Terre Haute Daily News, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 November 1890 — Page 2
THE DAILY NKWP. VOL.
8...
saraan
AT TH*
ered by Dr. Coultaa
.MO. 100.
AH INDEPENDENT NEW8PAPCR,
PabUsUed Every Afternoon Except Sunday,
NEWS PUBLISHING CO,
PUBLIOATION
OFFlOe
NO. 23 SOUTH FIFTH 8TRBDE9T.
*»-TELEPHONE CALL ML"**
nui
All advertisements to get in the first addition
of
THB NKWB, which consists
734 copies and
TERRK HAUTE now
to the city. W* sincerely hope to-morrow night will not see repeated the disgraceful proceedings
of
two
weeks
was
BACTS ronomc* AI
SCOOXD-CL4JS KATTXB.
TEEMS OF SUBSCRIPTION
Jwc YKAA «6 00 P*» WICK, BT OAmmtn
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1890.
NOTICE TO ADVETI8ER8-
of
reaches every town within
a distance of forty miles, most be in by 11
a. m. IF
It were possible to study
has
some
was full of patriot
ism and far above any of the political speeches
of
the cam pain platform. It iT
not going too
far to
was
one
say that the address
of
the ablest ever delivered in
Terre Haute.
THE NEWS' Washington correspondent says: The question of the head of th* next Republican presidential ticket will be considered this Winter by the leader* of that party, and the wire-pulling they will Indulge in will add much interest to Washington political gossip, Just now Mr. Blaine has it all his own way, but whether he can keep it that way, even if he de •ires the nomination, Is problematical.
Blaine seems to be about the only available presidential timber in the Re publican party at the present time, cartoon in the last issue
of Puck
as
the Ameri
can institution of Thanksgiving day from the turkey's standpoint, we should doubtless awake to a new understanding of it.
a council with
business sense. If
ske had
bad one
several years ago that Walker case would have been settled with a saving
ago. Prompt ac
tion in arresting violators of law will soon put an end to open defiance.
PAENKLL, in a speech thanking the Irish members of parliament for insisting upon bis keeping the leadership of bis party, said that if there had been any negative expression or diversity of opinion he would have cheerfully retired to private life. Judging from his late private life, as
recent
Tiis union services held by the churches yesterday in the Central Presbyterian
church
was a
over
most enjoyable and com
mendable occasion. Terre Haute might well feel proud of the array of ministers assembled in the pulpit.
a mile
events have disclosed
it, a return to it would be about the very worst thing be could do under the circumstances. This is probably what bis colleagues thought.
They are gen
tlemen of dignified appearance, of superior ability and force
of
passed
in
character, not sur
any city
of
this size. The con
gregation was composed almost wholly of regular church-goers. This is somewhat LITID
in that nucha
a holiday should also draw
the class
of
shows
him a phcenii rising from the flames that swept down and destroyed nearly all prominent Republicans the 4th
of
month. Blaine is stronger throughout the West to-day than any other man. The Ores
ham men are nearly all Blaine
men now, and Harrison will find him a more difficult man to defeat. It looks very much now
as
Cleveland would once more try con elusions. Either can have the nomination
of bis
party
if he
so desires.
MR. BLAINE'S scheme
Terre Haute and surrounding territory. Terre Haute is located npon the beet and most direct line of railroad leading from the gulf ports
of
come
Tampa and Mobile or
Pensacola to Chicago, upon the Louisville and Nashville railroad. Congress ia likely to take immediate
HANDLERS
WILL bring Chicago
steps in
the
coming session to comprehend reciprocity. The result of the recent elections, taken as a censure upon the McKinley tariff bill, has
URGED reciprocity to the
front and made Mr. Blaine the most probable presidential nominee in 1892, by the Republican party. Reciprocity, more than anything else, will aid his election. If, at the next meeting of Congress, mail subsidies are granted to further SERVICE with southern countries, the vessels will most certainly land at one of the Florida or Alabama ports, where mail
will be
distributed by the
railroads. In such an event TERM Haute is in an excellent situation for commerce with SOUTH America. Especially should the too) works BE able to find A large market, also the carriage works and piano case factory. Our merchants
CAN also be
of South Acaerican pro
ducts, Judged from a local
and selfish
standpoint TFERR* Haute and the Mississippi VALLEY has ail to gain
lose
AND nothing to
from reciprocity.
