Daily Tribune, Volume 17, Number 76, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 February 1903 — Page 8
UNCLE SAM'S SCHOOL
BOYS MAY FIND THIS* LESSON MUCH LIKE A STORY BOOK
THE C^ASS IN GEOGRAPHY
Tells of Present-Day Doings in Far.v Away Lands—A Caucasian -i Trolley Line.
Uncle Sam is the busiest sehoolfuditer with the biggest class in the 'world. Everybody is in it, from the little colored boys in the banana and coffee and tobacco plantations of Porto Rico to the millionaires who drive their flashing automobiles through Newport.
Of course they cannot sit in a classroom. There wouldn't be room for a classroom liig enough if the whole city oi Xew York were roofed ove^u and crowded from the Battery to The Bronx with desks. So Uncle Sam prints his lessons and sends them-out every day to all who desire to study..-:
They are" interesting lessons because they are not out of books, but out of real life. They take the student from the glow of the magical Orient to the palms ow the lazy tropics, from the land where the midnight sun shines out over deep,, still, black waters to the home of the citron and the lands of wine, from Russia to Alaska from Cape Horn to
Jreenland. '•'Ht class in geography, here is somefor you. What's this? Russia?
I i.U ham will tell you that fifty in that country are lighted by electricity now. Not so bad for Russia that used to be considered almost barbaric. and not so long ago either.
More tljan forty-five cities have full electric car .service. In St. Petersburg alone there are 1,870 miles of trolley wires.
You remember the Dnieper? That wofully crooked river, which empties into the Black Sea,v lias fgiveil all the grown pupils of Uncle Sam headaches and no doubt, it is bothering you- now. 'It has cities with such terrible names on its winks and its course is so wickedly tangled that it is a terror of the schoolhouse constantly lying in wkait to perplex some nice child.
A Russian engineer is going to avenge the wrongs of the American school ehildren. He is going to harness the Dniep er and make it work. Its*Cataracts, that have been roaring idly for thousands and housands of years through Tartar and Moslem raids, through slow growths of feudal systems, will be forced now to produce electric power.
Down in the Caucasian mountains, whence the. beautiful Cieassian slaves still fro to Turkey the mountain streams are to be harnessed in the sam way and soon there will be trolley cars speeding from Yaladikavkee to Suhkuin. Those trolley cars will carry strange passengers.
They will have business men dressed like your fathers and living very much as they do. There will be oi! merchants and oil well diggers from Baku, which is ttie oil city of Russia.
Alongside of them may sil a' dweller ot the Caucasus, with crooked sword and silver-mounted pistols in his gorgeous £asli. A Tartar from the Khirgiz steppes may swing himself aboard with his long flintlock rifle and liis high felt hat,\or a dark, bearded rug merchant fronj Bokhara may sit alongside of a ^caravan leader from Teheran.
All the^e ji'nd 'ina.ny other tribes meet
WILL SEND
$2.50 FREE.
Franklin Miles, M. D., LL. B., the Celebrated Chicago Specialist, Will Send $2.50 Worth of ©T His New Treatment
Free.
When, an experienced physician offers fto give away $40,000 worth of a Mew Treatment for diseases of the heart, ^nerves, stomach or dropsy, it is conciusive evidence that he lias great faTth in yit. And when hundreds of prominent, fpeople freely testify to his unusual skill J|and the superiority of his New Personal llJpiliTreatment, his liberality is certainly 2^ wo thy of serious consideration.
That Dr. Miles is one of the world's most successful physicians is proven by
$lrV'huTi$T§ds
of testimonials from well-
i|know} people. One patient cured after .Aailure of eleven Grand Rapids physi-^•-ians, two after being given up by six and seven Chicago physicians, another after nine leading doctors in New ork -City, Philadelphia and Chicago failed.
The eminent Rev. W. Bell, D. D. of Dayton, O, Gin. See'y of Foreign Missions, writes editorially in The State Sun lay School Union: "We desire to state that from personal acquaintance we know Dr. Miles to be-a most skillful specialist, a man who has spared neither labor nor money to keep himself abreast of the great advancement in medical science."
Mr. J. S. Zeiit, of Hartford Block, Indianapolis. was entirely disabled for business for 14r months from head, lieart and •stomach troubles. "I hadi" he writes, been under the care of many physician? Avithout any permanent benefits, before ,-applying to Dr. Miles with his new ideas ami methods." Mrs. E. G. Reynolds, of
Elkhart. Ind., states:, "For 20 years before taking Dr. Miles? Special Treatment for enlargement of the heart, severe pain, smothering spells, headache- and prostration, my case was pronounced incurable hv many physicians in the larger cities. Tie cured me in three months." Mrs. A. Kronck. of Huntington. Ind.. was "cured '•after forty physicians had failed."
