Terre Haute Daily News, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 November 1890 — Page 2

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E A I N E W S

HO. 07

AH INDEPENDENT HEW8PAPEH,

Po&ilsfied Every Afleraoon Except Sunday, BT TH» NEWS PUBLISHING CO.

PUBLICATION OFFICE

HO. 28 SOUTH FIFTH STREET.

MrTKLEPKOKff CALL 1SL'««

SStXXXD AT TUB TZKKX BJLVTK IWKCTWI A* **CO*t-CLlSS MATTER.

TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION

OME VEAW.... $8 00 Psn WBEK,

By

AU

OAJtmtft,. .10 OT8

cornmpaadence

should be addressed to

THE NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25,

NOTICE TO ADVETI8ERS*

All advertisements to get In the first eddition of Tim Njewb, which

comusts

of

7:J I copies and roaches every town within a distance of forty miles, muat be in a,m.

publishes a long ar

tide entitled "How tin plates are made. The high tariff makes tin plates in this country.

Tiikue are ft few newspapers in Indi ana that are opposed to the new election Jaw, which makes the corrupt practices of the past impossible. The election law has come to stay, and those who be lieve in aa honest expression of public Hentiment through the ballot will see that the system does stay.

A Rki'I'iiucan organ takes occasion to spring a paronomasia on the statement that Congressman Brookahi.e promulga ted an argument that the price of shot guns would bo advanced. Tire News W9« not aware that Vory's shot gun policy carriod the district by over 3,000, It wa« of the opinion that the conspiracy bill and turifF measure did the work.

Tif ANKMiiviN'u will ba here on Thurs day and tin people of Terre Haute have been asked to contribute to the poor There are many who are deserving and everyone should contribute his mite to iviteve the improvident and gladden their homes, if but for a day. It wilt make the donor feel better a»d give him more enjoyment on Thanksgiving day became ho has assisted in the noble work of charity.

Details of the evictions in Ireland arouse our sympathies and enliat our snppoit 1 hey are coudemnod and an almost universal protest goes up against the ra lieu We are apt to close our eyes to conditions Immediately lurrou tiding tw. The coal monopolists of Pennsylvania have, within the past few weeks, evicted many miners from their little homes. The Leheigh Valley com pany lends the way. 8uch work is un American. It is not calculated to produce harmony between capital and labor -So long as monopolists outrage labor, they can expect little in return When a corporation is driven to evic tiona there is something radically wrong —and the wrong is on the side of the company. ____________________

Tkkius 11 At'TK is already receiving praise for resolving to obey the law. The outside world which has always regarded the city with a suspicious eye is forced to the conviction that there is yet hope tor it, Thero can be no question but ihat the return to Rood government will prove of vast benefit to Terre Haute. It will give the city a name which will command respect. At home the benefits will be felu The city will become law-abiding and there-- will be leas rowdyism, less dissipation and a con fequimt improvement of public morals. The new order of things will be accepted with good grace by all classes of citiseos. It is safe to predict that afur a few months of enforcement of the law few, if any, will wish to return to the old order of affairs. Law Hind order has come to

Tiik

legislature, which meets in Janu­

ary, will bo called upon to pass a salary bill. Both pitrtioa pletlgcd themselves to nmet such a measure. The Democrats and Republicans made promises to catch the farmers* vote. It now becomes necessary to varry ©at the pledge to the people There is certainly room for improvement. ^ome of the oftitsee pay handsome avenues, too handsome, in fact, for the aervksre }M?rformcd. There we, however, instances in which large salaries should be pud. Treasurers who have thousands of dollars in their posses »ion we required to give very heavy bond They are expected to be competent men, aud competency is always well paid. The county should compensate it# ollicer as well as a business man. The auditor re cetvea large amounts, under the present taw, for doing a few hours' figuring. Radical change demanded in this department of county service. The sheriff's oittce is also lucrative, for the rvason that every time he turns a key he is entitled to a fee and lie conduct* a boarding house on a large plan in citiee where arrets of all kimla are incarcerated in the county jail. All theee fads should be takenr into consideration and an adjustment of salaries made on an equitable

