Terre Haute Daily News, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 July 1890 — Page 7

%L

wm iisSi

t,

mi

§&<.

MODERN FRONTS ARE NEEDEB

COXK1DBKATIOXR IX EMCTIX6 SK9f BraUfKSS BLOCK1,

Vlie Wfmt •f ft* Knell Kt*ne IHiapyMr-Ibc-Imtcmc In Ewrt E»4 Bant MM

Mi Exeitcacat ttytmg Out.

The arcbitecta of Terre Hante deserve mttch credit, bat they also hare their faults and have made mistakes. Daring the past two season* the city has awak ened to its need of new fronts of modern types, upon the principal business streets. New fronts have been put into about twenty stores. The appearance of tLe streets have been improved and tenants have willingly paid additional rent. In connection with these new fronts has been noted an architect oral blunder. Stone has been used instead of iron in supporting the fronts of the old buildings. Oply when iron is used can a modern front be put in. In repairing the Gofttz building it was necessary to put timbers under the wall to support it while the stone was removed and iron substituted. This was also the case in the lioyse building. However, both these buildings mere old and when they were built their architects were probably modern. It is impossible to put into the marble block a front as beautiful as the Goetz or Royse front without removing the stone arches and substituting iron. While the architects of the old building may be .excused, there can now be no apology for using stone as a horizontal support to a front wall. The day of stone is past. b'aid a gentleman who built only a eon pie of years ago, "I see that I must put in a new front before my store can be attractive to tenants. Now, I permitted stone to be put in and the stone must be taken out. This makes it necessary to tear the front wall nearly to pieces, and also the ceiling and the upstairs room by supporting the wall with timbers while iron is being put in. I know now that 1 made a mistake in using stone in the first place." Said another gentleman who built two years ago: "I saw to it mygelf that two '*1 beams' were bolted together and put in as a support for the frqnt wall. Those beams are strong enough to hold up the entire front wall without any vertical supports between the side walls. Although I did not think it wise to put in an expensive plate glass front then, I can do so at small cost whenever an improvement becomes necessary. There will be no occasion for damage to the front wrfll."

All persons contemplating the building of store rooms will find it to their interest to consider, the above words. A modern front has become a necessity to a store room. A closed, dark, dingy, front having immense stone pillars cannot stand competition with the light and airy grace, of the iron front. Tenants promise to give landlords no rest until as good a display of wares can be made as it is possible to make. It is the duty of builders to know this fact. It is also the duty of the architect to be a little ahead of the geneml public in nil nmttoro pertniniriK to his trade and to b*» first to see the drift

Popular taste and to comprehend the labilities of tbo. modern use of iron, it may safely be said that no money is wasted that fs spent upon making a store front of plate gla*s, no matter where the •store rooms may be built. _, ffSotw.

Every indication of an oil boom seems to have died out. The general public seems to be discouraged. But little conIklence is felt in number 4. No strangers are even paving an occasional visit to the field. Uowever, the fact remains that every patHotic citizen should take interest in the oil field as the surest means to bring to the city a future of growth and enhancing real estate values.

Said an Kant End business man: "I have been here four years. The first year my business amounted to 2,700, the second year it amounted to $5,000, the third year to $15,000, and this year it has every indication of going up to $25,©00 in the whole amount of sales. There has been some recent talk of establishinst an East End bank. It is proposed to locate on the corner of Twelfth and Main streets, on Mr. Mickey's lot In this case the frame building will be removed and a brick houso built The day cannot be distant when the East End will have a bank.

Nothing has yet been done toward utilizing the artesian water flow for power purposes. A vast amount of money has been lost in the drilling of dry oil well* There is reason for thinking that each one of these wells, located in the city, would pay a dividend on its cost if the wells had been put deeper into the heavy water flow. Each well is capable of giving out several horse power. For all light manufacturing purposes, such as driving printing presses, or running sewing machines for factories, the water pressure is sufficient. It might have been well if the city had opened her sewers to the use of artesian wells for power purposes When the eewcqra are kept in proper re* pair, there can be no escape of o&ensive gases. "Oh* water pressure ia now known to be hydrostatic and (Joes not come from conthirii gas as Was at first inferred. Thv water is inexhatwtable and if a 12-inch hole could be drilled, the power would be great. lima oil was thi* weok listed upon the New York Oil Exchange. In all probability it will now become "certificafc oil." It

