Daily Tribune, Volume 17, Number 65, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 3 February 1903 — Page 5
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SOCIAL HAPPENINGS,
THE CALENDAR.
\V KD.N E.SD AY.
Entrc Xoua Dancing Club at JJuenwcg's Hall. Euchre party for Mrs. 0. A. Bruok^ank, Mrs. E." Thickstun," of Mulbeny street.
St. Paul's Guild at St. Paul's Mission.
THURSDAY.
R. P. 1. Glee club at Washington Avenue church in the evening.
FRIDAY.
Supper at the First Congregational Church.
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SATURDAY
Eeeet'tion—Mrs. John Clark Hill and the Misses Hill.
Miss Louie Hopwood, of Woodstock, Canada, and Mr. Edward M. Lucas will be united in marriage March 4th. at the residence of the bride-elect's sister.. Mrs. J. C'. Rutherford, 825 Maple avenue, .Mr. Edwarcl Lucas, formerly of the Tribune and Express is connected with, the Scrantoii school of correspondence with headquarters at Danville.
Mr. and Mrs. Simeon Waggoner entertained. their evening card club Monday at their home on South Seventh street. The prizes were won by Mr._ Herman Prox, Mr. Will Shepard and Mrs. Allen Weinhardt. At the close of the games a hot luncheon was served.
Mrs. Simeon Waggoner will be,hostess for her afternoon card club Tlnurs: day afternoon of next week, at her home on South Seventh street. .'
The Missionary tea at the home of Mrs. G. W. Bement Monday afternoon at her home on Ohio street was largely attended and of great interest. About iifty were present. A bright paper was read by Mrs. Joseph Jenckes on her trip to British Honduras. This was followed by a delightful talk by Rev. J. S. Jenckcs eff hii school in Honduras and aboiV, the inhabitants of that country. Miss Mary P.lake gave two s«los, "The Golden Promise" and "Slumber Boat. Rev. John E. Sulger and Rev. R. Foote gave talks on missionary work. Tea and wafers were served. Mrs. Bement
AVOS
assisted by Mrs. Bruce Bement, Mrs. Richard Strong, Miss Mildred Burt and 'Miss Virginia Somes.
The Misses Antoinette Hoffman and Oecil White entertained their card club Saturday afternoon at the home of Miss Hoffman, on Ohio street. The prizes were won by Mrs. Clair Dobbs and Mrs. George Morris and the hostess. Re-
NERVOUS PROSTRATION.
The Result of the Pain and Irritation From Hemorrhoids. Nervous Prostration is often the result tof neglecting a case of hemorrhoids or piles the pain and irritation, attendant upon this disagreeable trouble inconveniences and annoys one, but it is possible to go to business and to do tTie ordinary day's work, so the trouble is neglected until the nerves become exhausted and the patient is a victim of nervous prostration.
Hemorrhoids cause a sensation of heat,: tension and itching in a region where is located the most sensitive nerves of the human system and the continued irritation will eventually cause a collapse of the nerves. This would easily have been avoided if the patient had carefully treated the case of piles from their first appearance. 2£o other trouble can be so quickly and safely overcome if treated in an early stage and even if the case is an old one there is a remedy which will act with remarkable results if faithfully applied.
The Pyramid. Pile Cure is in suppository form and can be conveniently applied to the afflicted, parts, the soothing oils and medication reaching and healing the enlarged hemorrhoidal veins of the rectum and acting at once upon the inflamed tissues.
Every sufferer from this trouble should send at once to the Pyramid Drag Co., Marshall, Mich., for their book on Piles or Hemorrhoids, which will be sent free. The Pyramid Pile Cure is so well known and the hundreds cured by it have so advertised it that the little book is merely sent to give each patient a clearer vie\fr of Eis or her particular case and the proper treatment for it.
Elk Floor
New Car Load. 25 lbs for .. 48c 50 lbs fo[. 95c Per barrel.. $3.75
frcshments were served. The next meeting will be with Miss Agnes McNabb and Mis. Houghton at the heme of Miss McXabb on North Seventh street.
