Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 18, Number 21, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 November 1887 — Page 9

8

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THE MAUI

A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

PERSONAL MENTION.

Walter Glover is on the sick list. H. S. Richardson was in Chicago yesterday.

J. A. Parker has obtained a patent on a car wheel. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Fryberger are visiting in Roekville.

Mrs. A. C. Duddleson returned home Monday night from Chicago. President Mendenhall, of the Rose Polytechnic Institute, is in New York.

A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Skinner in Baltimore last Mon day.

Miss Lena Wcinstein, of Bemenl, 111. is the guest of her cousin, Miss Carrie Weinstein.

Miss Meda Mack, of Summit Grove, is visiting Mrs. George Grimes, of south Seventh street.

Mrs. W. M. Slaughter is crippled with a turned ankle by which some of the !ones were crushed.

Wm. Simpson and Harry Oliver have withdrawn from W. W. Oliver's and will go west to grow up.

S. rffenheimor will go to Now York next week to buy novelties and holiday goods for Ilerz' new Bazar.

Miss Maggio Kanolty started on Tuesday afternoon for San Diego, Cal., where she will spend the winter.

Jacob White has been assigned for special duty as guager with revenuo agent Dunlap at Cincinnati.

Charles Bevins will move his family back to the this city, having taken a place with H. Robinson it Sons.

Mrs. P. M. Donnolly will spend the wintor with her daughter, Mrs. James Gookins, in Indianapolis.

Mrs. J. II. Pinnell, formerly of this city, now of Charleston, 111, is in the city the guost of Mrs. J. T. H. Miller.

Miss Alice Warren, of this city, acted as one of the bridesmaids at the RiceTylor wedding at Vincennason Wednesday.

Miss Nora Athon, daughter of Win. A thou, of the National House, was married at Paris, Wednesday evening, to Dr. W. W. Wilson.

Mike O'Brien, who left tho Gazetto to take 11 place on the Indianapolis Sontinel has moved on to Cincinnati, to do reportorial work on the Times-Star.

Prof. Wm. Zobol and Miss Clara lloinian united in marriagoThursday morning at St. Benedict's church. They will rosido at tho corner of Seventh and Swan,

Mrs. Kmma Robinson, who came hero from Rochester, N. Y., has decided to make Torre Haute her home and has purchased a residence 011 north Eighth •troot.

Major W. C. irifFlth, of Sullivan, grandfather T. J. (}ritlith, was in city this week, after a visit to relatives in Marshall. He Is ninety years old and yet hale ami hearty.

Miss Ella Piper, a popular young lady clerk at bergs, was married Wednesday evening to Charles Yearnshaw a dry goods merchant at Carleton, ^obraska, and has gone with her husband to his western homo.

H. F. Schmidt has announced his intention of giving a premiun of a fcio watch or other goods in his stock valued at that amount to the boy or girl in tho public schools receiving tho highest per cent, at tho end of the Christmas term.

Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Perduo, Mr. and Mrs. Alden. Miss Eliza Warren, Mrs. Dr. Weinstein, Mrs. C. M. Warren and Miss •Sallie McKeen, attended the annual meeting of tiio State Association of Congregational churches at Indianapolis this wook.

Torre Haute was well represented at the Indianapolis Chrysanthemum Exhibition. 11. Gralmn showing roses, L. Ileinl carnations and John G. Heinl taking llrst prise on bridal bouquet and lnst new funeral design, in competition with the State, LoulsvUloand Cincinnati florists.

Robt Moore, thO|bcst practical elects rician in the city, formerly with tho Western Electric Company, is now employed by A. G. Austin A Co., who carry everything in Electric Supile® and will lie pleased to make estimates on electric •work.

The personal appearance of old and young men is greatly improved in wearing a new and late style hat. Such you will tlnd in great variety and at the lowest prices at S, l^oeb's, who also has a nice line of glove®. He is selling at cost all his fur and plush lap robes In order to close out stock. Now Is the time for lmrgains in these robes.

