Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 December 1889 — Page 2

roU-»t.'Cfr7-ROYAL Pot.cV*

POWDER

Absolutely Pure.

This powder never varies. A mirvel or strength and wholesomeness. More economl cal than the ordinary kinds, andcannotbesoldln competition with the multitude of low test, short weight alum or phosphate powders. Sob! only in can*.

HOIAL BAKI.W POWDKK Co.. 100 Wall St., N.

DIED.

KANTZ-Frank Kantz died Friday last at 4 in. of consumption, aged 21) years. The funeral will take place to-day at 1 utf) p. m. from his former residence. 1710 south Thirteenth street.

Interment at Highland Lawn cemetery. The friends of the family are Invited without further notice.

ANNOUNCEMENTS. N

JOTICK I. O. O. I'".

Brother Thomas Stephens, of l'leasantvlile lodge, No. 40S. I. O. 0. K., died December 7, at 1 o'clock p. in. Funeral will take place from his late residence, north Second street, to the I'nlon depot at !i o'clock a. m. Brethren of Goethe lodge. Fort Harrison lodge, Terre Haute lodge, I. U. 0. F., are requested to meet at Fort Harrison lod^e hall at 8iiii a. m. HKNHV SCHWINDV, N.

FUANK

oethe lodge, No. 382, 1. O. ». F.

WANTED.

^TrBEK(iHERM & Fl!FUND'S

Southwest corner KIghth'and l'oplar streets,

You will lind one of the finest assortments of STAl'l.E AND FANCY (.KOCKUIK3

Inltlie city.

Look at our dlsplay of vegetables and rrults.

All goods sold at rock bottom prices.

WANTED—The

East End shoe store. Win. McWilllama.

Wand

ANTKD—Salesmen In this district. One of our men earned $4,ti00 In 1KS7 and $5.'Jim In 1888 is doing better tills year. I'. O. box. 13il, New York.

WANTED—The

W\NTED-

IS MA

llAUKKLAiNT), Sec.

ladles to call and get a pair of

those line kid shoes, put up In a nice cedar box. They are something nice. At the Fast r,nd shoe store, corner Main and Eleventh street. Win. McWlllIams.

"VITA NT EI)—$00 salary, §10 expenses In advance

VY

allowed each month. Steady employment at home or traveling. No soliciting. Duties delivering and making collections. No postal cards. Address with stamp, Uafer Co Plqua, Ohio.

\\7ANTED—I wish to employ a few ladles on YV salary to take charge of my business at their homes. Light, very fascinating and healthful Wages $10 per week, lieference given, (.ood payTor part time. Address, with stamp, Mrs. Marlon Walker Louisville, Ky.

WANTIiD—People

to stop complaining and

call at the Fast Knd shoe store, where you can get the bargains In boots and shoes. 1(K4 Main street.

\NTED—Unod tinner at Geo. S. Zimmerman's, 058 Wabash avenue.

WANTKD

Scissors, knives, cleavers, etc.

ground in best manner. Lawn mowers put in order. Also saws dressed for carpenters, butchers, and others. Repairing of all klndc. John Armstrong, No. 10 North Third street.

WANTED—The

little, big, old and the young

people to come right alone and look lor themselves and see what bargains are olTered In boots and shoes at the corner of Main and Eleventh streets, the

school children to come and

get a pair of good school shoes for $1.25, corner Main and Eleventh streets. The East End hoe store.

restaurant two years' experience in grocery buMness and three years In restaurant. Address A. L. Moon, this olliee.

\\7 *NTED—The public to know -Another serYY les of Hose Building and Loan will soon be started. It will be on the old plan, except that shares will be $100 each Instea of .$500 each. Monthly payment on each share not drawn, -f 1.05. which makes It very convenient for persons wishing to imrrow less than $r()0. Call at W. 11. Slaughters olliee. Third and Ohio streets, and subscribe tor shares.

FOR SALE.

pOK SALE-A BARGAIN—

House and Lot

on northeast corner Thirteenth and Eagle, lot KixlGO feet, house of nine rooms, well arranged and In good condition.

Excellent location.

Koom on the lot for several other houses that will rent well. Good barn, well, cistern, etc.

Can be hail at a bargain! KIDDLE. HAMILTON A CO.. JO south Sixth street.

~*Olt SALE -lij tons of timothy and clover hay.

