Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 1, Number 29, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 January 1871 — Page 7
ft
[From the Cosmopolitan.] DEATH CANNOT DIVIDE US.
BY. W. S. H.
In my heart of hearts lies hidden A secret, sacred drawer, Where my life's most precious jewels
Its
iwcf[wt
•J
memories are. ^,
*'''IleiT are |x*nrl* of childhoods laughter. Here arc diamond* of sigh*. Vtiloli «unt from liwts as piironni true
As the pcyjple in the skies. 3Icre are lmrs of golden music, Snntchec! from Sorrow's saddest hvmn,
X!.V*
Priceless ncms of glittering U-a"n» I line can never, never 11 in. "j'.r/' wreatli-H of wanning welcome smile* hich adorned the college prize Jierean* sparks which made tin- love-light
Blcsgt nod cheer the nail good-byta* JP Here are rubies from the wine cup, Whero the lips cave but the click Of telegraph which spoke from heart*
pt That were throbbing warm and rjulck Here arc ilropu of holy water. Which were once inv inwther's tears,
Still perfumed by her hallowing love ,'% And hereon*'crating prayers. And in this drawer an inner drawer
Far more sabred yet than all,
4
Where rny life Is ever lingering, Waiting, waiting for his call. H'-re are smiles made up of God's smiles,
Light of pure and holy love Her*» are slshs and tears to teach me That she was not from above. IITC is tm-t and truth and beauty—
Music, mirth, and gentle grace Kvcry fi.-uur*KjK-:ika the goodness That irradiate* h-*r lace. And her form Is lithe and lamV-llke
Iturcst «ifts by od were given— Human love and h'ly living— Kiic dings to man and climbs to Heaven. Angels took her up one morning
From :ny clinging arms to (Jod, And my lurnrt wan racked with anguish, liroken, broken by the rod. Hut I heard within thl.s drawer,
Like the voice of Sinner's friend,"?"Love, your own is with you always, Always, even to the end." And I looked and «aw her smllliiL'.
And I listened to her prayer. "I'atienc( darling! wall a little Where I am thou shall be there." God, whose care is e'er beside us,
Tells me "Dcntli «l*ill not divide us."
[For the Saturday Evening Mail.]. WAITING FOR THE TRAIN. As the traveller nervously paces the long platform at the village station anxiously peering into the dim distance to detect the first sign of the long wished for train, and the incsnngo comes "behind time." lie weals himself wearily, and, as his head drops upon his hands in meditation, memory takes up the thread she ban npun and turns backward the spool of time unwinding slowly while present disappointment is forgotten in tho soeneH of long ago. At first, but dimly comes the homestead nestled down among the hills in the far away home of his childhood.'"
There the robin sang in the dear old apple tree beside the door, and the blossoms fell in showers in that happy spring-time, hiding the green earth as the snow hides its dreariness to-day. There the balmy air of .May, breathing on the Mowers wakened into life the violet and snow drop. There the spring bubbled up beneath tho hill and dancing over the pebbles mingled its cooling waters with the stream whero ho wan won! to bathe his weary limbs in the later harvest time. And now the thread is spun in sorrow, for tho mother &tll» her hoy to listen to the last farewell with smothered sobs the llttlo grou|) of mnltton onos awaits tho fatal touch- of deaths «old lmnd how his quivering heart feels tho blow and even now the scene so long buried calls hack' the straying feet to virtues paths, flow painfully the long train of curtallied carriages moves across his vision! The stricken heart returns to tread anew th" paths so hard to walk alone. II" lingers in the darkened room once so hallowed by a mother's love. When weary and forgetful he returns to lay hi" burden down, as the hand presses the fainilliar knob the thought cornea. Mother, is not there the weary Ie.• pause on the threshold and desire to escape the haunts so linked with sorrow hurries him away to seel forget fulness.
Time sears I lie wound, and in tho busy whirl of noisy crowds he finds oblivion. I.ii'e has prospered him. and (o-dav his gi'lii" is powerful to obtain th best that- earth atVords but wealth has not brought I hat for which his soul has longed and looking back upon the dreary waste of life he feels its emptiness and sighs "unsatistled."
