Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 November 1889 — Page 2
4% 7
DAILY EXPRESS.
GEO. M. ALLEN,
Proprietor.
Publication Office 16 south Fifth street, Printing House Square.
IKntered as Second-Class Matter at the PostotUce of Terre Haute, Ind.]
SUBSCRIPTION OF THE EXPRESS.
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THE WEEKLY EXPBES3.
ne copy, one year, In advance $1 iS ne copy, six months, In advance Co Postage prepaid in all cases when sent by mall*
The Express does not undertake to return rejected manuscript. No communication will be published unless the full name and pltt of residence of the writer la fur nlfthed, not necessarily for publication, but
HH
a guarantee of good faith.
Everyone can give thanks for being alive to-day.
(live thanks for the cold wave that froze stiff the mud in our streets that is, provided the wave comes as promised at this writing. If it doesn't get here say what you please about the weather and its prophet.
it Is the purpose ol the (iazette to print both sides of this, as of all ijuestions. For Itself It has said, and repeats, that to stop local slaughtering would be a great mistake. When pork packing was lost to Terre Haute it was a bad thing tor the farmers of the county. It home cattle slaughtering Is transferred to the big cities there will also be a bad blow to home industries.—I (.iazette.
If the home" industriesof the United States are transferred to cheap-labor England, will not that be a bad blov/ to home industries? OJ is the Gazette a protectionist for the selfish limits of its own community?
There is a great deal to be thankfu for if you stop to think about it. The trouble with all of us is that we don't stop thinking about the things for which we are not thankful long enough to consider the many blessings heaped upon us. There is an urgent necessity for more of the Mark Tapley tempera nient. ft not only tixes one to give hearty thanks for what he now has, but enables him to go forward in search of more for which he can be thankful next year. It is the man who has too mucn to-day who has the dyspepsia to-morrow and thereby is unfitted for the effort to acquire more for next Thanksgiving day.
The newspapers are discussing whether or not Mrs. South worth should be held accountable for shooting the Brooklyn millionaire who, she Buys, ruined her^ All accounts agree that he was a roue. There is no doubt that she is a woman and as such everyone should be on her side. The only persons, it seems to us, in the wrong are her brothers who, with tears running down their cheeks, tell how they had en aware of their siBter'a wrongs all these years, waiting for her to avenge them. Some of the New Vork newspapers intimate that 1'ettus submitted to blackmail until he could do so no longer and that his refusal brought about the tragedy. We don't believe the woman blockmailed him, it is not to be believed of any woman, bu^ those brothers, growt men, prominent in business circles honorable and upright merchants, may not have been weeping in vain during the years their poor, dear sister was wasting away, physically because of her intense anguish of soul.
THE FIGHT AGAINST TRUSTS.
The decision of the Illinois supreme court yesterday should not bo considered as a death blow to trusts, nor should any enactment of a law-making body or the decision of any court upon the law. Trusts or combines can not be prevented by legislation and consequently not by the courts. The Chicago gns companies formed a trust which the court hBS declared to be illegal because it, was held that the corporation was not for "a lawful purpose" as stipulated in that clause of the constitution providing for corporations. It was held that the incorporation into one of several companies to defeat the natural laws of trade was not for "a lawful purpose." The principle thus enunciated is no doubt sound, but the Ohicngo trust had anticipated it, aud already is prepared to reorgaui/.e in a manner contrived by able lawyers which is expected to avoid the objections sustained by the court. This can be done over and over again.
The immense protits of combines can be used to circumvent' the most carefully drawn laws. .Nothing short of public sentiment will f.vtermin* ate the great evil of "trusts." Q^hat the light is on t!-ere can bo no doubt. The people are determined that they shall go down and that they will eventually "succumb is equally true. Missouri is revoking the charters of those which are state institutions but to morrow the state institution may ent an ini.er siate combination that will deny the power of a state to restrict its operations. In short, the light in the balls of legislation, and in the courts, partakes more of the nature of a chase—the hunted wolf aiwsys escaping, llis freedom may be circumscribed somewhat, but he is wary, and nothing short of a general closing in on him will effect his capture. Aud it will take time to do so.
C. 0. D.
A Dissipated Menl.
Yabsley—We had a dissipated breakfast at our boarding-hou'e this morning. Wlckwlre— And what do you call a dissipated breakfast
Yitbsier— Hard liver.
