Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 28, Number 3, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 July 1897 — Page 4
THE MAIL.
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
A. C. DUDDLESTON. Eollor ».d Proprle.or.
Publication Office, So. 501*4 Ohio Street. Telephone 469. The Mail is sold in the city by newsboys and all newsdealers, or will be delivered to any address, by mail, at the rate of iS a year, $1 for six months, or 50 cents for three months. ntered at the Postofflce at Terre Haute, Ind., as second-class matter.
"J
.N I.Y IT.
THE MAIL'S
UDfaty Contest.
Name of School.
Name of Teacher.
Name of I'upll.
Kacli Coupon will count as ONE vot.f. Tin- contest closes Saturday, i-epU'tulwr 4th, 18517.
THE MAIL'S LIBRARY CONTEST. The interest manifested in the contest for the libraries offered by The Mail to three of tin* public schools of the city continues unabated. The absence, however, from the city during the entire summer of tiie majority of the teachess and many of the pupils who are interested in the contest, has necessarily caused The Mail to announce a postponement of the close of the contest. It was originally fixed for September 4th, but the date has been changed to November 1st, to cover the time lost during the vacation.
The details of the plan are familiar to the readers of The Mail, and are as follows:
Tiie Mail will print each week at the head of its editorial columns a coupon, which is to be voted at The Mail office for the most popular city school, the most popular member of the city school force, and the boy or girl furnishing the most coupons to The Mail in the coutest. At the close of the coutest, on the 1st day of November, to the public school in Terre Haute receiving the highest number of votes The Mail will give a Library of Hooks, to be selected as the successful school may decide, to cost #100. To the public school in Terre Haute receiving the second highest number of votes The Mail will give a Library costing #50. To the public school in Terre Haute receiving the third highest number of votes The Mail will give a Library costing #25.
In addition to these substantial prizes for the schools. The Mail also offers the following inducements to every person interested in the award of these Libraries:
To the teacher receiving the highest numlicr of votes in the City Library Contest, The Mail will give a Webster's International Directory, the latest revised edition, with a Complete Reference Index.
To the boy who is credited with the highest number of coupons in the Library Contest, The Mail will give a $10 Gold Piece.
To the girl credited with the highest numlHM'of coupons in the Library Contest, Tin' Mail will give a #10 Gold Piece.
A 'uirAiio minister says it is wicked, even if legal, to possess #t00,(x)0.000. That is a line of sin which certainly is alluring, and there is no'commandment against it.
Pi iuiAPS the Turkish language, like the Chinese, is written backward or upside down, for whenever the Turk says "peace" it is supposed to 1m a scheme to cover up war. and when he talks fight it is called a bluff.
CON si I. PAKKKR, to oblige an English museum, has sent home for a specimen of an American rabbit's foot. To preserve the reputation of this charm the sample should not be taken from the large and useless collection of rabbits' feet accumulated last year by William .T. Bryan.
IT is reported that lakes of oil and mountains of coal hare been disoorered in Alaska. This forbidding and deeolate country, which was reviled when Seward effected its purchase from Bawls, bids
AN exporter Mexican cattle is quoted allow under the grind of fierce competias saying that the new tariff will have a tion a fair enumeration to the digger of prohibitory effect on shipping cattle as far coal- A full day's work for a fair part of as Mexico is concerned. From that coun-1 the year by each miner would produce try ,vw,i*w head of cattle are said to have more coal than could be consumed and bw»n shipped in the last two years. The I Y& new fields are being opened to comyears stock raisers of the west who have been nipped by the hard times and the stock yards are not likely to complain of anything which will enable them to get better prices for their cattle
IN Egypt, as in other poor countries, the are employed, which does not support the money lenders, which are Syrians. Greeks assertion that there is too much coal, and and Hebrews, are most oppressive, and have exacted thirty to forty percent, in-! terest lord Cromer, who now direct* the Kgyptian finances, in behalf of theI British government, has inaugurated a
plan of making advances to the native one-third of the world's coal, and the agriculturist# on crop security, charging United States mines another third. The only six per cent, interest. If the British, after protecting the people from the exactions of the khedire now save them from the money lenders, they will not have gone down into Kgypt io
fair to be one of America's richest treasure houses and an everlasting honor to the great statesman who secured it. After all, the fame and glory which statesmen are supposed to covet usually come after the men are dead, but endure, while the
che*P'
"T"" •Pe1™" Politician,
sacrifice their consistency and honor to win, dies away or is transferred to some other temporary favorite.
