Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 30, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 18 January 1896 — Page 4
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THE_MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
SUBSCRIPTION PRICK, 82.00 A YKAK. A. C. DTTDDLEBTON. R. 3. PXKPKNBRINK.
DDDDLESTON S PIEPlSBRIHK,
PROPRIETORS. PUBLICATION OFFIOK.
Nos. 29 and 22 Sooth Fifth Street, Printing House Square.
The Mail Is sold In the city by 250 newsboys and all newsdealers, and by agent* In SO surrounding towns. Entered at the Postofflce at Terre Haute, Ind., as second-class matter.
NION
SATURDAY, JANUARY 18,1896.
A MICHIGAN woman has sued her hus vband for divorce on the ground that his fiy political aspirations have made life a s| burden to her. She wants to leave him because he is an unsuccessful politician.
RAILROAD building in thiB oountry
Y^' during 1895 was the lowest for twenty years, the total reaching only 1,782 miles, against 13,000 miles in 1887. But the agsegregate railway mileage of the United
States is 181,000, and exceeds that of all '-. '•the rest of the world combined.
sj** THEY correct the oigarette habit in a heroic manner in Missouri. In Sedalia "J'i a boy was expelled from school for oiga^rette smoking, and when his father went after the principal, the latter carved him I^Vc/with a huge knife. Hereafter, the or\dors issued by that prinoipal about cigW'J*rette smoking will probably be obeyed
THE Boern, in addition to boing able V-, to whip their English enemies, can also ,*-* v"** give them some pointers on how to treat vtraitorH. They simply impound the 'bank balances of the traitors and confia \--*cate thoir property. A m«in who rebels '?, unsuccessfully against Boer authority S ^has a chance to start in life anew, and find out wh-it it ineano to hustle for a dollar. hiv DURING the just closed year there were $ 171 persons the victims of mobs in the 'J' United States, 161 men and 10 women. It rC' a striking feature of these statistics that 144 of these ly noh ngs occurred south of the Mason and Dixon line, the remainder, 27, in the north. During the same period there were 132 legal executions in the country, of which 89 were in the .* south and 43 in the north. lErfy-
The Ohio programme was oarried out
this week, or part of it at least, when J. ^ifMk B. Foraker was elected United States senator to succeed Calvin S. Brlce. It is the first time in nearly thirty years that fs|| Ohio has been represented in the senate ffsSsby two republicans. This is the first part of the programme mapped out last f|f year in Ohio politics, and we Bhall see whether the balance of it, loyal support 'i of Mr. Mr Kin ley's presidential aspira tions, will materialize.
k# A GREAT many of the people of In dianapolie must have been waitiug for the outside residents of the state to pay their taxes, as they expect them to foot
I' other bills, from the appearance of the delinquent list in the Journal this week. It required an extra sheet of eight pages jf-,'/**? for the publication of the delinquents in
Marion county. It was a novel sight to see the delinquent tax list published in *, the Journal, and calls attention again to 0V the fact that the Republicans are in v?power In Marlon oounty.
ifif' THK venerable Lyman Trumbull, of i-Vf^Ohleago, who,, has bean a congressman, '"United Slates senator, and a justice of the Illinois Supreme court, is being V(talked of as tho PopnVsn eir.rHdi'o
for
,v president this year, other cau»Ji .tie* ir&^who are named being Senator Allen, of
^Kebraska, and Senator Marion Butler, of ""xNorth Carolina. The latter, however, lacks three years of having attained the ^constitutional age. and declines to beootne a candidate on that account. It is not likely that the age qualification will f'jipreTent the Populist candidate from oc» :ii®*»upying the White House for the four sf%rears from March, 1897.
