Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 32, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 31 January 1891 — Page 8

"HE MAIL

A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

PERSONAL MENTION.

The Mail will be pleased to publish all personal and society notes sent to the office before Friday noon, of each week

J. L. Wagner, haa gone to Florida. S. B. Burdin has returned from Paris, Ky.

Robert Stunkard, of Kansas City, is in the city. Miss Anna Ross is visiting friends in Louisville.

Mrs. Sam Kleeman is visiting her parents in Chicago. Mrs. John Cook and son Frank, will leave soon for Florida.

Mrs. C. F. Putnam is still confined to the house with la grippe. Mrs. B. F. Havens has been quite sick this week with la grippe.

Mrs. Sallie Pinnell of Kansas, 111., is visiting Mrs. B. H. Alvey. Mrs. Wm. E. Dorfan, of New Albany, is visiting relatives in the city.

Miss Anna Buckingham, of St. Louis, will soon visit Miss Anna Strong. Miss Mary Korbly, of Madison, Ind., is visiting Mrs. Donn M. Roberts.

Miss Frances Foster left to-day for a three weeks' visit at Ft. Wayne. Mrs. J. H. Crum will go to Florida in a few weeks with Mrs. John Cook.

Mr. Hanahoe, of Toronto, Canada, is visiting his son James, of the tool works. T. Kmory Morford, of Chicago, is visiting his mother-in-law, Mrs. R. N. Hudson.

Miss Li I lie Knott left Thursday night for Cincinnati, to enter the Conservatory of Music.

Master Sheldon Boll, little son of Mr. and Mrs. O. D. Boll, has been quite sick this wook.

Miss Lottia Alhoirn, of St. Louis, is in the city, tho gueat of Miss Gussie Walsor.

Mrs. Julia Roistnan has returned from a visit of several months in Texas with lior son.

Min.s Fannie Gordon, of north Fourteenth street, is visiting relatives at Paris, Ills.

Mrs. Arthur Mann, of Ashland, Ohio, is visiting Mrs. W. H, Paige, of south Sixth street.

Miss Graoo Koyes, will board at Coates College during theabsoneeof herparents in the South.

Mrs. Graham and Miss Bailey of Ohio, are tho guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Ijams, at Warron Park.

Mr. and Mrs. Chas Gardner of Washington Ind. are visiting Mrs. Gardner's brother, John B. Aikman.

Mrs. Charles Appleby, of north "Twelfth street, has returned from a visit with relatives at St. Louis.

MISN

Mollie Cruzan, visited in Dau-

ville, Ills, this week, tho guest of her sister Mrs. William l'ahrer. Mrs. IIearn, is lying very ill at the residence of her mothor, Mrs. Satnl. Reese, of south Seventh street.

F. P. Towle. who has beon connected with Schmidt's music house for a short time, is no longer in th»ir employ.

Mrs. Hitchcock and daughter, Mrs. Wilson, of Vincennes, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Dr. Ponce yesterday.

Mrs. Swain and family, of Indianapolis, an» visiting tho family of G. W. Carl Ion south Sixth-and-a-half street.

Misses Anna and Lulu Zeigler, of Cincinnati, are in tho city, the guests of the Misses Gfrorer, of north Eighth street.

Hurley Pritchard, who has just recovered from an attack of typhoid fever, litis lvHn taken down again with a relapse.

Mrs, Dr. Hut moss has returned from quite an extensive trip in the eastern part of Kentucky, much benefited in health.

Mrs, Kimtnell, of Chestnut street, has returned home from Evansviile, where she has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Chas Meyer.

Mr. and Mrs. Bob Stewart, who 'have beeu visiting Mrs. Stewart's father, Owen Fred ricks, left yesterday for Kaunas City Mo.

Ed Miller, who has been visiting his parents in this city for several week», returned on Wednesday to his home in Nashville, Term.

George Grimes ha* severed Ins connection with the Journal. He left yesterday to visit his home near Center Point, Ind., for a few days.

Frank Haberlaud has received the aad news of the serious illness of his nephew, .Frank Haberlnnd, of Vienna, Austria, a highly educated and promising young man.