During the Itow.
Mrs. N. I'eck—And you dare to tell me this to my face? To my open face? Mr. N. Peek—Hut, my dear, your face is always open. 1 have to say things to your open face, it 1 s.iy them at all.
THANKSGIVING DAY.
THE TOOTHSOME TURKEY.
'They're cheaper than roast beef this year." That's what the fat poultry man of Washington market said of the Thanks giving bird to aNew Vork Journal reporter. 'TurkeyB are cheaper this Thanksgiving than I've known 'em for many a year," he added, with a jolly twirl of his knife. "Why, even boarding house keepers have found them cheaper than hash, and that's saying a good deal. On rainy Saturdays all this month you could buy tine ones as cheap as ten cents a pound. Rainy weather is bad for fowl both dead and alive."
The Journal reporter asked a housekeeper how she told a good turkey from a bad one? '•Well," she began, "when I go marketing for a turkey I take off my gloves. I pay no attention to the butcher's recommendations. I run my eyes along the line of turkeys, and when I see one with a plump breast, a clear white skin and fat legs I ask to have him taken down. '•Then," said she, "take your thumb and press it against the breast-boee. If it gives a little that ie one sign that the turkey is tender. A real tough turkey has a breastbone of iron. Then hold up one of the wings, and if the skin breaks easily that is another sign. Then look at the legs. If they are fat and round the turkey is Bure to be young. If he goes through all these tests buy him and have him sent home at once. It is best to buy him two or three days before Thanksgiving."
This wise housekeeper, who has cooked turkeys for the last twenty years, says that a turkey should be drawn as soon as it is brought home. Indeed, she insists that there should be a law compelling those who killed the turkeys to draw them before sending them to market. Then, when the turkey is nice and clean, it should be well rinsed in cold water and a tiny bit of cooking soda, wiped perfectly dry and hung in a cool place away from the sun until Thanksgiving morning. "I do not approve of these French ways of roasting a turkey," she explained. "I dres3 rny bird in good old New England fashion, and if I only had a brick oven to bake it in I Bhould be happy. I allow fifteen minutes to each pound of turkey, and I like my lire to be clear and bright, but slow, the dampers all turned, you know."
She explained that for a 2 o'clock din'ner, which is always the New England Thanksgiving time, she took the turkey at 11 o'clock and put him in a big pan of cold water and salt, and let him remain there while she made the dressing. "This is the way I make my dressing.
It's easy, always good and not expensive. For a ten-pound turkey I take a small louf of stale bread, cut it in slices and put it in the oven for a few minutes to crisp. Then I crumble it all up into a bowl, add a level teaspoonful of salt, the same of thyme, and two ounces of saus-age-meat I mix these all well together, wipe the turkey inside and out, hold him over the fire a few moments to get thoroughly dry, then stuff him just as full as he will hold and sew him up with a big needle and soft whiLe thread. I tuck the heart under one wing, the liver under the other, put a piece of suet on his breast and put hiin in the oven. If the turkay is a fat one, I use the fat in place of the suet. F.very quarter of an hour I baste him well, and turn him so that all parts of him will brown nicely."
When the turkey is done, she lifts him on a warm platcer and puts a bit of white crimped paper about his neck and leg ends. The gravy in the pan is then poured out until only a cupful remains. This is put on the stove in the pan two cupfuls of water is added and a tablespoonful of Ilour. It is boiled until thick, put into a tuireu and served with the turkey. '•Meet American men make an awful muff at carving a turkey. They go at it so unscientifically," said the steward of the Union league club. "Couldn't you give a few rules to aid theni?" asked the Journal reporter. "Well, yes, 1 suppose that I could. In the first place, the carving knife should be sharp. It should be ground especially for Thanksgiving day, so that all maybe peace. The guard of the fork should be turned up and the fork plunged into the brea6t of the turkey."
He explained that the next move was to cut off the wings, and that the point of the knife should be put under the wing and shoved upward, aud then the upper part should be cut about the joint, and the wing shouid drop off.
Next the legs should be removed, and the upper and lower joints cut npart, then the breast should be sliced downward and afterward served.
A THANKSGIVING DINNER.
Chrlslluc Tribune Ilcrrink Tells lJn\v It Can be Slado Thing of Joy and lieauty. Of all appeals No method's more sure at moments to take hold Of the best feelings of mankind Tnari that all-softening, overpowering knell, The tocsin of the soul, the dinner-bell". —Byron.
