Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 19, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 November 1895 — Page 2
2
If
v&X
I Was Thrown from a Horse
And sprained my ankle badly. A nloer formed and caused me much pain. Last August It broke oat worse than ever. I commenced taking Hood's Sarsaparilla and now the nicer has entirely healed, I have laid away my cratches and am doing my own work, thanks to
Hood's Sarsaparilla
I gladly recommend it to all who need a blood purifying medicine." MB8. O. 8. BIRCH, Chauncey, Ohio, fl six for 5.
Hood's Pills
*ur in «OM*. He*
I HE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
MAN ABOUT TOWN.
The admirers of James Whitcotnb Riley will be pleased to learn tuat tbey are soon to have something new from his pen. For a year or more now Mr. Riley has not been before the public on the platform and with a few scattering exceptions there havo been no uew poehi*. In the new series, which* will be published In the Ladies* Home Journal, the poet's versatility will be shown to a remarkable degree A. B. Frost will furnish the Illustrations.
Oeueral Passenger Assent Stone, of the Chicago & Eastern Illinois, h*3 a griov anew against the Chicago newspapers. The Chicago writers have been complain ing of the roads wouth of the Ohio river on the score of discrimination against the Windy City as regards traffic arrangHtnenl* with the southeast. It hus been said over and over again that the roads have been too friendly toward New York and Louisville and Cincinnati. In the course of their articles they have persistently asserted that until a few days ago there bad been no such thing as a solid train running from the north across the Ohio river. The Chicago «ft Eastern Illinois has been running the Nashville limited train solid between Chicago and Nashville for several years. It is a fast train, too, and by It the trip from Chicago to Atlanta was eight hours faster than by any other route, and yet in all that was written until a few days ago nothing was said ab^ut this train. Indeed, when anothwr route put on a through train It was heralded as the first. To is week the Caicag fc Eastern Illinois shortened its time so that the passengers leaving Chicago at 5 o'clock In the afternoon arrive in Atlanta the next afternoon at 5 o'clock instead of at 6:25 In announcing this new time it is referred to as the Chicago & Eastern Illinois' "new train," so that the first impression is continued—that there had been no through train until recently. The Chicago A Eastern Illinois has a natural advantage In reaching the southeast territory out of Chicago. It Is a far Bhorter route aud there Is no reason why it should not be a great north and south trunk line in time.
Mrs Zelda Seguiti Wallace has sued the Vandalia for $50,000 damage# for injuries received in the Coatesville wreok. The Vandalia Is not often sued for darnages In suob oases. It has been the policy of the company to be liberal In allowances and avoid damage suits. In ail other oases of persons lnjnred In this wreck, the company effected satisfactory settlement*. Mrs. Wallace says she will be deprived of earning $10,000 a year as an opera singer by reason of the injuries. The Vandalia's flnoal year ended with the last day of October, on Thursday. The financial showing for the year will be severely affected by accidents. About all of them were on the main line and some of them were very oostly In the destruction of property, and to this cause of loss at Coatesville is to be added the payments for injuries to passenger®. Railroad people have been gossiping about the Vandalia's 1MM! In ok and particular attention is attraotod to the fact that the losses are on the main line. The same rules govern the Michigan division and the Peoria division bat there is a freedom from aooidenta on these divisions that is all the more noteworthy because of the frequency of accidents on the main line that were due to erring human nature.
Father McEvoy will t*o to Hoboken and Father Frewin, formerly his assistant here will be his successor at St. Joseph's church. Father McEvoy has many friends in this oity, and they are not confined to his congregation by any sneaoa. He Is the peraoniflcation of good will. He believes that all is well spiritually with the people if they are happyfe I don*» think ha would enforce doctrinal belief on anyone, fcowo&sf stoutly he might believe in it himself, if thereby be should shake the other** be
lief
in another doetrlne. He wanted people to bo happy, and there could be no better Christian doctrine than that.|^
Indianapolis
people are trying to get
Stbe council to reconsider its act in changing the names of the numbered -streets of the city. It Is **id the change has caused much confusion. Terre Haute
"liP
oould tell the Indianapolis people how futile and oonfuslug it is to try to change the name of a street. Several years ago the council changed the name of Main street but with the exemption of a few advertisers the old name Is used and p*r haps one half the population has forg itten that the name ever was changed. There is no way to force the pe«pie use the legal name—uniesn the dtatin gulshed lawyers who are framing th* curfew ordinance should Incorporate a provision in that enactment fixing a penalty for all who persist in calling it Main street. _____
Deteotive Grady of the Big Four road has been granted polloe power* by the new board of public safety at Indian apolis. The former board refused to give him polloe powers because of something he had done which the board thought wa« inconsistent with his duty and position. Grady Is the sleuth who witn the aid of the Big Four lawy.r* and Sheriff Billy Stout started in to prosecute Ed Holloway for the Fontanel train wrecking case It will be reoalled that Grady got a so called oonfeasion from Holloway.
