Terre Haute Daily News, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 March 1890 — Page 2
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THE DAILY NEWS
VOL. I.....
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...Ma 195.
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
PabllsteedEyery Afternooa Except Stmday,
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
PUBLICATION OPFIOS
23 SOUTH FIFTH STREET.
X?XEPHOSK CALL JO. "Ce.
AT THS TKKKX BACtX TOST OWCB AS SBCOVD-CIU.M MATTKR.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
^0«t YSA*.„ *5 00 WCCK, «Y Carrier *...,.JOCTS
llJSVAH correspondence »houll be addressed to tho MEW8 PUBLISHING COMPANY. •IjN I. A. HARPER, Managing Editor.
MONDAY, MARCH 24, 1890.
DELEGATES FOR THE PRIMARIES. A dispatch in another part of the paper describes the effort that is being made in Baltimore to compel the Legislature to pass a high license bill. The Senate has already passed one of $600, which was cut down from the original one of $1,000. It has now gone to the House and here the old story is repeated. The lobby sent by the liquor dealers has the matter in hand. It is composed of the ward politicians which there as elsewhere are either saloon keepers or men controlled ly the saloon influence. They are em ploying the usual threats, that if the member* pass the bill they shall never again be elected to office. .Should they fail to coerce the Legislature they will direct their efforts toward the city coun cils to prevent their putting the law in operation. We do not have to go to Maryland for an example of this kind of scheming. We have it right here at home. It is true that our Legislature only permits the miserable license of $250 and that this is left optional with the cities, but through our city council Terre Haute has been deprived even of this pittance for tho past two years. We believe that outside of a limited number of small saloon keeper* the universal sentiment of this city is in favor of high license and yet the will of the people is thwarted by a handful of persons in tli© interest of their own private business, men who are not taxpayers to any considerable amount and who are practically a disadvantage to the city. If the railroads or the manufactures which have made the town what it is, which give employment to thousands of men and enrich the treasury by hundreds of dollars, if they were found to be subsidizing the council or patting in their own men, the poople would rise up in thoir virtuous indignation. Mass meetings would be held to protest against the domination of capital, the iron rule of wealthy monopolies. But this same public submits year after year to this same subjugation by the liquor element and makes no effort to throw off the yoke. We ask our readers to refer to the list in another column of the delegates appointed last Saturday to the township convention which is to be held to-night. There is not one ward which is not represented by a saloonkeeper, with the ex ception of the Second. Even in so small a matter as a township election this element is in the field, alert, watchful, guarding their interests at every point and so fur as their control, extends, permitting the1 election only of such men as they can depend upon to baffle any interference with their traffic. This cannot he said of any other class. Men in legitimate business do not have to put out guards to protect it from being called upon to obey the laws. That which has been done in the case of delegates to this township convention will be carried to a still greater extent when it comes to the city elections. As far as lies in their power the liqnor element will have a delegate from every wan! in the city. Where the sentiment against them is too strong to permit them to play an open hand they will secure the appointment of a trusty representative, This will be attempted in both parties. It rests with our citizens to say whether they propose to submit to this dominion in the future as they have in the past. If th*v have had enough of it they will go to the primaries and insist upon delegates who will represent the taxpayers and business mm and moral interests of the communities. The time is fast approaching and there is need of immediate counsel and organisation.
has been apparent to Americans for some time that the English syndicate business was being largely overdone in this country and that somebody would be left with the bag to hold, the followtag from London would indicate that the collapee near at hand. Americana will be excused if they do not cable their sympatl y. "Ttw idiottt w*nn«r So wbteb. or lire. owybostSr fes* 1**® of wtlik» 9chnm«* hew ta emlly Itwawdlbte, A very rwHurea h*** Vf *®'r:v ami many mlHkstt* o€ swarif BHtlih wwjf ten teen wutW tr «laatte a* weee*esw#*:--'SBW* m.* m*, bm tafwM- *w* atei, ottc nsws I '-'-'jiWiy BflitwJ a a
IfrKiHty fUr Wfev viee etctj Aa*«rtaui *T &******•• has- '«ea t*ntor tm c«tM*r«9eft *n 4 MM Mt* -W
At IH**!
