Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 13, Number 28, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 January 1883 — Page 4
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THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
FtTBUCATlOS OFflCK,
No#. 18 and 20 South Fifth Street, Printing Honae Bqnare. *_
P. S. WESTFALL,
TTtlTOR AND PBOPRiisTOB.
TBTRRK HAUTE, JAN. 6, 1883
THE LEQI8LA TURM.
The State Legislature organized on Thursday. The Lieutenant Governor presided oyer the Senate, and our townsman, Albert J. Kelly, was elected Secretary. Hon. W. D. Bynum, of Marion, was elected Speaker of the house. The dead lock on the first day between the two branches over so small a matter as whether it was respectfnl in the House to inform the Senate of tits organization through its clerk instead 9i tbr0»gh committee of tiiembfifs, augtii'S pooJy1 for the forthcoming session. By reason of this triviality an entire day was lost, as the reading of the Governor's message had to go over to the nest day. But after all perhaps this loss was the people's gain, and perhap3 the best thing that could happen would be a continuous dead-lock until the end of the session, thus ensuring the absence of vicious legislation, which 'generally is the larger part of the legislation got through. This State, in common with others, suffers from an excessive exercise of the law-making power, and almost anything which makes a cartailment of it ought to be gratefully accepted. But all the same it augurs badly for the laws which will inevitably be made, to see the Legislature squabbling over so puerile a point as the one named.
THE first number of the Cincinnati Commercial Gazette came out on Thursday and was somewhat of a disappointment to the general public. The new paper is practically a duplicate of the Commercial, having all its distinguishing features both as to form and matter. Although the publishers announce that the consolidation is in the interest of a better newspaper than either of the old ones was, and that the former patrons of both will be pleased with the new paper, the general impression is that the Gaaette has virtually been swallowed by its^ younger rival, and that most of the peculiar characteristics of the old Gazette will be missed in the new paper. The consolidation was manifestly in the interest chiefly of larger dividends to the stockholders.
A SOMEWHAT sensational libel suit ended recently in (England, attracting universal attention. The plaintiff was Belt, a young sculptor of humble origin, whose talent attracted the notice of Lady Stanley. She "took him up," as it is called, and was able by her patronage and that of others of the nobility which her friendship attracted, to give him a handsome start. The young sculptor had of course jealous rivals who talked about him and charged that be did not himself do the work purporting to be his, but grew rich and famous through the work of humbler hands. A publication to this effect in a London Journal brought on a suit for libel against the author for $100,000 damages, and at the end of a trial lasting forty days the jury found a verdiot for the plaintiff for 125,000.
THE merchantile failures of the past year throughout the United States, as reported R. G. Dunn fc Co., were 6,738 with liabilities of $101,700,000. In 1881, the number was 5,582, and the liabilities $81,000,000. While the increase both in number and amount is large the figures are not considered to be unfavorable,because of the large increase in the number of persons engaged in business, and in the volume of trade. Yet it is to be observed that there is an increase over any year since 1880, and the tendency seems to be steadily in the direction of a continued increase. Should this tendency oontinue long enough, another financial convulsion is Inevitable.
IN refutation of the charge that the champions of the woman suffrage movement are old maids, or have no interest in domestic affairs, Susan B. Anthony publishes 4 statement showing the number of children belonging to some of the prominent workers in the movement, as follows: Lucretia Mott, 6 Elisabeth Cady Stanton, 7 Mrs. Wright, 5 Mrs. Black well, 5 Lucy Stone, 1 Mrs. Robinson, 3 Mrs. Livermore, 2 Mrs. Blake, 2 Mrs. Gage, 4 Mrs. Lock wood, 2 Mrs. Hurlbert, 3 Mrs. Sterrett, 8 or 9 Mrs. Bradwell, 3 Mrs. Frances D. Gage, 8 Mrs. Nichols, 4 Mrs. Brown, 2. Sixty-ty-five or six children for sixteen ladies. That ought to silence the tongue of detraction.
IN the death of Gambetta, which occurred last Monday, Fr**5ie loses her greatest statesman of the present age. Although but little more than fortyfour years old be bad been one of the most prominent men in the Republic for the past fourteen years. His escape from Paris in a balloon after the investment of the city by the Germans in 1870 wv illustrative of the energy and activity of his character. He was an enthusiastic believer in Republican ideas, and did more than any other man of his time to make Republican government successful in France.
