Daily Tribune, Volume 17, Number 2, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 December 1902 — Page 10

TO

SIN CREEK REVIVAL

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WAS-HARD TO GET STARTED

Hut a Parable Started the Mourners Rushing to the Bench in -5 Droves.

CHARLESTON, W. Va., Nov. 8.— Notwithstanding its name, Sin Creek, Greek, back in Boone county, is a highly religious district. It has a revival tf&gularly every four months, "f So keen is its appreciation of the -B&vival that it presently backslides in tfrder to experience another. In this $ay it strikes a higher average of reformation than any other region in the 'state.

Unfortunately for Uncle Bob Peterson, when he struck the creek last ,jWeek, the effects of the latest revival 3iadn't yet worn off Uncle Bob, or, as -It® prefers to be called, the Rev. Robert Gkfr Peterson, is a famous exhor•tor. who, to quote his own words, has la his seventy years of life, "yanked .more brands out of the burning by :±he singed hairs of their heads than •any man in this state or Old Virginia, -•sir^"--' .•* 'What is the spiritooal state of this community, gentlemen?" he asked as he took a seat in the store. "Sort o' slow in your line, Unc'

Bob," said Jim Sark, the proprietor. "Lost in sin an' sunk in unrighteousness?' inquired the exhorter with brightening eye. •. "No, not jus' exac'ly," replied Jem. :V.They was a Methodis' here last week,

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he was shu'ly a pow'ful singer." "An' a Hard Shell Baptis' two weeks befo'," added Neel Elkins. "He got a Tight. peart lot o' mourners." rr-: ?'He was mighty penetratin' agreed 'Jem. "Like to-a drownded the Widow Cruse's husband in two foot o' water." •t\. -'.'Ain't there been no backslides .asked Uncle Bob, anxiously. HV'Bort 0' early for that," said Elkins, -'fiibugh I did hear that Vance Culbert SfiOT.'ieveiiuQ officer on riday." he didn't get him," corrected MSn& Sark who came in just in time to make rthe correction. "Only shot him %fi£Wgii the arm." """WiBll, there's that business of Gar-

Jaiie cuttin' up tho nigger over on T&vrey's run, if you count that," suggtijied Jexn. "--''jDJi,, there's a light plenty lot o* n:e1umess- here, if yoti come at the [gilt ''time." said1Elki'rls.'''"Btlt just aftr.T revival—shook his head dubiously.

Mfe. DAN DAVIS TESTS A GREAT DISCOVERY.: WONDERFUL RESULTS OBTAINED.

..SAYS THu PUBLIC SHOULD KNOW.

is better known or more

••Stately-esteemed

in Terre Haute, Ind.

Shan "Dan Davis, the coal merchant, ifahen extraordinary good has been •fbneffflr.

Davis says the public should

know it. For no other reason he gives this statement for publicity.

Dai» W. Davis, Terre Haute. Ind.

L"*u1i^heii

a man is. weighted down as

\L l^as-for years* with chronic rlieu88mitic g-oiit, and finds a remedy that ly cures, he should make the tjiown. Well aware of the many

Hfi'g'tfb give unstinted bott Bros. Rheumatic Cure, the remBdy'that'cured me. I employed phyttci?inSr without avail, but when I begun" Eft take Abbott Bros. Rheutaatic Q^^e,rtire old rasping pains subsided at :once.

Seven bottles cured me.

That vas three years ago, and I am a well man to-day. My son was taking treatment at the Springs for rheuma* ti&lfi, but returned without much benefttf! He began taking Abbott Bros. Rheuaaatic Cure, and in three days was able to bend his knee, something heThad not done for ten weeks. Five bottles Stired him." ®iad?eds in Terre Haute and elsewhere who know Mr. Davis, and his reisioration to health, have tried Abb'otlrBros: Rheumatic Cure with the

S a if in

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N. FILBECK TESTIFIES.

vsa-, Aie rr. S

ftiute, ind., "had sciatic rheumkti8m fend-was confined to her bed for five ftgek'a At length Mr! Din Davis, induced her to try Abbott Bros Rheumatic Cure. Two bottles cured her. jtfrs. ^ibjfey is very enthusiastic oyer lier complete recovery, and speaks Klffh -prafee for Abbott Bros. Rheu* lUatieCure"

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If the Abbott's had no other testiRjoiiul than this of Mr. Pilbeck, it wul$ at least convince all Indiana

FOR SALE ?Y ALL: DRUGGISTS.

