Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 44, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 April 1896 — Page 2
2
BAB'S LETTER, a
I Published, 1896, by the Bok Syndicate Press, New York.] New Yobk, April 23,1896.
If you wish to be considered smart, you are, of course, announcing to your friends that May will find you in Russia witnessing the coronation of the Czar. I have been told of the pleasures expected by women who will get no nearer to Russia than the quarter dedicated to the Russian Jews, on the East Side, in New York City: and the queer part of it is that these ladies who do not tell the entire truth are so placid about it. It takes a woman to lie with ease. She can get Into her face a look as innocent as possible, and then go ahead in her efforts to outdo Ananias. I can imagine that this great spectacle of the coronation will be well worth seeing, but I don't think it will ever compare, as a curiosity, with the stolidity with which the spring-gowned young woman tells of her invitation to be present, and of the impression that she made on various Russian nobles whom she met abroad last season I cannot understand why Russia is so fascinating to women. Possibly, it is because, in the history of the world, the most wicked women have been Russians. Possi bly it is because the average Russian man while good to look upon, is, in reality stupid. And, possibly, it is because the line of caste is drawn very decidedly in all the Russias.
WOMEN ABE BOBS ARI8TOCRAT8.
A republic does not appeal to anything feminine. The eternal feminine wants to sit upon a throne and command other people, or else she wants to be sufficiently near the throne to influence it. With woman, an aristocracy is a necessity, and although we may talk until we are blue in our faces about an aristocracy of brains, theje nev^has been and never will be one, Brains bow to good manners and b'ooil. Sometimes, when I get to thinking very hard, I find myself predicting that five hundred years from now the United States will be a monarchy. The day when men of brains and wealth, men like Thomas Jefferson and James Madison Ion yd to make all men as near as possible equal, have gone by in these (fays each city and each little town has its aristocracy, usual ly an aristocracy of wealth. But after two or three generations of wealth, there begins to be a longing for an aristocracy of race and, once the aristocracy of race and wealth, with a certain leaven of brain is in control, it will demand a leader, and a king will be the result. Who will be the king five hundred years from now? A descendant from the butcher Astor? One of the tribe of Vanderbilt, boatman? Will the king come from out of the West, and be descended from one of the railroad magnates, or from one of the workers who dug in the earth and found gold therein? The king will not be a politician, of that I feel sure -unless, indeed, he should descend from one o£ those dignified New England geutlemen who made politics not a question of money but who used their money to purify politics. I am not speaking of any politicians of to-day. Even in New England, I know of none who will answer that description. But think itoutforyourself, and decide under whose banner will the aristocrats of twerity-flve hundred rally.
AS TO CATHARINE OF RUSSIA
But to return to Russia. The. woman of to-day is a great admirer of Catharine of Russia. She always speaks o^ her as possessing great brain and will power. She has never seemed to me, however, the sort of person that I should care to have an intimate acquaintance with. She began her career by killing her husband, and after that she took fancies, so to say, to various geutlemen to whom she gave her very intense love, and on whom she spent the wealth of all the Russias. One of these' gentlemen, Potemkin, was so weary of money that he had his books bound in bank notes. I may mention that I have never seen or borrowed one of these books, but I read this in the history of Russia written in French. Speaking of borrowing books, aren't they cheap enough, and Isn't our civilization old enough for that sort of thing to cease? You or I love a book. We spend many happy or unhappy hours over it. Here a passage is marked by a pencil there a specially beautiful description is emphasized by some rose leaves between the pages, and there, well, there where there was something that appealed specially to your heart or to mine a tear drop fell, and a tear drop never fades. This book is part of one's self. Some day Miss Rosalind Flighty appears, and she, after the manner of her kind, goes over your books, picks up this special one, and asks you to lend it to her. You are kindhearted and don't know how to refuse. And this fool has in her possession what is really apart of your life. And the chances are ten to one that she pencils certain passages as "lovely," "too sweet for anything." and when the bookthat you've fond of comes home, if it ever does, it has become so inoculated with the insipidity of the borrower that you catch it up with a tongs and put it in the Are.
Sometimes the borrower selects your favorite passages, learns them by heart, quotes them to other people, tells how they were marked in your book, and then starts in to adapt them to your daily life.
DO NOT J.KND YOUR BOOKS.