This-new system of Special Treatnierct is thoroughly scientific and imaicn^ely superior ^o ordinary methods. •.
As allaflicted readers may have $2.50 worth of treatment free, we Avould advise them to send for it at once. Address Ih\ .-Franklin Miles. 205 to 209 State street, Chicago. 111.. Mention Terre ilaute, Tribune in your reply.
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Many Men Many Minds "—Terence Designed to meet the needs and adapted to suit the tastes of the many
GORIIAM
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is distinguished above all other silverware by its almost infinite variety. No article which may fitly be fashioned in silver is neglected by Gorham designers, while in a majority of instances these may be had in a surprising number of different designs.
All
responsible jewelers keep it
on the western coast of the Caspian sea. Even the black, hairy, mountain born knaves wander as far as this part of Russia. They go there to trade horses—mostly stolen horses from the British boundary of India.
When that queer trolley road begins to run where a person to ride on it stead i]y for four or five months he probajbly would see some representative of every country in Asia.
That is not a dull sort of geography lesson, is it? Here is another. Open your atlas at Africa| Look at the Straits of Bab'el Manedeb, that connect the Gulf of Aden with the Red Sea. Those were always hard Straits to remember for us grown pupils. How are they with you? '.s. .it
Well, just west of them is a land filled Abyssinia—the real, truejand of the Ethiopians of ancient history. Their ruler, whom they call the Negus, boasts that he is a direct descendant of King .Solomon. He calls himself the Lion of •ludea.
He has decided to build a railroad from Addis ^bbeda, one of his inland cities to the French boundary on the coast. This railroad will enattle merchants to cross a great desert, on which now caravans are threatened by all dang' 'er-4 from wild beasts to robber bands.
The railroad .will cross it in twentyfour hours. Now, of eouive. Uncle Sam dies not impart this information merely as an interesting bit of 'geography history. He explains to wyoun why as an American child.
It is because American merchants are -ending three millions of dollars' worth of cotton goods, very beautiful and solid in texture, and very well liked by the Ethiopians into the country every year. Hut Americans cannot increase their I rade as they wish, because the caravans arc so slow that it costs $193 a ton to transport goods from ,the sea oast to the Abyssinian cities.,-*
Uncle Sam begs for your attention while he tells you another curious thing about this American trade with Abyssinia. Don't you remember of reading those romantic times in American history when the fine old merchants of New England used to load calicoes and molasses and rum on ships manned by daring sailors and send'them away to Africa to be exchanger for gold and ivory and coffee and spices? Don't you wish that you could have been a child in thop days and seen it?
Well, just let Uncle Sam lead you to Fall River, Mass. It isn't a pretty town A here are no grass-grown wharves and strange narks with piratical-looking men with earrings and dirks peering down at one fro,m the high bulwarks.
Y®u will see great cases being swung into ugly, commonplace steam lighters ir you follow them you will see them'go down the Sound to New \ork or up to Boston, where they transfer their cargo into rusty, battered ocean steamships.
You will not hear any of those sad, wild sailor chanties that used to sound in' the days when tne British cruisers were objects of as much fear to American merchantmen as if they had been pirates. A few yellow Mongolian faces may be looking over the side, or you may see Malays or Japanese or Kanakas. »But the clamor of steam Avinches and chants take? the place of songs, Ind the smell "of hot engine* rooms is wafted over the pier instead of the odors of rare woods and spices. The Fall River cases go into the holds and presently a nopelessly modern and unpoetical tugboat warps the steamship out of the crowded dbek and gets her headed down stream, l.ien the reel screw begins to wallow like a suffering sea creature and off lumbers the ugly ship. -Voir will watch the vessel for a while mitil it disappears in the sun haze du"wn the harbor. Then you will go home and no doubt, forget it. But suppose you make a memorandum to think of it a month or so later.
Then you may picture that ship to yourself steaming down the hot Red ,ea. the sea of the oldest and most beau tiful stories in the world. A few miles away lies a low ugly dismal strip of sand without a human creature or a hut or animal on it for miles and miles. Nowhere is there A sign of life, neither in the air or the sky, or ther land, or the water, except on the edge of the .strand, where a continual show crinking as if a long, white- ribbqn were flapping on the shore, shows that a heavy surf is beating.