SMMMS

from present indication*

that Tom* Haute oil must rank at par with Uma oil. There seems no reasr

5i^n

th» wrtitlcalv method of doiugi oil hosmew will h. pitted to the weatftrn fields con* under the same «»&*». thforce of the arfceaku flow, the temperator- .»f th*» «sur is equal to d«ucy of w«»l t\ms of w«i. The nm A1#O an *m and amounts to ahou U%000co' f««t per dav. Tho wate» tHjwvr rtmUi bo employ**! to Sleetand he dimaly coweectwi with a riKH«r, or tiw current nid h* used during the niyht ttaw? for cl»arjrf»» storage batteries. The sUr*»e batter? has a future. Hence it may not be Sn» pml»bS«» tl»*t tlx- day will com** wh*i arte sian w»-n* ar^sunk inTern Haute ift powi^r purpos-^.

»v

&

anil

hands

for considering i", a "premium" oil, Nt ... until oil is here produced iu larwa quan Mr. Bright1* doctrine of caveat emptor evititkacsin of Tom Haute or dently Bnds no tavor in the eyes of the rwocoiseed. Pomtbl the llsttnit of Lima oii will do that fWld some jpo»Ki. Such a move does not enlarge the ma'kH, but admits the elemetit of apwsttlaiiiBu aas^ivania m«. who have

aecustomed t«.

*..

mnsmmsmm

WHAT THE TIMES NEED.

Clod give

OF QMCB!

A.tim» Bket3diitaiaju»4s

StK»CBxiod»,7i»&tfceaito,trti6 fe&fc «a4 rm4f

Hen whom the lostof office fi Mas whom the spoils of aBim «uun* Uij Ken who posts* opinions

mad

wfll

Men wbo fcmva hooor me» who will tta Men who can stood before a demagogua "And tfcuaa his traacberooa fiattariM witbeut wto Tall men •.••i cro«x«d, wholhreatoora ttMfog#

Is public duty and in prlnSt thinking, Foar tsrhila t.io rabble, with

thrtr

crtedn.

thumb

Boys, Improve Your TlmC^ There are a certain class of boys about every town and city who apparently do nothing but loaf, smoke cigars and cigarettes, and areueither a help to their parents nor an ornament to society. Nine-tenths of the convicts in the penitentiary were street loafers when they were boys, and preferred to get a living in some other way than by honest labor and the sweat of thair brow., Too many boys are growing up in idleness and are lotting golden opportunities pass by unheeded. Your boyhood days are rapidly passing by, and you will soon be called upon to take up the cares and responsibilities of manhood. .iVU

A good education is offered to you in our public schools, and one that will fit you for all active duties of life, but you are letting this precious gem slip through your fingers and instead of embracing this opportunity of securing a^good education, as your parents wish you to do, ypu are seen on thO street corner, stunting your mental and moral powers by the use of narcotics. Boys, there is a future before you. If life is worth living it is worth living right. Get an education, learn a trade and try and make a man of yourself, and let the world be better by your having lived in it. —Mt, Ayr Record.

Inrentlon of the Compai#.

The valuable invention of the compass is involved in mystery and its real discoverer is unknown. Lafitoau, in his history of the Portuguese discovery in the new world, says that Vasco da Gama brought it to Lisbon from the coast of Africa on his return from Melinda, where the Arabs then used it, and he believed the Portuguese to have been until then ignorant of it. Some attribute it to Ftavia Gioja, of Amalphi, about the year 1303 while others again are of opinion that the invention is due to the Chinese, and that one of their emperors, a celebrated astrologer, was acquainted with it 1,180 years before the Christian era nor have others again been wanting who have supported the opinion that it was known in the time of Solomon. The ancient Greeks and Romans are also supposed by some to hard used it, but tho silence of their historian on this subject renders this statement donbtfcL—New York Ledger.

Penalty for Adaltemtlon.', Sevece measures have reoendy been tak^n by the Russian government against adulteration and the sale of injurious substances as food. Persons convicted of these offenses will be liable to a fine of 300 rubles (£4$) or to imprisonment for three mouths. For a second offense those penalties will be doubled, and a third conviction will entail the loss of civil and political rights.

csar. Our own "free and enlightened" country r.- ht fa advantage take a hint from such truly benevolent ghioago Herald.

