Terre Haute Daily News, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 May 1890 — Page 3
PIANOS
AWD
ORGANS*
D. B. BALDWIN t® CO.'S
BARGAIN SALS OF
Pianos
-and
Organs!
New 7'i Octave I'pright ebauimi FIAXM, isold at IIM «p to
New Orx*»i« §34 tip to $MO. Every instrument fully warranted for FIVE ear* find warmuU-d a» gotni as gold. a!i and examine our good*.
320 Wabash Avenue.
HOOTH, SHOE* AND KUBHBRS.
LADIES,
TRY THE NEW
Holdfast Rubber!
Cannot slip off as others do they are much mom comfortable and durable tuid cost no more.
Bargain* in BOOTH AND SHOE iteforo purchasing elsewhere come and examine the goods and priced.
D.l^eibold,
300 Main St., Terre Haute, Ind.
COAL AND WOOD.
Household Coods
STORAGE ROOMS
jjjrjr
,,r
S IT S
046 MAIN STREET.
KKDIW.lf PRirtRM Off COAt.t Bout Block. .12.30 per ton Block Nut 2.20 WRishington Lump.. 2.20 Bbolburn... 2.20 Washington Nut.... 1.85 Hard Goal 7.50" Blacksmith Ooal..... 6.00 Stove Wood 8.75 per oord
Telephone 187.
MI MtU.A KOUt.
NEW KODAKS
IIMV-U
Ft
SfcauM know tfeat
Yon press
the button,
we do
the rest*
XtJ i« l»wl M«N
*i.i. wmt Film*. fusMr sate l*y all l*tw»io. !*tt*k I Kale r*. THE EASTMAN COMPANY, Jfrmt/tv'tfefekv*".
KOCIISSTK*.
.V,
STEAMERS*
I npw»«n» rtw to»»- a* mahlp Ifttes and
mm
pre, ntV tow* ales IbM W ftvMtt
North (Umnan White Star Uoyd Galon Cun&nl Hamburg
American
KvUu^udl
Red^tar ^tate Anchor Anchor Allan Lines.
jMasaesxiSt ac"*• JOHN G. HE2NL,
S«Hh ivXhlk W.t*m »»•«•. tw*.
tmKDS.
UMBJLXDURASOF
Flowers!
FOOTE S SEED STORE
416 Ohh
yjc
AFFAIRS OF THE RAILWAYS.
PSENIOENT rBEE9 WEB F«« »V THE H. A D.
TtwMI tirew Oil fT lh« ITCH KN«I ami Is 3f«« Trial mi IwdtaM-
The suit ot the Cincinnati, Hamilton A Dayton vs. Wm. H. McKeen began at Indianapolis on Saturday. The plaintiff represented by Mr. Maxwell, attorney for the road, and Mr. McKeen by no, M. Bute and no. B. Ham. The suit the one in which the C. H. A D. attempts to recover from Mr. McKeen $889,500, money which It is alleged Ives fraudulently took from the treasury of the G. H. AI. and paid to Mr. McKeen for share* of Vandal ia Stock. Mr. Maxwell, in his opening address, was very severe upon Mr. McKeen, charging that there was a conspiracy entered into between Ives and Mr. McKeen, by which the treasury of the C. H, A D., waa to be emptied into Mr. McKeen'h bands for Vandalia stock. John M. Batter made a strong argument opposition to the prayer of the complaint and in defense of Mr. McKeen. He called attention to the demands
Syreceived
ScKeen
c4
the
complaint, which are that Mr. McKeen
Wk to the C., H. A D. the $389,500 that if not directed to pay back the sum, that be hold it as trustee for the C., H. A D. that the contract between Ivee and Keen, entered into Jane 1, 1885, be cancelled. Mr. Butler called attention to the averments of the complaint, which are that Ives l»ad no right to take the money from the G\, H. A p. treasury and
ircbase Vandalia stoek with it that Mr, knew Ivee was'acting for the C. H. A D. and that Mr. McKeen knew the payments were to be made out of the C., H. & D. treasury. Mr. Butler said that if neither of either of those things were true that the case most fall. Mr. Batter then argued to show that Ives was the absolute owner of a large majority of the stock of the C., 11. & D. when the Vandalia was purchased was it possible that the owner of a majority of shares of «tock of a corporation would take a step that would be inimical to the corporation's interest? He thought not. More than that, he went on to show that the purchase was authorized bv the C., II. A D, directors. By resolution, he said Ives was directed to purchase 20,000 shares of Vandalia stock if be could get it for $2,000,000. The records showed that he did purchase that much. The contract, Mr. Butler averred, was|an oj»en, square one. The money over which the suit Is being fought is the amount paid by Ives when the deal for the Van ilalia was made and which he forfeited when the sale fell through.
