Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 2, Number 34, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 February 1872 — Page 7
TUK very beautiful vetwi subjoined were wrtiien by Mr. Joseph Brennan, one of the mott gifted young Irishmen that ever plunged into no abortive a revolution was that of im:
COMK TO ME. DABLIKO-
Come to me, darling, I'm lonely without thee. -Day time and night time I'm dreaming
Sj Night time and day time In dreams I behold thee, Unwelcome the waking that ceases to fold thee
Gome to me. darling, my sorrows to lighten Corn** in thy -auty, to bless and to lighten Coine In thy womanhood, meekly and low 'y. Come in thy lovingness, queenly and holy,
Swallows shall flit round thy desolate ruin iifija is treasure,
Telling of *prtifk and Joyous renewing And thought* of thy love and its manifest
Are circling my heart with the promise of pleasure •1) fSpring of my heart! Oh May of my blossom, Sliin^ out on ray soul till it burgeon and
Dlu*Mnn,
The waste of my life has a rare root within it, And thy fondnessalonc to the sunlight can,
Will il
1
Figure which moves like a song through the even, F- iiur-s II) up with a reflex of heav«n, 'Kvi*s llk't Iihskiesof poor Erin, our mother, •Where suii-dilne and shadow are chasing each oilier. SIIIII^ coming seldom, but child like and
Kitnpi--,
And o| -ning their eyes from a heart of a dimple. Oh! thfiks to the Savior, thut even the seemintj Is In it Uie exile to brighten bisdreamtng.
You have been glad when you knew I was gl:lild-m-d, D'-iir. are you ad to heart hat I'm saddened Oui h.-urL-. uverauswer .11 tune and time, love, As octave to octave, or rhyme unto rhyme, lOV'V I »IInot Htnlle, but your cheeks will be flowing You will not linger when I shall have died, loviAnd I could not live without you by my nide, love.
Come to me, darling, ere I die of my sorrow, Rise on my gloom, like the sun of to-mor-row, HtroiiK, »wift and true, as the words which I speak, lov«* Willi it son* at your Hp. and a smile on your cluck love Conn', for my heart in your absence Is weary tit. for my spirit Is sickened and weary. Com" tot ho arms which alone shall caress thee Come to the heart which Is throbbing to presH thee.
EDUCATION OF WOMEN. President White, of Cornell Universiiy li is recently been invewtin itinu the results of Ins various attempts made throughout the country to educate the sexes in coiuliiii.ition. Tlio occasion of this iiivesti^ ition was the proposition of a public spirited uiiiiseti to give two hundred and lifty thousand dollars us lomidatioii fiincl for ilie education ol women in Cornell University. The presiileiit's conclusion seems to be decidedly in tvor of co education, and lie thus sums up the results of his observation in an address delivered at recent educational convention in Boston [l lias boon my duty in the last two months to make a special examination in regard to this matter. I have visited every college in the United States of any import nice every college or university so-culled, where the sexes are educated together. I have talked with professors, with the presidents, with the students, male and female, with the •o^lo in town, of all conditions. Nor it matter which has been confined with mo to this six weeks or two months It is a matter on which I have thought for some time. And I find we »ro by no means without experience to upon thoro is a very large experl euce buck of this question. In the State of New York, containing now about four millions of people, we have a very wide system of education in our academics and high schools for young men and vounir women. From time immemori tl young men and young women of a marriageable age have been educated together in those schools, and 1 have yet to hear of the first case of scandal that hus arisen in one ot these Institutions. More than that. I have never seen a young woman educated in one of these institutions who did not seem to me to be rather the better for that education. 1 am-well awate of the IneiUblo inutility of the no-filled finishing education of women but I think that that education, poor as it has been in many respects, in the high school and academies where young men and young women have been educated freely togethor, has proved that It is not so difilcult a question us has been supposed.
Again 1 look back my own college life, in the second In importance of
?er
'our New Kngluml colleges. I rememthat in New Haven we had in lour of the more important lecture-rooms a large nuinlKr of young women, and, so fiir us 1 could see, the only influence of the introduction of those voung women was to m.ike the place a little more decent. There was a little less noise and rowdyism in those lecture-rooms than in the ones where young womeu were not. lint 1 have not oo.ifined myself to those observations. I have the benefit of a large correspondence, begun several years since at the University of Michigan, and which in part led to the eo-edu»Mtion of both sexes at that in siiiuiion. uud. while I have a large collection of letters from educators which declare their doubts of young men and young Jwotneti together, 1 find that wli they ar©"br»»u«ht down to the p.'iitt as to the education of the sexes the high schools or colleges, the!
ant. In n»t one letter do I rtH^tllect
auvtlun^ that makes agaittst this
Tacitus that I heard at Oberlin College was from a woman, and any person who can read Tacitus well shows gokd evidence of a strong, clear min
Again, at the University of Michigan there is a different system, there being no dormitory. There the professor of civil engineering, Professor Wood, told me that for several years he had been in the habit of offering a price for prolilems in the higher mathematics. For several years they had not been solved, bat this year it had be- solved, an solved by a woman, and the testiinonv generally was that the women stood well as the men. Professor Wincheli who has charge of the botany, showed me a careful schedule which be had prepared to show which stood the highest, and in bis department the young women excelled.
