Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 1, Number 43, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 22 April 1871 — Page 3

A BURIAL SERVICE.

To this buryliiic

We come alone,—yuu nnd I,—uol with our dead. But with our«dear living O, could mortal trcml lie uiuulteriiiR!

**°d knows liow we love it,

sS iiin wo hu\ecomr to bury the eyes smile,— -m. life's bust wino 'M 'lands lioM out! Darling, shall it be y«'Ui. or mini',

To lay tin'llr.st mk] iiljovfc il?

-«s Kut no d' caylntr reach it in this kriKikhn*, whose stone

1,11

heart* must innKe! To an' exceeding illory :ro\vn. This Krief, outweighing,

Not even rojeretting,

pit will Willi is-: Tnank G«l, not l.cirtjVjsown fn any dishonor. It will await lis own, •. Never forK«-Uhiii! '''if' vv h, tx b- **i & MS To 'hlist's protection sm Vow let lis leave if,—ih« lonitt ami the k.-yr II.-

Will remember it*. If there may owr Jiesurreetloii!

(I-'rom the Revolution.]

I'JI YSK'IA lfEAL THYSELF

1JV S. CABOT.

Tho New Y^rk Triton has been .• •'d with a sensational spasm oi ri, vou.s indignation about panel houses.k gambling duns. ILk reporters buvo 1 before the public startling stateino regardingnotoriousplacesandpractit with an air of discovery, as if their istence wre not as well known to I police, and for that matter to cvq body else, as that of Wall Street

Fisk, Jr. Does any sane man belie that any real good will bo done by ti. exposures and the temporary activi of the police consequent upon then little incident will illustrate sotno^ tho peculiarities of the situation.

A policeui II xv S inked if H.• thong) the arrests would do any good "No, said he with contemptuous derisioi "They inuv keep quiet Cor a week no. There," pointing to oiu of tho ken dens, "is one of the places, but tiier wero others known to the police tha were not pulled, one for example at and so, belonging to Alderman ."

The writer heard this with his owi •ears. Hut if every gambling and ever panel establishment in the eitv were t't 1)0 broken up, it would not cure the evi so long as the roots, out of.which the^ grow r"in'i". All °vi!s

-,re

but p"r

verted goods ami it is only by substituting for the evil its corresponding good that any radical cure can be effected. Legislation and repression never remedied anr evil vet anil never will.

And when woman has tho ballot it will not be by voting that drunkenness, gamlilinir.aud li'VMif iousness are erinr's, and indicting heavy penalties for the commission of them*, that they will be abolished.

It is by teaching mankind (beginning with children, where woman's influence is all powerful) the cause of all theso evils and tho truths that antagonize them that nermanent reformation will come. Anil no one thing is more cortaln than that no partial reform will aTiiil. Is it conceivable that a society can suppress g-mbling in the keno or laro form, while it honors gambling in stocks and gold Soiling "short" and "long" is only a way of betting that prices will go up or down and making a "corner" is exactly equivalent to playing with loaded dico. Yet the men who do these things in Wall street, especially if thev give largosunis to build churches, nrolionoitJd, and their example held up as worthy of imitation. Kvcn if a serious effort were to be made, ias nobody believes it will be) to suppress the vulgar gamblers and thieves, there would be more built up with the one li.ind than was pulled down with the other. So long as the whole system of commerce is based on the t":i* 1 maxim that "a thing is worth what it will bring," and no attempt is made to ascertain what constitutes justice ..nd equality in all tho exchanges of daily lile, it is idle to suppose that tho more evident evils can bo dono away with. To attempt to suppress gambling, thieving or prostitution by an occasional arrest of their functionaries, is as futile as it would bo to undertake tho cure of a fever by painting the skin of the patient, on iho ido.i that tho redness of the skin WHS th» disease nnd i' that was concealed, all was well.

No! O long as the Tribune and tho rest of us exemplary citizens uphold tlu* false ideas, the inequitable principles, tliit underlie our social lif?, we only act as hypocrites when we

Compound for sins we are Inclined to, Ujr dnmuitiK those we have no mind t»." So long as water runs and grass grows, If i' woman can get by hard work the whole week long, barely enough to keep body and soul together, while by serving man's lusts, either iu marriage or out of it, she can faro sumptuously every iy, then' will be plenty who will adopt tho latter alternative.