"v"MMfcttaawwi s#«ft*ajs4
coaMOTattv aom t» bem. tKh It be
itot wowk few mtA i» a
T«xs* It a vast
U£&«£K*
pablic sentiment on the castom of ex,w**ive drinking la thbeorotry tad In j«ti»aay. Thm mtmrnm e«£f*d$y «f
B^ttal-ber^let°LpS
native Germans and there is no ^pnd to the stories they tell of the immense quantities of beer he can put away. On the occasion of hia great speeches he alf ways stimulates freely with brandy in Mi view of the audience. Many of oar fliatfngniwhari statesmen are far from temperate but the very last thing they would be willing for people to know the amount of liquor they consume, speaker who should lake a glaas of wme or brandy during a public speech would commit political suicide. This simply illustrates the difference in public sent! ment which after all determines the enormity of an offence.
As Independent
fft&er of
Owls is to
be established in this city# As its name indicates its meetings will be held after dark. The night hawks who seek ad mission will have no difficulty in securing testimonials from a large number of neglected wives in respect to their capacity for staying out all night as often as it may be found necessary for the lodge to meet.
THE following advertisement from Bridgeport, Conn., paper shows how apt the Chinaman is in catching on to the needs of the young white lady:
Cbu Fong would likee smallee nice Mclican \aAf. Sbc no have to work, as Cbu Fong got big Jot of money. Cha Fong will to the wftflhee and the cookee wife ehe can dr«s« wp everyday. Prize, tio tor bent gfrl. Cbp Fong.
THE Hahneman Medical college has just held its thirtieth annual commencement in Chicago. The graduating class numbered ninety-seven, the largest ever sent out. The first prize of $50 for the highest standing in general examination was awarded to a woman, Miss Mary C, Shibley, of Illinois.
THE highly eulogistic obituaries of General Bchenck do not mention the ac complishment which gave him more reputation than all his feats of statesmanship or generalship. He was considered the best authority on poker playing in this country or England*
THE
modest
and humble hen last year
laid $200,000,000 worth of eggs and did not try once to crow over it. I'ild \Vlnti:r Tor Ciml Ui-nUm. '•There will bo more hardship in the coal trade this spring than ever before, Is what a dealer in black diamonds says, "The loss on the supposed failure ef the ice crop will amount to naught as compared with that of the coal trade," he continued. "It is a gray haired knowledge now that this winter has been the mildest in the recollection of the oldest inhabitant. Few people have stopped to think of the savings to poor families on that account, and tho consequent loss to coal dealers. I mention poor families because it is from th&m that the greatest profit accrues. "People of means purchase their fuel in the summer, when the market is down to the last notch. Poor families can't do this, no small portion of them being obliged to purchase their coal supply from the corner grocery at so much per pail or bushel, as occasion demands. Each winter for the last five years I sold between 70,000 and 80,000 tons of coal. This winter my output will not reach 80,000, and from present appearances Pm afraid it will run below 25,000 tons. I have had a dozen horses and wagons idle all this season, there being nothing for them to do. I feel sorry for some of the companies that have secured a small sixed corner on the market They'll come out the wrong end of the game."—New York Mail and Express. -I*
1
Trailing Arbutu# in March.
"What! Trailing arbutus the 4th of March!" exclaimed Mrs, Blaine when little colored boy held several branches of the pretty pink blossoms up towards her as die alighted from her landau.
Ten cents a bunch, lady," said the ebony youngster, not knowing who his customer was.
Dat was big bigness," said he, as he went off flowerless but turning a silver dollar over and over in his yellow palm.
I'm gwlue get more dose 'butuses an' hang roun' dat corner." The fragrant little spring flower grows abundantly along the Potomac hills, and the colored people know its pretty hiding places well. To them mistletoe, safras, holly, arbutus are like raspberries and blackberries in their season, and they earn many an honest dollar gathering them. But they never found the arbutus so early befo^—Washington Letter.
The Author 'Xoraa Itooa*."
