Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 2, Number 31, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 January 1872 — Page 7
"IPS' I
If silting with this little worn-out shoe Anl scarlet stocking lylog ou my knee. I knew the litt'e feetl through
Tbe pearl-net gates that fie 'twist heavtn and me, I con
Id be reconciled, and happy, too. And look with glad eye* toward the Jasper Sea.
If, in the morning, when the song of birds Remind* un of a n»u*le far more sweet, I 1 bite tied for bis pretty broken words
And for the music or tils dimpled feet, J? I could be almost happy though I heard No answer, and saw but his vacant seat.
I con id be glad, if, when the day Is done And all 1ls cares aud heart-ache* laid away. I could look westward to the bidden sun,
And with a heart lull of deep yearning, say, "To nlatht I'm nearer to my little one
By just the travel of a single day."
If 1 could know tho«e little feet were shod Inn in'lal* wrought of light in better lands, And that the foot-print* of a tender (Jod
K-in Hide by side with his in golden sands, I could bow ehwriully and kiss the rod, Since Benny was in wiser, safer liaudu.
If he were dead I would not sit to-day 1 Anl stain with tears the wee sock on my knee I would not kiss the tiny shoe, and say, "Bring back again my little boy to me!" I would be patient, knowing it is God's way,
And thatllu'd lead inetqlilm o'er death's silent sea! 5, it- TCt&j Bui 0! lo know the feet, onee pure and white,
I'll- hauuts of vice hive boldly ventured In! The hand* that should have battled for the rUht I Have been wrung crimson In the clasp of sin!
And should he knock at heaven's gate tonight, I fear my boy could hardly enter inl,
[Ml'OIl TA NT NOTICE—DOG LOST.
IOST—On
or about theM Inst., a poweiful
and frroclotiH black bull dog, known as the Capital Dog lo hands high had on hr iH* collar mumed nenponslble Editor will come lioine when called with a raw beefsteak. Anyone returning him at the back donrcir ihis' fllee willbemagniicently rewarded. Knock hard.
The above advertisement was originally intended for the usual department -fornue.h notices, but a meeting of the stock holders of this select family journal Irtvo decided to place it where it will bo sure of tho public eye and attention.
Ye-t, gentle reader, we have lost our dog, uxl if that unapproachable canine in not brought back by the police, or a battallion of Company A, orsomething, wo give notice that our type and fixtures will bo for sale low. It's all very well to talk, but we've tiied it and we can't got along without that dog, that's all thore is about it.
It will doubtless surprise the religious reader, but about every third person who drops in upon the editors of this, our Hingularly conservative and pacific sheet, inquires for tho "Respon«ble' lCditor," and has a club up his sleeve or ft gun under his coat.
No»v one can very soon tret used to tho report of a pistol and all that sort of thing. Constant practice can accustom ono to the sobs of widows and the racket of tt coroner's jury. It isn't so much that, but when the press has got. to be stopped every tew hours to go to the funeral of ono of the Assistant Sulw, why you can't make the thing sco at all. A fellow can't stand the interruption.
Hut of course after we got the dog aforesaid everything went like clockwork. Whenever we called a prominent citizen a "low lived liar," or a putrefying porjurer," and the party dropped around tc see about it, all we ihtid to do WM to point to thej door with
Responsible Editor on It, and then lock it after the victim when he went in.
Th* dog wax in there Obviously all that remained was to wait till the groans ceased, and then send the devil In shako the remains through the ash-sifter so as to save the •tuils aud cut!' buttons.
We don't want to lose that dog if we •un help it. Wo had no end of trouble 'aining that animal when he was a •uppv, and especially in getting him lavage enough. At nret we had to be{ln with tho smallest newsboys sprinkled with gunpowder, and it was nearly eighteen months before ho displayed a roal, downright relish for even delin|urint subscribers. And now we have It all to go over again like as not. It's "true that he ran away once before, but then he dragged on a hand-press he was chained to, and we captured hiiu ts he tried to got through tho Treasury railing.
