Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 July 1889 — Page 4
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£l3P
WE WANT
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te'
so-
X-^2
813® VH--
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Hatter In Terre Haute.
BREAKFAST, DINNER, SUPPER,
Do Yon Want Mi|'
It doesn't necessarily follow that we're "hard up" because we £j-*C want money. We think it making money to move clothing that'll be
an eyesore to us during cold weather. Clothing at|regular prices isn't tempting unless you're absolutely in need of them. A suit of good
x' clothing with one profit knocked off means a profitable investment
for the buyer. The two months' service you can get out of .a summer suit this Beaaon and the prospective service next year may tempt
many to invest at our profit losing prices. -v
~,
Leading One Price Clothiers and Furnishers,
Corner Fourth and Main 'Streets.
M1DSUMMEK BARGAINS Reduced Prices.
Remnants and Odds and Ends at Half Price.
aud Wash Novelty Goods at "greatly reduced prices. Summer Hosiery away down. Ladies' Jersey llibbed Vests reduced to 8c, 12 £c, 19c and 25c, worth double. Dress Goods marked down. Silk Mitts, Summer Corsets, ltibbons, Rucliings, Collars and Cuffs. Silk Drapery Nets at very low prices. Fans, Fans, Fans from lc upwards. See our 10c Ginghams. Reduced prices all over our store. Please examine.
HOBERG, ROOT & CO.,
Jobbers and .Retailers. 518 and 520 Wabash Ave.
ESngiijes, Boilers, Mill and Mining Machinery.
ARCHITECTURAL IRON WORK A
Look at this wheel with one eye and then the other. If you do not see alike with both eyes you have reason lor alarm. Should some of the spokes appear blacker than others, you have Astigmatism, which, if not corrected in time, may become irreparable. Pain in and over the eyes is a symptom of Astigmatism. EXAMINATIONS FREE.
Prof. G. D, Edmondson,
Practical and Scientific OpticiaD,
At 131GWOOD'S JEWELRY STO^E.
Phaetona, Landaus, Coupes, Buggies, etc.,
100T, 1003, 1005 Aiul 1007 WubMh Atodii6| ipiriipv uAiim1 VNTI 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 80 and 3» Tenth Street, «-KKK HAU1K» l«u.
KEENLY HILD,
Boiler Maker and Sheet Iron Worker.
Steam Boilers, Tanks,
&c.
WILLIAM C1.UW, J. H.CLIFF.
I
?cjL *»."
e- ti-u7T' t- •**&*
MYERS BROS
AVe are reducing stock now as fast as possible. Cutting prices right I graphing at the office here Sunday, and in two. A few Parasols and Long Handled Umbrellas are marked at ^outs ^"known. 'B
less than cost. Fine Sateens and Wash Bengalees, fine Ginghams
PHCBNIX:
Foundry and Machine Works
NINTH STREET NEAR UNION DEPOT, TERRE HAUTE, IND.I KAHOTACTDRBB3 OF
Mr..
SPECIALTY.
DKA1.KBS1H
Belting, Bolting Cloth, Pipe, Brass Goods, and All Kinds of Mill and Machinery Supplies. Engine and Boiler Repairing promptly attended
A SCIENTIFIC TEST.
Boots, Shoes and Slippers
AT
GEORGE A. TAYLOR'S,
Where you can save money If you do your trading. 11 AC
Repairing neatly and promptly executed. ilUO WADiiU.Il AVxi
JEFFERS & HERMAN,
MANTTTACTURKRS OF
A I A E S
to.
WAUAQ1J A
Repairing a Special y.
AH Work Guaranteed First-class.
No. lOll MULBERRY STREET,
CLIFF & CO.,
MANUFACTURERS OF
BOILERS, SMOKESTACKS, TANKS, Etc,
ALL KINDS OF REPAIRING PROMPTLY ATTKNDRD TO.
on First between Walnut, ana Poplar TERRE HAUTE, IND
SOMETHING NEW in Terre Haute! HA^MADK"OVKR' by machinery to look like new. -I have also the spring style blocks for LADIKS* HATS and BONNETS. M. OATT, 3»e Sonth Third Street, the only Practical
MKALS ific.