The Wednesday Club will meet \ulli Mrs. George McLaughlin tomorrow instead of with Mcs. Potter I nth am. owing to the illness of Mrs. Graham's little sou with diphtheria.
Mi^s Youse and Miss Freeman will entertain the ladies of the high school faculty Saturday evening at their rooms on Chestnut street.
Miss Idelle Kidder was hostess for the Portfolio club Monday afternoon at her home on North Center
street.
Mrs. B.
IJ. White read a paper on ''Buddhism and Christianity in Japan." Refreshments were served. Miss Squiers of Dixon, 111., was a guest. The next meeting will be in two woks with Miss Fannie Blake.
Mrs. Herbert P. Dahlen did not observe her day at home today.
Mr. and Mrs. Ries B. Mooter delightfully entertained Saturday evening in honor of Mrs. Mooter's sister Viola 0'Leaiy at their home on Oak street. Mrs. Mooter was assisted by Mrs. John Connelly,Three tables played euchre, after which' refreshments were served. Those present were: Misses Mary Ncenan, Cognese Hall, Josephine Burget., Kathryn Walsh, Louise Finkbiner, Emma Mohler, Viola O'Leary Messrs. Will Lindely, Fred Hayes, Chas. Hankev, Tim O'Leary, Julian Wray, Lee Boleman, Mr. and Mrs. Ki^s B. Mooter and Mrs. John Connelly.
The members of the "T" club were delightfully entertained by Mr. and Mrs. QJjver M. Kay on Wednesday evening. "The evening was passed by various amusements, and at a late hour luncheon was served. The members of the club present were: Mr. and Mrs. Henry Yeager, Mr. and Mr.% James Snyder. Mr. Sam Matthias, Miss Anna Bergmann and
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Kay. The guests were: Miss Maybelle Brown, Miss Bessie Kay and Miss Daisy Nichols of Rockville. The next meeting will be with Mr. and Mrs. Powers of North Seventh street.
NEW PHASE OF COAL FAMINE
Why This Man Controlled Himself in a Barber Shop. "The other evening," said a man of dolorous tales, "I broke away from the office a minute or so before 4 o'clock in order to get uptown to my barber's to procure a shave. I hadn't been shaved for a couple of days, and according to my wife's chart, 1 was due to attend some kind of a rough-house at a friend's house with her that evening. Before 1 left home for the office ray wife had told me not to come home without a shave on peril of a whole lot of things. So 1 hopped a car on the run to get up to my barber's for that shave. "A man with a beard entered the barber shop about three jumps ahead of me, bestowing upon me one of those malicious grins of triumph habitual to fellows who are ahead of you in the barber's next line as he did so. The boss barber was the only one working in the shop— the other barber, the boss tol'd' me when I inquired, was on a drunk, or something
I sat down to wait for the bearded an to be attended to. "First, the man in the chair who had only beat me to the barber's door by a nose on the wire, so to speak ordered a hair-cut and he spent about ten: minutes in giving, the barber explicit directions-as to how he wanted his hemp removed. The hair-cut was a' pretty elaborate affair, and it took a long time. I was hungryfo^ my dinner, which I knew 'ul be getting cold, but I feared to go home without that shave. "After the hair-cut the man in the chair wanted his beard trimmed, and he knew just how he wanted it trimmed and spent quite a. while in telling the barber just how. The beard-trimming operation was a tedious game but I had to stand for it, although I was gradually accumulating a prowerful amount of un-Christ-ian hatred for that man in the chair. ^After/ the beard-trimming the man in the-chair caught my eye in the mirror as I squirmed around in my seat and grinned cheerfully at me. 'Guess I'll have a shampoo' he said to the barber, and by a this time I was sore enough to heed a rub-down and hungry enough to eat a burro stuffed with firecracker's. It was close on 5 o'clock when the shampoo began, and you know how long it takes a barber to shampoo a fussy man. Thinking of the lukewarm, talluwgravy steak that awaitedi me at home, I came near frothing at the mouth, but I said to myself that my turn would sure come soon unless the duck in the chair out of innate devilishness instructed the barber to go through the whole performance again from the beginning or backward. When the barber began to dry the fiend's hair after the shampoo I started to' remove my "collar and tie confident that I'd be in the chair inside of a couple of minutes at the most.