1

Will deliver In lots to suit customers. l'Ol'LKES, DA1ILF.N .V GREINER. 611 Ohio street.

ij'OR SALE—A house and lot near the Keyes biiBW works on easy monthly payments, little more than rent, with or without payment down. ltlDDLE, 11 Ml 11.TUN' ,V CO..

JO south Sixth street.

1,-iOR SALE-Statlonary engine, cast iron frame, second-hand, lirst-class. flxteen horse-power, in llrst-classcondition. Applyto

HENRY 111LD, 8'Jl Slain street.

1T*0R SALE OR EXCHANGE—A carefully se leeted stock of hardware, direct from the manufacturer, invoicing at lowest wholesale or job bers' prices *16.000. Address^

Drawer 11. Lovlngton, III.

jpoa SALS—O id St fccnCHfi, su

able for hoiiBecleaning purposes, lnautra at Dally

Express offlc!.

FOR RENT

li^OR RENT -Store room on Cherry street, between Fourth ami Filth, suitable for small business. Apply to J. 11. Brlggs.

1

?OR RENT—Furnished room for one or two gentlemen, within three blocks ot Main street. Enquire at 001H Ohio street.

1

7(IR

RENT—A cottage convenient well, els tern and good outbuildings: also, two story house, conveniently arranged, good out buildings both pleasant and centrally located good repair. Enquire 410 north Fourth street.

17*011 RENT—C -ttage of live rooms, pantry, eel1' ir. cistern, gas five squares from business center. Inquire of A. B. Stoner, Town ley Bros.

LOST,

I

OST—A dark green crepe veil on Main street. ,j probably south side, between Sixth and Seventh streets. Tuesday afternoon. Finder will please return to this office.

FOTND^

I

rMH'ND-A pair ot nose glasses, about three

1

weeks ago. Owner can have same by Killing at T. J. Griffith's, south Fourth street.

MONEY TO LOAN.

O.N'KY TO LOAN—Any sum: most reasonable terms. BIDDLK, HAMILTON A CO.

Mrs. Frank L?slie on the Marital State and Its Happiness.

THE GRQWTH OF THE BENEDICT CHAMBERS.

Can. Men or Women Lead a Truly Successful Liie Unmarried? —Some Reasons Given.

Copyright, 18S9, by the Bok Syndicate Press.

.Straws show which way the "wind blows, and a quiet little addition to the building interests of New ork especially, and other cities in their degree, shows the growth of a new phase of our American life, likely to make a large mark upon the future.

Benedict chambers is a favorite name for these new edifices, and that of course means that they are intended for bachelors'quarters, although in passing let us wonder, as I often do, why Benedict, who is chiefly famous because he did mnrry, and calls himself "Benedict the married man," should be chosen as the type of resolved and settled celibacy.

Until lately, a young unmarried man was considered and accommodated as a sort of bird of passage he had a tiny room in his father's house, or he boarded somewhere, or he lived at hotel, or lodged in one house and ate in another or at a cafe he was on his promotion he was not living, but staying he was the half of a. pair of scissors he was a transitional formation, not worth placing or formulating very accurately.

If he hung long on hand, people began to say, "Why doesn't he marry? He surely has salary enough, hasn't he?"

And if by chance he remained unmarried, he became a sort of phenomenon, was called "an old bnchelor," ridiculed, offered in jest to each other by merry girls, and made the subject of comic songs, stories and jests. It was in those days, not so long gone by either, a matter of course that a young man's one idea of contented personal life was to marry a nice girl, set up a home where he should be lord and master, and accept with equanimity the little responsibilities likely to accrue.

But the luxurious and carefully planned Benedict chambers do not accord with this idea. They are evidently intended for men who already have secured a sufficient income for modest marriage, but who do not intend to spend their money in that way for men who say of two or three or five thousand a year as the gourmand did of the goose —that it was an inconvenient-roast, being a little too much for one, but not enough for two.

These gentlemen consider that a pretty suite of rooms where they may smoke BB much as they chose, stay up until they wish to go to bed, have guests when they like, or play hermit if they prefer, have the morning coffee and roll 'served at their bedside, and lunch and dine at Delmonico's, is better than to establish a partnership household, when the domestic portion is more apt to rule than the one whose business takes him away for most of his waking hours.

From a purely selfish point of view probably Benedict judges wisely, tie can be more comfortable, he can be more independent, he can escape a good deal of nnnoyance and perplexity, but then— he can't be married.