You are now about to select a suit of «loths» for fall. At one place you can tlnd a pattern to suit but not a tailor nt another the tailor is good enough but the stock isn't up to the mark. If von want to be thoroughly satisfied, with a splendid stock. Including the Hnewt imported and domestic woolens, and a tailor who can flt you perfectly, go to Phil Schloss. comer Main and Fifth streets.

Timely warning, for Holiday Presents Nothing Is nicer than a finely finished Photo or a life sine Phot*MTrayon» snch as can he had at ft. H. Wright's In thf* greatest perfection. Do not delay too late, ____________________

The largest and most complete stock of men's and children** Ready-Made Clothing mn be found at Schloss'. The stock of fall fpnad* in this line, recently purchased by Mr. Scblow, is far superior to any ever brought to thin city.

PERSONAL AND PECULIAR.

Anthony Comstock says that be has destroyed forty-nine tons of obscene literature in fifteen years.

If people should stop suddenly some evening telling what they think about other people and tell what they know about themselves, what a stir-up there would be in modern society,

Mr. Herreshoff, the blind builder of famously fast steam yachts, always asks at a hotel for a light, bright, cheerful room. He can feel the atmosphere if he cannot see the sunlight.

There is a case on trail in Brooklyn where the defendant is charged with beating his wife, and the defense is that she did not have his meals ready when he came home. Decision awaited with interest.

Anybody can live happily with an eighth wife, or a seventh wife, for that matter. Statistics show very few fail ures uf perfect bliss with wives beyond the fifth. It is with the first and second that most failures occur.

A tall young man, lar from stylish in appearance, recently registered at a Philadelphia hotel and asked to be call ed at half-past six in the morning. He proved to be John Dubois, of Dubois, Minn., whose uncle died not long ago and left him a fortune of $8,000,000. Youn^f Dubois is about 28 years of age, neither smokes nor drinks, is unmarried, retire? early and risfes early, ancl has neither the habits nor the appearance of a youthful millionaire whose wealth is almost inexhaustible.

David Hostetter, of Pittsburg, Pa., who has made a vast fortune in the manufacture of bitters,'is a man about seventy years of age. Physically he is insignificant. He is not much over five feet in height and very slender built. His hair is white, and he wears a gray mustache. He has a large family. His eldest son, who was threatened with consumption, is now in California, and is in much better hoalth than when he left Pittsburg. Mr. Hostetter's wealth is estimated at between $5,000,000 and $6,000,000. There was a time when he peddled his medicine 011 foot.

Tho Jewish Messenger deprecates the tendency of Hebrews to go into club life. 'Some of us," it says, "are so Germanized by club influence and association, that we refer to non-Israelites as'Americans,' thus voluntarily proscribing ourselves as un-American and foreign. To avoid general society and organize our own petty Jewish circles, to which nonIsraelites are not admitted, is both bigoted and imprudent. It not only conveys the impression that Judaism is narrow and clannish, but it will drive from companionship some of our best and most representative Hebrews."

A doctor said to a patient on his first visit: "You are a very sick man. If you have any business to do, anything to put in order, it will be well for you to do it at once." "Doctor, do you think I am going to die?" "Yes, there is little liopo for you." Tho man had sense onough not to be frightened to death, and said, "Well, I've had a great deal of trouble in my life, and most of it never happened." He defeated the doctor's prediction. This incident a well-known railway presidont often tells when his colleagues are prophesying gloomy things.

W. M. Slaughter is making things lively with his collection agency. The promptness with which returns are made is surprising as well as satisfactory to all who intrust their accounts to him for collection. Such an institution goes a great ways toward making times better.

Call at the Globe office, Fifth and Ohio streets, and see the finest line of Wedding Goods, Yisiting Cards, Ball and Party Invitations, Programmes, etc., ever brought to tho city. Any kind of Printing or Binding executed in the best style. Estimates furnished on any class of work. ________________ "Tender and Juicy." ^4

This is what a young lady said about the meats at T. J. Patton fc Co.'s. She was right. There isn't nicer meat to fce had anywhere.