Railway Rumbling*.
Fred Ellison, claim agent of the Vandalia is in the city. J. K. Yost, commercial agent of the C. H. A 1)., was in the city to-day.
C. F. Appleby, traveling passenger agent of the Frisco Line is in the city. The National Tribe works at McKees port, I'a., are now making a thousand tons of water pipe for Ogden, I tali. The Klo Grande and the Union T'acilic, through their Eastern connections, are engaged in a lively fijjht over the order, eacu wanting the freight.
Under the agreement of the Joint Committee of Eastern Koa«!s taking effect May 10th. the minimum charge for ice antf salt used in refrigerator cars, including labor, is £t.50 per ton, and that the present established minimum of
$2
per
enr for each icing will be continued. A new line to lie known as the Inter uational railway is to le built from Doming, N. M., to TojH»lobam|H Bay. on the l*acific coast, a uusance of l,350^miles. l4ndon and Chicago capitalists are behind the deal. W. J. Marks, of I/omlon, has secured the contract for building the road at 121,050,000.
The Kvansvilie & llichmontl will IK» completetl lo Hichmond by July 1st. A large force of woikmen are now employed between Seymour and Westnoint, where the connection is made witn the Big Four, and that will leave only the connection between Rushville and Richmond to be completed!.
A corps of engineers are now at work near Chambersburg, I'a., on anew line from a point on the Pennsylvania to a point on the Cumberland Valley. The new line is being built in order to head off the proposed alliance of the Heading and the Baltimore A Ohio and prevent tho new trunk line scheme of those com* panies.
The Oedar Kapids, Iowa Falls and Northwestern, Iowa City and Western, Cedar Kapids and Clinton, Chicago, 106corah and Minneeote Itailway companies, hase elected the following officers C. J. I vet. preanient ami general manager, J. CI Brockamit, vice-president w. P. Bcaly,se*^tary SL 8. Dorwart. treasurer, II. F. White, chief engineer. H. II. Hot* lister was elected treasurvr of the Chicago, Decorah A Minnesota.
Tle Central Traffic Aewciation (passenger department) has agreed to pant excursion rates at a fare and one-third for the round trip for the following occasions: Omnd LtHuie of Ohio, X. O. O. F., Dayton, O., May^th to LMth,«'rom points in Ohio Western Ga? Association, St Iwouk, May 31st to 23d, from all associations and $enthem points Knights of Labor, Kvaasvilkftt lnd.t June 10th to Uth, from points in Indiana and Illinois Sons of Veterans and Iiadies' Aid Society, Mansfiekl, O., June loth to 17th, from points in Ohio, Indiana and Pennsylvania.
At the meeting of the stockhoklem of the Kickle Plate twld in ClevTlanl one dbi^ hist week. William K. VaiHlefi!4U« Ooraalina andertwft Frederick W. Van* derbih, H. McK. Twwnhby, John a Kennedy and James A. Kooievelt,
wnmm
*tc.