Thanksgiving dinner may be made a thing of beauty and a ty that will not bring on indigestion in its train, writes Christine Terhune Herrick in Harper's Bn/.sr. In the first place, let us reduce the amount to be eaten. Reflection upon all that this national celebration signifies may enlarge the soul and lire the imagination, but it does not increase the holding capacity of the diaphragm nor stimulate the gastric powers. Lst these have a chance to b9 thankful as well as the palate.
A little thought wiil indicate the style of dinner that may be evolved without departing too far from established custom, and which while preserving the old-time llavor, may yet gratify the aesthetic sense and possess artistic as well as legendary charms.
In the first place, the table must appear at iis besl, with the finest napery. the best chins, glass and silver. .Nothing is too good for Thanksgiving day. Save time and trouble in waiting byplacing all the forks and knives that will be needed on the table at once. Set a vase or bowl of flowers in the middle of the table, choosing chrysanthemums or some other autumnal blossoms in preference to exotics. Dwellers in the country can srrange a charming center piece of scarlet partridge berries, ferns, mosses, sprays c-f evergreer. and perhaps a few witch-hazel blossoms.
Oae or two glasses cf ceiery should stand on the table, a mound of cranberryjelly, sweet and sour pickles, olives, salted almonds or peanuts and other relishes which make the board stractive. When ail these are in place there will be little room left for vegetables, and indeed it is always better to have them passed. Instead of having the turkeyserved from the side, it seems more ap
propriate at such a season as this to have it, carved on »he table. The first course may be an oyster soup or bisque. This combines the souB^Mttd tish courses, and is almost universally popular. Or a clear soup may be served, and be succeeded by creamed oysters or oyster pates. Should the former order be followed, the classic chicken pie may follow the soup and serve as an entree. It may appear* either in the form of small pates or a large pie. If as the latter, it should be accompanied by sweet potatoes, and pickles should be passed with it. After this appears the bird of the day in all his glory, attended by white potatoes, cauliflower, creamad spinach any any other vegetable that may be desired, although there is really very little use in having more than three. With this course are passed the celery, cranberry and other jellies and pickles.
While a game course is not indispensable at a Thanksgiving dinner, it is a pleasant variety, should one choose to introduce it. In this case a small glass of Roman punch coming between the turkey and the game stimulates the laggintr appetite and refreshes the palate. The venison or partridge, quail or whatever it may be, should be served hot and on very hot plates, and have passed with it French pease, currant jelly and crisp celery. A simple lettuce salad follows. The olives, almonds, etc., may have been passed all through the dinner, during and between the courses.
THANKSGIVING TARTS.
Snow Tartlets.--Bake the paste shell, keeping them as white as possible heap as full as possible with whipped cream sprinkle with cocoanutoralmond6grated. Or, lay a teaspoonful of stiff, red jelly on euch tart.
Cocoanut Puffs.—Make a custard same as above, and flavor with lemon extract. Before baking the paste, till with the mixture sprinkle with fresh grated cocoauut. Bake, then ice and sprinkle thickly with cocoanut.
Cheese Tarts.—One cupful of curd drained dry, yolks of two eggs, three cupfuls of sweet cream, one half cupful of dried currants—washed and redried, a pinch of ealt and pepper sweeten to taste. When baked, ice with the stillly frothed whites of eggs. Sat them in a hot ovon two minutes.
Fruit Custard Tarts.—One and onehalf pints of sweet milk, one heaping tablespoonful of corn 6tarch moistened with milk, three eggs, two tableepooufuls of sugar. Stir well together. Line the turt pans with paste, till with the mixture, and scatter one pint of ripe, sweetened cherries or currants on top. Bake. You can ice them if you wish, but they are good enough without.
Lemon Tarts.—Peel and grate a good lemon, and two-thirds of a cup of white sugar, yolk of one egg, one cup of cold water, in which has been well mixed a dessertspoonful of corn-starch stir well together cook in a new tin or porcelain pan stir until it is a smooth jelly. This is good between layers of a cake. Fill the tart shells, ice with the white of one egg whipped to a froth with a spoonful of sugar, aud set them in a hot oven one minute.