Tax first day of the new year will be memorable for the death of Gaa*«ita, the French statesman, the sudden sath of the Hawaiian minister, at the ?hite House, while attending the President's zeeepUon, and an earthquake at Halifax
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'.t NE VAD A. -ff"
The uncertainty of a prosperity based alone on the wealth of mines is forcioly illustrated in the short history of Nevada. A few years ago when the young State was admitted to the Union it was supposed to have the most golden prospects. The State was organized on a magnificent basis. The Governor's salary was $6,000 the Lieutenant-GovBxi or's, 93,6*0, with |1,500 additional as State librarian the three Judges of the Supreme Court received 17,000 each, and the other State officers and the members of the Legislature were provided for with similar munificence. But already the bottom has fillen out of the great Com stock mines, which yielded $300,000,000, and it appears that the supposed inexhaustible gold and silver mines of the State are either a myth or are {practically worked out, and the short-lived glory of Nevada has departed. Says the St. Louis Republican "Its millionaires have fled to San Francisco and New York to spend, their the Yriy?8 of some of them have taken their share of it and gone to Paris, where they are living in an opulence peculiarly their own the enterprising mining classes have gone to Arizona to pursue the quest of gold in that new and more premising territory Virginia City, the capital, has lost its splendor and glory like Tyreand Sidon and the inhabitants of the State who are left are beginning to wonder how they are to maintain a government with such a brilliant outfit out of their scanty gulch scratchings and the little crops they raise in the valleys."
After all, it is only from the products of the soil that a permanent prosperity can be maintained. This is shown by the large and continuous growth of States like Kansas, Nebraska and Iowa, whose prospects steadily improve instead of declining. The people of Nevada are talking sensibly of reducing official salaries and all the expenses of the State Government, and when they do this and devote their energies to "the raising of cattle and the growing of grain," to the development of the permanently producing elements of the soli, doubtless there will yet come a solid and lasting, if more slow, prosperity to the new State.
WITH the advent of the new year a number of important changes in journalism have taken place. The Evansville Journal puts on a new and handsome dress of cftan faced type, the Milwaukee Sentinel is enlarged and printed on a new press the Lousville Commercial on the other hand, reduces its size and the price to two cents, and from a Republican becomes an Independent paper. But by far the most important and surprising change is the consolidation of the Cincinnati Gazette and Commercial, the name of the new paper to be the Commercial Gazette, with it appears, both Mr. Halstead and Mr. Smith in control of the new paper. This consolidation is remarkable for several things: both papers are old and thoroughly established and were Supposed to be doing a fine business, they wereal ways radically 'different in tone and spirit, so much so indeed that their union would seem to be about as impracticable a thing as the mixing of oil and water. In a city of such size and com mercial importance as Cincinnati, and surrounded by a rich and populous territory, it is hard to understand that there should not be a profitable field for two papers like the Gazette and Commercial. Possibly the union is not made solely with the view of increasing the income of the owners the public may yet be start eled by a new ^triumph in journalism when the Commercial Gazette makes its appearance.
THE statement that more than nine million dollars were invested in new buildings in Minneapolis last year is indicative or the marvellous development at present going on throughout the great northwest. That sum is more than half the building expenditure of Chicago during the same'period, ayear of remarkable prosperity of growth in the latter city. Manufactures amounting to $43,000,000 and jobbing sales to $97,000,000 prove that the prosperity of Minneapolis is of substantial character.
GKN. SHERMAN emphatically denies that he recently became a member of the Roman Catholic church, as charged by the New York Sun. Whereat the Cincinnati Gazette says there has been no report that the General was recently taken into that church, but that it was done many years ago, and that the remarkable part is that he has kept his Roman candle under a bushel.
WHILE the development of the great northwest is going on so rapidly, the probable opening up of the Florida everglades to settlement is attracting some attention. It is stated that a navigable channel iias been opened from the Gulf to Lake Okeechobee, which will eventually drain these vast swampy regions and make them susceptible of cultivation and habitation. It is one of the most important improvements the South has seen for years, and is expected to be the source of great wealth to Florida.
DOWN quilts can be bought for $50. They are so light in weight that on a cold winter night you imagine you are freesing until you get up and pUe all your clothes on top of it then you go to sleep and dream that you have tumbled down the enter of a volcano and can't get out.