B, D» Blackmorc, known the world over as the author of "Loraa Doone," continues to write with all his old time assiduity and with much of his old time forces Ho is a brisk old gentleman, and as a sort of avocation or amusement ho cultivates grapes and fruits in his large gardens in one of the suburbs of London. Some time ago he discovered thai one of his gardeuexs had ptadbined and sold $35 worth of pears, and the did gentleman has bee& in a condition of great mental jerturbaUon ever atnee. "Lorna Doone* uta reached its eighteenth edition. And everybody who reads it wonders whether it were possible for any man to be strong enough to poll the muscle ma of another man's arm. Blackmorehas received thousands of letters on this subject—Eugene
Ti»tfaf.
A BOGM SLEATMTI
Here is s» item iwtm several exchanges which is somewhat peculiar viewed in the light of the fact thatTbeSt Louis Republic did not exist in imtk A oorked bottle thai evide®tly had flcttted ahout £,000 mile* was picled up hi the rivet near Boinfes Gscpe, U., last week. It was opened and the contents ftxmd to be a slip of psfer bearing these woedst '"Thrown over at St Paul, Minn,, 15th of April, im by R. Ufeby. Finder itoue advertise WIMN it vras found and what date and moch obhge yowm fcroly. Seskd this paper to The St. Louis Repobfie to •drntiM." The paper was dry imd welt pmstned asd the charsdbeis ml to t^e bmA *dte£Mnd.-~OdcaKo
fttm
tlife
llllSBfciiaaib
Reporter -the Daily Rustl«, and I haw called to ob*U3.von view* sstb pro^Mscts taring trade.** DWK iwa^ed We've had nothin« hnt tpfkif Me il! wiafcsr.**—^Kew ¥«l
WALTER WELLMAN HOLDS IT TO
BE A HOLLOW, HOLLOW SHAM.
&« G1T«» Hii EWWM for tb« Wmith Thmt Xl Within Him—A Botannot Bsl« Hut £i Coottmsatiy Broken—Th« Appalling
Blander of a Green Sew Senator. [Special (kxrettpemdence.] WASHIKOTON,
March
gver
20.—We
hear
great dieal of late jivbout senatorial dignity and the protection thereof. A most serious committee of this dignified body is now at work trying to ascertain the names of the unholy wretches of newspaper men who print facte which the senators think ought not to be printed. "The dignity of the senate must be maintained at all hazards," say these aristocrats of the national legislature, "even if we have to put in jail the whole newspaper outfit." As if the dignity of great body like this depended upon the action of a few newspaper writers, and could be maintained by locking those writers behind iron bars for performance of their duty to their employers and the
iblic. There is nothing new in all this, since it was born the United States senate has been striving to keep up
itB
dignity. It has paid more attention to dignity than to brains, and in consequence has constantly degenerated. There has not been a really brilliant senate since the days of the war. These old chaps who spend half their time thinking up new devices for maintaining their dignity are as a matter of fact a commonplace lot
It is the judgment of every close observer in the national capital that if one were to swoop down on the house of representatives and take the first eighty men he came upon he would have a body of legislators of more learning, sincerity and ability than is contained in the United States senate at the present moment The men of the house do not suffer from the dry rot of laziness and in difference to the popular opinion as do their compeers at the other end of the CapitoL They remain closer to the people, are more anxious to please and be right and useful. Their dignity is a thin that bothers them little. What they go in for is action and accomplishment. Any sort of an old stick who happens to break or buy his way into the senate can maintain a good status in that body. There is precious little brains in his old head, and the manners he has are of recent and forced growth, but he is, forsooth, a senator, and that is everything.
One of the traditions of this body is that every senator must help every other senator out in maintaining his dignity and status. So the weak carry the strong along with them, and thus help out the general average and delude the people who look on from a distance into believing that it is the wisest and most eloquent and most patriotic legislative body iij the world. It is quite different over in the house. There no artificial standard is raised, and a man rises or falls by virtue of his own native force and the brains he carries about with him. The nincompoop in the house is quickly discovered and sized up. He goes to the foot of the class. But in that body which has such anxiety about its dignity they decline to have afoot to the class. There, in their own traditions, if not in their own belief, they are all smart boys.