THE English editors are amazed and offended by the style of John Sherman's diplomatic papers. The trouble with Sec retary Sherman appears to be that he says what he thinks so plainly that even a Briton may read as he runs. He desired to let Lord Salisbury know that his policy in regard to the seals was unsatisfactory, and that his plan for distorting evidence was very apparent to Americans. The excitement of the British editors shows that Mr. Sherman stated his case very clearly. On the other hand it may be said that discourse among diplomats should be smooth and silky, as among lawyers in court, or senators in the senate, who call each other names only in Pickwickian terms and then walk off arm-in-arm. Secretary Sherman may not be able to reform diplomacy or to introduce the habit of calling a useful implement a spade, but it will come to be known by the study of the papers of sucfi secretaries as Blaine, Olney and Sherman that American state papers are designed to reveal and not to conceal.
IT was a sad accident at Winona Park which cost the lives of two lovely girls, Miss Yarnelle, of Fort Wayne, aged 17, and Miss Georgia Coulter, the fourteen year old daughter of Prof. John A. Coulter who were drowned in Eagle Lake, while out sailing. It was also a sad waste of life, but such* as we are continually meeting with. Precious lives are staked against trifles and lost. Risks are taken for gains of little moment and lives are lost. An outing in a frail boat, a bath in unknown depths, trifling with a piece of fireworks, a dash with a bicycle in front of an electric car or vehicle, and somebody is killed or maimed. All that a man hath will he give for his life, says the good book but, in this careless, volatile, happy-go-lucky era and country, lives are given nearly every day for trifles. The loss is none the less bitter, but it will be sheer waste of irreparable treasures if these losses do not suggest safeguards, caution and vigilance and lead to greater care of the thoughtless and careless who will not think or care for themselves.
THE engineers and machinists of Great Britain have entered upon a great strike to enforce a demand for an eight-hour day. The same orders led a strike in 1870 for a nine-hour day, which they won, though labor was not so well organized as it is now. Great Britain is enjoying exceptional industrial prosperity, and every engine in the country is said to be running. Wages are at their highest point and production was never so large, but competition is very keen and profits were never smaller—all this notwithstanding the working day was reduced by one ninth. It is encouraging to note Great Britain's present prosperity, because not many years ago its industries were much depressed and it has had many industrial crises that were so severe that restoration seemed hopeless and labor doomed to eternal beggary, but the wheel rolled around and prosperity came on top, just as it has and will again in America. In the meantime the busy times and crowding of orders encourage the engineers and machinists to believe their demand must be granted.
THE great strike of the coal miners has grown in extent and is accompanied by unusual features. Never before was there so little of threatening or anger displayed by the contending parties, which appears to be an acknowledgement by both sides that there are wrongs to be settled. It is however early in the struggle and the the strain is yet to come. When supplies of coal fail and the dealers and manufacturers are pinched, when idle miners see working miners loading trains to run by their doors, then passion will rise and trouble may be precipitated. As long as good temper prevails we cannot guess when the strike will end, when strife begins we cannot tell when peace will come, but good temper and arbitration ought soon to end the trouble. There cannot be arbitration as long as any considerable field of coal is worked and the peace cannot long be preserved if any remains out. This seems to be a case when "the tail should go with the hide," for a partial, indeterminate strike will be the ruin of many men, and win but a short lived settlement. A fair test of arbitration, a fair agreement and honest observance, in this case, will be worth more to labor than all the Utopian theories offered the poor man.