Personally, I do not lend my books. I tised to, bat the disappearance of a valuable French book, the mystery attending a book illustrated by John Leech, the walking away In some mysterion* maimer of an expensive dictionary of quotations, and the disappearance of no end of novels baa made me brutal.. Now, I have the courage of my convictions, and announce that I never lend a book. For myself, I should just as soon think of asking people to lend me their underwear as to lend me of their library. Of course, there are peoplo in this world, as I know to my sorrow, the line on lingerie.
be fascinating and mon? than merely fascinating to both men and women, and yet always be womanly and loveable. I
who do not draw Apropos of books, if you wiuit one for every dollar they possess, spend it so ignoyour daughter, put into her hand the life r*ntly. it is quite time, either for the charitof Dolly Mndifton, which has just come! inclined to teach them better, or for out, and which will explain to her in the the country to revive thm old sumptuary mo*t charming manner how a woman can
am, a great admirer of Dolly Madison's. In her day what a great lady this little Philadelphia Quakeress was! No queen ever surpassed her in dignity or in charm, and no queen ever realized better than she did how to make people like her. And she managed this little bit of diplomacy as a woman and not as a politician. Dolly Madison would not have been in harmony with the advanced woman. Bicycles, bloomers and longings for votes would have been far from her, but she would have ruled to-day just as she did so many years ago, and for the same reason—because she was a charming woman. As said before, it is a good book for a girl, this story of her life, and a good book specially for the girl" of to-day
SLEEP, GENTLE 81 FEP
To-day, or rather to-night, nobody sleeps well. Whether it is the fault of the noisy city, of over-strained nerves, of a troubled conscience, who can tell? But certain sure, that the doctor who will find an innocent opiate is the one who will make a fortune. I don't believe the beds themselves were ever more beautiful they are of enameled wood, of brass, of mahogany brightened with gilt in the Empire fashion, or of whatever material you will, but they are always marvelous studies of beautiful furniture. Gossip says that Julien Gordon sleeps in a bed shaped like a swan, with drapings of lace about it surely, slumbering in this way, the songs of the swan should come to her dreams. Of a fashionable divorcee it used to be said that her bed was like a huge hearse, heavy and black. It stood in the center of the room on a raised platform, which made it necessary to climb two steps to get to it. When it was first brought over from the other side, the heavy top was lined with a French mirror, for the purchaser did not know that French ladies objected to this style of bed, but the truth was soon discovered, the looking-glass removed and rose-colored atin put in its place. Those who know say that this bedroom Gad a barren, cold look, and all that it suggested was the opinion given of Raphael's Madonna by Carlyle's servant—"it is expensive."
QUEEN ELIZABETH'S WAYS.
That funeral type is the sort of bed Queen Elizabeth ought to have slept in. This Queen of England was undoubtedly a woman of great strength of mind. No frivolous lace decorated her nightgown no rosecolored knots were here and there upon it, and no thin mull made the gown in which she dreamed. No, indeed, her favorite nightgown was of purple velvet, trimmed elaborately with gold lace This was sufficient reason for her remaining a virgin queen.
But to return to beds. Mile. Mousseline must have abed that looks simple and is expensive. It must be all white, its curtains of white swiss muslin, its ribbons of white satin, really, it must in the first place be as immaculate as the lilies, and then it must be kept so. And that is why it costs so much. Mile. Mousseline's draperies must be like herself, unspotted. The fancy for the silk coverlids on one's bed has caused the heavy Marseilles counterpane to disappear, and this means that it is now possible for one to sleep under something that is less in weight than sheet iron, and which permits a little more ventilation than a stone wall. Doctors tell that more people have died from Marseilles counterpanes than from pneumonia, and that is saying a good bit. The prettiest bed I ever saw was Mrs. Langtry's. The bed itself was Chippendale the draperies, soft gray brocade with tiny flowers in faint figures upon them the side curtains were of bolting cloth, those at the head of the bed embroidered in poppies, and those at the foot in morning glortes. But, after all, it is not the bed or its draping, or its covers, or its curtains, but it is sleep that one wants. And one may have the softest bed in the world, and yet the rose leaf hidden in it will irritate the flesh and annoy the soul. If one is awake, the hours of the night are just as long if one's bed is draped in brocade, as if one slept without curtains on a hard est.
GOTHAM AND ITS SHADES.