Mrs. Blanch© Hughes, nee Buckingham, left San Frauciseo Sunday for a long visit to her brother, W. S. and F. M. Buckingham, of this oily. She is in poor health,

Luia Hedden, the little daughter of A1 Hodden, the VfcndftU A passenger engineer, who was recently hurt at school, is in a

very

serious condition and her re­

covery is doubtful. Frank Miller, formerly of this city, is now hu per in tending the work of building anew street tail way at Santa F», X, M? Ib' is with the Edlaon company, with h«:ads}uarters at Denver,

Mrs. Clara B«dgley writes friends her* of the sat# arrival in Portland, Oregon. She has accepted an intwrctt ia & commercial colleg©, with her companion, Miss Cad Albertson, M#is»nt.

Misa Janet Scudder leaves next Tuesday for Chicago, where she will make her home with her brother, Will Scudr der and family. She will pursue her art studies at the Art Institute there. ||f

Mrs. Harry Graham and Miss Emily Allen, of Peoria arrived in the city on Wednesday Misa Allen took part in the Centenary parlor concert Thursday evening at Mrs. A^J. Crawford's,|and return ed to Peoria yesterday.,

H, Sherman, forema* of copper and tinshop, at the Vandalia, and one of the oldest employes of the company, who received injuries by a mistepsin the erecting shop, a week ago, has almost recovered, and it is thought will be able to resume work the coming week.

Mort Gould has sold out bis gram business at Peoria, breken up housekeeping and is now at Baaville, Ills., with his wile whose mother, Mrs. Dickason.is scarcely expected to live. Miss Carrie Gould, who was visiting her brother, is now the guest of Mrs. Gertrude Beach at Lafayette.

J. A. Parker will serve as superintendent of the First Baptist Sunday school during the absence of R. L. Alder on his western trip. Mr. Aider expects to be gone five weeks, and during that time will take in all the principal cities of the entire country west of the Mississippi. He and J. G. Debbs will go together, accompany the fruit growers who start from Boston. They will join the party at Cincinnati, going thence to Chicago, then to New Orleans and from there west.

PERSONAL AND PECULIAR.

Mesmerism originated in Paris with a quack doctor named Mesmer. The average Wellesley college girl weighs 11914 pounds and is a trifle over five feet two inches in height.

The "bachelor" girl is now the term applied to the young womep who leaves the paternal home and strikes out for herself.

Mrs. Blaine is the tallest of the ladies of the cabinet and Mrs. Noble is the shortest, the later being only five feet in height.

Nine hundred and ninety-two women registered at Cheyenne, Wyo., for the recent elections. Several women rode 26 miles into Cheyenne to vote.

Count von Moltke, the Germau soldier, received with other gifts, §50,000 on his birthday anniversary." Not needing the money, he gives it to the charities. .Dorn

Pedro, ex-emperorof

The Soudanese women wear no shoes, but decorate their ankles with bright bands of the more precious metals wlien thoy can get them. They also wear rlugs on their toes.

The class yell of the young ladies of tho freshman class of Colby University is stated to be as follows: "Co-ordination ha, ha, ha, tessaras kai enenekonta dux femiua facta, rah, rah, rah."

A couple were married at Atlanta, Ga., who were first betrothed 35 years ago. The engagement was broken off, and since then the man has buried two wives and the woman one husband.

Corsets, tight shoes and all artificial and fake ideas of dress are discountenanced at Mr. Moody's Worthfield school, and girls are taught the higher ethics as well as practical results of physical culture.

William Archer's criticism on Mrs. Langtry's Cleopatra is everywhere pronounced to be the most severe on record. Here it is: "Purple patches ot Shakspoare swimming in a prismatic-scintil-lant maelstrom of spectacle."

Cardinal Gibbons is very simple and methodical in his habits. He rises at 5:30. says mass at 7, breakfasts at 8, takes a walk at 10, dines at 2, and spends the afternoon receiving visitors. Supper is served to him at 7. and by 10 he is in bed.

Bismarck's inseparable companions »n% two largo Danish hounds/ At dinner they eat besides their master, and he occasionally feeds them with hip own hands. After dinner the prince smokes three pipefuls of tobacco, that being the amount allowed him by the doctors.

Nearly 500 invitations have been accepted to the Jackson day celebration at Philadelphia. Among those to be present are Gen. Gordon, Mr. Cleveland, Congressman Breckinridge, of Kentucky: George A. Jenks, Senator Kenna, Chairman Keer, and Henry Watterson.

Robert Garrett, since his return to Baltimore, is reported to be "looking like himself again." "Mr Garrett looks so well," said a gentleman who met him on the street, "that no one who sees him can refrain from expressing pleasure at the visible proofs of rapid restoration to health."

