Daily Tribune, Volume 17, Number 7, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 December 1902 — Page 16

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GROUND A LARGE AND BUSY CITY LIKE TERRE HAUTE

Bhe \#a3 Congratulating «Mr. Sistine" on His Madonna—High School Teacher Issues New Order. .... good story is going the rounds of lli: gossips of Tone Haute. The Portfolio club, which is composed of some ijfi the best ladies of the city, was rc('fitly entertained by one of the lady members. This lady has many beautiful pictures Initio upon the walls of her fuftiie and during the afternoon the p|ests took advantage of the opportunity to pass their judgment -upon the masterpieces. One of the women,, dressed as if she might belong to the 100, approached a copy of lJaphael's Sistine Madonna and exclaimed in terms of the greatest dignity. "Oh, llon't you think Mr. Sistine's Madonna isjjuat elegant?" |The dignity of one of the high school jiniiors was slightly milled by a queer !i|tle mistake one of the teachers made hot long ago. An order was promulgated that the pupils shoukl not gather in the halls during recess. One day a ionoly junior was standing in the lower fia.ll, trying to look wise, when a moml£r of the school 'faculty, who happens to be a teacher of rhetoric and literature, approached him and said, "Harry, don't congregate in the hall."

Another moth ball story has just some to the surface. A prominent young man stepped into one of the Wabash avenue pharmacies the other day. He had a prescription to be tilled and when the clerk stepped behind the prescription counter the youngster thought he would help himself to some candy. Two jars were sitting on the ease nearby, liot.h appeared to have candy in them arid it. was but the trick of an instant to lift the lid and take out a little round lump of the supposed sweetmeat. Just then the proprietor of the store came from the rear of the room and it was necessary for the amateur thief to make ijiuiok work of his spoils. Me stuck Ihe white bail in his mouth, but no nor.ii- had 'he begun chewing than he i|scovered his mistake, lie tried with

JJ his might to swallow the moth ball. !i\tt" in vain. There stood the druggist patching the antics of the victim of illusion. An explanation ended the scene. "Not long ago a grocery keeper employed two boys, probably IS or 19 y'ears old to deliver his goods. One day fie boys were sent to the cellar to clean :tp and make room for a new stock. They were not particularly fond of ork and thought cleaning up the basement below their dignity. After retraining below for some time they emerged from the cellar door, both with fafes black as the ace of spades. "Why, what's the matter?" asked the grocer. ''Well, if we have to work like niggers we might as well look like them," re* [died the boys in concert.

Among the hundreds of stories told around the Thanksgiving day dinner table was the. following, the truth of which is vouched for only by the man ^ho told the tale.: Several years ago he lived at Prairie Creek, this county, :md while with a crowd of other men a -ijuestion was started as to who could tilt the most. Two members of the crowd were known to be great eaters nnd a wager was soon fixed up to sec which couid eat the moat raw oysters. 'J"lie contest began. No fresh oysters were on the market so the contestants liesorted to quart cans of cove oysters. (Jan after can was opened and still the men seemed able to gulp down many more oysters. Finally one contestant reached his fifth can. He faltered but soon masticated the dose.

rjhe

contest

ended with the winner eating seven full cans of oysters and the Jospr ate six. That night the winner was in no shape for sleep. He was taken violently ill nnd the men who had backed him in flic contest were again called upon for assistance, but this time to try and relieve his sufferings. Everything possible was done for the man but he was mnahle to go to sleep until after 3 o'clock the morning after the contest. He finally recovered but said he had eaten his share of ovsters.

At the Luray Caverns.

A sanatorium has been established over the limestone caves at Lurav. Va., and air'from the caves is forced through the rooms. This air is free from impurities and it gives the guests virtually the air of the mountain altitudes without going thete.

Causes Merriment.

I The decision of the directors of the theater at Halle, in Germany, to distinguish bv means of red and white advertising posters between the plays that, are fit for young persons to witness and thos that are not is causing some amusement.

Most Expensive Book.

The most expensive book in the world \s lately been given by the Ameer of \-hariistan to the Shah. It is a copy

Ahe Koran, bound in solid gold and set with pearls, rubies mid diamonds. It cost $400,000.