Wo want that dog, we do. We shall never foriret his playful way long as we live, never. The funny kittle way he had. for instance, of reakiug up the desks to get at the editor's lunch. And then the time he kopi our now base-ball editor perched on a hot stove-pipe all night under the tuipriVMloii that he was General DGnt, or somebody. It was mighty lucky the fir# had nearly gone out, or he would
yMjfvo
had to gut his pants reseated anyo\v. We have kept tfc.» menagerie carefully ookoU up ever since, but it seems that his time our treasure escaped by digging down through the tloor. We thought the oharnel house had been very quiet for a day or so, but when a llaptist collecting agent and a colored leinocrat whom we had sent into tbe den about feeding time tho other day camo out unharmed, and asked how deep thy artesiau well won to be, we knew at onee that something had happened. The frtthftil animal had evidently burrowed after a rat ttntll he tad got down to the Seneca atone fornation, where he oouldn't tarn round, »nd HO had to keep on right through. _t any rate we have kept a boy whisling at the hole tor a week without otleot, and have let down a shin bone ritli forty fathoms of line attached rithout the first nibble as yet.
How far down he's going we oant av, out It he don't strike oil or switch oft into tbe Comstock lode, we suppose ho will crawl out through one of Capron's celestial turnip gardens and «om« home on a Union Pacific pass, iead-kead, If not its going to be lively for the Mongolian's family whose cellar he comes out in, that's all. (Canton and Yeddo papers please copy.)
A* we used to approach to feed this chwrftil terrier on iron-plated stilts ten Wet high, we would confidential!v adflse our paying subscribers and adverMsers who may work for the rewards to make their advances from the top of a lamp-post, or an awning say.
In that ease one would be as fortunate as the voung man was the other day on the Kew Jersey Central. Kverybody knows that the "New Jersey Central Railroad Is the road where they have extra brakesman attached to each .rain, so that if anv one gels run over he can go home and break the news to a
You see, there was little girl who used to go to school on tbe line of this road, and being a very fogy and general ly unprincipled little girl, »be used to wall until the boy with oandy boxes came around, and when he had led the oar she would steal a sugar plum out of the sample* he would leav* In people's laps. She would then sinfully eat the same after the
the boy "dropped on4 it," as he said -himself. So he put np
final
boy
tbe boxes again. Well,
had collected
this sort ol thing went on until
a
job on this
unreliable little girl, and gave her a box one day filled with nitro-glycerioe torpedoes painted red.
Of eourse the first torpedo she smuggled into her mouth exploded with the fimt^nip and blew the top of her head off and into the lap of a young married man who sat behind her.
The young married man was tbe for tunate man we meant just now, because the explosion didn't wake up hi bride, who was sleeping on hisshoul der.
If she had woke up and found the head of another girl in bar husband's lap, things would have been pretty hot around ihere for a spell, don't you see
We doA't know exactly what this has got to do with our dog, but we want him all the same.
Bring him back to us, somebody, please. And we will pay the reward to the widow.—[Derrick Dodd in The Capital.
--~r
OLD BRIDOER.
Once Bridger was guide for a column of cavalry through the Powder River country, when, one evening, the commanding officer sent for him, and said he wished to make a cut-off across the prairie next day. Bridger told him he could not do it, and that there was no way but to go around by the trail. The Major, who thought he knew the country pretty well, said he would try it any way, and the old guide left in a huff. Next morning, when the column moved out, it was unserved that Bridger had not saddled up, and, on the Major asking him what It meant, he said, "MajorJSas yer agoing across that perrary, I thought I'd wait here till yer come back, and give 'Buckskin' a chance to graze." The astonished officer rode on, and, when about two miles out, suddenly came to a deep ravine with precipitous banks. Thinking to discover a crossing, he followed it, and was surprised to find it lead back almost in the direction of bis camp of the night before. Going round a bluff, there he found Bridger stretchd upon the grass, and his horse quietly grazing beside him. Springing up, the old man hailed the Major with, "say, Major, did yer find a crack in the yearth out thar?" "Yes," sullenly answered the officer. "Well, I' knowed it was thar, and that you'd be back here byme by." It is neealess to say that the Major afterward generally took the old guide's advice about the roads.
