Terre Haute Daily News, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 10 December 1890 — Page 2
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THE DAILY NEWS.
....NO. MO
AM INDEPENDENT MEWftPAPEft,
-Jublisbed Every Afternoon Except Sunday
rNEWS PUBLISHING CO.
PUBLICATION OFPICE
'iUO. 33 SOUTH FIFTH 8TRHBT,
mrTELKPHOJJE CALL ML"**
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TERMS OF SOB8CRIJPTIOX
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All correspondence siioald be addressed to TilK NEWS PCBLISHIKCi COMPANY.
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1890.
NOTICE TO ADVETISER8.
All advertisements to get in the firet addition of Tub Nisws, which consists of 7: I copies and reaches every town within a distance of forty miles, must be in by 1 fa. co. ____
If the fight is continued, the law and order advocates will insist upon the removal of screens.
The king of the Hawaiian islands is in this country. Here is an opportunity for the "plumed knight" to make political capital out of the visit.
Daxa's candidacy for the senate will meet with opposition, because he is a jibboose, distasteiul to the rank and file of New York Democracy.
Quay is the Parnell of the Republican party. He is equally as ambitious as the Irish leader. He refuses to retire from the leadership of his party, although openly charged with the embezzlement of the funds of the state of Pennsylvania. Can the party carry such a burden?
Tjhk Morning Misinformed in its dis tressiug attempt to escape censure for its position on the question of enforcement of the law seeks refuge behind the words of Col. It. W. Thompson. The despera tion of the Express is such that it is desirous of making a scapegoat of even the "old man eloquent."
Tits city is Just at present receiving more advertisement, the decision of F. Danaldson, mayor of the city, liavlng been heralded far and wide. The outside world regards the decision as a victory for the saloon men. In reality it is OJ.ly the conclusion of a weakling mayor, oue who is goverenod by his political aspirations rather than by his judgment ,of inw and justice.
Hknry Viixard refused to talk to a newspaper reporter at Chicago because the latter "was not a big enough man to talk to." From the president of the country to men in all situations in life, reporters are given audience, yet the titular deity of the railroad world, sets himself above them all. Villard fails to recognize the fact that the press has the power to make men as well as unmake them.
The comment an all titles, In tbo city and by ihvi prtnw ebtewhero. is that a mistake was made lu Uio passage of the saloon closing ordinance. It in generally concedcd to bo unnvcossnry if not Invalid and an obstruction to tfeo enforcement of the law if valid. Ulii wasteCftlmo iu trying to enforce it when there Is ample law en the ttate «utut«s.—Kxprew*.
The comment referred to above is from the saloon element, with which the Express has been conniving to defeat the enforcement of the law. Of course from such sources nothing else but condemnation of the King ordinance was to be expected. A deaf esr is turned to the opinions of decent, law abiding citisens in Torre Haute, They have net pronounced the passage of the ordinance a mistake. They are outspoken in the defense of it, yet the unscrupulously unfair organ of the lawless attempts to mislead the public by promulgating a false statement. No alarm need be felt by the law-abiding citisens. The Misinformed has long since lost its in flue nee and is always on the wrong side. The King ordinance has not been pronounced Invalid by a functionary capable of passing judgement from an unbiased standpoint. The Supreme conn has yet to pass upon it.
NEWSUTTS.
Dtirango, Ook, is excited over a murder. N«trly everyone is armed. Gregory, of the Memphis Democrat, has been indicted for violating the lottery law.
There will be no change in the personnel of the inter-state commerce com* mission.
It develop"* that MeKinlev sneaked the tobacco rebate bill through just before adjournment.
The Kicaraugna canal it, reported to be pro«r«8iutt saUsfactorily. Fat Walsh, editor of the Augusta Chronicle, declined appointment on an Indian commission.
Mexican lottery advertising matter is going thmujrh the mail*. Will be stopped.
Jarnee W. Hathaway has been jraUnostcr of the house. The Cabinet yesterday discaased financial situation.
Sp
the
Masse threatened repe iarth$m*ehiotfuf Martin, colored, ftr, at Roebuck. Him, and he was also lynched.
John P. Clow, an ex-pugilist, was shot nnd killed at Denver. COL, yesterday, by Frank a Marshall.