An American Englishman:.*: •T. II. Pe!*vemn a native of New .JcrVer.'Ts a candidate for I'ar'iment in one

vof

the London districts. He lis lived in England for some ten years and recently 'became a naturalized subject of King

Edward.

in Mexico City

There are fifty automobiles in use in Mexico Citv. most of them electric machines of American manufacture.

®ad

Roads-

The- principal drawback to the use of Automobiles in Mexico is the lack of good roads,

A COUNTRY WHERE MARRIAGE IS HELD ILLEGAL

AMATEUR ARTIST'S BAD BREAK SOME CURIOUS LAWS ENACTED

Can't Feed Baby in France and in Germany It Is Forbidden To Roast a Man Over the Phone.

Lust year an officer in an English royal regiment was arrested for attempting to get married, in spite of the fact that he and the bride-elect were eligible for the married state. As it happened, however, his relatives were opposed to the match and had recourse to a regulation which, although still in vogue is seldom exercised, and which gives the Soverc'gn and War Oiliee power to interfere in the-matrimonial affairs of any officer in a voyal regiment. It is therefore, a crime for an officer thus placed to enter the bonds of matrimony against the wishes of the powers that be, and one punishable with dismissal from the army and six months' imprisonment: but whether the individual in question was .faithful to his vows or not the writer is unaware.

A few months ago a young Englishman was sentenced to a fortnight's imprisonment for kissing his fiancee in the streets of Odessa. It is strictly illegal for lovers to osculate in public south of Iiussia and it was only after considerable trouble on the part, of the Uritish consul that the too-amorous youth was liberated nt the expiration of three days' captivity, and even then his sentence was commuted to a due.

If you are given to political sneaking it would be as well to be careful where you hold your meetimrs. for there is one snot where such orations are considered treason, however loyal you uvy be at b^nrh

THj

is within tli» mile radius

of Westminister Palace during a parliamentary session, and anv one urging a iTovernnient pel.itio" in the area named can be arrested and thrown into orison th*-1 reason beinff that, members of the house misrht be biased in their legislation thereby.

Tf von take your familv with you on a holiday to France you should be very careful how you feed the baby during vonr soionm. The Froneli. have made it, a. nunishable offense for anv one to give so1id food to an infant under a year old. unless it has been prescribed by a medical man. and hundreds of people are prosecuted for breakir.f this law everv year.

while it is eoually illegal for nurses to

feed their charges from bottle^ having a iubber tube attached. You must, be very cautious how von treat your neighbor in .Tersev for he can have you arrested on the slightest pretext. and if he has a 'midge against you can bring about such a calamity by simply ffiving a fictional account of your misconduct, to the nearest lawyer, the latter will demand a fine ainVshoukl you decline to pay it he will cause you to be thrown, into prison to await, trial. Then, even if you are acquitted on the ground that the charge is unfounded, you have absolutely no claim against vour persecutor. though you may have suffered a counle of months' imnrisonnient fqr "othing. Similarly in Germanv you must not insult your n^isrb.hor through the telephone or he will legally claim dnm:irres for libel because your uncomnlimentarv remarks may have reached other ears to the detriment, of his character.

Tn a famous Scotch town you can be fined is fo'r throwing orange wel in the styeets. of if you happen to be in Chester and omit to raise your hat when a, Mineral is pass:n?. any policeman who witnesses your disvesnect can arrest you. inasmuch as von are breaking a regulation of Jnt ancient city. B'lt an even more peculiar law forhds vou to sell your lodv to a hosnital for dissection after rfeath. Some peon-1** do on. "ertainlv. bnt •Ihev could be mrnished if discovered, because your bodv legally belongs to vonr relatives and to sell it makes you guilty of fraud.

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roadsi. ture date ^without the, feeul 'ij tfur, iwavi'J

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Although the recent reports of the engagement of Miss Alice Roosevelt to Lieutenant J.. Greenway were immjdiately-officially denied, it is being whispered in Washington circles that the announcement was inaccurate only in that it was premature. The young rough rider, whose exclusive photograph is published above, is known to be a great favorite with the president, while friends of Miss Roose -elt declare that her regard for Lieutenant Greehway is such that the announcement may be repeated .at a fu ture date ^without the, feeultant djjnia). j)lo au-iT -ite jteTjj "V b^riyi! rcre- sif, .0

JAMAICA LABOR WILL PROBABLY BE EMPLOYED AT PANAMA

THE MEN ARE NOW

READY

Men of Island Are Physically Powerful and Almost Immune To the Tropical Fevers.