THE harvests of 1895 were known as the fllinost bountiful for many years, but few are able to appreciate the immensity of Pf^the productions of our farms, or their to-
tal value. The reports of the Agricultural i\ department of the value of the prinoipal i^farm products of the United States for fe^J896 shows the enormous total of $1,489,xS'487,OOOf divided as follows Corn, $607,609,000, wheat, $237,930,000, oats, $163,655,,000, rye, $11,965,000, barley, $29,812,000, V^fbuckwheat, $6,936,000, potatoes, $78,985, V? 000, hay, $393,186,000. The immensity of fthwse values are beat appreciated by oom^Iparisou. The total indebtedness of the Instates and territories of the United States, r*coording to the oensus of 1880, was only jiyf1,135,210,422, and the total indebtedness i%f the national government at the same •Jftlrne, was but $915,962,112.
T«w commercial nations of the earth have reason to dread the competition of little Japan, whioh besides proving that she is in the front row of fighters, has shown an increase in her manufactures that is really the wonder of the nineteenth oentnry. Her Imports during the past ten year* have increased over three hundred per oent., and the advance in manufacturing has been so marked and aggressive that she is now exporting some of I her prinoipal productions, and thos out ting into the foreign trade of the ooun tries that have heretofore had a monopoly of this business. In ootton productions is thla true espoolally, tor twtwmn
1888 and 1894 she out the importation of ootton goods from England 40 per oent., and the importation of the same class of goods from India 90 per cent. At the satne time her ootton mills were paying dividends of from 16 to 20 per oent,, while the cotton mills in the great Lancashire distrio in England were running at an absolute loss. In addition to this, Japanese QOal is driviug English coal out of the eastern markets. Little though she may be Japan is destined to out a great figure in the history of nations in the next quarter century.
IF a recent decision of an United States judge4n San Franoisco stands the test of the higher courts, we are destined' to have the Chinese with us as voters. He ruled that every Chinaman born in the United States is a oitizen thereof, and of course if he is a full-fledged citizen he must have the right to vote. The ruling was made in the Sase of a Chinaman who was born In Sacramento, went to China a .year ago, and on bis return recently was refused a landing by the collector of the port of San Franoisco, on the ground that he was not a oitizen. Campaign literature has heretofore been printed in many languages, and hereafter when political contests wax warm we shall doubtless have set forth In Chinese the beauties of protection and free trade from the opposing points of view.
Now that Utah has been admitted to statehood, New Mexioo, Arizona and Oklahoma may be expected to push their demands for admission to the sisterhood of states. All these territories are imbued with the desire for free silver, and if they should be admitted as states, with two senators eaoh, the forces of the silver mining men would be abnormally inoreased in the Senate, though in the House of Representatives the additional influence would make no particular difference. The silver ooinage men have been having,since 1890, a voting strength iu the Senate out of all proportion to the voting powers of their constituents, and when the Utah senators take their seats they will be still further re-enforced, with the case of New Mexioo, Arizona and Oklahoma still to be considered.
NOT every governor is able to send to the legislature of his state recommenda tion with as much point as those of Governor Greenhalge, of Massachusetts, who discussed a subject of increasing public interest, the improvement of the quality of citizenship.* He offers three suggestions, as follows: First, greater care in the administration of the naturalization laws in the state courts second, a probationary period of residence after naturalization, and third, the disfranchisement of persons convicted of felonies. It would seem that there is ground for the demand for gieater oare in the administration of the naturaliza tion laws, when we read of aNew York judge who requires but an average of a minute's examination to discover whether or not a foreigner is entitled to become a oitizen of the United States.