Cleveland *ty» & confident he vtli be nominated In A m* riot Is reported from littleton, Ala. One white man was kilted.
Up in Vermont Is only below sero. An all maintain company has been orjambed in Chteaga Capita!
Chicago will try pneumatic tabntw carrying packages*
man mails, received a bill from the agent in Bremen, one of the items of which was a package which weighs fifty grains, or about one-and-one-fifth pounds, consigned to Pr, Abraham Jacob!, New York, and sent by the steamship Saale, which arrived this port Sunday. This package contains the precious lymph. Another package of the same weight and make up is mentioned in the bill as consigned to Dr. Billings, of the surgeon general's staff, at Washington. This is also supposed to contain a sample of the lymph.
HERE AND THERE.
Yesterday evening abont 6 o'clock an past-bound street car polled by a tired team of mules came jogging along Main street, behind time and loaded with a crowd of passengers, weary and anxious to get to their homes. At Ninth and Main there was an interminable wait for a union depot car—not in sight—in order to transfer a nervous old woman, a carpet bag, two band boxes and a slatted box containing a meazley Scotch terrier to the depot car aforementioned. The passengers were impatient, anxious and mad. One bright-faced little woman, whose countenance was the only pleasing object in the car finally ejaculated, "What is the matter with that driver? Why don't he go on?"
An old man, with a shaggy head of hair and a shaggy beard, buried in the capacious depths of the shaggy collar of a big shaggy overcoat, and who had thus tar evidently sat "nursing his wrath to keep it warm," growled out a reply, that came through the portals of his lips in chunks. "Matter with driver? Matter enough. Damn fool ran over a cow up the road. Gone back to skin the corpse. A bush fell on the crowd and the car was soon on its way.
Said an old traveling representative of an eastern tobacco house last night: "Not one man in fifty who thinks he knows a good cigar from a poor one can actually tell the difference, and not one man in 100 who smokes, but who will frequently pronounce a cigar a poor one and throw it away when it is really his own fault simply that alone. Now of course the trade is glutted with fttferior cigars unfit for use but I want to tell jou that if the smoker before lighting his weed will properly prepare it he will note a marked difference, for the most part enjoy a satisfactory smoke and many a nickle and dime literally thrown away will be saved. Now when you buy a cigar, supposing you select one of a standard brand, whether of the 5 or 10 cent class, gently roll the cigar between your hands, then take the file blade of your pen knife and puncture the cigar through and through right near the point of the cigar, reverse the weed, place the large end in your mouth and blow through the cigar until you can feel the cool air issuing from the puncture in the other end. You may then light your cigar and I'll guarantee that a good 5 cent cigar will smoke better than tne average 10 cent cigar not subjected to the slight treatment I have subscribed."
EPISCOPAL COMMISSION.
An Important S«nl«n nt Indianapolis —Shall Women be Admit tea. Indianapolis, December 10.—The special commission of the Methodist Episcopal church in the United States, and the proceedings of which .will be Of more than ordtnary interest to the members of that denomination throughout the country, opened its sessions to-day in Roberfs Park church. The membership of the mission comprises Bishops Merrill, Fox Bjwman and Waldron the Rev. Drs. Jno. Mi ley, of Madison, N. J. Thomas B, Neeley, Philadelphia Jacob Todd, Wilmington, Delaware Luke QitchcockL Chicago Alpha J. Kynett, Philadelphia Charles L. Madison, San Antonio, Tex. Jacob Rothweiler, Columbus, Ohio and the lay members, Wm. P. Dillingham, Moutpelier, Vermont Root, Buffalo, N. Y., Hiram L. Sibley,. Marietta, Ohio Samuel H. Elbert, Denver U. N. Wideney, Los Angeles, Cal. T. B, Sweet, Topeka, Kan, Colonel R. W, Ray Indianapolis. The question which the commission was called upon to discuss is what portion of the discipline is the organic taw and constitution of the church and what portion is merely legislation From time to time this question has been mooted in the various general and district conferences throughout the country until it has become one of serious import. At the last general conference the quea tion of interpretation was raised on the proposition of admitting women delegate?, and after considerable discussion it was decided to appoint a commission consisting of seven ministers, seven laymen, and the bishops, thus representing each con ference district, to prepare and submit to general conference of 1882 parasrraphs to take the place of paragraphs sixty-three and sixty-four of the present dicipline. These paragraphs define and determine the constitution of the general conference, defining by whom it should be compos*! and by what method it should he organised, and generally declares its power*. It is expected that the eommta aion will be in session for at leaot a week. Last night the visitors were entertained in an elaborate banquet by the Method 1 a on
Colored I*«*opl« Prtlmtlni, Oou-iiBtA, S. C,, December 10.—An indignation conference of leading colored tftfseos from ail parts of the e*ate is being held here for the purpose of protesting against the bill introduced into the state legislature providing for separate can for white and colored passengers, and to take measures to bring abont its defeat. Whether this can be accomplished ia, however, doubtful as, it is said, that a large majority of the membership in both house® la pledged to its pftsmg*. The colored people say that the measure ban iniquitous one, and the an infringement on persona) and legal rights of the &egtotte» and would create prolonged trouble between whites and colored people.