WINEMILLER'S CAFE, "sd'7 Soutb. Fourth Street.
¥1?
A N JLIF*
BUNTIN'S THERMOMETRIC RECORD. THE HIS IBS' 8TRIU-
Tuesday, 7a.m. 2p.m. p. IB.
July 16. 67.1 88.7 76.9
WEATHEB PROBABILITIES. WAB DKPAimoeHT, WiaHaeTOH, D. C.. July 16, 8 p. Forecast till 8. p. m. Wednesday, July 17.--For Indiana: Fair warmer, southerly winds.
I
CITY IN BRIEF.
Judge Mack yesterday sold his house and lot at Eighth and Walnut streets for $4,000.
Charles R. Parish, son of Dudley Parish, of south First street, has been adjudged insane.
Frank M. Fox, manager for Indiana, is here in the interest of the state committee of the Young Men's Christian association. .Cohen & Son, tailors on Main street, between Fourth and Fifth street, quit business yesterday and shipped their goods to Indianapolis.
Ralph Conover was fined 81 and costs by Justice Felsenthal yesterday for assault and battery on John B. Greggs, the gas company's collector, in Bader & Bader's saloon.
Messrs. John R. Sullivan, Henry Huff, George W. Smith Bnd H. L. Froeb were fined §1 and costs in the mayor's court, yesterday on pleas of guilty to the charge of allowing their cows to run at large.
The new ice company did not deliver ice to its customers yesterday and the latter began to patronize the old companies again. The consumers are congratulating themselves that they succeeded in reducing the cost of ice by bringing the new oompany here. Ice is now thirty cents per hundred to saloon men.
The new directors of the Indiana loan and savings association held a meeting last night which was the first meeting of directors since business was commenced. During the week the series has been open $100,000 of stock has been subscribed and five loans, ranging from five hundred to two thousand dollars, were made last night. The stockholders are in exceeding good spirits.
Mattoon Journal: A man going under the name of Gerald M. Dunne, who swindled the people of Terre Haute out of ten or twelve hundred dollars last week, was in this city Sunday and Monday morning. It .was not known here that he was wanted in Terre Haute till yesterday afternoon, and he had then left, probably going east on the limited. His name was discovered at the telegraph office, as he did considerable tele-
W
1 &m the on]y hBtter Terre Haute
he only hatter
who can make your silk hat look new. Schluer, the hatter. We have a great many fiat brim yacht hats, suitable for ladies, which we will close out at a large reduction. Schluer, the hatter.
PERSONAL,
Judge and Mrs. McNutt are at French Lick springs. Miss Clemie Dorsey returned yesterday from a visit to Merom.
County Clerk Warren and family leave for Wisconsin this morning. Dr. R. D. Haley, of St. Louis, formerly of this city, was in the city yesterday.
Mr. F. A. McNutt has returned from a visit of two weeks at French Lick springs.
Messrs. Joe Kiefer and John Westlehut, of Vincennes, are visitiDg Mr.Frank Conrath.
The Reverends S. B. Towne and J. H. Hollingsworth returned yesterday from a short trip to Virginia.
A letter has been received from Mrs. Christian Dressier and her son Charles, announcing their safe arrival in Germany.
Mrs. W. D. Ferrell and niece, Miss Mary Ferrell, of north Fourteenth street, left yesterday for Wetherford, Texas.
Mr. Eugene V. Debs will leave to-day for Washington, Ind., where he will deliver a public address in the Masonic hall this evening in behalf of the working classes.
Ernest Aldan has accepted a position with A. S. Pettit & Co., a leading real estate and investment firm of Denver, Colorado. He will enter upon his duties about the first of August and will make his home with Mr. Pettit, who is an old Michigan friend of his father's.