Bridger was very fond of hearing the Bible read, and laughed heartily at some of the passages. He said "David was cute on Uriah, but he was a durned unprincipled old cuss." He could never be made to believe that Samson slew a thousand Philistines with the jaw-bones of an ass, and he declared that was "the biggest Blackfoot yarn he ever hoerd." He thought Samson "was a consarned old fool, to pull down the house and smash himself for tbe sake of killing a few of the Philipsea besides, it wasn't right, on the women and children's account." He said, "the dod-darndest best trick in the hull book was where Samson tied the foxes' tails to fire-brands and let them go among the Philipses' wheat-fields. Nobody but old Samson or a Sioux would a' thout o' that." Hearing Solomon's Song read, he denounced Solomon as an "old blackguard," and said when he was in New York, "A fellow on a steamboat tried, one day, to sell him Solomon's bnll book, with picters in it, but he wouldn't buy It." The Queen of Sheba was no doubt, "he reconed, a good enough lookin' gal, but it wasn't right in her for to go a sneakin' that way after Solomon, who was, probably, a married man."
NOTIMK FOR HIM TO PUT IN.—The Bangor Commercial tells the following good story: Every body recollects Uncle Van Meter, the colored philosopher in Parkersville, who died some months since. Van was a character. He was summoned on oneoccasion as a witness of the snpreme court, on a cow case, at the time the benevolent Judge Hathaway presided. The counsel on either side, who are still living in this city, out of sheer fun, rticked their brains to obfnsticate the veteran Afrioan boy by plying all manner of questions pertaining to every other topic but the oow. The experiment was successful, and poor belogged Van answered as wildly as a blind pugilist strikes ont at his antagonist. Judge Hathaway, willing to enjoy a little sport, but with a view to getting tbe bewildered philosopher back to a rational stand point, turned benignantly towards him and put a simple question. This was more than the illustrious voudoo could stand a magazine never exploded quicker. Lifting both hands above his head and with a countenance beaming with despair: "I sea, now, youole grap-harred gem man up dar on the bench, don't you interfere wid dis matter. I've just as much as I can do to take caro ofaese two chaps down here."
KXCSRPIXOLT SORRY WB IT.—Hon. Walker Brooke, of Mississippi, bad an inexhaustible fund of dry humor, which never deserted him even In the most trving exigency. During theClav and Pofk campaign his admiration for the great Kentnckian led him to bet a
Kd,of
ir match horses, all the stock he ou the result and this, though a strict member of the Presbyterian Church. Of course he lost, and of course be was "churrhed" far gaming. "All we ask of you, Mr. Brooke," said the minister during the trial, "Is to acknowledge that you are sorry, ami promise to sin no more." **8orry asked Mr. Brooke, rising from his seat with an air of injured innocence, *'Sorry My dear brother, when I think of those beautiful bays, gone from my gas* forever, I can trnly say, with my hand upon my heart, that no transaction of mv life gives ine more sorrow than this i"
SPEECH OF A RURAL MEMBER. Some time time during the lsst session of the Arkansas Legislature a a member introduced a bill to authorise tbe burning of old poll-books in the clerk's ofBoe as useless paper. Our hero totally mistook the object of the bill, as was his custom, ana supposed it was a bill to burn all the records of tbe counties. With this view on tbe -nbject he arose in bis plaoe greatly ex-eit-d, ran bis chubby fingers through 'i hair, threw out his tobacco, and »-id: "Mr. Speaker: This proposition confounds my apprehension, and preys loudly on triy reelings. What, sir! burn up tbe universal memorial of our progeny which has gone before us, as well as that of the present transactions? Oblivion Would float over us forever. Why, sir, I would as soon vote aye to burn in one common conflagration the scripture of the Bible! Then, sir, I would like to know who, ab, who, sir, could tell when Christ made his advent into the New Testament I'll not go for a measure so diabolical and multifarious—never!"
