Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 25, Number 46, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 11 May 1895 — Page 4
SSfif
THE* MAI I.
a
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
BUB8CRIPTXON PTTLCS, 13.00 A Y*AJU
•. a DUDDLKSTON. I. PIBFEWBMNK.
DODDLBSTON & PIEPEHBRIHK,
PROPRIETORS.
,, POBiJCATIOJI OOTIOK. NSS.s20 and 22 South Fifth Street, Printing House Square.
The Mall Is sold In the city by 250 newsboy* and all newnd eaters, and by agent* In 30 surrounding towns. Entered at the PoNtofflc* nt Terre Haute, Ind. af second-ciaxs matter.
IERHB HAUTKv INM., MAY 11,1893.
A MAN ho WKH INT*« a member of the IodiaoH lfgi-Uti is ba njf tried ID ID diaoapoliM
for
murder rbe moral is
olear—keep out ler'^lature.
'm.-
WITH all our railroad* we yet have room for marvelous development. If the United States had as many mi lea of railroad in proportion to area as Great Britain, its mileage would have to be in creased from 180,000 to 492.000 miles.
JAPAN is a good fighter, but she can't stand a bluff. Russia'** protest has prevailed on her to surrender some of the fruits of her great victory, and Instead of territorial indemnity she will take money. Evidently Japan's diplomats need a few instructions iu the ureat American game of poker.
THE Yankees who are noted for their wooden nutmegs manufactured for domestic use, evidently have many imitator* in the business world The aunual report of the State Food Confimis sloner of Obi, shows that out of
EVIDENTLY
1.329
samples of louds analyzed by the order of the department 846 were found not to be what the dealers sold them to be. They were adulterations.
the recent killing of the
son of Kentucky's governor for ruining a home has not had the desired eflect, and it will be necessary that there should be a still further thinning out of the Kentuoky population. The de«d man's friends in the p|f»rt to fr htm from ihe disgrace he deserve* are attack in* the character of his paramour. It is not liKt* ly that the dead man hittnelf, vfrould have done suqfa a thin^, and it is reserved for his fool friends
AN United States judge has refused to allow C. P. Huntington to be taken from New York to San Francisco on an Indictment charging him with issuing a railroad pass in violation of the inter, state commerce law, because, forsooth, the indictment does not charge that transportation was ever furnished under it. Courts, and especially United States courts, are very considerate in their treatment of iudicted men who are pos sessed of as much money as C. Huutington. ________
THH state board for the appointment of a board of regents who will have control of the soldiers' monument at Indianapolis, has named Gen. Lew Wallace, Gen. Fred Knefler and Major G. V. Menzies. Geo. J. Langsdale, who has had a soft job in being in charge of the monument for several years, and who is said to have been instrumental in the passage of the r^ffency bill in the hope of continuing the j^b, was leftout in the cold. He Incurred the dislike of the old soldiers by his actions as one of the commissioners, and th^y are glad, a* a rule, to Beo him turned down. ...
ENOLANO has her |75,(K)0 from Nlcaraugua, or the promise of it. She got it in much the same way that the high way man coilwis toll from the peaceable, unarmed livelier, in a "stand and deliver" manner. If the claim was just, arbitration would have not affected it, and it is not very much to the credit of Uncle Sam that he permitted the robbery without a word of protest. If the people, instead of the people's present representatives, had bad a hand in the proceeding, it would have been settled in a legitimate way, and we would have had tome credit out of it.
OK* toMW -h« to »M
huve had a presidential bee bnzilng In
hi. bonnet for a long time, l» g»l»g to
•oiler on th.t account. It 1. aald that
the president I. going to step over him
when a aneceaaor to Gen. Sohofleld la »p-
pointed, on the Utter*
Mllea'jonlor officer In point ol'wrrlce.