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•HOUSING MEETING IN TME WEST

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?VIRGINIA MOUNTAINS

"This is a Saturday," said Unci* Bob Peterson. "Beginnin* with tomorrow I will hold a nightly service for the savin' of souls in the school-'us. Come one, come all. Music on the or-gin." "On the fiddle," corrected Mrs. Sark, "if so be Fiddle Sim ain't in liquor. The Methodis' busted the. organ's breathin' pipes."

Far an dwide through the mountains went the word that Uncle Bob Peterson was to hold a week's revival at Sin Creek. Surfeited as was the locality with religious fevor the fame of Uncle Bob proved a magnet.

Solleran Gully turned out its score Pole Creek, Upper Alder, Stranger Mountain, Torrey's Glen, Heron Creek and Peonta Creek contributed their quota the song-diggers from Tim's Gut came on short-eared, swift-heeled trotting mules, and occupaats of cranky flatboats poled up the river with eel spears from as far away as Racine.

To these and others did Uncle Bob Peterson preach the vengeance of heaven and the fires of hell for six nights running, and never a mourner came forward except Fiddler Sim, who, having absorbed moisture by the regular process, so exuded it through his eyes, being thereto moved by the preacher's eloquence, that he bedewed his fiddlestrings, which forthwith w'ailed flabbily from discord into silence.

Then spoke Uncle Bob Peterson out of a full heart. "Ye generation of vipers! This is Fri day night an' I have been a laborin' with you sence Sunday. Who bows down on the mourner's bench? Only Sim, and him because he can't set up straight to save his sinful soul. Now I'm goin' to tell you an ancy-dote. Do you know what a ancy-dote is?" "Yarbs," said Garby's Jake, taking it in the medical sense. "No it ain't yarbs, you sang-digger" returned the revivalist. "Artychoke is the word you're after, an' that's a sort of jam. An ancy-dote is a parable."

Everybody knew what a parable was. The West Virginia mountaineers even those who can't read, will quote the Bible by the chapter. So the congregation leaned forward in anticipation. "In ix nights I been a-laborin'," began Uncle Bc-b. "I been a-preachin' the fires of hell, an exhortin' you to reepentance. Here on the seventh night I'm a warnin' you. "I'm a warnin' you that them as don't repent an' come a-runnin' to the mourner's bench'll be consumed in them everlastin' fires. It don't count that you've repented before, fou you've backslid since. "In word or deed you've backslid. An' the flamin' depths of hell is ayawnin' like Kyle Russell, there."

Mr. Russell roused himself from an uneasy dream with a loud snort and huskily murmured that he was a-think-in\ "Oh, I want you all to think, my brethren and Sisters," cried Uncle Bob, warming up. "I want you to think on the eternity of hell-fire. So you know what eternity means? Do you know what eternity means?"

His finger pointed straight at. Calmer's Sal. who sat in the second row. She hazarded a guess that it was "quite sme time." "Quite sme time!" said the preacher, scornfully. "I'll tell you how 'quite some time' it is—I'll tell you in an an-cy-dote or parable. Now, I want you to think of a sparrow—a little, mean, ornery sparrow. You know what a sparrow is, Jem Sark." "A c'nippin' sparrow?" asked Jem, uncomfortably, feeling that he was expected to say something. "Yes, a chippin' sparrow or a whitethroat or any kind or sort of sparrow. We'll take a chippin' sparrow because he' the smallest Now, how far do you reckon that a chippin' sparrow could hop? The littlest chippin' sparrow you ever saw. How far do you reckon he could hop, Sister Garraon?"

After chewing her bonnet string for five pain-ridden seconds Sister Garmon murmured "Several." "Several what?" demanded Uncle Bob.

No answer. "Several inches or foot or miles." "Yes," said Sister Garmon, agonizedlv, eager to be agreeable. "No!" thundered the preacher. "1 want somebody to tell me how—far—a —little chippin'—sparrow—cap—go, can go in one hop." ./..

There wa-s a long silence. Then "Dog durned few" said Neel Elkins. "About a finger len'th," said the revivalist weightily. "Ay-bout a finger len't hif he was a right peart sparrow. Now, does any person here present know how far it is from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean?"

This was a poser. Nobody answered. "How many miles is it from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean?"