A plate on crisp, llaky tarts, second edition of a pie, is a pretty and delicious addition to tea or luncheon. The pastry must be made of butter, ice-water, etc, on a marble slab, if you have the aforesaid materials, but if you have not, it may be made of two heaping tablespoon fulsof lard and a pinch of salt rubbed into one pint of Hour, wet with enotJgh cold water to bind it together. Knead as little as possible, line the greased gem or patty-pans with the thin-rolled paste, pinch closely to the edge and prick with a fork to prevent bliEter6. ike. If possible, do not fill them long before using, that they may not become soggy.
THE POINT OF VIEW.
S.MAU. INY,
T.oijrrn
I:
"You must wake and call me early, call me early. mother dear. To-morrow w'll be the gladdest day of all the glad old year! For when to-morow's sunset glides the gray No vember sky I'll be as full of turkey as I can be and not die.
8MAL TOKKKV. LtMJLTrPR:
"Let me sleep till lale tomorrow." said the turkey to his ma. "For I shall bn an orphan then, bereft or you and pa! And while I'm roosting drearily, without a dam or sire, You will be roasting cheerily before the kitchen lire."
Time.
DRUMSTICKS.
New Hampshire: Culinary taxidermy Stufliug a turkey. R-ithway Advocate: There is just now an over-cultivation of the turkey crop.
Dansville Breez?: The r^file of the turkey is heard in the land. Whitehall Times: Whoever undertakes to devour poultry without thoroughly plucking it is apt to feel down in the mouth.
First Turkey—Why didn't you ask to be spared? Second Turkey—Oh, I was too excited. I quite lost my head, in fact.
CRANBERRY SALCE.
Philadelphia News: The eagle is our national bitd all the year except on Thanksgiving.
Dansville Breeze: A Thanksgiving turkey should be eaten with thankfulness, and winter squash.
Boston Post: The baseball season is over
DOW,
to be sure but the man who
loses his turkey on Thanksgiving day will be outen a fowl. Boston Courier: The hotel waiter who was presented with a Thanksgiving turkey by a patron of the dining-room called it "a fowl tip."
Puck: Never forget to be kind to dumb animals. A few extra handsful of corn thrown to your turkeys these cold autumn days may make you feel a great happier by Thanksgiving.
Rochester Post-Express: One can go from Paiis to Constantinople now without a change of caft. We mention the fact for the information of those in this country who ej pect to go to Turkey Thanksgiving D.iy.
FILLING HIS INSIDE.
With plates and ads and fakes and fads. The editor wrought, with scanty scads. With a decent pride he cheetlly tried till up the eap of the vast "inside.", But ads were few. and news notes, too. And the editor otten was In the stew. But there came a day whan the scribe was gay And merrily whistled "The Boulanger." And his waistcoai wide was stretched and tried. 'Ttvas Thanksgiving Day he'd a full Inside. —IWarren Tribune.
LET EVERYBODY BE THANKFUL. If "hard tlmse" your sense of true gratitude bothers
To think of a theme which your words shall Imbue. Be thankful your not quite so hard us as others
Or that others are not quite so hard up as you.
Kind blessings have fallen on saint and on sinner Though the measure to some has be painfully brleo. But the churl Is unworthT a Thanksgiving dinner
Who kicks cause his turkey is not a whole beef
THE TERRE HAUTE EXPRESS, THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 28, 1889.
EXPRESS PACKAGES. .\
THE FIRST SNOW OF
WI.SrKIt.
"'Tis the first snow of winter £$• That comes with the blast. But this thought Is uppermost
Would 'twere the last.
The widow, the orphan. The homeless are sad. And none but coal barons
Are happy and glad.
The ice cream sign's hiuden Away on the shelf. But the oyster stew placard
Is bumping itself.
The boys o'er the mill pond Will presently glide. And the festive toboggan
We gaily will slide.
The town of Elkins, W. Ya., had no existence last spring. It is now a thriving village.
The phospate lands of Florida are to be developed by a New Vork company. They are said to be very rich.
Some Los Angeles fruiterers are planning to establish a permanent exhibit in New York City of an orange grove.
Havre would suffer more than any other city in Europe from the derangement of the coffee market by the troubles in Brazil.
The Queensland legislative assembly recently held a continuous session for eight days. There was a sharp struggle over an appropriation for railways.
Irwin A Stetler, merchant at Frederick, Montgomery county. Pa., during the fall has shipped 1,000 barrels of shellbarks to Eastern points.
