Terre Haute Daily News, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 May 1890 — Page 2
THE DAILY NEWS.
vou I wa
AM INDEPENDENT MEW8PAPER,
pmIisftc4Every
1
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8
li
Tiik
fe
Aftennwa Except Sunday,
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TSU »vt
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
PUBUCATJON OFFICE
NO. 23 SOUTH FIFTH 8TRKBT
TELKPHOXE CALL ISl."
At
wrs nut
SUET*
T.., «CO*»-CUU»
roar ornae
I. A. HARPER,
a*
MATTES.
TKBM8 OF BUmcaiPTlOH:
OHM YCAR.,... $8 00 WCCK, evOAMtttsn to ore
All eorrsrpondenee should beaddrssted tolhe »EW8 PUBLIBHIXa COMPAXY.
Managing Editor.
TIIT'RHDAY, MAY
I, 1890.
DEMOCRATS, GO TO THE PRIMARIES, Thoroughly aroused by the large attendance at the Republican primaries the Democrat# are making special efforts to 'have a full representation at their nominating convention* to-night. The tax jaying business men of this party appreciate folly the necessity for patting in a different class of eouncilmen for the coming year. No amount of party fealty can blind them to the fact that their representative* for the last two years have repeatedly sacrificed the interest® of the Hty and defied the will of the people. Jt is their doty as good citizens and faithful Democrat* to repudiate aneh men and replace tbem with those who will not be a constant reproach to the party which elected them. There seems to be little doubt that there will be [m attempt to run in a set of candklatea who will continue the present regime. This can lte thwarted if the tetter element will go to the primaries and ont vote "the gang." The serious financial condition «f onr rity demands in a greater degree that ever before that we should elect a first class council on next Tuesday. The Jtepublicana have recognised this demand and liave pot up a ticket that is beyond criticism. We call upon the Hkwocrnta to do the same. I^et us have no candidate who will be compelled to buy his election. There can be r.o possible excuse for a poor ticket. The election of inefficient or corrupt men In tin* present emergency would be a public calamity. 1st no sneh name be pnt npon the ticket. Democratic citmim, do your duty.
impression neeniH, to be general
that Mr. Hybarger will be a candidate for ra*el«etlon from the Fourth ward. It is said ho desire® this iw a •'vindication.*' Nothing that can be done by the Fourth ward or the Democratic party can "vln dicate" Mr. Ifybargvr. His record in the council is one which caanot be tin dhftted. jit? may be non\innted and he may
IKS
elected but that will prove noth
hig oxct'pt that a majority of the voters in tho Fourth ward are susceptible of being corrupted.and that Mr. Hybarger is eajmbie of corrupting them. There are a large number of most excellent people in tiiis ward who have been misrepresented by Mr. Hybarger for a number of years and are strongly opposed to his re-election, li he is renominated it will bo doe to a political gang, that seems to have gained control in thia ward, and not to the respectable portion of the real UlentR
TIIK NEWS
01-)
a badk teal the M«*t coroer of the r-ij... Tut called meeUng of th* mum last nbthi to coiwidef Mn Havens* prujx mn for indtng the leb( of the city mmac* a htilUsot eestt. itta* t.dawny la Ala «Jr, apeak^ went oat through the key hote* ttttnhled tK»wn stains «too4 not open the onierof ingoing bot got up and w*. Themaj manh»Hy perfwrtaed hisdiaty for three quartern of am hour *nA ttiM infcfft :•-is the laithfsd that he was oa tap whtosmr wanted, fas
Hertw% awt^Dret held dawn
autre a'taM* and watted pifiartl* t*» vote Wal»h that h» wan on the fowl* Iml «ridttftlly go? boat in the was Is
Hybarger left his policy shop in charge of the hoy and came up to represent Mr. Havens who
of
PmesiriKtfT
THAT
has no desire to perse