THE free trade professors in nearly all of our leading colleges, have for years been teaching our youug men that that man is a robber, a traitor to his country, and utterly unworthy of consideration who believes in the theory and practice of protection, are the very men who at the present time are telling the same students that there is no such thing as the Monroe dootrine, and those who' think there is are fools. The other night one of the Yale professors in a lecture paid of the Monroe doctrine as enuncU ated in the president's message, "It is the embodiment of insatiate greed, inordinate selfishness and colossal bump tiousness of a large part of the American people." He characterized Henry Clay as being a man of the foregoing oharac teristocs, and said: "He talked like an angel and acted like a buccaneer with hemorrhages of eloquence." If that over-educated professor could have just one hemorrhage of common sense he would not indulge in such silly twaddle, which makes him laughing stock. And then to think that such men are to be fouud in all our leading colleges to teach our young men the lessons of patriotism I
THE late Jeff Davis is not such a popular idol in the South, or at least in some portions thereof, as he once was, as shown by the faot~that the movement to have anew oounty in Mississippi named in his houor is meeting with great opposition. The old timers are in favor of thus honoring the deceased secessionist, saying that he is worthy of any distinction that can be conferred upon him, but the youngsters are opposed to the movement, deolaring that it is a revival of secession feeling thatoannot be approved by the present generation. There oould be no more striking demonstration of the change in publio sentiment than that shown by the fact that Davis's own state refuses to perpetuate his name by giving It as a title to a oounty. When Mr. Davis was secretary of war, Kansas and other western states honored him by bestowing his name on several counties, but changed them afterward when secession came. One southern state, Florida, made Jefferson Davis's birthday a legal holiday, but It has had no Imitators. On the other hand, four stales have already made Oen. Robert E. Lee's birthday a holiday, and there is a dfspo sitlon on the part of all the other southern states to make it a southern holiday, commemorative of the confederacy. Texas created a Jeff Davis oounty, some eight years ago. When New Orleans, last year, renamed its streets, and honored Gens. Lee, Beauregard and Hood, and other confederates, it declined to remember similarly the president of the southern oonfederaoy. And this Is all the more striking when It Is considered that every southern state has Linooin oounty, named after Abraham Linooin, exoept thrse, South Carolina, Texas nod
Virginia, and a large number of them have Grant oountles, named after Gen, Grant. When the ex-OQOfederates oarne again into power in the southern states after the war a number o* the more ardent, particularly in Louisiana and Mississippi, proposed to wipe a*ay these Republican names, which had been oreated during the period of oivi! was and reconstruction bat this was protested against as ttying to turn history backward, and, in not a single instance* were the names disturbed, and Louisiana still exalts Grant, Linooin, Colfax, and even Simon Cameron, Lincoln's secretary of war. There Is but one couuty in the south that bears Jefferson Davis's name, to twelve bearing that of Abraham Linooin.
IT looks just now as if the Venezuelan question might be settled without a resort to arms, as was thought probable at the time President Cleveland sent his special message to Congress, but it is not so dear that the Alaskan boundary question oan be so easily settled. The commissioners appointed by Great Britain and the United States to define the boundary between Alaska and Canada have finiHtiad their work and signed a joint report for presentation to their respective governments, but this report is simply a summing UD of THA results of a series of surveys that ha%i been in progress for several years. The boundary line between Alaska an^dj Canada was fixed in a treaty between Russia and Great Britain, whioh defined it, in substanoe, as beginning at tfye southernmost point of Prince of Wales Island, northward through the waters of Portland Canal to its head thence folj lowing the summit of the mountains to a point where they interseot the 141st meridian of longitude, provided that no point shall the boundary be located more than ten marine leagues from the shore. The mountain (range taken as the basis of the boundary delimited in the treaty appeared on all the maps qfthe day, and would have formed an admirable natural boundary line. But, unfortunately, asitsubsequently proved, it did not exist in the shape shown on the map, with a well-defined summit, and so the true line has always been in doubt. What the report of the commissioners is cannot be told, but it is believed it comprises a statement showing that it is practically impossible to run a line as laid down in the treaty. The surveys have demonstrated the fact. What next is to be done Is a question for the diplomats, who will have to deter mine what shall be substituted for the impossible line.
THE NEW ELDORADO.
A Former Terre Hautean Tells of the Attractions of the Cripple Greek, Col. Gold District.