And now he is waiting l'or the train which shall bear him home, lit type of that groat train in which we all shall soon le passengers whose mighty engine Time is whirling us onward to eternity. Car nwav down the road we see it coming, in the distance its seems to creep along unmindful of the nervous haste ainon^ the waiting multitude
We grow impatient, will it never come. that the ennine would hasten, we are eager for the hopes that lie beyond and would be away, we glance at our watches but this train is not In'hind. it comes fast enough, only our thoughts do not keep pace with i\ Faster and faster apoears to move as it near* our station. The deep toned whistle strikes ujHHi the ear with a solemn and foreboding sound, when at last it rushes in we wish it might havo tarried. From this our train na passena-r alights, all are bound faf the s,-,r,u ie »tin uion all will at tho joruney's end. all our fellow pusscngcia are not old. but tho linn tread of manhood and the tottering step of age alike, mount the platform. The bright eyes of inr.oecuco and t!i dull oil's of crime gaxe from tho wiiitk4v8s. Purity and vice art fellow pissi'ngvrs, not all departed to-d ty, but each pissing train carries a new 1 «ul and returns empty. Often, very often, friends are gathered to witness the departure of lo\\*d ones, need no baggagi! as we enter uj«n tins journev. In the bustle and o'vileinont of preparation nothing is for^ 'Uen what we are when we enter the train we are when we leave it. The last f.irowell is
iiuickly and quietly sj tun off, alas! too soon
*loken and hur-
jLOST LOT E.
A recent number of Hearth ajtfl Ilomc contained an article entitled
uV\lves
who are no Wives," in which a wife who has lost the love of Jier husband Is thus described I "She racks her memory to lind what I ofTence she can have given. She devisea lures to win him buck. She trusts her goodness, and truth and love, and patience, will at last avail, and he will patiently return more loving than ever.
She shows a brave and smiling faee to the world, makes no complaint, utters I no cry, and goes on dying, quietly bleeding at the heart.
Who does not know one or more such instances? I do not see what can be done about them. No law made already, or to be made when woman casts her ballot, will reach these eases. No possible avenue of escape can be easy to such a wife. She can go away from her husband, but not from the misery he has caused her. Where, in all the world, is solace for her unrequited affection, derided, despised, trampled under foot
There certainly are a great many eases like the above to be met with, and the misery involved in them cannot be estimated*. It is impossible to sav how far changed affection evinces moral turpitude. We have known good and excellent people whogrew apart as friends, lovers, husbands, and wives, from causes too subtle ever to be intelligently explained to outsiders. The laws which govern feelings and emotions are as yet mysteries, and perhaps always will so remain. The worth of people is not, in every case, met bv a commensurate amount of love. It is sad that this should be the fact, but it is, never thelcss, true and we may rejieat, and keej) repeating, that people ought to love in any given case, and yet the assertion cannot force love any more than a demand for water can make it Mow at once from a frozen pipe.
A fleet ion has its times and seasons, its ebb and flow, its attractions and repulsions. Almost every intimacy ss es through one or more of these chafes and fluctuations and where there is not good cause for alienation,when lov. dies down and flickers in the socket there is no reason to suppose that it may not be fed with new life, and ^low again into warmth and brightness. Feelings cannot bo forced, but they have their periods. The idea of duty and responsibility cannot safely be eliminated from the emotional life more than from any other. Tho boundary line between caprice, the evanescent moods of the heart, and a breach that can never be healed, an aversion that is all-powerful and dominating cannot be laid down dogmatically. All that can be done is to improve men and women, so that they shall enter more discriminatingly into the gravest relation of life, and be better fitted to preserve mutual respect and reverence.
Loss of love conies more frequently from slight disgusts and slight failures in matters of taste than from largo and glaring faults. Only a very small number of human beings have as yet learned to live together in the most intimuto and familiar of relations without sometimes striking upon harsh and discordant notes.