S ,11 I. Covbny* Uphold t.h«

kt Weodwr, Wj. them about 900 cowboys

in

camp. Nooflhm am lo­

cated there, :,.t the men are held In restraJot bysui respect and the orders of their employers. Chi* of the punchem stoleasftddie. Re was captured red handed, stripped on tho banks of the Platte and received twenty isshes on the bare bade with a heavy whip. Than he was paddled with boui The cowboys are detwv xniOr«d to nphold the dignity of the law.—

vi Ti** CnwotimMtal torn. woity dear. I can lite on lone.

He—Yon wont think ao after i! father

jaa.

Addrcw all communication*

wtrn

Their largo protettfam and their Uttte deed*, Minsk In «flflsh staffe, to! Freedom weepo, Wroair rule# the Isod sad waiting Justice sleeps. —J. a Holland.

Handkerchief)*.

There was recently exhibited in Paris, preparatory to sale by auction, a collection of pockethandkerchiefs which had Occupied its owner many years in the getting together.

Hand kerchiefs appear at the first glance to be singular and unprofitable objects for a collector's fancy, but the collection exhibited at Paris seemed to prove that they could be made to tell an interesting story, illustrating the development of manners in modern society.

The most ancient handkerchief in this collection was merely a bit of silk tissue, used many centuries ago by priests at the altar. For' centuries, indeed, priests were the only persons in the European world who used handkerchiefs at all, and they used them only si the altar, and there only for the sake of propriety.

The handkerchief of the altar was called a facial. It was carried by the priest in his girdle, and left with the ves*me*$s of worship when the service was done.

Presently the grand' ladies of the Court began to provide themselves with similar squares of silk. The next step was to embroider the edge of these squares. And soon their convenience recommended them so highly that gentlemen connected with the various European courts in some measure adopted their use.—Youth's Companion.

A Particular People.

A great big ragged tramp was stretched at full length on one of the benches in the Circus park when an officer approached and dropped the end of his club against him and said: "Get oat of this!" "W-wlio-what!" .gasped the sleeper aa ha struggled up. "What are you doing here?" '•Sleeping, sir." "But this is no place to sleep." "It ain't, hey?" "No, and you have no right to stretch out and occupy a bench." "I think I have." "Well, I know you haven't, and if you do it again I'll nrrcsfc^you!" "Is that the law hero!'" .. "It is." t."r "Well, you must be a mighty particular people'. If a feller wants to sleep be must keep awake on account of the law, and if ho wants to stretch his legs he's got tO go out and hire a vacant lot somewhere Say!" "Well?" "Put your old park Jn your pocket! There's no society for a man like me here, anyway, and I just wandered in to show the people that I wasn't proud or stuck up."—Detroit Freo Press.

Smith, champion land, was the

White kings—16,

TEItltEWAUTF. L)A1LV NEWS: SATURDAY, JULY 2b, lSdO.

Qar Cheeket* Column.

JWUT

as. isoa

torihla

ment 10 Jobi T. Duma, Wl StxeeV, CaiCAOO, lu.

depart­

Fllteenta •1

THE LATE ENGLISH CHAMPION. Aa*trail an Sympathy—Our colonial are showing their sympathy with the lata champion Smith's family in a practical maa nor. A collection la Melbourne on their behalf has realized over £7, says the Leeds Mercury and the draughts players of Sooth Australia are likely to increase the sum. A Melbourne correspondent writes that Mr. Wyllle, the "Herd Laddie," gave an exhibition of simultaneous play on May the proceeds cf which -were to'go to the fund, and in spite of the counter attractions of a big torch light pooces slon, the exhibition was well attended. Out correspondent favors its with the following ex tract (being a sob-leader) from the Melbonnts Argus, showing the deep interest taken in tha matter by the Australian public: "The death, at tbo early age of thirty years,' Of Jam el draogots player of Enresult of an attack of paralysis, which had been preceded a few' months previously, by a severe illness that had axhausted his resources. It was reported, shortly after the announcement of his defeat la his great match with Mr. C. F. Barker, the checker cbastpion of America, that he had bees dismissed from his employment because the foreman under whom he worked had lost money through having heavily backed him to win. But whether there was truth in this rumorjor not. it is certain that his death "was but the culmination of a series of other misfortunes and that, although he had the reputation of being both a steady workman and a frugal man, he left his widow and four children in very necessitous circumstances. The sympathy of the draughts players of Great Britain and America was promptly shown by the initiation of a fund for her benefit and the Mel* bourne Draughts Club recently resolved on making an attempt to obtain contributions vo the fund in victoria. Tho result has been that some money has been already collected, and that a stmil&f- movement hai been initiated in South Australia. Mr. Wyllls has very kindly offered to give his assistance to these efforts, and It has been arranged that he shall be in attendance at Mr. Mather's cafe, in Bourke street, on the evening of the Queen's birthday, prepared to meet all comers at his usual tariff of one shilling per game It is his Intention to hand over the whole receipts ol the evening to the James Smith widow and orphans' fund and he hopes, therefor* that every draughts player in the city who de sires to assist in alleviating the distress pf the widow and orphan children of the late'eham