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Will Reynolds, formerly. .stewar at the National bouse, and a nephew of R. G. Watson, who has been located in Colorado Springs, Colorado, for some time, was back here this week, interesting some local capitalists in a project to erect a hotel at Cripple Creek, the oenter of the gold mining industry in Colorado. A number of Terre Haute people have visited Cripple Creek, and returned as enthusiasts on that subject, ,but Reynolds is the most enthusiastic man in that direction that has ever visited these parts. Some of the stories he tells about Cripple Creek read like tales from the Arabian Nights. He tells one on W. S. Eirkham, formerly superintendent of the Fuel Gas Company, who is out there prospeoting. One day Klrkham passed a restaurant, looated in a dingy, uninviting room, that was filled with people, who were packed in the room like ear dines in a box, and pulling and hauling each other in the effort to get something to eat. Outside the street was packed with men who were struggling to get a chanoe at the eatables, such as they were.^ The Terre Haute man thought this would be a good chance for an investment, and he inquired of the proprietor what he would take for the establishment, whioh complete would not invoice for more than a hundred dollars at the very highest figures. "Five thou"3t»n(i dollars," was the cool reply. It rather staggered the Terre Hautean, but he passed it off by saying that he would let' the man know In the morning. "That's my spot oash price right now," said the restaurant owner. "If you wait until morning my price may be $8,000." Mr. Kirkbam didn't go into the restaurant business. The main street In Cripple Creek, Benedict avenue, according to Mr. Reynolds, presents as interesting a scene every hour in the day as does State street in Chicago, in the height of the busy season. The declarations of miners in taking claims are filed with the county clerk, and that offloial, with a force of twenty deputies, is compelled to work twenty-fours a day in handling them, using a day and night force, and is even then unable to keep up with his business, but cannot secure the proper help to increase his force. No man thinks of taking a job out there for less than three-and-a-half or four dollars a day. Mr. Reynolds has been in business In Colorado Springs, and is still in business there for that matter, but not long ago he had a chance to purchase a very desirable piece of ground in Cripple Creek on which to erect tf hotel, and he paid $5,800 for it. On his way back here to organize the company referred to, for the erection of a $50,000 hotel, he had an offer by telegram of an Increase of $1,800 on the price he paid for the land. Near the land referred to 1s a fine $2o,G00 Masonic temple. The rush to the Cripple Cieek oountry Is so great, and so muoh of it is by way of Colorado Springs, that Mr. Reynolds at his restaurant there feeds three hundred persons regularly at every meal. He Is an enthusiast on the' subject of Cripple Creek, and if he oould inspire everybody with the same feeling, Terre Haute would soon be depopulated,
Attend Goodman de Hirschler's annual Inventory sale. This will actually be th* beet ohanoe offered yet to obtain first class winter oiothing tor leas than manufacturers eost.
BuyRlaer% Oaramelstnone belter.
/«i$t Xi
NEWS OF THE, CITY.
1
it.il j,,.®
Miss Bridget Hayes die# last Mo if ay at the residence of Mrs. Johanna Phillips, on south Ninth street, aged sixtytwo years,
Joseph J. Roach, the aounollman, has purchased the grocery formerly oonduoted by the late Geo. F. Seeman, at Seventh and Oak streets.
The firm of Wright & Holloway, photographers, has been dissolved, George G. Holloway retiring. For the present Mr. Holloway will conduct a photograph gallery in Brazil.
Mrs. Bmellne Kinman, an old and well-kndwn resident of this city, died at •Mon-, ge of
'her home on south Seoond
2
day morning, at the adva%or eighty-four years. The Hudnuts have purclLBfed the steamer Irene to take the place of the Janie Rae oarrying their corn river points to the mills here. Capt|p Cooper will have oharge of the boat
A special representative of the Chicago Times-Herald was in the city last week interviewing Col. W. Thompson, and tomorrow's issue of that paper will contain the results of the interview.
The suit of Miss Catherine Fitzpatriok, the dress maker, agatnBt her former employer, C. W. Hamill, for damages, was decided at Brazil yesterday, resulting In a judgment for'the lady in the sum of $450. One of her lawyers was Mrs. Leach, of Sullivan.
The announcement was made this week that James Seath and Miss Eva Daniels, of this city, had been married in Chicago, on the 11th of December. They have gone to housekeeping on south Twelfth street, where the groom has fitted up a beautiful home.