New York is rampant in color. From royal purple to burning scarlet, from sunshiny yellow to a blue that blazes, there is every color of the rainbow, intensified and made inartistic. Women's heads are topped by flower gardens. The styles are not pretty as they were when the simple cloth gown and the small bonnet were in vogue. Considering the extravagance of the poor, and they are the most extravagant people in the world, it would seem as if the old law regarding who should and should not wear velvet brocade, silk or lace, or jewels, should again be enforced. The lady who presides in our kitchen is attired, on Sunday afternoon, in a gray cashmere with a pink brocade waistcoat, cuffs and collar, and she is topped by a gray hat wreathed with pink roses, yellow jonquils and green leaves. Her coarse, rough hands are squeezed in yellow kid gloves two sizes too small for her. It has taken two months' wages to pay for this get-up. Her underclothes are in rags, her shoes are run down at the heels, and she hasn't a penny saved. Yet, in reality, she gets better wages than the average shop girl, inasmuch as she pays nothing for board, and when holidays come, receives many presents. The furore for rich materials and bright colors is so great that, undoubtedly, women with good taste will cling during the summer months to pretty cottons and to hats that have not all the flowers of field and garden and hothouse upon them.
ON POVERTY AND ART.
There are so many kind ladies who are willing to teach the lower classes many good things. Just now, they seem most anxious to make them appreciate fine pictures. I wish they might bang into their heads something about the value of money and the seiwe of dressing to suit one's condition in life. 1 can forgive the overdressing of a child that is mother love. But, when women who have to work hard for
N*w
York used to say that it was
the w« um! south that overdressed. That I can no laager he its claim, for bonnet« and frocks, parasols and belts, gloves and veils
are gaudy of the gaudiest. I think if some of them could only see themselves as others see them, they would not crown wrinkles and crow's feet with roses. Hundreds of years ago, the Jewish maidens wore, in chatelaine fashion, small mirrors framed in brass, and these mirrors were to show exactly how they looked at certain times. Hand mirrors would be of no use nowadays. If the city would have a cheval glass at every street corner, however, some good might come, and one would not see, as one does nowadays, a shabby skirt with a gaudy, overtrimmed bodice a conspicuous hat, and a general air of overdressing, that almost convinces one that overtalking, but not overthinking, is the habit of the wearer. To be a bit slangy, there is just too much of the Bowery skirt and the Fifth avenue bodice. ||||t
CONSISTENCY, WHERE ART THOU
Consistency is lacking. Consistency in everything. In politics and in religion as well as in dress. How to stop it all Be the woman to set a good example. Remember that there is a time of the day that demands simplicity remember that churches were not intended as places to exhibit the handiwork of the dressmaker and the milliner. Remember that the gown suited to one woman is utterly unsuited to another, and remember always that one never errs by dressing quietly though daintily.. I love pretty things. I love to see women well dressed, but I don't like a torrent of color and this overflow of cheap materials that are so conspicious just now, for I do not think that any woman looks well in many colors, and I know that no woman can be all that she should be in cotton-backed brocades, or indeed, in imitations of any sort. There is something demoralizing about an imitation. That is the reason why the bonnet of my neighbor will not be copied by her neighbor
The head was apparently that of an 11 or 12 year old, and the sturdy little boy that supported it—and remained outside the door—was trimly clad in a short frock. To every office, including those on the s'teenth floor, went the little head, and everywhere it asked the same question, 'Do you want an office girl?" When last seen, it was leaving the building wearing an expression of countenance which might be interpreted, "Nil desperandum this is only one offioe building there are others."— Philadelphia Times. ,i thi White Bout Kindergarten.
The little Wallace children, the grandchildren of Chief Justice Fuller, the little daughter of General and Mrs. Draper and the children of Private Secretary and Mrs. Thurber are among the pupils of the kindergarten that is situated in the nursery at the White House. The children are put behind the bars of the little cribs when there is laziness or disobedience, and a final humiliation for extreme cases is a stool and dunce cap in the corner. The little outsiders who are so favoved get all these advantages for $6 or fS a month. So the whole burden of expense does not fall upon the family in the White House.
Beware of Counterfeiters
Who Infest the market and are the means of robbing sick people of their money, and what Is of still greater consequence of not unfrequently aggravating the complaints under which they labor. It is an act of duty we owe to society to warn the people against these dangerous frauds. A little care on the part of the purchaser will protect them from imposition by Jbearing in mind these facts: Never bny where it is offered in bulk, (in or Jugs) as the genuine Hostetter's Bitters are sola only in bottles having the handsome steel plate label displaying the combat between St. George and the Dragon, and having at the bottom a miniature note of hand for one cent, bearing a facsimile of the signature of the president of the company. Over the cork Is a metallic cap. on which is Impressed the name of the article, together with a medallion head In the center. Any person selling the counterfeit Hostetters Stomach Bitters we shall not hesitate to bring to justice, as we never fail to convict.