Dorse Breeder*.

If you want to raise "The Farmer's Horse" patronize a stallion of that breed which in every essential particular meets your requirements. Don't depend upon the mingling of blood of opposite extremes in the hopes of striking a happy medium, for you will lie disappointed nine times out of ten. Follow the scientific course of English breeders, who, to use the words of a prominent importer of French horses, "have for centuries shown the world the way." Breed for a purpose, a specific result. Use the blood which is its full strength shows the form you want, each successive cross bringing you nearer the desired result, th® perfection of a farmer's horse, the defend Bay, which at three years old, if properly cared for, is fit for business, and after a few years work on the farm, hauling your produce to market, wheeling your family to town or to church at a rattling ten mile an hour gate, and giving yourself and the boys the pleasure of driving the handsomest team in the county, sell to buyers at fflOO to fl^OO the pair: and the Cleveland Bays Imported bv Geo. E. Brown A Co., of Aurora, Illinois, during the last fourteen years wherever introduced fully demonstrated this.

EISERS

for fresh new process Caramels, Taffy, Creams, Coocolate, etc Corner 9tn and Wabash Ave.

J. NCOKJiT. M. J. BROPHY.

TNTUGENT & CO.,

PLUMBING and GAS FITTING

A 4 dsater la

Oaa Fixtures, Globes and Bngfaaar** Supplies. SftS Ohio Street. '1: Itorr* Bmt*, lad,

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l!|IISt|Site"

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ffipippqjf t£\*

Fancy green golden Roasted coffee, loose, per

Tige

T^RRB HAUTE SATURDAY gyiiTKrTNIf} MATT.

HEALTH IN THE BREAD.

Perfect food is that which, while prepared in the most appetizing form, is also the most wholesome and nutritions. It should never be necessary to sacrifice the wholesomeness of an article in order to make it more palatable, nor, as is too often the case, should we be compelled to take our bread or cake bereft of its most appetizing qualities in order to avoid injury to our digestive organs.

The Boyal Baking Powder possesses a peculiar quality, not possessed by any other leavening agent, that applies directly to this subject. It provides bread, biscuit, cake, muffins, or rolls, which may be eaten when hot without j\ inconvenience by persons of the most delicate digestive organs. With most persons it is necessary that bread raised with yeast should lose its freshness or become stale before it can be eaten with safety. The same distressing results follow from eating biscuit, cake, pastry, etc., raised by the cheap, inferior baking powders that contain lime, alum, phosphates, or other adulterants. The hot roll and muffin and the delicious hot griddle cakes raised by the Royal Baking Powder are as wholesome and digestible as warm soup, meat, or any other food.

Another greatly superior quality, possessed by the Royal Baking Powder is that by which the preservation of important elements of the flour is effected in raising the bread by th© mechanical operation of the gas, without fermentation. Yeast, and all baking powders that produce the leavening gas by fermentation, as is well known, destroy a portion of the nutritive elements of the flour, and particularly those which are the most healthful and the greatest aids to a perfect assimilation of the food. The Royal Baking Powder, while perfectly leavening, retains without change or impairment all those elements "\vliich were intended by nature, when combined in our bread, to make it literally the staff of life." *1

No leavening agent or baking powder, except the Royal Baking Powder, possesses these great qualifications.

Just received another shipment of those fine cedar bucKets.atSoc each. Sagar cared shoulders, warranted, per jxund

14 lbso?standard granulated sugar for SI. 14% pounds confectioners' A sugar for SI. 18 pounds soft white sugar for Si. 17 pound bright straw colored sugar SI. Choice green coffee, per pound 25c.

A FEW DAYS ONLY

Groceries at Cut Prices!

coffee, per lb 2714c. uud 25c.