There Is a prospect of Sunday even ing entertainment* at the Opera houne, and I hope we will have them. The Opera Houne Is as good a plaoe to go in winter as Harrison Park was in sum mer. And there is no evil iu either. At least it is best that the people biafforded these opportunities for enjoyment so long as worse plaoes are open to them. As a matter of faot, I belt vein Sunday entertainment and instruction and both are all the better if provided on the same oocasion. There la just an much nonsense and impracticability among those who would restrict other* from enjoying on Sunday what is recognized as beneficial on week days as there is among the other impracticable.* wbo want to assert thwir "personal tiberty" views by creating public nui sances. I believe the time is oomlng. too, when there will be prevalent a com promise on this question of Sunday observance and saloon closing. The saloon will be placed under moie restrictions, but it wil! be permitted to keep open at least part Sunday, and will h«* severely dealt with if it offend by disorder or obtruding its business on th»* public. In short, we will accept th«' doctrine of live and let live, and have charity and tolerance for all who do not agree with us as to the manner iu which lives should be lived
Colonel Thompson's recent recovery of strength and good health was a remarkable event, and one that. cause* still fnrther wonderment on the part of his friends an I the physicians alike For several weeks the colonel had been steadily growing weaker and weaker, until it wa9 difficult for him to move about the room. Someone bad to assist him in dressing. There^was no evidence of a ohronic ailment, nor was he at tacked with the prostrating fits whioh alone had caused him inconvenience for several years. He told Dr. Roberts he believed that if he had a liniment with which to rub his leg* and the muscle* of his back he would feel better. The dootor remembered a liniment of olden reputation called Opedildoc and he looked It up in his reference books. Its chief constituents are oamphor and soap. Opedlldcc Is on sale In the drug stores. It is an English preparation and on Its label are named a large number of things it will do, as was the custom In the long ago with apothecaries. Dr. Roberta fixed alike preparation and the colonel was rubbed with it. The effect was immediate and startling, and the colonel walked down town and baok home the nflxt day He says he doesn't know whether the liniment or the mas 'sage restored his strength, but something did.
It looks as If Indianapolis is to go through the experience that character Ised the inooming of the metropolitan police foroe In this city some years ago It will be recalled how the new police board declared that it would cause the laws to be enforced. The board was under suspicion on that soore, just as is the Taggart administration in Indian apolis, and made a very strong state ment of its purpose to en foroe the laws The declaration was in toe shape of an address bv President Eolsem. I recall that the public whioh had been annoyed by a dlsgraoeful struggle for oontrol of the lice department of the oity, felt that Inas aauch as the metropolitan police law had been declared by a court to be valid there was no other coarse than to abide by It and that the polloe board's pledge to the publlo, made in the Kolsem address, was to be acoepted in good faith antil It was shown to be a sham and a fraud. Presently the polioe were not enforcing the laws as they started oat to do. Then it was desired that the newspapers say nothing about the failure of the department to live np to the Kolsem polioy. That Is always the way. The public officials want to deceive the public and insists that the newspapers shall He to ail its readers to the end that he may succeed in his purposes. He wonld not think of asking
Mr. Hoberg, Mr. Hers, or Havens A Geddes to lie to all their regular patrons,
do. His plaint was that be undtamtood the Kolsem instructions to mean what they said, but only that night he Md b*en, in effeot, upbraided by tbe board for oarrying them aUt. told blm tbat 1 would not let them make asoapegoat of me, and that it wm idle to try to fool th« people all the time. The •'fooling" not last long, and the official noon decided to oast bis Jot with the powers behind the board, and he has had no trouble sinae then as to the performance of his duty.
fresh, vigorous,
J.._
TERRE HAUTK SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, NOVEMBER 2,18^5.
Exposure to oold, damp winds, may renult in pneumonia unless the system ia kept invigorated with Hood's Sarsaparilla ^_____________
LITERAHY NOTES.