plon of England will endeavor to be present at nis proposed exhibition of simultaneous play." POSITION NO. 204.—BY P. TBIRK1LL.

FROM ECHO

AND

TIMES.

Black—12. 24. King 33.

S3.

White to play and draw

THE ST. LOUIS TOURNAMENT. The editor of this department and Mr. Charlei Heftor, of Chicago. 11L. have received an invitation to participate in the tournament which lfe to tako place, this month tn St. Louis for a purse which is to consist of live hundred dollars In prizes, which will bo distributed 1a the following order: First, SSJ?5f secona, 8195 third, $75 fourth. t85. Mr. Reed has beenbarred out on account of holding the American championship,"

GAME NO. 296k "ALMA.*

The play which follows is W Ma J. 1C Lyons, of Liverpool, and is taken with notes from The Glaego II..IS,: 23..10

t» Horald.' 18. 90 39..27

9

83.18

8..11

2S..17 8.. 8 25. .22

1.. 5

30..28 9 18.. 9 5..11 16.. 19

23..16

11..16(3 9.13 27..23 88..83

S.

Finn—Baker and Reed's Alma, Var. 178.) I Up to this point Baker and Reed's "Alma," Var. 891, has been followed. Tho position is now identical with Var. 175 of the.same work at 18th move, and with'Bowen's "Bristol," Part II, Var., &4Q at 38d move.' (b) This move, first Introduced by Mr. O. W. Umsted, of Teiluride, OoL, U. S.'A., was for m&ny years supposed to win for White, but the neat draw given above Anally settled the point. Mr. M. Z. Wright has "rediscovered'' this move, and asserts that it wins for White. His play absorbs Umsted's (Bowen's "Bristol," IL,

Corrects Bowen's "Bristol," IL, Var. 640L at 8&th move, and Mr. Wright's reproduction of the same. 13-82 Is played, and White allowed to win. (d) Corrects Bowen's "Bristol," IL, variation 656, at firth move, where 15-19 is played, and White wins as in variation (1J. This sustains tho draw In Baker and Reed's "Alms," variation 291.

Variation

15.. 19 24 .98 8.. 18 22 .26 19..96 31 22 13.19 30 .25 9..14 28..39 19 .94(2(6 25.. 18 96,.80 97..23

S9..tS

to. I* 18.. 10 8.-15 m. 7.-11 .19

31..18

28. .89

19..23 90 .27 33.27 18..S3 90..2H 96..80 23..S3 14..18 24..19 «6..3B 87..9I KJ30 .S 27..94 W..26 19. 88

PRICES FROM

t!

11..16 11..16

7—Castles........ x. 8—P to 4 9—Ktx 10—Bx Kt.: 11—!) to 2 12—11 to sq.. 18—11 to 2. 14—B to 8 15—P to 5 lfr—P to 5.... 17—P to Q6............. 18—P to QKt 4.. 19——Q to 3 1......: H)—P to Qlt 3....

