Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 43, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 22 April 1893 — Page 8

Sharp Pains

The pain may be sharp or dull—it makes no difference,—the HOP PLASTER relieves instantly and cures speedily, every pain, ache, strain, inflammation and weakness. They always do good, never do harm.

Enterprising medtetae-dealers Mil 'the genuine jrooos. flop Flatter Co*. Bottoo, proprietor*, on boch aides or plaster J* & guarantee.

Hop Plaster

Hires

DR

G. W. LOOMIS,

ZDDE^TXST.

20-10 north 0th st. Terre Haute, Ind. 1 square from Eloctrlc Car Line.

0. JENKINS, M. D.

w.

Office, 14 South Seventh Street, telephone 40, residence, 032 Ohio street, telephone 178. Otttee hours: 9 a. in. 2 to 4 p. in.: 7 to 8p.

•MI.

111.

A RTIFICIAL TEETH.

'i Mil

tion.

ai»

Time

is the right time for everybody to drink

Root Beer

A temperance drin k. A home-made drink. A health-giving drink. A thirst-quenching drink. A drink that is popular everywhere.

Delicious, Sparkling, Effervescent. A 35 cent package make* 5 gallons of this delicious beverage.' Don't be deceived ifa dealer, sake oflarger profit, tells you some other 'just as good —'tis false. No imitation a* the genuine

HIRES'.

1

HARRISON SMITH

Manufacturer aud dealer In

OF A 1.1. KINPS.

WILL PAY THE HIGHEST CASH PRICE FOR DEAD HOGS At my factory on the Island, southwest of the city, ofllco No. 13 south Second street.

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

1

At residence until until 8 n, in., 12 to

tu„ to tip.

-T-V- I) 11, p. G. BLKI ISO K—DENTIST. With 30 years practice in dentistry, I can ^guarantee first-class work. Special pains Taken In mendlugold plates. Teeth extracted without, pain.

I unit,

lul 11 strnnt, nnir Ninth.

J)R. L. H. BARTHOLOMEW, DENTIST.

tlemoved to 071 Main st. Torre Ilaute, Ind

H. GARRETT,

Custom Harness mess Maker.

Track Work aud Repairing a Specialty. 23 south 7tli. rear P. J. Kaufman's Grocery

I Best aid to the Aiunteur, tho Artist, and to those fond of a, beautiful

ART

INTERCHANGE

Homo. 30 oralPicfcures

fth

iven

CURE

a

year's

subscription for only 8-1.00. Complete instructions and designs given for

sj

yfH Hyn (t*xt4 (4jwv Nr» Ant

China PaintColor

ra­

JSO_____

fating.

homo is complete without this

beautifully illustrated guido. Everyone who sends direct to our •ofHee for one war's subscription will get

I'rce, an Prcmluin, a copy of our »exquisite water-color fac- simile— The Try

SLLIT IF

Place," si

KG

37X23 inches—

which has never been sold for less than 910, mid which makes a most beautiful gift for any occasion.

Sample copy of tho Magazine, with 3 Colored lfclcturc», sent for SIOc. Cutnlojxuc Free. THE ART INTERCHANGE CO., 9 Dasbrosscj St., N. Y,

CARTER'S

ITTLE

IVER PILLS.

ESck Hta-Uchesad 1*1 tar* *11 tbotroobkn toot* £er.t to a bilious «tata of tho sj-ntem. much aa JDixstatM, N na«, Crow*tav««, IUtr««8 after c*u&«, Paixt In ttw Sido. fto. while their rooart sucew* hse twea!

1 •hovrn in

SICK

B*a*eb*

y°* Carter's little

Utnsr

PfTbr «r»

*cu*lly niuablo in Con*ttp*tion, curing and proxtcUtig tiiU mooring compUlnf»blh» ttaralao ccrrvc 1 all AUordcrsof tho JUrer aoA negate** the bomb. fiwo

HEAD

Ac»thgrwonldbotonottptlcokMitoflxwc^Bu nralfer from thlt distraining cam plaint Imtfort* JUt^th^rgOodtWMdOMDOtODdbCS^aDdtkOM wfeoeeeettTUna will find than tttttepOtawla. wxTitb&iibey *tU not bo willing to do witfaoat liwrn. Bat after ails&k

ACHE Knsany

thai ber* whom

wtta*fa*e«r greet txwrt. Oar ^Ubtca»U«ttiId do b(A* C*RTRT^L^TL«IJHWL^W«VETT«MAAK3J itrrwqrlotite *n«ry fcnmricUjr v«s«tUnuad act grtpope stteeettoa pUomtaU wS enrstv bet ty their gcntUactkw plaa*»ail tttt&cm. ta ftfo for $t Sali Ly dro«#Ma cnrotrwteKk or «al by trag.