Goodman «fc Hirsehler have fully settled their great loss by fire with the several insurance companies since the last issue of The Mail and are now engaged in making a sweeping sale of the damaged goods. As would be expected, tlrey are baying a great rush and the store has been crowded dally at those hours when workingtnen and businessmen are at leisure Great reductions have been made on all grades of goods regardless of the fact that many counter* were hardly touched by the water. Bargains are without end and the people are getting the benefit of the firm's calamity.

There will be an orange *ocial at the Christian church next Thursday evening to which the public is cordially invited to attend. A good supper will be served for 15 cents.

A BROKEN MIRROR.

XbMfiver circled looking glass I gave into my Dora's keeping 'S® Joying shattered now, alas! fit A.-M1so my dearest girt is weeping.

Doe* all this grief her bosom swell Became her pretty toy is broken? Or fears she lest the kes foretell

Tint rfoath of him who gave the token?

fc In either case, could Doraaee H§ How very plain she looks when crying, She'd weep for neither glass nor me,

Though one were smashed and one were «|fftldying. —S. St. G. Lawrence in life.

I WOMAN'S ADVANCE, #jj

Some of the Almost Insurmountable Obstacles She Has Overcome. Without much blowing of trumpets or unseemly boasting women have overcome almost insuperable obstacles, have brought business abilities to the management of affairs, and have achieved phenomenal success. Their capacity for public affairs receives large recognition at the present time. They are elected or appointed to such offices as those of county clerk, register of deeds, pension agent, prison commissioner, state librarian, overseer of the poor, school superintendent and school su pervisor. They serve as executors andadministrators of estates, trustees and guardians of property, trusts, and children, engrossing clerks of state legislatures, wardens of women's state prisons, college presidents and professors, members of boards of state charities, lunacy and correction, police matrons and postmistresses.

They are accountants, pharmacists, cashiers, telegraphers, stenographers, typewriters, dentists, bookkeepers, authors, journalists, lecturers, painters, architects and sculptors. In many of these positions women serve with men, who graciously acknowledge the practical wisdom and virtue that they bring to their duties. Hon. CarrollD. Wright, chief of the national bureau of the statistics of labor, has announced the number of remunerative professions and occupations in which women are working as 342. "Many women have been appointed to positions in departments of government, and to important employments and trusts," said Senator Blair, of New Hampshire, from his seat in congress, "but as far as your committee are aware no charge of incompetence or malfeasance in office has ever been sustained against a woman."

All this is prefatory and prophetic of the larger opportunity and the nobler development which the future will accord to woman. The twentieth century will be hers, as the nineteenth has been that of man, in an especial sense. Woman has wrought more of good than of evil in the world during her ages of ignorance, bondage and degradation. What, then, may not be expected from her in righteousness and helpfulness when she is accorded freedom, equity and untrammeled opportunity?—Mary A. Livermore in Jenness-Mil-ler Magaztno.

Value of

Brazil, bus­

ies himself with art, science, and language. Though sixty-five years old, he is taking daily lessons in Hebrew and Sanscrit.

1

the

Thermometer,

Although the thermometer has its widest sphere of application in fevers, yet it renders valuable aid in diagnosing other forms of disease. It aids us in differentiating functional from organic troubles and real from signed diseases. It tells whether the increa :,1 heart action is due to fever or cxhaus.'m: that sweating, not preceded by fever, t.he result of exl^ustion and not the c.: of it. In many%isteruN?8 it would be difficult to tell hysterical troubles simt: '"*ting organic disease from true organic yible, without the aid of the thermofn.. *r. It may be worthy ofHtbte that the deposition of tubercle, whether in tho lungs or in other organs, is always accompanied by an elevation of temperature. In cancerous infiltration, on the contrary, there is no increase in the temperature.

Tho thermometer is the only reliable means of determining the presenco or absence of fever. Often the hands and feet will feel cold, the nose pinched, and at the same time a high grade of fever be present. Ignorance of this fact may lead one into the mistake an old physician of my acquaintance made in a case. He claims to bo able to tell all about his cases without the aid of instruments. Ho came to the case in question, seized tho patieut's hand, and said "temperature normal. Not a bit of fever." I took the temperature with my thermometer, and found it nearly one hundred and iour degrees. Such mistakes are unnecessary and reprehensible, and when instruments of precision are obtainable neglect to use them should not be tolerated.—Housekeeper's Weekly.