The annual meeting of the McKeen Rifles association will be held at the Terre Haute House next Saturday evening, the 25th, and at the conclusion of the business meeting the members will be tendered a banquet by Manager Baur, who is president of the association.
An entertainment will be given at Germania Hall on the evening of the 30th inst., for the benefit of St. Patrick's church. Among the features of the pro gramme will be a debate by Ab Brown and Leo McCormack, well known local comedians, on the "Coming Woman."
The members of the Rathbone Sisters, of this city h^ve inaugurated a new movement in secret society circles, that of holding their meetings ih the afternoon. Heretofore these meetings have been held on Wednesday night, but beginning this week they will be held on Wednesday afternoons.'
Last night through the efforts and assistance of Manager Dickson, of the opera house, a new feature was added, that of a series of tableaux was given, and will be repeated with each performance. It makes a striking addition to a very interesting programme, and was received with much applause.
The congregation of Sc. Benedict's church, at Ninth and Ohio streets, will erect a $100,000 ohuroh the oomming sea son. It was expected to begin the work of tearing down the present church within thirty days, but it has been post poned for about six weeks. It is expected to have the church completed by fall.
In the last apportionment 9f school funds Vigo oounty received only $29,711.19. a considerable reduction from last year, when her share of the school fund was $40 277 52. It is said that the reduction in the fund may lead to a shorten ing of the school year in the townships outside the city, 'i
Frank Westfall, for many years a member of the fire department, died at St. Anthony's hospital Thursday morning, of consumption. He was for-ty-eight years old. His funeral occurred this morning, from the undertaking establishment of Isaac Ball& Son, under the direction of the members of No. 4 fire company.
A number of local expert gunners have organized the Terre Haute Gun club, and will hold practice shoots every Thursday afternoon at the base bali park. The members are Ed Tetzel, Ernest Metzger, Guy Stone, Albert Neukom, M! D. Mitchell, Ed Clift, John Jaeger, Wes McPeak, Benjamin Knlseley, Weloh, Gerhardt, J. W. Bell, John Walsh, John Taylor and Bruce Bement.
W. T. Jones, superintendent of the Prudential Insurance Co. in this district, gave a banquet at the National-last night to the agents of the oompany and a number of invited guests. Manager Merritt, of the National, fairly outdid himself in arranging the menu for the occasion, and after the close of the banquet a number of interesting speeohea were made, bearing on the insurance question in general and the affairs of the Prudential in particular.
Since C. A. Power became prominent in the Populistio movement he has had honors thrust upon him by the wholesale. He was promoted by the newspa pers from oaptain to oolonel, then to general, and yesterday when the Associated Press sent oiit reports from St. Louis of the meeting of the national committee of that party he was oalled "Judge Power." M. C. Rankin, who Is treasurer of the national oommittee, Is also attending the St. Louis meeting.
W. L. Kidder, the east Main street miller, closed a deal thM week by whioh he becomes the owner of "The Ruggery," a big office building In Columbus, Ohio, that brings In a rental of over $18,000 a year. The prioe paid for the building is given at $208,000, and Mr. Kidder turned In trade his terms In Honey Creek and JEtiley townships, 1,190 acres In all, on which the prloe was fixed at $95,000. The deal was engineered by Fred Lee, the well-known real estate dealer, of the firm of Lee A St. Clair, McKeen's blook.
Under a recent deoblon of the United States court at flan Frandsoo, to the •Aet that a Chinaman born In this country is a citizen thereof, To Goong, a laundryman near the eorner of Yhlr
teenth and Main streets, is going to the polls in the Third ward in the May election and insist that he is a oitizen of the United States, and demand that the judges, permit him to vote. Albert Neukom, the well-known druggist at jThirte«ftth and Main streets, has interested himself in the case, and from that it is pretty safe to say that if Yo gets his vote in, It will be cast for tho G. O. P.
