Daily Tribune, Volume 17, Number 69, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 February 1903 — Page 4

THE TRIBUNE

narrow margins.

on the gallows.

A REPUBLICAN NEWSPAPER.

Published by The Tribune Company at 661 Wabash A.V«. Daily, Sunday and Weekly.

Long Distance Telephone No. 378—Private Exchange. Citizens' Telephone No. 378.

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

Daily .....

Daily and Sunday, per. week, by carrier Daily and Sunday, per month," by mail. Daily and Sunday, three months, by mail .... Daily and Sunday, six months, by mail Daily and Sunday, per year, by mail Weekly, per year

ON

TERRE HAUTE, IND., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1903.

Daily Average for January

Circulation

THE electric company concession. As was generally expected the city council last night ratified the report of- the committee delegated to consider the agreement between the board of public works and the lerre Haute Elective company. Under the terms the electric company comes into possession of a very valuable franchise and Terre Haute obtains therefor a large sum of money and the promise of an early developement of the inter-urban system, even more desirable than the cash in hand. All things considered, perhaps, Terre Haute fares as well as might have been

expected—-certainly

much better than if the first olier of the

company'had not been so vigorously protested and yet The Tribune cannot help feeling that it might have done even better if the board of public works and the council had taken a determined stand for a better price for the splendid concession. It was worth more money and more money should have been paid for it. At any rate no harm could have come of the experiment of indulging in a little \ankee dickering, especially in view of the fact that the electric company set an illustrious example in this regard. The Tribune believes that had a dogged stand for $100,000 been made, that consideration would have been paid. Upon the whole, ho\ve\ er, the city can congratulate herself that she came off as well as she did. A splendid inter-urban railway system is assured and the money consideration will be so paid that the piesent council will not have an opportunity to get at the whole bunch It might have been very much worse.

THE HOBO PARK DEAL.

In spite of public protestation, in spite of the knowledge that the public believed the thing a steal, in spite of everything that should have appealed to reason and self respect, the council has perpetrated the Beach park purchase. It means that in order to obtain a miserable little plat of ground wholly unfitted for park purposes this precious' city administration of ours has saddled on lerre Haute an-obli-gation which will prevent for a long time the purchftsl of a real park—a park breathing somewhat of grass and the great woods. Tlie money that should have been spent for the whole people goes to buy a narrow neck of ground along the street car tracks, every inch of which is within plain sight and sound of the traffic of the city's principal thoroughfare. As a park it will be a joke. As a monument to the perfidy of a corrupt city council it will endure as a shining success.

By doing what no one ever thought he would do, Mr. Adpick's has piaced the opposition faction of the Delaware Republicans in an embarrassing position. Their old cry of "anybody but Addicks" is now answered and it is up to them to take the medicine. A refusal to enter a caucus with Addicks eliminated compromises them seriously with the country and agreement to so act places them in the hands of their deadly enemies. Addicks has shown himself a master politician and commands the admiration even of those who abominate liis

peculiar methods.

A dispatch from Greencastle states that basketball is to be abolished as a sport for the Depainv co-eds because a lot of male students attended one of the games, "looked on with lustful eyes and talked." Why didn't the |pculty bar men from the games and allow the play to continue? The action suggests that of 'the daft laddie who cut off his hand with a hatchet because his finger-nails were dirty.

For several years past it has been customary to refer to J. Edward Addicks as "the man who split the Republican party in Delaware." Still it must be remembered that since Mr. Addicks entered polities in that state the Republicans have been uniformly and signally victorious at the polls, whereas in previous years they won only semi-occasionally and then on

The defeat oif the Luhring Bill in the lower house of the legislature evidently voices the sentiment of the people of Indiana on th Nicholson Law. It is safe to say that every man who voted on that question of indefinite postponement bad licard from his beloved constituents.

Terre Haute ought to have had more money for that electric company concession, but with the present city council we may count ourselves lucky that a subsidy was not granted to the company for the purpose of inducing it to do what it was willing to pay handsomely to do.

There is nothing surprising in the report that Brigham Young's bloody grandson has to be dragged whimpering to the court room to face the charge against him. A hyena hearted murderer "usually cringes at his trial and collapses

The vaccination methods of Indianapolis might well be applied to Terre llaute. The smallpox season will not bet over until the last of April and there is yet time for this city to suffer materially.

