Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 50, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 June 1896 — Page 7

The Mystery of the Laughlin

^Islands,

5

ff,\ ICOSTIXUKD FROM SIXTH PAOB.[

her topsails showing through the groves of coooanuts on the southern point, and then In a few minutes she came into full view. From the number of boats she carried the islanders knew her to be a whaler, and a loud cry of delight rang through the village when she hauled tip her courses and lay-to, to wait for the canoes to bring off supplies.

Only some three or four ships had ever before visited the islands, and the open, friendly manner of the natives and the de-

a**«rt

THE CAPTAIN OF THE MACEDONIAN TOOK OFF HIS HAT.

light they showed at meeting white men and the desire they expressed to have one co live among them was beginning to get known among the whaleships that cruised about in those latitudes sixty years ago. It was for this reason, and that he wanted to buy some hogs, that Captain Abraham Warren, of the Macedonian of Nantucket, determined to make a call at the islands before working his way northward along the east coast of New Guinea.

Taranoa, the leading chief of this group of nine islets, was the first to board the whaler, accompanied by half a dozen of his young men. His simple pleasing manners and desire to serve the American captain iu every possible way. expressed In perfectly intelligible English, decidcd Captai" Warren to accept his invitation and spend part of the day ashore.

KA boat was lowered from the »hlp and 1 the li Taranoa, sending his M^ore wHh a lOQb^flUt ovec-thato-iwlb tfra%Mage^o hirf pebpfeto pretiare food for his guest, got in the boat with the captain and piloted her ashore.

For some time the master of the Macedonian felt dazed by the noise of the welcome afforded him. He noticed that every native insisted upon shaking hands with .him, English fashion, and also that many of them showed unmistakable traces of European blood in their veins. The women, In particular, were very light In color, and, Indeed, many were not as dark as Creoles.

After the chief had managed to get his white guest through the crowd of natives that hung about him, he brought htm to his house and placed a rude chair for him to nit upon, while the women of his family placed food before him the captain motioned to the chief to sit near him and talk. "Like white people?" Taranoa said, in answer to a remark of Captain Warren's "Oh. yes, sir every ship that comes here the captain say native here got skin like the white man." "Where did you learn to speak English T'' asked the American presently. "I have been to sea, sir—sailor man on board whales hip—English whaleship belong to Sydney."

For nearly an hour the captain remained with his native host and then expressing a wish to have a look abou the island, Taranoa at once offered to be his guide.

They set out a few minutes later and Taranoa, leading the way, took the white maa to every point that he thought would intreat him. As they were returning to the village along the path that led through the cocoanut grove on the southern side of the Island, the. chief pointed out to the Amer lean a cluster of native houses, and said was the place where the white men ice lived. 'White men! Did any white men live and In those house*?"

jjpnee

Yes. A long time Ago but they not live those houses there. Houses belong to lis men fall down long time ago." W After they had returned to the chief's house Captain Warren questioned Taranoa about these white men. At first the chist hesitated, but then told him this story:— "A long time ago, in bis father's time, before he (Taranoa) was born, a ship bsd oome in doss to the land. The wind had died away and Kilagia, his father, and tour other men hsd launched their canoe to go out to her. when the breeze sprang up.

Just as darkness had fallen, and they saw the ship tun» round and sadl away. So Kilagia and those with him turned back, but scarce had they dragged their canoe up on the beach when they heard the sound of oars, and runatn back they saw a boat close In. All the people ran out of tr.-tir bouses, some with torches in their

bat

and they

saw that there were six mpn in the host and one woman. The white men were alt very much frightened and feared to step out of the boat at first, but Uranu, Kilagta's oldest wife, ran out into the water and taking the white woman's hand In here placed It on her bosom as a sign of friendship and goodwill. 80 toeo they all came out, and the people took them to Kllagia bouse and gave them food and driak. The chief of the white men was named Paka the woman, who was young, was his daughter. Paka was an oM man his bead mi white: and alt that night his daughter held his hand in hen aad shook and trembled if one of the Island mea looked at her. But they meant them ao barm, for Kllagta told the people that these white mea must aot be hurt, as the gods had sent them at the time of the aew mooa. which Is a lasky