The cheerful, un wrinkled, handsome and almost youthful faoe of Llnooln, in the very primeof manhood, which serves as frontispiece to MoClure's for November, is perhaps the most interesting con tributton ever made to Llnooln portraiture It is surprising that this wonderful picture, which Is the earliest portrait of Unciln and is from a daguerreotype owned by ht* son Robert T. Lincoln, has nnvor been ohg'avod or publishod. It wits taknn at k-ast tweive years before any other known portrait. There are
five other portraits'^ Llnooln in the
ujagHzine, all Interesting and rare, and tbw first chapters of a new biography,
This new life of Llnooln is a genuinely ..
and absorbing narrative
in no other biography with whioh we
am acquainted does the reader come so lose to tne young Llnooln Miss Tar b«ll has succeeded in collecting suoh a "and offset and anecdote from surviving contf mpornrles regarding Lincoln's vouth in Kentucky and Indiana, his family, his manner of life, his employments, bis education and his character, that a stor.v more abounding In Tncidnnt and interest oould not be asked. Even more unexpected than the information brought to light, is the abun d-tnee and interest of the pictures found to illustrate it. Never before have the scenes of Lincoln's early life been so fully and beautifully pictured. The other features of the November McOiure'a, including interesting sketches of General Miles, and "Boss" Croker make it a splendid and uotable number
"The Holiday Dance at Worrosquo yaeke" is the title of Mrs. Burton Harrison's latest and best short story,—a two part novelette—which opens most delightfully in the November Ladies' Home Journal. It deals with New York fashionables—first at the Horse Show and subsequently in Virginia, the personages and environmebts appealing to the author's happiest efforts. The story is concluded iD the December Journal and is artistically illustrated by W. Taylor. Dr Parkhurst's paper on "The Father'* Domestic Headship" lucidly, and with discrimlnatfon, defines a father's duties and responsibilities in the home. An interesting description of
Girl Life In Modern Jerusalem" ia given by United States Consul E. S. Wallace, and Illustrated by Eri Pap$j Edward W. Bok'editorially discusses the brutal and demoralizing side of up-to-date foot-ball games, and counsels women to refrain from witnessing the exhibitions of roughness and toughness. He also directs serious attention to our national evil—extravagance. Numerous other interesting features make the No vember Ladles' Home Journal a most admirable Tbinksgiving Issue. It is especially engaging in its illustrations and bright in every line, exactly adapted to the Thanksgiving season's diversion of all members of the household, jff|
The November number of the Arena closes the sixth year of that successful publication, and its list of contents is possessed of singular interest. Among the important contributions to this issue may be mentioned a very suggestive pa per by Professor George D. Herron on "The Sociality of the religion of JesuB" Senator J. T. Morgan, wbo is recognized as one of the ablest thinkers in our senate on international questions and constitutional problems, dlsousses the Silver Question ex-Governor James M. Asnley, an old time Republican, con gressman and governor, writes on "The Impending Political. Advance" Professor Frank Parsons, of the Boston University Sohooi of Law, contributes a masterly paper on Municipal Lighting. These are, however, only a few of the features of The Arena which illustrate the ability and varied obaracter of its oontents. It Is announced that with its December issue the price of the Arena will be reduced from f6 00 to $3 00 per year, but the redaction in tbe price will not be followed by a falling off in tbe merits of the magazine. Rather, from Its prospectus for the coming year, is it to be made brighter, abler and more inviting than ever before.
so credulous as to believe that Taggart palatable bread, biscuit, cakes and pasIntends to continue the Denny policy of try at a few moments' notioe, even in the enforcing the laws, and right now is the time, no doubt, when the newspapers are being besought to aid in the deception. I recall that at about the time the
Oil Stoves.
SSSl
Cheapest and Dnenweg's.
best at Finkbiner A
It Is not our custom to paff articles of merchandise, bat in daty to oar subscribers we cannot help mentioning the excellent brand of stoves sold under the
who have come to believe tbey will not trade-mark of "Garland" Stoves and Ranges. Sold only by ... C. O. SMITH'S SONS CO., ,r Third and Wabash Ave.
be cheated in their stores, but be is wroth if the newspaper refuses to He to those wbo support it. The Taggart ad ministration gave out a Kolsem declare Hon, and for a week or two it fooled nearly everyone. Not as many aire now
"imperial Prepared Patent Floor randers the production of good wholesome
hands of unskilled persons, a -certain and comparatively simpleand easy matter. The now is also true of Imperial Prepared Graham flour. Complete
Kolsem policy was being dropped one directions with every sack. A twenty of the heads of the polioe department five pound sack costs eighty-five cents, came to me to ask as to what he should Ask your grocer for it. I
0ood health cannot be attained solely by breathing pure.airj it is jnst as neces sary that we eat properly cooked f«d and have our bontda heated to proper temperature. "Garland" Stoves and Ranges never fall to accomplish both these results. Sold only by
O. O.SVlITH'aSONSCO., Third and Wabash Ave,
Attend Man uberg^r & Stroustfs Collar and Cuff sale to-day.
Not a big store in the big olties has as complete a Carpet*and Rug Department as oan be seen at WILLIS WRIGHT'S, 424 Main street. Everything late in design Is shown here, and the prices are so moderate as to surprise yon. Before you invest a cent in anything in bis line yon will do well to see him. Remember the place.