It was Kyle Russell this time that hazarded "several." "More than here to Charleston ten

times over, said Uncle Bob. "Ten times over an' more." "Dog-bit-a-rat!" said Calmer's Sal, involuntarily permitting the local exclamation of extreme surprise to escape her." ", "Yes, indeedy," pursued the exhorter. "Now, if that sparrow, that little, cirnery chippin' sparrow, was to start in an" take just one drop of water from the Atlantic in his beak, an' start with it to the Pacific, makin' one hop a day,

MlBc MalWIsi that drop of w«. ter into the Pacific an' then go back one hop a day—just one little, weak, ornery, chippin' sparrow hop—an' fill up his beak again an' go back, an' if he was to keep on doin' thdt until tl^e Atlantic was emptied dry as a bqnte,

Pretty, but so Thin!

7i

"Doctor," said our clerk, as a customer went out," that woman would be a beauty if she were not so horribly thin."

Yes," said the doctor," she is really ill most thin women are ill."

Unusual thinness may mean worry, extra work, care of the sick, nervousness, dyspepsia, bowel troubles, or the first sign of a serious disease like consumption.

The best thing we have found for thin people, whatever the cause, is Vinol.

To combine the medicinal properties of cod liver oil with organic iron in such a powerful and yet well-tasting preparation, was a great discovery. If you try it and are not pleased we pay the money back.

A S A A

Mail Orders Supplied, $1 per Bottle Express Paid.

an* the Pacific was over-flowin' till its banks couldn't hold it—why, then— why, then—an' mind you, I'm talkin' about eternity now, the eternity that them as doesn't repent will have to burn in the unquenchin' flame

The speaker paused impressively while his congregation bent forward at a universal angle. "Why, by the time he got one emptied an* the other filled," shouted the revivalist in a voice of thunder, "it wouldn't be sun-up in hell!"

Thirty-four mourners fell over each other getting to the bench. Uncle Bob Peterson's parable had made a revival record for Sin Creek.

FCRTUNESJN_PEAT BEDS

Well Known New Jersey Chemist Claims They May Furnish Heat and Light. An inventor and chemist of ineland. N. J., has just discovered a cheap process by which peat can be converted into fuel briquettes far below the cost of mining coal. After careful investigation and experiments he declares there is enough peat ifi the Maurice river swamp alone to supply all south Jersey with fuel for generations to come, and that over in Atlantic county are hundreds of acres of the finest peat bogs in the world, running to a depth of fifteen feet.

By the mixture of a chemical, at a nominal cost, the peat is by the inventor's process made into fuel briquettes, which last four times longer than coal, give heat of twice the intensity and leave less aslics than does coal.

Nor is fuel the only available virtue that this chemist has discovered in peat. He assorts and has demonstrated that he can producc from peat fuel illuminating gas of a quality and brilliancy superior to that derived from coal, and at a much reduced cost.

By the use of chemicals peat can he converted into paving blocks which the inventor says are impervious to time and wear and can be manufactured much cheaper than any other kind of paving blocks. He also makes of peat a chingle composition as hard as adamant and of a metallic ring and as light as aluminum, which will compete with the slate roof shingles. Of this kind of materiayi he also makes fine bric-a-brac. brackets and other household ornaments. Of peat he has made building blocks of all colors far cheaper than good brick or building blocks can be made from other material.

American foresters are trying to give as wide publicity ..as possible to the fact that long-lived trees may be grown under protection of short-lived trees, to eventually take their places and form the permanent stand.

A TIMELY TOPIC.

At this season of coughs and colds it is well to know that Foley's Honey and Tar is the greatest throat and lung remedy. Tt cures quickly and prevents serious results from a cold. For sale by all druggists.

The easy terms offered at the Auction Sale of building lots at Wlass Park should interest many young'Indies'and voung men to become real estate Owners. By the time the lot is paid for its value will have increased givingg large per cent on investment.

A kidney or .bladder trouble can always he cured by using Foley's Kidney Cure in time. For sale by all druggists.

Gloss Park is bound, to be one of the best suburban places about Terre ITaute. Its location gives the working man every advantage. The lots will always be

rnorg

than Auction price

I fivcrv aoQjiwce.k

at 2

p. m.

i&P,i

THE OftiLY TRIBUNE TEBRE .HAUTE, IND., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1902.

