Terre Haute Daily News, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 20 January 1890 — Page 3
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512,514 AND 516 CHERRY STREET. IWM.
A. HUNTER, £x
Fine Cabs and Carriages!
EVERYTHING IN 8TYLEI
'TELEPHONE MS."
1,1 VERY 8TABLK.
LIVERY STABLE.
Large and Commodious Quarters,
1358 Main Street.
Horses will be boarded for $10 per month will be doliT€rt»1 to any |*rt of the city promptly when want
COAX. AND WOOD.
Reduction on Coal
-AT-
S I S 945 MAIN STREET.
Best Block. Block Nut....... Washington Lump.. Shelburn...... ./.. *. Washington Nut.... Hard Ooal Blacksmith Ooal. Stove Wood ......
,$2.30 per ton 2.20
,s ,4
2.20 2.20 1.86 7.50 0 00 3.75 per cord
Telephone 187.
CH.YNDKI.TKHS.
CHANDELIERS!
NEW ARRIVALS.
The finest Lin® ever before brought to the Olty.
...... —AT
D.Vli. U//^T50|\l'g.
TNSUltANCK
A Card!
Terrs11avttr,IK n., Oct. 2$th 1889.—-At et the uDiMnied, return wtf thanks to F. Ifavens for his aaiisfactory fettlenituit of our losses by flrfr, ami we cordially rccommend thows» waiting fire insurance Mid prompt and fair tmtmeat when tln*v mwt with kwses, to insure with Mr, I lawns.
John L. Rgnronn. Ktw aki) I'. Cha$» P. FI.AII). Mtss Mmnu Harm*.
JOB PRtXTKlt,
HQ TROUBLE 10 «tTO tSTHMTES.
23 SOUTH FIFTH ST,
DAILY NEWS BOlUMNG
1)YS WOltKH.
EXCELSIOR
Steam
affairs of the railways.
DECIItCO FA1LI3TO Off rSElfiBT SBlPBEm
The E.*f. H. Bteiart* a DlfidMiiM«rk«y Tbfnke tlie LEA St. L. Will Puy DifMepAt.
There has been a noticeable falling off of the freight traffic on all of the Terre Haute lines. The Big Four holds oat better tliac any of tbe others, and is moving a trememloua btusineeu, both east and west-bound. This is due to the fact that tbe main line baa so many feeder* that it is able to hold out even when business is dull on the smaller lines. The west-bound traffic which is turned over the Big Four alone would make business lively and local traffic is fairly good. The coal traffic on the Vanoalia ia helping matters out considerably and without it bovine® would be very dull. The C. & E. I. did a smaller business last week than in tbe corresponding week of last year. The E. & T. H. and E. & I. are both doing a very fair business, but this is due to the fact that much of the freight they are now handling ia that which could not be delivered on account of waahoute along the line and as soon as the delayed freight is rushed to its destination there will be a decided fallingoff. Local traffic remains fair with a tendency to decrease. The T. H. A P. is doing abetter business in tbe second two weeks in January than for the corresponding period of last year. Tbe mildness of the weather has bad a depressing effect on tbe Logan division of tbe Vandalia. Had Luke Maxinkuckee froten over the ice shipments for points South and East would have brought business up to the standard. The opening of tbe extension to St. Joseph will probably cause an increase, but owing to the effect of the weather upon the manufacturing industries of South Bend and St. Joseph the increase will doubtless not come up to the expectations before spring.
B«Uwajr Rnmbllnca.
Dave Heilman, express messenger on tbe EAT. H., has resigned. ft. A. Campbell, general agent of the C. & E. X, and Mackey lines h&j gone to Florida for his health.
The Evansville & Terre Haute has declared a quarterly dividend of l.i per cent, payable on January 21st.
J. E Johnson, agent for tfce Vanddia at the transitr station, Indianapolis, his resigned to go into commercial LUiiness.
The proposed change in grain rates by the Trans-Missouri Association will »eriously affect Chicago and divert a large portion of its traffic to other points.
The Chesapeake & Ohio earned in the second week of January, $120.3111 increase over earnings in the corresponding week last year, $42,168. The Big Four, through its St. Louis division, has beeome a valuable feeder to the C. A 0.
The Cairo Short Line will soon begin the construction of a iine from Eldorado, III., to Marion, Ky., where a connection will be made with the Ohio Valley, thus securing a line seventy-two miles shorter to Nashville than any other line,
The ordinance providing for the issue of $20(1,5000 of refunding bonds to be used in r**tiring the Air Line bonds that fell due July, will be presented to the New Albany council at the meeting of that body held the first Monday night in February. The refunding bondaare to bear 4i per cent, interest and are payable in twenty-five years.
The directory of the Monon is considering the advisability of building a branch line from Bennettsville to Jeffersonville a distance of fourteen miles. Hut little grading will be required and only one bridge need be built. Tbe object of the branch is to secure the cement trade from several points in Clark county which amounts to between 78 and 100 ears per day.
A. D. Thurston, Grand Chief Telegrapher of the Order, of Railway Telegraphers, was to have been here yesterday, and the local order was prepared to give him a grand reception and banquet He was taken with la grippe, Friday, at Indianapolis and from there went home. His absence was a disappointment to the members of the order here. They held their regular meeting yesterday afternoon.