Rio .. per po

Levering's E. L.C. brand, one pound packages, ronst coffee, 25c. Chase & Sanbom.s fancy Rio, roasted, per pound, 30c. Chase A Sanborn's extra golden Rio, roasted per pound pound 80c. Chose & Sanborn's combination Java, roasted per pound 33c. Chase & Sanborn's Maracalbo, roasted, per pound 33c. Chase & Sanborn's Standard Java, per pound 35c. Flour, best, per barrel S4. 25 pound saeks50c: 50 pound ?ncksSI. Flour, patent, per barrel S4.50. 25 pound sacks 00c 50 pound 91.19. Schumacher's Akron graham flour. Buch wheat flour. Potatoes, Irish, choice, per bushel SI. Butter, per pound 20c. Kingan's English cured shoulders, perpound 9*c.

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Our canned Tomatoes, Corn, Blackberries, Pie Peaches, and Table Peaches were purchased before the lato advance all fresh, new goods. All abovegoods warranted as represented or money refunded. We buy our goods from first hands and manufacturers, which enables us to get the best and freshest at the lowest market prices. Goods delivered to any part of the city.

'."--W. W. OLIVER,":!

631 Main Street. Terre Haute, IncL

1

Bucket Pump and Water Purifier

FOR WELLS AND CISTERNS.

A Model Invention endorsed by Scientists and the Medical Profession

mm s® as a Preventive against TYPHOID, SCARLET AND MALARIA FEVER.

Kingan's English cured breakfast bacon. Kingan's sugar cured hams, all meat, uncanVftSHed. Babbitt's best soap 100, bars, 75 pounds, per box 94. bars Hahltt's best soap for 25c, 8 bars R. VV. Bell's Good News soap for 25c. 8 bars Shultz's Bed Star soap for 2fc. French Prunes, new, 18S7, per pound I.JCV Choice new citron. fas New raisins. New seedless raisins. .. New dry currants. sal 18 pounds choice Turkish prunes foi SI. 8 pounds pearl starch for 25c. V*

Crackers, per pound Sour pickles, s\ les, sweet pickles. New New Orleans molasses, first of the season. Hitter's apple butter 10c. per lb.. lbs. for 25\ Photograph brand salmon, per can 20c. New Aork cream cheese, per pound i"J^c.

It hi simple In construction, strong and durable, aa It has no tubing, suckers, or valves. It docs sot freece, the backets having a bole In the bottom, discharge themselves.

It Is easy to set up as there is nothing to fasten below the platform. II wilt aot rout,

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5 pounds lump starch for 25c. 1 dozen boxes sulphur matches for 15c. ... 1 dozen boxes parlor matches for 15c. 1 do/.en papers carpet tacks for 15c. 3 hoop, brass bound, cedar pails for 3u«r Strained honey, per pound 10c Bulk baking powder, per pound 10^. j*"* Sweet Chocolate, percake 5c.

the chain and buckets are made of the

best galvanised iron and steel. We have the best pump for domestic use in the world. Try one tor30days and If not convinced, return It at oar expense. With this pump as many gallon* of sir at* circulated through the water "from the bottom to the top" as gallon* of water are drawn. The pare oxygen of thealrthus liberated rentllatw, rKslizMsad purifies the water. After a few days use ail foal taste and smell will be removed, and the old flatness, and insipidity Is replaced by a sparkle like that of a siouiaia spring. It is the only device known that will destroy wiggles, water bugs, lice and worm*, lor raeh vermin cannot exist In Uving water.

Every Pump Warranted for 5 years.

Call at oar place of business, No. 15 south Second street, west of New rtart Honse. and see glass model, showing the action of the air on the water,

MCFERRIN BROS.

No. 15 South Second Street, Terre Haute, Ind.

4

9

sweet pickle*, sour mixed plokmlxed pickles, chow-chow

THE MIR

GOOD NEWS!

To our friends andfpatrons, who have been so anxiously waiting to earn when we will remove to our New Store Rooms, 512 and 514 Wabash Ave. Well, if nothing unforeseen occurs, we will be in our New Quarters about Dec. 1st. Prior to our Removal, we will place on our counters some of the Grandest B«

seen in Terre Haute.

r:.