Here he became so excited that the mover of the bill interrupted him, and told him it was not to burn all tbe records, but only the old poll books that had accumulated in the offices under the old viva voce system of elections. His mouth fell down, his eyes expanded, and bis long arms dropped to his side while he gazed at the member for two minutes, and then inquired: "To burn up the old vivy vocy system, is •, ..
The mover of the bill nodded.' Then burn and be ."
U:i-A SOUND REPROOF. Brudder "James, is a well known colored preacher in Georgia,and among the many good things that he does may be mentioned several good things that he says. He is a cordial hater of styles and fashions, and one half of his fervor and eloquence is directed against the tendency of his race to be carried away with such notions. At a meeting lately he sent his most bitter arrows against all sorts of fashions.
My brudders," said he, "my brudders and sisters, all you tink about is de close and frills, and tucks, and cheap jewelry. You tink de Lord won't notice you unless yer got up all starchy and nippy, but I tell you dat yer all miserable sinners, and dar ain't good enough in the whole lot ob ou to fill a hazle nut wid. Why you rudderin and sisterin you may sarch de Scriptures from Genesis, fust book and chapter one, to Rebelation, last book and concludin' verse, and you won't find dat de master ebber wore a watch, finger ring, or a choke rag!"
The effect on his simple minded hearers was electric, and each and all, then and there, "swore off," and resolved to leave jewelry and frills to the "people of the world."
ADVANTAGES OF CRYING. Some of the greatest modern physicians, chiefly English and French, have written treatises on the advantages of groaning and crying, in Keneral, and especially during surgical operations. They contend that groaning and crying are two grand operations by which nature allays anguish that those patients who give way to their natural feelings more speedily recover, from accidents and operations than those who suppose it unworthy a man to betray such symptoms of cowardice as either to groan or cry. One tells of a man who reduced his pulse fronVone hundred and twenty six to sixty, In the course of a few hours, by giving full vent to his emotions. Ir people are at all unhappy about anything, let them go ints their rooms and comfort themselves by a loud boo-boo, and they will feel a hundred per cent better afterward. In accordance with the above, crying of
Sance,
5
FISK'S FIRST MISTAKK.—Fisk nsed to often tell about his first mistake in life. Said the Colonel, "When I was a little bov on the Vermont farm, my father took me up to the stable one day, whero a row of cows stood in the stable."
Said he, "James, the stable window is pretty high for a bov, but do yon think you could take this shovel and clean out the stable?" "I doh't know. Pop," said James, "I never have done It,"
Well, mv boy, If you will do it this ...* silver him on ...... dollar beforf his eyes. "Good," says James. ••I'll try"— and away he went to work. He togged
pulled and lirtea ana puireo, ana, lly, it was done, and his father gave him the bright silver dollar, saying"That's right, James you did it spleudidlv, and now I find yon can do It so nlcefv, I shall have you do It emery morning all winter
ressea, tne result may oe oi. uusepileptic fits or some other disease of the nervous system. What is natural is nearly always useful, and nothing can be more natural than tbe crying of children when anything occurs to give them either physical or mental paiu.
A HEARTY laugh, which is ever in order, stirs up the physical man from the centre to the circumference, and tends to improve the whole physical and spiritual being. It promotes animal health and spirits, and is to the man what the tides are to the ocean it stirs up the sluggish depths, prevents stagnation, and keeps the whole system fresh and welcome. It was that the gulf stream is to tbe ocean, a vivifying and warming element. The convulsion produced by hearty laughter penetrates to the minutest blood-vessels, and causes tbe blood to flow with freshened Impulse.
THE Louisville Courier-Journal says: "An expedition, fitted out more than a year ago to search for Dr.Ujiilii Livingstone,Is still on the march through the wilds of Africa. As a loser of himself Dr. Livingstone is without a parallell in history. For our part we cannot see the use of spending so much time and money to find a man who can't be hired to stay found, and who is never happy except when he Is lost."
BUSINESS CARDS.