The World's Fair
to the
ter
HOST as a
OF Sooth American trade.
cen
HUMMSMe (Unkln*.
PmULtMtuwt*, November S8L—The steamship Pennsylvania has arrived at .her
dock, and report* thai the British (.feme fte&cb etHed «poa ttafwomcittiitg j^g|_ ,§teaa*ejr Falcon, from New York l&rtilas^lM^ney a&d ask»d for *_ warns!, for
XAMUKAUL ,|4TK, AAS&
ftaaa»
Ktf, -*K,
condition, having encountered heavy galea. Tbe captain and crew were taken off by the Pennsylvania and landed here. The crew of the Falcon consisted of Captain McMillan and fifteen men.
HERE AND THERE-
"I
reading that item in THB NEWS
about the calf frightening some girls at the Union depot," said an old gentleman to a Nsws reporter last night, "and ii reminded me
of
another laughable circum
stance very similar in affect, which occurred oat on my farm in Lost Creek township. I had a fine short-horned cow and calf, which my wife prized highly. The
cow fell
of
10 ere
All correepoadenee should be addressed to THE NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY.
on the ice, broke one
her legs and my wife raised the orihaned calf on the bottle and by hand, became a big lusty fellow and a great pet. We never pretended to keep Billy, the calf, tied up and he wandered at will all over the premises. Well, my wife, not being In very good health one Fall, we had employed a big, stiong Irish girl to ^assist in the housework. One cold day she had completed her week's washing and had the clothes on the line out on a tawn to the side of the house. That same day my two grandchildren, who were with us, had a little party of neighbors' children at the boose,' and were making a big suppiy of molasses candy. My wife bad finished boiling the staff and, hot
the Breatself, she had placed
a big platter of
.the
mass just
some
was up in her little room
RANNIORY^N
outside the
kitchen door on alow bench to cool. The boiling hot mass w«a every bit of an inch deep on the platter, and just about this time
Billy, the calf, who had be
»n
to
rumag-
ing about seeing what mischief be could accomplish, sauntered up to the kitchen door and the next thing my wife, who happened
be 1 ,oking out
regular
of
$2,000
of
the win
dow, saw was that fool calf jam his broad nose smack down into THE hot taffy. In less than a bolv second that calf let off
A
howl, jumped off of all
his four feei at once, and started on a mad gallop around the corner of the house. Her. is where
I
A GRAND STAND FALLS.
Foot Ball dame nt Brooklyn the Scene of F«*/»rfu\ Accident. NEW YOUK, November 8.—A terrible accident occurred in the grounds at Eastern park, Brooklyn, before the YalfPrinceton foot ball game was played yesterday. The big free stand collapsed at 12:10, carrying down with it its entire load of human beings. The crash came without any warning. It is estimated there was more than 2,000
stand
at the
LATELY upon
people not regularly attend
ing church services. The
address deliv
screams
and shrieks and groans which came from the unfortunates were heartrending to hear. Many fainted
however, were very seriouslv hurt ana broken limbs and bruised heads and bodies were numerous. The big dressing room under the grand stand
Another of Porter's Victims. PARIS. 111., November 28.—Peter
preliminary examination. Major
this
the meeting of the January term
the questions
though Blaine and
of
of
reciprocity
with Central and South American countries will be
of
vast importance to
FORGOTTEN FRIEND3.
Forgotten friends, you who have flownt Though an remembered, not unknown-* Like cherished blossoms, faded, dead.
Which the sweetest perfume spread Or faintest echoes softly known Too have not left me quite alone. Though we have very strangely grown,
Yet memory holds a «olden thread. Forgotten tnenas.
Within my breast I still enthrone The light tliat from your presence shows. Your son Is set, but from the red
Of mein'ry's sky aglow is shed Name*, faces, gone yet all my own Forgotten friends.
THE HEIRESS.
MissMcAdam lived in a beautiful house, it was the pride
sured, and left his family richer than they ever expected to be while he lived.
