Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1898 — Page 7
«. lv -a .v M \
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“3^r
THE GREAT GLASS TROSTS
CHAJKIBM IN FLINT BOTTLB AMO TABLEWARE INDUSTRIES.
with Overprodaettoa m4 s Crowded Market It “Tra*ttmm*’ to Mot Resorted To—Position of latlaaa Plant* la Case.
make J2.624,&30. The Commercial al«o had cash resources amounting to $969,017, to be added now to the Royal’s $418,387. o ■ YUKON RIVER CLOSED. ' ' { , Last Passenaers Out ot Dawson Arrive at Vancouver.
[Speolal to Tbs Indlanapoll* N*w».] Gas City, Ind., October 7.—This week and next will mark a greater revolution In the American glass industry than has beea wrought in all the years that have passed since the first glass plant was established in this country. The work of “trusting" the industry will be completed this week in New Tork. and under the corporation laws of ths, Bute of New Jersey the Flint Bottle Trust and ths Glass Tableware Trust will become tangible. The Flint Bottle Trust is effected on the lines of the Plate-Glass Trust—by absolvt* ownership of plants. When It Is completed it win aund another monument to the wonderful organising powers of J. HL Parks, of Boston, who brought the wirs nail and other trusts Into Ilfs. Parks has acquired the name of “Penny-a-Keg” Parks from the fact that his commission for ths organisation of the wire nail trust was one penny on each keg of nails sold. His commission for organising this new trust will'be In the neighborhood of $J0,000. He eUrbed the work of organisation last April and obtained options on twen-ty-sight of ths thirty-four plants in the country. These options are now being closed, the plants being turned in at their appraised value, and the owners accepting the amount of the valuation in stock In the big company, or taking the cash. It is reported that English capital Is behind the transaction. There will be about twenty-six plants in the trust, and they will represent not less than 86 per cent, of the total production of the country. The Indiana Plante. Almost all of tbs Indiana gas belt Plants are included. The capitalisation Of ths trust will be 96.000,000. Pittsburg and Indianapolis are considered for the location for the headquarters of the new trust, and the Indiana capital’* chances ars brightening. All orders will be booked In the headquarters offices and sent to the plants which ars nearest the point from which the order comes. By this method great saving can be made In freight rates, and M will be Impossible for the Independent plant* to compete with the trust. All of the buying of raw materials will also be done through the csntral offices, and all plants will be omnAffed from ther*. The tableware manufacturers have before been able to "get tegether,” even on s selling agreement, and the result has been that tableware has In some cases been brought down to a point where the selling price would not cover the cost of sand and chemicals. For Instance, durtng last summer, common tumblers sold gs low as 10 cent*. With the discount to the trade, this was reduced to 9 cents a dozen. It was shown at a meeting of the manufacturers that th* bench coet of production was 16.66 cents a dosen. This Is but one Item, but R forcibly Illustrates what the cutthroat market policy has been. The result Is that tableware manufacturers have not only been unable to make any return on their product, but they have seen their stocks pile up and the bottom fall out of the Industry. Plants hay* besn kept shut .up most of the time and the manufacturers that did operate found that there waa nothing to look forward to. Fsresd to Organise. * This kept up until, to save themselves, they were forced to recognise each other, and the result Is the formation this week of a truat on the plan followed out in the organisation of the Window-Glass Trust. The new organisation, to be Incorporated this week, under the laws of New Jersey, will be known as the United Glass Manufacturers’ Association. Pittsburg will probably be selected as the headquarters, though Indianapolis is also being considered favorably. The organisation will be effected on a basis of a 8.000-pound pot aa a unit. All of the Indiana plants turning out tableware are Included In the list of twenty-four plants which are being turned Into the trust. The Window-Glass Trust has issued a call for its annual meeting in Camden, N. J., on the 11th. At this meeting It is announced that the Window-Glass Trust Will get a still firmer clutch on the market by absorbing six plants which have been run independently. AH are Indiana concerns, and represent slsty pots, or almost one-half of the capacity of the independent plants in the country last
year.