Co At. appears to be too abundant, mines too plentiful, and miners too numerous to
pete with or shut out others but the business is immense already. In IS84 the United States produced 170,741.536 tons of coal, valued at #186,141,564. At 00 cents a ton this would have paid a higher average than is now paid, to many more men than
too many miners, to be fairly paid. We have in this country 1° states 194.000 square miles of coal lands, which exceeds the whole area of the British kingdom, and yet England mines nearly
fact that we barely exceed the production of a smaller country does not show that we have reached our limit or cannot afford to pay an assured, tegular annual living to each toller in the mines. It can be and ought to be done.
Andrew Howe, the north Sixth street batcher, with his sons, Mi and Roecoe, is to sail to-day from New York for England, his old home.
4 TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENIXG MAIL, JULY 17, 1897.
POETRY AND PROSE.
POKTHT.
Love one morning came a-rapping, Rapping on her heart. "Please," said he, "do come and Tnatro me
Of yon« life a part!"
Love ono r-.orning came a-rapping. Raising «nch a din. Gold, he trenibled in the doorway,
And she let him in.
PROBE.
Love one morning came a-rapping, Rapping as he swore. "Wife," sa'd he, "do come and open
This con.'ounded door!"
Love one morning came a-rapping, licisinx such a din. Cold, he fumbled for the keyhole,
And she let him in.
—Baltimore News.
COLLABORATION.
"I don't want him atoll," said Mrs. St. Julian. "Then why not tell him so?" returned her buBband from behind the outspread Times "Surely you needn't stand upon ceremony with Ted." "But I must get some one to talk to biin, Tom. I can't have him on my own hands all day. Let me see. Maud Affleck's at home. I think I'll ask her over. She knows nearly as much about the Mongols as he does. I will write to her at once. She must come on Monday afternoon Ted proposes to arrive by the 7:15."
The house party assembled for the Cum berleigh cricket week, consisting of the famous Cambridge double blue, Norman Harding and his eleven the maidens invit ed to admire the prowess of these heroes Miss Affleck and the St. Julians themselves, was gathered together in the long li brary when Professor Alleyne entered it at 8 o'clock on Monday evening. His entry, very quietly made, was followed by a gen eral sensation of disappointment. The youthful company, hungrily awaiting his appearance to adjourn to its dinner, had expected to find in him a more typical specimen of the professional genus. It had looked for along haired scholar of 50, who should have stooped and worn spectacles and an ill fitting ooat. Now Al leyne, who appeared to be about five and thirty and was by no means ill looking, had a singularly upright figure. His olofhes were perfectly well cut. He used no glasses and actually boasted a mustache. Maud Affleck, who had been promising herself deep drafts at the fountains of his erudition, reflected sadly that his profound knowledge of all things Mongo linn had probably been much exaggerated by report.
Miss Affleck, wise in her generation, let the Mongols severely alone—and not for that evening only. Sho refrained from mentioning them for two whole days, during which she made herself so unobtrusively agreeable that tho professor began to forget she had ever studied at Girton and to wonder how his cousin Laura could have described her hair as "odd." But on tho third morning she commenced the subject in a fashion that showed she meant business. No soonor had tho great Harding and his team, attended by Mrs. St. Julian and her bevy of girls, started for the cricket ground after breakfast than she descended upon the profossor, who was peacefully smoking under the great oedar on the lawn, with her arms full of papers and her fine eyes alight with eagerness. "Mr. Alleyne—you are so kind—I'm sure you won't refuse to help me."
This appeal was uttered with a tremulous confidence whioh some men would hnve found extremely engaging. Not so the professor. He knew too well all that such an appeal portended. Reluctantly he made room for the newcomer on the bench beside him and looked ruefully at his pipe. "I wanted to ask you—oh, please, go on smoking 1 I like It. Your cousin tells me you are writing a great book on the peoples of northern Asia."