THE Washington monument, which should have beea topped off long ago,.it stated will be finished by 1881. Better late than n*r«r«
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WHAT
TERRS HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING. MAIL
Death is as sure as taxes. As we have to die, it is a satisfaction io know what we will probably die of. The recent report of the State board of health gives some interesting statistics. These statistics are for eight months, including September. There W6re during the period, 11,385 deaths. Of this number 1,341 were due to consumption 1094 to pneumonia eighty-six to smallpox 480 to typhoid fever 229 to cerebro spinal meningitis 590 to cholera infantum, 553 of this number dying in July, August and September, 60* to scarlet fever 161 to diphtheria 390 to casualties, not including suicides or homicides 142 to old age, four persons'over 100 years of age dying 107 to whooping cough 102 to bronchitis, and 709 stillborn. The deaths from the ten principal diseases named formed 36.35 per cent, of the total mortality. The statistics show that, so far as these diseases are concerned, the cities suffer less than the rural districts, the proportion being about 36 per cent, to 43. Of the persons dying-of these diseases 579 were farmers, more than from any other class. Of the deaths from consumption alone 810 were females and 531 males, more than twothirds of the females dying between the ages of fifteen and thirty-five years. Nearly seven-tenths of the deaths from this disease were due to personal exposure, rather than hereditary conditions. It is ascertained that more persons, in proportion to population, die of consumption in Michigan than in Indiaua. Ague is fast disappearing from the state. During the eight months covered by the report, there were 25,546 births, of which 13,482 were males, and 12,064 females, there being more than double the number of births as compared with the deaths. The illegitimate births numbered 418, aud eighteen abortions were reported. There were 9,203 marriages. The criminal records show 25 homicides 7 infanticides, atd 71 suicides. The oldest person to die was a woman in Floyd county, aged 110. The statistics show that the Hebrews and the Irish are the longest lived and the Germans the shortest, the latter being particularly susceptible to liver and stomach diseases. Of the for-eign-born population, 202 of the deaths were Irish, and 572 were German. Scarlet fever, it is found, peoples the deaf and dumb and blind asylums.
THE eminent English historian, E. A. Freeman, has been giving his impressions of America in an English periodical, a kind of writing that appears to be exceedingly popular across the water, judging by the amount of it that is done. Mr. Freeman, however, seems to be more tolerant of things American than most English travelers, and his criticisms are interspersed with judicious praises. One of the striking differences between the old and the new country he found that our cities are so cial centers, while in England, for the most part, people will not live in the towns unless the nature of his business compels it. Mr. Freeman observed that the English stock in the United States is so strong that it assimilates all other foreign elements. The German or other foreigner becomes English the Eng lishman never becomes German. He mab.es this significant statement: "The one main conviction which I have carried away from my American sojourn is that, while some things in the United States are palpably of yesterday, yet, whenever a thing is not palpably of yesterday, the chances are that it is older than the thing whioh answers to it on our own side of the ocean."
MR. HENDRICKS is reported as saying, in reference to the eivii servfee reform bill: "Isn't it a remorseless spectacle that the Democrats have been kept out of office for twenty years because the Republicans said they were not entitled to the places, and now, when there is a chance for them to get in, it is proposed to legislate them out!" Although Mr Hendricks uttered this sentiment laughingly, there was probably considerable seriousness at the bottom of it,and there can be little doubt but the matter strikes a good many Democrats in the same way. In fact it does seem rather hard, but then if the civil service is ever to be reformed it will have to be at the expense of one party or the other, and, after [all, if the matter is seen in the right light, the people that have ths least to do with the offices are the best off. But it is hard to make them believe it.
=_==_a_s=.
THE recent assertion of Henry Ward Beecher that George Washington "swore like a trooper" is not supported by historical evidence. It is admitted that the "father of his country" may *ve indulged in an emphatic expression now and then, on occasions of extreme provocation, but that he swore habitually, as it is understood that a trooper swears, is a base slander. If Mr. Beecher must say sensational things he ought at least to respect the historical vereties.
OF the entire Iowa delegmtion in Congress not one is a native of that State. Ohio furnishes the two Senators and three of the representatives, and Pennsylvania and New England supplies ths rest. This shows the advantages of emigration. It is quite possible that these men would never have become Senator* and Representatives la their native States.
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TKZ Indianapolis times asks: How would it do to let the couaty offices out to the lowest responsible bidder? That lathe way court houses are built why would it not be a good way U» run them
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Jesse James will have a before Garfield. A mule is unlike a toOi he works both ways.