CHEAM.B,
•Atlsrary *t Law 4k Mstarjr PsWIc No. 80 MAIN STRSKT, Between Third and Fourth. 21. Lirr*»ox,
Man a torturer* mT ItcMisllTf,
0 Masiwiarcn ti wwinr, Htatlonery, Marine, Tubular and Cylinder Boilers, Iron Tanks, Sheet Iron Work, Door Steps, etc., cor. Canal AMain 8t 19
KXabiUhed 1S54.
ABASH WOOLCX MTI.LS, «. F. Kllta, Proprietor, wbolrsaleand retal: manufacturer of Woolen Goods, north-west
W
cor. 1st and Walnut streets. 10
VIGO
roUXDRY Trrrc^Hswt* C*r Wark*.
Heath A Hager, man a torturers of (_*r*. Car Wheel*. Castings and Machinery, cornerCa^ nal and Main street. IV
TCBU-HAtm
ranaimlNl Callw.
Book-keeping Penmanship and Arithmetic, cor. 6th aud Main utrret*. I» R. GARVIN, Principal.
BKAtCHAMP
W
1
TBB London Spectator says that American politicians are the most reckless set of libellers on the face of the earth, and would charge the President with caniballsm if thai would •sours them a dosen votea.
Bi
KCI.V.T.
A TTOKyhYS AT LAW
And NOTARY# PUBI.IC, Ohio Street, between td and Mb. Speeial ail ml km paid to CbUretion*.
IIDY
mm,
Osrrta** RaaaAittarm, Cbr. Aeoarf amd Waimrt Street*, Repairing done promptly at low rates.
A MEM •. rilNHEl, Watchmaker and Jeweler. Ohio street, aooth of u»e Owrt, Jooae, Terve-Uaate, Ind. Wat«ies, Clocks and Jewelry repaired. Engraving neatly done and warranted to give aaUafertkm.
I
CTIWwilw»l
and Retail
Bookseller and Stmtfoner,
Bins UTU, AI
Estatek Collecting Agents,
R.
)L«W8.
No. 4 South Fijth Street.
L. BALL,
Dealer In
Stores, Mmntela, Orafrj, Tin Plate, Japan .rt
mHt
/veitrs Ware, 128 Main Street, North Side.
BUCM, FAI.1TH, OILH. Glaas, Toilet Articles, Brushes, Ac., O ULICK A BERR Y,
Corner Main and 4th streets.
^VPPEHHEIMEB BBOH.,
CLOTHIERS,
PHILIP NEWHART'S
Terre-llnnte Plow Factory 1st street, near Main.
(^YFEBS, TBADEB CO.,
WHOLESALE GROCERS,
190 Main street, Terre-Haute, Indiana.
C. SMITH, Dealers in Stoves, Reapers, Agricultural Implemeats,
And manufactured Tin Ware, 50 and 52 Main street.
W. RIPPETOE. General dealer in GROCERIES, PROVISIONS A PRODUCE,
R. FREEMAN,
S.1
The Leading Jeweler,
191 Main street.
0
SAY
I*
118 Main Street.
H. DOOLIT,
Opera House Book Store,
Books, Papers, Chroraos and Frames.
^ARBEN, HOBEBO CO.,
Great Headqua'rs for Dry Goods,
Opera House Corner.
JOSWholesaleand
FPU ftTROXO. Retail Dealer in ClMlee Tena, t'olT" es. tiafan,
Fanejr and Hlnple Oroeerles, No. 187 Main roet.
1HE ITKW WHEELER St WILSON Sewing Machine,
R. H. MAGNER, Agent, 'f Corner Main and 6th street.
National Block, 155 Main street.
A. FOOTE,
Dealer in
Garden, Field & Flower Seeds,
No. 65 Main street.
BIGELOW
COAL A MIKIN« CO
will furnish at lowest market prices Anthracite, Pitt: burg, Brazil, Block, Lost Creek and Sugar Creek coals. Leave orders at office, Rankin's Drug Store, 6th street.
1HE NEW YORK STORE, 73 Main street^ near Court House square, Dry Goods, Carpets, Wall Paper,
Shade*, «e.