Inflammatory Rheumatism Cured In 3 Days. Morton L. Bill, of Lebanon. Ind.. says "My wife had inflammatory Rheumatism In every muscle and krfnt. her suffering was terrible and her body and face were swollen beyond recognition bad been in bed for six weeks and bad eight physicians bat received no benefit until she trl«3 the MYSTIC CURE FOR RHEUMATISM. It gave immediate relief and she was able to walk about in three days. I am sure it saved her Ufa." Sold by Jacob Baur. Cook. Bell & Black, and all druggists, Terre Haute.
Save Your Life
TEBBE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, APKII, 25, 1896.
B4.B
A Queen's Hobby.
Queen Amelie of Portugal, to the great delight of the king and her court, has discontinued experimenting on them medically, in order to thoroughly study the Roentgen light, and now her majesty spends her time in photographing King Carlos and their attendants in order to discover what their skeletons are like. The queen, as is well known, has during the last two years devoted herself to the study of medicine, and has shown herself a very apt pupil, but unfortunately her majesty is too enthusiastic in the pursuit of medical science, and by her experiments has reduced some of her ladies in waiting almost to death's door. Now that the queen has a new hobby the Portuguese court rejoices, especially the king, as the queen was always insisting upon his trying new methods discovered by her self for reducing his growing corpulency. It is even said—perhaps maliciously—that in consequence of the king's gratitude to Roentgen, the pro fessor is to be invited to the court at Lisbon, and will receive a high order for his discovery. —London Letter.
An Office Girl.
The new1 woman, having had" a shy at almost everything that's going nowadays, has concluded that she wants to be an office boy. Office girl id the correct term, but it is difficult to get used to it all at once. One day last week the latest of the leviathan office buildings of our city was honored by a little visitor who popped its golden head into the door of every one of its many offices. "Please, sir," said the head, "do you want an office girl?"
Axeucax
By using "NAW Grsat Sotrrn KIDSETCTRAThis new remedy tsajrmt surprise on account of its exceeding promptness in relieving pain In the Kidneys, Bladder and Rack In male or female. It relieves mention of water, and pain in passing it almost immediately. Save yonreelves by using this marvelous cam. Its use will prevent fatal consequences in almost all cases by Its great alterative and healing powers. Bold by all druggists in Terre Haute.
Boru For Pimnlnf.
Borax, which has long been lnvaluableto the housewife in whitening her clothes, in softening water for cleaning purposes, and for washing the scalp to remove dandruff, is now being much used as a preservative of fresh meat and fish and of garden fruits. The latter when ripe are packed in layers of borax and sent thousands of miles to arrive in perfect condition. The housewife may herself test this method of preserving fresh fruits for winter use. The method is not an expensive one, as the borax canbe used a number of times without losing its virtue. The fruit itself should be thoroughly brushed and then washed before using, as this powerful substance taken in any quantity internally has a most disastrous effect on the kidneys. As an antiseptic and bleacher of the skin it is unrivaled, but is so dryjng that it should only be applied to the face occasionally, and even then its application should be followed by a thorough massage with cold cream containing lanoline, cocoanut or almond oiL Pure olive oil may also be safely and profitably used for the facial massage given to one who has a dry, fine skin. —New York Post ,,
Steamer Wrappers.
,. vr •v.
Any woman who contemplates going to Europe this summer will be glad to know that the prettiest and best stuff for a steamer night wrap is French flannel. It is soft aud fine as satin, warm and washable and very beautiful in both colors and designs. The colors are as delicate as are silken colors, and this spring the shops show a number of very lovely Parisian patterns besides the usual stock pf stripes and spots. Some even have Dresden bouquets and pompadour effects. A saut de lit just finished and ready for a steamer trunk is built of rose pink flannel and a Persian design in which rose predominates. The plain forms the princess foundation, with a watteau in the back and full shirt sleeves gathered into the wrists with a deep frill of coarse cotton cream lace. Over this, down the whole front of the wrapper, there is a straight broad length of the Parisian flannel. A square cut nfecjc reveals the throat, and the two sides are trimmed with a pink ribbon quilling and a cascade of lace. This band continues over the shoulders, parts behind and forms two plaits on each side of the pink watteau.—Chicago Herald.,
It rfas a Potent Charm.