After weary miles of purfihg and rolling the ship lies abreast of a queer little place, with probably only one building that deserves the name of a house— long, loyif one-story, structure l&ith
/Around
By the time the white men have greeted each other big flatboats will 3iave fought their way out of the breakers and.will be banging and tossing against the iron sides of the visitor. Busy hands tear open the cargo hatches.and engines begin to hammer.
All kinds of things come out of the dark holds into the African sunlight— cases of pocket knives from Meriden and soap from New York and ammunition froni' Bridgeport and shoes from Lynn. At last you Shall"'see the cases of cotton from Fall River swing slowly up into the air and go down into the bobbing lighters with a rush, amid the jabbering of the half naked black, surf boatmen.
Now Uncle Sam invites you to leave the ship and accompany that far-travel led Fall River merchandise on a still more curious voyage. He wants you to see his cotton goods hoisted to the hump of big shaggy camels—mean things that look touchingly mild and patient, but that are only watching for a chance to bite a piece out of any one who is trust ing enough to get near them."
The eameis are not loaded with Amer ican goods only. There are more cases of English cottons from Manchester ^and still more o* French cottons from Rouen
As the' days pass more camels are driv en in to be loaded. The little settlement resounds day and night with the shout infs of the camel boys and the tinkling of crude musical instruments, brought in by the desert men, and the droning of the story tellers at the campfires.
Then, at last, one evening the caravan making more noise than ever, begins to move out into the vast, silent, lifeless desert. Slowly it winds out of camp with tall, handsome Somali, warriors on fast, horses, curvetting and prancing and dashing up and down the line, their weapons all ready for any fighting that may be.
There are camel drivers in bright robes some in turbans and some in red fezzes. Here and there half-veiled women in gau-dy-loose dresses sit huddled on the necks or the humps of the rolling, staggering plunging camels. Slowly they pass into the moonlight, going on and on, straight westward until the last camel is but a speck on the stratching sands.
Before those cotton goods from America arrive at the market places in Abyssinia, where women in flowing costumes and hung with long strings of beads and metal ornaments will barter for them with-the Ethiopian merchants, tb/ey may be fought over a dozen times.
Those prosaic cases made by a matter of-fact American cooper, may be used for barricades when the desert robbers swoop down on the caravan. Men will fire from their shelter and perhaps be killed behind them.
Some of them may be carried off and finally after months of slow progress by barter and exchange, their contents mny deck the savage belles of unknown villages in the heart of the African forest. Some night a lion may go charg ing headlong over them.
Just suppose that one of the Fall River mill girls, working wearily over the loom, could suddenly see a vision of the
11th Annual
V''' -V":• -vl j*
Rug Sale at Fosier's ,v Monday
ON NEXT MONDAY, FEB. 16 AT FOSTER'S CARPET HALL THE ELEVENTH ANNUAL SALE OF FINE LARGE RUGS TAKES PLACE. EVERY RUG WILL BE SOLD (50 OF THEM) AT WHATEVER PRICE TH£ PUBLIC PUTS
UPON THEM, THEY WILL BE MARKED DOWN IN PRICE EVERY HALF HOUR BETWEEN 9 AND 12 O'CLOCK AND 2 AND 5 O'CLOCK TILL SOLD. TAPESTRY BRUSSELS* BODY BRUSSELS, VELVET AND WjLTO'N VELVET R)UGS AT YOUR OWN PRICE. THESE RUGS AFLE LARGE ROOM RUGS AND ALWAYS HAVE SOLD AT THESE SALES VERY CHEAP.
NEXT MONDAY SALE COMMENCES, .!"• DON'T FAIL TO INVESTIGATE.
FOSTER'S
ELEVENTH ANNUAL SALE OF LARGE ROOM RUGS AT
YOU*
OWN PRICE.
s^
THE DAILY TRIBUNE, TERRE HAUTE,
white walls and roof, that shine dazzlinglv in the sun.
it are a few
thatched huts. The ship's deep whistle blows to say she has arrived. But you may be sure that it is only a formality for eager eyes will have seen her long before that. Ships are rare there, and the few white men in the lonely spot are glad enough to see other white men. So the great iron anchor will hardly have begun to plunge downward before a long, narrow canoe will come climbing and swooping over the surf.
ftBOVE
pfattire
Has Vat
Into EVerg
Stomach
a liquid called the gastric juice, which in a healthy condition is capable of digesting the food and converting it into "chyme," irhieh at length becomes good, rich blood. The least little ailment ot the stomach affects this "gostrio juice" and quickly leads to various serious sicknesses. These ailments may be easily •voided by taking regularly
Dr. Caldwell's
(learnt***)
Syfrup Pepsin
SOe and $t.OO BattIA
They offer elephants' tusks and gold ore and coffee. Each side tries to drive the better bargain. It will be many days before any sales are concluded.