Never pass them by. Probst & Fisbeck for first-class bargains in furniture. In Old Cobweb's hive they are all alive
It's good liquors makes every one merry. r.i If you are dry, just step in and try sad
A little of its grand old sherry. But if your family is ill and you need a pill
Or a good liquor to make you well, You had better believe Old Cobweb never deceives
It has liquors for that purpose to sell.
*. RAILROAD NEWS NOTES.
General and Personal Mention of General and Local Interest,
li. B. Woolsey, of the Vandalia, is at West Baden springe for a few days'vacation.
Joseph Baumbach, of the bolt room, returned yesterday from a week's visit to St. Louis.
A 55-foot Hag pole, to be erected at Marmount station, ie being turned out in the planing mill.
No. 45 on the C., C., C. & St.
IJ
was
split into six sections Monday, necessitated by the heavy traffic. Messrs. Patrick Leary and T. J. Bell of the erecting shop, and Joseph Davis, of the blacksmith shop, were on the sick list yesterday.
As an employe of the O. & M. shopB at Washington was going to work Sunday night he was knocked down by four tramps, who tools his dinner bucket from him and made good their escape.
All of the engines, thirty-eight in number, which were in the flood at Johnstown have been taken out of the mud and are now standing on a side-track near there. The loss will not be so large as at first expected, the average damage to each being about one thousand dollars.
Iiogansport Pharos: Ninety new engines are building at the shops of the Pennsylvania company at different points and at the Baldwin locomotive works, which are to be put in Bervice on the lines west of Pittsburg as fast as completed. Several have been put in service in the last thirty days.
A box of waste saturated with oil in the basement of the paint shop took fire yesterday afternoon and but for the prompt action of one of the employes a serious fire might have occurred, as the room was full of inflammable materialoils, paints, glycerine, varnish, etc. Spontaneous combustion was the cause.
Auditor E P. Cutter, of the Ohio & Mississippi railway, makes the following report of the estimated earnings for the first quarter (1st to 8th inclusive) in month of uly, 1889, 'compared with actual earnings for the like period in 18b8: Total earnings in 1888, $60,777.19 total earnings in 1889, $74,043.36: net increase, $13,260.36.
THJS TERRE HAUTE EXPRESS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JPLY 17,1889.
A Popular Stent Tale To B* Taken By Th«
Miner*.
Special to the Km rati. BRAZIL,
July
l(v—The'regular
eemi-
weekly meeting of the central oommitteeof the striking block coal miners was held to-day, and 5,858 dependents were reported, an excess of nineteen over that of last Friday. The contributions were ss follows, a slight falling off from the last previous report: Rosedale miners, $21.85 Glen Roy, Ohio, $40 Fontanet miners, $26 20 Wellston, Ohio, $735 S. D. Coffey, $5 Indian* Tribune, $40 S. M. Barker, Terra Haute, $5 Local assembly 10,839, Maynard, Ohio, $10 Local assembly 3,842 Beaver Dam, Ky., $5 committee, iiogansport, $20 committee, Cincinnati, $1150.
The central committee ordered meetings to be held Thursday of this week in all the districts and a secret poi ballot to be taken on the issue of going to work at the price offered or continue the strike.
A miner, writing to a local paper, urges amass meeting of miners, ezpi ing the belief that a secret ballot would end the strike. He calls attention to the fact that most of their relief was coming from competing districts, and saye in a few days the year's contracts will have been let and the men thrown out of work for a year. Twenty-five men are now at work in the umbo mine at the operators' terms.
Messrs. Filbeck and Regan received yesterday $5 cash subscription from the Buckeye Cash Store.
President W. R. McKeen has ordered all provisions donated for the suffering miners to be shipped to Brazil without charge.
