Daily Tribune, Volume 17, Number 72, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 10 February 1903 — Page 3
!F YOU HAVE
Do not prolong your suffering by resorting to liniments, plasters, "cureall" medicines, etc. There is but one sure remedy and that's
Sold by all Druggists.
Pri 1.00, 01 Six Bo lies for 3)5.1 O.
DENIAL BY W. H. FLOYD
SAYS Y. M. C. A. GYM FIRE TRAP.
IS NOT A
FIRE ESCAPES TO BE BUILT
Officials of Association Are Little Alarmed Over the Complaint Made.
The charges of Prof. Robert Earhardt of the Rose Polytechnic that the new Y. M. C. A. gymnasium was a "veritable firetrap"' have been vigorously denied by W. H. Floyd, the architect who
planned and superintended construction who have already underwritten the first of the luiildin Air. Floyd has written the following letter regarding the charges: "It is a matter of great regret that "Prof. Earliardt did not communicate with the board of directors before filing his complaint against the Y. M. ('. A. before the board of public safety. Had he done so he would have found no cause for his hasty ill-judged and unjust action. "ft is a strange sort of logic that leads a man to tile a complaint against his neighbor and then write him a letter telling him he held
no
animosity against.
Jiini. "I have no objections to Air. Earhardt's criticism, but I feel that he might have conveyed it in a more friendly way. The building is rated lower than it ever was before by the insurance inspector. "Had Air. Earhardt inquired he would have found out that, the builders" contract called for another egress from the running track than the one named by him as having two turns. It has one urn, however, instead of two. There will be two fire escapes put in and these would have been in place by the 1"2 if possible, regardless of Air. Earhardt's action. "The delays in construction have been great and the things most needed have been done first. It all the seats in the running track were filled, there would be '27-) people. There is 110 gallery as mentioned by .Mr. Earhardt. The main tloor in the gymnasium is eight feet: from the street level. It has a broad stairway and six large windows. The distance from it to the floor of the main building is 4 feet and 10 inches. "The entire building is as near fire proof as any in the city. There are only brick, tile, eonercte. marble and iron in fbe basement or first lloor. The gymnasium floor is two and a half inches thick and the girders are of wood and steel. Thi* lloor will not burn unless heated from lire in some other building as was shown when the pile of oily rags, left c". it. bv the painters, which took fire. •'!rml through the door without setting "re 1o it. "As architect I will take pleasure in «!o\vm«* the building both to the board public s-'fety and to the public and may iu.l^c for themselves a to the truth of mv statements. Your=. truly. "\V. II. FLOYD. ".\ reinfect."
Members of the V. AL C. A. and the association officials are little worried about the charges as they claim llTere is little ground on which the trouble was stirred up. The gymnasium is not yet complete rind when it is finished two fire escapes will be on the exterior of the building, leading from the balcony. Secretary .Jamison says lie regrets that the complaint was made at the time if. was and to the board of safety, while his attention had never been called to it by Prof. Earhart.
Eire Chief James Daugherty ir.-'pert-ihe new Y. At. ('. A. gymnasium this afternoon and after a thorough investigation of the charges made by Prof. Ear hardt stated that, there was no need of a scare about the building. Tie said that fire escapes would be all right, but t'liat it was not necessary to place them on 1he building unless the association cared to make the people feel doubly sate.. The ladders are now being made by the Up-to-date Manufacturing company and will be ready for service part of the week.
bv the latter
Peyton Was Turned Loose. James Pevton. who was fined $10 and costs by Justice Brown, yesterday morning, on conviction of wife desertion, was released from jail this morning on his •promise to return to his home, and provide for his family. After Peyton had been sent to jail his wife relented and this morning, bright and early was at the justice's olTice, pleading for the liberty of her husband. The justice thought that if he would keep his promise and urtnide forJiis family it would be much better than to keep him in jail at the expense of the county and so turned him loose.
Big Money for the Transvaal. The mails give a more accurate idea of the financial schemes of Air. Chamberlain mr the benefit of the new South African "colonies" than was giver.- in the brief jispatches by cable. Th?rc is to be a ijnun of $175*000,00 based 011 the securiof the assets of the Transvaal and
In Terrc Haute alone more than 2.000 astounding1 cures are to its credit. More arc added daily to this glorious record. It cures all forms of rheumatism to stay cured.
WILL CURE YOU It contains no strong or injurious drugs andi is absoharmless.
mm-lutely
ABBOTT BROS. CO.