'flie bill to pension ex-slaves, recently introduced into the United States senate, need hardly excite the tax payers. 'Tis but the revival of an ancient joke.

The Indianapolis Su:n reports that Janitor Kreitenstein has been a gloomy and moody man ever since the upper bill got mixed up with the passive voice.

Dr. Alexander's trial is hardly proving a good advertise*

£ent for the Indiana iftfcdical colleges.

Hi

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1 cent

.......4 cents ......10 cents 45 cents $1.36 $2.70 $5.40 50 cents

8,471

and

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THE WIDE WORLD ROUND.

The Causes of the Goal Famine.

The causes of the coal famine by which the larger cities on or -.pgar Atlantic $oast have been afflicted are less obscure than they were last week, but it is to be hoped that they will be made the subject of a searching inquiry at the hands of the Pennsylvania legislature. It is certain that the Reading company is striving to make the largest delivery of anthracite in its power, and that it has faithfully kept its promise to keep down the retail price of all the output from its own mines $0.75 per ton. All those consumers, on the other hand, who are obliged to reply on anthracite mined by individual operators have had to pay very much higher prices. It'now {urns out that the supply of anthracite would be ample if the normal consumers of that combustible were not now subjected to competition on the part of manufacturers who ordinarily use bituminous coal. It is the relative dearth of bituminous coal in the seaboard cities which is now at the root of'the trouble. Who is to blame for this dearth? Ihe bituminous, operators assert that they could produce from two four times as. much cal as they now do if the Pennsylvania railway lines would haul it. The railway officials on their part, say that they have neither cars nor locomotives enough to haul sfriy more coal than they now do. Ihey are suffering, they say, from a general freight congestion, and cannot be expected to devote the whole of their rolling-stock to the transportation of bituminous coal. Whether this explanatin is well founded is just one of the questions upon which light might be cast by a legislative inquiry. One thing seems certain, namely, that bituminous coal, usually worthin seaboard cities three dollars or four dollars per ton, retail, is not now selling at seven dollars to nine dollars a ton because there is a demand for it on the part of householders, who would prefer anthracite. On the contrary, it is manufacturers who, unable to obtain their normal supplies of bituminous coal, are now buying the small sizes^ of^ anthracite formerly used in private houses. The responsibility for the present inordinate prices of fuel

seems

bituminous operators and the Pennsylvania railway.

to lie between the

The German Navy and Our Own.

Germany has twenty-two battle-ships in service where the United States has ten. She is building eight to our ten. She has four armored cruisers where we have two, but she is building only three where we are building nine. In protected cruisers she has nineteen to our fourteen, and is building three •to our six. In unprotected cruisers she has twenty to our six. In coast defenders she has eleven to our fifteen—ours are of the monitor type—and is building no more, while we are constructing four. She has something like one hundred and forty torpedo-boats to our thirty-two, but these vessels are already out of date, and neither country is building any more. She has thirty torpedo-destroyers to our twenty. We have eight submarines to none for Germany. Altogether she has about two hundred and seventy-five war-ships to our one hundred and forty, but inasmuch as she has over one hundred more torpedo-boats than we have—vessels that are useless the present disparagement between the natives ofvtlie two countries is not so great as the total figures would indicate.

One of the latest of the German battle-ships has just been launched. It represents the new type. It is not as large as the more rfecent of American battle-ships, but is compact and of the bulldog order. Its name is the Braunschweig. It is 308.62 feec long, 73.80 feet wide, 25.10 feet draught. It displaces 13,200 tons, as against about 16,000 tons of the newer English and Arnerican battle-ship. It lias a speed of eighteen knots an hour, which is about the average required of the largest vessels of this class. The new battle-ship carries 660 officers and men.

The Social Side of the Rhodes Scholarships. Dr. George Parkin, of Toronto, who represents the Rhodes scholarships trustees, is working systematically to get the best advice he can in the matter of assigning theh American schollarships. On anuary 23 he met in Boston some of.the college presidents and school principals of northern New England and got their views on January 24, in Cambridge, he met another company of educators, from southern New England, and talked with them. It will be remembered that under Mr. Rhode's will there are to be two scholars, from each American state and territory. Dr. Parkin said the plan was to select one of them in the spring of 1904 to go to Oxford in that year, and another in 1905, but none in 1906. In 1907 the group first chosen would have finished their three vears' course,' and another squad would be selected to fill their places. The candidates, Dr. Parkin said, must be

ceptable to Oxford, and must pay rather more attention to social requirements than students always do in American universities. The inference from that is that if a thrifty American had undertaken to live at Oxfoi'd on five hundred dollars a year and save the rest of his fifteen hundred-dollar income, Mr. Rliodes's purpose would be felt to be thwarted,

Oxford would disapprove.