The success of the Window-Glass Trust Is responsible for ths "trusting’’ of other branches of the Industry. The PlateGlass Trust, while successful, did not attract the attention that the WlndowOlass Trust has. The latter took a market that had been played out by cutthroat policy and an open market to foreign countries, and put a bottom in the industry and raised prices. It has re-establlehed a tariff fence around Its industry that Is 4 per cent, higher even than It was under the McKinley bill regime, and has advanced wages about S3 per cent, in the last two years. Manufacturers and workmen have both made monay, The Window-Glass Truit now controls about 90 per cent, of the production in the nation. After the absorption of these independents, It will control fully M per cent, of the production, it is roughly figured that there will be about LEO pots In operation. It is figured that the oo-oneratlve plants established by the workers will operate 130
fill
_ 9 pots of its ow
at*. This is over 90 per cent.- { Overproduction Threatened,
In the plate-glass industry the product-
ability of the country Is 33.000.000
iuar« feet per annum at present, and is consumption is only 14,000.000 or 15.- , tooo at the highest It Is necessary to curtail production; The capacity of the witidow-glasa plants of the nation at present is over 10,000,000 boxes mi annum. I! plante were run the hill twelve months; still In the same time, at a normal consumption of 441,000 boxes per month—the normal last year—the consumption would run but 5.293.000 boxes: The productive facllltlee of flint bottle manufacturers are 40 per cent, over consumption, and thus it la all the way •own the W»«. It li almply a quhttlon of limiting production and invigorating a market that would otherwise become
ruinous. 3
The development of the industry has been wonderful In the last few years. Ip 1890 the total number of pots represented in the American industry was 678. in mag It had increased to 1,100, In 1896 it had further incmaed to 1.440 pots, in 1897 to 1. CT0. in 1898 to l.a«, and this year there will be S.E0 pots in operation. While this has been the rate of increase in facilities, the rate ef increase in consumption about 10 per cent, per decade. The window-glass situation may be still further complicated this month by manufacturers and flattened and euttcre being unable, to enter Into a wage agreement for the coming fire. The date set for the opening of all the plante In the country is one week from Saturday. ^ E. I. LEWIS. Trust Companies Combine. Chicago, October 7.—Negotiations looking to the absorption of the Commercial Trust Company by ths Royal Trust Company have been completed, and the buainete of tbe former waa taken over by the latter to-day. the Commercial's deposits being transferred to the Royal, aid with them all Its reaouroea. The deal Is a purchase of the Commercial company’s businsea The companies are capltallaed at 1600.900 each. The Commercial Loan and Trust Company will transfer deposits amounting to tl.W9.419. which, added to ths tUtt.W* the Royal had when the last statement
pota, and the Independents will operate l» pota thin year. Thli will give the trust fully 3,000 pots of Its own to oper-
Vamcouver, B. C.. October 7.—'Navigation on the upper Yukon river is closed. The last passengers who came out from Dawson up the river on the steamers Columbian and Canadian have arrived her*, some with hard-luck stories and a few with gold. The most Interesting news from Dawson relates to Commissioner Ogilvte’e reforms. He is making sweeping changes and Intends to make the Klondike a model mining district. Mr. Jex says September 13 a small army of the half world and gamblers were arrested and fined to the amount of $10.000. The money will be spent in improving the streets of the city. Wages In the Klondike ar© becoming lower and lower according to J. B. Chamber*. of Victoria. "The new system now in vogue was established." he said, "by Kirkpatrick and Bonner, two of the biggest clatro owners of the whole district. When I left the miners were hired for $100 a month and their board for the winter months.’’