Uncle Sam has taken you by devious
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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY
•"SfK
4ALL DRUGGISTS SENT FREE: Sample bottle and an interesting book on stomach troubles.
PEPSIN SYRUP CO., Moaticello, Ills.
weird scenes through which the piece of cloth that she is finishing will have to go!
If the caravan fortunately escapes all these dangers it will at last reach the towns in the heart of Abyssinia.| The cases are opened and the rolls of striped and colored cotton are spread out. Then begins keen ftusirfess-r^-as keen as any in Wall street.
On one side aro the men from the coast with the product of the .busiest cities in the world. Off the other are armed men with the product of the vildest and loneliest places in the world.
14,1903.
ways from a land^of business to another land of business. Commerce, the conqueror has ^opened countries that have defied weapons from the time immemorial, has brought together in peace, fierce and strange tribes that never met before except to fight.
Uncle Sam has lots and lots of geography stories like this oiie for you. ,.
Spread of the Drug Habit. With the facts brought to light by the state board of pharmacy, which has secured indictments against certain druggists alleged to have sold cocaine illegally, the need of energetic, concerted action to suppress the drug habit becomes apparent. The most dangerous feature of the abuse of drugs is that once established in a community it becomes almost ineradicable. A few of the victims are cured, but the others do not escape the clutches until they die, and meanwhile the vice is steadily securing new recruits. There is reason to fear that were it left unchecked1 the indulgence of cocaine, opium, chloral and similar drugs might become so great a menace as drunkenness.
In its effort to stamp out the habit by preventing the sale of these drugs the board of pharmacy should have active support not only from the board" of health and states attorneys, but from the druggists themselves, both individually and through their associations. It would be a wise and timely action for druggists to take the initiative in discountenancing the attempt to gain profit in this way. It should be hardly necessary to add that a conscientious physician who finds it necessary to prescribe drugs for his patients owes it to society to exert every precaution to keep his patients from becoming habituated to their use.
Twenty-three ounces—more than twice the normal—was the weight of the heart of a porter on Whose body an inquest was held recently at Westminster.
Foley's Honey and Tar is best for croup and whooping cough, contains no opiates, and cures quickly. Careful mothers keep it in the house. All druggists.
ftj ECONOMY IN CALIFORNIA? TRAVEL. A double berth in a tourist sleeper, Chicago to San Francisco, costs only $6. The service via the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul and Union Pacific line is thoroughly comfortable and satisfactory.
Thro' tourist sleeper to San Francisco leaves Chicago at 10:25 p. m. daily. If you're interested write for folder. F. A. MILLER, General Passenger Agent,
Chicago. Irti:
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$34.
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and
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THEY WORK WHILEYOU sU-EJ.
VandaliaPennsylvania
COLONISTS ONE-WAY SECONDCLASS TICKETS TO CALIFORNIA POINTS, $34.00
On sale February 15 till April 30. To Phoenix and Prescott, Ariz., El Paso, Pecos City, Texas, Deming, N. M.
On sale February 15 to April 30.
COLONIST ONE-WAY SECOND-
CLASS TICKETS TO THE --.'^INORTHWEST.
Tickets on sale February 15 to April 30.
Ask about them at \jnion Station Ticket Office and City Ticket Office, 654 Wabash Ave., Terre Haute, Ind.