CARTER W«OtOH8 CO, Mew York. iSMAliPBl. SUAIiOOSE. SMALL P3Kt

NEW RACE OF WOMEN.

THE CHANGE THAT HAS COr.IE OVER SOCIAL CONDITION

How Modern Kducatlon and Exlgc Have Affected the Relative Position* c.f the Sexes In the Matter of Finances.

Business "Women.

It was a famous saying of Lord Brougham—though attributed by him to fioincbody else unknown—that it was the whole end of king, lords and commons, and of the whole machinery of tho state, to bring 12 good men together in a jury box. In a similar way it was once said by an experienced American lawyer that the most important result of all the great recent changes in the position of women—new laws, new education, new professions—would be found in the creation of a race of busings women, who would look after their own money matters, instead of trusting them utterly to men. It is inevitable that this result must in some degree follow. A race of women brought up "to read, write and cipher, to keep books and send business letters, to study constitqtional law and political economy, to sit on school committees and charity boards, to manage tenement houses and prisons, to practice law and medicine and mqke their own wills, cannot possibly remain in that state of pupilage which was once the only natural condition of their sex.

Whether it is pretty or otherwise, graceful or otherwise, a race of business women is upon us. For observe that it is not needful that each individual woman should do all these things in person, or indeed any of them: the most secluded woman still feels the effect of the general change, just as the disturbance of the central waters of a lake finds its way at last, though infinitesimal ly, into the remotest nook. The social alteration is in the air, in the. newspapers, in the whole habit of life. A prominent philanthropist in a city of 100,000 inhabitants once called my attention to the fact and proved it by comparison of documents that whereas 40 years before all the leading charitable associations of that city had men alone for their officers they were now chiefly carried on by women, even the office of treastirer being now in feminine hands.

And certainly the change has come none too soon. It is painful to think how large a part of the impoverishment of women once comfortably established has come not from avowed enemies, but from those on whom they had most reason to depend. Fathers, brothers, husbands, guardians, trustees, have often been the very source and origin of their woes. Trusted with too implicit confidence, able to secure the signing of any conceivable document without comprehension by tho signer, these men have been exposed to a temptation too great to resist in times of financial pressure or of promising speculation. With the best intentions at the outset, they have treated trust money as if it were their own. If all went well, the object of the trust might be benefited: if otherwise, she might be ruined.

Cases have been known where men of the noblest character, philanthropists of the highest aims, and withal trained lawyers, have been found at death never to have made any distinction whatever between trust funds and their own estate, so that it was with tho greatest difficulty that the trust funds had been replaced by tho executors, while tho immediate heirs have been loft penniless. The more prosperous such people outwardly are, the greatjjJJ^'*danger. Tho mechanic's wife u"""11" what hor husband's wages costs per week to* feed her the husband drinks to excess, SHte just where she stands. ___

The farmer's wife knows her rights in the homestead and is aware that the real estate cannot bo legally sold without her signature. But where property is oncp. invested in tho great perplexing world of stocks and bonds and mortages the woman of the past was powerless, and even the woman of tho present is only beginning to comprehend. But she has got to comprehend it, for the whole tendency of the age is driving her that way.

It is common to say that she is constitutionally incapable of understanding such matters. That is always the easiest solu tiou when one is not willing to take the trouble to teach or to learn. But this is not said of women alone. It is equally said of other classes not expressly trained to business—of clergymen, physicians, authors, army officers, naval officers, and in all these cases it is very often true-

In how many households it is the wife, not tho husband, the sister, not the brother, who supplies tho cloar head, tho prompt decision, the efficient action! Heretofore this has been less manifest because, as has been said, the women had not even elementary business training and were therefore at disadvantage even when better endowed by nature, but now we are changing all that

And it must, moreover, be remembered that there are tvhole departments of business action where the qualities that are confessedly strong in women—as, for instance, judgment of character—are concerned. I once heard an eminent lawyer, now in the United States senate, argue in favor of putting women on juries on the ground that the opinion they would form of a witness would be more accurate three times out of four than that of the men who sat by their side. They would follow by Instinct that admirable rule laid down by James Freeman Clarke—that it is not enough to judge people by their actions.