Water-Logged Schooner Picked Up. Seattle, Wash., October 7.—The steamers Brlxham and Tillamook have arrived from St. Michael's with 150 passengers, about fifty of whom were from Dawson. On September 20 the Tillamook picked up a small steam schooner, Fortune Hunter, of San Francisco, about fifty-live miles south of St. Michael's. The Fortune Hunter was water-logged and in a serious condition. Besides her crew sh© had ten passengers aboard, members of the Alaska and Bonanza Mining and Transportation Company of Chicago. The Fortune Hunter left St. Michael's September 16 for Golovin bay with a barge in tow, and was caught in a storm that recently swept along the coast. The barge was beached and the schooner stood out to sea. She became unman.igea.ble and was drifting south when picked up by ths Tillamook, which towned her to Golovin bay, where she was beached. An unsuccessful search was made for the barge. Sterling Martin, of Chicago, was left on the barge when the Fortune Hunter abandoned it. / The United States surveying party, in command of Captain Pratt, which has been surveying the mouth of the Yukon, has returned to St. Michael’s. Captain Fratt says the supposed deep-water channel at the mouth of the Yukon for large ships is a myth, although the party surveyed an eight-foot course through the Kisslinok channel. Only twf> Government surveying parties remain to be heard from, namely, the Eldrldge and the Spurr parties. Both went in by way of Cook's Inlet and up the Sushitna river. Spurr's party branching off and going over Kuskokwit. These two parties are expected back within a short time. The excitement over the reported riches of Golovin bay continues and people are leaving St. Michael’s every day In small boats. —o AS TO RIVER POLLUTION. Kx-State Senator Cranor Doe* Not Believe Filter Plan will Work.
[Special to The Indianapolis News.] Muncie, Ind., October 7&-ExaB ator Ozro N. Cranor, of Ibis Is deputy fish commissioner of this county, is not in sympathy with the plan of the State Board of Health to attempt a solution of the pollution of the rivers and streams Of Indiana by the strawboard and paper mills by establishing at these plants the filtering system. An experiment will be made at the Paragon paper mill, at Eaton, this county, twelve miles north of this city, on the Ft. Wayne branch of the Lake Erie & Western railway. He said to a News correspondent: "We have proof that the filter system is not practiced, the reason that it has been tried by the plant at Noblesville, where, I am Informed, it proved a dismal failure. Unless the system—held in mind by the board—is greatly Improved over tlttt used at Noblesville, I fdar that failure will result again at Eaton." "In roy opinion,” continued Mr. Cranor, “there is only one way in which to solve this exasperating question. I believe It would be best to build large ponds and then to run the refuse from the mills Into the ponds and allow It to evaporate. This would keep our waterways clean, but of course the atmosphere would be still contaminated by the stench that would necessarily arise from these ponds. But what else can be done, unless we close these plants altogether? I am In favor of the Legislature enacting a law tO Confine these kind of industries to sparsely settled districts, where they could do the least damage In making conditions uncomfortable and inconvenient "When I first became deputy commissioner I formulated a plan by which it may be possible to save at least our streams from pollution and to prevent the awful, heedless and unnecessary slaughter of our fish. My plan Is to get permanent Injunctions against these companies and to prevent them forever from emptying Into the waterways their refuse. I am endeavoring to get such authority In a suit now pending in the Randolph Circuit Court, before Judge A. O Marsh. It was brought by Marshall Short, a farmer of near De Soto, this county, against the Albany Paper Company, who venued the case to Randolph. Short avers that part of his land has been ruined by refuse from the plaintiff's mill at Albany, emptied Into the Mtssissinewa river and deposited onto his farm In times of high water. He has also asked for a permanent injunction aganist the company to restrain It from pouring Its refuse into the Mlasissinewa. If successful. I shall file similar actions against all the other paper and strawboard companies within my Jurisdiction, and. with such a precedent established, I believe I can settle this question once and for all in Delaware county. There are five such industries in this county— one at Albany, ons at Eaton, one at Yorktown and two in this city—more than in any other county In the State.” German Socialists’ Stand. Stuttgart, Wurtcmburg, October 7.