Unfortunately for itself the senate started in on this campaign of eternal dignity the day it came- into the world. At first it was going to hold all its sessions in secret, and aotually did so until it discovered that an election to the senate was like the burying of a man alive. There were newspapers in those days and sensible men running them, as now, and tho old time newspaper men concluded that the dignified, secret and stupid senate was not worth bothering with. They published no reports, rarely mentioned the names of senators, and, after three or four years of that sort of experience, so much of the dignity of the body as was embodied in, the secret proceedings was reluctantly abandoned.
Early in its career tha senate sought to borrow a little dignity from the office of president of the United States it construed the constitutional provision concerning appointments to mean that the president must personally confer with the great senate about the men whom he wished to appoint to places in the government service. Washington did for a time go to the senate chamber for the purpose of holding these consultations, but his good sense enabled him very quickly to perceive that such methods were beneath the dignity of hhr office, and he soon discontinued the practice still, to this very day the senate keeps in its standing rules the clause, When the president of the United States shall meet the senate in the senate chamber for the consideration of executive business, he shall have a seat on the right of the presiding officer.**
The senate had no sooner been called into existence than It endeavored to lift itself upon a pedestal above the other branch of congress. This was strikingly shown in the effort which the first senate made to compel the house of representatives to how the knee to senatorial dignity in the matter of transmitting messages between the two houses. The senate insisted that its communications to the ho^a&eHo^ hesent hy the hand of one of its employes, the secretary, who was deemed a person of sufficient importance to wait upon the common members of congress. When the hocus had a communication to make to the angttst sqsate, however,« committee of members was to take
the
bill or resold*
tkmin their hands, and with uncovered beads and cautious tread approach the senate door. Ttvere they were to be announced by the doorkeeper, and, as salw fear the wounds caused their pride by serving in the capacity of meniatb -were be received by the senate stand Luckily the house had no liking for distinction between the dignity of the two bodies, and hehl its ground in favor of Maiding communications in both instances by the hand dl employes till the senforced io yield.
To this day the senate eodeavors to Maintain an air of superiority to the houses. T&is is shown in Its claiming and taking the right of precedence aBosr*
atocial conference dealings with similar committees from the house axed in the rvstationships which weisfc between senators and1members so» ciaUy and otherwise. The theory of the estate and its aaeeihecs afi pnch occasion* 1§ that the botaw coiloc&veiy and
elections to the senate become the most arrant sticklers for senatorial dignity. Several notable examples of this oould be mentioned if it were pleasant or profitable to do so.
But what is this senatorial dignity we hear so much of? It is a hollow sham. The senate at best is a conglomerate mass of insincerity, and it is as insincere and affected in its dignity as it* its patriotism. These old chape,who are so eager to punish other people for violation of rules which they are not sworn to respect, themselves disregard the rules, which they are under oath to obey, whenever it suits their convenience to do so. A week or two ago the chairman of the very committee which is trying to run down the manner in which executive session secrets are given to the pubhc, gave a salmon lunch in the senate restaurant Hie senate was soon depopulated. There is a rule of the senate which declares that no senator shall leave the service of the senate without having been excused. On this occasion the sergeact-at-arms reported that there were twenty-two senators in the restaurant, and that when he informed them they were wanted upstairs to attend to the public business, said senators coolly told him they were too busy to move. One of the rules of the senate is that the restaurant must not sell intoxicating liquors, yet seven cases of champagne were opened at this lunch and several bottles of brandy and whisky. Every day grave and dignified senators may be seen drinking whisky in the senate restaurant, the rule to the contrary notwithstanding and when they want whisky nowadays they say whisky, and do not call for cold tea. This is the only regular ceremonial in the senate which, so far as I have observed, does not savor of sham and prudery.
Exclusiveness is one of the first ele ments of dignity as defined by the senators. They are exclusive even in the violation of their own rules. When they go down stairs to drink whisky they like to do so in private, and so they provide in their rules that "the large private room of the restaurant shall be reserved exclusively for senators and their guests," while "the small private room shall be reserved exclusively for the use of senators and members of the house of representatives, and such use of the private rooms shall not be interfered with." In other words, the vulgar public must stay out altogether, while the members of the house may sit down and drink whisky only in the outer sanctum.