At Antioch College, in a German class, I saw excellent work done by woiuan. I saw excellent work done in other directions in the colleges I have already named.
At the Industrial University of the State of Illinois the same thing was shown, the women holding their own remarkably well.
At the University of Wisconsin there is the same testimony. At the so-called Northwestern University of Evunston, III., near Chicago, and also at the Iowa University, which I did not visit, there is the same testi mony. Now I won't claim that th* women showed greater power than the young men. Tne gentleman who went with me, and who proposed to make the gift for female education in our university, came back believing that women excelled men in their powers of acquirement, but he did not lose sight of the fact that the voung women were singled out, while the young men were taken as they run. He admitted that the young women were apt to devote themselves so earnestly to study as to injure their health, thus confirming the judgment ol (ioldwin Smi that competitive prizes were dangerous where young men and young women were together. President Angeil, ol the Michigan University, who was prepared to think unfavorably of the system at the start, had begun to like it. The young men and young women did not walk together, and the young men were more attentive to "the young women of the place th to their fel-low-students. in regard to the studies to be taught to young women be lavored Latin, intellectual arithmetic, and botany, and thought that if "Plutarch's Lives'' could be read afterward, th women of the land would be far better fitted for their life-work.
i"i
SOMK of th papers are disposed to ridicule the Observer for refusing t' accept six letters from Henry W Ueedier, in payment of a bill an oun ng to fifteen dollars. Wo tail to (lis rover tho stupidity of our venerable •onteinporary but rather ire surpris at its astuteness. Ii was twenly-fivi •ears ago, and a half dozen letters from sueh A jovial, anti slavery, r.uiial, progressive innovutor us lhe -ech er ol that day in the columns of th» staid, pro-slavery Observer, would have created consternation among tin readers of that journal anil led to a risis in its history. We are inclined to regard the offer to cancel the bill in hat way as one of those practical jokts that Mr Beecherenjoys and delights in playing at the expense ofhisopi onen s, and reminds us of the fire-work tnanu faeturer who offered to pay the powdt rinuker by discharging a dozen superb rockets into his establishment.—[Golden Age.
Tit KRE was a man In our town And he was wondrous wi-e, Hu had a pain from ear to ear,
Another between bis eye*
11.1t'F A .SON
v./
posi
tion. Toerti \ver» plentiiul statements of theory again--: iM-edinjatioii. And I am not it\- eate of having young n»«»n and y^ung women always ©due*-! t«Ml ^*th« r. I am dellub'snf to have, anv'1'•» ty found a Vussar oilcge, 1 was} heartily glad to b«x*e this o|f«r made to us, and I shall do what I can to promote lis acceptance I believe am] not a bi. ttli tilt* master, but I liM'.«*t ly b'li vo thiit tut ltic )n I ot theWxe# tog«»ther is well worth try-] in^, tie! will briefly tell yoa some "of th- reasons. I in fciw. ,ncst j'l•*.«« I vtsi ®d Uftrlta C' V* n-eh ha«, p^rti j*s. i•••••Mi as la»if:'i 'd tit as ai'.v c^ltege iu the 1*1*0. ha« all sor.s.jtl It (IrfM to do that mos jr ^htfui jhiug—to tHlrn-.ik* black m»»» and white men together. It dartnl to e«! Ate toeu and woiuan together. I WENT and IM.W th-n t.'tf ther, and I never saw any! bodv conduct Usolf letter than thst body ol studeuta, nuittberlng two or tbrwhumireti of young men and roun* women. tr» iheir tirg« dining hill and those wu.» know anything about education know that th»t is nMnarlnbly, rood test of th« civlllntlon that obtains acnoitg then*. Then In the d**a-r»om,, aa to abilliy. Dr. Clark has said that iv© a wc thAt she could do. Sow the cleanest and the clearest and the beat reading ot
Miiiiiilhi'iiircr*of roconiollvf, stationery, Marine, Tubular and t.'vllndei Boilers, Iron Tanks, Sheet Iron Work, Door Steps, etc., cor. Canal AMain St. 1!»
Mllbli.lhrtl 1VH.