Owen Fredricks has donated his team to collect all provisions donated. He will call to-day and all are requested to have them packed. Any person who wishes to contribute will please notify the committee. The following persons donated provisions, eta:
Schmltz Bros., one barrel crackers. Conaat fc Son, one barrel flor. Mrs C. Wabler, one barrel corn beef. Bement, Bea A Co.. one chest tea. P. J. Kaufman, one barrel crackers. W. W. Cllver, ten pounds tea. Ed Lawrence, one barrel crackers. P. P. Mlsbler, twenty pounds lard. Union tea company, ten pounds coffee. Joe Miller, 200 pounds meal. J. A. Newhart, one barrel bomlny. J. F. Bodel, one barrel potatoes. Wlllard Kidder, eight sacks flour, 200 pounds. Bauermeister & Bush. 100 pounds meats. Jonas Strause, fifty pounds llour. Enos Strause, $2, coffee, sugar and meat. w. 0. Patton, fifty pounds hominy and five pounds tea.
George C. Foulke, four pounds coffee. T. J. Patton, twenty-five pounds bacon. V. A. Seeburger, twenty pounds picketed pork. A. F. Eiser, one barrel crackers. Miller Bros. A Co., two barrels crackers.
Real Estate Transfers.
Sheriff to Josephus Collett, undivided 6-9 of lot 66, Rose's addition (on foreclosure of T. H. Savings bank vs. Held heirs, certilicate of sale being assigned to Anton Hulman by the bank and from Hulman to Collett) 1,268 101 W. J. Rottman to John R. Lewis, lot 6,
SUMMER TOURISTS. upon R. A. Campbell, general
Call
agent C. & E. I. R. R., 624 Wabash avenue, and procure copies of the latest tourists' guides, giving complete informa-1 tion as to where to go, what to do and what it will cost.
Maid of the Mist and all other perfumes made by Lightner, perfumer, are the most delicate and lasting. Can be had of your druggist only.
DR. E. L. LARKINS,office326, residence I 328 N. Thirteenth at. Telephone 299.
Try Mary Queen, anew perfume. Sale by your druggist only.
Hidden & Hedges druggist near I & St. L. depot are agents for the Express.
NIAGARA FALLS EXCURSION. We are in receipt of circulars giving full details of the C. H. & D. Niagara excursion, which leaves Indianapolis at 11 a. m. Thursday, August 1st, and would advise all who want a delightful trip at light expense to send for full information to' W. H. Fisher, general agent, Indianapolis.
AS USUAL, yesterday Edmondson, I the optician, was busy from 11 a. m. till dark, so come early in the morning. For the balance of the time he will be at Bigwood's at 7:30 a. m., and you can make an early appointment with him.
We vacate our present quarters for improvements August 1st. Until that time we offer ail summer furnishings at greatly reduced prices.
JAMES HUNTER & CO.
Ladies, try the latest and finest perfume in the city—Lightner's Maid of the Mist. For sale by yoar druggist only.
:i:
EAGLE IRON WORKS
are now headquarters for oil and gas I well supplies. I carry in stock complete outfits. 'Also a line of standard tools, including all the modern fishing tools, at at competing prices with Pittsburg. I am also prepared to do all kindB of re-1 pairing promptly. Teams always in readiness to transfer work to and from the works. Telephone No. 14.
J. A. PARKER, Proprietor. I
First and Walnut St., Terre Haute A few more baby carriages left at Probst & Fisbeck'a. Closing out at coot.
DR. GLOVER,
Specialty, diseases of the Rectum. REMOVED TO SEVENTH POPLAR STREETS.
^JACOBSQjf
W TRADE UBHHB^MARK^
REMeSSAIIJ
AT DRUGGISTS AND DEALKH.
IK CHAILU A. V^Wll CO., I
Dyspepsia
Makes the lives of many people miserable, causing distress after eating, soar stomach, sick headache, heartburn, loss of appetite, a faint, "allgone"feeling, bad taste, coated tongue, and irregularity of
DIStroSS the bowels. Dyspepsia does
4 After
DR. K.
not get well of itself. It
.. requires careful attention, Baling and a remedy like Hood's Sarsaparilla, which acts gently, yet efficiently. It tones the stomach, regulates the digeson re at a a petite, banishes headache, J, and refreshes the mind. N8808CH0 "I have been troubled with dyspepsia. I had but little appetite, and what I did eat
UAtarf- distressed me, or did me little good. After eating I DUm would have a faint or tired, all-gone feeling, as though 1 had not eaten anything. My trouble was aggravated by my business, painting. Last Soul spring I took Hood's Barsaparilla, which did me an StOlflftCH immense amount of good. It gave me an appetite, and my food relished and satisfied the craving I had previously experienced."