We took a PfW'"'
aervlce once, bnt It la not likely to occur
again, and if Gen. Miles desires to prosper in his profession he would be better off to give that presidential bee Its liberty.
good word said for him Is to die. Then
a
TRAVU WWIVI
guished," "honored," and "beloved." referring to oltizenVt it lays, "known to have been financially dishonest, unkind to their families, or Intemperate
AN inaurance authority makea a statement that the American pay® propor tionately for hla Are insurance twelve times as much as the Frenohman, seven time* as much as the German, four times as much as the Englishman, and muoh more than the business man in any other European country. The fire insurance premiums in this country average $800,000,000 a year. By making their buildings fire proof the French cover their annual losses by an outlay of only $23,000,000 in premiums. In Franoe and
Germany the supervision of building i«* very strlot, and this means a vast saving to the people.
KEKLEY, the goid cure man, Is in a peculiar position. He has been sued for damages by a Kansas man, who claims to have been permanently injured by takiugthe much advertised oure. The judge before whom the case is beiug tried has ordered Dr. Keeley to give to the oourt a detailed aocount of the composition of the remedy, under penalty of contempt. An United States conrt has also issued an injunction restrain ing the dootor from making public his formula and so, in either case, the dootor stands in danger of being punished for oontempt. If he dfeobeys tbe -Kansas state court l.« will be punished, and if he disobeys toe United States oourt he will be punished. It look as if here is a case ofa trifle too muoh law.
The fight of the little stores against the big department stores has reached suoh a stage in Illinois that one of the proprietors of Chicago's largest stores has been in jail this week at Springfield, for refusing to answer some inquisitorial questions that wereasktd him. Among the questions asked him were these: 'What is the cost of the advertising of your corporation?" "Will you produce vour jAy-roll?" "What were the profits of the business of your firm during the last year?" "What were the profits eaoh year during the last few years?" "What were the gross receipts of the business of your firm during the last year?" The proprietor was excused from answering all the questions but the last and on his refusal to answer this was committed to jail. It will be made a teat case, and the courts will be called to deoide how far a eglslative committee inty go in prying nto ih-a *tf iir-« of a private mrp ratioa.
IT seems
that wealth has not brought
happiness to Count Geo. M. Pullman A number o' rich men were recently asked'the question a- to Whether theiji wealtA hhd brought'them added happQ IIPSS, and Pu lman in bis answer said"
For my part, I can only say that I anS not ode iota-happier now than I was in the days when I had not a dollar that I could call my own, save that for.ylUcb I worked from tunny morn to dewy eve. Now that my circumstances have impfoWd I c-tn only wear one Buit of lothes Ht a time, and that suit is no bet ter than theo-e I wore then. I ate three quare meal*
daily
no
at that time,
annot eac any more
and
now.
Then I had
responsibtlity and no cares. I onlj hid to be at my post aad do my duty at tLat time, and when my hours of work were over my mind and body were free as those of a bird. I could go to sleep as soon as my head touched the pillow and sleep soundly till morning. Now that I have the weight of vast interests and business cares constantly resting upon me, both in and out of working hours, I do not sleep so well as then. All things considered, I believe I was quite as happy, if not much happier, when I was poor. Therefore, with all the great advantage1! and privtlfgns which wealth confers, I do not believe that it brings happiness." There would be something really pathetic In this if it were not based on the presumption that happiness consists in getting three square meals a day, and sleeping soundly at night. If life's horizon were thus narrowed, there would be little inducement for ambition. Th6 tramp, whose meals are not very regular, and whose leep stands many chances of being rudely disturbed, is probably the happiest person in the world. Yet there isn't muoh in his life to attract the genial run of people.
THE INCOME TAX AND THE TARIFF. It is given out from Washington, with the poaltlveness that is peculiar to
WMh^"gton MtrMpond.ntt
the SQDreme
th.u. n.pp«i
September last, the correspondents, recall, the peoulOeo. Ruger, who la the tacky man, ia
wfcta
th.t when
oonn
meeW
on May 20 the
fcy
,|a
dllrlng rehMrlng,
o#
of Ja„
JuM wio hM me, wlth
,h»
will be
The oourM
ont (or Justice Jaekaon
olronml,^(!M on(i6r which
he re-
the s„
,»
old
line
doe.