A
r* «nMa« AMI Hoelety.
O&tCAOO, December 10.—A Columbian aid society wilt be brought into existence •t a meeting here this sfternoon. The movement has been inaugurated by Ure. Isabella Beecher Hooker for the purpose of providing some way to assist women who are competent of making creditable exhibits, hot are not able to secure proper material, to have their talents represented in the proposed women's departm^nt of the V\ orld's Fair. She has a*cured tbe co-opomiioa ol a considerable number of able and energetic women, who will do effective work among the .colored pso&fe. It is proposed to make
«tock, $10*. uk movement a national one.
For MMMrtetr Howra. 4 December 10,—Joha Boris,
no tottialisl* said to-day, May-HI* {•MAlfciwwwW lw a geoeial striks of
KRW YORK, Decsraber 10.-—A consign-' dtk* a strife* meat of Dr. Koch4# lymph Is hm at Ini Minpoeft at tit* Soomtk xilhray BracktB*&& Ltxfaftcbti, trho Ja estiaht aeSeM iJMfSSlfe,
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FIGHT TO THE DEATH.
Owporate Strn sl« tie! nroea Two Eat" rageel and Kvvnty H»ieU»l Cougar*' I have often wondered what hindered the cougars from being very plentiful, suva writer in Forest and Stream. They are monarcbs of the woods and are very say, with plenty of game and cattle to live on. This spring 1 was talking with an old cruiser—a man who hunts for Umber and good land claims who had followed the business for the last twenty years in Oregon and this state. He never takes a gun. but carries only a blanket and amali ax, He related ehat one night when camping in the head of a ravine about dark he heard, a cougar scream on one of the ridges and this one was answered by another on the opposite ridge. They kept working toward the head, until finally they came together some three hundred yards above htm in some quaking aspen and such a row and racket at they maio he had never beard before. They rolled down within one hundred yards of him and he says he was pretty well scared, but be kept up a big fire and stayed behind that. They quieted down in a coupie of hours and the next morning when it was tight enough he went on to the battle-ground. He found oue of them lying there dead, ail cut and torn to pieces. It was a very large one
Four a ays afterward, as he was coming back the same way, some 500 yards from where he had found the first one, he found the other one, also dead. This, too, was all cut and torn as the first one had been. At another time'in Oregon, he board a big fight going on, but did not go to see the results. He was stopping one night with an old Indian, who had hunted and trapped all his life, and was telling him about the fight, when the Indian said that that was the way when two old males met one or the other was killed, and very often both and that whenever the male would find the young ones and the mother absent he would kill the last one of them, but if the mother were with them she would keep him off. That must be the reason that the mother goes with the young until they are nearly two years old. They say that all the cat kind will kill their young, We know that this is so with the domestic cat*
-Tight Place for a Uoteotlv®. ••You must sometimes get into pretty tight places," 1 said, by way of drawing him on. ••Yes, I've had my share »of close calls. I was playiug poker once with a man that we were after for murder, and a man came in that knew me. He gave the whole thing away, and the way the pistols came out would have made your blood run cold. I thought my goose was cooked that time.'* ••What did you do." -fOwnec. up on the spot that he was right, and then I told them that 1 was kicked out of the service for helping a man get off. I was never so scared in all my life, and I believe I was never so cool. I knew I had to have all my wits about me if I expected to get my carcass out whole." -And they believed youP" •They swallowed the whole story They would have sold out themselves if they had been in the service so, it seemed the natural thing to do. .And what is more, my man came to me afterward and asked my advice how to get the detectives off his track so that in the end I really caught him on tha deal that I thought was going to make an end of me."
