Daily Tribune, Volume 17, Number 70, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 February 1903 — Page 4

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gold lace.

would

THE TRIBUNE

A REPUBLICAN NEWSPAPER.

Published by The Tribune Company at 661 Wabash Av«. Daily, 8unday and Weekly.

Long Distance .Telephone No. 37S—Private Exchange. Citizens' Telephone No. 378.

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

.... .7.7.7.7.7,7.7

.£aJly a-nd Sunday'.' per 'week,' by 'carrier 7.7.7.7.'.'. and Sunday, per-month, by mail -i

Sunday, three months, by mail

a-n?

®unday, six months, by mail

JJally and Sunday, per year, by mail Weekly, per year........ '.

TERRE HAUTE, IND., SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1903.

Daily Average for January

political

Circulation

The English press is practically unanimous in denouncing the Anglo-German alliance and the government is floundering helplessly in the pool into which its own blunders precipitated it. All this talk of war with England is the veriest moonshine for even were the British ministry insane enough to contemplate such a suicidal action the protest of the English people would override its action and preserve the peace.

The word comes from Washington that Indiana has had her share of the political plums and will not participate in the division of patronage incidental to the establishment of the department of commerce and the canal commission. This ia in the nature of sad news to those friends of Mr. Ilolliday who have been expecting his genius and generalship to land

them several splendid berths.

General Miles has been banqueting with the military heroes bf England, exchanging confidences and commiserations. Those 'things which the British heroes suffered from the rude Boers,

General Miles suffered from the rude American newspaper, -which always laughs when it sees a chesty front covered with

The Colorado legislature is preparing to pass a law making •it an offense- to give or receive a tip on a sleeping car. If this law were adopted by all the states the Pullman company might be forced to pay its employes instead of allowing them to bunco and blackmail the public..

There is one thing in favor of Mr. D. M. Parry of Indianapolis. He isn't afraid to speak his sentiments. If he believes that certain measures or certain men are wrong he says so and gives hiss reasons for the faith that is in him.

It is highly probable that the Alaskan boundry commission will return a prompt verdict in favor of the United States but if it does not this country will have no occasion to worry. We shall continue to retain the disputed territory.

The United States was never so well prepared for war as now. Besideg the magnificent standing army she possesses, a call

enlist the services of nearly 120.000 militiamen,

m,aay of whom have seen active sen ice.

The number of bills introduced into the legislature now approaches the six hundred mark.' Fortunately many of them are now vesting quietly in graves that are wide, deep, and ^ell

filled with cement. j^

After fifty years of prohibition in spots Vermont lias voted •to try lpcai option for a «oa»on and will legally tolerate what Us been illegally endured for many yeais.

cent

4 cents 10 cents

...- 45 cents 11.35 $2.70 $5.40 50 cents

8,471

THE SUNDAY BASE BALL BILL.

While there lias been a very considerable protest against the Sunday base ball bill that measure has much to commend it, especially when it is considered that it applies merely• to the large cities of the state and in nowise renders possible the dreaded Sunday game on the commons opposite the village church. It can be taken for granted that a large and active portion of the population of Indiana's large cities will have some Sunday diversion other than the Sabbath school. The thousands of men who work for six days in hot, Emoky and crowded factories are going to have some out of door amusement in the summer season and baseball presents the most healthful, most temperate, and most attractive ot the American recreations. It appeals to a class for which the public park with peanuts, .small children and a brass band holds no joy or allurement and from the moral standpoint it is infinitely preferable to the country picnic with its beer, stupid dance, and noisy hilarity. Sunday baseball in a city 'the size of Terre Haute is removed from anything like proximity to the church or residence district and attracts public attention merely by the crowds coming and going. But then the churches do that—the popular churches, that is. While •The Tribune earnestly bespeaks an orderly, decent Sabbath, it recognizes that £he Puritan Sabbath is distinctively of the past and in its advocacy of Sunday baseball merely commends one of the most innocent amusements of that large class which looks on Sunday as a day of rest and recreation. And after all, are the patrons of the Sunday ball game on a much lower moral plane than those goodly people who on the Sab'bath day put on their black clothes, alpine austerity and sitting on stiff backed hair cloth chairs discuss in low, well modulated voices the short comings of the neighbors?