Virtue can never be univers il until it pays. Hard words you say, but true nevertheless. Let i'. bo our *t iv.k to seo to it that in the highest sense of the won! as well as the lowest, it shall pay. All the evils which we see and deprecate grow ou« of the antagonism of interests, the want of justice and tho absence of love betwoen man and man. They can be cured only by the establishment of society on the basis of friendship, which when uni\vrsall7.od becomes love to (Jod and 1\- lo man or religion, regulated by th: laws of justice Rtid equity disc«*vetvd bv the reason and constituting the science of life, giving nerfect freeiloui to the plav of all the affections of tho human soul, which constitutes the art of life.

now to riiEVEXTsrxixt

Those who take a-groat deal of out-door exorcise are usually enabled to work it off, unci seldom suffer much in consequence, except in hot weather while those who lead a sedentary in-door life suffer most. When warm weather comes on in the spring, peoplo require tauch less carbonaceous food, but instead of changing their diet, as tho weather changes, they continuo to oat the same kinds of food thov have been eating during tho coldest weather of tho winter, and tho consequence is that the already overburdened livor is unable to bear up utidei mis uAt_r.» lo.id, and utterly refuses to perforin its function until it has had a chance to rest and to throw off its accumulated burdens. Now. to prevent this state of things, two things are necessary. First, people must eat a less proportion of cnr)onaceous food at-all times. Second, as the weather grows warmer in the spring, they must eat a much less quantity of it than they do in cold weather, and substitute, instead, more vegetables and acid fruits. Every family should have a large supply of canned fruits and green vegetables to use at t.hi«

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Dr. A. i*. Wood, in the Herald. 0/ Health, writes:—There arc great innny people who are subject to a "bilious attack" every upring, and who expect it ii« inatter of course. Now there is no more need for people being thus sick in the .np.iii^, ill «t «ny other liiueui* the vear.lf they only know how to live.* This periodical sickneits can be I #rn pn»venttMl slmp'y by regulating thej diet. Not wi«i »dl perauiis, who h.»vo subjeet T» such attacks yenr after year, for a long time, can always overcome the difficulty at otiee. We are all such croaturvs of habit, that when any thing becomes established in this way, it li:is a strong tendency to return at jn

During cold weather people cat larger piantities than uaual oi carbonaceous

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sueli as fat meats, sugar, butter, bread, cakes, and other preparations or white or superfine flour, nuts, fats, sir* up. etc. Of course, a much larger

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the regular time, even after the pro* 1 ijon. during or.use hss censed u» operate «TNSIIJIIT'TITLV, in lad C*«M, it souietiinNs takes several years lo overoomo it cntirclv. Vnder proper regimen, the attacks will grow less severe cTery year, until they eutirely disappear. T. c. BVNTIM.

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qunivt itv of carbonaceous food is requir- S5 Jp IO pci LJuy MEN, BOYS, ed bv tfie system in cold weather than nnd tilRI* who repw in our new busimtM in warm, but as a general thing people oat too much of it, clog up their av** !^t

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tenis with tho excess, and overburden nMlt prolltablc work, ahould addresa at the cxciotory organs, particularly th« t^e^, uKOKUE HTIwsos ACo^, liver, in vain eflorta to get rid of it. s:4m Portland, Maine.

Tjn-ABASH

§-3 ^s.p.sftg s3

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Woolen Mills,

I, (ESTABLISHED ISM*)

a. F. ELLK, Pf»prkttr,

1

Wholesale and Retail M«tiuft»ctiirer of

Woolen Goods,

And Yarn.

Have in store a full and etinj»lu(2 assorlment of

Extra Plaid FIRM»«I«, J«UM, Cmwiui«r«i, Twc«d«, DomkliM. •.

Blaakctii, Oemifcrpnnes.

COVERLETS OF ALL KINDS, JiOTII WOOLEN

AND oerroy.

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The Street Cars pw« thin Hoose every Ten M'.IIUUM, from Uie Depot and River. TS« Arlcrinn Rath* or* conpsdcd mtth 1-U". (Mi HoleL

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WORKA OV CANAL,

JBetwees Main ami Okie iSte.

0&DBB9 SOLICITED

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8KATH A BA«A.

TERRE-HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL. APRIL 22.1371 3

JYJWAS. MUSIC.

PIANOS,

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Organs, Melodoons,

Together with all kindc of smaller

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HAVBUKXOTEBtt

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TREET,

(Opera House BloekJ

Where they have opened the best and handaam«rt stock of aooda 1» th*1*Ud«»• this city. r-tr.

rpERRK-HATTTE PRIlTDMgO HOlgp^-A 1 moat eompletn PriaUag.ErtaW^Bnwit, Sew TrW, Hr» PTMW, aad lb*bytVwk' nea, Mtauila sUaet* J. Smith A CS».

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Tuell, Ripley & Dealing's,

EMPORIUM'

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is fiow vpea for Inspectleo, aai

Will be Sold at BOTTOM PRICBi,

.ATV.S. FRANK'S,

COBWEB MAIN AVO FOUUTMSJRBBtS. «]-u

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