And

Situation as clerk In grocery or

placing Benedict chambers in one

scale, and married life in the other, which has solid goldgenough in its composition to bear down the scales?

Is marriage an essential of the happiness of life? Fifty years ago, as I have just intimated", no such question could have been seriously asked or answered. It was a matter of course that young people were to marry justas' soon as they had the meanF, and, to judge from what was written in that day, and from the ingrained prejudices of the survivors of that day, it was the young men who were ea^er to be married speedilj as possible, and the young women who were urged to set aside their coy Ecruples and consent to an early day.

What has changed this healt.hy, natural, patriarchal order of events? Why do men now take council with themselves and each other, and so often conclude that chambers are preferable to a dulce domuni? and why do they and illnatured women so often speak of girls trying to marry, angling for husbands, and all the rest of it?

We are often told by the bachelors themselves that the march of luxury has outstripped the march of incomes thata tnan cannot now start in life aa his father did, but is expected to begin where he left off.

They say that the dowerlees daughter of a man living up to a big ineome expects to go from her father's house to one just as fashionably situated, just as well furnished and served, and to continue without a break the life to which she has been accustomed. "And a fellow of five-and-twenty doesn't ordinarily have an income rising ten thousand a year," said one discontented bachelor to whom I was giving sensible advice.

But, taking all one's friends together, do the married men seem absolutely happier than the bachelors, even if they have means large enough or a wife economical enough to make marriage possible? 1 am inclined to think tney are not. Married men, as a rule, have a speculative, Bbsent minded expression upon their faces, as if they were mutely pondering over some intricate domestic or commercial affair. They generally have an air of arriere pen6ee, so to speak, and it is not. to my mind, the fullest expression of happiness the human face can wear.

The bachelor face, on the other hand, has its own handwriting of ill success. It is "apt to wear a bored expression a look of is life worth living? or else a cynical indifference to this and every other question outside of his own material comforts, which is very painful to read upon a young man.

Au unmarried man grows selfish, narrow and material almost as a matter of course, for life in its early days possesses an elasticity like what the medical men tell us belongs to the human stomach. If one eats a good deal, and varied food, the stomach embraces and assimilates it all if one eats too little, and that only of concentrated food, the stomach contracts, grows rigid, and is no longer capable of more than the most limited service.

Moral: Put good deal into your life, and your life will be able to make good use of it, and to nourish the inner man, the unseen and immortal K^o, to the best advantage.

We cannot supersede nature, although

v:

we do try very ardently and obstinately to do so. Men and women were intended for each other they were intended to marry and to become parents. The human race is to be carried on, and the waste places of the globe are yet to be peopled, and this great sweep of the cirole of infinity is not to be clipped out and thrown aside by the architects of Benedict chamber?. Perhaps the gilded youth of New

Y'ork,

London",

Pars, and Vienna will inhabit such chambers, and live and die in them: and please fancy such a deathbed But the world will go on, men and maidens will love and marry and rear up children to follow their example so long as the world endures and well for the world is it that these things thus should lie, for this IB the natural life, and in following out such laws both the race and the individual will find its highest development, and, therefore, highest happiness.

The unmarried man, and more especially the unmarried woman, has not filled his or her amplest sphere of existence, and cannot be called a success, whatever he or she has achieved, for they leave the place where they stood vacant when they fall, and the world, although it may be wiser, cannot be the richer because they have lived.

It is hardly worthwhile, however, to fret very much over the perversity of those who will not follow out this benign law of nature, or to severelj scold the selfieh Benedicts, or the silly, extravagant girls who discourage them for, after all,'they are only obeying another law of not so much nature as destiny— oneof those bite of quiet irony with which that "Destiny which shapes our ends, rough hew them how we may," often diversities her labors. Look through the history of the world, that is, of its civilized nations, and you will find every one of them governed by this unwritten but unchanging

IBW

while life

is simple, the need of population confessed, and communities small, marrioge will be looked upon as desirable, and nearly all young persons will S9ek, desire and accomplish it. Life will be easy, and children will spring up like buttercups in June.

Later on capital becomes concentrated, rich men wealthier and poor men poorer, labor less honorable, the standard of comfort advanced beyond what was once the limit of luxury, the cities grow too large to be called communities, business takps on the air of piracy or predatory warfare, and men no longer profess to care much for building up a country or emulating the patrotism of their grandsires.