A Fortune Teller. •_

There is an old fashioned toy that is quite easily made at home which yields a good deal of amusement at family parties. To make it you take abase of firm wood, round by preference, but "any ilrin piece will do. From the back you drive a long, sharp pointed nail or screw right through it into the feet of a little figure—a- doll dressed in red cloak like an old witch. Then you take a circular piece of cardboard, and ruling lines like the spokes of a wheel llll in the spaces with mottuus such as "Beware, your pride will have a fall," "You are loved again." "Yon will marry in leisure and repent in haste," (ind snch like sentences. The figure has a wand fixed in its hand. The disk of cardboard is placed so as to balance, free to revolve with a touch, and the answer is of course found by the direction of the wand pointing to the sentence at which the disk has stopped. It is a very old "novelty," but things half forgotten are often more popular on their revival than quite fresh and original ideas. —New York World.

Women Literary Assistants For myself, without the aid, the intelligent assistance I hive received from the ladies who have shared my literary labors, I should have bten utterly unable to accomplish the little I have done. The spirit of order which they introduce into the chaos of a literary man's environments, tho quick sense of the characters of the correspondents whom they have to deal with, the plastic facility with which they mold themselves to the mind which furnishes their working patterns, make of them alter egos, which moreth&a double our effective personality as litcrarjr workers.—Oliver Wendell Holmes in Ladies' Home Journal. v.

Utile Trimming for Stout "Women*, Stout women's millinery should always be selected with tcreat cure. As a rale it prill bear bat slight elaboration in the matter at tximwia&, :dag iopeod- .~ the shapeliness and suit:/ !ity of tl:v itrttctare. An extremely st woman properly gown«d and bonm iu black may be :&e an attractive .if she ptoaMsru array herself

with,

dxns 1'.. iiy.—JeajaMS-Miiler

A IwSyisi otif vf. (jut cMts, throwa ssdfle&l: 3 Lcr resources, hit upon the idea preparing delicacies for tbasick, cad unrbw mo» demand for her dainty eooktoetbaa site em supply.

wsmm

Go to F. A. Seeburger & Bro. for your Sunday meats. They have the best shop in the city and will give you the choicest cute of any kind of meat you. wish 711 Main.

Go to Peter Miller ior lap' Robes, Blankets and Harness supplies of all kinds. Prices there will surely please. 505 Main street. ?15

To the Mardi Gras at New Orleans February 10th. These carnivals are famous all over the world and need no description tour ists have come direct from Enrope at this festival time to see this quaint historic city in its holiday attire.

The Queen & Crescent Route is 94 miles the shortest and quickest line running from Cincinnati through Chattanooga by Lookout Mountain and Birmingham, Ala., crossing the famous Lake Pouchartrain bridge over 21 miles long and one of the most magnificent feats of railroad engineering in tho world.

Round trip tickets to the Mardi Gras at half rates. The only line running the Mann Boudoir Sleeping Cars (owned by the Pullman Co.) but instead of berths opening into the aisle, each section is in a small drawing room and is sold at the same price as the regular open berths unequalled in comfort for families and invalids, or any one desiring the comfort of a private room. First class Buffet service on all cars.

Trains leave Central depot every morning and evening with through cars. Ticket offices all over the country sell tickets over this line, or they can be purchased at depot, and Q. C. ticket office, 92 West 4th street, or by addressing D. G. Edwards, G. P. & T. agent, Cincinnati, O.

TWO CENTS PER MILE.

O. H. & D. Thousand Mile Books Good to a Thousand Points. A. popular demand has been a thousand mile book at a §20 rate good over several roads, without refunding attachment or other vexatious regulations. The new thousand mile books

Marg arefcSidney's new serial, Jive Little Peppers Grown Up, will tell moreabout Polly and Jasper and David and loel and Phronsie, andothers,asitruns through the year. Fifty charming illustrations by Charles Men to. iUarnettft's Good Times will chronicle In her own words, from her own manuscript, the childhood'adventures of Marietta Ambrosi.

Miss Matilda Arcliambeau Van Dorn, a little girl who had a great many ancestors, is an irresistible little folks'serial, by Elizabeth Cumings.