AXcw 8rilc%

llut^OAts, lnd„ Xov«r-'er"35.—A permanent improvement is new iron bndg» twing built across Little Raccoon creek by the (X A E. 1* railway at i..*.» point and no? enuring cc*~"V. .solid Umestot* :w«»ni*oo co»nctU\i by tw» »oHd K. i.roi cmiew seventy-eight ngh.«tr^hisg ihirty*eight thoasaa 1 {"Kinds each, tit capable of etrrying an imme oee

•w. v-* ,ilt£ nhiwUi WAII*««AS.t,4

'-. \X S5^^^4| i£^-4i-%^1*Tv /•.«?* ^'^?Vr ''r ^*_\. /*'ft»^''vS^%£

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NEWSLETS-

w. E. Freezer has been arrested at Fort Worth,. He will be returned to Hillsboro, 111. He has three wives.

Mills says he has the inside track on the speakership. A movement

i&

on foot to knock the

tariff off tin. New Yorkers are.behind thescheme. Mi*. Annie Jenness Miller, the dress reform and divided skirt advocate, will be given an opportunity to tell in court next week what she knows of her husband's property. Her husband says his wife paid him $23 for advertising her business.

Davenport has let the contract for the largest filter plant in ihe world. Tascott is on a farm near Winnetta, III. He is not the mnrderer of Millionaire Snell, .Three negroes are un'der arrest for the murder of Amos Still well a wealthy and prominent citizen of Hannibal, in '88.

Sloason and Hchaefler nlay their great balk-line game next Monday nijzht in Chickering ball. Scbaeffer is favorite.

Wanamaker has mortgaged his house in Vt ashington for $50,000. Butte miners want eight hours' work. May strike.

Ik Marvel, the author, was thrown from a carriage and perhaps fatally hurt. He is 68.

Bev. Dr. Williams, of Baltimore, has employed a string orchestra of eighteen pieces for his church.

Congressman Hitt has received notice of a contest for his seat. Ike Wier is going to Australia.

A turkey famine exists at Boston. Beans are plentiful. Grecia Davis sues John Davis for divorce at Oakland. The couple were introduced by Sarah Althea Hill Terry.

Enraged citizens of Colon, Mich., drove a cruel school teacher from the town. General Gooding, after following wealthy Widow January all over Europe, has returned to St. Louis.

There was nothing in the reported South Carolina riot. Dr. Fritz Baum, of Kansas City, has received a supply of Dr. Koch's lymph and has treated several patients.

The Brooklyn police found 895,945 inhabitants Farter enumerated 808,000. A barrel of oil exploded in the Richmond hotel, Chicago, last night. The gufsts were badly scarfed.

Mrs. Birchell has left Woodstock for England.

MR. BELL'S PICTURE.

How It Wim Obtained by an Enterprising l'obllslilot House. I hoard the other night a pretty good Story of how a well-known publishing house secured the picture of a prominent scientific man who was excessively and painfully modest

The firm, which has within the last six months been swallowed up by the Scool-book Trust, was about to publish a work containing the biographies and pictures of some of the noted men of science. Prof. Graham Bell, the inventor of the telephone, of oourse had to figuro in the book. Little difficulty was experienced in securing points for a biographical sketch of the eminent scientist's career, but when it come to getting, a picture of him the projectors of the enterprise were balked. "It was found that JVIr. Bell would not notisawft hla picture pub^shed," said the tuaa who related this incident to the ft^wgr^Tellor. "He was, it seems, excessively sensitive on the subject of his personal appearanoe, though why he should be it is difficult to imagine, as, while he is by no means an Apollo Belvidere, ho is not an uglylooking man. Temporarily, the publishers were in a quandary on account of Prof. Bell's refusal to give his photograph. Howover, a bright man was sont out to see what could be done. His genius proceeded to make himself solid with the servant-girl omployed in Prof. Bell's family, and it was not long before he was on the good side of the domestic. Ho confided to the girl what he wanted, and offered her ten dollars if she would go into the parlor, slip out a photograph of Prof. Bell which was iit the album, and allow the publishers to retain it for half an hour. The girl demurred, and said slio was afraid she would lose her position. The young man, with the authority of the publishers, guar* an teed the girl & new position in case she lost the old one through executing her part in the plot This proposition carried the day, and the girl yielded, procured tho photograph, and in due time Prof. Bell's picture appeared in the work. I very much doubt it the scientist to this day knows how his picture was procured. No, I have never heard whother or not the servantgirl was detected in the job."—Chicago News.