10.. 15 17..10 l)9dl4 Drawn

12.. 8 12.. 8 4.. II 7..11 26..23 8.. 3 6. 9 a)11..16 24. 19 b)v2.. 18 15. 24 OU..28 28.. 13 8.. 8

8. II 10.. 16 12..19

iV-K

to It 4

*1—P -J—QR to S ..' ^1—Q to 15 4—ch. 25—Q to

18. 27 83.. 10 82..83 39..27 93..19 90. 94

4

26—Q to 4-ch........ 27—M to K16 2i—R to 2 2i)—R to Ki'2 30—B to 5 31—R.to 2...., 82—Q to KKt 4 33—RX 34—B 35—B to Kt 0—ch. 36—Q 37—Q to 6—ch 3&—Pto Q,1..........

1

29. 25 14.. 23 19..15 84.. 98 19. .96 W..9T 25..93 97..84 15..11 28 .39 86,23 97..93

White wins.

(C. W. Umsted, Bowen's "Brifirfij," P. EU varltlon&56.) (e) Corrects B. and R.'s Alma, variation 296 at sixth move, where 19-23 is played, allowing Black to draw.

Variation 9,

Draw

(g) Oonects Baker and Reed's "Alma," variation 296, at eleventh move (where 30-96

is

played), and variation 296a, st first move, where 82-23 is played, allowing White to win 14-18 also draws.

Variation 3.

9..14 1.. 5 S0..27 8..11 96. 93 8S..It 38.,ffll 82.. 17 8.. 9 9,i 7 15. 16. 20 17..13 25. 22 28. 10 19.. 15 11. .16 16. SO 11.. 16 4 29..25 93.18 17.14 hj«3 19 7..11 14..83 10..17 lJSOi.84 81..86 87.18 S1..14 j36-92 i- fLyoofe and McAteer.) (h) 9642 draws (Martins v. Coltherd, Ooald*s Match Games, page 50.) Does not this also drawf (I) Mr. D. a Calvert (Quarterly Review, vot L. p.», Var. 84), and Mr.

S4..87

k)l»..*& 18.. 19 16.. 10 6.15

30.

.88

li.18 28.15 Draw

IS.. 6

4) 19.. S3 6.. 8

J.

aid. Qame

So.

Macfarlane (Ber

!SM). elves this move to win for

Black, and correct Bt wad R."s Alma, Var. i,

st

8Sdmove. (P Corrects Messrs. Cslwat and Maefar* lane, who play 88-33 and allowiag Black to win. 00 Jndfctosa.

Variation

9t..ti 8.. 8 ?..W «..i0 J8..8S

30..

a.. 8 *?..« M. .18 1* Oraw U.M 17..13 «..14 t.. #.

rnm GAME Na m—"SOOTEft." Mr.. James MacFartana of Ulasgow. 11..IS 83.19 9. 14 88. 17 9 IT..13 8.

Free the West txthvan Conner.

*T .84 14.17 81..1* 10.. 17 W..M 8.18 •S .83 18. m.

15.18 8i. 15

11

84.190 87.. 81 85. 89 7..11 18..15(e 81..87 89. 25 11.. 1S..11 87..88 85..8S O 7.. 11 II. 7 IB. 14 14..18 11.. 'T.. M., 9 IS. .S3 B. wias 8.. f\.:S3. .27

11..IS

93. £1 18..83 19..» M. Mfa I3..|»{1 S..14 86 18 IS. .88fe tt.lUd 8..I5 10..J9

S3

85 8 80 84 IB

T..11

8S..» H-*

(a) DnnntBotHTs tth, p. H'rar. B, ghw Ate aa a tar Bisek.

Jloss®White

CSsa draw after thtst Oramaoad piar»

tMn

n* ate.

W if SO W, 3-t, St aat Btoek wias. VartaUoel. 9&.M 88..I? J9^9 «.« 8ft -U.M 18.-15 8 7 88. 88 17.. 1$ W..» Sk.U

»..« «.. 8 IS? n..n

(Ht.8? mm St. 87 ».«•» (e) Biaek wtas.

mmrn

8

It.JB a..* »..u

M..1T 1-.«L

A

BLACK.

YVHITK,

W.

M. Tr CHIUOBIN.

STFLXITZ.'1

1—Kt to KB 3 2— toJQ 4 8— to QB 4........... 4—Kt to QB 3 &—.1* to 3 6—H to 8 ......