Itotnnnoa In Tennessee,
Wilmouth Williams took an unusual procedure to socure a husband, says the Memphis Avalanche. The object of her affections was one Henry Williams, who languished in the workhouse because he was unable to procure the $25 necessary to liquidate the amount of his tine. Henry was cold to the love that Wilmouth lavished upon him, for he was smitten by another's charms. Wilmouth had an advantage over her rival that enabled her to carry her point. She possessed money, while the object of Henry's attentions was devoid of monetary at* tractions. Wilmouth visited the workhouse and offered to furnish the amount of her lover's tine on the consideration that he would relinquish her rival and lead her to the altar. To this Henry consented and affixed his signature a contract to marry her as soon as she got him out of prison.
S*
^3 Coins for Africa. SSs@ The German East African company has just had coined a new lot ol metal money for the German colonies. The silver pieces are of about the sixd and value of an Austrian sulden, approximately 40 cents. The coat-of arms consists of a lion £hd a bust of the German Kmperor in the uniform Of the Curaissier guards. The cop*! per coins are worth about 1£ cents each, and are inscribed with Arabian characters. Italy, too, has instituted a new coinage for her African possessions. The silver pieces are worth a little loss than $1 each, and bear the face of King Humbert and a statement of the value in Italian and Arabian. The bronze coins represent a value of 2 cente or I cent each.
A ttalno Mim^i Xo«o.
1 was talking with one of the old settlers the other day says, a Lewiston Journal writer, and he said:
Don't kbow Ilea Jones, do y$a! Wall, when you see him you'll know him he1* got the darndest nose on him that you ever seed on a live beta*. "Pother day sec Ilea eomia' downhill into the village, aod he was drivio' a horse wtth one hand and makin" queer motions with t'other. When he got np to me I «eod what he was doin'. He was piekiti' up pebble* from a pile in hi* wagia and was stontar quitoes off"n tho end of his nose."*
XL«*pt«jr Ami
Put a layer corn-stalks oa the smooth surface as tbiekt? as you and croa*-lay with another iararof #t»l$* or about four inches of pine straw or other straw. Next, nail together four planks or board* forming a hollow. Bore bote* in each side of this, urferit oa|i la tha «ea*®d pllePKs -potatoes
TERRf? HAtTtB DAILY NEWS. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10.1890.
tao potatoes, ana a layer of cornstalks setting on ends over it. Cover the stalks with dirt, spading it from close around the bank, thereby forming a ditch to turn the water from the potatoes. Be sure to let the top ends of the boards extend a little above the top of the banic Leave the top opea until rain or cold snap comes, then cover with a piece of plan* until the weather moderates. This hollow furnishes a channel through which air can readily reach the potatoes all around the center, and should be kept open as much as possible while the weather is moderately cool, but as winter approaches it should be kept closed. Potatoes always go through a sweat after being banked and air distributed through them is very essential.
CURIOUS CONDENSATIONS.
The Michigan university has twentyfive Japanese students this year. A Wisconsin packing company has paid out $30,500 for cucumbors this fall.
Over six thousand men in tho I nited Slates struck durlnjr the month of Septomber.
The submarine teiegrnnh system ol the world consists of 120,0"0 natural milos of cable.
A Western cowboy «conin»lttc! suicide because a 13-year-old j?irl refused to marry hbn.
There are thirty-one millionaires In Denver, and thirtv-five men worth, on the average, 8500,000 each.
A Georgia man has raised a Mexican cucumber weighing thirty-flvo ,ponnda. It resembles a green citron. a* Jti'i
The name of Wayne Is the title or part of tho title of more places in the United States than any othor.
A Du Bois man has in his yard palm treo in blossom, and a plum tree on which plums are now growing as large as nuts*.
Jd*
At Holly Springs, Ga., a dox fell into a well and stayed there fourteen day before his owner found him. llo was taken out and is doing well.