SLOW JOHN BULL.

UA

certain big manufacturing concorn in this city sent a typewritten business letter to Sir William G. Armstrong, Mitchell Co., the world-fa-mous ship-builders of LiverpooL The two houses had done business together tor years, wad heavy interests were involved. hut the Liverpool concern sent an indignant protest against the printed circular, as they called It, to the New York company, it even went so far aa to intimate that if their house was not I deemed worthy ot a private written lettor. instead nf a printed circular, it might bo

4wled

I'.,

to sever its relar

tioos with the Kow York concern. |S| It was hard work for the New York company to make the Liverpool coaoern understand that no discourtesy was intended and ts.3! ilt printed circulars —othe mil the, three ti

lyr* ifeBft letlMf

Am,-'.

TbSs was only

our y«.»rN ago. sine* then 1. -v% pv5 oio-.l htft- roitserf--s» i. '-vritewi» oordial

John atism wel

^g'afcrwswt for Arnsn. Kt tx, N*otipmber, 2S,—G. Sorer' n»n, prop 'or of a clothing and furaisht^i^o ^siweoo Colombia ttneet, has been nr tttNl on mtspMott of* des» p«rat« attempt to. bom his stare and wsitleace over it,

J. ,A

Sl'lKMJii AM* nil)(iKESS.

WHAT IS BEING DISCOVERED AND INVENTED.

Boil*, Their Cast*, Symptoms. Course andj Treatmeut—Carbuncle* Rather Dangerous 1*0in—An Eiectrlc Ban—Some Simple bat Interesting Experiment*.

»ol!«.

The predisposing cause of bolls is lowering of the heaJth at some point.

thi h, !nn?,rn»l

TK

tho of tho

Solvigor

appears on tho head or neck, or espef astonishmg and laughable. The specially on the lip. At first it resemble#**

rt

place, constitutional, aiminK to restore.

The

sy

ha

'"At

d^-.ffissa.a,nm

a

1

abundance of pure air, and wash hi

vises the application of a solution sugar of lead every six or twelve hour with a camel's-hair brush. If this fails he would promote suppuration spreading on it a wash leather plaste of galbanum ani opium, cut in the mid die for the escape of tho pus.

If the pain continues to increase, li would apply soothing anplications When the boil begins to heal, ho woul keep tho skin around it dry, clean with tar soap, aud smear it with vello resin oinlniont, dressiiiK the broken surface with lint spread with th» same ointment, keeping the dressing in position with strips of adhesive plaster or by a iiprht bandage,

i'

I'-xperUneat In Conductivity.

The conductivity ot metals may be easily observed aud demonstrated aa follows: Take a ece of Iron wire or a knitting needle and apiece of copper wire of the same-length and of near'y .the same section.' Heat these in the

exi'Kiumext in

Bat

II# Foncht Trpewrlters for Tears, Nad to Swallow Them Finally. The head of one of the big typewriter manufacturing concern's was speaking the other day of the hard fight the typewriter people had to overcome English conservatism and get John Bull to actually give their machines a trial. •You see," he said, "the English people had been used to sending and receiving written letters for so long that they regarded with dismay and disgust tho proposition to print their letters for them. Business men wouldn't even listen to the proposition, and, for a time, we couldn't get a foothold on British •oil.

eosnncTiviTv:

flames of a candle and then pass them through tho latter. Thou, holding them vertically, allow thom to coot. They will remain covered with a thin layer of solidified stearic aclc. Next, Insert the oxtremitfos in a cork supported by a bottle. Then heat the fres extremities, and, in measure as the heat 13 propagated, the stearic acid will hieltand form a globule, that will run along each wife, thus vory clearly showing the spread of tho heat (see figure). Tho giobulo will run more quickly aud to a greator distance upon the copper than upon the Iron, and this indicates that tho former is a better conductor of heat than tho latter.

trhe ir#e of on.