The first sawmakers' anvil used in this country is in possession of E. Andrews, of Williamsport, whose uncle imported it from England in lSl'J.
A young man plowing on a ranch near Gait, Cal, found over SI,GOO. His employer kept all but 620 of it, and left the plowman to plod his weary way in the field.
An otter, a muskrat and a mink play together on the banks of a creek at Scranton, Pa. The farmer who owns the premises won't let his boys trap or shoot them.
Since Sept. 30 there have been nearly 1,300 visitors to the Bellefonte, Pa., jail, nearly all of them to see Hopkins, the double murderer, an average number of twenty-seven each day.
The Japanese census for 1S38 showed a population of 39,GOT,234. The marrintres numbered 330,210 and the-divorces 109,175. Japan evidently leads the nations in the latter particular.
The hansom cabs sent over from London to Paris duriDg the exhibition have been a great success. A large number have been bought by private individuals. "La haneom" has become chic.
The Dublin Freeman's Journal says Archbishop Walsh has organized a plan of temperance reform, with the concurrence of his clerical brethren, by which he hopes at once to secure a free and sober Ireland.
German chemists have discovered in the cocoannt a fatty substitute for butter, and it is being produced in large quantities at Manheim. One factory turns out 6,000 pounds p6r day, worth 15 cents per pound.
According to the French papers the Madrid gallery has lately received, ns a gift from the Duchess Dowager de PastranF. 225 pictures, among which are said to be Van Dycks, Rubensee, Ten iersee, Mengses and other fioe works.
Everybody will be glad to learn that the United States expedition for the observation of the eclipse is all right, anil that the members will soon bB safely on shore at St. Paul de Doands, where they will find civilization in full blast.
Recent widespread failures in the tea trade in China have had a curious effect on ruined merchant?. Five of them have taken refuge in a monastery in preference to meeting their creditors, one committed suicide and rnaDy have disappeared.
The Norwegians are said to be the longest lived people in the world. Of ficial statistics show that the average duration of life iu Norway is -13.33 for the men, 51 30 for the women aud 49 77 for both sexes. The duration of life has increased of late yeare.
A typically ignorant juryman has been found in Iowa. He could name only eight states of the union aud three presidents. He was firmly of the opinion that Eng'and is in Africa and that Canada is "out somewhere beyond California." Of course he takes no newspaper.
A remarkable discovery of gold has been made in Montgomery county, North Carolina. The ore yields a large percentage of pure gold."' The place is owned by three brothers named Sanders. It is said that one man in two hours' work got out 2,000 pennyweights of pure gold.
British capital is developing the resources of South Africa at a remarkable rate. The returns of the mines have increased from §250,COO to 87,500,000 a year. At the same time silver, coal, petroleum and planting companies, with all their attendant industries, have been started, and in many cases are doing well.
Thomas Cousins, of Kennebunk, Me., the oldest of a family of fifteen children, died Monday. The family was remarkable from the fact that James and Hannah Cousins had seven boys in succession and then eight girls. There were three pairs of twins. The children were never all together except once.
Pete Gruber, of Oil City, has added to his curiosities a production of the Brad ford field—not anything in the oil line, but a three legged rocs'er. Aside from the attention it draws to him, the third leg is practically valueless to its owner, as it is too short to do any scratching with, or to be used for walking purposes.
Russia, although in many respects a semi barbarious nation, is ranking steady progress in civilization. The announcement is made that the infliction of corporal punishment on peasants is to be abolished in the Baltic proVinces. It has been the custom to employ the lash for petty offenses, or as a means of extracting rent or taxes.
A PhtureMjuc Imltnnu Campaign. Indiana had no election this year, but its canvass next year will be picturesque enough to make up for this omission. Several state officers and a legislature will be chosen, and the discussion
Banker—But it's really impossible for me to lend you any money! Why don't you go to somebody that knows you?
Montogue Tigson—That would be of no use at nil, my dear sir. It's a perfect stranger I wantl-^unny Folks.
White Cherry and Cherry Iitd. Pianos boxed in white cherry are the latest. Boxed ears still appear in cherry r»d.—[St. Paul Pioneer Pre»B.
Do you suffer with catarrh? You can be cured if.you take Hood's oa'sapBrilla, the great blood purifier. Sold by all druggists.
Men's Overcoats, $2. $3, $4, $5, $6, up to $28.