A Michigan county farm which exported 20,Q')0 barrels of apples hist yeai did not produce enough for home consumption this seasou*
The sixteenth child of a Wisconsin couple arrived the other day and preparations were immediately made foi the reception of the 'seventeenth.
Tho principal of the Now York State Normal school has forbidden young lady students from wearing garters. He says garters cause varicose veius.
Two centenarians have died in Barrv county, Michigan since tho census man started on his rounds, but Miss Anua Demund, 102 years old, aud tho oldest of the lot, still lives.
One Of the sights near Nebraska City Is a massive stone temple built by the Mormons in honor of Joseph Smith after their expulsion from Nauvoo. It was also used as a fort. -1"u.i'n
SILVERSMITH'S FANCIES.
A unique breast-pin represents a large hook and eye. A handsome cigarette case of oxidized silver is in the form of a note-book.
White silk watch-gu&rds with silvei or gold mountings a$e being quite fashionable.
A neat traveling clock is mode In gilt with an ornamental porcelatn face and a leather case. By pressing a spring in the top of the clock at any time it will strike tho hour.
Anew piano lamp has for a support an Oriontal dancer holding a wand on which the lamp is placed. The figure Is about three feet In Height and leans gracefully on the'staff.
Novelties in key rings lately shown were In two forms, one of a serpent, the head and tail being intertwined to close the ring, the other of a wish bone with the ends bent until they meet. Both are in silver.
Black onyx has lately been utilized In making cases for mourning watches they are usually open-faced. Chaln9 composed of oblong blocks of onxy joined by slender golden links accompany the watches. -j:,"
The latest in~cihrand"dmbrella heads Indicate a reaction from the extravagant designs of last year. The most popular seem to be natural sticks with the knots relieved by silver deposit work and the handles tipped with silver. 'f|
Chain purses of gold and plafnuni or of all-gold links have again become popular. Some have a monogram ot initial tn'gold, aud one, recently exhibited, had a watch about an inch in diameter set in the clasp.
The grotesque figures which are generally associated with with Kip Van Winkle's ghostly companions in his celebrated vigil have of late been brought forward in bisque. One group of three such figures called the "Kazzle Dazzle" was recently exhibited.
SHARP POINTS.
Texas Siftings: It Is the dentist who can do tooth things at once. St Joseph News:
MI
have no
patience with a woman who writes poetry." "Nor have I I hold to the adage that a poet is born not maid."
Atchison Globe: Many men fall in love and claim to have lost their hearts whose experience afterward convinces them that they lost their heaas instead.
Yonkers Statesman: "I'm a stranger about these parts." explained the new barber, who was undecided as to which side he should comb the customer's hair.
Lawrence American: A scientific exchange states on authority that two bodies can not come together without losing some of their energy. 11 ow about a man and a tack?
Harper's Bazar: He (slightly rude): "I called because I thought yon were ont.w She (sweetly): "Well, do you know I thought 1 was out, too. The maid mast have mistaken yon for some one else."
Good Hews: Teacher: "Explain the difference test ween law and custom." Boy iwho owns a sailboat}: "Accordfn* to law, a steamboat must give the right of way to a sailboat, hot 'cordltg to custom the sailboat hiss got tor make tracks or get smashed."
SIMPLE REMEDIES.
New breathe through the woutk ttnlese It is ia possible to breathe through the tsttse, tfwr fta acbtajr tooife, saturate a pie.* et cotum wltfe ammonia, and lay it oq the tootk
CofesUpatloa m*r be relieved it cvpfel of hot water, is which a u» fai of salt ims hem dissolved, fs a 9te*y worsta* feefar* brnkfasi frppi&f ia* e»8*» nit «vtsewered Mire ft* iw» ffitJa*»i, aad iire a
COOB.'8coMPomsru.
'8 Oottxm O O N of Gotten Boot, Ttatv sad
Peanrroyal—* woset dfeaovwrVraa
your
Cotton Ito^OOTpwmd
Cbok*
took)** 9 afeiunpirfor mated wttalin. POND LOT COarAMt, No. a Fkfctt la Woodward av«* Dstreft* MMk
mbstttnt*,
paitts aki surra*
DO
Pants to Order For
3.0P
YOU
Suits to Order $18,001
EAR
Fit Guaranteed.