—At the Socialist convention here Herr Fisher. a member of the Reichstag, referring to Emperor William's anti - strike speeches, said: "What little monarchical sentiment survived among the proletariat has now been definitely killed. WoLmust org&nlia an opposition. Wo shaff be cowardly dogs If we leave unanswered the insults heaped upon us. The Emperor deema U right to throw down the gauntlet, and we have the courage to pick it up.” This remark was greeted with a tremendous outburst of applause, and the convention resolved to call protest meetings everywhere Immediately after the strike biU t» introdued. ...— o —— Short Work. [Cleveland Plain Dealer.] ‘'Yes, Ethel was in the hospital only three days." "Why did she leave so .soon?’ 'The chief surgeon proposed to her and she came home to get her trousseau rsady "
YOU DESIRE GOOD HEALTH. There is no doubt tbat every sick person wants to get well Nobody wants to bo weak and ailing, for tbe feeling that comes from vigor and vitality is splendid. Nevertheless, a great many siok people neglect to take advantage of chances to get well that come in their way. Here, however, is a golden opportunity that no sick person can afford to miss. Dr. Greene, 148 State St., Chicago, HL, the great specialist who cures so many, offers to give the sick advice by mail, frea This is a grand opportunity. Bon’t delay in taking advantage of it You desire good health. Here is the chance to get it
Which Rides ? A When a man is sick his rja work rides him instead of riding his work. His daily Wsk instead of being the means which supports and carries him on to comfort and prosperity becomes an overwhelming burden weighing him ■ down. He has no strength, no ambition. He feels that there is nothing left but for him to stagger along un- . til the awful pressure of disease and trouble at last crushes him to earth. The prosperous ^ man is the one who ^ keeps the upper hand of his work, cause he is strong, capable and energetic. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery has brought the best kind of prosperity to thousands of weighed-down, over-burdened men and women by giving them the physical strength and stamina to carry on their work forcefully and easily. “For the last three years,” aays Mr. J. C. Morgan, of Monongah, Marion Co., W. Va., In a letter to Dr. Pierce, “ I have been a constant sufferer from indigestion complicated with complaints that generally accompany such cases. Always after eating there would be a formation of gas and a heavy load in my stomach. I would belch up my food after eating; bowels were very irregular; I would imagine I saw objects floating before my eyes. I had pain across my back. About December, i8q6, I began feeling much worse than usual and was beginning to think I would have to suffer the remainder of my life. I was greatly discouraged. I described my case to Dr. Pierce’s staff of physicians and they directed me to begin at once taking the ‘ Golden Medical Discovery • according to directiohs. I did ao, and am happy to state I experienced most gratifying results, as all the unpleasant feelings have entirely left me. I have now
THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS/ FRIDAY. OCTOBER
The Largest Men’s and Boys* Outfitting Establishment In Indiana. SATURDAY BARGAINS WITH A BIG "B” Tomorrow we will have on sale 150 Boys’ Knee Pants double-breasted Suits, five different patterns in cheviots and hard twisted cassimeres, strictly all-wool, regular $5 quail- •* *• •* *• •* •• •• LAV^Oa •• #• •• •• •• •• s •
First Dry Goods Store North of Union Station.
t0 9-m-sot/TH-iuTsT.
211-213 South Illinois > Street
CUTTING PRICES Al_l_ OVER THE STORE A FRO USING SAL-EE F r OFR SATURDAY
ty i dred and ten miles in about four days.’ No remedy relieves constipation so quickly and - effectively as Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets.
gg§i MEN’S HALF HOSE
The average father is afraid
his daughter
WILL NOT HARRY THE RIGHT HAN and the mother Is afraid she will not “catch on” at all.
But Just give the girl a little
ifi-
[time, and when she sees I how cheap we | are selling oar
] beautiful
shoes and slipusrs, she will "have ideas of
her own.”
SPECIAL SALE 1,500 pairs Ladles' fine, handsewed and welt Shoes—Drew, Selby & Co.’s goods—slightly Imperfect! worth $3.00 to $5.00, for $2.48
All sizes, widths AA to E; latest styles.