E T. Hazaldlnd seauis to have captured about all the prizes in sight at the annual Indiana Pet Stock and Poultry Show at [ndiauapotta last week. Me received five first prizes, throe seconds, and two speoial prizes, more than were ever won by one person in the face of such strong competition. Some of the pigeons fanciers in attendance at the meeting pronounced some of Mr. Hazeldine's birdf the finest in the world. He has been engaged in the business for about seven years, and Is said to have the finest collection of pigeons in the world.
For the first time in many years the graduating class of the High school, at the January graduating exeroises, will contain more boys than girls. The exeroises will be held at the opera house next Friday night, January 24th, and of the olass of seventeen, ten will be boys. The following are the members of the olass: Jesse Brewer, William Cronin, Sue Denny, Fred Kadel, Frances Kretz, Albert Lyon, Charles MoFerrin, Marianna Monkhouse, Bert Murphy, George Noyes, Prank Pfleging, Mary Retz, Gertrude Spellman, Delia Steen, Maurloe Ward, Clara West and Rudolph Young.
The Daily Express this morning used for the first time its new perfecting press, and appeared as a seven column paper. Few cities of the population of Terre Haute oan boast of a paper of such a metropolitan appearance as the Express. Arrangements had been made for the use of the new press, with its stereotyping process, Friday morning, but it was prevented by an explosion of the steam table used in the stereotyping process. The stereotyper, Harry Ironsmith, and George M. Allen were standing near the table when the explosion occurred, and had a narrow escape from death. Part of the table wips thrown up to the ceiling of the press room with suoh force as to break a rafcer.
Very few persons in this oily are familiar with the extent of the opera tions of the Liquid Carbonio Acid Gas Co., a Chicago oompany that is owned and conducted by Terre Haute people. The officers of the company are Jacob Baur, president, Charles Baur, vice president and secretary, and H. J. Spruhan, formerly of McKeen's bank, treasurer. The company has extensive plantB in Chicago, Pittsburg and St. Louis, and has just completed an immense plant in Milwaukee. In addition to producing liquid oarbonic acid gas by a protected process the oompany owns a five-story brass foundry in Chicago, and does a general business in that line. The company started out with a capital stock of $75,000, but its business has increased to such an extent that the capital has been inoreased to $500,000, all of which ia paid in.
John Neimeyer, the gardener, whose residence was at Twenty-fifth and Locust streets, was run over by an electric oar just west of the Rose Orphan Home last Sunday night, and received injuries that oaused his death a Bhort time afterward. Niemeyer was driving east on the tracks, and as the light is bad at that point the motorman did not see him tintill the car was upon him. The power was thrown off and every effort made to stop the car, but it was impossible, and the man and the horse he was driving were both killed. Niemeyer was a native of Holland, and had been a resident of this city for about fourteen years. His wife and three children, two sons and a daughter, survive hun. The coroner held an inquest on the remain*, and after a thorougn investigation returned a verdict exonerating the street car employes from blame for the acoident.
Deafness Cannot Be Cared
by local applications, as they oannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entire ly closed deafness is the result, and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever nine cases out of ten are oaused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed oondition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Doliars for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) thatoannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for oircuiars, free.
F. J. CHENEY ft Co., Toledo, O. ^-Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Goodman A Hirschler have started a great inventory sale All heavy Suits, Overcoats, Pants and Underwear, at 25 per cent, discount. This is less than cost prioe.
Relief In One Day.
8ot?TH AXKKIGAJT NKRVTNK relieves the worst cases of Nervous Prostration, Nervousnes& and Nervous Dyspepsia In a single day. No such relief and blessing has ever come to the Invalids of this country. Its powers to cure the stomach are wonderful in the extreme. It always cures it cannot fail. It radically oures all weakness of the stomach and never disappoints. Its effects are marvelous and surprising.—It gladdens the heart of the suffering
and brings immediate relief.
It is a luxury to take and always safe. Trial bottles 15 cents. Bold by Cook, Bell and Black, and R. H. Bindley
A Co.,
Haute, Ind.