Politeness is another theory of dignity according to the senatorial interpretation But this, also, is a bit of sham and delusion. Their politeness is often but veneer for malice and sarcasm and irony. For instance, a western senator rises to introduce a bill which a citizen of a state adjoining his hassent him. "I introduce this bill by request," says the senator, with solemn politeness, "and add that do not indorse the bill, that I do not know the man who sent it to me, and that should have preferred to send him the name of one of the senators from his state." How deferential and sweet all this appears, but look for the sting in the insect's tail. It happens that the senator in question does not like either of the senators from the Btate he has mentioned, and also that the senators from that state are not as yet famous men, and hence,
I should have preferred seifding my correspondent the name of one of his senators."
One of the unwritten laws of the senate, one of the traditions which have grown out of its efforts to maintain its own dignity, requires the senators in political sympathy with a new senator to sit and listen to his first or maiden speech, no matter how unanimously they may afterward absent themselves when he takes the floor. A week ago Senator Higgina made his maiden offort in the senate, and only five Republican senators were in their seats.
Under this thin coat of politeness all sorts of personal enmities and jealousies seethe. The senate has just one-fourth the number of members contained in the house, and three times as many cases of personal bad feeling. I suppose that comes from too much dignity, and the cultivation of that quality as some people cultivate mushrooms.
The new senator who presumes to take advantage of the superficial politeness and "we-apples-swim" tendency of the august body, will make a serious mistake. There was an instance of this a few weeks ago. Anew senator from the west, who had been but a few weeks in his seat, wanted the senate to go into executive session, and made a motion to that effect This seemed harmless enough, but the older senators were horrified. They coughed and hemmed and stared at the new man till the poor fellow imagined he had committed the crime of sedition or arson. The presiding officer, who chanced to be one of the older senators, preserved his presence of mind, and was for the nonce conveniently deaf. He didn't hear the motion, and the senate west on with some other business. Then two or three of the old fellows gathered around the new mum and whispered in his ear: "Didn't yon know that ft is one of the traditions of the senate thai a senator must have been here two years before be can move to
go
lie preserved,
Into executive ses-
sionT Ten minutes later a senator who had served the required two years made the executive session motion, and the gong sounded three times, the doors were closed, tbevutewr public retired, and the senate went soletanhr into secret session, the old chaps goasipiiag in the cloak rooms about the young senator's blunder like aparcel of old maids ataqatttlag. But the digirftf of the senate most
fMJTMM
WfiajL&Ur.
Thm TSmmnmt Tltteff fa KstarfluHrcMfefk,
The most fashionable thing in haadtGen&ieii for ladies is that imported from Mexico, fbtm dainty a^ieles art eoiirely of laee, exeept a crater of muslin, about tvroixscbee square. They are worn at and swell dren aftuxs, bet treof no tHBcikal use. They cost about $430 apiece. Another {&) hm border and insertions Off Vatencte&oes laoe, but good are to be bad lor ene-thtfd toe coot A isan&erehief vitibs acalkjped-oal. edge, in imitaHoxt of an ivy M, is novel ana ptetty turn a btwwfar rf ecioired'dote, each dot worked la by hand. Bimx the Mgb Ham weaves* bave taken
io embrafckry, the Freocfa
BO
baves laooopoYyia ibis style ef —T OoT. C&IOEgQ
Dottoi! that
A tuft.
Mr*. Gushing—Oh, I am to charmed with vocor home, Mrs. Quiverful. Such a bsaatiful hooss, and each pleasant surroundings! and then such draghtars, too. I bqpe die young ladies realiwttetttwarhoaia is a perfect paradise.
Uncle Joe (a gwrn old thing}—Oh, they live op to it, Mrs. Gushing. I assure you thtn
no
is
marrying or giving in marriage bare.— Muiraey's Weekly.
Wwttm Changes.
George—Ho much colder it's getting Violet—Yes, bat it will be warmer soon, for here comes papa.—Munsey% Weekly.
§§g
Unable to Come to *n Understand IDS* Footpad (presenting pistol)—Pork over your rhino, and be quick about It!"