Just for a Saturday flyer we will sell one case of 60 dozen Men’s Half Hose at 3 Pairs For 25c They are the kind we sell every day at 15c per pair— and worth 15c per pair.' They are double heel and toe, genuine Hermsdorf dye, guaranteed fast color, and to give perfect satisfaction in the wear. We will sell 60 dozen to-morrow at 3 pairs for 25c.
Have you seen our great $1 White Shirt? Do you know our $2 Eur Hat? Genuine Reading Cassimere Pants at $198. STEVENSON BUILDING
SUS* 8 " rrre w'&iaiiiilMj
3 3333332 '33 33 33 33 S
“WT IBS. IN THE NE ws y^OHLTOHB CEirr A
New
I* lull of new and nobby sh*D*t that ars not shown olsowhore. Remember] lEvery price *-3 All Dimensions For All Men Asenlafor (ho genuine English Christy, £ C pries w -5 ciiipTC A11 0WQ make 1 O and guaranteed. Have you seen my New Fall Shirts, with TWO COLLARS to match? Just the thing—all the rage. An elegant Woven Madras Shirt, $1. Gerritt A. Archibald, 38 East Washington ft. SUCCESSOR TO AULT A ARCHIBALD.
NOTICE.
GREAT BARGAINS. OUR $1.50 HATS Silk trimmings; all colors. Sole agents Knox’s New York Hats, Gordon & Co.’s English Hats. Dalton Hat Go. BATES HOUSE.
It kills rats, mice, roaches and bugs instantly. One 25c box of Stsams’ Elactric Rat and Roach Pasta will soon rid Use premise* of all vermin. It never falls. — Your druggist has it.— 4 > Stearns’ Electric Pasta Co., Chicago.
Grand Opening of tke
GLOBE GROCERY To-Morrow You are cordially invited to come and see our new stock of groceries. A look will couvifice you we have the Best Goods at Lowest Prices We are offering some very special bargains at this opening, namely
20 lbs. best Granulated Sugar
Jor S1.00
PiMury’s best Flour, per
barrel $4.50
50 lbs. Pillsbury’s best Flour.
25 lbs. Plllsbury’s best Flotr. 00c Best roller process Flour $3.50
50 lbs. best roller process Flour 25 lbs. best roller process Flour Sugar Cured Picnic Ham, per lb Creamery Butter Sweet Dairy Butter
88c
44c
6!4c 15c
12&c
elephe lean
406 E. Wash. St.
KELLER’S MASS. AVE. AMD DEL. STTelephone 73
1 banket Grape* 8 1-S4c 1 ba. Potatoe* 45c 20 bars Laundry Soap 25c 2 package* Soap Powder .... 5c Straight Creamery Butter, Ih.lBc Best New York Cream Cheese lb 14c F*riti«*€>*» Flour, i»e-x* saok. ... . i-JSe Keller’* White Roue, Cinaran- 1 teed, per sack 23c rPcarl or Lump Starcb, 2 lb*. for 5c
WE HANDLE ALL, Ralston Products The Ralston Health Club Breakfast Food is the finest and purest made. WE HANDLE IT.
/ >
Skirts made to order, with linings, complete, 59c Silk Waists made to order, linings, complete, 79c Purchase tbe goods Ip tfte store.
DRESS GOODS. Broqaded Black Dress Goods, neat patterns, 25c vaTue, yard Ho Novelty Suitings, pretty mixtures, 42-inch, were 39c and 50c, yard 16V4c All-wool Black Brocades and Serges, 44-lneh, 75c value, yard 29c Fine all-wool Novelties, silk mixed, 42-inch, $100 value, yard 39c Silk-finished Henriettas, all shades, 46-inch, $1.26 \ value, yard ®c Fine Covert Cloth for tailor-made suits, 50-inch, worth $1.50, yard ■' 79c
DOMESTICS.