Whig. Nominally a Democrat, he does not owe his place to the Democratic party. He was appointed by a Repub lioan president and was confirmed by Republican votes. It i« known, more-
THK surest way for a man to have a over, that he was particularly called to
A A. A am MM 'WiM OAW
the ministers will say a good word tor ator George F. Hoar, of Massachusetts, ad be a os Mr. Jackson when he was a member of
him and the newspapers will dwell on his good points, for every man has some good qualities. The Christian Advocate the Senate, and who knew perfectly Is after those ministers who indulge in well what the bent of his mind was. It postmortem eulogies, and tells of a is known that Senator Hoar secured the minister who, in preaching at the grave confirmation of Justice Jackson by the of a man of msst disrepntable character, specific and emphatlo statement that he exhorted hie hearers to prepare to meet was "right" on all of the constitutional the deceased in another world "some- amendments and all of the war Issues thing says the Christian Advooate, that, in fact, the Republican party, if "that every one, Including the family of any question should oome up In the the deoeai»ed, would hope to avoid." United States Supreme court which The Advooate also lectures the news- might involve the controverted queepapers for the nonsense that Is written Mons of the war, might confidently rely about the dead, and objects to the use of upon Justice Jackson,although a South the expressions "most useful," "distln
the notice of President Harrison by Sen-..
J-",~
em man, to deoide In aocordanoe with
the Northern view pf the couatHutional amendments and all vital question" which resulted from the war. If the income tax law isdelam) unconstitutional the present administration will .foe in a peculiar position. The expenses of conducting the government are greater every month than the revenues, and muc?h dependence has been placed on the reoelpts from the income tag ,to make up this deficiency. If this }aw declared invalid the treasury wM^ in a condition what to, a man would be complete and bankruptcy, "^here i»- but one' overcome the difflonl'y, andtfcHjftis the president to call a apeclal nveetin congress to devise w».vs andymeau|£ raise revenue. The only way to ralwJ revenue In a legitimate manner is to ad! vance the taritt from the rates, rulnon* to American prosperity, fixed by the Itet tarift act. Two things are evident, that the government ^tnnot exist when I'J8 spending millions more .every moi^h than it is maklngi and tfoat the present tariff law w|ll not produce the needed reTjpnm. The minute the president issue* a call for a apeoial session to enact a law Increasing our revenues will see a revival in business that has been talked about a great deal, but has made littlp progress. Business is improved somewhat over its last year's condition,^bijfc there is not a business man, no matiGr what his polltioal prejudioe may be, that! will admit that it is what it was threej years ago, before the tariff agitation be-' gan, with its disastrous results. Once we get our factories started and our thousands of unemployed workmen at work, we will hear muoh leas of bimetallism, free coinage, gold standard, etc.. than we have heard during the past few months, when men WI19 had nothing else to do, devoted their time to the dls oussion of a question of whioh they knew very little
Catnrrh Cannot be Cured
with LOUAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional dis ease, and in order to oure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and actsdlrectr ly on the olood and mucous suj^es. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medl cine. It was prescribed by. one of the best pbysioians iff this ebuiftr$rwyear* and is a regular prescription, It Ip-conflf poaed of the best tonics known, conflu bined with the best blood purifiers, ao^, ing directly on the mucous surface^ The perfect combinations of the two inp gredients is what produces «uoh wonde^ ful results in cilring Catarrh. Send for testimonials free. F. .T. CHENEY A CO Props., Ttoledo, O Sold by Druggists, price 7f$.
Baldwin A Young's Continuous Shows at NayIOB'S Opera House all next week, commencing Monday afternoon—continuous from 2 to 11 p. m. Popular prices, of admission, 10, 20 and 30 cents.