One day. as George was calling upon his intended, he almost stumbled over a young girl in white, who waa reading on the porch—A gentle-eyed little thing, whom he
of
saw
him. The faithful Irit»h girl had just stooped over to press the clothes, which she was taking off the line, into the basket, and chanced to be in direct line with the calf as he came around the corner in his mad charge. He hit her like a battering ram. She went over the clothes basket and the calf continued in his wild career. Norah never stopped to ask what had hit her. She «imply
corn
from the house. When my
wife, after
little search found
the poor girl f»ighteued out
Nora,
of
her wits
at the
top of
the bouse with her door locked
and
bolted, and it was some little time before my wife could make her understand th|t the world was not going to pieces an the end of time had come."
people in the
time.
A
itlO1 'WMofriM' iro toltoS'Wl tlia crash, which was heard in all parts of the grounds. The occupants were mostly men, a great majority of them students from Yale and Princeton.
mystery, told him that for soma nights past she had heaed strange, ghostly noises above her head.
There was a ladder in the darn and she asked George's aid the following evening to ascertain who the gh'ostly visitors were, 'LHE young man, to show his contempt for spirits, readily consented to invest gate.
Miss MuAdain bad been
gathered
herself up and fled around the house as though Satan himself wan in pursuit. I found that calf in th« far corner of a twenty-acre field of
you
from the
injuries they received. At first it was feared that some might have been killed, but this fear proved to be unfounded.
A
great many persons,
George's
was rigged
up as a hospital and the surgeons from three ambulances from the Brooklyn hospital, which
H«d been summoned
as
as soon
the aceident occurred, had their bands full with patients.
for
*J. A.
Connelly, United States district attorney, appeared for the prosecution and the accused was placed under $500
of the
United States district court at Springfield. He
was arrested for refusing to answer
the census enumerator.
Tale Down* Princeton.
NEW YORK, November 28.—In the great foot ball contest between Yale and Princeton,at Eastern park yesterday, in which the interest of every 'college "man and every lover of foot bail has been centered weeks past, the blue banner of Yale college flies prondly in the breeze, while the black and orange trails in defeat. Princeton's defeat was complete, her score was nothing
Yale's 32. The
game was witnessed by at least thirty thousand spectators.
A Jealous Ha*tMia«l.
GASSY. Ill,, November 28.—J. M. Goocb, a prominent merchant of this city, has been drinking very hard for several days, and last evening encountered Ed Roeeberry, aaother
welt
known busi
ness man wtiom he assaulted, whereupon Roseberry fired and probably fatally shot him. Jealonsy of Roeeberry'S attentions to his wife caused the trouble. Roeeberia being held to await the extent of ooc&'S injuries.
A Skwhloj Accident.
PARIS, II)., November 29,—A shocking accident occurred in the northeast part
Edgar conntv WEDNESDAY afternoon. MEW Nettle Manning, tbe pretty 17-year-old daughter of Alfred Manning, a wealthy farmer,
was killed
Nktp Went Itovrn.
H&XMTT, November 2S —The Norwegian bark Neptnnus, Captain Tobia&eu, at London, from Quebec, reports that while lying to daring a gal*off DangeOONS, SUNDAY ewning,
SHE SAW a
targe
weet bonnd steamer tnr?» to the Eastward, capsise AMI foa»
r,
was ronnin* at
A heavy tea
the time. No trace
the steamer crew has been fomnd.
of
Kw» In a P»»l Alley.
ST. I** »«. November
•W to IMbp, to «Mnd*| fcw day* with rektft** aad frt*»aZ~-
face grew a
C.
Breeder, of Hindsboro, was brought here yesterday and taken before United States
Commissioner J. C. Ficklin
of John
The glass fell to the floor with A crash and at the same moment Janet sprang through the skylight with A cry of alarm, hurried to George's side and clasped his arm tremblingly.
McAdam, with his haggard face turned paie, gazing up at George, with bis shifting eye* grown strangely dull, and with a trembling hand raided entreatingly. ••Whydid you »tne?" he saia. In weaK, monotonous way. "Why could
fou
not
in A runaway.