Ma*tors of vessels cannot be reminded too often of the use of oil in stormy weather. Its Importance is well illustrated 'In the fact that it Is now referred to at length in standarJ books, on seamanship and the international marine conference at Washington recommended that "the several governments require all their sea-going vessels to carry a sufficient quantity of animal or vegetable oil for the purpose of calming the sea in rough weather* together with suitable means for aoplying it" As a good example of the di» rectlons that are now given for the best method of usins oil, the remarks in a recent book on practical seamanship, by Todd & Whail, printed on the "Atlantic Pilot Chart for October are of interest-. "To cross a bar In heavy weather,' after baitoning dowr. all hatches, etc., take two pieces of India rubber pipe about twenty feet long aud one inch In diameter. Put these through tne hawse-pipes, one on each side, and let their ends trail in the On the upper end «f each pieco tube lash a good-sited funnel, secure It to a stanchion In a vertical position, and station a man at each, with a three-gallon tin it colza-oiL When the vessel outers the outermost sea that breaks on the bar, let each man srcntly pour the oil down the pipe*. This will smooth the bar immensely, ami the vessel will steor much better. Almost any oil of animal or vegetable origin will do but petroleum {jt not of much service, excepting to mix wfth and thin the other, if necessary. When ly?ng-M It a gala, bead to wind and drifting slowly, if a little oil is used, a »hip~ought to pull through the heaviest storm. Rannina in a gale, an oil-hag hung over the weathar-slde or oil poured dawn oipt well forward, is of groat service In preventing the *e* from breaking aboard jtft'e increasing, to round to, pre pars anchor, watch for a *mo »th ips'sl, aao t&«.n put tbe helm down, heave over, board a fewgsllon* of oil, and Sont the sea anchor. Keep pouring the oil on the sea down a weather pipe or a scupper while the ship is coming «p to the wind. A well equipped salilag-shtpw even if deeply laden. will li* to under dosftly reefed topsail or utrpattHn in the rig*Hut, and weather ah»««t any pile, Ion# as she is net taken aback. Sailfca waters nn-

TERRK HAUTB DULY NEW8, TUESDAY' NOVEMBER 25,1890.

smoatn tin- sfiakljruu j*Hf»re Uii tks ideal po^ttioti of laden vessel la a. dangerous storm. WUHst towing a disable:] ship over l&jv or where iho sea Is very wicked, couple of oU-bivsrs over the stern will oasa the sea on the

-***"—-la..i A.

ilon»* lmt Fanfnatna W*dae*Mlay id Ttinrwdnjr nleht* nnd Tfc*»k«[«ivintar Mstlncc—S«1 Smith Uunsell Friday—Staff* Oosftljh

-night the theater-goers "«?|11 laugh barley Hdyt'n new piece "A Trip to

In the opinion of many students of dis- latown," aud, if reports are true, it ease tho immediate cause is a microbe, be a very pleasing performance. The th which tads its way into some gland of umes are said to be something nnly fine and the stage setting wtil be eeplng with the elegance of the coses. The following is the cast: Lena ville, Irene Murphy, 0:lie Archmere, tie Hornby, Harry Conor, George A. e, r., Harry Gilfoil, I^ouis Finsnger

the skiu where ft sets up a peculiar in filarnnatioi Generally the gland is an oil gland. In the armpits it Is a sweat' gland. On !he eyelid, where the boll known as a "sty,** it is a gland of stil another sort

The first indication of a boil is slight itching, followed by a redd is plmpio' with a hair in the center.1 Sometimes tho pulling out of this hair? Hiuilo»'« Ftuifaaiua. will arrest tho development of theM'on a fairy spectacular play, "Fansore. As tho pimple grows the rednessina," will be given at Kaylor'a on extends and becomes more intense, andjduesday apd Thursday evenings and the part begins to throb with paio. InLe matinee Thanksgiving day. The !s breaks, pus

Edward Metcalf.

ot

z®4il0ns

out, the pain abates, and soon after tbejr capacity for merry making is well dead tissue—the ^so-called ''core L,D^They

have been seen here before, and

not'fai, to

on

and

an ordinarv boil, but It gives rise tf to make the baautifui stamng inter blood poison, and after extreme sufferTnS

fne is fatal in about live days. Mf 8*"^ the play well. The matinee A "arbunelo somewhat resembles thanksgiving day by the .Banlons boil, but is much larger and more pain be specially desirable for Jhe ladies ful. It tends to spread ant! has severa children who wish to avoid, tl^e large openings. It produces a great disturb wds at the evening performapjp. ance of the whole system, and is verj dangerous in its tendency. The con Sol Smltli Rossell. stitutional symptoms of boils are slight o\ Smith Russell, the sunniest and though in some cases there may be con :t genial gentleman on the stage, siderable feverishness }se facial wealth ought tJ give him