GEO. E. FARRINGT0N,
UNDERTAKER,
108 NORTH FOURTH 8T. Carrie* in stock a full Una of Caskets of the very be«t quality all at the. most reasonable prices.
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TWENTY-FIVE. FREE TOURS OF EUROPE
V"
•Try the Tribune's one cent a word column, A
a A E a
M|ifIfllo® VkH PWZE&TO BE GIVEN AWAY
In this advertisement we publish nine rebus pictures, each spelling the name of a city located in the United States. Can you name them correctly? If you can, All in the slip and send „it to us, together with a short, twenty-word article on the city No. 1 named after a famous general. We will give a First Prize of Five Hundred Dollars in Cash to the person whose list is correct, and whose article is best in the estimation of the Committee. For the next best answer, Two Hundred and Fifty Dollars in Cash for the next best answer, One Hundred and Fifty Dollars in Cash for the next best answer, One Hundred Dollars in Cash for the ten next best answers, Twenty-flve Dollars each for the twenty next best answers, Fifteen Dollars each for the forty next best answers, Ten Dollars each for the fifty next best answers, Five Dollars each and every one naming three or more of these cities correctly will receive a cash prize of One Dollar,
Someone Is going to win the money, and it may be you: anyway it does not cost you any money to try. There is only one easy condition, which will take about one hour of yOur time, and which we will write yoy as soon as your answer is received. This rebus is not as easy as it appears, and it will take a great deal of brain work to solve the nine cities correctly. The envelope containing the correct answer has been sealed and deposited with a leading safe deposit comrpany of Boston, and will'not be opened until after the close of the contest. This, we believe, is the only honest way of conducting a contest, as everyone will have an equal chance. In the event of a tie, we will request five persons who have answered our advertisement to act as a committee to award the cash pro-rata. They will be invited to come to Boston at our expense and be our guests while in this city. We take this original method of purs of selecting a committee to show our good faith, as we want to treat all in the fairest manner possible. The committee will be selected, solely upon their merits from among our contestants, and. In addition to their expenses being paid, we will allow each one Five Dollars a day for their time. You may be asked, but not compelled to act as one of the Committee.
NAMES OF CITIES.
,.f. ....... -.. J. uesuay, juiy 41, s«» huui wowu 2 0 a I a a f/'c pecially reserved cars for Warwick, Hotel "'V v'-y'*
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Palais Royal, and the'Gobelln Tapestry Works. A whole day will be devoted to*a trip to St. Cloud, thence to the Park of Versailles and the Great ani,Little Trianon and to visit the state carriages. From here the party will proceed to the grand Palace at.Versailles, and devote the afternoon to its treasures of history and art. In Brussels. Drive and visit the Hotel de Viile, the Church of Ste. Gadule, the Palace of Justice, and the Wiertz Picture Gallery.
These are prizes which are worth trying for, and only come once in a lifetime. It will be under the auspices of the Brown Book, which means that everyone
^"now'6outside ofThese twenty-five free European titos, tljere will be a twenty-sixth prize of Three Hundred and Fifty Dollars, a twenty-seventh prize of Two Hundred Dollars a twenty-eighth prize of One HundreFfcollare, and Twenty prizes of Fifty Dollars eacft Twenty Prizes of Twenty-Five Dollars each. Twenty Prizes of Fifteen Ddllars each, Twenty Prizes of Ten Dollars each, and Fifty Prizes of Five Dollars each. You hpve an opportunity to win and secure from us without one cent of expense on your part, any of the above mentioned prizes. There is positively no deception, and as for trickery, how can there be when the Cohunlttee is selected from the contestants
you yourself might b® chosen to decide who the winners are.
Remember we are the only publishing flrln in. the world who have given away the largest cash prizes in contests arranged by a single firm. Do not throw this advertisement aside and say, "O Pshatf! I have answered puzzles before and got nothing for It." for if you.dn, you will regret it as long as/you live. Someone will 'win and It may be you anyway, it does not cOst you one cent, as we do not" want any money from you, and surely the prizes are worth trying for.
Do you candidly know of any firm in the world who has mack? such liberal offers in such a" fair manner? Of course you have no assurance except our word that we are financially able to carry out the promises we have made.. If you have the least .doubt, look us up. You wilt find that we have lived up to every promise that we have ever made, and we have thousands of letters from prize winners on file In our office. We are a responsible company with a paid-up capital of XM.M composed of well-known business men, giving employment to upwards of two hundred people, and our. sole object In firing away such princely prizes is to lead our competitors- and we will leave no stone unturned to accomplish, by honest methods, only, our object. Everyone entering lhe«e contests will receive honest treatment, and you w}li have the sAme chance Wheth-r you live in California. Canada or Massachusetts distance positively makes no difference. No one connected directly or.j indirectly with this firm -will be permitted to compete for these prizes. Send your answer to us at once, and in a few days you will receive our reply. Do not I a A a
•CONTEST DEPARTMENT, THE 8B0WH" BDOIC. 68 FHMUM ili BT01D STS„ BOSTON. MUSS,
-jjs -r ifi? lifcyifrin ditto %Arii*nMkMkt
4 & 4 0
The Committee who decided our last contest was composed of the following named persons: Fitz James E. Browne, Montreal, Can. C. D. Baldwin, Cascade, Iowa Mrs. Francis Little, Lincoln, Neb. Mrs. R. Ryan, Houston, Tex. Fred T. Tremble Saranac Lake, N. Y.