Baltimore has an sells coffins on the plan. %:*./•- ,r'- 7* '*j
An Illinois preacher returns thanks to the kind friends who broke his furniture all te pieces when one of the chimneys got ablaze.
A passenger on a New York and New Orleans steamship committed suicide on on the voyage because the steamship of another line passed them on the way.
A New York bigamist says that if he bad $25,000 in cash he could marry thirty wives inside of ayear and feel safe from exposure for at least five years.
A New York doctor says that no medical skill will ever be able to furnish an antidote for home-sickness, even where the patient has no home to be sick
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STAGE LOVE AND KISSES. .*
HOW IT IS DONE IN MIMIC LIFEKISSES OF THE LEADING ACTRESSES.
"Love scenes," said an old actor, the other day, who in his young days was a famous "juvenile," "although they may seem so congenial, are recognized by actors and actresses of ability as especially hard
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portray, particularly before
American audiences, who will not endure them if they are at all mawkish or 'gushing.' They require them to be playedby the actor with manly vigor and strength and by the actress with a natural earnestness and grace. The slightest imperfection, resulting from inexperience or awkwardness, will mar the attempt and change the tender wooing into a ridiculous farce. The point of equipose at which the actor is required to maintain his delivery and movements is such a nice one that it needs years of experience to acquire the necessary tact. No scenes are so carefully rehearsed as these. It will doubtless seem strange to be told," continued the Thespian, with a twinkle in his eye, "that very few people have any idea how to embrace a woman gracefully and effectively. At the first thought it would appear that no instruction is necessary to show a fellow how to put his arm around a pretty girl and print a kiss upon her lips. But let the amateur stage lover try it before spectators and he will be very likely to find himself entangled in a train of delicate silk that must be neither stepped on nor stepped over he will stagger under the weight of a healthy female whose arms are clasped tightly about his neck, and when she walks he will step out with the wrong foot, and the gait will be anything but a graceful glide. "So the art of love-making and the art of kissing," continued the old stager, "havebeen carefully studied by the leading actress of the day, and each of them have their peculiar methods of meeting lipS with lipS. Pretty Miss Nelson used to hang about •Romeo's' neck with an ecstatic abandon that was almost frantic at times, and when the kiss came it stayed a long while. Mrs. Langtry it is said, doesn't impress the spectator with the iden that she wants to be kissed, as she allov^'i her leading man to touch her lips irGsbectfullv, anu seems very ill at ease while she is in his arms. Miss Mar/ Anderson is rather difficult to kiss nicely, because she is too tall to nestle down upon Mr. Downing's broad chest. She kisses in a good straightforward way, however, as though she isn't ashamed of it, and there is no nonsense about the
erformance. It's in the part, and she it, without putting any very delicate touches to it. Miss Catherine Lewis, whose sprightly ways in opera bouffe win for her hosts of male admirers in every city she visits,has evidently given a great deal of thought to the art. She »ps her arms about the neck mock lover as if she wanted to make tbem go »f hi sure of her
wraps her arms about the neck ©f her over as if she wanted to make twice around, and when she is ip she gives a hungry snap, and then all is still for a few seconds. Suddenly there is a loud pop and the operation is over. Her Bister, Miss Jeffreys Lewis, is something like her, but her methods are more subdued. A favorite bit of business of hers is to have the lover sit in a chair and she comes before him. She walks cautiously around him first, as though watching fora place to light on. With a whirl she falls on her knees and bends backward over his right knee, tossing her arms about his neck and drawing his face close to hers. For a moment she looks into his eyes and theu proceeds to business. The jkiss (is long, quiet and dreamy, and means whole volumes. "Modjeska kisses in an intelleetual fashion. She prefers to be kissed rather than to kiss, and her graceful movements make her an easy person to act with. There is no unnecessary clutching and clawing to hold on to ner lover. She rests upon his bosom in a picturesque way that is very pleasing to the eye. Lotta just pecks at a fellows face, and is liable to strike anywhere between the eyes and the chin. There ia a jump, a smack, and that's all. It's ths worst kind of a kiss, because it can't be anticipated, and the actor only realizes what it is when it's all over. Clara Morris's teeth have been discolored and depleted by too much medicine, and her mouth is not an inviting one for this reason. There is nothing girlish about her kisses. They are womanly and businesslike. Janauscbek has very little kissing to do, but she never tarries over it when it is to be done. She places her favors on the forehead in a maternal sort of a way. and doesn't appear to elicit nor bestow much satisfaction. Sara Jewett, the leading lady of the Union Square Theater, ia said to bestow a kiss as soft as velvet, and has become noted for the grace with which she can pose within a pair of manly arms. Her scenes with Charles H. Thorne were always pretty, because she was about the right relative height to his. Maud Granger's kisses are generally bestowed with her head reclining languidly on the sbouldei- of her lover and a magnificent pair of arms entwining him. Fanny Davenport ia much too large for a man of ordinary stature to look well with her in his arms. She'generally assumes the entire responsibility of tbe kiss, and it's a straight stand-up performance. Alice Oates spresds her arms out wide out and goes right for the objective point with a will, and the labial is noisy and indelicate. When the kiss is given a abake of tbe head, and kick indicate her an alarming uncertainty about Soldene's kisses'which made it a toss-up whether the kisser would have to go on ths lurid* or «M of doon." A1?