BRITTLE SPRING CHICKENS

After Two Summers in Cold Storage They Break as Easily as '-.v*- Chinaware.

Spring chickens that have been in cold storage for two years are not by any means strangers to American tables no more are "fresh eggs" that have been in cold storage for a year more or less. "And it takes a mighty good judge to tell them from chickens or eggs that have just come in from the farmer's barnyard," said a wc-ll-known cold storage man with whom a reporter talked yesterday. "In storage," said he, "we keep the rooms at a temperature of from three to four degrees below zero all the year 'round. What ever is put Into storage Is simply frozen stiff and in this state it is impossible for it to change condition it is just as good the day it is taken out of cold storage as it was the day it was put in no matter what length of time is permitted to elapse, whether it be one year, or two, or even longer."

It is no uncommon thing in this city for produce merchants to buy thousands of dozens of eggs in the summer time, when eggs are selling for next-to-nothing prices, put them in their private compartments in cold storage houses and hold them for a rise in the egg market. Bought at 15 cents or less a dozen, they are held until the price has soared to 30 or 35 cents when the supply from the henneries is exceedingly small, and then they, are put on the market at a good big gain.

Another cold storage operator with whom a reporter talked yesterday told of an accident which recently occurred in one of the cold-storarre warehouses of which he is very familiar. "A crate of chickens was being moved the other day." said he, "and by accident the crate, which contained several dozens of choice dressed fowl, fell a distance of about twenty feet. It had been in storage nbout two years and had become a veritable cake of ice. In the fall the crate broke in half and would you believe it, the chickens lying in the crate where the break occurred, also broke as clean as though an iceman had cracked a cake of ice in half and it separated. "I had one of those chickens on my dinner table next day," said the cold-stor-age man, "and I never ate a fowl that tasted better, and, mind you, it had been in cold storage for about two years."

A beautiful piano will he given to the narty buying the largest number of lots at Glass Park during the grand sale that began today at 2 p. 111.

TRIBUNE "want" ads brine result*.

SORES

SLOWHEALING

Slq,w healing sores are unsightly, painful and dangerous. They are a constant care and source of anxiety and worry.

Chronic, slow healing sores, are frequently the after effects of some long debilitating sickness that leaves the constitution Weakened and the blood in a polluted, run down condition, when a scratch, cut, simple boil or bruise, becomes a fearful looking ulcer that grows and spreads, eating deeper and deeper into the flesh in spiteof everything that can be done to check its progress. Old people whose blood is below the standard and the circulation sluggish, are often tormented with face 6ores, and indolent, sickly looking ulcers upon the limbs that give them hardly a moment's rest from pain and worry. Ordinary sores Plinfy tfl8 BfOOQ are liable to become chronic

I16EI

tnG

S0T6.

when the blood i3 too weak to throw off the germs and poisons, and no amount of external treatment will heal them, but they continue to grow worse and worse, and many times terminate in that most horrible of all human maladies, Cancer.

S. S. S. cures slow healing sores by •aurifj-ing and invigorating the germaden, vitiated blood and purging the system oi all corrupt matter, thus striking at the real cause and removing every hindrance to a rapid cure, and this is the only possible way to reach these deeply rooted, dangerous places. S. S.^ S. strengthens and tones up the circulation, and supplies rich, nutritious blood for the rebuilding of the constitution and healing the sore, when you get rid of the old plague spot for all time.

SIS

If you have a slow healing, stubborn sore, write us about it, andour Physicians will advise you without charge.

The Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga.

Easy to take and easy to let is that famous little pill DeWitt Little Early Risers. This is due to the fact that they tonic the liver instead of purging it, They never gripe nor sicken, not even the most delicate lady, and yet they are so certain in ssults that no one who uses them is disappointed. They cure torpid liver, constipation, biliousness, jaundice, headache, malaria and ward off pneumonia and fevers.

PREPARED' BY

E. C. DeWITT St CO., CHICAGO

Bon't Forget the Hsnte*

BAUR'S PHARMACY.

Grates and Mantels Fixed

"While you wait. Leave orders' «nth us. We have an expert tile setter. Satisfaction guaranteed.'

Hardware

,657 WABASH AVE.

JAMES M. SHERMAN,

~m

C. & E. I. R. R.

WINTER TOURISTS' RATES TO THE WEST, SOUTHWEST AND NORTHWEST. ON SALE UN­

TIL APRIL 30, 1902.