time. By and by, as the days went by, Kilagia and the old white man Paka swore a friendship and became as brothers, and Kilagia built him a house for himself and daughter and gave him slaves to work for him. The other white men were not good men, they were bad men. But yet Kilagia gave each one a wife from among the village girls and all went well for a time. But one day, when the white woman— whom her father called Neli—was alcne, one of the white men came to her and said she must be his wife. He was a big .an named Kelll, and much feared by the others, but the white woman spok* scornfully to him and said be had a native wife already. Then she ran away and he ran after her. While he pursued her she cried 1-udly for her father, who ran out from his house to meet her. She sprang into his arms, but he put her aside, and draw-

ing his knife, he sprang at the big man and thrust it first into his stomach and then into Ids throat. The other four men then tried to kill Paka with their knives, but Kilagia and his men came to hlB help, and they overpowered the four white men, and then binding their arms and legs with kafa (chmet), they took them to the edge of the reef and cast them to the sharks which quickly devoured them. All these five men, so Paka told Kilagia, were prisoners who had run away from prison in Sydney. All the wives of these five men bore' children—born after the fathers were given to the sharks. When a year had gone Paka took a wife, the daughter of Uranu, Kllagia's chief wife. She bore him a child, and the whits woman nursed it and loved It as much as did its mother. Nearly, every day the old man and his daughter, would walk round the island and ~T any ship was coming. But after a itime the old man ceased to look he begftn te love the son born to him by the daughter of Uranu. Then, too, in time, the daughter of Paka. cared no more to look out over the sea for a ship she told Kilagia's wives that she cared not to go back to her own country again—it was only because her father once desired it that she lookea seaward with him for a ship. After she and her father had been living on the island for nearly three years the white woman took a husband, a man from the island farthest north of all these. His name was Kavirua, and although not a chief hs was rich in land and houses and oanoes. They hsd many children and then when Paka, the old white man, died, his daughter came over from the north island and took his body away and burled it near the place where she lived. Am the years went on shs forgot English talk, and although two whaleships oalled a year or two after her father died she went not near them, but lived and died as one of the island people."

That was Taranoa's story and Captain Warren listened to it with the keenest interest. "If you like to oome with me I show you the place where the old white man and his daughter are burled," resumed Taranoa. "After the woman had been dead a year another ship came. She was a brig, and her captain was a big tall man. He and my father made friends and the captain said he had come to search for the old man and his daughter. Then my father told him all that had been done and showed htm the place where they were buried. Come with me and I will show you," -r

Entering a canoe with the chief and four natives the captain of the Macedonian an hour later was landed on the north island A short walk through the groves of palms brought them to a cleared spot in the centre of the narrow island. A little to the right band side were two grassy mounds close together, and to Captain Warren's surprise at the head he saw weather beaten headboard with an Inscription painted on it in English. Over the headboard was a small shed, thatched with pandanus leaves, evidently built by native hands to protect the inscription from the fierce rays of a tropic sun. "Who did this?" he asked of Taranoa. "The big captain who came to seek for them. He stayed here with us for three days. Hs and the ship's carpenter made this board aad wrote words upon it, aad we promised him to cars well tor the graves."

The American leant down and read the lettering, which, from the effects of time, had In parts become almost undecipherable.'—

SACRED TO TUB MORT JA KS BARKER AND*

SDAUGHT KLLSN

BR CT ED By Jno LOCKS 14

The captain of the Macedonian took off hts hat aad tor a minute or so stood in silence over the tooeiy graves. The sinking afternoon san sent long arrow-like shafjs of light through the plumed aad silent groves of palm trees, aad the throbbing of the surf upon the outer reef rose aad fell la a soft sad murmuring esdcucc. Then, with slow and a thoughtful hs turned sway.

FOR LITTLE FOLKS.

TWO SMALL TRAVELERS.

A tittle Boy and Girl Make the Trip From Liverpool to Ohio Alone. $ The arrival of two little tote who had traveled upward of 8,000 miles alone attracted great attention when the passengers from the American liner Rhynland were being landed at Washington avenue wharf. Though strangers when first put on board the ship, the children became the greatest friends and came ashore together. One is John C. Gough, a bright little English chap, not quite 7, while the other is Mabel Blaney, aged 8 years. Mabel has a tag sewed to her dress, upon which is written, "My name is Mabel Blaney, and I am going to my mother, Elizabeth Blaney, new No. 408 West Fifth street, Cincinnati."