\|T AltANII WOOI.KX Ml M.S. G. F. V? Kill*, Proprietor, wholesale and reUii manufacturer o' Woolen Goods, north-west oor. Is I unit Walnut streets. 19
lta» I'Ol.MIKY A T«'rr**-ll»tiit«" I'sr Work*. Seutli Hager, manufacturers of Cars. Car Wheels ('.tst I nits and Machinery, cornerCamil am! Main street. If
^KKKt.-IIA ITK Com me rein I Col I ciTf. liook-kcpplnic. IVnmnnshlpand Arithmetic, eot. 6th and Main sirfts. 19 U. UAUVIN, Principal.
BKACCIIAMPrA
KKI.I.Y,
if r.s la wr
And NOTARY** PCBLIC, fihlo Street, lietween 3d and 4th. Sptxtal tUlenlinn patd to OnlUvtiott*.
\1 ILPY A I'OTHK. If C:»rrl«Kr ManuOieinrrrs, Cbr. Second and U'ainut StrcctA, Repairing doue promptly at low rates.
in the high schools or colleges, the jew. r. ol io street, south ol me ourt. room* where they are so educated are House, T- rre-Haute, Ind. niches, Cl»eks
VHK.H VIMI r.R. Watelii'iakeriOHl JeWi'ler. Ohio street, south ol tne t'ourt.
1 «. cox, |. Wholesale and Retail js Bookseller and Stationer,
Si
A KOYJIi
Ileal Estate & Collect ins:
A
ni 1.1..
^YFIIM, TRADER CO.,
5"
And when he saw he had Catarrh, With all his might and main He purchased Mage's Remedy
And bus his health again. It is sold by druggists everywhere
602
At* Arkansas paper, publishes the following notice: Persons wishing to have their marriage or obituary inserted, will please hand it in.
BUSINESS CARDS.
(•(Ktni.R,
W .A
iltoriic)' at l.nw A Xotnry Pnbllc No. 80 MA IN STKKRT, Between Third and Fourth. 21.
FURS,
cents.
N I S«vtith K.ilh f»tr»«t.
In
fir "". Tin
*M«f i'rr»W tfarr, r-s Ma'n North
1)
ttlWH. I'AlMX Toilet A'-: BrW*W»»*e« GUUCK &
Corner Main Ui.l
VrilMlKIM£K BIMMI.,
A.
I'MrriiiKiW l»j« M«in Stre«'t.
II. IKMU.KY,
Opera House Book Store, Booka. Paper*. Cbtwnm and Frame*.
yyr ARIII:*. IIOBEKG («.
JrJ^iSS «"»t H«adqn»T. forDrr Goods, Opeia Hoose Oorner.
TEKHE-HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL. FEBRUARY 17, 1872.
tflRPH RVmM, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Choice Teas, €*flT* ea. Nagarn, fancy ami Ntaple OrscfrlM,
No. 187 Main reet.
THENKW
WHEELER A WILMM Sewing Machine, R. H. MAONER, Agent,
Corner Main and 6th street.
)10VR,
PHILIPNEWHART*8
Terre-Haate Plow Factory, 1st street, near Main.
WHOLESALE GROCERS, IHw Main street, Terre-Haute, Indlaua.
CC.SMITH,
Dealers in Stoves,
Reapers, Agricultural iMjaleweala, And manufactured Tin Ware, 50 and 52 Main street.
RIPPETOK. il dealer in
H, General QUOCERIE8, PROVISIONS A PRODUCE, National Block, 155 Main street.
A. rOOTE,
(J
Dealer in
Garden, Field & Flower Seeds, No. 05 Main stieet.
BIOELOW
COAL 4k MINING CO
will furnish at lowest market prices/ tliraclte, Pitt burn, Brasll, Block, IXJstCree* and Sugar Creek coals. Leave ordera at office, Rankin's Drug Store, 6th street.
'piKXKW YORK STORE, 7X Main street, near Court House square Dry CUMMIN, Carpels, Wall Paper,
Nhnilin, 4k r.
WITTKNBURG, RUSCHAUPT Co.
A VMTIX, MIIRYER CO., fv Wholesale A Retail dealers in HARDWARE, SASH. DOORS, PAINTS,
Iron, Nails, Oil and Glass, 17*2 Main street.
R. FREEMAN,
AmericanA Foreign Watches, JEWELRY, Ac., Opera House.
KI88XER,
I'lVwM, nELODEOKM, ORGANS, MuMical liiMirnmenlN, Ac., Palace of Music, 48 Ohio street.
rEItltlMIAUTE MUSICAL INSTII TUTE, 5th St., bet. Main A Ohio. Mule taught in all Its branches. Pupils may nter at any time. Asency for Stein way uianox. A. SHIDE, Principal.
\f 1XTELS. ORATEN Furinieex ui«» Kanps, viauutacturcrs of Galvanized Iron Cornice
I-F MOORE A HAOF.KTY,
1 J." '1 181 Main street.
It. FREEMAN,
s.