cute any man and has no malice to gratify. Mr. Ilybarger's record speaks for itself. He is a man in whom correct principles and a sens© of honor are entirely lacking. He lias regarded bis ollico In the council as a private snap to le used for his own personal benefit, He has defied the wishes of the people and ignored the statufc* and the ordinance#* He has bwn the instigator of every job which hia been railroaded through the council. As ring teader of the police board he is, more than any other man, responsible for the thoroughly demoralised condition of our city to-day. While a member of thk board be is himself the proprietor of a low policy dive which la a sysiemaiiaed robbery. He is the recognised agent of the liquor dealers' association to guard their interests insteatl of the peopled in all questions which ootne before the council. Shrewd and unacrapttlottt, he is the tool of all such persona and c\m* |MMta* as haw a schetue to work through the council. He Iww easily placed himwlt at the head of the "ring*' which has unfortunately been lit control of the present council anil his every act liaa been in opposition to the best internets ©t the mtmieijsality. will be a disgrace to the Koarth ward to renomiaatc this man and a still greater one to allow him to purchase hit reflection. Theio is, however, little dembt but that the majority of the next council will be composed of good mea» and should Hybargfcr be rrtnrned he will be shorn of his powvr and relegate to th® place w*'-vre he belongs, it be most he there at ai
course, did not wish to
le caught in so common a crowd. The Republican members wisely stayed away as it was not their funeral.?After Weldele had given
TH* NEWS
TH*
several "fat
takes" the meeting became very dry and adjourned. The dear people can sympathize witb Kemmler, they have had respite but next Tuesday night Lord High Executioner Hybarger wOl be on hand with his &x, and the dear people's head may go into the basket.
XSW* believes there is little doubt
Of the popular sentiment in this city in regard to licensing the saloons. We will publish to-morrow statistics collected throughout the State which show that Terre Haute is the only city in Indiana which does not levy this tax. The two tickets will to-morrow be placed before the people for their consideration. They can readily decide from the character of the men what may be expected. There is nothing in the Republican ticket to in dicate that they have catered to the liquor element. They have put up just as good men in the doubtfnl wards as in those where success seemed assured, preferring to be defeated with a respectable candidate rather than successful with one who is unworthy. Let the Democrats carry out the same plan. The selection of first clam men in those wards where they can not possibly win and of liquor candidates in those wards which they feel confident of carrying will deceive nobody. The ticket will speak for itself and Tint
NEWS
will see that everybody shall become acquainted with it. If there are any voters who do not read this paper for the next week it will not be for want of an opportunity. So far as lies in onr power to bring about a municipal reform it shall be accomplished.
HARBISON'S
first veto
put upon bill to authorize Ogden, Utah, to increase its municipal Indebtedness. Unfortunately the President cannot step in and save all the cities in the country from alike fate. In our own state the Legislature has interfered to preserve the people of the various towns from the recklessness and corruption of unworthy councils, by passing a law that cities shall not incur a debt to exceed two per cent, of the assessed valuation of thentaxable property. But in Terre Haute our council has rode rough shod over the law and saddled a debt upon us of over $40,000 beyond the limit allowed by statute. "Turn the rascals ont," i« the cry of the hour, btit this will avail nothing if other rascals are to be turned in. The Republican party has recognized the demand by putting up a clean,, capable ticket. If the Democratic party does the same our interests are safe. Should they attempt to continue the present regime they rau»t be defeated at the ballot box.
the interest in the approaching
election is not merely spasmodic is showif by the large number present at the See ond ward primary last night. This being an adjourned meeting, and the candi date in a measure agreed upon in advance, it was liardly expected that there would be a large torn-out, but the room was crowded to suffocation, the capitalist and the workingman touching elbows. The nominee is an excellent, capable man, who can be trusted to represent the respectable, tax-paying element of this ward, and his name completes one of the best municipal tickets ever presented to our people.
Hit Reform
Now
FattlU*.