ShfiMM IW SaAs, Ttta, B«,
J. R. DUNCAN & CO., MM.eaoaiMteaawabMitai
1
id
Kew York Cliarlee M. I^ed, ol Exit*, Ifeakl W. CaM» Jephtha H. W«ie and W. iiicfcox, of kmi l-ederkk l\ Okwtt and Obwonccf ML. 5enew, of Kew York: and A%& Cox, of Mount Vma, 1 wen.1 eiec«eddirecieatorotM year. The tola. earaiDfi ol tbe road ia were 9^090,increase, tiTlll^ expeneea aaa uuwa» aet
Iweee^ S86--'^jr*
WhHi otd Vamii&i
bollt (Kiwi the Wabash into thfa dty tp 1 a«t USD it «H coraskiemla very hestrr'
bftdti tttd awrly et^rrbcOy at^) HM mm the wewten btidpe wb ffMnnet* the WabMib «f 8b, irmd whidi was ev«n tiMa the Vandalia tsridfe. that «c^r ayoaad^tto one at th- day ew&r ol a thinsjw flv bt&fffe be* iLwikS. frill •rmiiiii il iMV •iOOBroslltV'ER which only etmWe cJ haoliof a train fnwo ttrelire mm mm mA wm bt Bert tiM
"e ol lmnH awinn isaa c&anced all ttxse ...iMa Tbeoidbridgesbavt^ both I*. to im lorn out aod hm jn fwrt ia,
demote what they were twenty yean ^o and the trains that were formerly made up ol twelve cars of 20,000 pounds capacity now consist of twenty to thirty cars of 40,000 to 50,000 pouncb capacity. Engines Wilt ten year* ^o look like ponies akmg side tJ^ latest arrivals on the Vandalia, and an engine built twenty yean ago oould easily be carried oh the tank of one of the new passenger mo-
A SI ATE WITHOUT A CENT.
Pmtkc Xnlbrf Write* of M« Eipu•l*e MtUiotU of Trade is Catibnia. [BpecfaU Oorrw{xmdaDC&}
SAK FRAXCESCO, May 3.-—California sfcillrefases to ta&e coppers. They turn up thdr iaoses at cents. Nothing goes under a nickel. When incidentally and accidentally I ttave offered here pennies brought, from the east I have felt humiliatedat the lofty air which accompanied their rejection. It said as plainly as words: "Here is a narrow, stingy, picayuniflh easterner, freah from the constrained, one horse pastures of Connect!' cut, and not at all up to our broad, breezy expulsive way of doing business.* "Thf? Californians, yon know, don't bother with that sort of change," was the remark made at one of these refusals. "Bow long have yon been in Califor niaT I asked. "Eight yean.
I meditated. I came to this state in 1850 and remained until 1810. I saw the state in her flush days. Here was a man eight years in California looking down at me from his lofty perch of experience. "He a Cattfornian!" said Scorn. "Yes, a Califomian," said Com mon Sense—"as good as you are. What though yon were ont here in the 'early days' and saw it all? Is it any credit to you? Afe you any better for it than he is? Only you're angry because he won't take you're contemptible little coppers."
So I carried at last my coppers to the postoffice and humbly exchanged them for two cent stamps, and felt somewhat relieved because the general government was not above taking its own money in California.
But California today wants money as much as Connecticut. California with all her immense resources is in some respects poorer than Connecticut. Cali forniaprices for provisions, clothing, etc., are as low as eastern prices. California .today is not the California of 1853, when the miner was slinging his buckskin full of gold dust wildly about, paying for poor whisky fifty and twenty-five cents a drink, and foolishly imagining that because the place had given him a few thousands in gold it was inexhaustible. California is a land of wonderful possibilities and immense resources. She should be the richest state in the Union. She will be in time. But she needs the cent in her daily currency as much as does the opulent city of New York. "You may here in the course of a day want half a dozen small items, which in the east can be bought for a cent or two. When here you shovel out your nickel every time you find it a great factor in melting away your daily pocket allowance. Result, it checks trade. People do not buy as they do in eastern cities.