Then comes the era of Benedict chambers then does destiny permit her young men to contract their lives into selfish, cynical bachelorhood, and her maidens to wither upon the stem or to find themselves a "vocation" in the world or the convent, for she Bees this coming destiny that at this point of space and time there is no need of more population, no need of pioneers, no need of building up an already overgrown center. She eeee, too, does she not? that an ffete and overcultivated and exhausted stock is not the one whence to take scions for her new plantations, and she simply leaves them to run out, struggle where they will, unbound and untrained, flower or fruit, and finally lie down and disappear.

Nature knows best nature has her laws and her intentions and quiet though she be in most of her wayB, the combined wisdom, determination and effort of the whole race will not affect her methods in the least.

MKS. FRANK LKSMI-..

Heating Xraus-Faclfl* Kecorda. SAN FRANCISCO, December 7.—The

Pacific mail company's new steamer China arrived from Hong lvong and Vokohoma this morning, making the voyage from the latter port in twelve days and eleven hours, thus beating all trans Pacific records.

For a severe and aggravated cough1accompanied by a

Eore

chest, I have used

Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup with the most satisfactory results, obtaining, as I did, speedy relief. JOHN CJLOVKK.

Portsmouth, Va.

Thaukgiving is over, and so apparently is our Indian Summer weather and preparations must now be made for winter, which suggests a visit to S. Loeb'a for one of those fur or plush robes he is selling at cost, or a pair of nice warm gloves, of which he has a fine line. In the way of hats and caps he has all the late styles and is selling at the most teasonable prices. Also gloves in all styles and at all prices.

LITTLE AX TELLS.

Bay no other brand of cheese. It is full cream. A. F. Eiser, sole agent.

THE BOSTON AND LYNX FIRES. The losses of the New York Underwriters' Agency and the Germenia Fire Insurance Company, of New York, in the recent fires at Boston and Lynn, Mass, have been promptly and satisfactorily adjusted, and aggregate £270,000. These conflagrations teach property owners two things:

First—The necessity of insuring in strong companies. Second—That watchmen, first-class tire departments, abundant water supply and "fire proof" buildings are not sufficient guarantees against sweeping loss by fire.

The fallacy of relying on anything else for protection against loss by fire than good insurance and ample insurance is simply nbsurd and too often a serious mistake. William Biel is agent for above named companies.

HOMEMADE CANDIES

Made daily at Eiser's, Ninth

Bnd

Main.

NEW NOVELTIES

In candies, baskets and boxes at Eiser's.

The public generally and everybody in particular are invited to attend the opening of holiday goods at Somes' drug store, corner Sixth and Ohio, Monday Dec. 9th. Remember th*time and place, Monday, Dec. I'oh, at Somes' drug store, corner Sixth and Ohio.

J. E. Somes, druggist, on the corner of Sixth and Ohio, has secured the agency of Tenny's fine candies and has just received a large invoice of them. They are fresh, pure and wholesome. Try them.

BREAD! BREAD!

ATT AN TED—Everybody to try a loaf of the new Zulu or Indian bread. Manufacturer ^Steincamp is agent for this city. V21 north Fourth street.

The public generally and everybody in particular are invited to attend the opening of holiday goods at Somes' drug store, corner Sixth and Ohio, Monday, Dec. 9th. Ramember the time and place, Monday, Des. 9th, at Somes' drug store corner Sixth and Ohio.

DR. E. L. LAKKINS, office 32G, residence 32S N. Thirteenth st. Telephone 299.J

THE TEKRE HAUTE EXPRESS, SUNOAY MOttNING, DECEMBER 8, 18S9.

Her Sweet Smile Haunts Me Still.

I had not see* her for twenty years. Now

Bhe

was a well-preserved matron

with the same sweet smile on her face, and

A

set of splendid teeth, thanks to

SOZODONT. Her daughters call her blessed because she brought them up properly.

J. M. Bigwood, successor to II. FSmith, opposite Opera house, has been in the jewelry business for fourteen years, and has been sq long and favorably identified with the business that the Dublic is assured that his promises for low prices and goods as represented will be kept. His stock of opera glasses, diamond rings, ladies' and gents' watches are unsurpassed. A magn'ficent line of ladies' and gents' chains at low prices.