London Traffic.

London iS frightfully antiquated in its traffic and the Parisian, the Dubliner or the New Yorker is stirred to amazement when he sees tne

people

THE PIRATE'S CORNER.

There is not enough justice in the world to prevent the right from occasionally getting left.

Many domestic breaches are cause by the controversy as to who has the better right to wear them.

The Good Old Show.

What has become of the good old show That thrived in our boyhood days— The good old play of the long ago,

With its blood and thunder ways? What has become of the heroine Who leaped o'er a chasm deep To cscalpe* her %es—-or who bravely climbed 1'}"""

The side of a pasteboard steep?

What has become of the hero who, A gun in each steady hand, Defied the villain—his whole gang, too—

And murdered the wicked band?

What has become of the mother's prayer

That the deep dyed scoundrel heard, And the heart reformed by the chirping song ""j Of an automatic bird

Oh! that was the show that reached my heart! When swords and pistols and chairs Were hauled about for the fight to start,

I yelled like a fiend, upstairs! Often I wept for the lady fair And her lover's awful plight, Till some one near me would yell: "Say, you!

Dry up! They'll come out all right!"

Ah! if the villain had conquered—woe! Aye, woe to the playhouse tliep! vW« chaps upstairs ha& agreed to go

And never come back again! But somehow or other it all canie riglTt— "A narrow escape 'twgs, though, Wlien villains plotted ferocious crime

In the days of the good old show.

majesty of the law is^t it with the majestic bear-i

ing of ti& youftfu)liwyst he J» wwWWTF?'

speech. js I r'-V A wwfl seldom realises how mjwjh lie can't do until b® triea.

ac­

contentedly accepting condi­

tions which prevail in no other big city. We think the great railway companies are largely to blame for the congestion of traffic. The links between the lines north and south of the

Thames,

and east and west also, are very defective, and

the result is that a huge cross-city goods traffic results.

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DAILY TRIBUNE,

TERRE

HAUTE, IND., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY

ublic V.5 Expression.

February 4th, 1903.

To the Editor of The Tribune: You say in this evening's-Tribune that there will be sore spots no matter what the legislature does with the bill proposed by the brewers to prevent saloons from being kept out of communities that have no use for them. There is no occasion for anyone feeling sore if the law is left just as it is. The people in the townships that are becoming dry will not object, and those in townships that want saloons can have them. The brewers have no kick coming. The present law is a modification of the original Nicholson bill, amended to suit the brewers and their friends. It is practically their iaw. It is safe to say that the present law is satisfactory to those who take advantage of its provisions, and they constitute a majority of the voters in? a large number of the townships. The brewers admit by their action tfy*t at least a majority of the townships will take advantage of it. It will be a sorry day for the Republican, party in Indiana when a Republican legislature turns down a majority of the voters for a handful of brewers, most of whom are Democrats.

E. M. G.

CHEMISTRY AND COLOR.

The Intimate Relation Between Coal Tar and tne "Pot Boiier." "Art colors, you know," the shopman says, and a wan smile creeps' over ouriaces at the invocation of a sacred name in connectiOTi witn the catchpenny methods Ot the modern "emporium." But, nevertheless, we must be "grateful to the chemist for the beautiful colors he- has •Drought into our everyday life. Love of color is a birthday gitt of" the human race. Crude sjnd unlettered it may be, according with the elemental life of the child and the savage, but assuredly a constant factor in self-expression, from the bead necklace of the African native to the subtleties of a Turner from the pale radiancy of the pearl to the gorgeous intricacies of a coronation robe.

Today our dressed and furniture and carpets and earthenware, our street hoardings, our stage scenery, glow with rich, soft hues which vie with foliage in the autumn sun, or the fairy palaces of cloudland. And these things are so because the chemist has not only discovered a vast range of hitherto unsuspected colors in the common things about us, but also how to make these colors cheap. Even the toilet soap in the bathroom and the cakes and jellies at out Christmas feast'are made radSant by this wonderful, skill.