If yon want a sheet of paper or a single envelope you must plank down your five cents for it. If you buy matches you #nust buy five cents' worth and pack a cord about with yon. You must buy five cents' worth of candy or none at all. The cent stick of candy, the cent or two cent apple, the cent cake, tut roll at the baker s, the cent or two cent or three cent anything are here impossibilities.
I notice that in the world's great centers of commerce like London, Paris Mid New York do yon find the smallest subdivisions of circulating currency.
Now, as to some results. In New York city the Italian's fruit stand is sfcen on almost every other block. In San Francisco it is hardly seen at all. And California is the fruit paradise of the United States. Tho Italian's retail fruit business in New York is, in the aggregate, an immense trade. Many is the ton sold daily from those corner stands. It depends mainly on the one, two and three cent sales knock the penny out and the business would be ruined. Therefore is not the despised copper in the hands of boys and girls as well as grown up people a means of putting and keeping in circulation a great deal of cash everyday? If I can buy txventj' small articles with $1 instead of •10, fear the reason that 1 can by means of a small currency cut that dollar up into twenty pieces instead of ten, is not that dollar when capable of each division worth more to me? Yon are charged here fifteen cents at some houses for a glass ol beer if yon are ttnwtea enough to lay down a quarter of a dollar. That is at the rate of a "bit* a drink. A "bit" is either tax or fifteen cents. A "'long bit** is fifteen cants. A "'•short bit" is ten cents. People who put on style here and do the magnificent and wish to stand well in the estimation erf the bar keeper seldom proffer a "short bit" for a drink. No. They lay down their quarter every these and the bar keeper calmly stoves ten cents back, wKich the customer pockets, and his rcput&iittu is intact. In this way a prWely raancaaa pay sixty cents for four gtamceof lager if he doesn't uo short bitMacm.
The daily pape* hero is five cent*. As result* yon see ia the street car a©d $erry boat nothing to eocnpa»e th the mm upspn reading by the while in transit from (Stop or store to thdbr homes as in New Yorit, when) -evacybody^s nose is barfed in a paper when goiitf fftaaer returning to the&r homes, whidt they bey for one and two cvnt».
The entire sentiment on which this tv-y-ai castes*pi for small currency Is
5Tvd
iu curreocy is
MMed always was a humbug. Tbemfner wf the flush times after living »Inr year* where a dime was the krwest cots cMhOtn imbed oat the aaQ a few tihoowead dotla**. He wi*nt with fit his ii is 11 vii bome, ftunwd op kit ncae I at cuppwa* ^pent his money, cwase back
netei got ft, bMsott fa
acta which bfai «mbsm friends wwJdnt take a hen cocfk He w«s. the
ahoar oonpets,
mmb' hMmpmA
Ssor liwt w^^tbsd aear half
beta. tewMd «ae to .. ?IEEE:i£EES!*L
tlvi bceNt way ywa boeraM wei
TERRE HAUTE DAILY NEWS. MONDAY. MAY 12.1890.
Syctoy 8Mg.
Tfce ewto te end ghaateg. The tax* fe tatnra fat Us bad. Baia from toe riood t» stmrnning
And tho bo* bead* overhead, TOe charm
at
the viater la brokea!
71»» iaat
at
the apcQ ia aekl!
Oweei la tlw poad Is pddb*tiifc IhegniTtiBgleaf* ia theetreem $pnwc tt Qm dooda are tidefceebe?
See bow (be meadows gleam!
One
ibe Uueh
tbe roee.
The swift ia whwaHag and gfaamlng, Tlw wooda am he*lrailBg to rteg, ttaln from the cioad la stxeamlbc
There, where the bow doth dint, una tit nmlltnitafar OrartbeeboolderoC apriag! —Bobart
Some Londoam An
The West End was quite shocked when The Pall Mall Gazette published this story, and more than one good citizen stopped the paper in order that his wife and children might not be annoyed by the perusal of such vulgar atrocities.— Cor. New York Sun.