That the life of the girl bachelor has a subtle charm of its own, even for those 'Who are not urged to it by expediency, is shown by the fact that Miss Emilie Yznaga, the youngest sister of the Duchess of Manchester, has, after several years spent in the highest and most interesting society of England and the continent, settled down to an independent life in a charming apartment in the Avenue Marceau, one of the wide, beautiful streets.which radiate from the Arc de Triomphe like the spokes of a wheel. Miss Yznaga, to whom the more formal side of fashionable life never appealed, enjoys a simple life with her intimites, does a great deal of bicycling and spends much of her time in needlework, of which she is very fond The ducliess and her little daughter, Lady Alice Montagu, have been staying with her, as has also the well known beauty, Lady de Grey, formerly Lady Londale. The latter is certainly "divinely tall," being over 6 feet in height
The Effect of the Sun.
Everybody does not know that constant exposure to the summer son will fade one's hair. A woman who noticed last summer that her hair on the left side of her head was gradually assuming an appearance of having been washed in some chemical bleach, could not account for it until a friend suggested that it was owing to the fact that two of her hats were turned up on the left side, thus exposing that particalar spot to the sun's rays.
Sciatic Rheumatism Cured. L. Wagner, Wholesale Druggist, Richmond, Va., says: "I had a fearful attack of Sciatic Rheumatism, was laid up almost two months: was fortunate enough to get MYSTIC CURE FOR RHEUMATISM. This cured me after doctor's prescriptions had failed to have any effect." Sold by Jacob Baur, Cook, Bell Black and all druggists, Terre Haute.
Rheumatism Cured In a Day. Mystic Cure" for Rheumatism and Neuralgia radically cures in 1 to 3 days. Its action upon the system is remarkable and mysterious. It removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disappears. The first dose greatly benefits. 75 cents. Sold by Jacob Baur, Cook, Bell & Black and all druggists, Terre Haute.
Note of Warning.
Indigestion produces Inflammation and ulceration of tne stomach, and these are the exciting cause of so many deaths from cancer of the stomach. Sooth American Nebvink Is the most momentous cure for stomach troubles the world ever saw. There is no case of indigestion and stomach weakness which it will not cure. A sound stomach is never affected by cancerous growths. Save yourself by using this renowned cure which never disappoints. Sold by all druggists in Terre Haute.
Established 1881. jk Incorporated 1888.
Clift & Williams Co.,
Successors to Clift, Williams & Co.»*
MANUFACTURERS OF
Sash, Doors, Blinds, Etc.
AITD DKAUHI8 rw
AND BUILDERS' HARDWARE,^,
Mulberry 8t, Cor. Ninth.
J. H. WIJULIAHS, President. J. M. Ctrrr. Sec*y and Treas.
Mr. Mrs. Hesry Ksuesfcsck,
Funeral Directors
And EmbaJmets. Livery and Boarding Stable. All calls promptly attended to. Office open day and nignt. Telephone 2W. Nos. N. Third street.
Nerves
Are the Messengers of Sense,—the Telegraph System of the human body. Nerves extend from the brain to every part of the body and reach every organ. Nerves are like fire—good servants but hqj-d masters. Nerves are fed by the blood and are therefore like it in character. Nerves Will be weak and exhausted if the blood Is thin, pale and impure. Nerves will surely be strong and steady if the blood is rich, red and vigorous. Nerves And a true friend in Hood's Sarsaparilla because it makes rich, red blbod. Nerves do their work naturally and well,—
Ij.
the brain is unclouded, there are no J'*? neuralgic pains, appetite, and dige»tion axe good, when you take
Sarsaparilla
The One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. ft. Prepared only by C. I. Hood A Co., Lowell, Mnss. .. p.,,, the best family cathartic rlOOd $ FlllS and liver stimulant. 25c
CONSUMPTION
To THE EDITOR—Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy free to any of your readers who have consumption if they will send me their express and post office address Respectfully, T. A. Rloeum, M. C.,
Reduced Rates to...
No. 183 Pearl Street, New York.
DR. R. W. VAN VALZAH,
Dentist,
Office, No. 5 South Fifth Street.
C. I FLEMING. M. D. (). VETERINARIAN.
Special attention given to diseases of lior cattle and dogs. Office 811 Main street.
CRUSHED
$4.50
COARSE...