£Er—um—I
plM
it HICKEY GROCERY CO
HISll
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FIVE CASH STORES. 13th and Liberty Ave Tel. 523 7tli and Lafayett .....Tel. 711 704 South Third Street........Tel. S90 2nd and Main Tel. 411 lSth and Majn.. Tel. SU
guess you'd better singe
my hair,' said the cutthroat, yawning cavernously, just as I hung my collar up, and he shot me a look out of his lamps that was plumb full of victorious vindiictiveness, I sat down again, and tried to read the funny paper upside down. "'By the way you forgot to shave the back of niy neck,' said the black-hearted occupant of the chair, leering at me sidewise in the mirror, after the hair-sing-ing operation had been concluded. "After that he demanded that the little hairs be cut out from his nostrils and ears. Then he slowly climbed out of the chair audi smiled at me. I never ached so hard to throw out a fancy crack or so as I did right then." "Well, why didn't you?" the man of dolorous tales was asked. "Because,"' was the reply, "the ruffian was my coal dealer, and I was due to stop by his office on my way from the barber's and after groveling and walking on my stomach for. a while, beg him
on my hands and knees to sell me a quarter of a ton of coal, so's I could keep my family from perishing."
OUTSIDE THE PRESIDIO.
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Dozens' of Liquor Dens That Catch the Soldier Trade. The persistency with which certain elemeuts and members of societies oppose the army canteen in the face of official recommendations and ever-recurring army reports would be much modified, and their sensibilities severely shocked, if they could see the United States 8,rmy post at San Francisco and: its environs, as I have seen it and them, said J. W. Walker, a leading educator of the Golden Gate city, to a Star reporter this morning in an up-town hotel
The main entrance into the presidio grounds, the reservation covering several thousand acres, is through a section of the city lying on the bay known as Harbor View. The contrast .between Harbor View and the presidio is somewhat on a par with Jackson City and Fort Myer, only about fifty times the size of the former place, the city, in fact, being built up to the reservation grounds.
Around the gates leading into the grounds and for a considerable distance therefrom are saloons by the dozen, most of them small and vile dens where the worst kind of liquor is sold, elected and maintaned especially to catch the soldier trade. These saloons are like drag nets, and they catch the soldiers in their meshes as does a seine entangle the fish.
It was in this vicinity that the soldiers caused a riot and razed several of these detestable traps for men to the ground recently because of the rapacity of the keepers of these vile joints, and the riot was quelled with much difficulty and only after the shedding of some blood. Thus we have had at different points of the country, at three separate army posts, Chicago, Fort Myer and San Francisco, uprisings. on the part of the soldiers against the surrounding dives that the absence of the canteen from the army post largely keeps in existence.
As I have so many frieiids among the soldiers I have often wished it were possible for the advocates of the canteen to take every opponent individually to San Francisco, show them in detail the vile and dirty resorts that their opposition mainly contributes toward support in Harbor View, and .then go with them into the beautiful grounds of the presidio adjoining, with the blue Pacific tumbling and foaming lazily at their feet the flowers in gorgeous bloom, and the lawns a sparkling carpet of green I am certain, unless these people are blind+W.. s,,, instantaneous change of front and ui'ge their representative.'? and senators to vote for the post exchange and such pleasant surroundings, rather than indirectly favor the low, sand-floored resorts outside of the presidio gates.
Reading boasts the first 'stafue in England of King Edward VII. He appears with his crown on.
Alfred Russel Wallace shares with Darwin the honor of establishing the theory of evolution
Kaiser Wilhelm, while visiting Silesia recently, conducted the band: of his Bresiau cuirassier regiment on two occasions.