4' 7-429
IVarborn sti eer.. Cnic^ffo
Orange Iliver colonies and guaranteed by 1 he 1'iitish government. This money is to be applied to paying the existing debts of these colonies, buying up their railways, building new railways providing irrigation canals and other needed public works ami further land settlement.. The idea- is to get money for the I rapid development of the country in the next few years, in the belief that rapid development and growing wealth will put an end to discontent and disloyally. Hot!-, colonies arc to share in these benefits. In consideration of war services and this loan of .British credit, a sum of $1.)0,000.00( is to lind its way from the Transvaal into the British treas ury at London as part payment of the war debt. This is spoken as a "war contribution." and was agreed to by the mining magnates of Johannesburg,
$.")0.000.000. There are to be three installments in as many years, each of $.0.00t!.0(), and the whole "is to be treated." says Air. Chamberlain, "as a •war debt, secured on the assets of the Transvaal." The Transvaal is to issue $1 oO.OlXl.OOO of bonds, and the mining magnates will see that the London government gets the money.
T11
ef
fect the two colonies will have a total debt of $o'25.000.0()0 of which sum $150.000.000 will bo due to a repayment of part of the cost of the war. contributed wholly bv the mining interests.
THREE CASES FILED
Divorce Litigation Given an Impetus With the Break of the Lull in the Matrimonial Market.
The break in the nine day lull in the matrimonial market is followed by a fresh stir in divorce litigation, and three cases were tiled late yesterday afternoon, and it begins to look that marriage and divorce matters rise and fall together, like Mr. Bryan would have the price of silver and wheat. The cases filed yesterday, save one. were on the common statutory grounds. The one tiled by Richard Mason, against his wit'n, Ivy Mason, besides the usual clause of cruel and inhuman treatment, alleges that his wife has been guilty ot' adultery, but does not name a co-respondent. They were mar ried in September. 1899, and lived together until May. 1901. Caldwell & Hughes are attorneys for plaintiff.
Efrie M. Allen, through her attorney. F. F. Blankenbaker. has begun suit in the superior court against her husband. Marion -Allen, asking a decree of divorce
011
the ground of cruel and inhuman treat ment and failure to provide. She also alleges abandonment. They were married in July. IfiOl, and lived together until last November. She asks for the care and custody of their ten-months' old child.
Through her attorneys, Hughes & Caldwell. Yida McAllister has begun suit against her husband, John W. McAllister, asking for a divorce on the ground of cruel and inhuman treatment. She alleges that defendant struck and beat her.
MRS. HAMMOND WAS FINED
Woman Charged With Stealing a Purse Was Convicted of Intoxication —Case Being h.. jstigated
Mrs. Alice Hammond, the woman arrested yesterday afternoon, suspected of having stolen a purse containing $S from Mrs. Sleith, who conducts a boarding house at No. 129 North Ninth street, was tried in the city court this morning on a charge of drunkenness and was fined $1 and costs and sent to jail in default of payment. Mrs. Sleith says^hat the Hammond woman was seen ransacking the room from where the purse was taken, and that she is sure that she got it. She and the other women about the house were in ccurt this morning ready to prosecute. but the larceny charge was continued until a more thorough investigation could be made. It is claimed that the Hammond woman is a slave to drink, and has been a source of considerable annoyance to saloonkeepers in the east part of the city. Some time ago the board of guardians took charge of her child and it is now being held at the Friendly Inn. She was preparing to bring suit for possession of the child, but it is now certain that her arrest and conviction on a charge of intoxication, and the pending charge of larceny, will cause her to abandon the attempt to retrieve the child.
No. 773.
No. 77-1 won the prize of. a pair of shoes in the second week drawing at the Truth Shoe store.
TAKEN IN.
We sold a lot of new pianos and organs last month. The instruments offered below were taken in in part payment for new ones. In every particular they are all right,. They will give good service for years. The cases are medium high and quite handsome. Come and see them. A good stool and book goes with each organ.
Taylor and Farley $18.00. A. B. Chase, $21.00. J|). S. Johnson & Co., $24.00.
One Practice
Square
A proper
Piano.
'We have restrung the bass with new 'strings. The action has been carefully adjusted. The tonens remarkable. $45.00 buys if.
discount will be given for
spot cash.
\v. W. KIMBALL CO.