The proposal to elect the county superintendents by popular vote is not a bad thing from a Republican standpoint, the raid of the Democrats on the trustees at the election in 1900 having delivered the boards of education in many Republican counties into the hands of the enemy. Over and beyohd the

consideration, which is a wholly unworthy one, the legislative bill has many other features to commend it and may well command the serious attention of the legislature. If the new plan would provide more advantages and fewer disadvantages than the present method, it should be adopted.

A Christian Scientist couple of Indianapolis allowed their little child to die of scarlet fever without the attention of a doctor, attempting to pull the little one through by giving it the alleged "treatment" of this new cult. While no one will question the sincerity of these people it can be said without doing violence to reason that they were wholly unfit to have the custody of a child. Christian Science is all right in its place, but its place is not scarlet fever.

Mr! THE WIDE WORLD ROUND.

An honest

The President and the Negro.

-The question is, sht\ll the military power of' the United States be used to force a colored official upon a community against the unanimous protest of its white inhabitants? If this question be answered in the athrriiative, we may liave to face a renewal of the civil SViir. We doubt the expediency of raising such an issue,. We regret to add that there is A trace of vindictiveness' and provocation in the cdurse pursued by the post office department whi£h has compelled the citizens of Indianola to obtain their mail at a post office thirty miles away instead of at another only four miles distant. Conceding, for the sake of argument, that the inhabitants of Indianola had defied Federal authority—with,, is not clear, since no threat of violence was made, and Mrs. Cox seems to have resigned her office voluntarily—we doubt the constitutionality of the measure taken by Mr. Roosevelt. ^Ile could unquestionably, have appointed' another negro to the postoffice at Indianola, and upheld him withj the judicial and military powers of the Federal government. But where doe3 he get the right to deprive an American community of postal facilities the cost of which it helps to defray? We sincerely hope, that the Veal, though unavowed, motive of the attempt to discipline the citizens of Indianola is not, instead of being a somewhat belated lesolve to enforce rigorously the privileges granted to colored persons by the reconstruction amendments of the constitution, a bid for the colored vote in certain northern states where it holds the balance of pbwer. Does Mr. Roosevelt imagine himself to be a truer friend of the colored race than Mr. Booker T. Washington, who has repeatedly advised his brethren to forego ofiice-holding or office-seeking in that section of the country which resents even an approach to negro domination?—Harper's Weekly.

The Growth of Socialism

Some newspapers seem to have entered into a conspiracy of silence for the purpose of hiding from thoughtful persons the ominous significance of the returns exhibiting the growth of Socialism during the last two years. It is no sincere, or farsighted upholder of individualism who acts upon the theory that anything is to be gained by a suppression of unwelcome facts. I. on the face of official statistics, there is spread of proof of the fact that Socialism is likely two years hence to become as formidable a political power in this country as Populism was ten years ago, the Sooner the fact is recognized the better. Eternal vigilance is the price of economical salvation. Individualists cannot conjure the specter of Socialism by shutting their eyes and pretending that they see no signs of it. The startling truth is that, while Eugene V. Debs, the Socialist candidate for president, in 1900, received but 86.000 votes, over 400.000 votes were polled for Socialist candidates for congress at the reccnp general election. If the voting strength of Socialists* shduld increase at the same rate during the next two years—that is to say, at the rate of 500 per cent.—they would be able to cast almost two million votes in November, 1904. In other words, they would be twice as strong as the Populists were in 1892, might carry a few states, and would hold the balance of power in others. What is much more serious, they might tempt one of the great political parties in 1908 to a species of fusion such as Mr. Bryan brought about between the Democratic and Populist partie-s in 1890. It- is not by blinking and pretending to ignore it that the best means of copying with so grave a danger can be devised. -.

A New El Dorado.

If experience shall confirm the reports made by experts of international repulatfoil concerning the richness of a new gold-bearing district in Alaska, we are more .likely to experience a glut than a scarcity of the yellow metal for some time to come. The more confidence is attached to the reports because the public has not been invited to take part in the exploitation of the placer-mines to which we refer, as it is said that they have been purchased by an Anglo-American syndicate, in which the Rothschilds are represented. If it be true that over a very extensive area the gravel yields on an average two dollars in gold to the. cubic yard, there is nothing extravagant in the estimate that something like an annual output of fifty million dollars may be expected for ten years to come. As' the cost of extracting th# gold Jrom the gravel is computed at only sixty cents per cubic yard, the prportion of profit should be large. Nor'ife that the only quarter from which large additions to the annual flow of gold fiom the Klndike and the

South-African

%*. '4tF»*2*1.