"LIVE AND LET L1VJ

Is my motto. Call at see me at Pcoeuix meat market. Choice beef, mutton, lamb, pork, hams, bacon, corn beef, tongues, liah, game and poultry in season. My killing is done under my own supervision. JOSEPH HORN,

Corner Sixth and Lafayette avenue.

Before you make your Christmas selections call on J. M. Bigwood, opposite Opera house. In diamonds, watches, gold-headed umbrellas and canes he has the most elegant stock in the city.

In order to reach the public more readily, Mr. Gruenholz has established a brunch of his basket works at 638 Main street- The prices will be found to be as cheap as at the factory, 420 Cherry street. The finest line of reed and willow ware is displayed at both the Main and Cherry street 6toree, including doll and baby carriages, willow and reed chairs, sewing stands and baskets and ail kinds of willow ware. The public is cordially invited to call and examine. Some handsome Christmas presents to be seen.

DR. GLOVER,

SPECIALTY-DISEASES OF THE RECTUM. Seventh and 1'oplar. Honrs 10 a. m. to 4 p. in. and to 8 p. in.

Baldness ought not to come till the nge of 55 or later. If the hair begins to fall earlier, use Hall's Hair Renewer and prevent baldness and grayness.

Rubber Stamps

J. TRUINETT, No. 10 S. Fifth St.

B'G DOLLS, LITTLE PLAIN DOLLS, AND PRETTY DOLLS,

at Liwrence's Novelty Store, 325 Main. On Tuesday, December 10, a grand SPECIAL SALE of these dolls will be held. Call early nnd get first choice.

Call and see the display of fine imported and Key West cigars. The Health Office makes a specialty of cigars by the box.

638 Main Street

Headquarters for trunks, valises, baskets, baby Bnd doll carriages, willow and reed chairs, sewing stands and all kinds of willow ware.

The Health Office cigar is a clear Havana, 3 for 25c., and is the best cigar'in the city for the money.

PRICE & BROWN,

Successors to P. P. Mischler.

Having bought out I'. P. Mischler's north Fourth street meat market, we solicit a continuance of his trade. We will keep all kinds of choice meats, sausage, etc., at most reasonable prices,

C. A. PKICK, W. C. BHOWN.

Fresh lot fancy bright id a a a nice variety of apples at J. H. Briggs', Fourth and Cherry streets.

Genuine Star brand

can and bulk oysters

at Eiser's.

The most perfectly appointed billiard room in the state is at Fasig's Health Office. Cozy setor a Come in and enjoy an evening.

weight—^

CREAM

^Tp^cfMAS

Its superior excellence proven In millions ot homes for more than a quarter of a eentuir. It Is used by the United States eovernment. Endorsed by the heads of the great universities as the strongest, purest and most healthful. Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder does not contain ammonia, lime or alum. Sold only

IDcans.

PRICE BAKING POWDER LU,

NKW rOKK, CHCAGO, ST. LOUIS.

THE LIMITED FAST MAIL. The Union Pacific Railway, the Overland Route, has just put on a limited fast mail train to carry the Uaited States mail between Council Bluff's and Sin Francisco and Portland. This daily fast mail train will carry a limited number of passengers, and, in addition to the United States mail cars and a baggBge car. will be composed of a Pullman palace sleeper and a Pullman dining car for Portland, and a Pullman sleeping car for San Francisco, thus accommodating a limited number of passengers.

The sleepers and the diner will run through from Chicago, via the Chicago Northwestern railway. Only first-class tickets will be honored on this train.

This train, with its connections, makes the extraordinaryjtime of 107 hours, New York to San Francisco, and 101 hours to Portland.

As accommodations are limited, early application for same Bhould be made to the Union Pacific agents in New York, St. Louis, Cincinnati. Chicago, or to E. L. Lomax, General Passenger Agent, Omaha, Neb.

If you want to buy gentlemen's holiday presents call at the large and exclusive furnishing house of James Hunter & Co., 523 Main street. Largest variety to be found in the city. Our prices we guarantee always below any competitor. Please don't forget what we say about prices.

Call and see the display of tile hearths at James T. Moore's, No. 657 Main street. The stock includes a great variety of designs. Grate baskets, ash pans, etc.

Satisfaction Positively Guaranteed

We feel confident In sajlng that

NO Purer or Better Baking Powder

Is sold. All we ask is a fair trial.

Sold, by all Groccrsl

1-pound cans for 40c, and i£-poand cans for 20c.