"J^mnatba, I wish 1 could break myself of thia slavish habit of smoktag!n aaid Mr. Chugwater, despairingly. "I'd give worlds if I could do "Will you bo guided by nay advios, JotfahF' naked Mrs. Chugwater. "What do you know about sach things!* he demanded. "Now mind what," she replied. "Will ydu promlae to do exactly what I prostaibsf "For how Jongt" "For about two wwka* "Oh, yes," ho aaid, tisttody. "(Jo ahead with yoor jmscrfptloti.*
01
Mrs. Chugwater Idt in a moment with a box of 100 cigar*. "JoctaV* *h» said, tenderly, "I bought thss* of a fwddhtr for fifty cents, and fva been saving them for you. You will smoke fourteen of them every day tiU they are all goae,"—Chicago Tribooa,
What the U« Aliew*4 Hlau A frkttd seoda t» thefottowiag ctory may bealltt&e gray with the frost of time* though we do not recall aeeing in prist, We tasart it, any how, with the thought that nothing new wader th# ng gantknwn and a yoang tatty attmidlng a wedding-thetor own wedd&g, by thaway. After tfee oefetoony t*» over groom, ia a bttStnctt ttfce maimer, saind the aikMiirter tor a fAatracant at aecoaat the told tiim the law allowed tdm 93. The poom said, la a ganeroea teas of heading hint a fifty cent pkna: "Thin, witdk wtiat Che law «U»ws yoo, wia make it three doUars and a West Shore.
"The Otartaa—0, my dearorlldi, does It not asalte yew tiaartcriRAy b«*t with frtdeefcy to thtnk what a heaatifaiovilch ceaafiry «sr own RflMia ist •.. Hfce Osa*w~2$a|swesWa^y, I do awl luesaty Ruaiia. Woald yo« ka*»w what thftsMky el it
MY«a,
ttf*
my pelsky. What da yon ttdakof
ttlt
Is.' a bomb«lairi»h43~Lawrsao» Aasriossu
oWWRe eSWJ*
rtiwlfwk-
Dafftywa on Mils
A Weeaaartt Wayw-
9fei9t3i'MWeBt JkMsat how Ad yww wtts
w«s«batt
*fa»w -j&K *i
ARTIFICIAL MERMAIDS.
THE "GIRLS OF THE SEA* MANUFACTURED BY SKILLED HANDS.
M*ak»T*' BeMM Jelaed to "wmtWrmOt with Caaalif and
Dexterity—Bo* UM
rnop!* Ate l«MiTBd by )11ii»wiii mm& XlMtr AM*—The MmuM
SEelwr
Talk*.
"Mermaids made and repaired." Such an advertisement was well calculated to attract attention, and, as it confronted me one day in a little frequented street in a large eastern city, I determined to make the acquaintance of the maker of these incongruities. Pulling an oid fashioned brass bell handle, a little old man, crowned with a square paper cap, came to the door, and after eyeing me suspiciously for a moment invited me in. There was the "beggarly array of empty boxes," vials containing strange animals, curious stuffed birds which peered from high shelves and were laced together by cobwebs laden with dust, while many other objects strewn about tcjd M, the tzade of the taxidermist.
THE MKBMAIP KAXXS.
"Yes," said the old man, in reply to my questions, "I am a mermaid maker, and I flatter myself that I have produced some of the most artistio mermaids ever placed upon the market. Why, sir, continued the speaker, warming up under the recollection of his triumphs, "I produced one that fooled even the doctors. You see, mermaids have been made as long as anything. The Chinese manu factured them centuries ago, and so well that a large number of people believed in them and if the work is fairly done the production is one of the best cards a show can have. "One day a man came to me and 1 knew the moment I saw him that he was a showman. He said he had mermaids, but that on the last trip & man had offered to wager him $500 that he would not dare to allow the mermaid to be cut open so he wanted something that would bear inspection and be ready for such a contingency. I told him I could do it, and received the order to go ahead. "Generally in cheap work I stuffed the skins with cotton or something of the kind and let them go, but in this case I went to work on scientific principles. I took the skin of a monkey and separated it _at the waist then allowed it to dry as a mummy would, all of which I helped along by the application of heat. I novr took a fish common in the China one that would not be familiar, and treated it in a similar way, and finally I joined them both. 1 fastened scales upon the monkey portion and carefully graded them up among the hairs then introduced some hairs down upon the fish portion barnacles were fastened here and there, and a great cut was left open up and down the abdomen, through which any one oould readily see the ribs and tho joining of the vertebrae
f,
"The face had been given an agonized look, the hands were clinched and. all in all, it was 6ne of the most disagreeable sights I ever saw, even though I did {ffoduce.it/ 'Yes, it gave "complete satisfaction. When they Exhibited it a cloth was thrown over the body, and when any question was raised the proprietor would say that he would leave it to a commit* tee of medical men, thus being confident of obtaining some, notoriety. In one case a number of provincial doctors were completely deceived, and signed a paper retracting certain statenients which they had made to the effect that the mermaid was a sham. \,
EXHIBITING THE FREAKS.