Zteceat JDevelopinenta of Tale Culture. A novel fad has recently taken possession of the Yale juniors, and is causing much amusement about the college, Every afternoon and evening the mem bersof the three upper classes gather round their respective portions of the new fence in front of Durfee and as a new man strolls up to join a group of classmates he is suddenly pounced upon his vest is unbuttoned, and in spite of his struggles the tab on the bottom of his shirt bosom is cut off. This trophy is then tacked up on an elm, where are some fifty or more similar ones. The custom is peculiarly a junior one, and the members of the other classes look on and cheer while the struggle is in progress. As many of the tabs so taken have the owner's initials embroidered upon them they are easily recognized as they lumg upon the elm, and among them can be seen the tabs once belonging to the best known men in the class. New York Sun.
An Acoustic Tale."
A special to The New York World from Helena, Ark., dated April 24, says: John R. McGuire, of Modoc Landing, says that during the high water he has been compelled to fell trees in order that his cows might sustain life by browsing on the green leaves. The animals were always hungry and he had great trouble in driving them away to keep the oakn from falling on them. Two days ago there was a thunder storm and before it began to rain there was a clap of thunder that sounded exactly like a tree falling. Mr. McGuire's entire herd of cows rushed frantically towards the spot where it seemed the tree had fallen. Another and another clap followed in rapid succession and all of tks cattle put to the hill country, where they supposed trees were being cut down. Not one of them has been seen since.
Cotton Over Tw«aty-flv« Tears of Age. A sample of cotton with a history has ust been exhibited in Nashville, Tenn. [t came from a bale raised near West Point, Miss., in 1868. The man who raised the cotton waa offered forty-two cents per pound for it in 1804, but refused to take it. He has since been hold ing for a rise that never came, and cm March 10 last he sold it for ten cents per pound. Estimating the bale to weigh 500 pounds, and counting simple interest on tho money at 6 per cent,, the planter lost $487.60 by not disposing of it twentysix years ago. The cotton ia perfectly sound, and as good as when taken from the field.—Exchange.
WHAT'S
the matter with
PINTS,
!K
TbeupMat tbe wiater la ribtkea! Tbe weetd aaakca from a dnaatt.'^ ^SChsflr fats oat greett&agcn, «s
Tta pear tree eaftir blows. roee to ber dark bower ttagera, wM aooa uarlnee
at
SMUAUTA.
Some of the London newspapers have been inconsiderate enough to harrow the feelings of polite society by publishing the tale of an East End tragedy whereby a dock laborer died of starvation. Mark Valle was the victim's name, and his neighbors report him to be a teiljWate, steady man, who made every effort to obtain sufficient work to support his family, consisting of a wife and five small children. He had a little money due him on Thursday, and dropped dead at tie paymaster's feet as he received it The doctor who made the post mortem said death was due to starvation, and the man's stomach was entirely empty. The eldest boy told the coroner that their father had eaten nothing since the previous Saturday, though the children had had a little stew twice since then. Their father ate nothing in order that there should be more for his little ones.
THE NEWS?
It's all right. Only 10 cents a week.
ASTNOITSrCKMJENT.
ANNOtfNCEMKNT-Theof
routes of
TH*
Knr*
are now in the lMct4a the carriers who are re^msibJe for the proper delivery of all papers. If you do not receive yonr paper meh evening, do not pay tor it, Saturday when the boy cai:* to collect.
WAWTKD.