Tho profossor could have groaned aloud. Perfidious Laura! What! Even this last secret delivered into the hands of the enemy. Perhapp he thought, this very pushing young wuuan would presently demand to see his unfinished manuscripts. "Because," tho pushing young woman continued, "I am writing something on that subject too. Oil, rot a great book of course—quite a small one. "And I thought perhaps you would kindly help mo with tho spelling of the proper names. You see, 1 know nothing of tho dialects."
There was nothing for it but to aocede to this exceedingly cool proposal. Alleyne took the sheets and began to run his eyes over them, indicating an error here and there. Suddenly at the bottom of a pa go ho stopped short. "That is a novel idea." "Which? Where?" "Here, on page 91. You suggest that the Ostyaks"-—
The approach of a servant with a note for Miss Affleck caused the professor's sentence to remain unfinished. Maud, when she had glanccd over the scrap of paper addressed her, heaved an impatient sigh. "Laura wants me to join her. I suppose I must go. There is nothing I hate quite so much as a cricket match. May I leave these with you or shali 1"— "Pray leave tbem—by all means." The professor's tone bad grown quite cordial.
It seemed this girl did know something of the Mongolian problem after all and had opinions of her own on certain vexed points connected with it. He turned the page with some curiosity. "Very good. Very good Indeed. Remarkably well worked out." The professor read on, ignoring the misspelled proper names, and was covered with confusion when the owner of the manuscript returned to claim it. "I'm afraid," be stammered, "that there are still some corrections to make. The truth is, I grew interested in the subject matter. Perhaps you will leave the sheets with me a Uttio longer."
Maud accepted this kind offer with alacrity and went to get ready far luncheon. The professor remained behind and took out his notebook. That bint about the Ostyaks wandering bad set him think* log, and he felt that his thoughts were worth setting down.
Suddenly the pencil fell from bis band. Good heavens! What was he about? This train of ideas was absolutely new. Bntfor Miss Affleck's manuscript it would never have risen in bis mind. The pro feasor was a man of honor. A oold sweat of dismay broke oat upon bis forehead as be realiml the nature of the crime be bad bees near committing. Re to pick a girl's brains! He shuddered at himself.
He shuddered. Yet be was sore]? tempted to look again at that half read chapter. For, if the theory Pot forward in it would bold water—well, the best half of his second volume was Just so mash waste paper. poshed the temptation from him to the tppnalts end of the bench. Then he fell to writing busily on certain slips of papsr.
Tbess slips—together with ha
script in a nmi ,aroel—he took occasion to present to Miss Affleck the same afternoon at tcatime. "What ip the meaning of these hieroglyphics?" she inquired. (The professor wrote an execrable hand.) He explained, reddening slightly, that they were "rules for transliteration which he thought she might find helpful." "They will enable me to correct my spelling—myself, I see. I suppose you did cot read any further, Mr. Alleyne?" "I left off," returned the professor, getting redder than before, "in the middle of the chapter on the Ostyaka. Will you take toast or tea cake?"
Maud was bitterly chagrined. She made no secret of her mortification to Mrs. St. Julian, and that impulsive young woman, moved with indignation, seized the first opportunity of finding herself alone with her cousin to remark: "Ted, how could you be so horrid to that poor girl about her book?" "I suppose you are speaking of Miss Affleck. I gave her all the assistance she asked." "Yes, and refused to discuss the subject any further. Let her performance be ever so contemptible"— "I did not say it was contemptible." "You might have condescended to speak of it, one would tblnk! What has Maud done that you should snub ber so unmercifully? If she were a rival authority on —what do jou call them—Mongols, you could hardly have treated her worse."