,1-Kt to KB 3. 2—P to 4. 3—P to 3. 4—P to QB 3. 5—B to 3. '-f 0—QKt to 2. 7—('astlcH. 8—1* KP. 9—Kt Kt 10—P to KR 8. 11—R to sq. M, 12—Q to 3. 13—Kt to B'feq. 14—H toQl 15—B to Ktsq. 16—QtoQsq. 17—P to QKt 3. 18—P to 3. ID—P to Qlt 4. 20—P to 4. A 21—Kt PxP. 22—B to 2. 23—Ilx P.

''Rnpld Transformation.

Miss B., a member of the corps de balle* at the Court Opera house, called upon her friend. Miss C., whom she found busy with her toilet. "What!" said the first named danseuse, "you have gray hair already?," "Yes," replied Miss C., somewhat disconcerted, "it turned gray in a single night In consequence of a great sorrow.''

Next day Miss B. called again. This time her friend bad completed her toilet, and with the help of Eau des Few her hair was now a brilliant- jet. "Ah!" maliciously remarked her visitor, "today your hhir is quite black again!'* "You ses*" remarked Miss C., "it baa turned black again overnight as the result of a sudden

joy!"—Werner

In Paris. fat

(On the Boulevard.) .f-J a

Re^nalde de Jacke Chum play—Weally, doncherknow, I do beliteve I've lost me way. (Calling to man standing by,} I say there, ah. my good fellah, doncherknow, it's blawsted hard luck, but when a fellah's hyar, and cawnt speak a word, doncherknow—er- 4t's—er—weally now. do you— er—do you speak English, doncherknow?

Frenchman—Yes. (Surprised. Do you? —Harvard Lampoon.

They Came Handy.

Uncle (to disreputable nephew}—You have got down to be no better than a common beggar. Hardiy a day passes hat yoo don't come to too and borrow money. Thank heaven "you are my only nephew, and I wteh 1 didn't hare yon.

Nephew—I am abetter man, uncle, than you are. So far from wishing yon dead, I wish I had five or six more such uncle*.— From the German.

Tb« Only TJjinR He Sm to Change* "lam very enrioia to know, Mr Stanh*y," said the interested young person, "what the nnclothed savage of the Afrkao wilds does when the temperature changes -bate no elot&s&i, of oourjie he cannot change them?*' **Kc, madame." wfrfied the Intrepid traveler, "but he changes his mind. That's all he has to change."—3?ew York Sun.

Might Haw Ben.

Aoiptain in the German army published »pa»f«let showing how the French might have ^neda ^rwfc victory at Sedan, and he ha* been caahiared and aeat to prison for fire |«aw*. If the French didn't know what they were doing at Sedan it i* not thcbutioesaiof any German to post them at this late day. So rated the court tiaL ^Detroit Free Breaw.

SahBttdbe lor

Tax Dx&r

ON EASIEST SORT OF TERMS!

Jcr tn

WORLD'S CHAMPIONSHIP GAME1 Wonderful Game of Cbess Played at Havana.

The following waa awarded a prize of 300 francs for being the most brilliant game played in the Havana match for the championship of the world, between 7/. Steinitz and M. Techigorin:

.i

:fc

A

2t—Kt to 3. 25—Kt to eq. 26—Kt to 3. 27—Q to Kt 3. 28—KR to QKt sq. ",f 2i—Q to 2. 3U—K to 2. 31— to 3. 32—KttoB5. *33—P R. 34-P to KKt 4:i 85—K to sq. 36—QtoR2. 37—K to Kt sq. S^-Resigns. t.

The eleventh meeting of the Indiana Chess Association will be held at English's Hotel, Indianapolis, Monday August 11,1890, at 8 p. m. Play will begin Tuesday morning at 9 o'clock.

The Terre Haute Club will be Represented by one or more members. *i }^,fVIt

5

v'

2ST*m.

ft fil

Caricaturen.

v(|

itik

1'

Galyasized Iron Cornices,

ipte*

RSAL l»TATX.

A Chance to Get a Home

B/krboufl J\ve:

WOO PL- Ave,.

grand

pp

Some valuable improvements are going up on these lots.® Others are contracted for and will be built soon. A. lot cannot be bought in this subdivision for saloon purposes at any price whatever.

RIDDLE, HAMILTON & CO., South Sixth Street.

LIFE INSURANCE.

-SEND FOR-

I S A I O N S

-OF-

THE EQUITABLE

LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY'S,

TWEHTT-TEifi lOHTUE PWffiL.