Women are said to be more constant in their affections than men. As society is now constituted, perhaps the greater sharo of woman's misery comes from misdirected, unrequited, or lost affection. Tho point wo wish to make, in answer to the article in Hearth and Home, is, that even a wife, much to be pitied on account of spurned love, has no right to sink down in abject nOSs and despair because of even a husband's coldness. Lovo is often last because women cling too desperatel.vyKnd make themselves burdens by their exactions. It is necessary for tlieni to learn that tho woman 'must, underlie the wife that self-reverence is the best fuindatioii for any relation whatever, (iail Hamilton has recently been preaching independence to wives through the columns of the /iKlcjx'iiiletit, We heartily indorse her view-*. Wives cannot maintain a healthy influence if they are merely parasites they need roots oftheir ow n, and a life of their own, so that love shall be worn as a crown instead of carried as a pack.— lirriilttltoii.
I S O A A I A
Then1 is a very general impression abroad that Louis II. is a weak and insignificant sovereign, but I do not believe a word of this. That ho is not a monarch of war-like tastes is true, and. I think, cause tor eternal gratitude. It is certain that lie ires more for music and literature than for the cruel pomp and glory of tho battle-field. As in every country foolish stories are circulated concerning the sovereigns, so is it her.», but happy the ruler of whom nolhiug worse is told than of th" romantic King of Havaria. When I inquired thi'other day of a native if the Kinyj would go to Versailles, "Oh, (Jott no," he replied, "the King only cares to stay at Herg and stare at the moon." Herg is one of the royal castles, situated on the picturesque Lake of Ntertilcrg, about an hour ride by the cars from Munich. Hut I am acquainted with other Havarians who arw not so llippant in their remarks—individuals of strong minds, calm and impartial. They assure me that h" is far from boing a weak Prince. On the contrary, that ho l-s very intellectual that his education has been very severe and thorough, and all parties accord to bitn a nature tvtlned, elevated, and of the puVest moral tono. In oonvt?rsitig with
Itiron F., th" othe* day, he !*tftted tliat llu Kiiij was perfectly familiar with the ba.uix arts, history, and governmeut, and an wtimm/ of all the tonics or the ilav. lie atlded also that his Slajj* sty road nil the leading journals of the different countries, including those of our own near America.—r. „Y. 1".
Mint.
\x ,n Aitxn ,m.—A rough looking j»|xMMinen of humanity was cruising throu-h Chatham strict. New York, not 1 nig sinw, when be came plumply
UP?V
now that momo-
....
A»irt- 'A svlitor -H«ys that tWljityfour ti lib- Chinese vrnlki»d Into Ibi* saneiviui ••.her day, aiul tbomuli the iBt(Jiuutk«#r ^n UMCHrjireUH-, ^-Ud Piir tweMt-^hr Jnlbfe^rTptton* to Ms paper., .Tile editor what they wanted I of tuj Engliidi iwjuM-. a h« was In-. efonuMl tlwi iHfty It for tho *'pic-1 Hiirw" in it^ th) pa^r having IVwlnr'i
hHikVtUlUw'\d
0
all ex invt it. but few rv-idv wi»en it ncs, but it will not tnrrv for pr. pini-
1,is
lion, so wo t.ilto our soat^ with thaso! thuiub, demanded an explana a re pa re KHHIU" nns»«ae con us before and wo* Jiecl it not. FeV: .«• traveller on Uiuertain journey *jt in gloomy clouds of disappointment, or soaring aliove in a brighter at n?pherc, coasld"r well Us warning tiv-wencer. »ud Ui prvjMml nntl wniiin^ ftir t&o train.
KnHIU»'::!'V tllO
tion ••Shut up, shouted, the him.