The professor was silont. "Tod! Do you consider her a rival authority?" "An'authority!' My dear Laura! It's Impossible for any young woman of Miss Affleck's age to have more th.* the most superficial acquaintance with sflfc a large subject. But a novice occasionally stumbles by chance on a solution of some difficulty that has been a puzzle to experts." "And that is what Maud has done. I understand. Forgive me for laughing, but really this is too funny!" "I do not see—to use your friend Mr. Harding's favorite expression—where the fun comes in exactly, Laura. The labor of two years rendered vain by a girl's random guess, which it probab.'y took her a couple of mornings to elaborate!" mut tered the poor professor, oa sting dignity to the winds in his irritation.
Mrs. St. Julian heroically stilled her amusement. "There is only one thing for it that I can think of. You two must marry, and —fuse your warring books into one." "Laura!" "Why not? She is pretty and well bred. Eventually she will come into a good deal of money." "If this is intended for a joke, Laura," the professor interposed severely, "excuse me for saying that it is an extremely bad one." "I never was more serious In my life," his cousin protested. "It would be an admirable arrangement. Do think about it."
But this the professor indignantly declined to do. It was well for his pride that he showed himself thus obdurate from the beginning, for Miss Affleck's demeanor for the next few days made it plain that his thinking—supposing he had weakly consented to take Laura's unscrupulous plan Into consideration—would have been to no purpose. The ex-student of Girton, having bad quite enough of learned society for the present, proceeded to unbend her mind in the company of Mr. Norman Harding, who had by this time awakened to the oharms of ber hair.
The professor often glanced at her across the table—Mrs. St. Julian no longer sent them In to dinner together—wondering how any woman with a mind could endure the irresponsible prattle of that brainless giant. Miss Affleck endured It with oheerful stoicism. She exposed herself voluntarily to the Infliction, accompanying the big man on rambles in search of wild flowers and suffering him to give her billiard lessons on rainy mornings.
By the end of the week Alleyne had serious thoughts of going back to Oxford. He made up his mind to this step on Monday morning (Mr. Hardinghaving shown himself peculiarly inane and Miss Affleck more than ordinarily tolerant of his inanity on the preoeding Sunday), as be smoked his after breakfast pipe in the shrubbery. And he had no sooner done so than a sudden winding of the shrubbery path brought him plump upon Miss Affleck seated upon a rustio bench. She had a writing board on her knee and a pencil in her hand.
The book?" inquired the professor, with a sickly smllo. Sho noducd. "My poor little book, whioh you wouldn't even deign to criticise!"
Her garden hat was very becoming and her blue cambric dress gave the utmost "value" to her auburn locks. "I didn't—feel confident," stammered the professor. "Was that why you wouldn't read it?" "No."
Miss Affleck's expressive face was one large note of interrogation. "You wish to know why? Well, it was beoause I found you too full of suggestion. You put me upon new trains of thought* It wouldn't have been fair to you—to go on reading." "But—but I should have been so glad to be of any use to you!" she cried.
The professor stiffened. You are very good." "I wish, "she murmured, "I knew what I bad done to offend you."
The professor looked at ber bard for perhaps half a minute. Then he, too, took a seat on the bench. "You have not offended me at all," be said. "How beautiful!" Maud Affieok sighed ten minutes later. "What is beautiful? The day? Or your hair? Or the dispensations of Providence? They are all beautiful in different ways." "Nonsense! I was thinking that—that you would let me help you with the book now."
The professor started guiltily. To do him Justice, be bad quite forgotten the book. "We will collaborate we will write it together," he mfirmured. Then be kissed ber and rose to new heights of magnanimity. "And publish it in our joint names —Edward and Maud Alleyne."