PANTS?
1»/I ERRITT, fC The Tailor and Hatter, €45 Miio St.
COAX
A
COKE.
\X\AwA.v\oA»
^NooA
TRUSSES, CKUa CHBS, KTC.
Lewis Lockwood
manufacturer OF
Trusses, Cratches, Deformity Brafiis and Patent Legs and Arms.
O t»
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p.&«
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is 5
tJ a a
Braces for all deformities made to order. Complete stock of crutches and trusacs always ob hand.
He Tenth and Wabash Avenue. Room 14, HeKees Block.
SBEDMAN.
a
IHAVB Bwovai%j|££
SeedStore
To 313 Wabash avenue. My customers are cordially Invited to these new and commodlius quarters where a fine stock of seeds will soon be ready for their inspection. I have added to my stock Pratt's Food for horees and cattle, also Pratt's Poultry Food, articles of real merit. Also in a few days a fine line of wire and wood
J. ArrFOOTE,
SEED MERCHANT,
313 Wabash Avenue.
RUBBER STAMPS.
Rubber Stamps!
ONLY 10 OHNT8 ONB LTNB.
Job Frirrting
Specialty—600 printed business cards for tl.rio.
J.
J. TRUINETT,
No. 10 South Filth Street.
COAL.
GOALJ GOAL! GOAL 1
W. H- LARIMER.
DEALER IX
All Grades ol Coal!
Bituminous coal mines tliree miles west of efty, en K«tkmal road. ornot 123 South thispSisot.
STKAM Dtia
Tie Excelsior Steam Dye Works
GIVES SATlgyACTlOX IN ALL 2X8 BRAXCHas. CAtL ox
H.|P REINERS,
665 Mam Stmt. South Side.
*TTO* ruiDim
A I
Kothlh* UJWIIJ CBtsotosandflirfJnn:
33XJEHTWB3C3-.
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IM Iff
lift
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4
TICK DACTJSTXdESS,
USE
HULM AN'S
Dauntless Goffee.
IT HAS NO EQUAL.
DBY GOODS.
S GENTLEMEN'S
SNIGHT SHIRTS*
Beautiful assortment, all sizes, and low prices. 50c, 75c, 89c, $1.00. Nothing to equal them in town.
THE BtJCKEYE CASH STORE.
HOLIDAY PRK0KNTS.
Watches and Diamonds
S:y#:,,y.KitGi-N
ri»i(iiiriiaiiiii m•- ii#
Faultless' NIGHT SHIRTS
WW STKS
BEST0N EARTH
Next week we open a large line of Dolls, beautiful line of silk umbrellas, Plain and Fancy Handkerchiefs. Fur goods go
AT HALF PRICE.
Take advantage. Satins in 25 different shades at 2Sc. Kid Gloves, you know, we've got the best glove in town, a trial will prove it.
ESP^TYAIPL/MBREEFYT
DUY GOODS.
BUGEYE QASTY^TOREL
Extraordinary bargains will be offered in our cloak department for the next ten days. We are showing some beautiful new garments. Come whi!o the assortment is good. New line of handkerchiefs, verycheap. Don't forget to visit the basement of our store, the Great Holiday Bazaar.
iN
HOIID-A.^ PRESENTS!
Solid Silverware. 8olid 8ilver Spoons,1" Rogers Bros. Plated Knivesand Fortes, Ladies and Gents Gold Watches,
Fine ne of Plsted Ch&in^, J'*ino Onyx Clocks, ael
Bronzes, Bric-a-Brac, Opera Glasses, Bo lid SUverS^ootn.
J. M.¥BIGWOOD,
Opposite Opera House, 403 Main street.
tOAU
I
QUKBS8WA11E
CHI3ST-A. STORE
Is the place to go wben yoa want to select a present for someone aad dou't know what to bay- We can assist yon und make yoor isoner larther than 3 on conld gnsw. See oar elegant twelve piece and oar make plated Student lamp at $3.5«.
PLATED WARE AND HANGING LAMPS.
Beautiful tatd Cheaper Than Ever.
O-.
Gold Kim-ned Spectacles
ft Co. 307 laii Street
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4 I
.or-
«i£2t'