She was out driving when the HNRSE ftightened and became unmanageable and nut away, throwing h»*r from the BOGGY- She died in a few tmnntee.
wait for a
of
sai
of
the neigh
borhood, and George Phillips ought certainly to have been the happiest ot men as the favored suitor
of a
beauti
ful girl so richly endowed physically and financially. The father
of
a month
the heiress had died
after having been
of
MissMcAdam would never have suspected her of so aostird an act as going to her admirer vitU her nonsense —no, not her admirer—A little passage last night had set Janet's mind at rest on that poiut,
She felt a thrill of relief when Bhe heard a rustle in the shrubery, and saw a dark ligure coming across the lawn. She waved her band, and the figure lifted its hat promptly.
There
scene of indescrib-
The
was a thud against the house,
and the top of a ladder appeared a bsmdi iafroraul liiorai stood Wi
her. She led him, without a word, to a small skylight near the edge of th« roof. ••l)o
which 28,159 are
heavily in
afterward
dis
covered to be ,anet Moore, a cousin of Miss McAdam. He saw tbe young lady frequently after that, and the more
they met the
more his love for the young heiress dwindled away, and a stronger feeling for Miss Moore took
its
will thus
restless and
decidedly irritable that evening. George had failed to come, and her spirits bad sunk and her temper risen in consequence. It seemed to Janet that she had regarded her once or twice with something
distrust.
What if her suspicions had been aroused? Whut if she were to discover them3
She would think they were about
ians'love
hear it?" she said, grasp
ing his arm breathlessly. The sound of a low muttering oamo up to them, and of a deep drawn breath, rising and falling regularly and ending in a groan.
little pale in
tbe moonlight. "At least it is not rats, JanetN ha said, smiling seriously and he lifted up the skylight* smiled again assuringiy, and sprang through.
Tbe room was quite dark and he drew a match from his pocket and struck it. By its lUckorintf light he saw a bed at the side of the raftered wail, and a liguro .fitting upon its edge with its Lead burieu in its hands and the next instant be had seen the haggard face and met the nervous, shifting glance
ALE
He stared
bonds until
Adam.
for a moment
speechless
ly, with the truth breaking slowly
on him.
'J
tliis was his death—A death indeedl McAdam had tottered to his feet and came across the room and was standing before him. looking up at him pitifully in the darkness: "L'ou'." he said, woakly. "Why are you here?"
A
door creaKed upon its hinges, flood of light lilied the low room and two persons came softly in. Mrs. McAdam, tall and calm and graceful, bearing a lamp anu her daughter, bright-eyed, smiling as ever, carried a glass of water and a small covered dish.
day—A few hoursf
should have been gone then." He pointed to a small satchel half packed In a corner,
with
*»L
a mirthless smile.
should have been gone, and they would have followed.*" he went on, quietly shifting his dull gra*S to his wife and daughter. "IT would ail have been right we should have succeeded, Why did you come?
do you hear? Go!*1 His hand droppe he tottered back suddering and and fell heavily to
•floor.
must
COR
He
drew
—John G.
Morse, a traveling salesman ia the employ of Jesse French, dealer in pianos a&d< organ#, has coafaned to being short in hit «reo«Lttf» to ttw extrat of ft 2,000.
of cafes nml
MUS
of
NEWS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 28
oid McAdam's niece to a young man who was almost a stranger in U»wu Tbe landlord of tho llam.^ton House, who had ocene.1 the house hospitably an an unearthly h(Kir to receive the eccentric coupler retenJed to know ail the facts of both oases* but as .he kept them heroically to himself nobody thought for It moment of believ. ing nim
COST OF LIVING IN PXRIS
The tltr an
EXCELLENT
of
for People
MUIICMIO URIIFK.
The number of private hotels and residential PREMISE in Paris
of
rental of over £1.000 a year is surprisingly small, considering the reputation for wealth that the I rench capital has ac nired, remarks the Pall
Gazette. ••There are in this a pi a a to 8 I vided into 1,1 J1,:^OO teuaaoles,
of
workshops ana
ufactories. 303,32$ are.
places
of
MAN
shops
business,
and
aud
O, .IIH are
apartments or 'hotels'nor human habitation.
Half of
THEFTE
flats do not BRING IN
to
£60
to
place.
One night when they found
apartments or
A higher
£400
rental
than J£12 per annum. That is the average sum which a workman will have to pay for two diminutive rooms on tbe fifth, sixth or seventh siory of a crowded tenement, where the
only
advantage altitude gives is tbechauce of breathing some of the fresh air ol heaven. Of nats ranging in rent from £40
a year there are-
H2,i)7i
from £60 to £160 MNIUI. .,A.S»76 from £160
rental.