KIRK'S

AMERICAU FAMILY

SOAR

5OO0FFEREB

for Jin hu'iir.-ible of Catarrh in tlu' Ih'at! liytlie proprietors of

DR. SAGE'S CATARRH REMEDY.

Symptoms of Cntai-rli. Hradaehe. obstruction of nose, discharges fulling- into tbrc-ii.sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, nincons. purulent, liloodv and put rid eyes weak, riii-ring in ears, deafness, dillicull of elearinf throat, expectoration of offensive matter breath nll'ensiye: smell and taste impaired, and Keneral debility. Only a l'ew ol' these symptoms likely I be present at once. Thousands of cases result in consumption. and end in the grave. llv its mild, soothing, and healing properties. Dr.'Sage's llemedy cures tin1 worst eases. 60c.

The Original

\sxrces LITTX.E

LIVER PILLS.

IR Purely Ysocta-

*3 \i C*

lie

A

Harmless.

UucoualedasnUvcrPill. Smallest,cheapest, easiest to take. One Pellet a Dosc. Cure Siek Ileadaelic, Kilious Headache, Dizziness, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derungeinenta of the stomach and bowels. Ho ets. by druggists.

\i\ni\7

CAST0RIA

for

Infants

and

"Caatorisis »o well adapted to children that I CutorU cures Colic,

CLAR

Great

5c &

Children.

[recommend It as superior to any prescription I 8our Stomach, Diarrhoea, Enictation, known to me." H. A. ABCHIR, M. D„ I PTes ^P. promote* di111 8a Oxford St., Brooklyn, N, Y. Without Injurious medication.

Still in the lead, 314 Main St., north side.

We are now ready to greet you with bargains that simply paralyzes all competition. Look at some of them. Fine large nlush albums, former price 6- -5, now 61.-"0 all other styles in proportion. Fine plush autograph albums, all others sell at 25 our price lf3. Shoolly hobbies, former price §1.10 our price 85a. Larger, former price 81.25: our price SI. Large hobby horses, former price S1..'25 our price O03. Large writing desk and black bound combined, former price SI.'25 our price !X)c Extra large, same style, former price $2 our price $1.50. Anf.l everything 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, .'il Main street, north side.

N. B. 1 have five successful stores in operation besides my wholesale trade, consequently buv 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. CLA.RK, Proprietor, 314 Main Street.

Call and examine the line line of Heating Stoves and see the Charter Ouk Cook Stove with the wonderrul gauze wire door.

GEO. S. ZIMMERMAN, 658 Main Street

SOMETHING NEW in Terre Haute!

SANTA GLAUS' HEADQUARTERS!

!(M

GRAND OPENING OF.

Toys and Holiday Goods

IN THE BASEMENT OF THE BUCKEYE.

Our basement is full to overflowing with the choicest collection of toys and holiday goods to be found in the market. Never before has such an assortment been displayed in this city. Our two large basement rooms being two small for this immense stock, we shall have several tables of novelties in our cornar room on first floor. Experience has taught many the folly of putting off shopping till the last few days before Christmas, for then the assortment is broken and the store too crowded to do your trading carefully or comfortably. The most desirable things always go to the early shopper.

THE BUCKEYE-:-CASH STORE

'Corner iSixtli a.n-L Wabasli Avenue.

Constipation,

THS CENTAUR COMPAXT, 77 Murray Street, N\ Y.

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 cigarseat the bar.

SAND130N & BURNS, 677 MAIN STREET,

Wm.

RADAMS'

Has been pronounced by doctors, drugt'lsis an Invalids who have used It as a specific

For All Throat or Lung Troubles

and the only medicine that lias ever cured and

WILL CURE CONSUMPTION

It Is the only medicine known that destroys thu germs of disease In the blood without Injury to thn patient.

We Kimrnntcc* »U we claim—$1,(WOforfeit II any of our testimonials are not genuine.

Itiul iins' Mtcrulte Killer Co., Chicago.

.J. & C. BAUK,

Sole Agents for Terra Haute, Ind.

HOLIDAYS!

10c Cut Price House

S

—AND THE—

IIOME COM FORI Wrouj(hlrlron Stool

by machinery to look like new. I have also the latest style blocks tor I.ADIKd HATS and BONNETS. M. OATT, 980 South Third Street, tlie only HracUcs Hatter In Terre Haute.

FURNACE

"'I'llKTI

illUl'