Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 31, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 21 January 1893 — Page 4
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THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPI.K
SDBSCHIPTION PRICK, 82.00 A YEAK.
K. P. WESTFALL,
PUBLISHER.
PUBLICATION OFFICE.
Nos. 20 and 22 South Fifth Street, Printing House Square.
The Mall is sold in the city by 250 newsboys and all newsdealers, and by agent* In 80 Bur rounding towns. _____
TERRE HAUTE JAN. 21, 1893.
THE death of General Butler gave a number of Southern papers ail opportunity to show that despite their protestations to
the
contrary»the war of the
rebellion still goes on-
OUT in KanBas when a man loses his back bone they say that he has "gelatlned." For a week or more the impression has been gaining ground that the Republican members af the legislatare are not possessed of a back bone which can even boast of the consistency of gelatine.
THUS far there seems to be only one point on which all the members of the Kansas house of representatives are agreed—they are unanimous for pay. No Kansas man eyer goes into politics for his health, especially as a member of the legislature
TAMMANY has served notice on Senators Hill and Murphy that it isn't with them in any opposition which they may want to make to the Cleveland administration. If these two seven by nine statesmen are determined to follow the example of Ro*coe Conkling and "Me Too" Piatt Tain many has too much sense to die with them. It prefers a share of the spoils and an active part in preparing the political corpses of Hill and Murphy for burial.
UPON being asked if he had ever been an admirer of Mrs. Langtry Oscar Wilde, with his band on his heart, replied "For three long years sat at her feet. I had nothing but my life to give her, and I gave her that." Possibly the fair lily's husband wasn't around about that time or he would have concentrated his boots in sucK a manner that the asinine Oscar would have found sitting a very uncomfortable position during the following three years.
THE legislature lias adopted a novel plan
for
abolishing the olllce of coroner
in this state. Having been established by the constitution it cannot be abolished by legislative enactment, but there is nothing impossible in politics to an Indiana legislature, so it expects to be rid of the coroner by wiping out his fees and making the salary tivo dollars per yoar. The pnuuriousness of the Indiana legislature in dealing with county ofttcials is only excelled in its extravagance in state affairs.
TrrK preachors of Atlanta, Georgia, have entered a vigorous protest against allowing Col. Robert G. Iugersoll to lec tura there. They say: "But to send for a man and pay him to come into our city with the prostigo of a natioual reputation, oouibmod with a polished eloquence, a withering ridicule and a matchless magnetism, and for the sole purpose of haviug him uso all his powers to oaricature our Christianity and, as far »s possible to him, destroy the faith of our children and sot them atloat in the murk and fog of a hopeless agnosticism, the very thought has in it a aadnoss that bids you stop and think," This reminds one of the old cry "Fathers save us from nigger husbands," and contains about as much sense.
SINTK the meeting of the presidential electors in the various states there has been more or less juggling done with the presidential rote by papers of all parties throughout the country in an attempt to show what might have been. For instance, the New York Press states that a change of 31\379 votes in California, Delaware, New York, Indiana, West Virginia and Wisconsin would have defeated Cleveland and elected Harrison. It might also havn remarked, but it didn't, that a change of 30,482 votes and Harrison would have carried only six states—Iowa, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Pennsylvania and Vermont—and hwd but 77 of the 444 electoral votes. In 1SSS a change of 7,ITS votes in New York would have given the state to Cleveland and thereby have defeated Harrison. Iu 1S84 a change of 524 votes, a very narrow margin, would have elected Blaine by giving him the electoral vote of New York. The satue reasoning also shows that Haacoek was defeated in 1888 because there was not a change of 10,516 votes in the state of New York. Such deduoticns may be very comforting to defeated parties or candidates but they never change the result, however much they may relieve the sting of defeat. The ouly way in whioh this style of hindsight re*»oningcan do any good Is for some person to invent some system by which these changes can be made at the proper time.
BUILDINGTTHENAVY.
The letting of the contract to the Crumps, of Philadelphia, for the building of the new warships Iowa and Brooklyn calls attention at one® to the magnitude of the concerns which conducts them and the growing strength of onr navv. At the present time the firm employs in their yani an army of men and boys 3,SQ0
wbicfa
March l*t wilt be inersaJHHi to 5,2M, and rerv likely will reach 8,000. The two new ships will be the finest yet built for the American navy. The
WSSM
Indiana and Massachusetts y$r® br fee coast defense, bnt the low* will ne an aggnwsive battleship of 11,296 toils burd*". or
l,C\?ton8
ana.
r-
jpore tban||heIndir
^I.^SMlsp Sea better,beaboatf
and'-^ill -more rapid-J while jjher 'i will Arry^h(5avie'i*araiior
figans
aster|and she
rry^lieavier^arauor
than the In
diana. The' Brooklyn will also be an improvement on the splendid crniser New York being larger and better equipped, and will be able to steam from New York to San Francisco without stopping on the journey for coal.