A man is ttirowing his money aWaf wbenihe invests his mo,ney in insuraocjpjj either fire, life or accident, ^unless h« patronizes the very beat companies. ^55 A. Daily, 509 Ohio street, represents some of the most'reliahle companies in the country in all the linen named, and when you place your insur^rce you should be sure to call on him. He also has some desirable bargains in real estate that you will find it worth your while to examine, if you are looking either for a home or an investment.
Music Just Arrived.
We have just received a large stock o^ Guitar, Mandolin, Banjo music. Also the latest popular songs. We are still' selling our music at one half the marked price and can furnish anything pub, lished. Be sure and get Fred Kessler'ri new waltz. Will be out in a short time We invite everybody to call and examine our stock. W. H. PAIGE & CO., 84lJ Wabash Avenue.
"Say!*' "What's thatT" "Why, the Terre Haute Carriage and Buggy Co., corner of First and Wabash avenue, have thogreatest bargains I ever saw."
.EXCHANGE.
Forty acres, twenty-five in cultivation
fair
improvements exchange for
city property. RIDDLE-HAMILTON CO. Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder
World'sFair
Highest Medal aad Diploma.
EDUCTION IN WATER CONNECTIONS.
The Water Works Co. announce that, beginning April 15th, 1895, and continuing until. July I, they will make water connections to parties agreeing to make immediate use of the water for S6. This rate applies only tt parties residing on unpaved streets. Connections on htreets pavod with brick or asphalt will be made at a corresponding reduction. For fall Information as to rates, etc., call on or address the Water Works Co., 618 Ohio street.
L. L. WILLIAMSON, Superintendent H. 1L LEASE, Secretary.
^TTENTION ALL BED MEN Ton are earnestly requested to meet at the wigwam, on south Third street, Sunday, May 12th, at 6:45 p. m., for the purpose of attending services at St. Stephen's church, in commemoration of Tammany Day.
By order of committee. &. A. BROWN, Pre* 1 dent. Attest: R. HJOSBL,Secretary.
T°
THE PUBLIC.
The different committees having in charge the arrangements for 'The Charity Circus," to be given hereon July 4th,take this method of informing business men and the public in general that no one is authorised to solicit advertising for an offlcikl programme. On the day of the circus a souvenir programme will be issued. The programme will con Ufa no advertisements of any nature Whatever. It will toe solely a "souvenir programme" in every sense of the word, one that will be commemorative of the biggest day in the history of Terre Hants.
MARTIN N. DIAL,
Chairman Executive Committee.
... HA11BY BCHL088, Secretary.
$ ONE SOLID WEEK
Commencing
MONDAY AFTERNOON
May 30th
THE REAL THING,
Baldwin & Young's
ContiDDoas Comedy Company
Comedy Minstrelsy Vaudeville
Opera Drama Burlesque
CHANGE OF PLAY DAILY
High Class novelties. No,Intermissions, No Waits. Continues from 2 to 11 p. m. Revolution of Popniar Amusements. Popular Prices of Admission.
Patrons may select the most convenient time to visit the theater. Can come at any time between the hours of 2 and 11 p. m. You can stay as long as you like. Ladles while up towu shopping should step in and rest and also see a great show. No repetition in 3 hours. For the week of May 13th, associate Naylor's. Qpera House with the con-
keep on repeating It until you have it firmly fixed in your mln(l.
Prices Only 10, 20, 80c.
A Change of Dress.
A light, comfortable Suit, a cool Hat,#makes'a clear head in irm weather- You pan have both by coming to uh this season. Pri6fs, style and quality in reach of all.-
J.T.H.
Fashionable Tailor and MenY furnisher.
522 Wabash Ave.
-AT-
BOTTOM PRICES.
•—SRE*
So Wabash Ave
Baldwin A Young's Continuous Shows at Naylor's Opera House all next week, commencing Monday afternoon—continuing from a to II p. m. Popular prices of admission, 10 20 and 80 cents.
Green Beans, Choice Cucumbers Green Peas,
New Beets,
Strawberries, Strawberries, Strawberries,
|E. I WRIGHT C0.'S
It's the Luxuries of Life
ii"
That Make Life Wohh Living.