The old mermaid maker has passed away, but examples of Ids work are often seen either in grog shops along the harbor streets in shipping towns, in old taverns and occasionally in a museum. The mermaid is generally an adjunct of the side show, or second rate circus. Such a one I recently saw. It was of huge size and kept in a tank of water. A spirited painting on canvas depicted a beautiful maiden, half fish, floating upon the waves, while the young man who stood by shouted his story of the "Lady of the Seas," unconsciously, we will assume, giving the impression that the mermaid was alive and frisking about the tank.
The little inclosure was well patron ixed, and it was curious to listen to the comments of those who paid the required dime. It was a holiday, and young men and women were searching for some ex cuse to spend their earnings. When ten or twelve victims had gathered the proprietor would wink at a friend, borrow lis cane and begin a lecture remarkable for the exact repetition of its points, in which he explained that the mermaid was half fish and half human, and had been captured hi some foreign sea and brought to America at enormous ex pease. At least one-half the people who gaaed at the mermaid evidently had a suspicion that it was a fraud, while a third accepted it as a fact and expressed their amaiMMtteiiS and wonder at it, all of which shows that with all our educational a&mntagee we are still credulous perhaps to an extmne.
One of the most skillful workers in this uncanny art tw well known to as, and from whom many hints as to the ways whkh are dark were obtained. In eraltaffe popular unscientific of th« country miuurkably hideous maids are exhibited, generally under glass cases, white with tbem is offered a paper purporting to he the testimony of tbeeaptors. It is remarked that inmaiiy C*J» the names signed to these
FFTPFEN
•ot fSctitfcfta but evidently given in good faith. There is tat om assumption, that either the mm were bribed or de-oaived.*-Cor. Philadelphia
T% Ofctmia
IMWMWS
wi pool*. utb«tliia.*teft«
Tvmmy-.Xo, t*. yoa Jw* to Idas bar, HrJoM»~Wbyn6t! ftaassy topd t«»-Gr**t 8«*t iwrtaiowii
lately advised is that hi which
the subject, after taking a d«ep incpiraIwsfcifai Ids until ifitoooB&ftirt is Mt, then repeats the pwsm a second and a third time, this being* as a ntfe. spomgh to procure sleefk, A stijgfat degree of asffcyxia is a«antM« as a icforific stgeafc, but the theoretical eorotf this method Is somewhat ©pen
A* A*t «l Rmlea aw?!**.'
a* the tvomt wedd&it of his iMfKmsr* Lowfc, is—or waa—the ycurn^g ve*net ofdragwitt who, when the f&-fated Birkenhead atraclt «n the rode Ci«% Iwflped to eat* the wmam and cJriidrea, aud whee thiswws dm iwidmlsi tot tftaaou
TBR&g flAUTB DAILY KBWB, THCJtSDA Y, MAYK1890.
as -—-SB* tot Ira
fering £n the water. The
than
itinjt cf
Prussia, the grandfather of the present German emperor, when he beard of this deed, ordered & parade of 100,000 men at Beriit}, and had the account publicly read as a record miHtary herouaa. Exchange.
A CHINESE FUNERAL.
~I*«ta»
(mjmmJoc ObMqalM CUaatmtrem Blffcti la the BtreaU. There was in Chinatown today a aoene unique and heathenish, and which oould only have taien place in San Francisco, which in itself Is a distinction or a disgrace, as it may be regarded. It was the funeral rites over the body of Gy Ah Wy, who was shirt in Chinatown. It proved beyond question the Remarkable influence exercised by the notorious "little Pete.** The funeral was the greatest that place in Chinatown for many years. No one could be found who had seen a more ceremonious affair.
Yet Gy Ah Wy was a most commonplace individual, and the only distinction he oould claim was that of being a friend and supporter of the highbinders' agent and diplomat, "Little Pete." A great mandarian, even Consul Bee, could not possibly have secured such a fanfaronade on his exit as did this humble follower of Pete.