SHOWING- THE FOLLOWING UNPRECEDENTED RESULTS AT MATURITY: ,* i. 1

•MJ MARSHAI4LL G. LEE,

i-i-iimfi'itiiir

-On "Endowment policies a return in cash of all the pre* **r,wc miums paid, with simple interest, varying according to age, from 6%. to ^per cent, per annum, COMPOUND interest. of 4^ to 5 per csnt. perannun^

On "Twenty-payment life" policies a return in cash of all the premiums paid, with simple interest, at the rate of from 4yz to 5^ per cent, per annum, or COMPOUND interest ot from 3^ to 4^ per cent, per annum.

On '*Ordinary life" policies a return in cash of all the premiums paid, with from 2% to 4 per cent, simple interest, or compound interest of from 2 to per cent, per annum.

1

I

Bonds guaranteeing 5 per cent, interest fqr life.

District Agent, Terre Haute, ind.

WATJJ ON- KCTION8.

FREE WATER CONNECTIONS

•OFFERED TO-

Z-HV

Tlic' First V500 Diiraestic .^Applicants,

In view of the larjrelv increased facilities soon to be complel«l for furnishing ater to the citizens of the city of Terre Haute, the Water Work® Company will a ........ _i'. AillAA* MMil fn-m ri nniifwifti (WkA t.VlA /ri^r

wfiitcr „MV make water connections for stores, offices and for domestic purposes free to tho number of 500. 'n ,v

KATES FOR I)W VI ii rMflfOtTSt-S.

Houses Oeenpted toy One

6 rooms

tor

Only,

1 to 4 rooms 12 30semi-annually 5 or

3 F4

8rooma .8 6011^^"

9 or

10 rooms 4 00

1

11 or 12rooms,,.... 4

13 or 14 rooms 5 00 Each additional family, 82 semi-annually.

Terms and Other Fnrni«hel on Application* ffl

TEHEE E10TE WATEB WORKS COMPAHT. Office, SIS OHio Street.

J. C- KOI^EM, President/ L. I* WILLIAMSON, 8ttperlttt«nden

eAJLVASTmrn Dtps C08*1C*S. KTC.

LYNCH & SURREL^L, XAjrtrrACTuaxBa of

HO. 710 MAHf SIBSHT, TBSB8 HAUTH, XHDIAHA#

S

f\l r-1

:Mm

EW:

B«ye

k- boyo ii pr ecause agai •al.soc xoald definet dd *i eapi roy iiSoatlu «v iplftca helped a pcott. coun drd, wl -Id be

It pi beca

iriendsi ^redica the fo w, wo the not be id s« ot tymnui

I beli«

cjv 8Ufj iortom fey det Jitv to lyltupr in just h' that 1 «t mint be coen aders.

CAgO v«

pool roportic tho W awn (0 .t laa detect rig«n, an inju porni 't pbliee, rtog

Mem 8 o'cl /ietermii itlar rio

it refui ng that 1 'ionalitj decide

K- Vity dra Tin police a

J* wttlm Vinunk'i

W

,.r

1

Carlisle '3 Tl.e I position 1

in«l, Is

Senate vo lly mnuiu "finmtlUm 1 tho exlnt 'mvcKi'oU diiiri', wli ot lln Hi! 1 lie Di-r ne, entitle) ., with t'u "onHlilurut 0 IIH to 1

Lttnge of

t0WHKIWlopI1tocoin(jonunlugrccjfroo•

ogAiUkt

iuiN. a.CAiainti

indM of

nond .Yft 8»VH: Bra »t regain so knocl name, af borne nea rd scboli in i: feud whi they

Uj

0 and door |jSt'(llel a '0a of Bla tb centn Its chani ifar day a odse culh Hnalemhli during ienta a Itoi mouth a ed.

^MEXICO.

*t 0,000 Art

is

ao

onderstoo "liave

,V'^ nd from 1

UrX'

-'.v

T-'

V~%i hundi in 0 alley# tt the conn

mm

Kb negTf govern to 1 tb« nati\ i.

M.

leader. 1 shouid tb isdueemei at their tb bettt'r a large Short not!

r»twn*l 1 ^jnal Amoc opened it this moi delt'gal sanfactilri ^oea«ion winter to fp op ewt/od it iV a Mnheta

r* iia»i»i4*.