Hardware.
A Oood Baker. A Record Breaker. A Home Maker.
FOB
»20^75.
OUR GREAT
Standard Range Co., 601-619 N. 6th St.
All Klarfa of Castlagi Made to Order.
Places the luxuries of life within the reach of your purse
Shirt Waists 'WS
Did belong to the luxuries but are now within your
reach. Made of best quality of Chintz prints, dressmaker style, large sleeves, and then only V/ The best Percale possible is used in our 49c "Waists, made very stylish, consequently they are very popular. Only
The Handkerchief Sale
Has brought many new customers to our* store. Not surprising at all It you could see the Gentlemen's Handkerchiefs we now have on sale, you, too, would hurry around here Big, large, full size, plain white or colored corded border choice
Gentlemen's Ail Linen Hemstitched, regular twenty-five oeDt article, 121a Gentlempn's All Linen Initial Handkerchief, hand worked launder them and their value is all of thirty cents pay you well for a little laundry work choice..
Wash Fabrics.
-w
f: :r
St
j§§geff
Burmah Challies, dark grounds, fast colors Scotch 1, Lawnp, stripes, figures, elegant quality. Illuminated Challies,
sook
like a flower garden on Challie cloth. .*^4'
Spring Novelties. Extra Fine Lawns full width many new designs. Black grounds with new designs. A pppp-ial bargain 'or the May Sale
Irish Dimity. Just like the boy eating bread, we nev» get enough of them Case after case lot is sold and. still the demand increases. It's a good thing bettfer get some Light, airy, serviceable,..... "j.i* 1k :Hv-v
rv--i
Screen Doors, Lawn Mowersand Builders'
French Sateens. EvSry ne"w design is found here mm stripes, checks, figged sure to please you service- I able and low in pr'icft high in quality. ll/W
&
A Special Displny in Parasols. Seethe White Rnifle^t.Paras»ls, Dresden Handles ...
1,*%
/gf-
W. D. Mort is & Co 421 Wabash Ave
5
49c
5c
19c
MB
You need them. We sell them.s
10c
12ic
Til"
onn Manion
Leading the Trade in 1
'Jt' -s!
?5 and
Furnaces
Specialty Made of Ti^and, Slate Roofing.
v-'
Main 5t.
905
8tlm«on,SMmton
Si Biggin*,
Attorneys.
^DMINISTHATOE'S SALE.
Notice Is hereby given that by virtue of au order of the Vigo Circuit Court, the undersigned, administrator of the estate of Lemuel Htulhard, deceased, will oSer for sale at private or public sale, at the offices of Stlmson, Stimson & Higglne, 327% Wabash avenue, Terre Haute, Indiana, on
Saturday, the lftth day of one, 1805, the following described real estate In Vigo county, Indiana, to-wit:
The west half of the southwest quarter of section twelve also, the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section twelve also the south side of the middle part of the northwest quarter of sectioa twelve, containing flfty-two acres also, the east half of the northwest quarter of section thirteen, containing sixty-six and slxty-slx hundredths (66.68) acres also the east half «f the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section thirteen also the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section thirteen, containing twenty-eight and one-fifth acres all of which lands lie In township thirteen north of range eight west. Also lots number seventeen and eighteen In Johns' subdivision of lot number sixteen in Chase's subdivision ofa partof the northeast quarter of section twenty two, township twelve north, range nine west also the north half of lot number eight in block three in McGaughey 4 Roach's subdivision of a part of the southwest quarter of section fifteen, In township twelve north of range nine west, in the city of Terre Haute.
TKRKS—One-thirdcash in hand the residue in equal payments at six, twelve and fifteen months from date of sale, with notes at 8 per cent, interest, waiving valuation and appraisement laws, and secured by mortgage upon the real estate sold. Sale will begin at one o'clock p. m.
JOHN C. HOFFMAN, Administrator.
DR. R. W. VAN VALZAH,
IDBIsTTIST
Office, No. 5 Sooth Fifth Street.