WlTTEKBURG, RUSCHAUPT A CO.
AUSTIN,
SHRYER co.,
Wholesale A Retail dealers in HARDWARE, SASH, DOORS, PAINTS, Iron, Nails, Oil and Glass, 172 Main street.
B. FBEEMAN,
AmericanA Foreign Watches, JEWELRY, Ac., Opera House.
L.
KISSNEB,
PIANOS, MELODEON8, ORGANS, Musical Instruments, Ac.. Palace of Music, 48 Ohio street.
TERRE-in
HAUTE MUSICAL INSTI
TUTE, 5th St., bet. Main A Ohio. Music taught all its branches. Pupils may enter at any time. Agency for Stelnway pianos. A. SHIDE, Principal.
ANTELS, GRATES. Furnaces and Range*, Iron Manufacturers of Galvanised iron Cornice
MOOBE A HAGEBTY, 181 Main street.
Ys
«3r "ijV
it-
4
0
YES\
JONES JONES.
ITTIG DICK. WHOLESALE NOTIONS,
W Commission Mercliaiitaa
148 Main street.
O. r. SMITH. W. A. WHEELER.
SMITH
WHEELER, Dealers in
Stoves. Grates and Tin Ware. Agency Fairbanks' Scales, 150 Main street.
PHILIP
KADEL,
Manufacturer of Saddles and Harness, Whips, Curry Combs, Brushes, Horse Blankets, Ac., all work warranted. Lowest prices in the city, 196 Main street, near 7th.
DENTIN MADISON,
DRUGGISTS,
168 Main Street, near Sixth.
W.
H. SCUDDER,
Confectionery A Toys,
lfM Main street.
S. RYCE CO.,
The Popular Homse,
Main cor. 6tli street.
A. SHEAP, Confectionery, Toy*, Fr resit Oysters Manufacturers Agent for Children's Qa., riagee, Hobbv Horses, Ac., 6th St., opp. P. O
URS,
FURS, FURS.
Having determined lo establish a far departmenl In conn««tJon with oar dry ®oods we respectfully explain the scheme.
A* a first-rate stock of Turn require* an Invertment of eeverai tboaMnd it baa been coatomanr tor tbe dry goud*, bat and certain notion DOOMS of oar dtir to handle theve goods In a "small way." ThtobM divided tbe trade to so great an extent that no one has had a really well asuorted Ktock and neither merchant nor container has reaped any material advantage.
LAstyear we were dUpoaed to give np the trade bat as noone seemed disposed to make It an attractive specialty we have determined to do so.
This year ww will offer theae gondsln fcr greater variety than they have ever been displayed In Terre-Haute.
We anticipate that some who really do not care to engaae In tbe trade will attempt to close ootthc**£ux"k on hand at «*t,*iw we understand that to make oor nndertakInc a sncuaa we most keep below tbetr prices.
TIJEEX^ KIPLET A DEMORD, AVUtkM.
•.
C3-EN-TLEME2ST
,, Wi?Xnft TO BUT GOOD ARTICLES
In Ready-'Made Clothing, .*T*
WILL DO WE1X TO ^1
1
Call at Erlanger & Co.'s, Middle Room, Opera House Building.
,? -T .« ak-^WdJis,
We Have the Largest and Best Stock
Clothing for Men, Boys and Children in the State, the handsomest selection of Furnishing Goods of any house in the city, and prices lower than any other. Our motto is to
Deal Fairly with all, and Treat all Alike."
The prices are marked in plain figures on the tioket of each garment, consequently any child can Duy of us as oheap as the best judge of goods.
Out' Merchant Tailoring Department
Is well stocked with seasonable goods, and Mr. W. C. Millar, late of the firm of Grover Miller, is ever ready to give perfect fits to all.
Shirts Made to Order.
CALL AXJ SEE US. ERLANGER & CO., Original One-Price Clothiers & Fashionable Merchant Tailors,
17-tf Middle ROOM, Opera Honse.