The Cramps' shipyard is a busy place at the present time. Those ships now in the yard* are the battle ships Indiana and Massachusetts, and the crilsiers New York, Minneapolis and Columbia. The New York is almost ready for her trial trip. The Columbia is only slightly behind the New York. She has her middle screws on, and will be docked in order to have her two counter screws put on. The Indiana is a trifle over half done. She can be launched any time after the 28th of January or the first of February. The Massachusetts is but little behind the Indiana in point of construction, so that when the Indiana is launched the Massachusetts will follow her within six weeks' time, or, at the furthest, two months. The Minneapolis is very nearly half done. She is a sister ship of the Columbia and New York, and it will berate in the spring or early in the summer before she is ready for launching.
The five ships now building will cost the country, according to contract, $15,000,000. To this can be added the cost of the Iowa and Brooklyn, $6,000,000, making a total of ?21,000,000 received for government work since 1888, with a trifle over $5,000,000 for the York town, Vesuvius, Baltimore, Philadelphia and Newark. The whole cost of the ships built at this yard, including premiums paid in excess of performance on four of them, which ran up to about $5,000,000, makes a grand total of $26,000,000 to represent the Cramps' contribution to the new navy. Their work, too, is said to be superior to any which can be produced by any other nation, and it is cause for congratulation that the United States will soon have the finest navy in the world, all built at home, of American material, by American workmen from American patterns, and in the construction of which none but American inventions were used.
THE NEW GOLD FIND.
It seems 4"ite likely that there is goi. to be trouble in official circles over the alleged discovery of gold in paying quau tities along the banks of the San Juan river in Utah, from the Colorado line to the point where it empties into the Colo rado. On May 17th, 1884, all the territory lying south of the San Juan and Colorado rivers in Utah was, by executive order of President Arthur, withdrawn from sale and settlement and was made a portion of the Navajo Indian reservation. It is understood that this step was taken at the urgent request of the war department.
At the time the land named was withdrawn from settlement and added to the Indian domain it was asserted that gold and silver existed in paying quantities iu that locality, and subsequent invest! gation has confirmed the assertion. During the past Mve years prospectors have been prowling about that portion of the reservation in search of wealth, and some of them found it. Three years ago a party of twenty-four made their way into the Carizzo mountains, some distance south of the San Juan, on the reservation, and being heavily armed stood oft the Indians while they prospected. They were BOOU removed by a iletatchment of the Sixth cavalry under command of Capt. Wallace, but by the time the troops arrived the miners had not only secured some rich ore, but had staked off claims. They had silver ore which assayed up in the thousands of dollars to the ton and had samples of free milling gold which rau from eight hundred to eleven hundred dollars to th#ton.
Theso miners were not mere adventurers, but represented an organized body of capitalists who paid their expenses and who hare been moving heaven and earth and the powers at Washington to have this territory taken from the Indians and thrown open to settlement. That portion added to the reservation by President Arthur has been withdrawn by President Harrison, and it is charged that the secretary of war has succeeded in locating all the choice finds before the. rescinding order of the president was made public, and the matter is to be investigated. If the investigation ifc pushed, and commences back a number of years (before the Harrison administration) there may be aome interesting developments. It might be shown how it has been the custom of numerous agents for many years to give considerable attention to search for the gold and silver how the immaculate Indian Rights Association was used as a catspaw to secure the appointment of an agent who would play into the hands of the speculator, and who, on his subsequent refusal to tote fair, was unceremoniously bounced.
The San Juan placer mines are only a blind. The real object of the speculators is to get into the Carrizo mountains which are rich in gold and silver bearing quarto, and in which there are not only interested many prominent western politicians and business men, but names tolerably well known in military circles to stay nothing of numerous politicians in the effete east who hare heard of the rich cess and wouldn't object to having a finger in the pie. The Navajo Indian: reservation is about half the site of Indiana, and has a population of about 16,000, 1he largest number of Indian* under one agent in the country. The
V. •. -wr $
'"^-land is volcanic and barren—good for 4dthing on earth bnt Indians and minerals. In the latter it is rich, has a .boundless supply of coal, copper and gtroleum, and when opened for development, as it should be without delay, -fa* will prove a Bourcs of unbounded wealth to those who are on the inside and know the "lay of the land."