Little Gough has two tags sewed on the inside of his coat and one on the

BSiS

outside, upon which is inscribed his uncle's name and residence in Hamniondsville, O. Perfectly complacent, these two children strolled along the wharf, and when it came their turn to gQ through the examinatigfl fthey answe^jJ the questions* put by" the' immigrant commissioners with afar greater degree of intelligence than many of the adults. Both children were put on board the Rhynland in Liverpool by their relatives. They gave little or no trouble during the passage across. The officers of the ship say that they never seemed to become homesick, neither did they suffer in the least from seasickness.

Mabel Blaney is a well clad, bright little tiling and explained to the commissioners that she had been put on board the Rhynland by her aunt and was going to join her mother in Cincinnati. She had a prepaid ticket and was put safely on board the train by Mrs. Kaney, who looks after the women passengers for the immigrant commissioners.

John Gough, in the most "old fashioned manner, sat on his trunk in the immigrant station yesterday counting his money and putting his railroad ticket away in his purse. "I am going t*"611 cle Stephen in Ohio to learn to 3 bridesman,

,b

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING- MAIL, JUNE 6, 1896.

he said When queStioirope or-

too, was put safely on board thet of for his destination. —Philadelphia Press.

Be Polite.

School children are most apt to be guilty of a certain breach of street etiquette. This is the forming of a group on the pavement so that the knot of people interfere with passersby or the walking together three or four abreast, so that the same hindrance is presented. Please try to remember that while the street is meant for you as much as for 'any one else it is meant for any one else as much as for you.—New York Times. .-

Johnny's First Attempt. -1

Johnny was about to repeat his first verse at the Sunday school concert. Of oourse it must be short and simple words, so his mother selected this for him, "I am the light of the world," re peating it to him a number of times until he was sure of it. The evening of the concert came. Johnny came out, made his most approved bow, and proclaimed in a loud voice, 'My mother is the light of world. "—Congregation' alist '-t rhe rallies' Trolley.

The fairies laugh at mortals' folly' For boasting of their wondrous trolley. For they wore first, I know it well. To run a line from dell to dell. The spider spins, of course, the wire ^u The fireflies make tbe sparks of fire The liue is hung from tree to tree, fj And the motorman is a bumblebee.

For be can hum and ban as well •As clang the gong, a big bine bell. Bis uniform a black and yellow, "fif Be really is a handsome fellow. £¥it

Tbe conductor's place tbe waep most take, For he can stinging speeches make— "All aboard! Don't take all night!" "8tep lively, please. Go ahead! All right! 80 If yoo find tbe ffciry dell, Listen for tbe big bine bell. Yon'11 hear the train go whining by, Ait it's hidden, of coarse, from mortal eye. », —Anna K. Almjr in 8t Nicholas.

Tlw Bert Ha Coatd Dot

"William." said the teacher, "hdw do you spell 'sawbuck?' Go to the blackboard and write it"

William went to the board, scratched his head, shifted his weight from one foot to the other, wrinkled his forehead and at last produced this diagram,

•That*s the way it looks anyhow," he said.—Chicago Tribune.

What Maaaai

Little Dot—My new doll has a dieiful dirty face. Little Diek—Why don't you wash it?

Little Dot—Mamma won't let me. She's afraid I'll get soap la her eyes.— Exchange.

Her Worth Recognised.

Miss Fannie Edgar Thomas has been made officier d'academie by the French government in recognition of her work in musical criticism. She is the first American woman to win this distinction. Miss Thomas has been in Paris little more than a year and went there utterly without influence. Her success^ therefore, in grasping the musical spirit of France and interpreting it as she has done is the more remarkable. The recommendation of her work, sent to the Academy, was signed by such well known names as Alexandre Guilmant, Ambroise Thomas, C. Saint-Saens and others. Massenet, who was in Milan, sent a special letter expressing his desire that the honor should be conferred.