Near Sighted Bostonian—Beg pardon! (Sternly) "No monkeying} Unlimber! F&>dtice the scadsl1' "Pardon me, but 1 do not exactly apprehend the drift of your" "Cheese your patter 1 Don't you see
I've
got the drop! Unload your boodle!" "I am totally at a loss, my dear sir, to perceive the relevancy of your observations or to" ft "Clap a stopper on "your gab and whack up, or Til let 'er speak! Turn out your bundle quick I Get a squirm on you!" "Is there any peculiarity in the external seeming of my apparel or demeanor, sir, that impels you, a total stranger, to" "Once more, you dash hedashed bloke, will you uncork that swag!" (Hopelessly bewildered) "My friend, I confess my utter inability to gather any coherent idea from the fragmentary observations you have imparted. There is something radically irreconcilable and incapable of correlation in the vocabularies with which we endeavor to make the reciprocal or correspondential interchange of our ideas intelligible. You will pardon me if I suggest that synchronization of purpose is equally indispensable with homogeneity of cerebral impression, as well as parallelism of idiom and"
But the highwayman had fled in dismay.] a i-i-r-V"?.!,
The Power of the Press.
trt
don't want that young fellow to come around here any more," her father gave out decisively. "All right, father. He is only a newspaper reporter, and" "A reporter! Ob, well, in that case I don't think it's any use. In the first place it wouldn't do any good, and we'd only be having him coming down the chimney or through the window, so I guess we had better yield gracefully."
And that evening, after she told him, it was a pleasure to them both to acknowledge the great power of the press.—Philadelphia Times.
The New Coachman.
Lady—And what is your Christian name! Coachman—Nebuchadnezzar, mum. Lady—What a dreadfully long name. 1 should never be able to pronounce it if I wanted you in a hurry.
Coachman—Yer don't need to pernounce nothin', mum. When yer wants me you've only to stick yer fingers in yer mouth and whistle, and I'll be around afore yer can say Jack Bobinson.—Yenowine's News.
PROFESSIONAL.
J)p MEDICAL ELECTRICIAN, |ji||
CATARRH, THROAT, AND NERV-
ous DISEASES. TUMORS. MOLES, SUPERFLUOUS HAIRS REMOVED, tar Hours, 9 to 11 a. m., 2 to 5 p. m. 115 Month (Sixth street.
J. C. MASON, M. D.,1
Treats Diseases of the
NOSE THROAT a CHEST
OFFIOK, NO. 2I SOUTH SEVENTH STREET.
SYDNEY B. DAVIS, JNO. C. ROBINSON, GSOKOS 11. DAVIS.
DAVIS & ROBINSON,
I flWYFRQ
Rooms 1 and 3,
Lnil I 0\0,
sarWABKEH BLOCK
8. W. Cor. Wahtsh anjl Fourth Sts., Terre Haute
H. C. BOYSE,
NSURANGE,
REAL ESTATE, AMD MORTOAOE LOANS,
No. 617 Ohio Street.
DR. VAN VAT.PiAH,
DENTIST
OSes la Open Home Block.
DR. B. A. QILLBTTB,
DENTIST. Filling of Teeth a Specialty.
Offloe, XeKee&'s Hew Block, Car. 7th
DR. F. G. BLEDSOE,
ear aro. astr% MAMS WiiET/w Yine GOLD and RDBBIR PLATES a specialty.
A gpt W
A IV f«l 1 iPi
Attorney at Law,
OHIO«TMCT.
TJtQ.
J. WKENSTKOT, ML
Physician and Surgeon!
Chectaat street.
Qt&m,
ML f. 0. JENKINS
ff hitT if Sli^i I TIM ffitufi' |«|H IH a
hft&d-
Tim
lis week tho
will be shown at)
NEW
111 8.
An mils
m.
Hs$ renwi'sj fals o£«« to *"•. IS cornet «f flgli in
jBflnQIWfV •WMB muA Liaioa street*. KssMtnm tsk»l»H*
DR8. ELDER BAKER,
MOMiHsaTfiivm. 0»wcM02
mourn Wacm
KteM«OtaJMS*w»dfts«sllMiOlB«i
Galvanized Iron Cornices,
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St.-
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J.