Tbe treatment should be, in the first to

Jfaw a big

their reappearance. ^Fantasma"

ir!Ln^Piece witliout a plot, but replete with

thn "Hind Tt hard and ifain-Pnificftnt scenery. The several scenes fm Ina iL in/ ^"pocaled in Elfland and afford excelSometimes a malignant form of boil[^i)0r.tl

nity

St

a go^y display

^velt,^ are of first order,and

a?.wfu a?

^tractive. The com-

1th of the most coveted kind, returns

Friday evemng

wee.ks

his

'•Ssg: tJfSX

vxh.atsi?e?^dr

1

at Da^y theater, New

body daily with cool water and soap. JJf ''metropohtan" good Local treatment, also, is needed That the theater will be filled with Toa^est the progress of a boll in It and beautiful audiences goes withJlrst stage, Sir Erasmus Wilson adf^y111^

))^orlf

\,

Staxe Gossip.

erick Bryton's new play, "Jim," et with remarkable success in New anf'. said that M. B. Carti^.will soon ce anew play bj A. D. Gordon and

Byrne. y|reported that Arthur B,'Chase has from the management of Margaret on account of illness.

rgWWHawyti^nii^ ^||.|

should bo, Is in Sir F. Abel and *B6vtrtou Itedwood in the Chemist, and Druggist The eausos of explosion may he., arranged under these heads: 1. Rapidly carrying or moving a lamp, so as to agitato the oil, causes a mixture of vapor

a,,d

oil to

escape in close proximity to the flame, this escaping mixture may iguito. and produce au exploslop of the mixture in the reservoir.

4

2.

Ah imperfectly closed filling aperture in tho lamp reservoir favors explosion, as It favors the formation ot the vapor aud air misturo just mentioned. 3. A sudden cooling of the lamp, owing to the exposure to a draught, may give rise to an inrush of air. whereby the air space in tho reservoir Is charged with a highly explosive mixture, and the flamo.of the lamp may at the same time be forccd into the air space. Blowing down the chimney to extinguish the lamp has the same effect, and if the wick be lowerocl very much, or tho flame otherwise much reduced in size, the lamp mav become heated, and its susceptibility to the olfocts described cor.esponUmgly increased. Explosion in these cases Is favored by the air passaaros being obstructed by dirt or clun g, wick, by the wick not boin^ lo.. enough to reach the bottom of the nil reservoir, and by {he lamp being burned until the surface of the oil is scarcely level with the end of the wick. 4. The accidental dropping of the burning wick In the oil reservoir i* a fruitful source of explosions.

It is also stated that a loosely plaitol wick otlong staple cotton draw3 up tho oil freely ahd regularly, and Is altogether better and safer than a tight!v plaited wick and that a lamp explosion is not usually sufficiently violent to cause tho fracture of an ordinary glass reservoir, although in several recorded cases it has had this effect.

Would mtult to Find It Fame. Jones has a bad habit of snoring on the slightest provocation. "Where is your papa?" asked a visitor one day of Jones'youthful son aud heir. kHe's In his study, asleep.** ''How do you know he is asleep, my little man?" "I heard him my papa sleeps out loud.''

Two €3onld That "Where did you getlhat umbrella?" demanded a citizen, fiercely, as ho re° cognized a familiar looking rain, protector. "Before I answeiHhaC repeated the other calmly, "suppose you tell me where you obtained it originally?"

Then the first questioner wilted.

lUnstratlag t»y Kwnapl*.

•"Charley, dear, what Is monopoly?** she asked, looking up tenderly, as she rested submissively In b»s arms, with her daintv head nestled against his coat collar. -Well," rieplled ChtRle, manfully struggling to bring his mind to cops with abstruse subjects and fatting altogether to get beyond concrete facta, **i Finrerely hope that this is.-'

Xm,\ni Kc«reK^«.