The funeral took place from Stockton itreet, near Washington, the headquarters of the deceased's society. A huge platform was built In the street (without a permit). It was covered with a canopy of white cloth of fine texture. The platform was loaded with all the delicacies to be found in Chinatown. Gy Ah Wy will probably have a post mortem attack of dyspepsia on his arrival in the other world should he sample the dainties that were spread out for him on the platform.
There were whole carcasses of roast pig and goats. There were chickens and ducks* eggs and birds' nests, small fish and large fish, fish brought from China and fish smuggled from Sacramento. There were pies and puddings and a magnificent opium layout for Mr. Wy to smoke or for the appeasing deity to en joy. There were plenty of victuals and opium for both.
The coffin in which were the remains of the late lamented slave dealer and blackmailer lay in front. It was decorated with gold and silver and cost a fabulous sum, contributed by the highbinders. laf^hl
On a iMtlng new hand widow, who bowled at the beginning, but who gradually reduced her lamentations to a feeble squeak, uttered at long intervals of exhaustion. By her side lay the child and the dead man's brother. At a short distance away, but without matting, lay the dead man's three slaves, who also sent up hideous cries of grief. A high priest, dressed in raiment like unto Solomon's and glittering with jewels, tortured a musical instrument like the bagpipes, and the second high priest beat cymbals furiously. A crowd of young Chines^, women, dressed in white silk, poured out tea over the platform and on the heads of the mourners, white another crowd of women from the houses of ill fame beat time with their hands and tried to weep. ,r
A large gang of men wandered about for blocks around casting forth th* papen through the holes of which the Chinese* Mephistopheles has to leap before he can catch the spirit of the dead man. Before his satanic majesty could get through all the holes it was confidently believed that the dead man would have been safe in heaven. The ceremonies lasted two hours.
At 1 o'clock the funeral started. There were eighty carriages, containing the leading highbinders, and an immense number of Chinese followed on foot.— San Francisco Report. m?-% tp ^fesdUievMie like Wew York.
Southerners take to New York more than to *any other city nor& of Mason and Dixon's line. They are at home there whether as visitors or residents. When the close of the war found thousands of southern men penniless, and without any method of earning a living in the devastated south, many of them came to New York.
At every considerable social gathering in New York one is almost sure to find several distinguished ex-Confederates. The southerner in New York retains much of the provincialism and clannishness with which he is created, but In spite of this he is adaptable, more so, probably, than the New Englander. His happy go lucky temper fits in well with the reck* leasness of the city and his suavity of manner vastly smoothes the rough places of business life. It Is noticeable, too, that the southerner seldom falls into the social vice of snobbishness. —Cor. Pittaburg P*«rt.
In Ye OI&MI Tyme.
We remember the time when & small Spanish diver coin did service ail over the United States as a lS4~eent piece, and one-half the sise as a H-cent piece, and both were abundant acd more popular %n the dimes and half dimes. These were the daiys of thfngiti frwi'ffiw* of cents hei&g carefully calculated, method which was aided by the large number of half cents hi circulation. Merchants' ledgers showed away entries for 4$, IS# aad 2£| oec«a, and from that tip to 85T| cents. It wa« a common practice for merchants when they were short of half emta lor change to give half a lowofptnain the place of one. Common cigar* sold everywhere four for a cent, and many a time have we seen one^two,
far fractional cbange^-~Ooil»e& timea,
MMutdhm FTertm.
Sewn oi white KMtef osmce each of beeswax aodmidtaai. lieh alt togethsr, then pctur into oold water and work like wax sostil thoros^hly then roil tuftnMi each ka tlssaa pftiff to
KEEP FIXIM SIICKIITSTOGTETHER. SOCNEO^ the piiriur may hr ipMiswl mwni thin. ftw» aad cut iato strif»GOBveDfeiB*2or
This la
SB
old rale lor «ha wMk
'highly valued whflwwsc used*
tf £tfe not wetted, ttiiflfitekteaM
£bee%cf tlvwrpoot mtxstbeawsartl-
^e sioiSStotwi ha
Ito you
iSttt
^hls Itappi hasstt^la
vwuat mythlsqi?