Rand may be looked for.

Extensive deposits of gold are known to exist in Mexico, and it is only a question of time when the mining energies of that country, hitherto concentrated uptin silver, will be devoted to an exhaustive search for the yellow metal. The more the world's stock of gold is increased, the more desperate, of course, appear the prospects of bimetalism.

Tree That Dries Up Springs.

At a recent meeting of the National Agricultural Society (of France) M. Lamev reported that the eucalyptus is a dangerous tree in the neighborhood of springs, which it dries up rapidly. "I have seen," said he, "a eucalyptus whose roots had penetrated into the pipe tff a sink. The fountain that supplied the house had been destroyed by the roots of a neighboring eucalyptus tree, which it was necessary to cut down. "At the forestry station of St. Ferdinand, built near a spring that issues from a natural grotto, the roots of the eucalptus trees planted above have penetrated the fissures in the rock and have completely covered the interior of the grotto with a thick velvety layer formed by an innumerable quantity of tiny rootlets, short and tufted, similar jo those by which the ivv clings to walls. "Owing to their energetic absorptive power

these

greedy for water, had also invaded and choked the conduits, so that the outflow from the spring was greatly reduced We may say. then, that although certain species of eucalyptus are valuable aids in drying marshy land, it is prudent to keep from planting them in the neighborhood of springs used for domestic purposes or irrigation.

THE PIRATE'S CORNER.

Many a prominent man has ceased to work at it after the votes were counted.

man

would'rather

A song for the hero who goes to the fray 1 [And strives to shoot heroes who stand his way A song for the mon&rch who sits on the thronfc* And seeks to add fitlier mens lands to his own. A song to the magnate, the prince of finance, Who leaves to his small, struggling rival no chance. Here's a rousing refrain to the strenuous elan

But nobody sings of the peaceable man.

Love htis made

many a

military service.

rootlets,

be underrated than overrated.

The Peaceable Man.

Nobody sings of the peaceable mftn Toiling and doing the best that he can. Pretty good fellow, the neighbors all sftv Ready to smile on the children at play. Doing his duty without laying claim To special rewards as to fortune or fame, Helping the needy to save or to plan Nobody sings of the peaceable man.

young man too nearsighted for

A Mother Goose on the Trust Busters.. The maid was a buster, And around with a duster

A

*f,

.* -v Wa^ raising a fluster A-dusting a bust 7n the hall, But when she had dusted jr

The bust it was busted,

-V The bust it was dust—that was all.

SCoo much reereatipn fails to .recreate.

There has never been a reduction in the wages of sin.

THESUNDAY TRiBUHE, TERRE HAUTE, IjlP.. SUMSftY, FEBBVABY 8, 1903.

2Mb

Publ Jr

1C

Expression.

An action for damages wap commenced in the Vigo superior court against the Terre Haute Electric Co. and Judge O. B. Harris of Sullivan was called as special judge to try the case. The attorneys for the company, on a motion to strike out of the complaint the charge that the running of freight trains by the company over its city lines was unlawful, Mr. Beasley maae a very elaborate argument, contending that the company had aright to run such freight rains by virtue of a statute enacted in 1901. Judge Harris announced from the bench that the statute did not confer upon the company the right to run reight cars without a new grant of authority by the city and yesterday .overruled the motion of the company.

The old franchise does not give the company the right to carry property or freight over its city tracks, and the attorneys of the company have not eon* tended that it does. The first section of the new franchise expressly gives the company the right to carry property over all the streets of the city, thus enlarging the power of the company and permitting it t6 do a general freight business over said streets. The fifth section of the new franchise recites that it is not the intention to enlarge or change the rights, powers or limitations of the company as conferred under the old franchise, but only to quiet the title and extend tne lines. This is a plain falsehood incorporated in the new francnice itself. This lie deceived the council ptd is a plain fraud upon the public.

R. B. STIMSON.

Terre Haute, Feb. 7, 19P3.