Maud blushed. "Ob, ne! It must remain your book. Perhaps you might pat a note in the preface, saying you had been assisted in your researches"— "By my wife. That sounds charming. Bat"—be kissed her again and was pricked in conscience—"would that be giving you your doe share of credit? You see, in that matter of the Ootyaks"— '1 shoo Id Uke It bent so," she declared. 'Of coarse it mast be as you please," said the prole—ot.—Sc. Louis Times-Dem-ocrat.
first Stranger—I aay, that's any umhrsUa you have! Second Stranger—I don't doubt It, sir I don't doubt It I bought itat a pawa-kroksr's.—LomkKi.TU-Blts.
Wash Goods.
The weather will be hot again soon. Take advantage of the present breathing spell and have a nice cool dress made. We offer now thin goods of high quality at low pi ices.
Printed Scotch Lawns 10 yds for 25c. Handsome styles in Printed Organdies, 6Hc a yard: just half value.
Printed Lawns: 36 inches wide: choice patterns 6V4C a yard. Polka dot effects in Organdies, down from 20c to 10c a yard.
We have just received 5 pieces Homespun Linen buiting. We should have had it some time ago. To move it quickly the price ii 12Hc a yard.
For Wheelmen
We offer our entire line of BicycleSweaters and Hosiery at very low prices. See them in our window.
All Wool Sweaters $1.00, $1.39, $1.50 and $2.00. All Wool Bicycle Hose 48c a pair.
Boys' Sweaters 69c and 79c each.
Salted Ore.
It is not generally known that it is possible to salt ore with gold just as it is possible for an unscrupulous man to salt tbe mine in which gold is found. In the one case the fraud is comparatively easy to detect, while in the other it would defy even an expert, and therefore shareho'ders, induced by the overflattering 1 'ports of a perfectly hones assayer, could be readily taken in. Tbe gentleman who demonstrated this possibility is a Mr. C. Johnson of Adelaide, Australia, who, making experiments with different salts of gold, found that he could produce quite natural looking specimens of gold bearing quartz from stones whose previous assay showed that they contained no particle of gold. Furthermore, the gold penetrates the stone in the most natural manner possible. Indeed, pieces of this artificially produced gold quartz were exhibited some little time ago at the Imperial institute in Edinburgh.—Pearsou's Weekly. jFrcneb as She Is Spoke.
The Emerald Isle is not the only habitat of bulls, and the connection between the Gallic and Celtic races must be olose indeed, if tbe following gems, given upon no less an anthority than that of tbe Journal dea Tribunaux as emanations of the judicial mind ii France are to be considered genuine: "Justice is not a clandestine cavern where people are strangled behind their backs." "I esteem my honorable colleague too highly to admit for a moment that he can believe in the truth of what he alleges. "That bouse of business was but a forest of bandits." "The defuuettook his place at the table, meanwhile manifesting a keen displeasure at not having been invited."
You are to blurne for building sumptuous palaces that throw dust into people's eyes."—New York Commercial.
Neither a Pauper Nor a Papa.
The Ottawa Herald notes that occasionally a little fun comes into the life of a township assessor. At one house Assessor Wharton found a young bride who persisted in the declaration that her husband had no occupation. "You don't want me to set him down as a pauper, do you?" facetiously inquired Mr. Wharton. "Law, no!" responded the young wife, blushing furious. "We ain't been married but six months."—Kansas City Journal.
A IWr Oflfler.
"I can save you $5,000, Mr. Moneybags." "How so?" "Well, then, say you will give your daughter $50,000 as a marriage portion." "Well?" "Well, I'll take ber for $46,000."— Harper's Bazar.
Pure, rich blood feeds tbe nerves, is why Hood's Sarsaparilla, the blood purifier, cures nervousness.
L. B. ROOT & CO.
Clearing the Decks
We are clearing the decks for action. Our immense purchases for the fall season will be pouring in upon us soon and we must make room for them. Interesting items at profit sacrificing prices will be found in every department.
Musiin Underwear.
That great
$100.
JJr. E. Detchon's Antl Diuretic May be wgrth to you more than $100 if you have a child who soils bedding from incontinence of water during sleep. Cures Old and young alike. It arrests the trou bleat once. tl. Sold by all druggists in Terre Haute. Ind.