The decision of the Navy Department to hold the winter manoeuvres of the Atlantic and European Heels in Caribbean waters, with Kingston as a possible coaling base, cannot but have a decided effect upon the relations between Jamaica and the United States. The beautiful tropical fruit garden with its peculiar inhabitants will play an important part in the events of the near future, and a naval demonstration of a friendly nature will surely leave a favorable impression upon the nptive mind. .The harbor of Kingston is naturally one of the strom/e^t in existence from the strategist's point of view. The water is good and it is protected from the heavy "southerlies'1 making a safe and comfortable anchorage for a fleet.

Its formation enables it to be fortified easily, and its position will at once mark it as the kejf to the Caribbean ^en. Hut it is English and therefore not available for landing troops or fortifying for the war game.

Our own coaling station, which it has been decided by the Nuvy Department to developo, is situated off the eastern end of Porto Kico, upon the little island of Culebra. TIeve, of course, the greaterer part of the. sham lighting and search ing for enemies will take place.

The successful culmination of the canal negotiations will mean a great deal to the native Jamaican. l?eing of West African extraction and havinsr been exposed to peculiar vicissitudes of tropical climate, the native islander, who is, of course, black, has developed into a tropical immune.

That is. he is about as impervious to climatic diseases as ft human being can be, and it is for this reason principally that he will be the power employed to dig the great trench. It has been pretty well decided to use as many native Jamai cans and Cayman Islanders ks can be induced to leave their fruit arrowing and accept the sound money of Uncle Sam.

The state of feeling in Jamaican politics has lately been strongly American. Among the overtaxed pUmters, whose burdens have not. been light, the feel

im, fol.

i,!ls burst out occasion-

ally, and there has been some strong pro-American politics /developed. Tt, is out of the question for a revolution to grow, even among the most dissatisfied of the. heavily taxed fruit planters, for the island is one of the best, protected and policed in the world. Still in the event of the Panama route being chosen, complications might arise from an cvodus of the fruit, growing negro.

Being a, free man. like his brother in the States, the Jamaican may ^vork where he pleases. There is no law to bind him to the plantations, as in the case of the imported East Indian coolie, who is practically a slave to the English Jamaican and a heavy draft, of these men cannot but have its effect.upon the affairs of the island.

A natural born sailor, the Jamaican takes to the water and ships instinctively. He is large of bone and usually quite slender, be.ing a long-limbed muscular fellow, who can work to advantage either upon a vessel's deck .or noon her, soars and the very sight of a fine vessel gives him delight.

ITis language is the hybrid developed by having the English language pronounc ed- by a. negro who has a. leaning toward Spanish nnd an acouaintanceship with his cousin over in Cuba.. A truly Ironical production and well suited to' a class who look upon work as an evil.

Tne appearance of the beautiful white ships of the American squadrons will be the signal for the black mountaineers

WED MISS ROOSEVELT

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THE SUNDAY TRIBUNE: TERRE HAUTE, IND ,* SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1902.

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dreds. the men-o'-war will attract thousands, and it would take very little persuasion at this period to get the entire popnlytion to emigrate In a body.

There will probably be very little feelii# shown by outward signs, for the Jamaican is a dignified person, especially in the presence of strangers. He has a dignified regard, also, for a uniform.

All along the hot, white streets of the island villages the white helmets and blouses of the guards have created a feeling of respect for order such as is not seen anywhere in the states. Big black men standing as straight as rifle barrels, patrol streets at all hours, and although they are courteous and ufTnble at. all times they permit no boisterous behavior. All this seems strange to the foreigner who knoking the negro disposition looks for an enthusiastic outburst Behind it is the strict discipline of the Jamaica regiment officered gy Englishmen.

Being an English port of entry, Kingston can serve only for a coaling station, but there are no shoals to be dreaded along the shore and some of the fleet maneuvers may be held within plain sight, frtnn the hill-tops except such fornirviios pf sea room.

To the westward of the island is the dec[.v-1 of the Waters of the Northera hemisphere, the famous B&rtlett Deep," where it is thousands of fathoms to the ooze belpw. Along,, the northern coast a battleship may run close enough to the Shore for the men aboard to hold intercourse with the natives.