TERRE TTAT7TE SATURDAY*EVENING MAIL, JANUARY 21, 1893:
!k }$*
EX-PKESIDKNT RUTHERFORD B. HAYES died suddenly of heart trouble at hiis Tiome in Fremont, Ohio, last Tuesday night. In his death the country has lost one of its cleianest, sturdiest and manliest men who ever antered public life. While never a showy man he was always an active and earnest one and whatever his hand found to do was done well. When his country required his serviced during the dark days of the civil war he refused a seat in congress to which he had been elected in order that he might be at the front with his command. At the close of the war he was elected to congress and subsequently was elected governor of the state three times in succession. In 1876 he was made the national standard bearer o'f his party, and a year later went to the presidency when men's minds were in a ferment. Under the most trying circumstances he acquitted himself very creditably, and even his most bitter political opponents #ere compelled to admit that it was his clean administration which four jears later made Republican success possible. Whatever may have been said of the methods which placed him in the White House the record of the Hayes administration was one .of which every American can justly feel proud. Since his retirement to private life General Hayes nas given most of his attention to prison reform and charitable work. In his death the country loses one of the finest types of the American citizen—a man who was at once upright, conscientious, fair minded, clear-headed and clean-handed.
THE WORK HOUSE.
At Last There is a Place whare the Wicked May Cease from Troubling, and Where they Can Earn their Jail Bread by the
Sweat of their Brow. After years of waiting the city of Terre Hautex has a work house at last. True it is not much of a work house, and there may not be a great deal of work done there, but still it is a work house, where the bum, the soak and the loafer can find steady employment when they violate the laws of the state. At the meeting of the board of county commissioners yesterday the following was spread of record:
Inasmuoh as the City of Terre Haute, Indiana, in its corporate capacity, through its duly elected, qualified and acting mayor aud the board of coinmisslpners of Vigo county, have entered into a contract by virtue of the provisions of the revised statues of Indiana, 1881, which contract is in words and figures following, to-wit:
Know all men by these presents: That the county of Vigo, by her board of commissioners and the city of Terre Haute, have this day made aud entered into the following agreement to-wit:
That said county by her board of commissioners will enter upon its records the neces-* sary order and notice for the confinement of persons sentenced for misdemeanors as is provided for by Section 022i) of the Indiana revised statutes of 1881, and in consideration of
Bald
order and notice issued by said board of commissioners as aforesaid the city of Terre Haute shall and will provide said work house, furnish all material and pay and bear all expenses of the management, maintenance and operation of said work house and save the said county free and harmless from any and all expenses and liability whatever for the maintenance and operation of said work house.
In \vitness whereof the said of commissioners of said county have hereunto signed this agreement as such commissioners and have affixed the seal of said county, and the mayor of said city has hereunto signed this ooud as mayor of said city and the clerk of said city has hereunto countersigned the sameasclerk of said city and attached thereto the corporate seal thereof this 11th day of January, 1S93.
FRfcD A. ROSS, Mayor.
Attest:CHAS. H. GOODWIN, City Cleric. jAwL&fx' "I Board County IOYLB LADD, Commissioners. Now, therefore, notlee is hereby given, and it is hereby by the board ordered ihat said work house is ready for occupancy, and the board accepts the terms and conditions of said contract, the said city in all respects to bear all expenses of the management, maintenance and operation of the same, and save the county of Vigo free from any and all expenses for the maintenance and operation of the same, and to hold said county harmless from any and all liability whatever that might in any way arise from the running and operating of said work house.
Hereafter, when the impecunious drunk is indescreet enough to put in an appearance before "hizzoner" his ear will be greeted by anew tune something like this: "Thirty days in the work house." The fellows who have been making the jail a winter resort ^on account of the comfort and warm meals to be found there will now give it a wide berth, as breaking stone for board and lodging is not to their taste. It will alsQ cause the tramp to walk around the town rather than through it in search of the jail for a night's lodging and breakfast. The ,work house is an institution in which the city has long stood in need, and it is cause for congratulation that it now has one.
All kinds of coal and coke at New Pi^sburg Coal fc Coke Co., 1005 Poplar.