Some Kiegaat Costumes.

Costumes of cream white mohair or pilot cloth with cricket caps or alpine hats of cream felt to match are imported for coaching or seaside uses. Some of these elegantly made suits are wholly unadorned, while others have the skirt and jacket or basque bodice lined with old rose, reseda mauve, or cerise silk with vests, and a bit of color on the cap or hat to match. A line of fine gold braid or a tiny band of gold galloon decorates some of the white wool costumes made for walking, cycling or driving, and the costume is then lined with palest yellow and the waist or basque decorated with white and gold buttons of large sia&—New York Post.

Want Wonin Appointed. :iJ. The matter of appointing women on the board of education in Brooklyn has re9eived the indorsement of a number of the women's clubs in that part of our greater New York, says a New York paper. Several women are already talked of for .the places if Mayor Wurster decides there are to be any. Among them is a well known newspaper wom^n, a member of the staff of one _&he Brooklyn papers, who i§ especially edtioalionair~matters, &Ud pointment is favorably regained by those who belifrve a business woman would do good service in such a position. The matter will not be settled until July 1.

A Kitchen Time Saver.^!|

Aocording to Twentieth Century Cookery, a chef of an up town New York hotel has a novel method of shelling peaa He used an ordinary clpthes wringer, and the rapidity with which the work is done is surprising. The pods, as they go between the rollers, burst, passing through to the other side, leaving the peas behind. The first impression one gets is that the peas are likely to get bruised. Such, however, is not the case. As the pods stain the roll era, an old one should be used. This seems to offer a very desirable use for old wringers, which have heretofore been a very cumbersome piece of lumber.

^-'A Capable Pulpit Woman.

afterTJmib^ar8are4i B* Barnard of ChelTbe groom hK,havinS satisfied ^he committfte^Fleld

m8hiP

k®r fitness for the

bride is ministry, has been com mendaa iu £he ministers and churches of the Unitarian denomination. The paper ifsigned by D. M. Wilson, chairman, and

D. W. Morehouse, secretary. Miss Barnard has preached regularly for some time in Chelsea and elsewhere, including Salem and Marblehead. During the past year she has preached in some of the oldest churches in this part of the coon try. In several cases she was the first woman to occupy these pulpits.— Boston Woiggp's Journal.

Four Prise Winners^

-Miss Clara Langenbeck of Cincinnati has won the Bryn Mawr fellowship founded by Miss Mary E. Garrett of Baltimore and named by her in honor of President Thomas. The fellowship is

Pbf

anted for the first time this year and the value of $500. It affords one year's residenoe and study at some foreign university. Miss Virginia Ragsdale has won the Bryn Mawr European fellowship, and Miss Winifred Warren has taken the Mary E. Garrett European fellowship, while Miss Ellen Rose Giles of Philadelphia has gained a graduate scholarship in Semitic languages for next year.

A Startling

i®8®

f.\¥

A 1 eSiSHsir

Admission.

In New York City, for five consecutive years, the proportion of Deaths from Consumption v| has been three in every

Twenty Persons.

Epidemics of Cholera, Yellow Fever and other diseases of similar character, so terrible in their results, occasion wide spread alarm and receive the most careful consideration for their prevention and cure, while consumption receives scarcely a thought, vet the number of their victims sinks into insignificance when compared with those of consumption. Comparatively few people know what to do for their loved ones when they see them gradually lose strength, lose color, manifest feeble vitality and emaciation, or develop a cough, with difficult breathing, or hemorrhage. Cod liver oil was for along time given in all such esses, but the poor success attending its use coupled with its nauseating taste has led many practitioners, as well ss the public at large, to place their main reliance In Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It deserves early sttention and will prove effectual not iu every case but in a large percentage of cases, and we believe that rally aB per can, iftaken

in the early stages of the disease, tie cured with the Discovery." Dr. Fierce does not ask people to believe until they have investigated for themselves. A pamphlet has been published having tbe names, addresses and photographs of alaige number of those cared of consumption, bronchitis, lingering coughs, asthma, chronic nasal catarrh ana maladies which will be mailed fix* to those sending Cor it with their nsmeaad address upon a postal card, or yon can have a medical treatise, in book form of 6o mailed to yon, on receipt of address cents te stamps. Yon can then write those cared and learn their experience*

Address for Book, Wouo'i Dunmunr MKDICAL ASSOCIATION,

Bufftlo, N. T.

Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It speedily relieves irregularity, suppressed or painful menstruations, weakness of the stomach, indigestion, bloating, leucorrhoea, womb trouble, flooding, nervous proa* tration, headache, general debility, etc. Symptoms of Womb Troubles are dizziness, faintness, extreme lassitude, "don't care" and "want-to-be-left-alone" feelings, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy, or the blues," and backache. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will correct all this trouble as sure as the sun shines, That Bearing-down Feeling, causing pain, weight, and backache, is instantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. It is wonderful for Kidney Complaints in either sex.ij|

Sciatic lllieumatism Cured. L. Wajtuer, Wholesale Druggist, Richmond. Va., says: "I bad a fearful attack of Sciatic Rheumatism, was laid up almost two months was fortunate enough to get MYSTIC CURE FOR RHEUMATISM. This curod 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 3days. Inaction upon the system is remarkably ftnd mysterious. It xeBWYSS- ar Oaefc th£ Cause and the disease Immediately disappears. The first dose greatly benefits. 75 cents. Sold by Jacob Baur. Ccok, Bell & Black and all druggists, Terre Haute.

Note of Warning. V'i

Indigestion produces Inflammation and ulceration of the stomach, and these are the exciting cause of so many deaths from cancer of tne stomach. SOUTH AMERICAN NEK VINE 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 reuowned cure which never disappoints. Sold by all druggists in Terre Haute.

TO THE

Big Conventions

I2ST 1806.

NATIONAL REPUBLICAN CONVENTION St. Louis. June 16. NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION.

Chicago, July 7.

NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIAT'N.

Y. P.-S. iVE. CONVENTION,

D. B. Martin, Gen. Pass. & Tkt. Agt. E, 0. McCormick, Pass, Traffic Mgr. CINCINNATI. O. yilsiitll

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 sendme their express and post office address Respectfully, T. A. Slocum, M. C.,

viii

ft'' 188 Petri 8trMt, York.

Established 1861. Incorporated 1868,

:-r Oliffc William! Co.,

Successors to Cllft. Williams & Co.,

S .0,

MAKCFACTDHSBS Ot

pi

nr iij

M, Doors, Bliods, Eli.

trt Asm DEALERS IS"

Lumber, Lath, fehingles^

Glasb

^wPainte, Oils A

AND BUILDERS' HARDWARE, Mulberry St., Cor. Ninth. J. H. Williams, President.

J. M. Clift, Sec'y and Treas.

SALESMEN WANTED

Pushing, trustworthy men to represent us 1 a thesaleofourChoice Nursery Stock. Specialties controlled by us. Highest Salary or Commission mid weekly. Steady employment tbe year round. Outfit free excltu ive territory experience not necessary big pay assured workers special inducements to beginners. Write at once for particulars to

ALLEN NURSERY CO.

ROCHESTER. N. Y.

DIRECTIONS. Apply a particle of the Balm directly into the nostrils. Draw stronc breaths through the nose. (Jse three times a day, after meals ferred, and retiring.

CREAM BALfl

CATARRH

ELY'S

VA

Opens and cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain andlnthe""sores!3*Protect*COLD")HEAD the Membrane from Colds. Bestores the Smell. The Balm Is gives relief at once. or by mall. 9$ Warren New York.

Senses of Tsste and autcklr absorbed and Price 90 cents at Drug-

7

RAILIiOAD Til TABLE

Trains marked thus run d«ily.

VANDALIA LINE.' MAI'S LIKE.

Arrive from the East. West. Ex*. 1.30 am 15 Mall & Ac* 10.00 am 5 St. L. Lim* 10.00 am 21 St.L. Ex*.. 2.38pm 3 Mail & Ac. tl.30 11 Fast Mail*. 9:00 pin Arrive from the West. ISCI11. Ex*... 1.00am 6N. Y. Ex*.. 3.30 a in 14 Eff. Ac S.30 a 111 530 Atl'c Ex*..12.32 8 Fast Line*. 2.05 2 X. Y. Lim*. 5.05

Leave for the West. 7 West. Ex*. 1.40 a nit 15 Mall & AcMO.15 a 5 St. L. Lim*. 19.05 a mf £1 St. L. Ex*.. 2.33 13 Eff. Ac 4.05 rati 11 Fast Mail*. 9.04 m.