One way second class colonist rates to points in the west and southwest. Tickets on sale first and third Tuesdays of each month.

Special Homeseekers* excursion on the first and third Tuesdays of each month to the west, northwest and southwest. $7.40 to Chicago and return, December 1, 2 and 3. Good to return until December 7.

Thanksgiving Day rates to points within a radius of 150 miles at one and one-third fare for the round trip. Tickets on sale November 26 and 27. Good to return November 23. Special rates given teachers and students returning home for vacation.

For further information apply to

J. R. CONNELLY,

Gen'l. Agt. 10th and Wabash Avenue.

W. E. M'KEEVER,

Ticket Agent, Union Depot.

The Health Office

COMMISSION ROOM

AL. MYERS, Proo. 503 Main St.

If you have anything to sell or trade just put a few lines in the Tribune's One Cent a Word Column.

Architect and Superintendent.

Residence, 1504 Second avenue.. Room IS Beach Hall. South Sixth street.

J. G. VRYDAGH,

j»*

Citizens Telephone

Architect and Superintendent. Room .2, Naylor-Cox bdg., Wabash ave. and Fourth

Artistic Umbrella Maker.

J. P. HARDISTY,

iat9«spUDrue

Brown 742. Covering and repairing. Prompt attention to telephone calls.

7 Eronze and Brass Foundry, Terre Haute Bronze and Brass Foundry, manufacturers of bronze, brass and composition castings. All kinds of metals bought and sold. Eleventh and Sycamore.

Cut Stone Contractors.

TERRE HAUTE STONE WORKS

Cut storii r.traet ^rs. Works and office, 10V4 and Mulberry streets.

Contractors and Builders.

The T. J. MARTIN CO., planing mill, manufacturers of Sash. Doors. Blinds and dealers in Lumber, Lath and Shingles, cor. Fifteenth and Van Railroad.

A. W. RAVELL,

28v* s-

6,h

atr°*

CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER.

KNISELY & EARL, 231 N. 19th

Brick contractors and builders. Telephone, Citizens', 1126.

Dentist

J. C, VAUGHAN, WT&tSS,}:*

Dentist, n. w. cor 4tli and Maia,' over Hoffman's store.

Eresc£0l^ |rjd Housepainting.

HEIMlf £. GyEVECKE

109 South Plxth stTheaters,

Interior pecoraUng—[Churches, M^ecfdenc^s, etc. Fufchc

"WB

mssmsm

A MILLION GOOD LIVERS, in a double sense, credit their good feeling to CASOABETS Candy Cathartic, and are telling other high livers about their delightful experience with CAS- ,t

CARETS. That's why the sale is nearly A MILLION BOXES A MONTH. The one who likes good eating and good drinking, and is liable to over-indulge a little, can always depend ony CASCARETS to help digest his (food, tone up his intestines, stimulate his liver, keep his^fj 5^ bowels regular, his blood pure and active, and his whole body healthy, clean and wholesome.t jn "In time of peace prepare for war," and have about the house a pleasant medicine for sourly stomach, sick headache, furred tongue, lazy liver, bad breath, bad taste, all results of over-in-- v,: dulgence. CASCARETS Candy Cathartic are what you want a tablet at bed-time will fix you"***'' aJl right by morning. All druggists, 10c, 25c, 50c. Never sold-in bulk. Genuine tablet stamped

COG. Sample and booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.

One Way

Colonist Rates

TO WESTERN AND SOUTHERN STATES

Home Seekers' Round Trip Rates

ONE FARE PLUS $2, ON SALE DECEMBER 2, 16, JANUARY 6, AND 20. GOOD TO RETURN WITHIN TWENTY-ONE DAYS. DROP IN AND SEE THE AGENT.

E. E. SOUTH,

Feed, Hay and Grain.

CALL ON W. L. HOLDAWAY

for pure clover hay and all kinds of feed, wholesale and retail. 1321 Main street.

Florists.

F. WUNKER & SONS, BOQUETS & FLORAL EMBLEMS.

Lumber Yard.

R. H. KINTZ & CO.,

Lumber Dealers and General Contractors ar.d Builders. Main and Water sts.

Livery and Boarding.

G. W. DANIELS

L"'"'

Cabs for theater parties, etc. Bell phone 372 Citizens, 366.