I ii^Wr
a
sjx'eimeh
of hi* nwjo, aliout whom here could lw no mistake,
ry reproaches for no better preparation, .. ,-v r« l'im'ii lu'iiri .hob »OTW»»UV !fc, yuccnswarc, China, Fruit Jars, mile po«t« drop away. Althougli all cxjHVt it. but few an wuics, but it will not tnrrv for pr»'pani "li»S4
knockwl him sprawling into tin-
n"
what for you tna«*h tiic 5n tor nose?*' asketl Abraham. Ye*, ycr have: ycr Jews crucified JOSUK Clirlst, and l*ve a mind to g«i for yer again."
Rut, mtue C»t, dat v»«h oight^n hundred mm ago !M mid tb«.lew. Wal, 1 donl ^re !f -1 only h."jml of It U»t night!" replied the niiwA#hcy|, again going for his victim, who wlselv went a trifle
direction.
.\ bil!Lml
ft catarrh cut, a gusno trlo$ althousrh drinking it It is taSirk, ttttrl mu unibr^U "picture." prohibited.
Holiday Presents,
TKRRK-HAUTK SATURDAY,EVENING MAIL. JANUARY'J4,»187l,
BOURDON FOLLY.
At the timo of tho Emperor Xapoloon's exile to the Island ol Elba, among other small means to which tho Bourbon king resorted in order to stay up his tottering tvrone, was tho passage of a stringent Taw that no picture, statue, statuette, figure, or resemblance of "General Bonaparte," as he was called, should bo suffered to remain in any place, publtaor private, antbng any residents, native or foreign. Consequently there was a sudden disappearance of every thing of the kinu, from the bronze statue on the top of tho pillar made from casnon taken at Austerlitz, which, statue Louis Philippe had the good »nse and discretion to restore, to the mere toy or thinible-caso bearing Napoleon's profile upon its outline. Kverv house was to be visited and examined, to see that the order was strictly obeyed, and all offending articles to bo seized.
Mr. Wilder, an American residing in Paris, owning a particularly fino and correct bronze statuette of the Emperor, buried it, with other things of the kind, in his cellar. His turn for inspection by the police came. In walked into his counting room the ofllcer, with his secretary ana other attendants, who said in a pompous and semi-con-
temptuous tone ystatue, ness of any kind, of that man "Of what man?" said Mr. Wilder. "You know, sir, very well, who is meant," said the officer, impatiently "that man—that usurper.'" "What man? what usurper?" said Mr. Wilder "I am a stranger here." "Why do you keep me? You know whom I mean that usurper—that Bonaparte, if you uiU havo it," said the ofiicer. "JIave you any likeness or representation of him?"
lave you any image, orlikc-
Certainly I have," said Mr. Wilder and, turning to a clerk, "Gougain, bring me a bag of Napoleons." Then, pouring them out on the desk before him, "Hero they are, sir."
Tho policeman stared. At first, he could make no answer but then said: That money is not what I want. You can keep that."
Go and tell your master," said Mr. Wilder, "that the whole specie currency of the realm must be called in before he can keep from_the eyes of the people the features of tho Emperor Napoleon."
You are right," said the ofllcer, now leaving, but continuing aside to his comrades, "it is ridiculous, truly, this business we are on but the Bourbons cannot see it."
AOMIN.vnLK CRICIITOX.—In a late Western paper, under the heading ''Situations Wanted," appeared tho following, which in a fair degree shows the the versatility as well as tho retiring character of tho American printer
WANTED—Situation by a Practical Printer, who is competent to take charge of any department in a printing and publishing house. Would accept a professorship in any of tho academies. Has no objection to tcach ornamental painting and penmanship, geometry, trigonometry, and many other sciences. Is particularly qualified to act as pastor of a small evangelical church, or as local preacher. Would havo no objection to form a small but select class of young ladies, to instrnct thcm-iti'the higher branches. To a dentist or chiropodist he would.be invaluable or he would cheerfully accept a position as bass or tenor singe* in a choir.
TAI.I, STORY.—"I once," said showman, "met a man wiio mado bene and nerve all-healing salve. Ho was an enterprising kind of fellow, and so he thought bo would experiment a little with it. IIo first cut off his dog's tail and applied sonic to the stump. A now tail grew on immediately. Ho applied sonic to tho piece of tail which ho cut ofV, and a new dog grew out. lie did not know which dog was which."