Every craft and manufacture gains enormously by a knowledge of colors and their uses, and the government of New South Wales has wisely resolved to add to its permanent museum at Sydney a collection of colors, and chemicals used in color-making, by which the dyes and pigments for every pui*pose may be known and selected. The collection has been made in London by Mr. J. Barton-Faith-full, and will be shipped on Wednesday. On Saturday a representative of the Daily News went over this museum of color at Mr. Barton-Faithfull's laboratories, at Oppidans road, Primrose Hill.

The mere statement that the collection contributed by the leading manufacturers in England and elsewhere, includes 2,000 specimens of color, is eloquent of the resources of modern science. Many of these colors, when used as dyes, yield a dozen or twenty beautiful shades, and the museum shows each of these shades in- the dyeing of silk, wool, cotton, leather, and other fabrics, gives the proportion of dye for each shade, the cost, the name of the mainufacturer, and the Australian agent Oi. course, all this will be of immense service in New South Wales, where wool fat for soap-making and other "raw materials" only need technical knowledge and skill to enable them to furnish employment to industry on the spot, instead of being sent thousands of miles away to be worked upon.

The greatest and most brilliant series of colors at present on the market is that of the anilines and alizarines made from -coal tar, the primary products for which have been presented to the ga,s-light and coke company.' The clear, transparent, water-like aniline produces almost every color of the rainbow. But there are also pigments produced from metallic substances, from animal matter, and from vegetable extracts.

One of the most important questions relating to colors is that of their permanence. Of course, the colors, in Mr. Bar-ton-Faithfull's collection vary greatly in 'this respect. The artist's palette of enduring colors is st}ll. almost as limited as ever. Indeed, the tendency...is for more and more colors to turn out unreliable.

We have Egyptian paintings on earthenware and stone which have lasted thousands of years and kept as bright as ever, but these depend on two or three primary colors only. The work of a few of the old Italian painters has preserved its brilliance through centuries, but of most old pictures it must be sadly confessed! that they have greatly faded, and that while the expert writes columns about richness of tint the common eyes see only a variegated coffee color.

A hundred years ago a good many English painters were quite reckless about the way in which their effects were produced and butter instead of oil, liquorice and tobacco-juice for pigments, were among the materials used. What wonderthat we now look in vain for the beauty which all admired at the time?

But all colors are not required for lasting uses. The brilliant carmine which adorns the cheek of beauty on the stage, a product of the cochineal insect, does not last long, and is not needed long. The gorgeous posters on our street hoardings could only be produced by the brilliant colors made from coal tar, which quickly fade away. Even the shades of our colored dresses we do not want to preserve forever.

A color is sometimes permanent in one set of conditions and not in another. Vermillion—the red oxide of quicksilverlasts well in an oil painting under mastic varnish, but iropld SO is Msed as paint for a pillar boic in the sulphurous air of London.

So our pillar boxes, mail vans and fire fUSines are painted with a vermillion costing less than a fifth of the money, made or orange lead dyed to a bright scarlet, with a para or aze red derived ffQH) cpal tar.

Aytigis deslripg a F|d Will WfhetTmes use red lead pigment dyed in tfhis way, and the dye wilKfadte, leaving gmy the dull color of tije red lead. Jndeeo.' .paint* 4 a of "pot boilers" desiring deeo,' .$aint«

7, 1&13.

Grip is an infectious disease which attacks weak and strong alike, especially if the bloodis sluggish, and generally involving the mucous membrane of the air passages from the nostrils down to and including the lungs. Serious complications are liable to develop in the course of the disease, as grip settles in the weakest part of the system, sometimes the kidneys, the brain, the stomach or tha heart, resulting often in heart failure,but the most dreaded of all is when, it settles in thelungs. Consumption issureto follow and cer«, tain death if prompt action is not taken and Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey administered.<p></p>CURED

The fatalities resulting from this disease within the past few years have sufficiently aroused doctors to the importance of giving the disease the closest investigation.

Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey is the only absolute cure for grip, influenza, asthma, bron-" chitis, catarrh, consumption and all diseases of the throat and lungs it prevents compifcations and bad after-effects that grip so often leaves in the system. Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey not only kills the germs, but it. stimulates the blood, aids digestion and tones the action of the heart.