Leave for the East. 12Cin. Ex*... l.tOamr 6 N. Y. Ex*.. 3.25 a mi 4 Mall & Ac. 7.30 a nit 20 AtIV Ex*. .12,37 m. 8 Fast Line* 2.10 m-1 2 N. Y. Lim* 5.10

MICHIGAN DIVISION.

Leave for the North. Ar. from the North 52 St Joe Mall.6.30 a 54 S. Bend Ex.4.00 pm 1

ill

51 T. H. Ex...11.10a 53 T. H. Mail. 7.00 mp

PEORIA DIVISION.

Leave for Northwest. Ar. from Northwest. 75 Peoria Mail 7.05 am 77 Decatur Ac H.55

78 Decat'r Ac.l 1.00 am 78 Peoria Mall 7.00

EVANSVILLE & TERRE HAUTE. NASHVILLE LINE. •Leave for the South. 5 & N Lim*. 11.40 30 & EvEx*. 5.38 a ni 7 Ev Ac 10.10 am 1 Ev & I Mail* 3.15

Arrive from South. 6 & N Lim* 4.45 a miSTHE&x* .11.00 a m? 80 Mixed Ac.. 4.45 ras, 4 C& I nd Ex*l.l.l0

EVANSVILLE & INDIANAPOLIS. Leave for South. Arrive from South. 33 Mall & Ex..9.00 am 49 Worth. Mix.3.30

4# T11 Ixed. 10.15 am 32 Mail & Ex. 3.15

CHICAGO & EASTERN ILLINOIS. Leave for North. Arrive fronj North. 6 & N Lim* 4.50 a 3 & E Ex*.. ,5.:» a mf 2 & Ex.ll.20 am 8 Local Pass 3.00 4 E & Ex*.11.35

9 Local Pass .9.25 a 1 & Ev Ex.. .3.00 miv 5C & N Lim*.11.35pml

I -BIG FOUR.

)ing Eaat.

Ex*....i.3iatt\ MW

38 N Ex* 4T & Ex.8.00 am 8 Ex & Mall*.3.06 ui 18 Knlckb'r* .4.31

1

Washington, July 3.

1

tf B. Y. P. U. OF AMERICA. Milwaukee. July IB. NATIONAL ENCAMPMENT G. A. R.,

St. Paul. Sept. 1 to 4.

Elegant through 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 the G. A. R.

E. E. South, Q. A., Terre Haute.

To individuals on the First Tueaday, sad to parties of seven or more on the Third Tuesday of each month, to nearly all oints in the8outh and on special dates xcursion Tickets are sold at a little more than One Fare for the round trip.

For full Information write to

J. K, RIBGELY, H. W. Past. Agent, CHlcagO, DL C. P. ATMORE, Gei'l Pass. Alt., LoulsTllle, liK

SENT FREE.

Write for County Map of the South to" either of the above named or to P. SmJoNBs, of Immigration,

•v

Ooliitf Weak

1.99 a in

9 Ex & Mail*10.08 am 11 H-W Lim*.. 1.33 m5 at to on A 7 0 5

JOTHc.

tlj€

SOUTH1

ON* WAV TIOKITH AN* MM

At Ii Cents a Mile

my map ui inc aonio nr bove named gentlemen, cs.Pass. Agent, in charge

Birmingham, Ala.

OF BOX

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has been tbe ntdridarS for tortr rears and Is more popular u-5ajr than ever before.

pozzorvi'g

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FARHERS*^ BOILERS.

GALVANIZED STEEL TANK5

Buy direct from us and SAVE MONEY., Write for samples and prices. We ship subject to Inspection.

Star Manufacturing Co.,

MJLDDLEBirilV, IXIK

Store'/

Artists* Supplies, Flower Material. Picture Framing a Specialty. MB WABASH AVE. North Side.

Terre Haute, lad,