The Sohnectady Locomotive Works have just sent out the last engine on an order for fifteen received from the Illinois Central Railroad. Six were tenwheel passenger engines, with cylinders 10x27 inches, and 58-inch boiler®. The drivers are 64f inches, and the tne weight on the drivers ia W,300 pounds, with a total weight of 123,500 pounds. The other nine engines were of the Mogul pattern and will be used forfreight engine*.
For the six months ending December 31, the JL E. & St. earned a su rplus, after all charge*, ©f $71,567, or 51 per cent, on the preferred stock. This show-, ing is very satisfactory, and assures Mr. Mackey that with the now road intobt. Louis, his load will reach a maximum business which will insure 5 per cent on tlie preferred stock and a healthy surplus tor the eommen. Tim showing, Mr. Mackey thinks, should place the bonds of the read at par.
The News leads. 10c per weok.
ASfltewFrMeatu
Aunt Miranda—"Well, I never. These modern ways be feo much for me. It dew seem there is no liberty in this world after all.n
Mollie-nVhatteitnow, auntie? Aunt Miranda—"I waa just a leading, that five American gtrfe» all as banw—e as pictures, wero preaenwd to the of Sweden. —Kearney Later* prise. *ri»» r*lr Ttkl«*«. nly it seems only fair that the
by it*%:*»•
*86 m*m mrmvt mM'
ti-z.xr+.v.
SILVERS, fripmUri
w. R. WILSON, SaEES?^3.1
AUOHIT««t.
4^^
America should be reptesfente^l of iVir on tbe bosid of
immiflMt of the W'tI -i Fair that is to r. a certain royal woman, whose mune '-miliar to every bright school boy in the ad, we should not now be coutempbtting the eelebrttion of the gTeat *c W' ni of Oolum ork Maul« Exprtas.
great
iMMk—5ew xork
Largest stty circulation.
TO ERR IS HUM/ N.
4a EiplVMtloB ot tfc® Orfjcbi mt Tjpoirapiiial Krr»w»:
OF
Some years ago an editor of a ¥t« weekly paper published by the students of Yale College was astonished, and, even more, scandalised, to learn that an editorial which he had regarded with fond pride referred to old maids who served as padding for a dinner party. Turning the page he scanned another product of his pen, a thrilling romance, and discovered that the haffied villain had fired three ballet* into himself.
The said editor had written in the first article: "—old maids who served pnOOlog (tor fflUMrpartr."
In the second article he had written: fired three bailela into bimseU." It is often asked with virtuous indignation why such typographical errors as these occur. The explanation, aside from the total depravity of inanimate things, can readily be given. In fact, the wonder grows that such mistakes do not far oftener occur.
Immediately before a written article is given to compositors to be "set," the "copy," as the manuscript is termed by printers, is scissored into "takes." or portions of ten or twenty lines. Sometimes slight attention is paid to the paragraphing and the punctuation of the written page when the article ia thus cut up, and, consequently, the last line of a "take" may often end in the middle of a sentence. When such Is the case the "take" is said to "end even."
After a manuscript is cut up the •Hakes" are commonly put on a copy hook, and indicated by a letter of the alphabet, followed by consecutive figures. For instance, the editorial which brought such consternation to the student-editor was cut up into three "takes," indicated as E1, E 2 and E 8. The first "ended even" with the word "as," and the second "began even" with the words "padding for a dinner party." The compositor who took from the hook the first "take" set it according to copy, while the compositor who took the second "take" made the error (a very common one) of mistaking a for u, and so converted "padding" into ••padding." The first compositor finished his "take" quickly, and a proof of it wai immediately read by the proof-reader. The other compositor was slow, and did not finish his "take" until several minutes after compositor No. 1 had finished his. In the meantime, the proof-reader, having been busied with important rfhd pressing statistics, bad forgotten the exact ending of E 1. Seeing that E 2 began with "pudding for a dinner party," and believing that pudding was proper and desirable at a dinner party, be did not detect the compositor's error. This error, in fact, should have been detected by tbe "copy-holder," or person who followed with his eye the wording in the "copy," as the proof-reader read aloud from the" proof but in this case, the "copyholder," duplicating the mistake of the compositor, also mistook a for «.
A similar mistake was made "in the ease of the scheming villain who "fired threfc ballets into himself—with the exception that was mistaken for a. The first "take" "ended even" with the word "three," and the next "began even" with "bullets." The compositor who set the second "take" subsequently observed that he didn't haye time to make sense of the "take," and thought that he had done his duty in following (as ho believed at the time) the "copy."
The same editor who experienced the two harrowing surprises referred to subsequently wrote, in reporting an evening address by Chauncey M. Depew, the sentence: "We do not thus sully our arms." In reading the printed account the next morning he saw to his horror: "We do not thus Sally our arms." The considerate compositor had mistaken the in "sully" for an a and, to make sense, had made the first letter in the word "upper case," or a capital.
Moral: Write your u'sand your a's in tuch wise that type-setters can not mistake them.—K. Y. Ledger.