Readers 9f The Mail will please remember that the place to get the best laundry work is at the New Method Laundry. If you are dissatisfied with the other laundries give us a trial. We are positive we can please yeu. 725 Main street.
Plenty of teams and coal to fill orders promptly at 1005 Poplar street. Telephone lte».
Terre Haute Carpet Hall—Closing out sale now in progress. Great bargains are being offered. Carpets »and other goods at cost. Don't neglect this rare opportunity. Call and see the display of goods and compare prices. Yon will be sure to hoy. 309 Wabash avenue.
Dr. E. K. GLOVER,
Specialty: Diseases of the Rectum. 104 SOCTH SIXTH STRKET
AMUSEMENTS.
Some of the Rarest Sntertaiaments of the Stuwon which are in Store for the Amusement Loving Public of the Prairie City—
Comedy, Minstrelsy and Music* One of the greatest comedy events of jthe season will be the appearance tonight of the famous oomedian, Roland Reed in his latest success, "Innecent as a Lamb," which has been the greatest hit he has ever hud, as is attested by the large audiences that haye greeted him throughout the country. In recent seasons Mr. Reed has not had a part that so well enabled him to prove his comedy talent. Though the character is an exaggeration, figuring in highly impossible surroundings, it admits of genuine comedy treatment, indeed requires it, and Mr. Reed is well qualified for the work. Of our young comedians he is ihe only one that has thorough discipline in the formal school of acting, being a .graduate of the stock company in which be bad been gaining an en viable.reputation when the combination system invaded the theater. He was not only well schooled but was critically trained, and he is now proving the virtue of the h&rd methods that fashioned actors in former years. Tobias Piekington ia a quaint characterization, but is well sustained within the prescribed bounds, and in. artistic detail is an exceptionally praiseworthy performance. Mr. Reed defines the humor of character with entire success, his own drollery assisting the fun ol the author without in any wise doing violence to tho propriety of the comedy idea. It is one of the best light creations in several seasons. The piece is cleverly constructed and the complications and situations are well contrived and splendidly carried out. The interest never for a moment lags but is kept up througbeut the entire play. Mr. Reed as usual is supported by an exceptionally strong-company.
MINSTRELS.
The Al. G. Field Minstrels will face the footlights at the opera house Mouday, January 23rd, and present a programme of varied excellence. The company roster exhibits many of the bright lights of the minstrel firmament, among whom are Al G. Field, Frank. E. McNIsh, Jerry Hart, Harry Shunk, Tommy Donnelly, Clayton and Jenkins, W. A. Junker, Chester Nyms, the Miguain Brothers, Eldora, M. Foy, Doc Quiglev, and Joo Reider. The vocal department is said to be exceptionally strong, and is composed of some of the best of American teuors. There will be a grand spectacular street parade at 11:30 a. m. Don't fail to see it or you will miss a treat,
KATIK EMMETT.
Katie Emmett, who will play a return engagement at Naylor's on Thursday, Jan'y. 26th, has achieved, according to all accounts, a great success in her new play, "Killarney," and aside from the individual success of the star the company and tho play are accorded the same. The play is.cpnceded by everyone to be far in advance of any Irish play of re cent years indeed, it iadoubtfulif there has ever been an Irish play produced with suoh magnificent stage settings and wealth of scenery and such a capable company as is seen in "Killarney." It is from the pen of Con T. Murpby, who wrote"Thelvy Leaf"and "Fairies Well" it is full of strong situations, bright comedy, and tells a touching love story Miss Emmett's role is a dual one, she .appearing both as a boy*and as a girl. The songs which she sings in the play are bright and catching, and are already whistled on every street corner in the cities where her play has appeared. The production here is guaranteed to be identically the same as that given at the Star Theater, New York, where Miss Emmett and the play were greeted by crowded and delighted audiences.
DETROIT PHILHARMONIC CLUB. This admirable musical organization, assisted by Miss Harriet Paige, of this city, will give one of its concerts in the Central Presbyterian church on Tuesday evening next. Speaking of it the Chicago Journal says: "The Detroit Philhar monic Club made its first appearance in Chicago at a concert given last evening at Recital Hall. The club is a string quartette, enlisting the services of Wm. Yunck as first violinist L. F. Schultz, second violinist Walter Voigtlander, violist, and Alfred Hofmann, 'cellist. The audience which gathered at the hall last evening was musical and appreciative, and the playing of the club was so excellent and so superior to anything heard in Chicago in many, many months, that enthusiasm was aroused before the players had completed their artistic and finished performance .of Haydn's major Quartette op. l4, No. 5, and the highest praise was spoken of their work by the musicians and music-lovers present—a praise of far greater worth than any mere applause of an unthinking multitude." The admission has been placed at fifty cents. Seats can be secured at Button's without extra charge.