LOOK IN
424 Main Street.
druggists, Terre
our show windows at
424 Main street, and keep in mind the day—27th—when we will have our big Rug Sale.
WILLIS WRIGHT,
H. F. SCHMIDT, 673 Main street, five doors west of Seventh, Optician, practical experience in fitting glasses by the latest and best methods.
riUSLlN
SALE
We've made it famous, economical and best for women to buy Underwear ready made,' and this biggest business of its kind ia the mark of your appreciation. Thank you—not for buying the goods, for you don't do that unless it's the best thing to do but thank you for finding us out and enjoying the betterment to such an extent. You're making better and better things possible by this unmatched bigness you're enjoying a premium on your work by getting unmatched goodness. SKIRTS—
AT 60c—Of muslin wide ruffle of cambric, edged with embroidery. AT 81—Of muslin umbrella shape 9inch flounoe of lawn with 8-lnoh ruffle of embroidery.
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AT S1.18—Of muslin yoke band 8 in. flounce of English eyelet embroidery seven fine plaits. AT81.50—Of muslin—yoke band ruffle of Guipure embroidery with spaced plaits above. NIGHT GOWNS—
AT 39c—Of muslin with ruffle collar and wrist full length only two sold to one buyer. AT50c—Of muslin front composed of 36 plaits embroidered edgeand 4 rows of insertion yoke back turnover oollar: 66 In. lone. AT 75c—Of muslin front of embroidery turn-over collar cuflb finished with embroideiy. AT 89c- Of muslin yoke and collar of cambric finished with open work Insertion double yoke back: sleeves have embroidery ruffle and row of five 'plaits. AT $1.25—Of cambric Empire style yoke of English eyelet embroidery openwork edge a newly pretty collar finished with cambric embroidery. AT$1.48—Of cambric round yoke surplice neck finished with Point de
Venice edged Insertion. And finer and finer gowns—up to $6.00. CHEMISES—
At25c—Of muslin finished with cambrick ruffles. AT 40c—Of muslin yoke composed of 96 plaits and embroidery. AT 50c—Of muslin circular yoke of 82 plaits and 3 rows of Guipure insertion finished with neat embroidery. AT 75c—Of cambric: square yoke fin?.
Ished with embroidereh ruffle. And by easy price-skips to 911. CORSET COVERS—
AT 15c—Of cambric: square neck. AT 25c—Of cambric yoke back and front pretty embroidery peail buttons seams are felled 4 styles. AT 35c—Of cambric square yoke back and front open-work embroidery and spaced plaits forming front. ATSOc—Of cambric square neck back and front finlsbed with embroidery. AT76c-Of cambric square neck front of Guipure embroideiy, ATS1—Of cambric square yoke of real
Torchon lace and insertion.
DRAWERS— AT 19c—Of muslin yoke band deep hem and tucks.
AT 28c—Of muslin yoke band deep hem and embroidery. AT 48c—Of muslin yoke band wide cambric ruffle with plaits above AT 65c—Of muslin yoke band ruffle of 4-ln embroidery with plaits above. AT 85c—Of muslin yoke band 6-ln. ruffle of embroidery and fine plaits above. AT $1—Of muslin 6-in. ruffle of new open work embroidery, finished with plaits above: Val.lace. Cut28in. wide. And with every reasonable betweenprlce up to S3.
S
Madame De Vosburg, Inventor of the 1 Mode Tailor System, has opened a cuti.. school here, which will be conducted same as in large cities, and where those wlb. ing to become proficient in the art of dress making will receive proper Instructions. We gve a thorough course in cutting, basting, mingand Joining garments properly. NO limit to time or lessons.
Rose Dispensary, Rooms 324-325
Corner of Seventh and Cherry.
School Open Wednesday,Jan. 8, at 8 a.m.
BUILDING AND LOAN
Money
In Abundance, No Delays. Smallest Payments.
Mechanics' Bnildioi, Loan 4 Savings Ass'n,
517 OHIO STREET.