£400
to
£800
L.,222:
£80.I a
there are only
them
selves alone together, Janet, with an air
from
yea
*.. I.)O
while tha
inhabited houses With a rental
of over
47\
uop rents
in the busy..parts 0I-- tiie TOWNS, are enormously:dear.. i••It
BFEVseen
the Faubourg
the value
that, with
of
PER*
haps the FE'- ception OF IHU 'di.-TRUSTS
of
SUIUU ORDAIN,
Champs Elyseea I^ID, t/ie Pure Mon ceau, Paris is ESSENTIALLY a
city ol
middle ciass people and workmen, who in tho matter of rent, taxes and octroi have to pay'pret.y
STI.^Y
privilege of living in it
for the
L^ARGE
blocks
of buildings belong, not to private individuals, but to IIIOU.-
auoe lOtupauies
and bankiug ESTABLISH men TD, who charge what they like AUD
do uot
because an applicant
excessive rent, feeling
to
rob the house, or to—elope. Janet grew a little warm. But that was impossible.
of
care
much whether a shop or apartment stands on th -ii* BOOK"
empty for
a time
refuses to pay an
sure that soon
they will be able extort their own terms. It is estimated that the grosj rental
Paris reaches the respecta
ble total
of
O-JJ.OUO a
year, while
the whole of the prop
erty in the FRENCH' capital, dweiliug houses, shops AND man (factories, ia put down at
XTVB, ..OD.UUJ. At the
present moment Ihere are nearly 4Y.000 places of Iu-iiir3ss or uts vacant, or about 2,UOO uuoro thau UL this time two years ago. '^A&JJ&JFNTO consideration the
CONVENIEIIK^GIVEN
change for the
London resident,"JPFTH his
house and little ^KT
much more of
in ex
T'EUJP,
the average
compact
of garden, has
^^^oyinent
in a small Hat on .the
for his
money, the DailyjHhlegraph thinns, than the FRONCNJ^H- in a similar MJpositiT»it'ii'i*MByM, rpnaiwtl t.p11
fifth
tenement, for which he pays
from
to £100 a year. Much
open-air
concerts is due to
Droxel'II
the primary u( ILO
up
he landlord's queer suspio-
ion came buck to him. This, then, was the price
of
the rudiments
rooms
AlcAdtim'S insurance
control
Be courteous, THERE'S
It costs
oan be rushed.
these
days
Go!—
the
S
S
GE R^ stepped to his side, 1eal OVER IT,and lifted his lifeless hand, gently and turto tho motionless GROUP. ••I
ratulate
YON.*
he said,
wHh a bust gr.".T!ty, "The !asur» a is !a O W N
JA^^'S MD through HTI
hand quietly, AND left them alone with the pitiful iifr?!*** form.
Hampton was V%«TIY «selted ov«r two STRANGLE event*—-tbe isddsa d«» |»RT«RE of Mrs, M« ADATFI AND her pro*. **erfopnah«ty^ knew wh*r*.
TH*eheap«rt, la the .city Tm K*m-
cafe
O
cribbed and
conrined apartments in hich they have to make their homes. '"I§~
ON
it
ve
IJ|«.
A pleasant-L*aced, gentle, refined nun, who is introduced as bister Catherine, and whose face is su Fused with a faint tinge of dolor
A»
he is intro
duced, calls to mind,A scene last winter when, in the chapel of the Mercy Convent, the lovely robe of White satin was. with the name of Miss katie Drexel, uiscarded
for the black
and the name of
some of
robe
LISTER
Katherine.
Sister Katherine is now engaged teaching
the UUO little
folks
who call St Paul's Roman atholic Orphan Asylum in Pittsburg, a., their home, ilerschool
I COMPILED
of the vast estab
lishment, and tenderiy and lovingly she governs ihem a.I I A-lies
them
of an education. Other
and
DEPARTMENTS
are under
ol other sisters,
of In our
'and
the rever
end father in charge of the institution says ti.at "a
child of sin religion or
nationality is received
and
T:tken
HO*no.
care
While
WE
are dis
tinctly A Kouiau Catholk-. institution, yet charity does not draw the lines very closely, and WE have number of Protestant childreu i« tue homo now."
l'ollt«LL«4(
T'UM
money in it.
nothing
AND .-ays
welL
of keen
Une
»N»
inui iulent if ho
wishes, and yet be
rteous. In
OM^TITION
little counts, anu
goods of the best naluy. charge a fair prit-E for THEM, S I for cash, never lose an opportunity of being polite to a customer, and you will find that it pays.