Now in addition to the cash prizes mentioned above, we are going to give to *kome one who complies with our easy condition, an opportunity to win and secure from us without any labor or expense on their part, one of the following Twenty-five prizes which will consist of a free trip to Europe lasting forty days which means every expense paid, first-class, from the time you leave home until you get home. Below you will find the daily itinerary:
Tuesday, July 21, sail from Boston via. S. S. Cunard Line, Wednesday, July due at Queenstown, Ireland, Thursday July 30, land at Liverpool and take es"Warwick Arms," Friday, July 31, make coaching trip to Sholtery and Stratford-on-Avon, returning to Warwick. Saturday, August 1, visit Warwick Castle, the Leicester Hospital, and the old church of St. Mary, taking an afternoon train for London, "St. Erwin's Hotel."
coaching trip to Sholtery and Stratford-or
Friday, August 7, leave by day express, proceed to Newbourn, cross the Channel to Dieppe and through Normandy, reach Paris, Grand Hotel St. James, Thursday, August 13, leave Paris on a morning train for Brussels, Grand Hotel, Saturday,'August 15,'(Evening) leave Brussels on evening train for Antwerp, one hour distant. Sunday August 16, in Antwerp, Hotel Central, Monday, August 17, go by morning train to The Hague and Scheweninzen. Hotel des Indes, The Hague, Thursday, August 20, Proceed to Rotterdam, and sail by Steamship of the a A a S a a A 2 9 I N
To give you a slight idea of the places visited we append the following: j'j In London, two days, carriage drives, and visits paid the Guildhall, the Museum the Corporation Gallery, St. Paul's and the Crypt, Fleet Street, the Law Courts, Middle Temple Hall, the Temple Church and grave of Oliver Goldsmith, the Embankment, Parliament Building, Houses of Lords and Commons, Westminister Abbey, Whitehall, Trafalgar Square, the National Gallery, Piccadilly, St. James and Green Parks Marlborough House, St. James' Palace, Buckingham Palace, Hyde Park, Rotten' Row, the Albert Memorial, the Royal Albert Hall. South Kensington Museum, the British Museum, Smithfleld Market the Mansion House, Bank of England, the Old Curiosity -Shop and Tower of London.
In Paris. There will be carriage drives, two days to visit the Palais de Justice, Ste Chapelle, the Pantheon, the Church of St. Etlenne du Mont, the Luxembourg Gallery, the Tomb of Napoleon and Les Invalldes, the Eiffel Tower, the Trocadero the Place de la Concorde, the Madeleine, the Park Morceau, the Boulevards, the' Opera House, the Porte St. Denis, the Column July and Place de la Bastille, Pere-la-Chaise, Notre Dame, the Morgue, the Galleries of the Louvre, the
SttSeiaS^,!
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PAINLESS DENTfSTRY
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To Billings, M«nt., $26. To Helena, Butte, Anaconda, Mont., $31. To Spokane, Wash., and points on Northern Pacific, $32.50. To Portland, Ore., Tacoma, Seattle and Victoria, B. C., and many other pointsf $35.
Gen-
J. A. NISBET,
-d Ii
Mr. Frank English 13 Extracted With= out Pain.
Wha,t. He Says of Our Methods, &<•«***.
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"Go to tlie Wabash Dental Parlors ^fp you want your teeth extracted absolutely^ without pain. After making live trips» to Terre Haute to have my teeth extract.* ed I finally gave up to let Dr. Owens pull? one, to see if his advertisements wore' true. He pulled thirteen before I left tha chair and he did not-hurt me at all.
Anyone having teeth to extract it will pay you to go to the Wabash Dental Par-? lors. Doctor Owens does- his work at a reasonable price and Jiills and extracts teeth absolutely without pain."
Signed by FRANK ENGLISH, Seeleyville, Ind. Vigo County.""
Full Set of Teeth ...'.'.^.$2,505 Gold Crowns, 22K v. $2.5o| Silver Filling '. .50. Gold Filling $1.09 Painless Extracting 25
Examination Free.
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Wabash Dental Parlors
DR. CHAS. OWENS.
41ly, Main St. Over Tnith Shoe Store.\
J. M. DIshon and no other Goes forth in haste. With bills and paste Ahd proclaims to all creation.
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Men are wise who advertise In the present generation. ,.
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