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CIRCUS HI
?!„*.•* New Yorl "Yes. it has been for some of the shol them, on the other hi pieces," said a wel agent, in Union Squi "You see," he conuni have swallowed up there has been a go ing." "But can you tell is, and what he has ices of a circus?" q| porter. "What do you kne young man?" "Only this," said playing the follo\ from a sportive paj
ule, because
undertaker who weekly payment
WANTED-Forty
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ming season but some of have gone to aown advance the other day. "the big fish little fish, and of squirm-
^hat a 'hustler'
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with the servthe Star re-
Jut a 'hustler,?
reporter, disadvertisement
first-class billIhows. We have men, but, as opposition this want forty more nust be good war ployers, nusilers, any emergency, side if it Bflotiid their rights, npwn bill-posters lithographers or it kind of men ral wages will be r, reliable men. a respectful neg-
posters for Unitt
already Becured sevent we anticipate sixty spring right on the st reliable bill-posters, workers, true to thei. and ready, day or nigl: Not afraid to nght for' become necessary to Only those who are need apply. We wan programmers. To th long engagements and] paid. Want none bn Consider two weeks' s: ptiV?, Applv imipedi "Well, that is a pAtV bold advertisement," said the m« i^ sawdust "but 'hustlers' must be ^on
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know
of any better way ol them. People who go to circ shows in the city have no idea oi the have to encounter ia out-c $»G-WAy country places. Not only is tbfire the competition of rival compai Wi but the countrymen, although the come any aiatance to see the sho
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l°°k upon
the show people as I natural enemies outside of the canv fc It is necessary therefore, for ever vtompany to carry with it a number of bODg fellows, who, as this advertisen W says, are 'not afraid to fight for tl ijaide if it should become necessary 'W protect rights.'"
their
You mean to safc^en that the circus companies fighters with them?"
Of course. Wb hen a circus man goes off to some out-of-the-way places in the South he takes his life in his hands. Tod1 Hamilton used to tell a story of his fentures in a town somewhere in Tea The sjow had a large crowd at botl day and evening performances, but my negroes of the vicinity had tried force their way in without paying. |eing ejected, they vowed vengeance. |was evident when the time came for ftiog the tents that there would be tro jh. The night was pitchy dark and Mies were lighted outside the line of He tents. Then it was seen that little Sots of negroes had gathered and wel patching the proceedings with sull expression. The circus men knew |$ was coming and prepared for action tent was never struck much quic fthat that. It was folded, packed and feed in the wagons, when there was a rtement among the negroes. The circi luen knew that the moment for actioi ltd come. Almost in the twinkling :t& eye the torches were extinguished tod in the stillness of the night came 1 Isound of the tentmen as they descen upon the negroes' heads. Each tent- In had selected the negro he was to at swiftly the work
|k, and silently and done, and the cirbefore daybreak, six negroes were nd that the show uted, because it ssible to identify lertainly a case of
1
cus moved out of Tody used to say left dead on (he fie people were not would have been the killers. It wai
the lives of the ireus people against those of the negroe and the circus peo-
pie did not propos This was one of
(most serious circus
We mJ
It ia worth your wfcfl*
HoMrglEoot&Co
Knowing that thii splendid opportunity to secure Bargains in Linens will great benefit to buyer and seller.