J. U. BARTLETT, Manager. The Kimball Store, 671 Main Street.:
LOBBYING FOR THE BILL
NORMAL STUDENTS TAKE A HAND IN OPPOSITION.
WANT SCHOOL ..IMPROVED
Recognition of the Request Will Bring an Advanced System of Studies.
Students of the Indiana State Normal school have organized for the purpose'of urging the passage of the Normal appropriation «bill which is to come before the Indiana legislature within the next few days. Those of the student body directly interested are writing letters all over the state requesting their respective legislators to favor the apropriation. The movement has taken the greatest activity in the upper classes but is spreading among the lower classmen as well.
The request for .$.0,000 for new buildings, $5,000 for ail athletic park and increased maintenance to $100,000 a year means a great deal to the normal students and to the school. If a manual training department is added many persons who have been attending other institutions will be drawn to the Normal because it is a free institution. The faculty also intends to change the course of studies in order that a more collcgiate system will be in vogue. Students will be allowed to specialize to a greater extent than they are now permitted to do and the school will be capable of caring for several hundred more students than at present.
It is argued that if an athletic park is secured, the Normal will be able to make a better showing in athletic and gymnastic events and thus gain a place ranking with other large Indiana colleges. With special courses students will enter and stay in school for four years at a time, thus giving them a chance to become athletes, while under the present system the students rarely go through school without dropping out for several terms, and it is impossible to build up strong athletic organizations from vear to Year.
HOTEL ARRIVALS
The "Riverside" Is Doing a Flourishing Business—The Only Official Hotel in City.
Mr. Daniel Fasig, assisted by the kind heartedness of the police department, is doing a flourishing business at the "Riverside," and is charging $1.3t for abed on the lloor and a light breakfast. The hobos are learning of Terre Iiaute's hospitality and are coming in swarms. Ten were sen down after the supper hour last night and were released after breakfast this morn ing. They ate one meal each and the cost to the county will be $13.00. It is very strange that when these hobos apply at the station they are given a warrant and are permitted to "arrest" themselves and walk down to jail. The sheriff then gets 50 cents each for letting them in, guarding them over night and "releasing" them in the morningj. This is in addition to the two days' "board" that is taxed up to the county. The funny part is that they are hauled up to the police station in the morning under guard. Many are wondering why it is that if these fellows can be trusted to arrest themselves and go down to jail to be locked up, that they cannot be trusted to walk back to the policc station to be released. Then it is claimed that it would be a great savin? to the county if they would all run away, It is remembered that when John Butler was sheriff there was a Democratic board of county commissioners, and they compelled him to make a report of the time a tramp was received and the time when he was released, and the number of meals he had eaten. He was paid for the number of meals eaten and no more. It is suggested that the Republican board of commissioners now in charge experiment a little along this line with Sheriff Fasig.
TYPEWRITERS FOR ARABIC
Machine Does Beautiful Work in Which Eighty Characters Are Used One of the queer proofs of the progress of the world is the fact that American manufacturers have gone into the business now of making typewriting machines that will write Arabic.
It is not so many years ago that a typewriter was an object of wonder, even in the big cities of the United States. But soon travelers may expect to drop into the tent of some fighting Arabic sheik in the Arabian deserts and find him writing letters to his friends on a machine made in America.
The profit, in making an Arabic typewriter is due to the fact that Arabic is not the language of merely the persons who live in the land known as Arabia. Arabic is one of the classical languages of the world. Tt is the language of millions of the better educated people in all that part of the world that is not European or American. Western Asia. Northern Africa, from the Atlantic Ocean to the Red Sea, great parts of India and many other territories through out the Oriental world, use Arabic as their written and official language. Consequently, the field for a typewriter with Arabic characters is a wide one.
The machine does beautiful work for Arabic writing is much more ornamental ami decorative than our practical writing that has been simplified for business purposes. There are eighty-four characters. Many of them are twice as wide and deep as others. Certain letters must nave three different-forms Ml the machine because different, forms are used-for the beginnirg, middle, or end of a word
Mrs. Hugh Shirkie Dangerously III. Airs. Hugh Shirkie. of South Sixth street, was seized with sickness Alonday and now her condition ^.--alarming. She had just recovered from a long spell of sickness and an operation, and during the past few months has been in better health than she has cnjoyr.d for years. Iler relapse will cause much concern among her relatives and friends.
THE DAILY TRIBUNE, TERRE HAUTE, I NDiF TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1903.
NO CLUE YET FOUND
INFANTICIDE CASE HAS PUZZLED DETECTIVES.