The rocky slopes fall quickly from a olateau or shelving beach to many hundred fathoms. Ss steep is the coast line that ships which have been run ashore upon the rocks have slid off within a few days and disappeared completely, leaving not a trace of their whereabouts in the blue depths. And all along between the island and Cuba is a clear sea swept by the northeast trade for a part of the year.

As for the business interests ashore, they may be said to be almost as much American as English. The fruit companies control about, all the banana land and an American concern alone lias-more than eighty thousand acres under cultivation.

The enormous number of bunches of this favorite fruit shipped is astonishing. Vessels may fly the English flag and the ubiquitions Scandinavian may be seen at any of. the banana ports, but the fruit goes mostlv to the United States.to be absorbed throughout, the country.

Nearly all the northern ports of Jamaica are useless for harbors. They open narrowly and suddenly, with plenty of coral reefs to make them difficult of navigation, and those of the less protected variety are simply ugly anchorages at which a large vessel cannot lie without being moored both bow and stern. Their existence is due to the banana trade.

The entire population engaged in t.lie fruit trade is black. Not an ordinary black, but a real deep Congo tinge such as is found on the west coast of Africa and it is only among the clerks, shinpers and office men one finds the color lightening a little.

Shoes are almost unknown, and a tourist, who lately entered a house of the better kind found a pair of corsets carefully rolled un and tied with a ribbon. and set upon the table in the parlor. Thev were exhibited as a strange freak of American and English fashions, mir/ht be supno=ed the morals of these primitive people are not convent'onn'^ ^Marriage is considered an evil. The wof»nn has to work as hard as the man and she fifid' herself handicapped under the English law when tied to a ln?:v husband who sits around and allows her to support him.

It works better when she can give him a shift when lie gets tired, and take up some more energetic fellow, who can support herself and Children. This puts a premium upon thrift. The worthless man cannot even have a home to shelter him. In spite of these peculiarities of temperament, there is seldom much quarrelling over domestic rights.

Missionaries have looked upon this con dition as almost, hopeless but. the peoole thrive and are happy, and while the East Indian 'ooks down with .scorn up-

LONDON'S LATEST ROYAL ROMANCE,

Austin Chamber'ain, postnaster general of England, and son of Colonial Secretary Joseph" Cham-: in love with Princess Victoria, daughter of King Edward, and that she returns his passion is the latest royal romance about which Europe is talking. If the story is true, it will depend upon King Edward whether the young commoner will be allowed to wed a princess of the blood royal. Although one of the most democratic of rulers, it is deemed doubtful if the king will give his royal sanction to a step unprecedented in English history.

to gather in force at the seashore. If on the great black man, the latter holds the fruit company's ships attract hun- the co«..iieyin disdain as a mere pygmy

of the human race and one whose opinion is not worth considering. They seldom, if ever, mix, coolies living 011 the plantations or in villages of their own.

To these black people the demonstration of the naval force in their waters will be a revelation. Brought up to believe that England alone has sea power the battleships and cruisers will give them to understand that protection maybe had under the striped ensign.

Accustomed as they are to English ships of war, they cannot fail to be impressed by the magnificent vessels of the heavier class flying the American flag. They will be more willing to trust themselves with the Yankee on the Isthmus.

When it. is understood that of all the 20,000 Chinese who wf$e shipped to work the canal under the French system, very few remain and that there is a well known saying that, every tie in the Panama roadbed could have been built of human bones from lives sacrificed upon the work, the important part these islanders will play in the canal's future may be understood.

To the naval officer who has never been a shore on the island of Jamaica, the place will be a revelation of beauty. This, of course, lies in the scenery and not in the productions of man.

The towns are like most of those seen in the American tropics, and are simply picturesque, and differ from those along the Caribean coast principally in regard to cleanliness. The fruit, which should be the principal diet, is of many varieties and a person may indulge in a dozen different kinds at one meal and be no worse for it.

The dyspeptic may eat of the papiae, the peculiar melon containing vegetable pepsin which, somehow, digests itself,

Architect and Superintendent.

JAMES M. SHERMAN,

J. P. HARDISTY,

HI

Architect

Residence, 1504 Second avenue. Room 13 Beach Hall, South Sixth streiet:

J. G. VRYDAGH,

om™°*

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

Artistic Umbrella Maker.fyv-

m9^ifho^enue

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

Bronze and Brass Foundry,

Terre Haute Bronze and Brass Foundry, manufacturers of bronze, brass and composition castings. All kinds of metats bought and sold. Eleventh and Sycamdre.