Men's Suits,
$3 50, $4, $5, $6, up to $30.
Men's Trousers, $1, $1.50, $2, $3, $4, up to $8.50.
*25our
TIME TABLE.
Trains marked ttus (l1) denote Parlor Car at tached. Trains marked thus (3) denote Sleeping Cars attached dally. Trains marked thus (B) de note Bullet Cars attach'-d. Trains marked thuf run dail?. All other irsl'is ran dalU Sunday? exoeprcd.
VMDALIA LINE,
T. H. A I. DIVISION.
LXAVX FOR THX WKST
8 Western Express (3kV) 5 Mail Train
1
fast Line* (F.fcV)
ra:t sia'.t
ARR1VX
3 ASaii and Accommodation 7 Fast Mall
Katt Lino
I:B
to
candidates hos already begun.—|GlobeDemocrat.
Strange, But True.
M'J a. rr. IU '2! a.
Thanksgiving Demonstration
I
'i OMIr.
-,
3 111 p. m. U.U4 p. (l
LSAVK ?0K TKK SAST
12 Cincinnati Express (S) 6 -ew York Express (Si.:V) 4 Kail and Accommodation !JC Atlantic Express (FS V) 1 VRSt LIM»
1.80 a. ir. 1.5J a. u. 7.1*8. a. 12. 7 p. ir.
1 r.
rr,
5.05 p. in.
FKOM THX KAST.
9 Westrrn Express (34V) 6 Mali Train 1 Fast Line (PAY)
l.sn a. m. 1(1.1 a. m. '2.1 n. n. (i." p. m. 6.46 p. m.
B.00 p. m.
ABRIYK FROM TUB WKST.
l.liO a. m. 1.42 a. in. 18 42 p. m. 2 ill p. m. 5.00 p.m.
T. H. 4 L. DIVISION.
LZAVK FOIt TUB HOKTH.
No. 6a Sonth Bond Matl d.W a. m. No. 54 South Bend Express 4.00 p. m. AIIRIVX FROM TUK SOETn No, 51 Terre Haute Express lSL'JP nooc No. SS South Bend Mall 7.90 p. m.
ffiESB NEW YORK ASD BALT1M0R OYSTERS
-AT-
E. W. Johnson's
Cir
MAIN STKKET.
ROBERT
H.
RLACK.
JAMKS A. SI5KKT.
ULACK S NISBET,
Undertakers and Embalmers, North Fourth street Terre Haute. Ind. Warerooms 25tb st. and Washington ave. All calls will receive prompt attention. Open day and night.
Of beautifully made clothing, as fine as tailoring can make, and a list of prices: the lowest, the most unparalleled, the most astounding.
Boys' Overcoats, $1.25, $1.75, $2, $2 50, up to $15.
Boys' Suits,
$1 25, $1.50, $2, $2,50, up to $15.
We shall keep up a constant warfare against clothing that turns while, red, green and all the colors, and is threadbare long before it's worn out. Don't pay your money for such truck.
Buy the reliable. Buy from us that which gives you lasting^service. Remember, the bsst goes first so be at your selection early. No trouble to show goods at
P1XLEY & (o.
THE CASINO Saloon and Lunch Rooms!
CHARLES CARTER
Serves Oysters in all Styles
At all hours. Give him a call.
Finest line of imported and domestic wines, liquors and cigars at the bar.
PANDISON & BURNS, 377 MAIN STREET.
HOLIDAYS!
A S
Great 5c & 10c Cut Price House
Still in the lead, 314 Main St., north side.
We »re now ready to greet you with bargains that simply paralyzes all competition. Look at some of them. Fine large plush albums, former price 82 25, now SI 50 all other styles in proportion. Fine plush autograph ^albums, all others sell at
price 15J. Shoofly hobbies, former price §1.10 our price Sap.
Larger, former price §1.25: our price SI. Large hobby horses, former price Sl-ij: our price 95j. Large writing desk and black bound combined, former price 61.25: our price 90c. Extra large, same style, former price $2 our price 81.50. And evervthing else in proportion. Presents suitable for old and young. Don't fail to come and see us before you buy. 5c and 10c cut price bargain house, 314 Main street, north side.
N. B. 1 have five successful stores in operation besides my wholesale trade, consequently buy in much larger quantities than any of the smaller dealers, and give you the benefit of the middle man's profit. Hence these cheap prices.