WILLIS WRIGHT, 424 Main street.
Go to Mooney's, 825 Main street, for Bulk Oysters, 25c a quart. Telephone 148.
Tomake your Sunday dinner
complete, go to Fiess & Herman
always
find
an abundance of
the choicest meats of all kinds,
They have also on hand sausages
... kinds of their own make.
Telephone 252.
Go to Mooney's, 825 Main street, for Bulk Oysters, 25c a quart. Telephone 148.
For Your Sunday Dinner.
Spring Lamb, Steer Beef, ."*• Sweet Breads, Pig Pork, S pa re
Beef Tenderloins.
C. H. EHRMANN, Fourth and Ohio Clean Meat Market. Telephone 220,
NOTICE TO TAX-PAYERS! Notice is hereby given that the time for paying the November installment of taxes expires November 4th, 1895.
w.
W. H. DUNCAN, Secretary,
W. T. BEAUCHAMP, President.
Bulbs
Just received. Also for sale a fine stock for fall planting of Hyacinths, Tulips, Crocus, etc. f*
Foote's Seed Store
313 Wabash Avenue.
Mrs. & Mrs. Henry Katzenbacb,
Funeral Directors
And Embalmera, Livery and Boarding Stable.
Ail
ed to.
calls promptly attend
Office
open day and ntght Tele
phone 210. Nos 18- 0 N. Third street.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll THE BRILLIANT ELSBACE BURNER
The new and improved
Steady, Brilliant, Sixty Candle Power for three feet of gas an hour. FOR SAliB BT THE
Terre Haute Qas Light Co.
507 Ohio Street.
Illllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
save jycoasrEY
By havingyourSummerGarments dyed for winter at
The Ermisch Dyeing Co.
653 Main Street.
Vandalia Pennsylvania
Atlanta, Ga. and Return
On sate October 9Sth and November Sth. Indianapolis and Return.
$3.00
$2.25
On sale November Sth
On Bale Nov. 6 aud 7.
Account Chrysanthemum Show. For reliable Information call at City Ticket Office, 620 Wabash avenue, or Union Depot.
GEO. K. FARRINGTON, Gen. Agt,
C. I. FLEMING, M. D. C.
tM ybtkrinARIA !*. Special attention given to disease* of horaea, saule and dogs. Office &il Main street*
sSsllllli
For...
The
t. sanford,^ County Treas.
TOCKHOLDERS' MEEFING.
The annual meeting of the stockholders of the Vigo Agricultural Society will be held at the secretary's office, 123 south Blxth street, Terre Haute, Ind., at 10 o'clock a. m., on Saturday, November 9,1895, for the purpose of electing six directors fdr the ensuing three years, and for the transaction of such other business as may come before them.
STANDARD
Always Reliable.
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••I*
FANCY BULK OLIVES. DRESSED CHICKENS. PORK TENDERLOINS SPARE RIBS BACK BONES.
VEAL:tH-'-''''r. -^'S%
MUTTON. BULK OYSTERS! CANNED OYSTERS. LETTUCE. PARSLEY.
I N
Corner Twelfth ana Mam.
SH .....
Fancy Bulk Olives, 30c per Quart.
s.
Manufactured at Terre Haute, Ind.
If:' Best materials and workmanship, durable, economical and guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction. ,. Examine the patent ventilated oven.
To introduce them quick, prices are made very low—from $18.00 to $55.00.7
SGeo. S. Zimmerman. John G. Dobbs.: Townley Stove Co. 8
SOLE 33-5r c,,
Robert Wuest. S. L. Fenner. Townley Stove & Mantel Co.
Madison C. Peters
Says it is an awful thing to sell goods and your soul at the same time. We believe that. We get you good, honest values for your money. We have to keep our eyes peeled to find them some times, but we do it. We have on sale a lot of
Chamber Sets,
wm
I
1
l%
fifi
Decorated in colors and gold, twelve pieces, full size, at
MS ««t5.00 P^SetF®'
ft*
Theo.Stahl
THE FAIR
I®
1 UCU.^Ullll
SUB OTTJH/ EAST WINDOW.
325 WABASH AVE
LOWEST PRICES
Everything: in the ffyjjulay (roods Line.
Everything in Honsefttrnishings, Hawartf Glassware and Crockery at prices which cannot be duplicated elsewhere.
l'
,*
SH
*^8
Telephone 80.
Marble Bowling Alley
Fine Line
Wines, Liquors, Cigars.
519 MAIN STREET.
Xv. ..
Builders^ Hardware, Furnaces,
... \w
and First-class Tin Work,
1200 -A. I 25T STEEE
E3T.
t-'J
A
636 Wabash Ave.
325 Main Street
George C.Rossell, Proprietor
iliS*