PUNISHMENT OF THE CRIME
Moment's Life After Birth Develops a Clear Case of Murder.
There were no developments today in the murder of the little child found in the gravel pit last week. 'The detectives arc still working
011
the case
and hope to probe it to the bottom before many hours, but they have so often been mislead by reports and supposed clues that the guilty parties seem well fortified with their terrible secret.
Various suggestions are offered, among them being that the mother of the child was not a Terre Haute woman, but was some one who came here, gave birth to the child and has since left the city. This idea is not. he-d'hy the police, nowever. In police circles it is thought the blame ultimately wiii be placed qn some one in the neighborhood of the Highland Iron and Steel mill.
The crime of infanticide, especially under the horrible circumstances surrounding the death of this child, may be punished heavily. Some years ago a case very similar to thi one was brought to the notice of the Terrc Haute police and was investigated in Montgomery county, this state. The ruling was that if the child was killed in an attempt to commit' abortion, the charge would be abortion. This could only be in case the child was stil! born. In case the child lived, although the breath of life was of but a minutes duration, and it should be killed or in any way be caused to die the charge would be murder. This charge may be placed in any degree and the punishment would be according to the degree established.
While the person or persons guilty of the infants death are not known there i3 no possibility of the deed having been incited by the child and the murder must have been premeditated. This would be foundation for a verdict of murder in the first degree and punishable with death or life imprisonment. The charge of manslaughter being preferred has been suggested. This is punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of from 10 years to life.
A MOUNTAIN FULL _0f^H0-T WATER
A most remarkable trouble has been met by the engineers who are digging the wonderful tunel that runs through the great SimploH Mountain and is to open a. gate through the Alps between Switzerland and Italy.
After the Swiss end of the tunnel had been practically finished and the Italian end had. been begun, the workmen noticed a peculiarly oppressive heat in the borings. With each foot talit was removed this heat grew until it became almost impossible to work.
For a long time it was a puzzle to engineers and all others. Even geologists were called in, but without result.
Finally, however, it, was found that the hcatTame from water that was almost at the boiling point and that dripped and flowed through the fissures in the rock of the mighty mountain.
Further investigation showed that this boiling water did not come from boiling underground springs, as might have been suspected at first.
On the contrary, it came from the very top of the mountain, more than a mile high. Although it is so cold up there that the peaks are covered with perpetual snow, and the water, consequently, was icy when it started on its voyage, the pressure and friction caused by its percolation through six thousand feet of mountain, mostly bed after bed of ilmestone. made the water so hot that it was at, the boiling point, when it reached the borings.
Before the tunnel had been dug very far on the Italian side the heat became so intense that it was not only impossible to work but actually impossible to live in it.
For a time it seemed as if the line of the tunnel would have to be changed. But the clever engineers solved the difficulty in a better way and they actually managed to make the hot water provide its own remedy.
They piped the mountain, and soon they had 15,000 gallons of steaming hot water (lowing out of he south end of the tunnel every minute of the day and night.
They harnessed this immense flow, and before long they had it driving refrigerating plans and cold air blowers. So now the hot water, that had threatened to stop the work, is operating machinery that blows cold air nito places where the air is too hot and cold water into places where hot water drips or flows. Today the temperature of the tunnel has been reduced to a pleasant warmth, equal to a fine, gentle day in June, from a heat that would have roasted a. man in a minute or two.
Not content, with making the hot water provide its own remedy, the engineers have chained it to pneumatic drills and boring machines, so that now it helps to dig the tunnel as well.
The Simplon tunnel will be the greatest in the world when it is completed. Tt will be fourteen miles long and will cost nearly $1,000,00 a. mile.
No. 773 issued to Ellen Ballard, won second week's prize, one pair American Girl Shoes, at the Truth. Shoo store.
FAVOR OPERA HOUSE
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS COMMITTEE READY TO REPORT.
IMMEDIATE ACTION BE TAKEN
Some Objection to Play House Those Who Favor an Auditorium.
A meeting of Occidental Lodge No. 18 Knights of Pythias, was held last night and it was announced that on next Monday a forma'l plan for building an opera house would be submitted to the lodirc by the committee which has been working on the proposition for several weeks.
The same proposition will be submitted to Oriental Lodge No. SI on Tuesday night and on Thursday Paul Revere Lodge No. 374 will discuss the plans. Cards arc to be sent to every knight in the city requesting that there be a full attendance at the meetings as the action taken then will be final.