Unusually Interesting Articles, some elaborately pictorial: "Dining with Gladstone," by Mrs. General John A. Logan "Amy Robsart's Embroidery," by Frances A. Humphrey "Mother Goose's Pets," by Agnes Repplier "Gypsies and Gypsying," by Elizabeth Robins Pennell "Home Horses that I have Known," by Maud Howe: "Helnte Marie College of Wynchestre," by Oscar Fay Adams "Boston's Girl Sculptor," by Mrs. Newberry "1 he SUgar Crank," by Theodora R. Jenness.

Problems in Horology* by E. H. Hawley, of the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, will Interest High school students—three sets «f Cash Prizes.

The Best of Short Stories from thousands

reproduction ui noem, from theoriginal MSS„now in Pilgrim •Hall, Plymouth.

Fijiare Drawing for Children, in twelve illustrated lessons, by Caroline H. Rimmer, with four prize offers each tnonlh.

Fine Ballads by Graham R. Tomson, Harriet Prescott Spofford. Mary E. Bradley and Laura E. Richards beautifully ilhtttrated by Garrett, Sandham and Taylor.

The ever popular Ways to do Things, the School and Playgroud Stories, Tangles, PostOfliee and Men and Things.

Wide Awake is only $2.40 a,year. A LOTEIROP COMPANY, PVBLISHKK.S, BOSTON.

„.

UbUU,

HSCALP,

Ml

Avhich

tho.

Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton Railroad will place on sale on and after January 20, meet this demand. They will be sold at all C. H. D. ticket offices and will be accepted for passage, not only on all divisions of the C. H. & D., but also between all stations on fifteen other lines. They are ever-ready tickets between Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Chicago, St. Louis, Dayton, Toledo, Buffalo, Salamanca, Ft. Wayne, Peoria, Ann Arbor, Cadillae, (Mich.) and a thousand other points.

All heavy goods whacked in pieces at Ford & Overstreet's.

WIDE AWAKE,

Beginning with the Holiday Number IS permanently enlargfecf to one hundred pages,* 100 radiant with new and -PAGESlarge type, a new stylo of page, and fresh, strong literary and plctoral attractions,

1891:

Mrs. Burton Harrison, whose story of "The Anglomaniacs" has been the sensation of the season In The Century, has written tor Wide Awake a story called "Diamonds and Toads."

Hon. John I). I.ong (ex-Governor of Massachusetts) furnishes six articles, under the general title of Our Government, for the enngh tenment of coming ci tizens—the boys and girls of to-day.

Kirk Monroe, who lately lived for a time the life of a railroad man, in all phases from parlor car to cattle cagg, has put .his experience into a thrilling serial for boys called Cab and Caboose. Striking pictures by Edmund H. Garrett.

f©TicuVa

UMORS OF THE BLOOD, SKIN, AND whether itching, burning, bleeding, scaly, crusted, pimply, blotchy,

Monev to Loan. Mest

ONEY TO LOAN in any amount at lowrates. Bargains in Real Estate In all parts of city. J. D. Bigelow, 22 South 7th

Wanted.

VGeneral

IGO REAL ESTATK CO., 030 Main street, Real Estate and Collecting Agencjr, Terre Haute, Ind. Rents Collected, Loans Negotiated, City Property Sold and Exchanged, Subdivisions handled in the moat satisfactory manner at reasonable rates. No trouble to show our property. We strive to please.

For Sale.

FOR

SALE—Nine acres of lend adjoining Collett Park. This tract will be sold at a bargain. Will trado'for lots or improved property. Will divide it.

I1flORSALE—LOTS—in

I"

P.

OT

cop­

per-colored, with loss of hair, either simple, scrofulous, hereditary, or contagious, are speedily, permanently, economically,and infallhly cured by the Cutlcara Remedies, consisting of Cotleura, the great Skin Cure, Cnticura Moap, an exquisite Skin Purifier and Beautitler, and Cnticura Resolvent, the new Blood ana Skin Purifier and greatest of Humor Remedies, when the beat physicians and all other emedles fail. Cuticura Remedies are the only Infalible blood and skm purifiers, and daily eflfeet more great cures of blood and akin diseases than all other remedies* combined.

Bold everywhere. Price, Cuticura, 50c. Soap, 35c. Resolvent, $1. Prepared by the Potter Drug and Chemical Corporation, JBo«*^ndfor "How to Core Blood and Skla

•arPimpkSs blackheads, ctu mir stria prevented by Cul

^aislte

ts

ter. 23c.