•200 Beaded Lace Fronts

& 3 A E a S a on a in O

tint IHU

Men's Suits and Overcoats.

S'i A I)oui»lo Done in tlie

Hoys' and (children's Departiiient*

ParentH will "turn out" to-day in largo numbers looking for useful Clothing for the boys. We'll get goodly whare of the patronage. A beautiful memorandum. slate %vi 11 be presented to everyone visiting bur Htoro to-day. Open till 11 p. in.

MkLeading Clothiers, Corner fourth and Main Streets.

THE BEST IN THE MA RKET!,

The Best Soft Coal Base-Burners Can Be Found at Zimmerman's. 1

The "West Point" Hard Coal Stove

AND THE

FAVORITE" COOK STOVE

Are Unuurpaased. A Full Line of

House Furnishing Goods.

GEO. S. ZIMMERMAN,

Sheet and Metal Boofer. 648 Main Street

m.

20 South 7th Street. Terre Haute.

f? At ft

Real Estate and Loan Broker

Bay and Sell Real Estate. Houses Rented and Rents Collected.' .^fon Residents Property taken care of and Taxes Paid.

NOTARY PUBLIC.

All Kinds of Real Estate bought and sold on Commission. Correspondence Solicited. Informr tion Cheerfully Furnished. Htocks of Merchandise given or taken in Exchange for other Property. AU Basin em Promptly Attended To*

WM

250 HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAWS

bargains ever

at iust

i. Dollar, 2. Odds and Ends of Corsets to clean up 25 dozen, thoioe l^c, worth all the way up $1.00 each. 3. Odds and Ends of Children's and Misses' All Wool Uuderwear, about 25 dozen, choice 39c goods worth all the way up to $1.25. In xur

J-i

Dress Trimming Department

Special Bargains and some lots will be closed J?

the

50c on

4

about to

at Astonishing: Low Prices. 4

NEWsiUMBRELEAS!

w"i. Another lot of 2,500 New Umbrellas just re-

teived, making it in all now 3,500 Umbrellas. Everything new in the line is represented. Prices Lower than the lowest, quality guaranteed. We -r' -v are still expecting some more and are deteri nuna

__ 'Wf

'Uy We shall offer next week Special Lots of Jackets astonishing prices^ Jackets, with and without Hoods, $1.25, $1.50, $1.75, $2. and upwards.

Children's Cloaks, 75c, 85c, 05c, etc.^ (rretcliX1 ens as cheap in proportion. Plush Sacques down to $21.38 worth $30.00. Newmarkets and

Raglans, a large discount from former prices. We want to move as few goods as possible and shall make prices to unload quickly.

Fur Muffs and Fur Trimmings.

HERZABAZAR.

OUR OVERCOATS!

Are Going Like Tax Receipts.

Do You Want One? OVERCOATS OVERCOATS OVERCOATS OVERCOATS

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Come To-Day.

OUR PIIICTCS 30 Per Cent. Under Others.

V."

L-

MYERS BROS.,

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GOLD MEM STUD

CLEVELAND BAVS! EN6USH SHIRES

IIME wtmmam tt UM greatint Elerw MIMWI i» Anrrfc*.- liimoto

SUto VWr and tfa* A—rWa Emm Show, is 18H.-48 PREMIUM* tmoeattiogtooemilr 92.300Md wWai thrmm COLO MEDALS, SntpttkH in both Cbniml and Shir* efawam tho GRAND SWEEPSTAKESopaatoantibxlrmftbraada. tad SPECIAL. l»tl*E *be*di«pU/of 8hireHo««.

wan navunMiiim an W&VBMk rvil*ft *WTueMUmyM/ ouuBi

GEO. E. BROWN & CO., Aurora, Kane Co., III.

DIN an MpHiCBft

'tV 8«sd far Ciaatratad hapUM

f«* IhmA tar UtnatMliMl Pimnh