1
A MYSTERY.
day aolhln
alsftiw
Tea*
ot
eweps
the
sUBaf idoad
tat
*h8*v
Star ataettof akiK^oa heaved dera crept, Aad wraaghK
ehouS the. mtomg hffii whfle
taMtetMf^ a®d rmj« their
HMf
tame
Craw
^reanawwitejHae Uuu draane, the eetolat ha%ht AjeAtertheak tm& the ChiUr voodhuad eefS. A wtalMS day aod sad yetafi while
Wlttda the grave grow twfllght ot the weed, basratibit, toamittahH apart, larktafaif the towdc, whose aemg ahe under
StnniettthttpMetwt tMaaitiatiw^ haert. .v —Heles
ONR COM IN QTMTUEF.
FaUwl to Work Somehow.
Mr. Billus has a theory that his wife is too Indulgent to tramps and beggars. With a dimly defined purpose of teaching her a lesson he disguised liimsetf the other day as an abandoned vagabond, boldly rang the bell at his own front door and inquired for Mrs. BOiua. "Have you any old clothes to give a poor man, mumf he asked to a loud, aggressive, but carefully disguised voice when the lady presented herself
Mrs. Billus looked at the aoiled, grimy, disreputable looking object before her with some interest. Whether or not she suspected the genuineness of the mendicant is not certainly known, but she answered: "None that would fit you, my good man. My husband is a much smaller man than you are."
She shut the door in his faoe, and Mr. Billus made his way back to bis office down town. \X "Darn it all!" he ejaculated^ 'is he sneaked through a back alley, "1 must have looked a thundering sight bigger than I feel just now 1"—Chicago Tribune.
J? A Caae of Telepathy.
A story with a little romance in it is that of S. R. W., of Bridgeport, Conn., who was returning from England on an ocean steamer. One night he dreamed that his wife, who was then in Bridgeport, opened the door of his statercom, looked hesitatingly in and then came forward and kissed him. When he awoke in the morning the man who occupied the upper berth in his stateroom looked down and said: "You're a pretty fellow to let a woman come in here in the night and kiss you." Pressed for an explanation, he described the scene which he had experienced.
Arrived at home, he was asked by his wife: "Did you receive a visit from me on such a night? I made you one. I was worried because of the reported storms that night. I dreamed I went out on the ocean and came upon a great, bhick steamship, 1 went up the Bide and along the corridor and opened your door. 1 saw a strange man looking at me from an upper berth. I was afraid at first, but finally 1 stepped in and kissed you.** —St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
A caae of lee'
Tb6 worst case of "ice fever" that has been experienced to date appears to be that of a Pemaquid (Me.) citisen. He had a big load of, eighteen cakes, and got about half way down to the wharf, when his cart tongue came out. Not noticing anything wrong he kept on driving his oxen, and just before he reached the wharf meta team In rather a bad place. He told the driver of the team that he didn't know as he could get by him with his big loud, but on being told that ho would have no trouble naturally looked back at his load to see what the fellow meant. His surprise can be imagined. a go a
An Every
Beveece Xa Sweet.
First Bootblack—-You had er quarrd wld Nldsey, Billyf wood Bootblack—Yea, I bad, ysr bet, and Pm agoin' to have my revenge, too.
F. B.—Goln' ler fight himf a B.—So, sires. Vm agotn' to atand aside of him when be1# a shinia' a geat, and wbeo ha gets through I'm agoia' ter aey, "Shioe, '—Barton Courier,
Bad a Carlmtd of Bia Oam.
So«o»~Interforof astsaptagcar. Time" Midnight Pla»—The Boraboe bead. Enuna^uttie Travrier (tbrust^ag hand foto berth aad rudely abakiag sleeping manager) •Wake up, quick, aad look oat at the beautiful scenery!
Manager (yawBing)~-llaag the beaatifal aceueryi IVe got a carload of my own aboard thia train.-Drani*tic Mirror.
What
"You Iftok worried.A "Yea," replied Charlie Gsshgo. "Do yoa flud that you caa^ d^»tr "Well, that bat the Mbia, axaeay. My tailor has asaared aie that cant gat ia aay |sitlHr.,*---Waabiflgteo Post.