SECRETARY KENNEDY'S LETTER

Prepared on the Conditions of the Indiana Coal Field. Following is Secretary Kennedy's weekly letter on the Indiana coal situation, published in the Mine. Workers' Journal: -v ,v "The ^reports from the various locals during the past week indicate that work is pretty good except at a few mines, where they continue to complain of a scarcity of flats. We have not heard of any serious trouble during the past couple of weeks, and it is very fortunate that it is so, as the officers of the district have all been in attendance at the national annual convention, and will likely be absent another week or ten days*. The writer just run down from the convention today in order to advance his own work in the calling of the district annual convention. "Ilie miners' convention that closed in Indianapolis was one of the most, harmonious conventions that the miners' organization ever held. Everybody seemed satisfied with the work of the convention, and important legislation was enacted in the interest of the miners' craft. The scale committee, in submitting the report, confined itself to the most important mat-ers, and made but few demands, namely, an advance in the mining price and an additional advanoe for inside day men, a uniform scale for outside men, a flat differential between pick and machine mining, and that the four states should go on a run of mine basis. Some important resdlutions were adopted. Some changes in the constitution and the officers' salaries raised so as to be somewhere adequate to the duties they have to perform, but as verbdtim report of the conventon will be published it is useless for me to go into details. The operators and miners met on Thursday morning and was called to order by President Mitchell. Committees on credentials and order of business were appointed, and after some protests were made by the Indiana operators against ^ne shot firing bill, now before the Indiana legislature, the convention adjourn ed to meet on Friday morning &t 9 o'colck. The convention met on Friday morning, adopted the reports of committees on credentials, and order of business, and elected permanent officers and

adourne^l

rVl'J,

until 9^'clock this morn-

Marriage Licenses.

Emery Armstrong and Ella Vest. Arthur Anderson and Charlotte Harrison. -Bessie Gardner and'Calvin Ptatt.

ri

As

Editor. Tribune. Sir:—xne ordinance granting a new fifty-year franchise to the Terre Haute Electric company has been passed. The common council has been deceived and the people betrayed. The names that ave responsible, before the half of the fifty years of the new franchise has passed will be infamous. The fact that they have been browbeaten and deceived will hot relieve them from the burden of public execration. They will come in time to despise themselves and curse the day they voted "Aye" in consummation of the most gigantic steal in the history of the city.

-"v

When I say that the council lias been deceived, I speak from the record. About two years ago the Terre Haute Electric company backed a train of its freight cars around the curve at Ninth street, knocked down a ten-year-old boy, cut off one of his arms and all the fingers of the other hand, except the thumb and little finger.

44?

FOB TUESDAY ONLY

Black, white and navy blue Barathea Silk Four-in-hand Ties (48) inches long, will be sold at Foulkes Brothers' on Tuesday only for 26 cents. We purchased 25 dozen of these at a reduced price* These ties are well worth 50 cents while they last you can. have tjiepa for the above price.

FOULKES BROTHERS, Hatters & Furnishers

OLD MAN LOST HIS WATCH AND THEN HE DIDN'T. l-t f£.kr*

WAS MAO WHEN HE FOUND IT

But the Incident Taught Him That He Has Friends and He Made a Short Speech to Them.

Jerre McCarty is one of the oldest employes at the Vandalia shops, where he is a favorite on account of his ready wit and general good nature. He is one of those jolly sons of Erin who always look at the sunny side of things, and when he is sad, all about him ia silent and down-hearted because they know there is something radically wrorg.

Uncle Je^re, as the boys call him, was sad a few days ago, because he lost his watch. It was not the intrinsic value of the*' wstch that made him downhearted, but the fact that it was an heirloom passed to him by honored ancestry that caused him to mourn its loss. His pipe wouldn't stay lit, and nothing that the boys about the shop would- say would bring a smile to the old man's face. When asked the cause of his sorrow he told them that he had lost his watch, a timepiece which he had carried for years.

He had looked high and low for it and as he could find no trace of it he was sure that it had fallen from his pocket into the shovel, unnoticed, and was thrown into the furnace The boys all looked, and when their search failed to unearth the timepiece their sorrow for the faithful old companion was increased, and they resolved among themselves that a subscription paper should be quietly started among them and Uncle Jerre would be presented with a new watch. The paper was started, and all responded liberally and soon an amount sifficient to buy a fine watch was subscribed. But before the time came to pay over the money one of the employes found the missing watch where Jerre had left it. He reported the find to the other employes and they decided to have some fun at the old man's expense. An old watch was secured, and at a time when Jerre was not looking it was slipped into the furnace. About the time the watch began to melt, an employe made an excuse to open one of the furnace doors, and there on the side of the grate bars he saw the melting watch. He called Jerre's attention to it and the ulu man at once recognized the watch as the heirloom whieh he had carried for decades. He lifted it from the fire with his shovel, and as the metal sizzled and popped, he said: "Now, there me lad, isn't that too bad—it's me old watch, sure as you're born, an' I'd know it among a thousand. It's the last keepsake I have from me beloved old father. I shall save the sacred metal—it's the best I can do."