1*r ANTED-Sitnatloa by a young lady as WW writer ia some kind of an dace. Can write both Ryl!«lt and tienaan, also tnuwlate. Tbelmt of refertreoesgi^ If desired. Aildreas 1.3SQ Walaat sot**. Hf AKTKD-By tnited »T Company at Anoi Ate., lotar good car axk makers a*d dwirbeatcia. Seady work and good wag«* for wober i&dwrtrioe*
WANTEDS
yr A3CTKD—S4*»aioo~Aji
mm
a
it aeeras to ewa ha/ rWBcnkKisc&2 '**$$* aad eaw^e, at rtdkskes as a Fmidi kay,
mm.
dtem 4. Z. te«g'AaaiMe, Ala., far all watioa.-Tl^,\3rrat--IHwilk«a at tiUM 3|«an«U. Addrww,
boosekeeper bare kddram, tm Xortb
T|T ASTOMte t«ay a good drew W. «U"
aeeead-feafeil soft mm. 1m&mp. Ad-
as clerk
goodt* -««n«L
in a dr ft. Nics-
ATFFTM*. X.
kyaaMW
If ti age «»d aieriHxc. Addreas P. O. IHSSK SC&, Orrfn'rantlr. fad.
1ST AXtKO-glfT ATM-8r a mac JV„, «fe g^l,rga'
saaa «r
WA.VTED-WORK-Any kind thataboyeaa of IA ^SmntntAm&^Xk ]tfi
by a boy
14 yeaes did. laaMafe. Ad-
WIS 4eaay wwt
dtw S. C. JOHSeOS. *a*«r%b
Xectli Tbl»eiaB#.
Iff AlfTED—4Blwstl«at a* Iweeeatewet
A3(TltMWi»
SOH4
AMI WtiA&tft'-
\If AKTED—POBJTIOX—By a widow lady Jf with on« child: position as boBsekeeper. Thoroughly tindemtands the duties and can five Ibe best of references, laqnjn at No. 32 North Eleventh street. \ir ANTED—A wetnnrse part of the day far a v¥ baby four month* old or to furnish mother'# mftk for it £wo or three times day. Apply to ., ELDER RAKES,
TIR ANT£D—Men y\ known nnr» and country trade. Oood p*y weekly. Good references required. Apply quick, stating age,
CHASE
8A
LB—Hone
1XR
Mill. 3 rooms and kitchen, Prlee, 180®, Easy terms, BEAUTIFDL COTTAGE, South Fourteenth street, corner of Ohio street.' Two squares from Main street: all conveniences, well, cistern, ont-hulldings, small fruits etc. Price, 11650. Terms very reasonable. COTTAGE HOME, west side North Eighth street, between Third and Fourth Avenues. All street improvement* made including brlclt pavement, city water pipes, street cars pass every 12 minute*, a very desirable location, will paint houao. Price, *1500.
TERRE HAUTE REAL ESTATE
AND IMPROVEMENT CO.
No.052 Wabash Avenue.
PAWN BItOKEIt,
MAX BLTJMBERG,
418 Ohio Ktreet,
I give the highest loan on household goods without removing. Also on all valuables.
DYE WORKS.
NE PLUS ULTRA!
Dyeing and renovating of Ladles' aad Gentlemen's w«ar in all desired shades of any fabric at abort aotUw and modern pricrs at
H. F. REINERS'
Steam Dye Works,
Ho. 065 Wabash AVOtlud.
setnra
Ad*
PA2STT8 AXD SUITS.
REMOVED.
O MBRRIVT. The Tailor and Hatter.'
WANTED. j£||§g TEM3C TABLE,
US South Sixth streetTcity.
Men to represent our weiilnraery la this eoanty, for town •ade. Oood pay weekly. Good
BROTHERS
CoSrANY, Ch5c*ffom:
FOR8AX.B.
OR
SALE—A
temily bone. T. Hulfioan, Sr.,
North Thirteenth Htreet.
Froom
OR SALE—NO. 1S01 liberty avenue. Three bouse, SO foot tot, Good title R. S.
FOR
SALE-TWO
1X)R
TEXNAKT. M5 Ohio (rtreot
wail abow black wal
nut, plate glass doors, ten feet long, five 14 inc" Aptfrei high, inches deep. For sale cheap, ply at once at woolen milt office, South First street.
and buggy in good *mdl
Uon. Will sell cheap. Enquire at TOT North Kleveath
FWillstreet.
SALE—A baby carriage, good as new, sell at a bargain, till at once. 332 North Eighth street.