:«dan«J raSoap.

i- •. weaJcn- .and

rheumatism relieve*! in «ne miu««&fcy the celebrated Cuts

cum Anti-Pain Plas­

Latest Arrivals!

Feather Trimmings, new, rare and beautiful. Jewel Lace Nets and Flouncings. Beaded and Silk Queen Ann Collars and

Cuffs and Girdles.

Novelties in Spring Hosiery.

The Embroidery, Lace, Trimmings, Ribbon and Corset Departments show many new attractions.

510 and 512 Wabash Ave.

Sugar Cured Hams, at

10

cents per pound.

Kingham's English Cured Shoulder

at

7

cents per pound.

Turkish Prunes at 10 cents per pound Canned Tomatoes, Canned Corn, Califor Canned Goods^ at

W. W. OLIVER'S,

631 Wabash Avenue.

RIDDLE, HAMILTON

FPrice

A CO.

OR SALE—A go 88C0. $100 cash and balance in. monthly or quarterly payments.

RIDDLE, HAMILTON it CO.

all parts of the city

from $49 per lot up. Money furnished to build. RIDDLE, HAMILTON A CO.

pORSALE OR TRADE—A brick dwelling of eight rooms on north Fourth street for sale or will trade for small farm.

RIDDLE, HAMILTON & CO.

dtftHA AA on easy payments will buy fjyUUU.UU 87 acres of choice land near Martinsville, 111. For particulars address JACOB FRANK & CO.,821 N.Sixth Street, 8t: Louis, Mo. 31M

NOTICE-IN

ATTACHM EN AND G\RNISHMENT.

State of Indiana, County of Vigo, gs. before Wm.

McCarthy, J.

P..

N

irri*on Township.

Albert W. Meyers vs. Henry Hucey. Be it known, that the a hove proceedings were institutea against the defendant and that by tho return of the oilieer, said defendant is a non-residat'f

Said non-resident defendant is hereby notified that the proceedings stand before me for trial, and that the same will be heard on tho 16th day of March, IS01, at 10 o'clock a. m., when due attention will be given by me to same.

Witness my hand and seal this 23d day of January, 1891.

[SEAL WM.

p. MCCARTHY,

J. P.

0TICE TO GAB CONSUMERS.

The Citizens'Gas and Fuel company will hereafter furnish gus stoves anl gas appliances and do all the necessary gnn fitting at cost to the consumers of luel gas. i'he public arc invited to call at the ollce of the company, No. 36 south Sixth street an I examine the large stock of the latest and best improved gas heating stoves, ga« grates, gas log», gas cooking stoves, gas ranges and gaswater heaters, which can now be bought at the lowest factory prices.

CITIZEN'S GAS AND FUEL COMPANY, 30 south Sixth street.

CHEAP FENCE.

Slat wire fence, four feet high, plain wire, 60c a rod Galvanized, 75c a rod- For sale Terre Haute Shovel & Tool Co., South 3rd Street.

WALL PAPER

Hughes & Lewis, 28 Fifth St.

Dr. B, B. GLOVEE,

Specialty: Diseases of tho Rectum. KEMOVKD TO

SEVKX

tii AND

POPLAR KT

Tcrro

SbfK«

ma^

COMIC AND FANCY.

Some of the most beautiful Valentino.* evor brought to this city. Also &,000 Comic Valentines to pick from.

Como early and get your choice of the Valentines.,,

Postoice News Stand,

XO. 12 NORTH SEVENTH STREET,

TWO DOORS NORTH OF MAIN

JERSEY'S COAL OFFICE,

1007 WABASH AVE. Leave your orders here for

Block and Bituminous Coal,

And they will receive prompt attention.

All kinds of Choice Sa ii sage at Pa 11 n's Clean Meat Market, 4th and Ohio streets, Tele-

MBH'S

FURNISHINGS!

If you want the choicest, newest and most desirable things in Furnishing#, you must visit that old reliabiu exclusive Furnishing store of

Jas. Hunter & Co.

Special Novelties for the Holidays.

Coke, Hard Coal,

All Sizes.

BLOCK and BITUMINOUS.

T. H. Coal and Lime Co.,

Office 515 Ohio Street Telephone 114

THE POSITIVE CURE. lax

BBOTXKBS. Wuna 8L,Kar Yofc. Fikw

"^V, $