The scheme worked like a charm and the word was' carried back to the man who had the old fireman's watch. It was sent to the jeweler's and was ordered brightened and put in a new case. The jeweler did his work well and when the watch was brought back to the shop it was as bright as a new one—in fact it would have required the eyes of an expert to have distinguished it from a new timepiece. All was ready and when the whistle blew Monday night and the men employed in the shop gathered at the engine room, Jerre was trying to make

xout

the cause of the meeting

when the foreman stepped from the crowd, and adressing Jerre, began a presentation speech. He proceeded to tell the veteran fireman in what high esteem he was held by the boys at the shop, and how they sympathized with him in the loss of his watch, the value of which could not be estimated by dollars and cents It was a pretty speech, and several times the old man choked up as though he was going to cry. 'At the conclusion of the foreman's remarks, Jerre took the proferred case, and as he saw what he thought was a new watch, tears came to his eyes, and coaursed their way ^own his coal-begrimed chee -s.- He attempted to thank the boys but the words choked him, until he could only say, "I thank ye, boys, I can't make a speech." Through the mist of tears which dimmed his eyes the old man failed to discover that the fine case contained his old watch brightened up. There was a season of handshaking and when the fires had all been banked for the night, Jerre started home happy in the knowledge that the boys at the shop were his 'friends. When he had got home he began tellfng his wife how kind the boys had been to him, and confirmed his story by handing her the watch which had been given him. Mrs. McCarty looked at the timepiece tor a moment, and: then she burst into a fit of laugher. "Why, you old goose," said Mrs. McCarty, "Can't you see that it is your old watch brightened up they have, played a joke on you." The old man wiped his eyes and looked again. Sure enough it was hi old watch. Jerre had a notion to get mad, but he thought for a moment and then he realized the joke and the spirit in which it was played, and joined his wife in the laughter. When he met the boys at the shop the next morning he acknowledged that he had been beaten, but said he was glad to get his old watch' baclc, as it was a more acceptable present to to him than a new one would have been.

IMcw Overland Service &

Three thro' trains Chicago to San Francisco every day via the Chicago, Milwaukee. & St. Paul and Union Pacific line. Direct connections for North Pacific Coast points* ...

California is less than three days from Chicago via this route. F. A. MILLER, GeneraLPassenger. Agent,

Chicago.

TRIBUNE "want" ads results.

Dr. Lindley-'s Golden Remedy Cured Her and Will Cure You. Mrs. A. D. Harrell, of Tarboro, Ga., a lady in middle life, who had been subject to epilepsy for many years, suffering many and frequent attacks, and having tried various remedies without success or benefit, began using the Golden Remedy in March of last year and under date of Nov. 17th writes: "I have not had any spells since I began taking your 'Golden Remedy,' only a time after taking the first bottle. This seems most wonderful when we remember the condition I was in at the time of beginning your treatment. Kindly send another bottle of mcdicine as I desire to keep it on hand at all- times."

Very truly yours/ MRS. A. D. HARRELL.

If you, or any friend or member of your family, are subject to epilepsy, confidentially write Dr. Lindley all about it and he will advise you free.

Golden Remedy- is for sale at drug stores, or we will send it anywhere on jceceipt of price—SI.

A FREE BOTTLE of GOLDEN REMEDY (full size) will be sent upon application, once only, to any sufferer. This is done to prove the absolute faith of the makers In their "GOLDEN REMEDY" as a cure for epilepsy that cures to stay cured. WRITE FOR IT TODAY. Address, Golden Cure Co., Hammond, Ind.

VALENTINES FOR EVERY ONE. LARGEST LINE OF COMIC AMD 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

ooooooooooooooooooooooodoo I THE CHURCHES. 5

OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCXXXSOOOu

Mattox Sunday School.

The Jolly Workers club met last Thurs day evening and re-organised by electing new officers. The next meeting will be held next Thursday evening at the home of Miss Rose Keller, the newly elected president.