£1ALL AT
BROKAW BROS.,
100 M»in Strr*l.
A1111 IIIIT soiiictliin^ •-rfal for vour
''irt.s, plain
Wagons and 1'ainted.
rrERRE-fUUTE _I_ «•"-*. ,TR.
Z!Zll and Janet/
For the Boys.
I.adie.s' Otinpaition.t^eoioptrfi lg/urnished. w. For the tiirls. f'toek and Fr.(* Braelcetx, earred and
Fur the House.
IVtret and Hrusset* Rugs and Mats. For your Wife. Ladies' and Cents'' Travelling Rags.
For your Friend.
Traveling, IFo/ J- and Stand Baskets. For a Lady's Present.
llnii(l«»iiip llrntMcl^. flut, ami IiigrMin
A E S
HE A t'TlFl'I. GTLT JiAXl)
3
W I N O W S A E S
Hep ««d Dnmnslc Curtain It ANIMMK
Looking Glasses & Mirrors.
AH very suitable and will be oflTerM «t mtueel prie*s durlna the holidays, at Itouxe l'tirni»h*iurj Starr.
W-Ciltl
1)
ANIEL BROWN, IStCBKiR TO BSOWK MRLmt,) Whokisale *nt IleMl Dealer la
hijm, Oirtor*, Tablm 9vKery, Ko. jt Mais hniiir, 8-tf. "**1 TKURR-HAUTE, INJ».
j|oskman
&
borwcm,.
nUtefc mit you, and, E A N A I O S
fiistor in the same
table i* no Uhlh t»i *it at wot «trie!lv
WBwmilWWii
217 Main Street. n*mr MevenUk,
%*'r TKRRE-HAfTE, IXD. |FJ
CWtimg and Hrpndrtng ,hnrt mot*o» *-\f.
rpERRE-HAUTE HOt^E,
T*rrr- ffrtufr.
Hr. c. «niTis,'
--I
fwi Mara*.
The StroetCar* J*JW thin I1msw ermv T*» Mlaiitm, from Depot nM Rirtt. T%e .irtctMM Balhi nr* 1-lf. fhU Iltift.
Commercial College
BOOK KEEPING,
PENMANSHIP & ARITHMETIC,
CORNER 5th & MAINSTREETS,
Terre-IIaute, Ind.,
R. GAIIVIN, Principal.
THE TERRE-lf AijTE'
COMMERCIAL COLLEGE
Gives Instruction In all the branches pertaining to a
Thorough Bn&mcss Education,
A Scholarship in the Terre-IIaute Commercial College Is good for lift-, giving the student the privilege of reviewing at pleasure free of charge.
R^i'iemlier this is the oldest and most rellabje institution of the kimt in Indiana.
The Fall Term of the Terre-IIaute
S'
COMMERCIAL COLLEGE
Commences on the 1st Monday in September. 5-tf
mm
PPEN HEIMER & BRO. •V'
ntr,
fmK
eaonty*
AND PKALKRS IN
Gents' Furnishing Goods,
No. 8o MAIN ST.
Has on hand and for sale a full liiii
I»l Ki KEVMtt'KY
COPPEH- DISTILLED
WHISKY,
Foreign and Domestic Brandies,
€*inH, Winesi.
23-tf.
RgaM!
AT.,
-F
-A"
,-•» ,» v* «,
No. 299rrMain Street,
Immeliately opp. Terre-IIaute IIOICM*. ec-tf
EMOYAL.
JA.nEN B. I.l'XE.
Dealer in Pure Kentucky Whlski*1* and Foreign and iHjniestic LUjuors has reiuoTel to his
Xrtr Building, 23) Main Street,
Imni'xllately opposite Tcrre-Ha«t»? IIou»«. ec-tf
^JENUINE BL(K'K COAL.'