In order to secure a long life md a «reen old ago. somebody has said, and no one will disputes, bodily rigor should ho fcusteieod by f^olan «tys tomatlc exere^e. avoutfasr all sudden strain and prolonged exertion as much as possible^ Hspeelddlty Is this true of running: lifting, oto. And labor, while desirable l« ntoderaiios, shouk. aovot* bo prolonged till it pm dllCOS

a x»i»» fitittg Jilltit /a It is stated tluti & on tke w#s| |^»t «f Africa who" rejoikses ht the ol i^|tal^halias^ticdftstth«lfta»rahita.

RAILROAD PECULIARITIES.

In the Cast a Meal Costs a Dollar, in the West Seventy-Five Cents. "Why is it that a man has to pay SI for a meal on any railroad train east of Chicago, and but 75 cents west?" said John Grncccn, a member ot the United States Geological Survey,, now in the city, whose business has taken him through nearly ©very State and Territory in the Union,

uIt

is a fact, a dollar buys a meal on any railroad east of Chicago or St Louis. A similar meal on any line running west of those cities may be had for a quarter less, though some would naturally think that the prices would be reversed," "How about the service?" "There isn't much difference in din-ing-car service East and West. Your waiter on the far Western road gets bigger tips than in the East, but your Westerner has a free and easy way of repressing any tendency to freshness or impertinence on the part of porters or waiters that keeps those autocrats very courteous and attentive to business. In some sections of the West the colored gentleman who attempted any impertinence with the traveler might be quietly dropped out of' the car window, and the ambulance car notified and no questions asked. "You don't find so many Bibles on the trains as you used to," he continued. "Ten or twelve years ago they could ba found on almost every road. Trainmen tell me that the passengers steal them. It is impossible to keep them in their racks A facetious brakeman on the Baltimore & Ohio, over which I rode not long ago, explained it to me this way: -'You see, Captain, it's them drummers. They set down in a seat,.an' if there ain'tany good-looking woman on "the car they soon get tired o' ridin'. Then they notice this Bible up there in the rack, an' take it down and commence readin' it It's a brand-new thing to nine out of ten of 'em. When they get through, they slide it into their gripsack.' "However that may be, the Old Colony railroad, which runs through the land of the Puritans, is about the only one which takes the opposite tack, and sets up stationary card tables in all smoking oars. "This fills "a long-felt want with ravolers."—N. Y. Sun.

Do you want Want column.

PHOSPHODINE.

Wood's

MEIf

anything Read oar

Flxos5)lxoa±3n.ee

THE GREAT KifOUSH REMEDY.

tTsed for 85 years' by thousands suocessfully. Guaranteed to ours all fon&Mrf Nervous Weakness, £mlsilons. Spermatorrhea, ImDOtency. and all the effects

ot Youthful folly

and tho excesses of later years. Gives immediate strength and vigor. Ask druggists for Wood's Pnosphodtne take no

pnouise: ta

One

substitute.

package,j»l six, $6, by mall, Write forpomphlec. Addrms ThelWooi Chemical Co.. 131 woodward

ore., Detroit, Ulch.

PANT8 AND SUITS*

-DO

Pants to Order For. $3.00

YOU- &

Suits to Order $18.00..

it Guaranteed.

ANTS

t'""

•v.

MERRITT, The Tailor and Hatter, 645 Main St

TBU883I8, CKITJ HI 8, KTC. Sjlpfe

tfs

Lewis Lockwood

|pgMANUP,ACTUBER OF.

Trusses, Crutches, Deformity Braces and Patent Lfgs and Arms.

ff 5

4^9- S

o-p

th

am

a

"2

Kevetttb and! Wabasfa A venae. Room 14, McKeen Block.

BATH nOWST.

EICM6I lETESliS BATHHOUSE

fl» water l*em these wells dees not strike Um sir until it Is fn the taub tab, tha# prteerrljst ftBbeftiOt riving qtilittos. It t» pzosoas«ed by ebytsditti*

tolempeztot

Corner Tenth and Ctmtnat stress, neai tnHtoadcjw*.

IHOt FISDISQS.

LiEATHER!