Miss Elam's class of girls met with her last night and organized a club to be known as "The Royal Circle." Officers were elected and committees appointed to select colors and draft rules and by-laws.

The Evermore club will have a winter picnic next Friday evening, the clu to meet Miss McCoy. Every member of the club is expected to take part in the picnic. The young men are especially invited to be on hand, for such are always needed at picnics and there is assurance that there wilf be a bountiful supply of good things to eat.

Miss Mary McCoy is reported sick at a hospital at Peoria, where she was operated on some time since. Miss McCoy was the first president of the club and every one is anxious for her early recovery.

Miss Faust is recovering from her sickness of typhoid fever. The school pianist, Miss Cliver, is sick with typhoid fever but she is said to be getting along nicely.

Much interest.is being taken in the teachers' meetings which occur every Wednesday evening.

"Damascus, the Oldest City." Dr. Wheeler will give a description of his overland journey on horse-back from Jerusalem, the Holy City, to Damascus', the oldest city Sunday evening, February 8th. 1903, First Baptist church.

Mrs. Ray at Centenary.

Mrs- W, W| Ray, one of the favorite contralto's of the city, will assist the Centenary choir this morning, singing by special request "Calvary," by Rodney. -Z

At First Methodist Church. Preaching by the pastor at 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Glass meeting and Junior League, 9:30 a. m., Sunday school 2:30 p.'m. and Epworth League service 6:30 p. m. A cordial invitation is given to all to these serives./

4'.

s-v„ Tabernacle Church, Morning subject, by Rev. C4. W. Pearce. "The Gospel, Told By Grumblers, Who Never Meant To Tell It." Evening, "The Lord Hath Need of Thee.", .„

West Terre Haute -M.^E. Church. The Pastor will preach as usual at the M. E. church this evening at 7:30 o'clock.-

Central Presbyterian CMurch/ The Rev. Mr. McCaughey, pastor, will preach morning and evening at the Central Presbyterian church.

Central Christian Church. Preaching by the pasto'r Rev. L. E. Sellers, at 10:4p a. pi. and,7:30 p. m. In the evening Mr. Sellers' will deliver the last of a series of sermons on "The Evolution 0f Character.'^ The sermon

DRIVING GLOVES

oo

IN FURS AND BUCKSKIN

75 CENTS, $1.00 $1.25, $1.50

You Can

Put Your Clothes In Our TrunKs

with the assurance that you aro getting the best that man can make or your money cap buy.

OUR$3TRUNK

exceptionally good valao for the money better ones, $5, $6, $8, $10, $1 up to $25. People who know how and where to buy Trunks, Bags, Suit Cases, Telescopes, etc,, come to us. We nave never disappointed them.

PETER MILLER

No. 22 South Sixih Street. Sign of Dapple Gray Horse.

GLOBE-WERNICKE "ELASTIC" CABINET

Keeps all business papers and records Instantly accessible. And it gro^s with your business. It's a system of units.

J. R. DUNCAN & CO.,

STATIONERS. 660-662 Main St.

Imported

Switzer, BricK and Limburger, and Pure Cream

Cheese.

CHAS. T. BAKER

Southwest Cor. Fourteenth ^ndpPoplar.

Arthur Gilbert

New Phone 859. I

COR. TWELFTH AND CRAWFORD.

NEW COAL OFFICE

"Mammoth Briar Hill Coal"

ALSO BLOCK AND ANTHRACITE COALS.

Quality, Weight and Prompt Delivery Guaranteed.

"The Fellow You Can't Forget."

J. C. RUTHERFORD,

RACTICAL UBLIC

4 RINTER,

New Phone 948. 665 Main 8t

Next floor to Tribune.

COALYanTFEED

From W. L. Holdaway, 1321 Main

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.

Citizens- Phone 33. Old 877L

ARTHUR GRIMES

J.

E N I S T,s

Crown and Bridge Work a Specialty, PAINLES3 EXTRACTION. Sixth and Main. Over McKeen's Bank.

The Health

Office

"COMMISSION ROOM IR

ssi

AL. MYERS, Proo ,,,#503 Main St.

will be illustrated in particular from the life of Abraham Lincoln. Mr. LeRoy St. John, the '.young baritone, will sing two numbers. A large chorus will lead in the hymn singing. These special sermons have created a wide interest and the large auditorium will doubtless be crowded for the last sermon of' the series.

1