SALE—House, boarding boose, '214 North Fourth, Idrooma and rents for $40 per month. Already furnished. Apply to 419 North Third street.
X8TRAYED OR STOLBN.
I
STRAYED OR STOLEN—Horse, dark brown, !i 16 hands high, blind in left eye. large scar on left hip. lately clipped. Suitable reward given for return or information given of whereabouts. Addn«s, 143G Chestnut street.
FOR RKNT. pleasant,
r?OR RENT-A large, Mulberry street.
t^OR
RENT—ROOM—Furnished or unfurnished. No. 624 North Ninth street. jpo
RENT—Two unfurnished rooms, or address, 1430 Third avenue.
MONEY TO JLOAN.
MONEY
TO LOAN-Any sum- easy terms RIDDLB, HAMILTON A Co.
NOX-HKSiI)KNT NOTICE.
STATE
OF INDIANA, COUNTY OF VIGO.— Frank W. Woelfle vs. John A. Woelfle. Attachment aud garnishment.
Whereas, the plaintiff, Frank \V» Woelfle. has procured a writ of attachment against the goods, chattels, rights, inouiea, emliUt un«l effects or said John A. Woelfle, nnd it appearing from the constable's return that said defendant, John A. Woelfle. was not found, the said defendant Is hereby notified of tho pendency of this action against him, and that the same will be held by me at my office In tho city of Tern Haute on the iSRth day of June. 1S00. nt 10 o'clock a. m.
JOSEPH M. WILDY, J, I'
RKAXi ESTATE.
REAL ESTATE BARGAINS
THIS WI:I:K ONLY.
TWO CHOICE LOTS, North Eighth street, just north of Muckeye street. These lot* lay nice with the street, l*rlce for the two,
S685 if sold this week. SMALL COTTAGE HOME, North third street. Convenient to Htudnute' and North Rolling
HIDE.
WALL PAPER, ETC.
^SIBLEY I B0SS0MO
Wall Paper, Window Shades, Mouse Painting ana Hard Wood Finished,102NORTH FOURTH STREET, Terre Haute, Indiana.
icnntiusn.
mm am, RUBBER TYPE
tes, Seals, Etc.!
J. J. TRULNETT,
SUITS $18.
J^AILROAD TXKX TABLE. Standard time 1G minutes slower than city time.
VANDALIA LIKE.
LAUvxFQMth*Wnrr—1:42am
Cm
I-
KAST-1:» a
I
Train* leave
fat
11:30
m.
Trains arrive from the north at MO am 10:15 am £10 and 8:45 m. BIG FOUR.
Trains leave for east at 1:30 a. m. 8:03 a. m. 12:54 p. m.
3:48
p. m.
Call
Leave for the west 1:20SL m, 10:03 a. m. 13:64 p. m. 7:27 p. ta.
RAILWAY*.
3 EXPRESS TRAINS DAILY
FA OH
tVAHSVILLg, VINOKNNES, TgRRK HAUTE and OANVI TO
1 ,Jt'
10:21 am
P- m. 3:10 p. m. fcO« p. m. 4:K p. m. ZJUVXro*TH*EAST—1
SSI
90
a LUam 7 16|
am 12:4? 2:30 m. 5:06 p. m. Amuva RAOM TH*
1&15
T. H. &
am
4:00p 3:06 p. m. &4S p. m. %0Qp. a. Aaaxvi r*o* TH* W*sr—i:» am: 1M2 am: 15:42 2:15 m. icOO p. m. »:S0 p. m.
L. DIVISION,
LKAVX FOE TH* Noara—&<»
am
Amxrv* r*oa rn*
4.-00
p, m.
NO*TH—M»noon 7:80
pm,
K. T. H.
Trains leave for the aouth at 5:20 am 10:30 a m, lsl& and 9:80 m. Trains arrive from the aouth at&lO am 11^01 a &40 m, and
11HU
m.
T.H.AP.