Laber
JUVTNG.
Old Boggs—Want to marry mj daughter, eh? What are your pros pecti for making a tivi ig?
Mr. Duriderhead (with modflStrV—O, I'm det ending on a great labor-saving device.
Old Boxcf—indeed: what is it? Mr. Dumiorhead (With more modestv) Oh, I thought I'd live on atf father-In-
taw-
.v
N» TO I«F« WHH N«R. C—Have you beea. cured of thai last attack of malaria.* —Oh, yes, Oociress Anna Curem knocked it silly. Bav hr-r treatment left me with a worse disease 111*4 ut*larla. on lio't say so:
Yes, sir I've got an lucerablo cue of heart disease now.
After the WEDDING bfr*««»a# Molatcr—Well,
'V -J*
ONCLI-SIX
NOTHING-SLOW-ABOOT
WiZ:
$
There is really nothing slow about Uncle Sam. When he invites a man to take a ride with him at this Thanksgiving season of the year he doesn't do things by halves. He is traveling at the rate of exactly a mile a minute. "What is his hurry?*' Why, he is on his way to A. C. Bryce & CO^, and he
knows
that if he looses any time he may be too late for the immense bargains which they are now offering at such exceptionally low prices.
THB NEWS has a larger circulation than any two other papers combined.
COOK'S '«*M POP D.
a Coition O O N
posed of Oottoa Boot, Ton 11 rsssat disooTsry *71
Pennyroyal-
ine
f^old physician. I»
1
V—ftaf®. Effectual. PrlM fL ky sealed. Ladiea, ask your drojrrl*t far Cotton Boot Oonpond and Uk« a* safeatttel*, or teolOM atataM for Malod aarHwilara. A4 dr«M FOND UlT CO MUTANT, No. S fWMt Block, 111 Woodward am, Deuolt, MUk.
Oook*
PAVT* IJTD SPRR*-
DO
Pants to Order For $3.00
YOU
Suits to Order $18.00.
WEAR
Fit Guaranteed.
PANTS?
MERRITT, The Tailor and Hatter, 645 Main St. I
35GM^5S555SSS3ESS5SES
tioor of a
Tl»TJF!SE8,
£80
of
tbe Paris
Lewis Lockwood
MANUFACTURER OF
Trasses, Ontehes, Deformity Braces and Patent Legs aod Arms. A
Braces (or all deformities made to order Complete stock ot omtcbes and trusses always on hand.
Meventh and Wabash Avenue. Room 14, McKeen Block.
BATH HOT7SK.
KICBAME AMMAN 6ATB HOUSE
1
every
TUB »:«re KEEPER
who
is anxious to KOE^ up and increase the number
of his
RD.stomors MUST
never forget to treat ihe..I with tbe utmost court**?. R^JTEEP the
right
Tbe water from these wells does not strike tbe tir until it is In tbe bath tab, thus preseirlni *11 health glTing qualities. It is pronounced by physicians to oe superior to tbe lamons Hot Springs. Cold and hot baths, vapor, Tnrkisb anA ftasdan baths. Elegant ladles' waiting rooms. Horses takea ears of while yen art frtthlng
Corner Tenth and Chestnut streets, neai in ton depet
WALL, PAPKK KTC.
KI.SIBLEY B0SS0Mi»
Wall Paper, Window Shades,
Mouse
MEN
CBI 'T (HJ-8, FTC.
Paint
ing and Hard Wood Finished, 102 NORTH FOURTH STREET Ten*© Haute. Indt»na
fTITOXBTAKXBS A!fl
HOW
atoeh f* the MIMUSW—TB» iawV sir, allows
as a
dollar and a HALF for perforuiiag tbe ttarrtasa CEREIIMMBF -R=S' 4 '4m*. «if Well, HERW'A fifty.. CE«M4 MAKES
#alia*«»"
KM
BALM
BROKEN LOTS 1 lot ladies' scarlet all-wool (Paats Only), worth $1.00, only.