J. It. WHITAKER prepnred to furnish .ocoal consumers of Terre-Hante, daring the Fall and Winter, the verv best Shaft Block
Coal In the market In quantities to suit purchasers. Call and examine the quality of his coal, on* slte the Market House, corner 4th and Walnut street*, before purchasing eliiewherc 13-Sn*.
JEW BAKERY^,
COR. FIRST & OHIO STREETS J. M. DAVIS, having had an experience of 10 years, with W. II. Hage, is pirpan** alt kinds of w*»rtc in thhlin^Jl" ™nrtnotice.
TROFES.«IOXAL.
tRAIKIE CITY
"X i""*
THIERS,
i'.U
TKRRE-TTAXTTK, INDIANA.
c-tf
AMES B. LYNE, v.
r*i to do
F^rtieaiu' at teat ion given tn\V #ddlngCak«s. Fre*h Jtremd, Oake*. Ptr*, dx., lS-Sm. ConsJantlT on hand.
DR. HARLAND,
217 MAIN STRBET,
BfXnoen Sixth 4 Seventh Street*, rwr 8ht m*rt. Con*nlt*tJon free from 9 aVIock A. Jt., to
So'clock P. M. ts-iy. I
Tcrr»"-11auuT'l-rtnling H«*«*, 1*2 Main firvrt, who deTu!* hi* ntlre timp *n« «tt^ntlon to tlw» beitar of WUIIL U. J. Hmltb A "«x
WARREN. HOBERCr & CO.,
HAVE -REMOVED!
TO Til KIR XEW NTOKF.
•1
Corner Room, Opera House Block,
And Opened with an Elegnnt Stock of
T" ft" r'
ft'
PLANING MILLS.
CLIFT & WILLIAMS,
Manufacturers of
Sash, Doors, Blinds,
WINDOW «t DOOK FRAMES,
MOULDING BRACKETS Machinery and Castings:
ST AI lv RAILING, HALLUHTKRS,
.tV «, !¥. Newell Posts, Flooring, hiding,
Anil all descriptions of
FINISHING LUMBER.
Wholet»&leVmf Retail deal«n in.
Pine Lumber, Lath & Shingles,
Slate Roofing,
AND TIOOFINTJ FKLT.
3
Custom Sawlntt. l'lanini :uid W'iM)d Tin ning done to order. All win^k warranted.
(\r. Ninth if: J\Iidliem/ St refit*. ... 9-tf.
rpiIE NATIONAL LIFE
~vr,
Insurance Company,
(IKTIIK
11 *',• •. :rh\.
rnited Srates of America.
Chartered bv Congress July 25th, 1W8.
CASH CAPITAL ALL PAID IN Sl,OdO,«W.
pit nl larger than 1 hat of imj- other in the I 11 it I Slates. FiiinnooN manaucd l.v Jay Cookcj K. A.
Hoilins, and other leading financiers. Kates of nrciniutns to per cent, hclow Mutual Companies. PIhii free from coniiilicntions of notes and dividends. Contract* definite and Impossible to he misunderstood or misrepresented. Polirlra liberal and specify everything. ,| .Money received In each Stale inv«"«lcd hi the same. KurrPKN beyond that of any Company ever organized, over 12,'KIO policies having been Issued in the twenty-seven months of its-existence. .!. A. FMTK,
Agent for Western Indiana.
OKFITK—No. FTI Slain street, Terre-IIaute,' J. H. AHMSTlto.Nfi, M. I)., 21-nni. Mellcal l'xaminer.
JJUSIIER'S
Photograph Gallery,
colt. MAIN IT SIXTH STHK^WS.
Ixing exfterienee and close at tent ion t« the t»u*«ine«s enaiili-s me to furnish all kinds ol Pictures in the highest style of art. I'artioo-, lar attention given to the new styl*s of Photographs. including the |H»pnlar Itcmbrant! arid Shadow ptcttirfw.
Price* low. Satlsftu tion caaranteeil. 7-tr. f. W. Hl7f*irfcn.
J.