Wcmust also judge actions by their people. And beyond this merely personal insight there is often a ready application of principles among women where the minds of their husbands move more slowly.

The mere fact of a consultation, the mere necessity of discussion and comparison of notes, makes a man safer and more prudent in the most complex business matters if he habitually consults his wife. And what man, knowing the uncertainty of his own life, would not prefer that she whom he leaves in charge of his children should be a business woman?—Thomas Wentworth lligginson in Harper's Biucar.

llurran Covers.

A model bureau has the bottom of each drawer lined with a cheese cloth or silken pad tied with tiny bow& Another pad, fragrantly sacheted in satin or watered silk, pink, bine or dclicate green, is edged with silver cord for the top of the bureau. Over this is spread an overlay of delicate linen lawn embroidered about the edge in dainty pink silk and garnished with tiny French baskets worked in yellow silk, filled with blue and pink flowers and tender green leaves.

Another design from Wattean is the very little basket his slwpherdness swings on her rounded ann. The cushion has Cupids and g»rl«mls on another bit of linen lawn edged! with lac*?, and is finished

vrilh

wlver cord and £»£*%& satin bows at each of the fonr corners* anlitter wirh a rhSnestoce backle In each kroS» This elaborate iom is motmtcd c». of obacurity oaa&j. easel, to bo purchased at a picture Move for S» ctaia.—UocaMitrifa.

WORLD'S FAIR EVANGELS.

How Brother Moody Will Attack Satan'f Cohorts In Chicago.

Evangelist Moody will inaugurate and supervise a fries of evangelical meeting in Chicago during the exposition that he expects will be the crowning religions work of his long and successful carter. The preliminaries are all completed, and beginning on May 1 meetings will be held every night in every part of the city. -Mr. Moody haf selected his assistants from the ablast Christian workers in this country and Europe, and every effort will be made tc keep tip an ^aflagging interest in the work. The services will be conducted in churches in the different districts and in four large tents which have been secured for the pur pose. Much good is expected to result from the tent work, which, has always bee especially successful in Chicago. The speakers will alternate betw»m the churches and the tents, but no one will be permitted tc speak at the same place on two successive evenings.

Especial attention will be paid to the musical part of the programme, which will be under the direction of Mr. Moody's well known colaborers, Ira D. Sankey, George C. Stcbbins and H. H. McGranahan. Large choirs are in training, and unusually good music will be heard at the meetings, both in the churches and the tents.

9

D. L. MOODY.

GEORGE M'KAY. J. "WILBUR CHAPMAN. Mr. Moody will not spend the entire summer in Chicago, but will leave for his home in Northneld, Mass., in June to conduct two large conventions which are to be held there. After these are over he will return to Chicago and resume his revival work. While he is away, however, he will be in control by deputy and the management, of the meetings will be in competent hands.

George McKay, a Wall street broker, will deliver a series of illustrated lectures during May that had great success in Dr. CuyIcr's church in Brooklyn. Mr. McKay has

Tsacked

lei*'

"V

The

COMMISSIONER LOCHBEN.

being considered. The president gave great deal of thought to the consideration of the appointment and consulted public men from all over the country. He declared that he was looking for a man who was at one* an ex-soldier, a lawyer of standing and ability and a man of experience and executive ability. Judge Lochren's friendr thought he possessed all the necessary qualifications, and the president offered him the appointment.

Judge Lochren's military record was brilliant. Fe enlisted in the First Minnesota regiment at the beginning of the war, being one of the first men in Minnesota to abandon his civil pursuits for military accouterments. His service culminated at the battle of Gettysburg, where the "Fighting First" made the famous charge that checked Pickett's onslaught. Only 40 of the 300 men who made the charge came out alive and unwounded. Young Lochren, who was first lieutenant of Company E when the rush began, came out in command of his regiment, all the officers above his rank having been killed or wounded.

After the war was over Mr. Lochren returned to Minnesota and resumed the practice of law. In 1888 he was appointed to the bench of the circuit court by a Republican governor and was twicc re-elected to the position as a Democrat without opposition. He wes twice the Democratic caucus nominee {or the office of United States senator, which is an indication of his standing in his own party, while the unanimous indorsement the Republican legislature when his name was mentioned for the pension commi^rionership shows thai his popularity ext« ~ds beyond patty lines.

Commissioner Lochren has been a resident of Miunesota since 1857. He had bat just attained his majority and been admitted to the bar in Vermont, his old home, when he decided to settle in the Xorth Star Stat*.

Mea Who Stop VTatrfee*.