WE OFFER WITHOUT RESEKV
fSff
fights that has occurred in some Mr. but every season there are a greato less number of these encounters wo never get into tbe papers and the sh folks nave learned to go prepared, you see, young man, a 'nustler' is a vc useful element in the interior econd of a circus."
SHOP LIFTING.
HOW IT IS SOMETIMES DEFEATED THE VIGILANT FLOOR-WALKERS
Indianapolis Times
"Do you have any trouble with sh« lifters?" asked a Times reporter of floor-walker at the largest retail goods store in the city. "Not much now," was the polite sponse, "but we used to have a deal. By close watohing we have pre well weeded them out, and they har ever come here any more. When I fi came on duty we used to lose a good 6 in that way, but I have about brok the business up. Not very long however, I saw a woman come in her daughter whom I suspected, ar while Sho was pretending to look some fancy buttons I saw her drop card of them in her umbrella. As was going out I said: 'Madam, you f( got to pay for the buttons.' 'Whi ones?' she asked. I said: 'Those in yc umbrella.' She weakened at once, a asked how much they were. I saia $]• naming a high price as a punishme^ She handed out the money without word. I thanked her ana said: 'No* madam, if you ever come into this st( again, I'll have you arrested.' Anotl time, not long since, one of our clei^ saw a lady pocket a pair of gloves! accused her of the theft, and named li dollars as the price. She said she hi not that much money with her, I would go and get it. I said: 'Pie leave your muff and umbrella with as security.' She did so, and never cai back." "Were these genteel looking person asked the reporter. "Oh, yes quite so, but I should ha. to say they were respectable," was t* reply. "Habitual shop-lifters know keep very close watch and they don come here, or if they do they dofc't their tricks on us."
A THEATRICAL MANAGER A. PREACHER. Joseph Howard.
And, by the way, what a glorious tionship these moneyed managers to the intelligent people of the city at country. At a fair average Mr Stetso. for instance, in his three first-class the ters, affords constant employnifent ton less than five hundred people, and giv nightly entertainments or instruction as the case may be, to not less th thirty-five hundred people, and often to five thousand people. A man \v can preach to three great audiences se\ times a week must necessarily be a tor in life not to be disregarded or ligl ly treated and if such a man, with instincts of humanity, determines leave his race better than he found one can readily understand with wb cogency and force his lessons addr« themselves to the popular mind. It not be an orthodox Idea, but the rr who determines what five thousand pie shall see and hear, seven or ei{, times a week,.has it in his power to more good or more evil than any fadozen ministers, ordained though tL may be. _____________
THERE is something soft and tender the fall of a single snow-flake, but always reminds us to look after bottle of Or. Bull's Cough Syrup.— old stand-by in the days ofCoughs a. Colds,—for we have always found reliable.
ANNOUNCE WITH PLEASURE THEIR
AMUAL'lIM SALE
At an average recuction of 8314 per cent., our usual complete stock of
Table Linens, Tewellngs, Turkey Damasks a |y While Goods.
In addition to a large purchase bought for the
sale early
novelties and desirable staple goods. All to be sold at less than ordi I
rirs
sale prices.
Barnsley ^Richardson's Linens, 8-4j.Satin Damasks, Damask Sets (Cloths and Napkins
HEATjjf GERMAN TABLE LINENS,
At 19, 24,80, 35, 42, 48, 50 and 58c a yard.
FIT E DAMASK TABLE LINENS,
At 60, 62, 66 88, 88c, up to $2,00 a yard, all 10 to 30c under former prices.
iT.A.:p:K:i:isrs,
-8, 5-8 wd 6-8 Lze. To-d.y 60c, Me, *1.00. «U», 75c 11.00, $1.60 a£d $1.90.
'URKEY RED DAMASKS,
n«y piece., extra ,X«
IAHABK ASW IIIlK TOWM»,
A..rg.towa,|8,..-iwfrjgi*sfsassr
PIECES CRASH TOWLING.
.4, 5, 7, 8, 12M »nd
genuine
in Decem^ of^^
Fringed Cloth and Napkir
All at 60 to 75c on the dollar.
62
*naMC-
16,18aodw
I5c"
bari^d »re making prices
will save yu money. Eximine our goods. Compare quotations and prices with fray you own or se
Hoberg, Root & Co "M 1 51^and 520 Main street.
NOTICE! °^n