GEOBGB
A.
PAGE,
Watertown, Mass.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Sold by all drugglaU. fl ilxfor£5. Prepared only by C. I.
HOOD CO.,
Apothecaries, Lowell, MM*.
IOO Doses One Dollar
Health is Wealht!
C.
WEST'S NKRVK
MENT,
1
Lee's addition, Lockport 125 00 Sheriff to Benjamin R. Musgrave, part lot 6. Farrlngton's subdivision 976 00 A. (jr. Chambers and wife, of New Jersey, to Henry Handrlck, s. Ife of lot 22 and 23, Grover's subdivision 400 00 Robert W. Lidster to Henry M. Slnghurse, part section 22, township 11, range 8. 1,400 00 Anna £. Patterson toJEwlng L. Patterson, lots 6 and 6, and 12U feet off n. end of lot 4, Patterson's subdivision... 1 00
Total. $ 4.060 10
"I cannot praise Hood's Sarsaparilla half enough," says a mother whose son, almost blind with scrofula, was cured by this medicine.
DON'T FAIL TO SEE Edmondson, the optician. Remember his time is limited here, and he is to leave here for the East on the evening of the 8th, and will not visit this city again until next winter. So see him, sure.
AND
BRAIN TREAT
a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizziness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache. Nervous Prostration, caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental Depression, Softening of the Brain, resulting In Insanity I and leading to misery, decay and death: Pre ma-! ture Old lie, Barrenness, Loss of Power in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermatorrhoea, caused by over-exertion of the brain, self-abuse or over-indulgence. Bach box contains one month's treatment $1 a box, or six boxes for $6, sent by mall prepaid on receipt of price.
WE GDARAITII SIX BOXES
To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied with $5, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to refund the money If the treatment (Toes not effect a cure. Guarantees iSBued only by J. A C. Baur, Druggists, sole agents, southeast corner Seventh street and Wabash avenue, Terre Haute, Ind.
FIRE! FIRE! FIRE! FIRE! INSURANCE.
You can get^Klre Insurance or any other kind of Insurance of
Allen, Kelley & Co.,
S66
Wabash Avtnua, Tom Haute, M.,
TBLEPHOHB
This agency represents the bed Klre Inturanoe companies now doing business, also the beat
LIVE STOCK INSURANCE
company In the itate.'All Louses an ADJUSTBI)
BY NS
and paid within ONB oi F1VK DAYS from date of same.
ASSETS, SI 53,000,000.00.
Very Lowest Bates and good treatment, as a call,
3
Hlvf
IMPORTANT TO ALL I Ladies' wear of all descriptions cleaned and colored. Gents' clothing cleaned, colored and repaired. All work warranted to give satisfaction Orders of $5 and over sent by express charges pa^d one way.
H. F. ftEINERS,
655 Main St., Terre Haute, Ind*,
BLACK & NISBET,
Undertakers and Embalmers, 26 North Fourth street, will furnish funeral supplies at the follow-1 lng prices:
A plain Rosewood Imitation case, no glass, trimmed complete, with box, heretofore sold by our competitors at $20, our price $16.
Finer finished burial case, with glass, heretofore I sold at $30, our price 222.60. Same face, extra line trimmings, heretofore sold at $35, our price $27.60.