OVIDE MUSIN.
On Friday evening, February 10th, this talented violinist and bis suberb company will give one of their concerts in Central Presbyterian church for the benefit of Coatea College building fund. Of Ovide Musin what can be said that all the world has not already thought? Violinists stand upoh royal ground with their simple instrument, and there is a trio of musical artists, Joachim, Wilbelmj and Saraaate the Spaniard, who are glad to form quartette with Musin as the fourth member. Let these not be compared, for each has in him his national and ancestral traits. Musin ha* a brilliancy, an airiness and a glitter that are hia own. He represented everything with hia marvelous bowing and delicious fingering-as be caressed the loving
front
of his living violin, and out from a mats of music and sounds grew and
rote,
distinct and clear, now swelling and swaying, again falling like the
ISP
cadence of summer breathings and dying away into melodious silence At times you were over come by his bold nesfl, brilliancy and power, and theu hf» embraced yon with his siuking strain* till you caught your breath and Bighed.
A Home Broken Up.
They* is nothing sadder in life than the tissolution of homes and the disintegration r' families. There are houses where we Lave been made welcome, whose hospitality is a green oasis in the desert of commonplace life. We accept the good gifts they offer us as weaccept the sunshine and the air, as if we expected them to endure always. Suddenly death or misfortune comes, and the home that opened its doors to us vanishes as utterly out of our reach as if it had never existed.
The charming hostess becomes a careworn, anxious woman, bereft of the iuxnries and the comforts that she so generously shared with others, and is a nomad in the land where she once had an abiding place. Her sons leave her and establish families of their own. Her daughters do likewise or turn their energies to thoughts of earning a livelihood and caring for the mother, who has never known before a privation or an uugratified wish. There is none of us who cannot recall these sad experiences, and, after all, they are the real sorrows of life.
For a home once broken up, its hearth fires extinguished, its joy quenched, its common experiences of grief and pain ended, the ruin is unalterable. No earthly power can restore its completeness, rekindle the flame or reopen the sealed book upon which destiny has laid its forbidding hand.—Chicago Inter Ocean.
For Mosquito Bites.
It amuses me to hear so many remedies suggested for the bites of the mosquito and so many devices mentioned for keeping the insects out of the way, even when every window and door in the house is protected by a screen. In frontier districts, -where mosquito bars and screens are alike unknown, various plans are adopted to keep off the insect pests, and those who live in houses could adopt any one of them with far greater certainty of success than the unfortunate man who has to sleep in the open without a cover of any description.
No mosquito will come within smelling distance of oil of cloves, and a few drops on the pillow or coverlet will keep the sleeper as safe from annoyance as a dozen thicknesses of netting. The precaution is specially desirable in the case of children, especially as the mosquito is not by any means the only insect that has a decided objection to the perfume.—St. Louis GlobeDemocrat.
Giggling Is Not Laughing.
Women very generally neglect a very powerful weapon of offense and defense placed at their command by nature. A woman's laugh, if intelligently and skillfully used, can wither a man in his tracks or elevate him to the seventh heaven of happiness.
Several causes have contributed to the decadence of woman's laughter. The chief one perhaps is the modern habit of dressing. Full, free laughter depends upon a perfect development and exercise of the respiratory muscljjs. Confined as these are by steel and whalebone laughter becomes an impossibility.
With a loss of the art of laughing comes a loss of t!:e sense of humor. When the expression of any of the senses becomes difficult the sense itself dwindles. Do not mistake giggling for laughter.—Philadelphia Times.
Miss Dodge Dislikes Philanthropliy. Miss Grace Dodge, who is so well known in connection with the various organizations of working girls in New York, is a woman of wealth and culture. She lives in a beautiful home 011 Madison avenue. More than that, she keeps house in addition to all her outside work.
Miss Dodge says: "I don't think a woman can be a true woman if she has no home duties. "I hate that word 'philanthrophy,' "wshe said in response to some remark about her work. "In the first place, my work in my clubs is not philanthropic, ft is simply part of my social life. A woman was talking to me the other day, and she said that she was 'in thirty charities.' I do not feel that way. I'm not 'in' any 'charity.' I belong to several girls' clubs, and I attend them like any other member."—New York Recorder.