Good, staple Calicoes, dark colors, regular 7c quality, a yard 2ftc Bleached and Unbleached Crash, 18-inch, regular price 6Mic ( yard 2i4c 36-inch heavy U nbieached Muslin, our 7c quality, tomorrow, yard 3MrC Heavy Unbleached Sheeting, full 9-4, regular price 16c a yard He
HOSIERY.
Children’s Hose, warranted fast color, all sixes, 12Hc kind, *pair ' 4c Ladies’ fine fast black seamless Hose, all sixes, 25c kind, pair 9o Ladles’ fine fleece-Uned Cotton Hose, fast black, 49c value, pair 23c UNDERWEAR. Children’s Underwear, some cotton^some wool, worth up to 50c, choice Ladies’ fine half-wool Oneita Union Suits, value $1.50 to-morrow 69c Ladies’ fine all-yool Vests and Pants, ecru or gray, $1.50 value 1 1 790 KID GLOVES. Alexandre’s Kid Gloves In black and all colors, new clasp, $1.25 kind, pair 69c New Velvet Mocha Gloves, new shades of blue and green, $1.50 value 89c SEPARATE SKIRTS. All-wool Skires, dark suitings, full wide, real value $3.50, at ......... $1.39 Black Brocaded Dress Skirts, taffeta-lined, value $4.00, at $1.69 Fine BrilliantSne and Sicilian Skirts, tailor-made, value $5.00, to-morrow .....$2.98 Elegant Cheviot Serge Skirts, extra flounce, $7.50 value, at $4.48 FURNISHINGS. Men’s Fancy Plaid Half Hose, lisle finish, value 25c, pair 10c Men’s fine Jersey-ribbed Shirts and Drawers, value $1.00, to-morrow 49c Men’s Shoes, to-morrow, one-half price.
CAPES.
Cloth Capes, double or single, plain and trimmed. Site \alue* Et •• ****** ••••••••* «*•••*•*• *••«»•••*•••••»••» Rough Boucls Capes, edged with thtbet. good length. $5.00 valu* .....T.....11.16 Astrakhan Cape*, medium or long, wall lined, our $7.60, to-morrow ....tLN Plush Capes, Salts’s very bast, full sweep, regular price $10.00 to-morrow $4.98 Handsome, Trimmed Plush Cape*, Jet and braids. value $15.00, to-morrow |7.3g
JACKETS.
Children's Jackets trimmed and plain, all slsss, $3.06 ones, at jm Ladies' all-qrool Beaver Jacket*, up to date, value $6.o0, at is.99 Ladies’ Nobby Keney Jacket*, some braid-trimmed. value $10.00, at $4.96 Fine English Kersey Jackets, taffeta sllk-llned, $18.00 value, at .$7.98
COLLARETTES.
Black and Brown Seal Collarette*, proper «tyle, 18.00 English Krlmrae r Colii&tte* ’ gray and' mixed. ’ liikdo* 1 '* one*, at . .. 13.99 Scarfs In *eal or mink, eight head* and tails, our leader at $10.00, now .<,;84.4a
MILLINERY TO-MORROW.
Walking Hats and Sailors, a great variety, value* $1.00 and ll.oO, to-morrow 5*0 Trimmed Hats, our own creations, pretty stylea, $3.;>0 value, at *»** Handsome, Trimmed Hat*, rich velvet shapes, value 15.00, to-morrow »** Beautiful Pattern Hats, season's extreme styles! values $10.00 and $12.00, at ,.$8.98 CLOTHING. ~ " : C a« 3 t“-mor n row“ bt '. , d * rk *" ,lw B $™>. al to^rrow 1 ^:. neat . w * 1 ‘ “* de : valv, « M value^9.00 y af nd . Bla ° k < ^* y Worsted Suit*,' all' eiMs.' M now W °° l ® ult * * n neat Patterns, vaju# ino!66,^^ ”$.» vuiV'T.T 4 .■ CI **' winai'' suiii;*-* *J‘- woo! Overcoat*, g^d.' full''' length." nim*
».eu. at
Overcoat*," a'u'"oi;iort,'"ii6.09
“nX ‘wVrroS’ VliiMl*"
• •••*•••** •••••••• ••aeasggx
CONTINUED MILLINERY OPENING TO-MORROW SELIG DRY GOODS CO., 211-213 S. Illinois St,
SENSATIONAL^ HAT SALE ANOTHER LOT OF 200 FALL STYLE MEN S DERBIES and FEDORAS Stylish In every detail, Including the exact copy ot Durtlap’s JfcS Hat
That Ordinarily would Cost You .02.SO
\HAT STORE,."