A Crude Mexican Law. Notwithstanding the remarkable progress of modern Mexico along civilizcd lines, many ancient crudities survive in laws as well as her customs. As present there are said to be some fifty American raih'oad men incarcerated in filthy Mexican jails awaiting trial or serving sentence for having happened to be working on railroad trains at the time of a wreck accompanied by loss of life. Under an old law of the country, based upon principles handed down from Spanish jurisprudence, a train employe may be subjected to punishment for manslaughter, in a mitigated degree,
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fHE DAILY TRIBUNE, TERRE HAUTE, !ND., TUESDAY, FE8RUARY 3, 1903.
HEADACHE
"My fatheri»d been a gnfferer from alek h»»d»ehs lor the lut twenty-five years and never found any relief until he began taking your Caicarets. Since he has begun taking Cascarets he has never had the headache. .They have entirely cured him. Cascarets do trhat you recommend them to do. I will give yon the privilege of using his name." E.M. Dickson, 1120 Rasiner St., W.Indianapolis, Xnd.
Best for The Bowels'
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good, Do Qood. Never Sicken, Weaken or Grlpo. 10c, 25c, 50c. Never sold in bnlk. The genuine tablet stamped OOO. Guaranteed
to
cure or your money back.
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 598
ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES
even though 110 culpability can be proven against lniu in causing the wreck. The principle involved, unjust as is its enforcement, has abundant precedent to support it in the history of jurisprudence among the older civilizations, and the antiquated law doubtless lias a salutary effect in making railroaders in Mexico more careful.
I11 Mexico legal process is as sluggish as the energies of the people, and it is said some of these American victims have lain in prison for five years without having been brought to trial or given all opportunity to prove their innocence. ,-V
German M. E. Church Revival. The series of meetings for the furtherance of the spiritual life at the above church had an auspicious beginning on last evening. The Rev. Charles Treuschel based his sermon on the words of the Lord as found ill John 14:13, "Whatsoever Ye Shall Ask In My Name, That Will I Do, That the Father May Be Glorified in the Son." Rev. Treusehel preaches again this evening. The public is cordially invited to attend.
Music Box Party.
Miss Willa Barnes of Maple avenue gave a "Music Box" party last night to her friends and entertained those present with music from the big music box drawn from S. Prager's last week. Miss Barnes intends to add all her latest pieces of music and have. many of these entertainments in the future. Miss Barnes' many friends are complimenting her on being so lucky a3 to holij the winning number in the contest.
TRIBUNE "want" ads bring raaulte.
Valentines
VALENTINES FOR EVERY ONE.
LARGEST LINE OF COMIC AND
SENTIMENTAL VALENTINES IN THE CITY- A FULL LINE OF
GAMES OF ALL KINDS. ALSO
FULL LINE OF SPORTING GOODS
-ALL THE LATEST BOOKS AND
MAGAZINES RECEIVED AS SOON
AS PUBLISHED.
L. D. SMITH
She Mystery of a Crac%er
-common soda crackers the kind you-buy in-^papcr b&gs^ get a good deal of handlings no one knows how much or by whom •collect a good deal of dust no one iknows what is in that dust surely nothing you would care, to ^e^at
—with Uneeda Biscuit Vs another story I in a a a a the In-er-seal Package
Y.
with red tfld white seal -the baker puts them
no oneflel*e touches them
•ills ...
•the In-er-seal means hands'^off—dust. out—-good in a to a is it vy-'i&Si-:
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
iiiwiniHPpuiiiviiw^iw
WHAT WE ADVERTISE IS SO
Big
Character.
TERRE HAUTE
Oil and Coal
COMPANY
O'CONNELL & SHEA, Props.
Dealer* in all kinds of Burning and Lubricating Oils, Miners Oils and Linseed Oil, Brazil Block, Lump and
Smithing Coal.
New Phone 490-0ld (black) 251
If you have anything to sell or trade just put a few lines in the Tribune's One Cent a Word Column.
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ESTABLISHED 1856. SOLE AGENTS FOR BUTTERICK'S PATTERNS.
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The finest line of all the newest, best and most fashionable goods for women's wear shown in this section.
WHAT IA/E ADVERTISE IS SO.