Hot gents' SCARLET ALL-WOOL (Drawers Only), worth $1.00, only..
WHO SUCCEED
E
KB*
•man a. SLACK. BLACNC NIBBBT, Undertakers and Embalmers
SSSROXTH Wojrra MUUC HAUTC.
rr
STATKCT1BT,
two
UJASTED
JtTC.
Mm&j, Bluk Bwh,S«k*, Tm, ft*.
J. R. DUNCAN & OO.,
AXrm~Bo*rten +i XORTH
prebensive. Yet every successful
by
substance—is
"The
ti
SpSpIp
*"HW UAI VT| JCHH.
A N S
IT HAS NO EQUAL.
DBT GOODS.
Bugeye (\asty ^tore!
UNDERWEAR DEPARTMEMT
Gents' scarlet underwear, all-wool suit $1.70, worth $2,25, Gents* black allwool tiuderwear, fust dye, salt $2.50 worth $8.50. Gents' Colored Merino Underwear $1.25 a suit—Extra value. Gents' Homespun Underwear only $1.50 a suit.
THE BUCKE1E CASH STORE.
TO ADVFUTHKKS.
Jlpe Daily J*(eu/s'
PHILOSOPHY OF SUCCESS.
life—as we
MORAX:
Xilke Begets Like.
Success Begets Success,
TO SUCCEED:
Advertise with Success.
THE DAILY NEWS
IS A SUCCESS.
PLAWIVG WILL
J. H. WILLIAMS, President. i.M. iM.IKT. Seoman and Trea»mre»
CLIFT& WILLIAMS COMPANY. fstabllsbed JSI). LI(ORPW'*K 'IHW,
Sash, Doors, Blinds, Etc.,
For Railroad Tickets
Calranfeal Iroa Cornices,
O 7 3 9
I
if
Coffee.
35c 35c
believe in themselves men who fail believe in fata
We begin by doing one thing well or ill, and all things follow accordingly. Nature abhors a discord, and each
life
is
success or failure) on which it is pitched. We are UM unaware
sung throughout in
tions, but he that states a general truth must be content with A general acknowledgment—unless the truth is mathematical. Success is a providence,
says
H. O OlD
the priest. Success is an accident,
the key (M to
of
tbe seeming excep
says
tbe cynit.
Success is.a habit, says the philosopher. .THE*.one indisputable thing aboaiit i«R that success is success. It is probably more of a babit than anything else. To call it a providence is onlv the priest's trick to bring the grist to bis own mill. AN accident it
will never
a series of accidents. This wisdom is all old. The ancients said
gods help them that help themselves," and Fortune favors thebrave." These agree more with the philosopher than with tbe cynic or tbe priest. They give the merit to industry and courage, not to power.
AND UEAL-CRS tr-——
Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Paints, 0'ls and Builders' Hardware.
Corner of Nfnth and ill erry Streets, T^ rre H.n»fe, fnd.
TK KKTH.
-OA&FT OH-
LOUIS D. SMITH, 661 Main Street.
Information cheerfully given as to routes and time of FANOY OOOD8. CTO., CTO
STOVES.
YOU OAN GET JUST THE KIND OF A STOVE Want Out of tbe l^V»nety»t
ZIMMERMAN'S STOVE STORE, $58
spear to
be
when the view taken is sufficiently com-
count success, by appearance and not
CITY CIRCULATION
2,370.
OUTSIDE CIRCULATION
734.
DAILY CIRCULATION
3,110.
TO ALL POINTS AT
REDUCED RATES.
MAIN STREET. M^KEEN'S BLOCK.
OALVAIflZKD IBOK
trains. Dealer In TOYS, MOTIONS
GOHX1CZB, EW
LTNCH & SURRELL. KAJRUFAORTRSJREH
MAIN 8TBSBT. TBRBB HA ITT S.
A XT' 11 Li'T
«LATX noontro, arc.
MAIN 1 JtLJuo, mi mm M»
•HIP
mm
ttmiAtfA
^Ml an«uas stoves and Slate RotHtoo