Cut Stone Contractors.

TERRE HAUTE STONE WORKS

Cut slono ntrac'. ~rs. Works and office, 10% and Mulberry streets.

Contractors and Builders.

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

A. W. RAVELL,

s-5,h s,r"''

CONTRACTOR AND BUIIDER.

KNISELY & EARL. 231 N. 19th

Brick contractors and builders. Telephone, Citizens*, U26w

Dentist.

J. C. VAUGHAN,

aouf:lTtot5^p:m.

Dentist, n. w. cor 4th ani

gRwffl Mala, over Hoffman's store.

Frescoing and Housepainting.

109 South Sixth dt.

HENRY F. GLAEVECKE

Interior Decorating—Churches, Theaters^ Public 3iiilding». Residences, etc. "r'"

and he may eat until he can swallow no more. He will be all the more pleased with himself afterward, and this at a very small cost, the fruit selling from two to three for a shilling.

It is impossible to send the fruit nortn, and he must content himself with a mere glimpse of paradise, going out under the trees where the peculiar melon grows, hanging like a great pear to tempt him to renounce his birthright

Jamaica itself is not more than usually unhealthful. In fact, it is just the opposite, but some of the outlying islands are not exactly health resorts.

It is probably due to this circumstance that the islanders become popular for contractors' outfits. Being an English-speaking race also aids materially, for there are not many island negroes capable of valuable work who have a working acquaintance with the language.

The heavy drafts must be made 011 these people for the work along the lower levels of the Panama cut. At Colon the climate may be withstood by a white man for many years, but upon the Chagres river and along the swampy districts the fever, is deadly.

Yellow fever is bad enough, but the peculiar variety developed in the waters of this sickly stream is even worse, for men who have recovered from its fierce heat will often remain as yellow as the rind of a dried lemon for years afterward.

The Colombian negro apparently cannot stand the climate, although he is much more impervious than the Chinaman or American black man. It has been found that the Jamaican is the only human creature who can safely risk the exposure, and even among these islanders the death rate must not be expected to remain small.

What You Want and Where to

W A E A A N E S I N E S E A E I S E E N S

Feed, Hay and Grain.

CALL orj W. L. H0LDAWAY

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

Florists.

F. WUNKER 4 SONS, BOQUETS & FL0RAL EMBLEMS.

Inter-National Correspondence Schooie

Train your brains to increase your income. Our system of teaching aims at practical success. Over 400.000 students. Local office 5 Erwin Bldg.

Lumber Yard.

R. H. KINTZ & CO., Wi

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

Livery and Boarding.

G. W. DANIELS

Uve',se"„"i,de?'"""°*

Cabs for theater parties, etc. Bell phono 372 Citizens. 8G6.

Ladiea' Tailor.

LrLClDl/nCn,

CI CICPUPQ The Fintcliss Ladles'Tai'or has returned from New York with full line of styles, Fur garments made to order.

Merchant Tailor.

F. P. BRYAN.

M""3

We make a specialty of suits guaranteed »o fit from *25 up pants 16 and upv

Meat Market.

BAESLER & W1TTENBROCK, 1404 Main st. Old phone 8803. New phone 883. Our specialties Home Cured Meats: Home Killed. Mea.ts, Home Made Sausage.

ANDREW ROWE, 827 N. 6th, Tel. 6202. Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Freab and Bait Meats. Home killed meats only Curerr of English brand of smoked meats

Otove Repairing.

GO

TO the COOPER FOUNDRY

For, Practical Repairing of all kinds ct Stoves. Best equipped in city. 42t Cherry.

A MINI EXftMMt

TELLS SOME OF THE fPRICKS^ HIS TRADE

DISCREDITS THE BIG STCRIES

Tale of Hew a Joke Resulted In OWer Of the Jokers Getting a Reputa ^^tlqp-and a Good Position.