The claim is made that some people are too magnetic to carry watches. Imtaross are related of am whose per- tJ magnetism is *0 si: .g that the r, accmtte dironcxnete^ become unre U)le v. hea

fertbein. fe.

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL. APRIL 22,1893.

JO::X

M'NEILL.

Europe for pictures for these

ectures and is said to have a complete life of Christ in illustrations. John McNeill, recently of the Regent's Park church, London, was heard in America a year ago and is said to be "n able aud forcible prer.cLer. J. Wilbur Chapman is a Presbyterian divine of Philadelphia. Some of the other speakers who will assist, are Dr. T. De Witt TalmagjpeMp|£ Mills, Dr. Theodore Cityii iris, who will preacl) in •r of Berlin, who will and the celebrated Porr Pindar of Tschen.

BRAVE SOLDIER.

Minnesota, tlic New

pniMjppier of Pensions. commissioner of pensions,

Judgo William Lochren of Minneapolis, was not an applicant for the position to which he was appointed, nor for any other in the gift 0' the president and was asi mished when he learned that his narn^ ..as

HIS AFFIDAVIT,

SEAL

s-

—wsm&n

IT WILL MAKE PEOPLE BELIEVE HIS WONDERFULSTORYjjgg||

Subscribed to by One of New York's Host Prominent ustices—Here is the Whole Matter Exactly It Happened.

State of New York, County of Washington, Lucien Kodd, of Whitehall, N. Y., being by me duly sworn, deposes aud says that some years ago be suffered very greatly with insomnia, nervous prostration and bis body was covered with sores, causing him great pain and annoyance. That his head was so covered with sores that he was hardly able to comb or even brush his hair, so great was the pain it occasioned.

That he consulted the local physicians without successful result that he took quantities of medicine with no benefit whatever that physicians told him his disease was incurable and he had come to the same conclusion himself and had made up his mind to go to a hospital and await death.

That just about this time he learned about Dr. Greene's Neryura blood and nerve remedy, which he began to use. That this remedy entirely relieved and cured him, healed and dried up his sores, enabled him to sleep soundly and comfortably, and restored him to his ordinary vigor and vitalityt in short, made a sound and well man of him so that he was fully able to work at his occupation, and has done so since thai time.

That he attributes his recovery to Dr. Greene's Nervimi blood a'^d nerve remedy, as it restored him when everybody

Vf/Jttj

MR. LUCIEN RODD:,

and everything else had failed and had been given over to go to the hospital and die.

Mr, Rodd makes thisstatement volun tarily and cheerfully out of sincere grat. itude for what the remedy has wroughi for him.

LUCIEN RODD.

Subscribed and sworn before me this 15th day of January, A.D., 1893, andrfipa

certify the affiant to be a credible reliable person whose statements be accepted with confidence and plioitly relied upon, having known him .personally for the last twenty-live years and that I have no interest, diioct or in direct, immediate or remote in thif matter

HON. WILLIAM H. TEFFT Notary Public in and for said County ami

State, residing at White hall, where this depo^i tion was taken aud ex ecuted.

Dr. Greene'B Nervura blood and uervo remedy is purely vegetable and is sold by druggists for $1.00. As is proveu b} the wonderful cure of Mr. Rodd, it is the very best spring medicine possible to take for the blood, nerves, liver, kid neys, etc. It is the discovery and pre scription of Dr. Greene, of 35 W, 14th street, New York, the most successful specialist in curing nervous and chronic diseases. The doctor can be consulted free, personally or by letter.

Testing Pare Water.

It is one of the easiest things in the world to tell pure water from the impure. If you want, to test the color of the water, just fill a colorless glass bottle with the water and look through it at some black object, and the distinctiveness with which you can see the object will give you an idea as to the amount of qlay.or sand there is in the water. Then pour out one-half the water, cork the bottle tightly and set it in a warm place for about 24 hours. Remove the cork and smell the air in the bottle. If there is an offensive odor, even the slightest, the water is unfit for domestic uses. Well water, no matter how bright and sparkling, is. nine times out of ten, putrescent Then, as a matter of coarse, decomposition is sure to set in in a day or two if you put the bottle in a warm place.—New York Telegram.

Trash Baskets.

The new trash baskets are quaint looking affairs in square, long shape. They are wound about with a scarf of tapestry for decorative effect and are designed to hang low on the wall beside the table.

Almost a Miracle. A young girl saved from menial and physical wreck. Another, victory for VIAVJ.