"A LITTLE NONSENSE."
—First Moth—"Are you there, neighbor?** Second Moth—"Yes how do I look ia this new dress suit?"—Yonkera Statesman. —"Can you forgive me and love me still," &aid the new-made brjde, "when 1 confess that my teeth are—artificial?" "Thank God," cried the groom, as he snatched off his periwig, "how 1 can cool my faeadr—Texas Sittings. —Dresden Professor (traveling in car, where the contents of a bottle in hit neighbor's valise are dropping on him from the rack over his head)—"I beg your pardou* but would you kindly just put the cork into that bottle till 1 can get time to open my umbreUai?"-—Flie-gende Blactter. ft SW'f&i t-•»-Tho following was overheard between a Columbia student and his best girl.—"Oh, Will, what lovely flowers. They look as if they had Just been gathered. Why, there la a little dew upon them." Will (slightly embarrassed)—"Not a cent, I assure you not cent.*—MaU and Express. —Touched a tender chord.—Tramp— "Kind lady. will you give me some^ thing to eat?"* I^adj—"We have some chops left over from breakfast You ca® have i. Tratmp (with a scornful lodfc)—"J-'.xcnse njB^.ythey area little too suggestive of the wood pile. I oooMn't take any comfort eating 'ea." —Kearney Enterprise. —"A yt-n ng fc- ,-vn who wants to succeed in life ahn:?d let cmrds alonei," said the old gcati n?an to his SOtt. "Y«S, at# a Jack pot. opened for. ft**: dollars, and No^had Jack high, what would yoa'dor^,0:«a,*said th« venerable aire. »r hc scratehed hi* ««r, "t would stiU let- alone, rd stand net and list
nr.
V,' Yonngbride-^am X. Don't you ^lnk» tw I George, It be t**A mkm moA eeo--r^^r.iii«imw rbm*« to keep a calf, thee we can have
Real &*tate and Tltte calf* liver for iml&ut everv aorepm* .. -u- I lag?"—Anseytea,
(.Iwk—'Yca. W* have a toillkm doi worth of teal «*tafe wbkh I wjWa to
«Mia, wioghjwMia em* Many at t*» S»Wu
Srotybodr rm&lb* Xmm.
Ujosdy
J*— Merchant Trav-
mm mt
—Mrs. Yer Jd*—"ITow does your breakfast suit a this inomtng, darMr. Yotn hride- 'Just i^j^tl I tell yost, Annie. '/may he plebeian,bat am aw^silly of calfa liver.*' Mrs.
War.
ttd iaflnmtw
are
gneatly altering Uwooce ovia3 character of the Prsace of Waiea Be Is said to led freatly the dissppwmuBce, «ae by of all tlw pmmm. Irl^tdv aatdl ew»of hiaearlv ymm, seme to n»graves nd Ahers into dark wf tlwaaasd yisws i&fflre Ifrrille, He six^nlarly
TERRE HAUTE DAILY NEWS, af6Ml}&Y< JANUARY 20.1SS0.
wnsa
stern and severe on the subject of morality, an illustration of which was afforded by an incident which took place a lew weeks ago. Amanwell known in London, who for^y^ire has been a prominent member of the Prince a coterie,appealed to him when begot into some trivial scrape, and instead of
doubtless vears back, was comforted with the following words: "My dear I am reallv tired of this. Yon must remem ber that I am not the Pope, and I can't grant indulgences,**
Tbe Most DMlnNa Sad.
Most people have many things In which they desire to succeed, innocent in themselves except when they Interfere with a higher aim and worthier purpose. It is this conflict of aims, this gradation of duties, that makes Ufa often seem so complex and so difficult. The questions come continually before every thoughtful mind: "Is this aim which I set before me the highest I can reach? Is it not merely a desirable end, but tbe most desirable? Is it likely to lead to still better and worthier purposes, or is it likely to hide them from view?" As we answer these questions to ourselves intelligently and conscientiously, the rightful limits of each will become clear, and our desire to succeed in each will harmonize with those limits. Thus tbe desire for pleasure will be limited by the desire for health, the care of self by the care for others, the love of money by the love of honor, the effort to please by the effort to do right—N. Y. Ledger.
O, Lord 1
Mine eyes have seen the coming
Russian grip.
For she always taken off her high-crowned hat AVbeu she sits in an orchestra chair. —Boston Courier.
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THE HOUSEHOLD BL'MOR LABOR ATHLETICS fcACIXe ROWIVQ 1BA8E BALL 4iC., AC.
THE
ol the woeful
It la going through the country on
flying trip
It is
a kind of
seizing all the people jnet above the upper lip. And it still goes sneezing on. —Chicago Tribune. "vTo
Better tire.
Speak shade more kindly than the year before Pray a little oftener, love a little nioro: Cling a little closer to the Father's love: Life below shall liter grow to the life above. —Anon.
We I.ove
Iter.
She's n» beautiful
as
an angel,
And
as
amiable as she is fair,
rn
THIS MORNING?
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i-
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trunk that will prove a victorious enemy to ti»
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CnmpCobe,qnam
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