"I have met many an expert judg^.Qi I a a and I do not believe there is one. who can tell 111 what particular state of France or Germany a wine was made^ jr that could call what particular disli-ietf. of France a champagne was manutaetured in,'' said Charles Norton, the expert wine taster. '"My observation of experts and if own opinion as well is that alter a goad, hearty meal is the time to judge, i-. will modily this to some exteyt. Each wine or liquor has a particular time wlifcn it is best to test its quality for instance, -, sherry wine should be judged beJore luncheon or dinner, but after break fust '"Claret,, red and white wme and Burgundy should be tested with something a a a a breakfast and before luncheon or dinnoi*.: port wine and cordials immediately -aftyr|s5S!' luncheon or dinner, and chanipagno* ate night, with something sweet to cafc^ih^p order to determine its dryness, on which |$£i depend-, it-, \alue. *35®1 "Smoking does not. interfere with abili-f^ ty to test and pudge honors or wines.-It helps the senses, but drinking docs interfere, though one need not abstain cntirely. "Whiskey made in Pennsylvania 10 different from that made in Man land They are both rye. however, and thev uj f.

turn are different from the rye nmcW in Kentucky. This last named state is.certainly the mother of the whiskey bnsi ness. In it we find the bourbon, divided into the sweet and sour njasli. The--ox-pert can distinguish the difference-• dietvyeen all these, and can also determine their age—that is to say. he can if he is shown samples of different age". If there is at least three years' di(Terence in their ages, he can say which is the oldest but I have yet to find one who could call the exact age of whiskey by testing and. tasting it. "All eperts 1 have met smoked and some drank, one in particular, of whom I will relate a story. A prominent .distillery in Kentucky, which had enjoyed a half century of existence and prosperity, was sold, the owner retiring from business. The distiller. ,who was also. tif part owner an'd had served in the Capacity of distiller for twenty-live years, had put away a cask of whiskey of his own made twenty-one years previous to the date of which the story relates. He' had marked the date on the cask plainly. A few Of his friends found it' and noted the date'exactly. "When the distillery was sold threcalled on him and in, the course of 1 ho conversation were asked to have a dnrilc. They asked for the best lie had, anil. they presumed, he proceeded to he coMo? arid came up with a-bottle of Ins twont.v-one-year-old- bolirtbct^.viiTboy drank, anij one: i*em«trked tho-toit•-$'«* the best ^lre. ever had. It tasted like twenty two vf-*"^ old whiskey, he said, and on closer 'c.bservation he declared it was ionici:i the month of (naming the nionlh ?nd year.)

Old Hats Made New.

P. M. CATT, cor. Ninth and Chestnut.^ts. Ladies and gentlemen's Kats clcaned 'dalored, blocked retrimmed, latest styTes-. New hats made to order.

Plumbing and, Gas Fitting.

FRED ARLETH, 1018 Main st. Citizens phone 865. Sanitary Plumbing and Gas FKttrag. Special attention given to repair wgjgFra

Painter and Decorator*

LEE JACKSQN,

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

vm

Physician and Surgeon.-,^^

S. 0. WEIR, M. D.,

Res. phone 980 Cltizen's .phom: Oi Office-, 322 Ohio St., Res. 322 S. Th

Shoes.

Notice—Stop and examine H. C. Nej kom & ,Co.'st sJioes and gents furnisbii goods before g'Oing down lowi.. Next dc W. J. Newborn's drug store, 686 Laftyeti

Dr. Reed's cushion shoes, best shoe tender and sure feet. Fine line men? ladles and children shoes. Chasi L.YYifool 714 N. Thirteenth.

IT

The Vigo Sanatorium.

PRIVATE ./HOSPITAL where {jafSerilSs have home comforts and advantages ct trained nursing. Dr. L, K. Stock,- 3JE4 i. Third., Cltz. ^el. 6?1.

Tinners and Roofers.

a

Carnrius & Dudley, 1022. Wabash-.'.aw-,. have opened a store in connection ^wluft their tin shop And carry a complete lix-» of stoves, ranges, tin ware, etc.,

I A ifr'

Upholstering and Furniture,

B. L. Pfdg'stedj 641 Lafayette ave. a£i 1002 N. 6% st TCI. No. 7163, mfgr. paricr furniture. Davenport3, leather couchesyA specialty. Furniture packing and storage

Vehicles of All Kinds.

3. VOGES, 666 Hulman st, Goodyear tfbber ttf-es put on. -v .' ubber tire vehJclo*. epairtn#&rfff parting. Get our