Read the VIAVI Health Book for Mothers and Daughters, free to any.fiddress or on application at Room 6, MoIveen Block. Free consultation. Ladies'only in attendance.

Saving For the Government. The fervor of economy which recently agitated congress recalls an incident of the government printing office which occurred during the Rounds administration. A chief of a division in that big workshop had had a good deal of difficulty in getting requisitions for supplies filled. The amoujit of lead pencils he had called for had been criticised as excessive, and he put his wits to work to devise ways and means to avoid clerks carrying away those useful articles. He made a rule that a clerk should be issued but one pencil at a time and that he should return the stump of his old pencil upon receiving anew one. This process was continued during a couple of years.

It never seemed to occur to the chief that a clerk could gather in stumps of pencils from his friends, if he were inclined to cheat the office, and the method was regarded by its promoter as an evidence of the massiveness of his brain. Finally, when his Successor was appointed, among the effects of the office turned over to him were two good sized boxes of stumps of pencils, each stump averaging less than an inch in length. The curious collection took up a good deal of room, and the new jchief lost but little time in sending it out of the office and in taking away the economical safeguard.—Exchange.

Wiiat Water Will Do.

The source of many disorders, which might in most instances be prevented if proper attention were paid to ordinary measures of precaution, is constipation. Irregularity in eating and exercising is the most common cause of this trouble. If persons occasionally troubled with headache, indigestion and other minor complaintg would remove the cause, the effect would soon pass away. When a headache results from constipation, a glass of cold water taken just after rising will do more toward removing the trouble than the local application of preparations to the head. Opinion is divided-as to tho merits of the use of hot or cold water for this purpose, but cold water (not ice water) is here recommended because it is not so apt to produce uausea. 1

Strongly Endorsed.

'lhe advertising of Hood's Sarsnparllla nppenis to the sober, common sense of thinking people, because It is true and Itls always fully suosiantlated by endorsements which In the financial world would bo accepted without a moment's hesitation. They, tell the story-HOOD'S CUBES.

Hood's Pills cure liver ills, jaundice, bit lousness, sick headache, constipation.

Jas. Boss Filled Watch Cases

Sid as far as you can see. They look wefcr like solid cases, and cases for all practical purposes—yet cost about half as much as an out-and-out solid gold case. Warranted to wqar for 20 years many in constant use for thirty years. Better than ever since tliey are now fitted,' at no extra cost, with the great bow (ring) which

off

1

Darlington, S. C.

A Rrturdjr for the Grfpp« Cough. A remwly recommended for patients afflicted with the grippe is Kemp's Balsam, which is especially adapted to diseases of the throat and lungs. Do not wait for the first symptoms of the dis- *», but g«t a bottle ara keep it an hand for n*e the moment ft Is needed. If neglected the erippe ham a tendency to hrinir on ptsrnnmnia. All drnargists sell the Ba]*anj.

'iJjT^'jGrwn Mountain Salve.an&Vdailed a esre for all rheumatic mIiis weaknewtnthe hide, back or any other and is ones ceiled for eats, braises, con)*, etc. ft Is the art compromising enemy of pain In whatever form, ©r wherever rnanlf«*trd.snd has never l«*eo known to fail In a castes* with ihi*dr»*4fn! foe of human bsp-

PIQW.

W%MI.»

If you wnoM live a peaceful and

P«5«i** Hf?, irytht- prest medy and you trill never rcgr* St.

THREE

".pvpi

"mm

®t§SSR®?i

cannot be pulled or twisted

the case—the

U!

Can only be had on the cases stamped with this trade mark. All others have the old-style pull-out bow, which is only held to the cr.se by friction, and can be twisted off with the fingers.

Sold only through watch dealers. Ask to see pamphlet, or send for one to the makers.

XWW'.rZ'

MATTOX&BARRETT^^EISI'fcPhllodo.,Drujgleu.LocalallbySoldPHILADELPHIA.ftqtiar*Paper*NomeC©.,MaIUon10,000MaU..CJnloticfctcr-Co.,returnbyInfor"IMIofCaseKeystoneWatchV

23 SOUTH SIXTH STREET. TELEPHONE 380.

LA

iiTilHH

COL. C. W. DEAN.

SUNSTRUCK IN BATTLE! DR. MILES MEDICAL CO., ELKHART, Inn.—1 must say the Restorative Nerving and Nerve and Liver Pills have done lue great good.