Quality High.
Price Low.
HASKELLS WHEAT FLAKES Easiest to Digest. 2-lb. packages only. At all grocers.
DON’T FAIL to see our line before you •. ♦ .fliiY• • • • Silk and Wool gkirta, striped llnlr i€’ J5 0 , 0d velveteen binding, worth *3.60, for ......81.75 Black Brocada Skirts, worth $3.00, for 77.*l» Heavy Gros Grain Silk Skirt*, our regular 87.60 Skirts,' a few to close out for $4.75 Boucle Capes, thlbet trimmed, for.ffi.98 Beaver Capea, fur trim, worth $3.00, for gfc All-wool Boucle Jacket!, til lilk lined, worth $8.50. to-morrow $8.98 Electric Seal Collarettes, good lining, for ffi,5o
JNO. F. REYNOLDS & CO. 43ut4!S.llli»HSt
A Large and Fla* Stock of Moa’a Fall aad Winter
At Emanuel's io« W. Washington St., Bates Boas*
4—*-«-* **
v X (j •
A well known American connoisseur of the fine arts relates that gome two years ago he was traveling in Europe with his family, and while at St. Petersburg his oldest daughter was much annoyed by constipation and its attendant ills, and the Russian physician had so much trouble about understanding the case, or such poor success in treating it, that the mother bewailed their oversight in being so far away from home without a supply of Ripans Tabules. Thereupon the father (the well known connoisseur aforesaid) remembered that he had packed away a box of the Tabules in a safe place in his portmanteau, so as not to be deprived of their use on board ship for the return voyage. These he produced, and they afforded the daughter so much relief and tided ovcr **^0 difficulty so effectually, tbat no member of that family has ever sine* failed to speak a good word for Ripans Tabules or consented,/
i to travel without a supply at command.
A. new style pacXet containing ten Ripans Tabuie* in a paper carton (without la
bow for aale at some drug atores—FOR FIVE CENTS the poor and the economical. One dozen of
ne i
by mail by sending 48 cents to the RIR.VNS New Tork—or a single carton (ten tabules) w
the five CIIEMI
111 be sent
This low-price sort Is Intended for
be had
pruce street,
cents.
-cent cartons (126 tabules) can lOAL COM PANT. No. 10 Spruce
ent tor & cents.
WANT ADS.” in THE NEWS I^Only One Cent a Word.
ijofeSfi, I- ■
THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS Is, and hat been for many y««ri, (hi Indiana Board of Trada for buyer* and sellers. Both know tbat each look for the other’! annouDoemtot In the advertising columns of Thw ■Rewa.
HOT BARGAINS that will maKe this month one of the busiest of the })ear and add thou, sands of new customers to our list. If ev^r f values were offered Worthy of attracting wonderful crowds, here thes> are:
for this 84 Reed Rocker, full comfort size, fine finish.
for this large Dining Chair, braced arm, embossed back. ’
(Q CfT for this full size, C/I 4/1 * or ^la large 0w* JU No. 8 Cook Stove, Dining Table large oven, with our three with crate of leaves to year guarantee. match.
EXTEND YOU ALL THE CREDIT YOU WANT—alk “littles," weekly or monthly. “SAME PRICES AS notes to sign. No interest to pay. No security " ' T * r ' ~ —..fc—x.© i 3E» aSm ■ mUm
133 and 135 W. Wash, bt.