WHAT'S
4
I
Day Game* *fti
"Say, there is a feller playing a game on Woodward aveftue this afternoon,11 he said through the telephone, after calling up police headquarters. "What sort of a game?" "The sweat box/' ••Where?" "On car No. 840." "'What sort of a looking man is he?" "He's the conductor, and has just gone up witb seventy passengers on a our made to carry thirty!"—Detroit Free Press,
oat of
the matter with
TKX
Ntcwgr
It's all right Only 10 ceftts week.
WAX.1* PAPSR, KTC.
^SIBLEY S BOSSOMOo
Wall Pat^r, Window Shades. House Painting' and Msod Wood Fmls^ied, 102 NORTH POUBTH STREET, T«pt© Haule, Indiana.
BUB8SB STTAMFS,
'j
RUBBER TYPE
l^tesf
OMlfl 0*/ SSBWUBy
Xbwkn***
J. J. T1BIKETT,
taliutei tan (Mm
USE
HULMAN'S
Dauntless Coffee.
IT HAS NO EQUAL.
XSTATX.<p></p>BUILDINGLOJFREE
RRAJL
A-.'-
To every three months, paid up subscriber on or before June 1st, we give one guess on the number of New
SUBSCRIBERS TUB NEWS
three months ending June 30th. The one guessing nearest the exact number w^ll be given the lot 55 on Nineteenth street in "Cottage Place" addition as shown in the plat below. This lot is given
NA
FBOYBMBKT Co. for th 18 pUrpOSB,
by the
*vT
A
PUT^
Mi lu
1
S K*
IV &
HuLf*JA N ^7-jJF£T
YEGKTABLB COMPOUND.
SCROFULA.
One of the most dangerous and unpleasant evidenoes of the existenoe of hereditary sorofjf ula Is glandular swellings and painful ulcers ^whloh 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 oaused 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 vlotim, and, being purely vegetable, leaves no III effeots.
FOR SALE BY THE WELL KNOWN DRUGGISTS.
J.AC. BAITR, H. K. corner Seventh and Wakaah avenue. QCI.ICK
CO.,
Main and Fourth Hto.
1ASIHI E. NOJWJRM,
BBAIDBD BAIL FBNC®.
Your Home is Beautified by Attractive Fencing!!
larBtnLT OP "BBAIDHD BARBLBSS 8PBING
Think of It! eenta a foot!—40eenta a rod!—for a bom and oow proof tence of Ave fall*!!— cents a foot!—«0 cents a rod!—for a boree.row, pig andpoultry
pounds atratn will not break a "Braided Ball.** Boat, ore ana froat woof, (.on^racu and expands hi Winter unit Samaier. Vou receive greater atmtgth, beantr, eiMtioHy, aMMasuc« and economy than when paylag two or three timoa much lor any other fencing!f 1" here are delighted with Uieir "Braided Kail" Feocea, Oome and Inveatlgate befow yon l»alld feneen thia spring. It will pay
yon.
OaJi on,
or
IMablkbcd USL Incorporated 1SK. MaaaCMtaracs ofi
Sash, Doors, Blinds,^Etc.,
For Railroad Tickets
AHD DXALX3U W—
Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Paints, Oils and Builders' Hardware. Corner of Ninth and Mulberry Streets, Terre Haute, Ind.
SACUBOAD IICMW.
-OAJLl* OK-
LOUIS D. SMITH, 661 Main Street.
•s la
flum moo*, cm, «m
sr.
write,
McFERRIN BROS., SOLE AGENTS, TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.
la. Rwitk Second Street, Wcat M«e ef the *«r Caart Howte.
PTiAHTVA MOL. ml
1. 8. WtLLlAUB, Praatdeat. J. U. Of JDTT,
CLIFT WILLIAMS COMPANY,
TilSB
Y'\"S
1
will have obtained during the
TKRKK HAOTB RKAR. KSTATK AND 1M-
Avk.
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E. eorner NlHh
and Ohio etrecta. jr. A. WIX.lMOH, SOI North Fourth
STBBL|RAILS."-1^
proof
fence of Wraiten 2.000
and Treasurer.
TO ALL POINTS AT
REDUCED RATES.
Mad flint ef JDealer la
«ALTAX£SD ZBOK OOSVICM. JtTC.
LYNCH ft SURRELL,
umunmBOi
SIO« *TlO MMKf STB*aT, TSBBB HAtTTK, DHHAKA.
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