The voluntary testimony received from thousands Of our grateful patients is proof positive that Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey :s the greatest known remedy for the grip and all diseases of the throat and lungs and all wasting diseases from whatever causes. Doctors, ministers, public speakers andanumber of the leading temperance women praise Duffy's Pure Malt Vvhiskey for the great good it has accomplished in saving iives.

Duffy's

Dr. Willard H. Morse, the eminent practitioner and world-renowned therapeutist, after careful study of grip in all its stages, says: "Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey is the only absolute cure for the grip it builds up the system and enables it to throw off the grip germs and prevents bad after-effects, because it is chemically pure and contains great medicinal properties."

PREVENTED GRIP. Burlington, Vt., Jan. 21,1902.

Gentlemen—I consider it no more than your due to tell you that the use of your whiskey has prevented me from having the dread disease, the grip, this winter. Everybody else on my street has had it. I am not over and above healthy, and was afraid I might be taken down with the grip but I took a moderate amount of Duffy's Malt Whiskey each day and never enjoyed better health in my life. My wife has also derived much benefit from its use.

Truly yours, A. A. YOUNG, Mgr., Young's Information Agency. CONSUMPTION CURED. Sirs—After being given up by several of our best physicians, having throat and lung trouble, and pronounced a case of incurable consumption, my sister started the use of your Pure Malt Whiskey. She has taken

rich effects will often draw on the amazing range of aniline and alizarine colors, either as pigments themselves, or to stain or dye other colors of lower tone.

Advertising as a Trade Factor. Advertising is without doubt the most powerful foirce that -can be employed in the acquisition of trade, as Press and Printer maintains. It is the battering ram that pushes through the solid wall of competition and launches y^ods in the place once occupied by the old competitor, whose mistaken notion that "long years of business" and "the reputation of the firm" were a sufficient safeguard agadnst the onslaught of newer, but more progressive enterprises.

Judicious advertising has forced unknown goods into the hands of unwilling dealers and created a demand with the consumer that no trade combination price-cutting or anything else could impair. A business built-upon this basis is strong, highly satisfactory and independent. Old advertisers, wlio halve tested the full strength of publicity and know its value, appreciate best the possibilities

or

advertising and comprehend

the iinmetlsfr and unlimited scope of the field of operation. Advertising is an absolutely indispensable necessity in thousands of businesses, many of which could not even exist without it. It is a mighty power, and, properly wielded, yields greater and more satisfactory returns than any other one thing. There is no business so small or so large, so poor or so rich- that cannot in some form employ advertising with a fair profit.

Advertising requires the same intelligent thought and consideration that an evenly balanced business man gives to eveiry detail of his own business, yet comparatively few business men treat the subject of advertising with the- consideration due to so important and necessary a selling fa' in this ago of progress and competition.

It takes a. man of good nerve and backbone to become a general advefrtiser, because at best it requires an investment of money and time before the "crumbs thrown upon the waters conje back," and timid men are apt to lose courage or become doubtful at just the time when the greatest effort and determination is required.

Low Rates To California.

Via. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul and Union Pacific line. February 15 to April 30, 1903.

Only $33 Chicago to San Francissco, Los Angeles and many other California points. One way, second-class, colonist tickcts#

Will be glad to send you additional information. F. A. MILLER, General Passenger Agent,

Chicago.

"1585, June, I thought it. 1 sawed i* May 1588, nailed it. I carved it. William Shakespeare," is

the

inscription on a

small oak cupboard about to be sold by auction at Snitterfield, near Stratford-on-Xvon

Foley's Honey and Tar is best for croUiP md whooping cou^h. contains no opiates, and cures qiiickly. Careful mothers ke^p it in the house. All draggists.

GRIP, C0LDS. CATARRH

Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey Cures Grip, Colds, Catarrh, Consumption, Malaria, Bronchitis, Asthma and All Diseases of the Thrqat and Lungs.

three bottles, and is so much improved in strength that we are all feeling quite hopeful. Mrs. BELL SHAUL, Charlotte, Mich.

Nov. 8,1902. GRIP CURED AT SEVENTY. Gentlemen—I take pleasure in informing you that I have been cured of a severe attack

(§5

Write

Under no circumstances will I accept a case I cannot cure. all.-

Call

or write today.

DR. S, H.