USE
HULMAN'S
Dauntless Coffee:
IT HAS NO EQUAL.
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One of the most dangerous and unpleasant evidenoes of the existence of hereditary scrofula is glandular swellings and painful ulcers which accompany it and render life a burden to the sufferer and to those about him. Sore eyes, scabs on the head, pimples on the face, salt rheum, and the like, are all caused by impure blood. There is but one way to banish these offensive symptoms, and that is by the use of tried and trusted remedies to strike at the root of the trouble. Dr. Cobb's Vegetable Compound, known to the world by Its famous corn-cob trademark, cleanses the skin by first cleansing the blood, it brings new life to the overworked and nervous victim, and, being purely vegetable, leaves no III effects.
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BRAIDED BAIL FENCE.
ttTBUILT OF BRAIDED BARBLBSS JSPRING|STBBL1RAIL.S."
PliANTSTO MILL
J. H. WILLIAMS, President, J. M. CLLFT, Secretary and Treasurer.
CLIFT & WILLIAMS COMPANY, S^''¥v.®itabllsh®d 1BSL Incorporated 1S88. Manufacturer* of
Sasli, Doors* Blinds, Etc.,
•AND DBAXXBS IK-
Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Paints, Oils and Builders' Hardware.
Corner of Ninth and Mulberry Streets, Terre Haute, Ind.
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IS Brnmm wum tML
STATIONERY, XTC.
Bint Bwb, S«ki, Tviie, Ett,
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Nos. aeOaode^aWabaeh Avenue*
WWM ii:
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urn! Ohio Mtreeta.
J. A. WILI.IMON. 801 North Fourth Ml.
Yog Home is Beautified by Attractive Fencing!!
Think of it! 8 cents a foot!—40 cents a rod!—for a horse and cow proof fence of five railtjlr--6 cents afoot 1—SO conts a rod!—for a home, cow. pig and poultry proof fence of 10 raiid I 2,000 pounds strain will not break a "Braided Kail." Ru«t, Around frostproof. Contracts and PX^pnnds in Winter and Summer. You receive greater strength, beauty, elasticity, ttntinfiietion ana economy than when paying two or three times as mueh for any other fencing! People in town here are delighted with their "Braided Rail" Fences. Come and investigate before you.bniId fences this spring. It will pay you. Call on, or write,
McFERRIN BROS., SOLE AGENTS, TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.
No. IS Soiith Nccoiid Street, West Hide of the New t'onrl llonne.
NOVELTIES,
BABY, 0-A.nPlI-A.CES.
Greatest Bargains in this line ever offered in Terre Ilauto
THE FAIR
325Main Street!
111 also open a lew novelties in the House-furnishing line. GOODS ARRIVING DAILY. 23ASTBR NOVELTIES IN LARGE VARIETY. Remember, I Buy my goods direct from the manufacturer. You will therefor have the benefit of buying without having to pay the jobber's profit.
In conclusion I will say that I intend to sell goods cheap in fact at rock bottom prices. Respectfully, GEO. O. ROSSELL.
N ALL ITS BRANCHES. Sole scent for KKOSK A DK* WXSTTKB'S WROUGHT 8TKKI. FtJRNACB.
NO. 710 MAIN STREET, TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.
BUSINESS EDUCATION.
Get a Business Education
Learn Telegraphy, Pfconojrraphy and Book Keeping at the Commercial College, FaU corps of competent instructors. ISBELL A MILLER, Proprietor*.
BXtAJTK BOOK MAJOCB8 AND BINDBBS.
trVQG JL WTfil?T BLANK BOOK MAKKRA and BINDERS: HIJC£50 tX ff lD-EiJU
mm"tat
4
AME8 WISELY-
KAat CTBJCrr, o*sr Central Book Store."S*
DTK WORKS.
NE PLUS ULTRA I
lfSln*
and renerstlng of Isdlss'
sad Osatlemsa's wear In all dexlred sluulot of say febric at Abort notice sod taodsnt prloes st
H. P. REINERS'
Steam Dye Works,
No. 055 Wabaah Avenue. »9irr«
SIDK.