D. F. CLARK, Proprietor, 314 Main Street.
SOMETHING NEW in Terre Haute! ATS9MA?»K'OVKK
by machinery to looklike new. have also the latest style blocks for LADIES' HATS and BONNETS. M. OATT, 386 South Third street, the on'j Practical Hatter In Terre Hsnte.
THE TELlilE HAUTE TRANSITU CO.
Are continually adding new stock, line carriages and cabs. They have recently purchased a beautiful coupe, suitable for ladles Iti making calls. The coupe is cheaper than cabs. Orders should be left at the main oilice. 02) Main street. In order to Insure prompt attention^
Coates College for Women
TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.
A PRSPARATOET SCHOOL -AND SEMIHAST.
(Write lor special circular.)
Standard College Curriculum
(See calendar.)
SEMINARY OF MUSIC AN0 VOICE CULTURE. (Piano, Pipe Organ, Voice.)
AN ACADEMY OF FINE ARTS
(Drawing, Water Colors, Oil, Portraiture.)
Opens Wednesday, Sept. n, 1889
For Information cail on or address the president John Mason Duncan, or Sydney B. Davis, secretary board of trustees.
US A TRIAL
And you will be surprised to see how cheap we are selling
As we are always to the front I11 Low Prices. Repairing neatly and promptly executed at
1105 WABlSa AVENUE.
E O A A O
A. J. GALLAGHER,
PLUMBER
Gas and Steam Fitter, 424 Cherry Street, Terre Haute.
Men's Heavy Underwear, 15c, 25c, 40c, 50c, up to $4.50.
Winter Gaps,
35c, 50c, 65c, 75c. up to $10. Winter Gloves, 40c, 50c, 65c, 75c, up to $3.
FURS! FIRS! ALL ABOl'lT11FM
The most important thing about furs is that they shall be "all fur."
There are Furs and Furs!
We carry the largest stock ot furs iu the state.
Seal Garments and Small Fins!
We carry the be3t goods. Of us you get pure goods—solid stuff. We can show you a garment at 8I.j0. We can show you another that looks like it at 6-00.
HUT NOT NEAT YHAR.
They won't look alike afler a season's wear, and we will show you why and fell you just the kind of material you nro buying.
S. AYRHS 4 CO,
Indianapolis, lad.
Agents for Butterlck's Patterns.
VTAYLORS OPERA HOUSE, W I S O N 1
'I hanksiriviiiur .Mafiuec ami I'vcnin'-v!
Thursday, Nov. 28th,
Fisher's (.'real Musical K\trav:it:ai./a.
A COLD DAY!
A Strom Company of Sinulm Comedians. Pietty Ladies. Handsome Costumes. Spcclal Scenery. Novel .Mechanical FneoH. Matinee :it '^.110. JhYftilnt tit Sil'iil.
Prices for both perfoi mance*. 75. Miami li'iceoU. Sale opens Tuesday.
NAY.LOR'S 0PHRA
WILSON NAY Lull, MASA.KK.-
Friday, November 29, CI IAS. !,. DAMS
Al.VIN JOSLINi In a new play
TIIE OLD STllCli!
Kxcellent Company! Charming Music! Magnificent Singe Sellings!
Sale Opens Wednesday' Usual Prices!
rsTa.ylor'a Opera' llcnist'.
Saturday, Nov. 30t.h,
Kngageiiienl of the famous author and arlw.
.EDM IIAHKIGiX.
And his original New York company, und-r the management of Ma. M. W. H»ni.ky, presenting Mr. Ilarrigari's original drama.
I
avknuki
A Splendid Performance! Orlitln il .Music! Esf~Advance sale opens Friday. Prices -1&, GO and 75 cents.
Look at This Array!
EMTLE ZOLA. ERXKST RK.VAN*. A A S S A N 11 i-
DO
i.k
HA N VI K,
FKRDEKICK HARRISON, HKXEST ECKSTEIN, and HENRIK IBSEN
Are all represented by articles In the firs'. arrmOsr ot
The Transatlantic.
A Mirror ot European Life and Letters,
O O
Subscription Price, $2.00 a Year
A£k your newsdealers for It. or send 10 cents for a sample copy to the
TRANSATLANTIC PUBLISHING CO.',
P. O. Box 210, Boston, Mass.
I'ocket Match Safe Free to Smokers of