The committee has finally decided to recommend that an opera house be built
011
the ground at Eighth and Cherry streets but the forma! statement will not be drawn up until the meeting next Sunday afternoon. It is not. known, outside of the committee, just ^\]int will be offered the lodges but it: is s-iid that there will be considerable oppo-ifim to whatever plan is laid before the knights. This opposition will come from several different sources. Some members object to the location of the property at Eighth and Cherry streets, otners dread placing the lodges in debt by borrowing to build a modern play house and some favor an auditorium to an opera house.
A Foolish Indian.
Indians soon part with their money. And in doing so they frequently display remarkable traits of business character. Agent Myton. of the Uintah Reservation tells of a. number of partings with the lucre incident to his recent, payments of rental and other incomes.
110
ADDITIONAL SOCIETY.
On Friday evening the home of Mrs. Will Kruzan was the scene of a pretty house party, ills. Kruzan and Mrs. Henry Ilaller entertained in honor of their husband's birthdav It was a complete surprise to both Mr. Haller and Mr. Kruzan. Those present were: The members of the Merry Fourteen club and their husbands, besides the immediate friends of Mr. Haller. and Mr. Kruzan, numbering seventy-five in all. Canvass was spread on the parlor floor and dancing was indulged in until a late hour. PuclvMvas served throughout the evening. The tables were beautifully decorated with roses and carnations where twenty ata time partook of ice cream and cake. As the guests entered the dining room they were presented with a beautiful carnation. After refreshments were served the remainder of the cvning was spnt. in conversation and playing games. At a late hour a car wa,s chartered and the crowd returned home. All having enjoyed the evening and wishing Mr. Haller and Mr. Kruzan many more such happy birthdays.
The Central Union of the W. C. T. V. will hold a department meeting at the home of Airs. St. Clair. Thursday afternoon. 103(5 Seventh avenue, subject "Franchise."
The Aid Society of the First M. E. church will hold its regular meeting Thur.sdav 2:30. February. 12th. at the home of Airs. George Dodson. 415 South Eighth street. Every member and friend of the society is urged to be present.
Gospel Temperance Meeting. The Alary Hadley Y. W. C. T. U. will give a. gospel temperance meeting this evening at the colored AI. E. church, corner Thirteenth and One-half street and Washington avenue.-
fD://o
S
act
dn^ctly on thes
liver cure constipa-
*Ly ti°n biliousness, sick-head-sit*
ache
indigestion.
•CSBIUUSMiU
by
A11
cow. little clothing, and less
to eat,. Reprimanded for his improvidence, replied that "white man rides in carriages why not Indian?" He was told that he should have purchased a common heavy wagon, such as could be used for farm work, and another Indian's purchase of such a wagon was told to liiin as a, wise purchase. The Indiana grunted at every word, looked troubled, but gave
110
evidence of being
favorably impressed. Next day Agent Myton saw his Indian of spendthrifty inclination riding about in just such a wagon as he had named for him. and upon inquiry it, was learned that he had traded his $250 carriage for the wagon: that as soon as he had been unbraided the previous day he didn't do a thing but hunt up the wi«e Indian who had bought a jolt wagon, and proposed a trade. "IIow did you trade?'' was asked. ''Carriage his, wagon mine," was the reply.- The trade was vehicle for vehicle. The farm wagon c.ost the purchaser $70. the carriage $250. The wise Indiana took the carriage back to the seller and got two wagons, two sets of harness, blankets, and a number of other necessaries. When the first Indian was told of the trade made by the Indian who got his carriage he expressed no regret. He simply grunted, shrugged his shoulders, and exclaimed: '"Fie wise Indian.''
J. C. AyorCo., Lowell, ICaas.
$2.98
I
hour
after one old buck received $275 in cash he was seen driving about the reservation in a splendid two-horse carriage. The Indiana had no means of carting the products of his range or fields, no wagon,
Great Play,
Sherlock Holmes
By Sir A. Conan Doyle and William Gillette Exactly as producer for 300 nights New York and ten months in London.
Prices—25c to $1.50.
Friday and Saturday and Saturday Matinee, Feb. 13 and 14.
Another Big Trust!
All the funny thing that are nen am novel, have been merged into
Peck's Bad Boy
It's True It's Funny! It's Funny It's True: Come and laugh with u\s and not at us.
Matinee—10c and 25c Night—15c, 25c, 35c and 50c.