Ladiea' Tailor, v*

Ln

riCPUCD The Firstclass rLtlOOnCn, Ladies' Tailor has returned from New York with full Una of styles. Fur garments made to order.

Merchant Tailor.

F. P. BRYAN,

ANNUAL SALErfTr. 0,000,000

Greatest in fSieWorld

VP

Genl-

J. C. RUTHERFORD,

*st.

"The Fellow You Can't Fcrgwt."*

RACTICAL UBLFC Ttt RINTER,

665 Main 8t

New Phone 948. Next door to Tribum.

What You Want and Where to Get

WATCH REGULAR CHANGES IN THESE ADVERTISEMENTS.

e"'-2W,Tb,T.1ii"g

We make a specialty of suits guaranteed to fit from $25 up pants J6 and up.

Meat Market.

BAESLER & V/ITTENBROCK. 1401 Main st. Old phone 8803. New phone 883. Our specialties: Home Cured Meats, Home Killed Meats, Home Made Sausage

ANDREW ROWE, S27 N. 6th, Tel. 5202. Wholesale and Retail Dealer ln Fresh and Salt Meats. Home killed meats onfy. Curerc of English brand of smoked mea'.s

Gtove Repairing.

GO TO THE.

COOPER FOUNDRY

For Practical Repairing of all kinds of Stoves. Best equipped in city. 424 Cherry.

If you have anything to sell or trade

just put a few lines In the Tribune's

One Cent a Word Column.

sH

V(,

a 1,1

VaMaliaPennsylvania

EXCURSIONS

ONE WAY COLONISTS TOKETS

To many points in the South,

Southwest and West, at ONE-

HALF FARE PLUS $2. 'f

On sale Cfcscembcr 2 and 16, January 6 and 20, and February 3 and 17, 1903. These tickets are one way only. j,

HOME SEEKERS' EXCURSIONS

One fare plus $2. /,

On sale December 2 and 16, January^

6 and 20. Good to return within

21 days from date of sale.

Ask about them at Union Station

Ticket Office and City Ticket Office, 654 Wabash Ave., Terre Haute, Jpd.

GEO. E. FARRINGTON,

Andy Burg-et

SANITARY PLUMBING Prompt and careful attention given to ,wvrl, repair work

Ollt

SOS Ohio

Try The Tribune's One Cent a Word Column.

It,

Old Hats Made New. wTkmr

F. M. CATT, cor. Ninth and Chestnut sts. Ladies and gentlemen's hats cleatied,' 'colored, blocked, retrimmed. latest styles. New hats made to order.

Plumbing and Gas Fitting^

FRED ARLETH. 1018 Main st. Clt^nJ phone S65. i.rr, Sanitary Plumbing and Gas Fittlrjg. Special attention given to repair work.

Painter and Decorator.

LEE JACKSON,

215 3. 9 1-2 dhruet. Oitizaai fol. 431i

A-l house painting, graining, glazing, etc. All work receives prompt attention.

and Surgeon

Physician

S. D. WEIR, M. D„ EKW"

lies phone 9S0 Citizen's phom: Office", Office. 322 Ohio St., Res. 322 S. Third-St,

S A -Shoe8,v-

Notice—Stop and examine H. C. Newkom & Co.'s shoes and gents furnishing goods before going down low/.. Next dooir \V. J. Newkom's drug store, 626 Laftyette.

Dr. Reed's cushion shoe3, best shoe .for tender and core fuet. Fine line men s, iadies and children shoes. Chas. L. Wood, 714 N. Thirteenth.

The Vigo Sanatorium.

PRIVATE HOSPITAL where patients have home comforts and advantages at trained nursing. Dr. L. K. Stock, 324 A, Third.

Dr.

Citz. Tel. 631.

Tinners and Roofers.

Carnrius & Dudley, 1022 Wabash avfM have openod a store in connection wkij their tin shop and carry a complete lii« 'Of stoves, ranges', tin ware, etc.

Upholstering and Furniture.

8. L. Plogsted, 641 Lafayette aye. SLT.S 1002* N." 6y2 st. Tel. No. 7163, mfgr. parlrf furniture. Davenports, leather couches

4'

specialty. Furniture packing and storage

Vehicles of All Kinds. ~—-7-r-rrmr-j. VOGES, 666 Hulman st., Goodyea,* rubber tires put on. *ubberj tire vehicles. [epairing and painting. Get our .1