THE BED FROHT S
Clothing House
DOING AN EXTENSIVE BUSINESS,
E BECKER
WHO IS ALWAYS READY TO PLEASE HIS CUSTOMERS, IS GETTIXG RAPIDLY FAMOUS FOR SELLING ,. a. *1
READY MADE CLOTHING
CHEAPER THAN THEY HAVE EVER BEEN SOLD IN TERRE-HAUTE SINCE THE WAR, AND FOR STYLE AND QUALITY UNSURPASSED.
Gentlemen, in Looking around when Visiting Terre-Haulr ,vDon't fhil to
SEE THE ELEPHANT
.*1 Which means come to
E. BECKER'S Red Front Clothing House,
98 Main street, south side,
®®-tf^ ,*• One door from the Corner, near Opera House.
GULICK & BERRY,
Drugs, Medicines,« Chemicals,'
Paints, Oils, Glass, &c.
Corner Main and Fourth Streets
Crackers, Cakes, Bread
r* Aim
A N
'K
A
3
fr
DEALERS IN
Foreign & Domestic Fruits,
FANCY A STAPLE GROCERIES,Jt
LATATKTTK STRKXT,
(Between tbe two Railroad*,)
21-tf. Terre-Haute, Ind.
FIRM^ 4 -•*J
WHOLESALE MOTIONS.
WITTIG 8t DICK,
I (SoooesBors to A. C. A. Wlttlg,) .. V*. IM Mala Street,
Jobbers & Commission
Merchants,
1* IMIMB. fAICT «MM, CIQAU, ENGLISH, GERM AY, AND AMKRI-
CAJV CUTLMRY,
Perftimery, Soap, Cotton Yarn, Batting, Ac.
With increased capital and New Stock we, are prepared to offer friends and customer*: iroperlor Inducements to boy of a*.
ABLY fr ROACH,
MAFFTNR ACTVMMMB or
Saddles and Harness,
Dealer* CbOart, Whips, Trunk*, de., TFO. T» MAIN STREET, North side, between and 4tA, TJerreHaate, Indiana. Agsn Uncle Sam's
OIL •'I*.
-•»"TERRE-HAUTE, IND. '"...Vk .*.5"'
5SlS $I""«£= -i 44^ IT t.'"
Agency for BARR'S PECTORAL ELIXIR.
TTNION STEAM BAKERY.
FRANK HEINIG & BRO.
Manufacturers of all klndu of^
49
ISf-f
1
r*J
GENERAL DEALERS IN a !f
I -M.,l4'
4
1
-fc-t
AT MPPETOE'S, 159 Mali St., Yon will always And THE BERT Sugars, Coffees, Tea*, Ham, Breakfast
Bacon, flour, Com Meal, Bpion, English Pickles, Table Saucea, Flavoring Extracts, Best Hyrap and Molasses, Crackers, Canned Goods, HardInes, Corn Htarch, Baking Powder, Maiione, Soap, Candlei, Silver Gloss Htarch, Halt, wood and Willow Ware, Stone Ware, Coal Oil, Ac., Ac.
Goods delivered to any part of tbe dty. ee-Sm
piANO TUNING.
P. H. MORE*
PIANO TUNER & REPAIRER.
1
npecial sttentlon will be paid to Cash Bayers, Peddlers and Auctioneers. NO. Itt MAIN STREET, Between Fifth and Sixth, In the Room formerly oocnpled by Cox Son* ®-tC.
Orders left at tht Terre-Haute Musical Institute- Ross Building, South VA /ft., toill receive J^rompt Attention, „w
MFIL MORE l)i a flmt-class Turier and competent Repairer be has worked In the celebrated Piano establishment of Stelnway A Sons, ss practical Piano maker .and In Abe most prominent Piano factories In the conntry. He 1s entirely worthy of the high eneomJnms with which he Is recommended.
4-
ANTON HTTIDE,
17-tf Principal T. H. Musical Institute.
TERRE-HAUTE PRINTING HOUSE, 147 1 Main street, doea tbe neatest and cbeapest Job Printing in the dty. Bosiness iMfea sboold make a aote of this. O. J. Sultb A Oa.