Beautiful Hands.
:*otonly ladies should have pretty hands —u rough, untidy pair of hands is just as unnecessary for a man to have as a woman—beautiful white hands very many can have if nature has been kind enough to bestow upon tbem fair skins. All may have neat looking, smooth hands. A lemon, some oatmeal, palm oil soap and tepid water and a few ounces of glycerin will be ail sufficient to accomplish the desired result.
After the hands are washed clean in the water, to which has been added a tablespoonful of oatmeal and a teaspoonful of glycerin, and the palm oil soap freely used, rub over the wetlands the lemon juice apply it especially well about the nails, for it hardens the skin and prevents the formation of hangnails.—St. Louis Republic.
Miss Constance Fenimore Woolson is now living quietly in Oxford, where she lids made many delightful friends.
For Rent.
FandRENT—Two
OR houses of 3 rooms each one bouse of 2 rooms. A. Taylor, 1363 Main street.
Wanted.
Wgood
ANTED—Immediately, a good cook, references. Apply to Mrs- J. H. Blake, Eagle street.
For Sale.
FThirdstreet.
OR SALE-House of five rooms on south Good well, cistern and splc ndid tan.. 20 south Blxth street 'OR 8ALE—TwoS-room houses on Liberty _*• avenue cellar, cistern and ontbaildtntH, all in srood condition. Price, fl.050 and flJOO. an in gooa HAMILTON A CO., 20 south Sixth street.
OR HALE—Good 3»room cottage on north street, Price tl.100. RIDDLE HAMILTON A CO., 30 south Sixth street.
Fdence
OR 8ALE—A thoroughly modern resion south Fifth street splendid I
,,rt-%SSI^iSaSSB5S®-co,oca-
Fcornerterms
O cc
3D south Sixth street.
wjRSALE—The Welsh property, soathmst Heeond and Vralnut street*. For &LE, HAMILTON A CO.
price and a
Hoberg
& Co.
Root
Never Do Things By Halves
When they have a Bargain it is a Bargain after you get it home as well as in the store.
Tuesday
Our Store Will Be Closed For Inventory.
MONDAY
Is the day to buy
3Dd FlIIS
A Y% Price Sale—and Strictly Cash applies to all Cloaks sold on Monday.
Our Linen Sale Continues
No lionse in the City can sell you Linens and Housekeeping goods as cheap as we can.
10,od6 yards All-Linen Crash at Sea yard. You pay 8c for it everywhere.
Table Linens. See them at 35c, 50c, 65c and 75c. Red Table Damaslc at 25c, 38c and 45c. Nothing like them in town at the price.
Pure Linen Towels at 3c, 5c, 8c, 10c, 15c, 18c and 25c. Everyone a leader.
1 case Honey Comb Quilts, Marseills patterns at 69c cheap at $1. case Extra Honey Comb Quilts at 94c cheap at $1.25. 1 case Genuine Marseilles Quilts 1 case Extra Fine Quilts at $1.19 cheap at $1.40. at $1.98 cheap at $2.50.
The handsomest Bleached Table Linens in the city at 50c, 75c, $1 Barnsley's Cream Damask a specialty.
Muslins and Sheetings at New York wholesale prices during this sale.
Full 9-4 Sheetings 13c a yard.
Come To-day.
Rootfi Co.
518 & 520 WABASH AVE.
CLEVELAND 4 BUFFALO TRANSIT CO.
"C. & B. LINE."
Remember that commencing with opening of navigation (May 1,18M), thin company will place in commission exclusively between
CLE VEL AND and BUKFAU)
A Daily Line of the Most Magnificent Side-Wheel Steel Steamers on the Great Lakes. fiteainer will leave either city every evening (Sunday included) arrivlngatdestination the following morning in time for business and all train Connections. QUICK TIME,
EXCELLENT SERVICE, LOW RATES. For full particulars see later Issues of this paper, or aadress T. F. NEWMAN, H. K. ROGERS,
Oen'l Manager. Gen. Pass. Agt. CLEVELAND, O.
"W-A.RNTTST G-
Occupants of house? should secure their Windowsand Doors at once against the Cold Drafts of the coming Winter, by buying Weather Strips for Windows and Doors which entirely exclude
Cold Drafts
in Winter, saving half your fuel. Windows can be rased or lowered as usual for ventilation. For sale by
FINKBINER & DUENWEG,
Dealers in Hardware, 528 Main street.