FOR YEARS I HATE NOT FKLT AS WELL AS NOW. The starting point of my dlsenso was a sunstroke received in baltle before Port Hudson,^'Louisiana, Juno Uth, 18f3. Up to the time of beginning to take Ir. Miles'

Jt Remedies I had bad a contlnual distracting pain in my head also, weak spells, and the past, four years I have had to give up everything of an active character, and stay in tho house for I jT* montba at a 1 It EU could not walk across the Rtroet. I KNOW YOVR REMEDIES HAVE CURED ME, and that the cure will be permanent. Several

^THOUSANDS

here arousing your remedies, and all spoak well of them. Yours truly. COL. C. \V. DEAN,

National Military Home, Dayton, O. DR. MILES'NERVINE is the most, certain cure for Headache, Neuralgia, Nervous Prostration, Dizziness, Spasms, Sleeplessness* Dullness, lilues, and Opium Habit. Contains no opiates cr dangerous drugs.

Sold on a Positive Guarantee.

DR.

MILES' PILLS,50 DOSES25CT».

FAT PEOPLE

You

can get thin.

SPEEDY & LASTING RESULTS. LKVBRET7S SPECIFIC CO., Boston, MM.

You

can stay]

thin.

EPILEPSY OR FITS

Can this disease bo cured? Most physiclaus sny No—/Bay, Yes all forms and tho worst eases. After 80 years study and experiment I have found tho remedy.—Epilepsy Is cured by it curcd, not subdued by opiates—the old, treacherous, quack treatment. Do not despair. Forgot past impositions on your purse, past outrages on your confidence, past failures. Look forward, not backward. My remedy Is of to-day. Valuable work on tho subject, and large bottle of the remedy—sent free for trial. Mention Post-Office and Express address. Prof. W. H. PEEKE, P. D« Cedar St., New York.

OuurrH

fitsttntft

ABBOTSrORO STtVtNS POINt

DROP USA LINE

INASnA

OINKOW

tffcrM.'WNDtlUlAC

AND RECEIVE 111 RETURN

FUUMFORTWION REGARDING-

Tntflttisr FismtioRuonTs in THE HOKmWKT imi

ANTIOCH

IMIVMA

e)A5(?POND 1ICA00. ILL

Henl MaisTKt AtfT.

T-TUIEL RICHMOND

EUROPEAN.

E. A. FROST,-Propr

Formerly manager .Sherwood House, Kviirisvllle, Iud., late Mtuigr. Hotel Urace. "lilcago. Rooms 7?c,.$1.00, gj.flO Per lsty.

POSITIVE CURE

POWDER: SAFE CH3ATWE BEiHTIFTIHG. |.2.3.

&!if

THIS MACHINE

TO

use

IN YOUR HOME

TH

IllWfinllWi.

"We Wio,"

W'iTnorr

IUHIIMO

vmr hen*

M4

Mqt

5m.

ALVAII

MFO.

KSf ...

LOOM

Htenm Heat, Centrally

tod, two blno!**

from P. O. and Auditorium, opn. the ne* Lester Building. N. W. Cor SUitw »n(l Vanlliirmi-CmCAfJO

Jl Chlehcfltei-** EnclInH Uiuuioml Rrand.

PILLS

rEjNrm.MiL

yr-T^

Original urn* Only (-otitilfie,

SARC, RLWUYA ROLLNM*. LAOIEO, AUK J3\

UruKfljlirt for

CKlchettera Snaiiah

mouv. Kcil and tioul in*tiitllo\VjKy IMJXM,JirandUi

TAILED

with Miie ribbon. Tftko

\A/

no other* Jrfu*6

tiatigrrou* nubctitu-

tionM and imUiitton*.

At Dnifcgitu, or «on4 4o.

In *Utnp* for pftrffotilam, trutimonlaU and

Cbcxaical

PLUMBERS' SUPPLIES, FINE CHANDELIERS AND GLOBES.

Special attention given to Hydraulic & Hand Power Elevator Repairs

Artificial Stone Walke

and Plastering:,

Mloudy Coffin.,'.

Leave ordersat1517 Poplar St., 1241 South Fifth Ht.. 901 Main Torm Haute, inrt

fjUK

r0i\,

£4TARB$

Price 60

ozzoijrs

COMPLEXION

AllSritffists Ffcsjjr StorM.

TINTS

odstixo vol?

A

nlme* one

la r«ar bme efadlttaaallr. Cat ««t advrrti*w

«4 to Willi tlilntol.'Wwttlw«. am) «rc wit! mm4 ran Toll pM

CO, El'.. 170 W. Van Btm *L,

I I in