New Spring Dress Goods New Wash Silhs New Gloves All the Novelties for "Early Spring of 1903 can be seen the
A few prices on the cheaper ones:
Store. A New goods arriving daily.
Our stock of Valentines has jost arrived. The largest and most complete showing ever seen in this city, embracing every conceivable shape and design from the cheap lace ones' to the Fine, Beautiful Creations of Celluloid and Silk.
The Lace ones usually so^d for lc each. Our price 2 for The Lace ones usually sold for 2c each Our price ... .... .. The Lace ones usually sold for 3c each. Our price (Fancy embossed envelope free with every lace valentine.)
Entirely new line of the popular Comic Valentines. Not the
old stereotype hideous affairs, but new designs of really comic
LOOK! LOOK! A Wringer oq 5fl
Guaranteed for gm 5 years And a Gem Toy Wringer given with each one
$2JJ
A Wringer
Guaranteed for 3 years .. BENCH WRINGER with rolls, same as pay $7 to $8 installment house.. Columbia Washing Machine
:R with I l-in.
i-UM
No. 3 Galvanized Tub
Indigestion Causes Catarrh of tKe Stomach.
For many years it has hpen supposed that Catarrh of the Stomach caused indigestion and dyspepsia, but the truth is exactly the opposite. Indigestion causes catarrh. Repeated attacks of indigestion inflames the mucous membranes lining the stomach and exposes the nerves of the stomach, thus causing the glands tq, secrete mucin instead of the juices of natural digestion. This is called Catarrh of-the Stomach-
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
relieves all inflammation of the mucous membranes lining the stomach, protects the nerves, and cures bad breath, sour risings, a sense of fullness after eating, indigestion, dyspepsia and ail stomach troubles. Kodol Digests What You Eat
Make the Stomach Sweet.
Bottles only. Regular size, $ 1.00 holding 2V4 tiroes the trial size, which sells foe 50 cents. Prepared by E. C. DeWITT & CO., Chlcaco, III.
PERKINS & RANDEL,6th
and
$3.00
»PPWISP"*!^PiP|^
"«qy
First Showing of
New Goods
for
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New Laces New Embroideries New Shoes ,at
Comic or
1C
1C
2c
TO CALIFORNIA AND
SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES SANDIEGO PHOENIX 'PRESCOTT
$3.00
Bdss Washing Machine
$6.00
No. I Galvanized Tub
45c
No. 2 Galvanized Tub....
55c
65c
S. L. Feaner Hdw. Go.
1200 Main street.
0hio-
Painless Extracting 25c
Positively Harmless. No Sore Gums. A GOOD SET OF TEETH
Guarantees to Fit and Give Satisfaction.
Onion Painless Dentists
'y 629% Wabash Ave.
/•fat'
One-Way Seconj Cfass Rates
INTERMEDIATE TERRITORY.
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On sale daily, February 15th to April
30th, 1903. Also cheap one-way and
round trip rates to Western and'
Soifthern points, first and third
Tuesdays'of each month.
E. E. SOUTH, General Agent.
V-P
Yandalia-
TO GREENCASTLE AND RETURN $1.35. On sale February 3 and 4. Good to return till February 5, inclusive.
Knights of Pythias District Meeting.
COLONISTS ONE-WAY SECONDCLASS TICKETS TO CALIFORNIA POINTS, $34.00
On sale February 15 till April 30. To Phoenix and Prescott, Ariz., EJ Paso, Pecos City, Texas, Deming, N. M. ^04^ O"
sa'e
February 15 to April 30.
COLONIST ONE-WAY SECONDCLASS TICKETS TO THE NORTHWEST.
To Billings, Mont., $26. To Helens, Sutte, Anaconda, Mont., $31. To Spokane, Wash., and points on Northern Pacific, $32.50. To Portland, Ore., Tacoma, Seattle and Victoria, B. C.f and many other points, $35.
Tickets on sale February 15 to April 30. Ask about them at Union Station Ticket Office and City Ticket Office, 654 Wabash Ave., Terre Haute, Ind.
GEO. E. FARRINGTON,