To Car* Constipation Fore»«r. Take Caacarels Candy Cathartic. 10c orSSe. If C. C. C. fall to core. dngxMi refund money.
News at Austin & Co.'s. Lawn Swing's. tft.00. Good Lawn Mowers, 12.50. Good Woven Hammocks, 50c. Good Screen Doors, cheap.
Changed Her Mind.
"I used to use another baking powder for along time. Mid thought nothing else could be as good, but I have changed my mind since trying Cleveland's, because I find Cleveland's baking powder acta more thoroughly and uniformly, requires leas and is more economical therefore I am recommending it to all my friends."— Mn. W.
jaM- .wis-* -'St
The kind that is made right, liberal in cut, perfect fitting and nicely trimmed. No other goods find place with* us. Satisfaction must go with every garment we sell.
Cambric Corset Covers, trimmed with embroidery, 21c e.*ck. Cambric Corset Covers with square and shaped neck, embroidery trimmed, 25c each.
Corset Covers in fine cambric, beautifully made and trimmed, 8ic each. Women's Night Robes in the newest styles rare values at 50c, 69c, 79c. 8S*c and 98c each.
Woman's Cambric Skirts, full width with wide embroidered flounces at $1.00, $1.19. $1.25 and $1.39 each.
A lot of Children's White Lawn Dresses, beautifully made and trimmed to close oyt at halt price.
Parasols.
All our Parasols must go. All our large assortment of this season's sun protectors comprising all the latest swell stylos are offered now at greatly reduced prices. You make your selection and take 25 per cent, or off the regular marked prices in plain figures.
FREE STONE PEACHES AND FRESH JERSEY CREAM California Fruits of all Kinds,
Canteloupes, Gem Melons, Egg Plant,
Cauliflower, Water Melons, Tomatoes. GO TO
KAUFMAN
Next Week and get your Blackberries to put up. Cheaper than ever before known.
Seventh and Main.
Two ArmlM-The Regular and the Irregular! To which would you prefer to belorajf? The regular, undoubtedly. The Irregulars »re, admltedly. tho most numerous, but thoy are in a very undesirable state of no-dlsclpllno. Hostetter's Stomach Hitters will soon remedy this want In it disordered diver or bowels. Biliousness manifests Itself in yellowness of the skin and eyeballs, sour breath, furred tongue, morning nausea, discomfort in tho vicinity of the liver, vertigo and sick headache. Hosts of poople suffer thus. These signs of InsulHirdiniitlon tothegovernancojof health, together with an irregular condition of the bowels, are soon regulated by tho Hitters. which also overcomes malaria, dyspepsia. rheumatism, neuralgia, nervousness and kidney trouble. As a means of checking premature decay, hastening convalescence, and mitigating the inllrmaties of age, the great tonic Is without a parallel.
For Your Sunday Dinner.
Spring Lamb, Steer Beef, Sweet Breads, Pig Pork, Tenderloins, Spare Kibs,
Beef Tenderloins.
C. H. EHRMANN, Fourth and Ohio Clean Meat Market. Telephone 220.
Quite Right That Wright's
Is the place to go for the best of everything.
E. R.Wright & Co.
ftR0CER3
Have everything good to eat.
New Corn, Watermelons, Spring Chickens, Cherries, Gooseberries, Blackberries, Pineapples, Currants.
647 Main Street.
IE. 5c T. H. IR,.
BOUND TRIP TICKETS TO
Nashville,
$7. $915 and $12.45.
Good for SO days, days and until Nov. 7tb.
Tbe Tennessee Centennial ts second to the World's Fair only and boo Id not be missed. For further information call on
J. B. CONNELLY. Gen. Apt.. Tenth and Wabash,
B. D. DUMBS* Tkt. Agt., Union Station.