WARD,

TOOLS

TOOLS

HAMMERS, HATCHETS, and all

HAMMERS, HATCHETS, and all

KNOCKING TOOLS.

CHISELS

Whiskey

^fBATTEg

KNOCKING TOOLS.

CHISELS

Cold, Corner, Firmer, Sockets, Framing, etc.

Cold, Corner, Firmer, Sockets, Framing, etc.

WRENCHES

WRENCHES

Alligator, Coes, Pipe and Monkey.

Alligator, Coes, Pipe and Monkey.

STARJET'S TOOLS A SPECIALTY.

STARJET'S TOOLS A SPECIALTY.

Freitag, Weinhardt & Co.,

Office: Sixth ud Wabash

DR. WEAVER SPECIALIST

E A S E S I E I S E A S E S O E

EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT

Office Hours: 9«I2 A. M. 3»$ P.M. 7*1 P«M.

(OTS'r5«"c"f)

TRY A TRIBUNE "WANT" A&.

sfol"

of grip by using your Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey. My age is 70 years, Mrs. ELIZA H. REAM, 711 Cherry St.,

Reading, Pa., Dec. 11,1902.

CURED THREE GRIP VICTIMS. Gentlemen—My family had La Grippe." I pulled three of them through with Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey and milk.

WILLIAM H. YATES, Rochester, Mich., Nov. 3,1902.

CAUTION.—When you ask for Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey be sure you get the genuine. Unscrupulous dealers, mindful of the excellence of this preparation, will try to sell you cheap imitations, and so-called Malt whiskey substitutes, which are put on the market for profit only, and which, far from relieving the sick, are positively harmful. Demand "Duffy's" and be sure you getit. It is the only absolutely pure malt whiskey which contains medicinal, healthgiving qualities. Look for the trade-mark,

The Old Chemist," on the label. It is the only whiskey recognized by the government as a medicine. This is a guarantee. The genuine at all druggists and

gooklet

rocers, or direct, $1.00 a bottle. Medical free. Duffy Malt Whiskey Company, Rochester, N. Y.

Ward,

The Reliable Specialist, treats all chronic, nervous, blood, skin, special and private diseases of men and women. Ladies —All diseajes peculiar to your sex successfully treated. You may cosult me in confidence, no matter what the trouble ,may bev Young Men who suffer from: th'e.fearful effjpets of self-abuse an aversion-to the spciety of Jadies, despondency, loss of energy, failing Memory, nervousness palpitation of the heart, w§4k back, stunted development, increasing nervous exhaustion and wretched or lascivious dreams, you may :be in the first stage, but are fast approaching the last. Do not let false pride or sham modesty prevent you from obtaining relief now.

Mirtriio Aaed Men Who are prematurely old as a result of indiscretion, or excess of later years who are troubled with too frequent evacuations of the bladder, and by finding a milky or ropy sediment in the urine and on account of this unnatural waste of vitality are unfit for business or marriage, you can positively ~be restored to manly vigor. Old Men who as a result of overwork, business cares, or imprudence in former vears now suffer frbm, partial or complete impotency, or some distressing bladder trouble. 'All may find immediate relief-many may be radically cured. Varicocele cured forever in ten days by our special treatment no detention from your daily work.

if living out of the city. All business stictly confidential. Only curable cases taken. Examination and consultation free.

SPECIAL NOTE.

Consultation free to

The Reliable Specialist.

Rooms 2J 27, 28 Beach Block, northeast corner Sixth and Ohio streeets, Terre Haute, Ind'. Office Hours: 9 a. m., 12, 2, 5 p. m., 7 and 8 p. m.

TOOLS

TOOLS

BATTERIES WET OR DRY. ELECTRIC BELLS ,.

BATTERIES WET OR DRY. ELECTRIC BELLS ,.

—AND—

—AND—

PUSH BUTTONS. WIRE

PUSH BUTTONS. WIRE

6 0

6 0

YOU CAN INSTALL A BELL IN YOUR HOUSE, BARN, CHICKEN HOUSE YOURSELF.

YOU CAN INSTALL A BELL IN YOUR HOUSE, BARN, CHICKEN HOUSE YOURSELF.

J* it

WiiM A

-.it

S

jTENTH YEAR. IN TERRE HAUTE ^rli

!.W'iJ3

Terte Haute, Ind**

1