COOK & HON,
Wiiolcsal« and Kctail tn IIA III) WARE AND CUTLERY,
Heavy Goods, Ibir Iron, Nulls, Are. Alwi rtit «*.r.,0 celfbratol Horncy's Klehiiioad Plon I KI.M.M
LIS nnri VA M'iin Strrtl, ""^TKRRE-IIACTB, IN1».
12-1
CILAUK
1
HOUSE.
Or. Fir* and OMm Htrrgtt, |f
THE TERRE-HACTE OMNIBCS'ANI HA' LINE will attend to enHa for train* («RI)S,TASHEIJS,(i!}1'^ AXDBl*TT(VN lenvlnfc l»oth the Eaalern and Northern I*poU also convey pas«*n|tcrs lo aoy jmrt of thedly. All orders left at the Terre-Hau* Howie, Post^ifBce, XatloniU Hon«*, IIunflL
Hoav, rwir»fTic% AATtonfti noQK', or Ui« fiark lioujf wUl Ua prompt-
E W O O E
S O A S
KAI'K AXD IKKD T4KIM. Bet. Flnrt ami Water Siivct*, and, Rnilroails, jt f- Itnmmloa,-23-lm ?TEnRK-I!ATTK, IM».
J0-
'J. /,
.,1,4.%
J" I
•Mi tjw'l
CHEAP DRY GOODS.
*37
An Inspection of NEW GOODS and Prices is Solicited. .. V.
Warren, Hoberg &
OPERA HOUSE .CORNER
.-*»
AXD
TEIUiE-HA VTK
CA WO
'14^
rilnss, Oils, Ystnii
"•'v
I
Co.,
*i A,
'M r.
JAS. SKAT1I. IGO FOUNDRY
J. II. 1IAGKR.
S
KEATH II AC.KR, Pimm's.,
Manufacturers of
Cars and Car Wheels
Of nil kinds.
Highest price paid for Cast Keiap lioiiv
a ^'3^,
Repairing promptly attended to.
WORKS ON CANAI.," :V IBetween Mafn and Ohio St*.
ORDERS SOLICITED.
I-lf.
1
8EATH «fc 1IAWER.
ULICK & BERRY,
fit'
Successors (o fi'fS H) o' .'i .i-T
If •'1•
11A RR, a Fl,l 'I\ d- JIFRR 1', l! it I (fi. I
I ',t I 1
I
li
riti
OKNF.liA I. 1IKA I.KKS JN
DRUGS,
\-Chemicalsj Paints,
m.-: i:.
Brtislic?,
•lie?,
•JUttJl." t*.'.idj1* PER Ft' 'i:i 'K) fl K'P\! TITIC'I. ER,
DYES, FINE LIQUORS,''
i. f"
l'ATKNT
'Spiers, Tvinrx, Sfwwge*, tfr.' Y, t' ii. t.'or. ftli and Main Streets,
S
V'lf-ti1''
(,
n-fi
TETlRTMrA'f'TE. IN*.
Y\ *v/o iff
j- 'Fliey have !!i« largest iin-1 most eouiftl' iitoek of everytlilnn ]crtnlni»i({ lotlie telle til Pin# ntislncss, keit In the city of Tern-'
Haute, and resin-el fully solicit a Miij re of thv public patronaKc. j, "v I-tf.
:w TKJMMixt.::
FANCY STORE,
J. SCHAUBLIN*
«!oor i:nsl Rjf*1'*
*s,, I'eju rni (ilh and Tt//,
Has openivl one of th" finest hnU lurjtt Ht sls-lt« of all klmls of
nLadies' Dress and Cloak
l.',r
i.
.UK
AN!'
.i
i, .•
FANCY
alio Mtiiiti'aciuic
Indies, call Sf»TWtl:i rToo(ft.' n«»cct f'llly, W-tf. J. KCHACIiLIX.
'N
ATIONAL HOUF=E
•i
COR. MAlirAND SIXTH ST»..
iTcrre-Haute, Indiana.
«ft
A Jr to so