Delivered
$4.00
De,,vered*
Sample order. 3 bushels to test, 85c. Equal to Anthracite Coal.
Citizens' Fuel & Gas Co.,
507 Ohio Street.
CATARRH
For Your Protection we positively state that this remedy does not contain mercury or any other injurious drug/jr^
ELY'S
CREAM BALH Cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Inflammation. Heals the Sores. Protects the Membrane from Colds, Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell.
COLD W HEAD
IT WILL CURE A particle is applied directly into the nostrils and is agreeable. Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mall. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren St., New York.
11 C. F. WILLIAM, D. D. S.
DENTAL PARLORS,
Corner Sixth and Main Streets,
v. TERRE HAUTE, IND.
£)R. L. H. BARTHOLOMEW
Dentist.
Removed to 671 Main St. Terre Haute, Ind.
j. DAILBY,
503 OHIO STREET.
liJve him a call If you have any kind of Insurance to place. He will write you in as good companies as are represented In the city.
JpELSENTHAL, A. B. Ju»tice of the Peace and
Attorney-at-Law.
26 South Third Street. Terre Haute, Ind.
j**/
Gerhardt
4,1
Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Glast. Paints, Oils
Rye and
VandaliaPennsylvania
Indianapolis
ONB FARE FOR ROUND TRIP.
Republican State Convention of Indiana. May 5th and 6th. Tickets good returning May 9th.
I. O. O. F. Grand Lodge and Rebekah Assembly of Indiana, May 18th and 19th. Tickets good returning May 23d.
Lodge F? & A. and
Grand Lodge F.' & A. Masons of Indiana,' May 26th and 27th. Tickets good returning
May 28th. Grand Lodge Knights of Pythias of Indiana. June 1st and 2d. Good returning June 5tl».
For tickets call at City Ticket Office. 629 Wabash ave.. or Union depot. G. E. FARRINGTON, Gen. Aj?t.
TO THE
Big! Conventions
I
11ST 1896.
NATIONAL REPUBLICAN CONVENTION. St. Louis, June 16. NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION5,
Chicago. July 7.
NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIAT'N, Buffalo, July 3. Y. P. S. C. E. CONVENTION.
Washington. July 3. II. Y. IV U. OF AMERICA, Milwaukee. July tfl.
NATIONAL ENCAM I'MENT G. A. R., St. Paul. Sept. 1 to 4. Elegant throuph trains, Wagner sleeping cars, buffet parlor cars, exquisite dining car service.
No tunnel at St. Louis. Best terminal at Chicago, Best line to Buffalo. Through sleepers to Washington. The popular line of
O A. It.
E. E. South, Q. A., Terre Haute.
D. B. Martin. Gen. Pass. & Tkt. Agt. E. O. McCormlck. Pass. Traffic Mgr. CINCINNATI. O.
The Terre Haute Trust Co.
Pays interest on deposits. Lends money on mortgage and collateral. Buys and sells mortgage notes. Buy8 street improvement certificates. Administers estates.
Makes loans and other investments for other people. Cares ior property.
Call and see us.
Office 30 South Sixth St.
I. H. C. Royse, President. M. S. Durham, Vice President. Charles Whitcomb, Secretary.
HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID FOR
Also Tallow, Bones, Grease
OF ALL KINDS.
At my Factory on the Island southwest of the City.
Harrison Smith,
Office 13 S. Second St..
TERRE HAUTE, IND, Dead Animals removed free within ten miles of the city. Telephone 73.
-Sail
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR
Vienna.... ..
S. Iv. PENNBR,
Builders' Hardware, Furnaces,
and First-class Tin Work,
1200 2&JLT2ST S IR IE IE T.
LOOKHERE!
If you are going to build, what is the nse of going to see three or four different kinds of contractors? Why not go and see
A.
FROMMB,
Greneral Contractor
416 WILLOW STREET,
As he employs the best of mechanics in Brick Work, Plastering, Carpentering, Painting, etc., and will furnish you plans and specifications if wanted.
We want a few men to sell a CHOICKLlNKOf Nursery stock.
We cannot make you rich in a month out can give you Steady Employment and will pay you for it. Our prices correspond with the times. Write for terms and territory.
THE HAWKS NURSERY CO., Milwaukee, Wit.
SANT 0. DAVIS. FRANK J.TURK.
DAVIS & TURK
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
42034 Wabub Ave. TERRE HAUTE, IND.
Young America
Bread.
ft I