Rosewood or Walnut imitation, llat topped casket, heretofore sold at $45, our price $40. Rosewood imitation '-0. (t." casket, sup trimmed, heretofore sold at $60, our price $41
Fine black Broadcloth casket, heretofore sold at $66, our price $50. Finer goods In proportion. Herse free of charge to either cemetery. These prices are permanent
BLACK A NISBKT, 26 NORTH FOURTH ST.
kr Adminlslerinc ilnines' Speciflc.<p></p>Dr.<p></p>EFLIIPS It can be given in a cup of coffee or tea without the knowledge of the person taking It Is absolutely harmless, and will effect a permanent and speedy cure, whether the patient Is a moderate drinker or an alcoholic wreck. Thousands of I drunkards have been made temperate men who have taken Golden Specific In their coffee without their knowledge and to-day believe they quit drinking of their own free will. IT NKVKB FAILS
The system once Impregnated with the Sped Be,If for the liquor ap-
becomes an utter petite to exist For sale by Jas. E. Somes, dniggl*. Sixth and Ohio sheets, Terie Haute, Ind.
LADIES
Enamel your Ranges twice a year, to pa once a week and you have the finest-polished stove in the rorld. For sale by all Grocer* and Stove Dealers.
At retail by oeo. 8. Zimmerman ft Co.. M. D. Kaufman, Taylor Robertson Wm. Fremont' BrelnlgA Co., wm. F. Hertfelder, W. O. Patton1 Geo. C. Foulkes, Bauermeister A Busch At wholesale by Townley Stove Co. and Hulman A Co., Jobbing agents, Terre Haute, Ind.
OHIO MILITARY ACADEMY,
PORTSMOUTH, OHIO.
Thorough and practical courses of study. Boys I prepared for college or government academlea. Commissions In a foreign army procured for our 1 graduates. Infantry, cavalry and .artillery drills.
For catalogue, address
COL. A. J. WEAVER, Supt.
A. J. GALLAGHER,
CURES PERMANENTLY BACKACHE, HEADACHE AND TOOTHACHE. CURB PERMANENTLY ALL Iflra I CHorry street. Terre Haute
PLUMBER
Qas and Steam Fitter,
SESSPUt"
W8 4*
GOING TO
HERZ' BULLETIN.
Hot weather novelties, new, comfortable and 'stylish, the "Byron" collars and cuffs at 15c, 20c, 25c and 50c a set just received. We think they are nice, cool and quite dressy for any lady miss or child. Lots of other neckwear, ruching, mull ties, black silk scarfs, directoire, Mary Stuart and Lorraine linen colors. We secured 20 dozen more of those elegant summer corsets at 50c each. Be sure and get your wants before the sizes are broken up, as there will be no more this season. Our stock of cheap muslin underwear has been replenished and again show splendid line of corset covers, chemises, pants, gowns, skirts, the showiest garments we ever had at 25c, 35c, 40c and 50c. Remember, we sell the best silk mitts for the money and a large assortment to select from. We continue to sell all summer goods at greatly reduced prices.
HERZ' BAZAl^,
Bargains in Laces at 2c, 3c, and so on.
512 and 514 Wabash Avenue.
LACE DEPARTMENT.
REMNANTS OF EMBROIDERIES!
Cheap! Cheap! Cheap!
DRESS GOODS!
Plain and Stripes 5^ Reduced price 18c.
S A IN E S
-"Y --V.- V."
Remnants of Satines at 10c and 15c per yard worth 20c and 25c.
Plenty of Bargains! Come and See Us.
ESPENHAIN &. ALBRECHT.
100 Odd Flannel Coats
-A.T-
-AND-
SUMMER GOODS
AT HALF PRICE!
Monday Morning', July 15.
Leading Merchant Tailor and Clothier Main and Fifth St.<p></p>REMODEK
Our landlord has decided to make extensive improvements in the
storeroom that we have occupied since 1872. We wiU
vacate our present quarters on August 1st, while
improvements are being made.
Commencing Monday, July 15th,
We will make a
limit Clearance Sale of ill Summer Goods!
Cost, and in many cases less than coat, is all we will expect. Now is
your time for
-TwJ
FLANNEL GOODS OF ALL KINDS! r.
Thin Underwear and Summer Neckwear.
*,
This sale will be strictly for cash. If any goods are charged, they will
be charged at our former prices. *.
JAMES HUNTER & CO. wr
5c, 7c, 8c, 10c
to 10c former
*1 '*7
fill