KotMhgtik«lt! Cat soles and fiodings! Buyof

DUEIsT

jBf MHHN

MOKAL:

Like Begets Like.

Success Begets Success.

TO SUCCEED:

Advertise with Success.

THE DAILY NEWS

IS A SUCCESS.

V*

—.y

SSBI®

mm,

mmm

£§2

Braces for nil delorrnittcs m«4e to order, CompJetc stock of cratches and irtunes always on band,

PAMOY

to ttettaau Hot

_* t*|w,Tarkkfc

Ctid »»d feci

siid KosstiUi bsth*. Iksast w«iitn$ toorns. Horses uuten tatreof whB* yon mt batW^f

THJK DAUNTI.B8S. tiH

USE

HULMANiS

Dauntless .Coffee.

SSI

IT HAS NO .EQUAL.

TO ADVXRTISBHS.

f®|BaiIy Nevus'

PHILOSOPHY OF SUCCESS.

WHO SUCCEED believe in themselves men who fail believe in fatoi. We begin by doing one thing well or ill, and all things follow accordingly. Nature abhors a discord, and each life is sung throughout in the key (as to success or failure) on which it is pitched. We are not unaware of the seeming exceptions, but he that states a general truth must be content with a general acknowledgment—unless the truth is mathematical.

Success is a providence, says the priest. Success is an accident, says the cynit, Success is a habit, says the philosopher. The one indisputable thing about it is that success is success. It is probably more of a habit than anything else. To call it a providence is only the priest's trick to bring the grist to his own mill.

O O

WILL

E

.^1

An accident it will never apear to be when the view taken is sufficiently com­

prehensive. Yet every successful life—as we count success, by appearance and not by substance—is a series of accidents. This wisdom is all old. The ancients said: "The gods help them that help themselves," and' Fortune favors thebrave." These agree more with the philosopher than with the cynic or the priest. They give the merit to industry and courage, not to power.

CITY CIRCULATION

2,376.

OUTSIDE CIRCULATION

,. 734.

I J. H. WILLIAMS, President. 3. M. OLIFT, 8eor«wr7 and Tre«urer

ICLIFT & WILLIAMS COMPANY.

Established

JML

Information cheerfully gfven a» to routes and Una of

OOODa, ETO.. tTO

DAILY CIRCULATION

3,1 10.

THE NEWS' GREAT OFFER.

HAVEYOU !-:SEEN-:-0nr LITEST WELL, HERE IT IS:

We* have made arrangements with a celebrated Chi:ago artist to furnish each- subscriber of THE NEWS' who has been a paid up subscriber for the past six months, or who shall pay in advance for six months, with an elegant crayon portrait ol any member of their family. Vou may see a sample of his work in Button's window. Furnish us with a photo and we will have it re-produced just as you see that sample has been. It will cost you $3.00 for the glass, frame and packing and will be delivered within ten days, an exact duplicate, in every respect, frame and all, of the sample we show you. Where can you get such a Christmas present for $3.00? If you have not been a paid up subscriber to THE NEWS for six months, it will cost you $2.50 to become so. This makes that beautiful $15.00 crayon drawing, frame and all, together with the best paper in the city for six months, cost you but $5.50.

FIRST COMB, FIRST SERVED.

PUB. CO.

PLANING MIIJIJ.

13 corpora ted 1866. HasnlactQrera

AKD DEAL?B8 IK

n«.

Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Paints, Sfaiist W Oils and Builders

Corndf of Ninth and Mulberry Streets, Terre Haute, Ind.

IIAIXHOAD TICKETS.

For Railroad Ticlei tS RE

-OAbk ON-

L0D1S D. SMITH, 661 Main Street

8TOVE9.

YOU CAN GET JUST THE KIND OF A STOVE

You Want Out of the Large Variety at

ZIMMERMAN'S STOVE STORE,

of

Doorsf-Blinds, Etfe.,

658 StAIH STREET, M'KEEN*S BLOCK. jr,

OALVA2CIZ*D IBOH COKJOCXS, IETC.

LYNCH & SUBBELL.

tUXVWAJtmJKXBMOW

Hardware.

TO ALL POINTS AT

REDUCED RATES.

JMater In TOY®, HOTION®

8E23TT METAL WORK tor XBC8K A

1

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