Train* leave for the northwest at 8:15an m. Trmlns arrive from northweat at 11:15 a and T:15p m.
E.&I.
detail*
adlrMs your nearest Tiokat Agsnt.
WILLIAM HILL,
Oen. Pass,
antf Ttt. Aflf
CHICA80, IU.
R. A. CAMPBELL, Gen. Aot., Terre
TRUKKS.
1
GALLON
V. G. DICKHOUT
for Trunks, Valfam and Traveling Ban. will I
are going away this winter be trunk /Aaf
'-hat will prOT« a fictorions enemy to tha baggage smasher.
HATH HOUSE.
EXCHANGE ARTESIAN BATB HOUSE.
Tb* water from tbeae wells does not strike tha I latrnnUl it Is tn the bath tub, thus preserving
ingt. Cold and hot batm, vapor, Hiid Ktussiaa baths. Elegant iadlea' watting fiorn. Hones takai care of while you are bathing.
Comer Tenth and OMMaat atreets, near anion depot.
JOB P&XXTER.
I. C. S. GFR0ERER
S-^t,
Job Printer,
NM KUHMTO. I
23 SOUTH FIFTH ST.
DAILY NEWS 0UIUMN0
CnrDEBTAKEBSAXDEMBAJLMEBa.
r«L AACK. «Ajnsa.nmar. BLAOtL NWBWr, Undertakers and Embaimers,
TsmBAom
mr-AU mO$ win i*eat*e OyaatfayaadlBlgifcL
A LAST CALL.
When a 900-page, royal octavo book,
[the admitted King of its kind, beauti
Trains leave for the south, mall and express,' &1S a m: Worth, mixed, 4:05 m. Arrive from the south Worth, mixed 10:60 a luul for the price at which J. Q. BUTmail and exprera, 4:05 m.
fully, honestly, durably made, can be
the north at5:90 am 1210p| TON A CO., of Terre Haute, oflbrs it, &30 and
several things will result,
Shortest.
E
CHICAGO
WHENCE DIRECT CONNECTION is mad# to all points
Ail for Tkdcrtt tU Oiugs Xuttn Illiasis 1 &
of
rttat, tima tablss and Information In
I* 1st. Many people—all who are wise
and who possibly can—will siexe tins
opportunity to secure it.
2nd. They will have decided on this
quickly and the otTer will cease.
3rd. All who ever will wont the work,
will have got it the demand will soon
be so thoroughly exhausted, that there
never again will le enough to warrant a
second sale in this community, at leant
in your generation.
Consequently this is, in the nature of
things, pretty nearly a "last call," and is
deserving Uie attention of every
JKT RICH MAN -Ha nir 1XX)R MAN
|a&* DOCTOR
Lir LAWYER MERCHANT «ir CHIEF, 10" FATHER
MT* MOTHER
!.<p></p>Haute. 1
IW PUPIL
\9sr
|«sr PROFESSOR
luar WORKMAN Iter FARMER
Iter EDITOR |«r POLITICIAN,
\mr
who hopes to Know something, Do something,
If you
nu^te a
-m
GOOD MAN
Lr THIEF,
-Ha
-m
"Wi
-m
TEACH KK, -%dt
Ur STUDENT PRESIDENT
-m
-m
PREACHER,
-m
"Wt
SAINT AND
I »sr- SINNER «ar AND EVERY WHICH 'UN—
Ik something.
To such we say that the great Brit-
lannica, in 24 volumes and index, can
be ltad cheaper than ever before or ever
I again. :.
And you know that the work is worth
double the introductory price flaked.
Tli ere fore, yon will come, not on oar
account, but on your own.
Yoo will "know a good thing when
you see it"
Call and learn terras
of
this wonder
ful offer. Respectfully,
J. Q. BUTTON A 00.,
Exclusive sale In Terre Hatsie.
Bead advta. in other paper* and pre-
vkraa ad via. in this paper.
JyS--•hh-, v-
9t
.J