EVERYTHING NEW
—AT THE—
0RPHE0N THEATER THIS WEEK.
ONE CAR
0 0
60
MATTING SALE.
Beginning Wednesday morning, we will sell all of our Mattings for one week only at the following prices. 40c China Matting for
35c China Matting for 25C 30c China Matting for 22*20 25c China Matting for "J Qc 20c China Matting for £jc 12£c and 10c China Matting for 1 Oc
75c Japanese Matting for
60c Japanese Matting for
50c Japanese Matting for 40C 35c Japanese Matting for 20C 30c Japanese Matting for Don't fail to see the n#»w Oriental patterns in
Japanese Mattings.
INGRASIM CARPETS —We are showing a full line of ail of the newest and latest patterns.
CARPET SWEEPERS —Th« roller bearing carpet t»we^per is sold under a positive guarantee pi ice
WINDOIA/ SHADES MADE TO
-TONIGHT—
"DOWN AND UP."
PRICES—15c, 25c, 35c and 50c.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT, FEB. 11.
GYMNASTIC EXHIBITION
Given By the
TERRE HAUTE TURN-VEREIN
Admission 25 Cents. Reserved Seats 15 Cents Extra. Seat Sale Now Open.
THURSDAY NIGHT, FEBRUARY 12 Mr. Herbert Kelcey and Miss Effic Shannon, Management of Daniel V. Arthur, in the
FANCY POTATOES CENTS PER BUSHEL.
25 lbs Domino, Big F., or Vigola Flour 5QC
25 lbs High Patent Flour 48C
20 lbs Granulated Sugar
$1.00
FANCY BULK OLIVES, per quart.
wm
3 1
and
9c
0(K
5CK
mmx,
LADIES' SUITS
Made to order for $15.00, from fine cloth, aod Skirts for $5.00.
$2.50 *or
ma'
anc*
'n9 skirts any style
$8.00
^or
mak'n9
suits. Tailor
made skirts from g2 to $0J worth twice the money. Guaranteed a good fit.
P. APPLEBAUM,
1133 Wabash Avenue.
PAINLESS DENTISTRY
Mr. Frank English Has 13 Extracted With= out Pain.
What He Says of Methods.
20
HOME RENDERED LARD, per lb
—-12'/*°
Three Cans Tomatoes for 25^
Three Cans Peas for 25^
Fancy Breakfast Bacon, per Ib.-IQO
Elgin Creamery Butter, one pound prints- 30C
BOSTON BUTTS. AT—
L. BRESETT & SON
Three Strictly Cash Store3
Eleventh and Main Sts. Tel. 275 Second and Farrington Sts. Tel. 201. Seventh and Deming Sts. Tel. 243.
J. M. Dishon and no other Goes forth in haste, -With bills and paste And proclaims to all creation,
Men are wise who advertiseIn the present few-ration.
Our
"Go to the Wabash Dental Parlors if' you want your teeth extracted absolutely without pain. After making live trips to Terre Haute to have my teeth extracted I finally gave up to let Dr. Owens pull one, to see if his advertisements wero true. He pulled thirteen before I left the chair and he did not hurt me at all.
Anyone having teeth to extract it will pay you to go to the Wabash Dental Parlors. Doctor Owens does his work at a reasonable price and fiills and extracts teeth absolutely without pain."
Signed by FRANK ENGLISH, 'Seeleyville, Ind. Vi£o County.
Full Set of Teeth $2.50 Gold Crowns. 22K $2.50 Silver Filling 50 Gold Filling. •$!•» Painless Extracting 25
Examination Free.
Wabash Dental Parlors
DR. CH AS. OWENS.
41lv, Main St. Over Truth Shoe Store.
O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O
FOR QUICK
RESULTS
a a a a
TRY THE TRIBUNE'S
ONE CENT A WORD
COLUMN. 4
40 acres level, good land for $1,600 cash, today. MARSHALL G. LEE, 225 Rose Disp.
"The Fellow You Can't Fcrcat,"* -J
J. C. RUTHERFORD,
RACTICAL iZ? UBLIC RINTER,
New Phone 948. 665 Main St N«t door t« Tribun*.
Andy Burnet
SANiTARY PLUMBING
Prompt and careful attention given to repair work. 505 OHIO.
Citizens' Tel, 375. S-M
If you have anything to sell or trad* just put a few lines in the Tribune's One Cent a Word Column.