The Leading Jeweler, 101 Main street.
SAY YES!
0
W WHOLESALE NOTIONS. CoiiiniiKKioii Merchants. l« Main street.
«. K. SMITH. W. A. WIIEKL.EK. O M1TI1 A WHEELER, O Dealers in
Stovea. OratCM ami Tin Ware. Agency Fairbanks' Scales, 150 Main street.
FHIEIP
MADEL,
Manufacturer of Saddles and Harness, Whips, Curry Combs, Brushes, Horse Blankets, Ac., all work warranted. Lowest prices in the city, 19tt Main street, near 7th.
OFNTIN 4k MADISON,
DRUGGISTS, 168 Main Street, near Sixth.
yy H. SCUDDER,
Confectionery A Toys, 194 Main street.
W.
S. RYCE 4k. CO.
The Popular House, Main cor. 6tli street.
WA.SHEAP.
Confectionery, Toy*, Freali Oyatern
Manufacturers Agent for Children's Ca. rlagcs, Hobbv Horses, Ac., fith St.. opp. P. O
URS,
"4 *U
0
JO\i:.S A JON EN.
IT I W it O I
ee-tf
FURS.
flavin® determined to establish a fur deportment In connection with our dry goods we respectfully explain the scheme.
As a flrst-rate mock of furs requires an Investment of several thousand dollars it lias been customary for the dry Roods, ha' and certain notion houses of our city to handle these goods in a "small way." This has divided the trade to so yreat an extent tbni no one has had a really well assorted sto^and net tier merchant nor consumer has reaped any material advantage.
I^st year we were disposed to Rive np the trade b'ut as noone seemed dispo«cd to make it an attractive specialty we have determined to do so.
This year we will offer these goods In far (trentcr variety than tliey have ever been displayed in Terre-IIaute.
We anticipate that some who really do not core to engnite In the ra«l« will attempt to close out the "Mock on hand" at cost, and we understand that to make our undertaking snee#"*-* we mn«t ke«»p below tin*!r prices.
TI'ELU RIPI.KY A DKMIStt. Cor. Wain A Flllh Rt«.
jiiHE-HAUTE HOUSE,
Hwrw-flViK/e.
I mitana
K. T. HUSTON,
MAWAGS*.
Th*8trcrt Can i» this Hou*e every Its Mui'ites, from the Ix-joi and River. The Artesian fin' t-tf.
ftmnetlrfi wUh
jytiS. WATERS & ELDER
HOMCEPATHIC
PHYSICIANS,
nifrry Hlrfft. Wt (th 71 It.
J.(
COOK & SON, Wholesale and Retail dealer* In HARDWARE AND CUTLERT, Heavy Qooda, Bar Iron, S«ih, Ae. Ala*
savy uoodi Bar ron, IIB, sc. AW»IU» celebrated BoroqrV RJehmond Plow
Vtt md IM Main SrefL, TKRRB-HAUTS. IND.
t»-lv
Agency for.
FRANK HEINIG & BRO.
Manufacturers of all kinds of V---ifrfei-:
WAIVTOTO TO BUY GOOD ARTICLES
In Ready-|Made Clothing
WILL DO WELL TO
Call at Erlanger & Co.'s,
1
Deal Fairly with all, and Treat all Alike." The prices are marked in plain figures on the ticket of each garment, quently any child can buy of us as cheap as the best judge of goods.
Our Merchant Tailoring Department Ts well stocked with seasonable goods, and Mr. W. C. Miller, late of the firm Grover A Miller, is ever ready to give perfect nts to all.
Shirts Made to Order.
CALL AND SEE US.
rackers, Cakes, Bread
•. ^L.
A N
DEALERS IN
Foreign & Domestic Fruits,
FANCY A STAPLE GROCERIES,
LAFAYHTTK STREET,
(Between tbe two Railroads,)
21-tf. Terre-Hante. In«l.
N
EW FIRM.
& ilOLF.S lLi: \OTIOXN.
WITTIG
Sl
DICK,
(Successor* to A. C. A. Wittig,) =. 5fo. I4S Msin Ntrwt,
Jobbers & Commission
Merchants,
IJT SOTIOXS. FAfCT «OOI«, C'lfURS, ESOLI8H. QERMAS, A 'D AMERI
CA CUTLER Y,
Perfumery,
c, ."on Yarn, Batting, Ac,
*u|»"*rioi i'ldoc-in ni- 1.1 i\ ns. Mfxpcisl ntlon *'lll be paid to Caali Buyers, Pe er* snd Auctioneers.
NO. 148 MAIN STREET,
Between Flflh and Sixth, in the Room for merly occupied by Cox A Son* ®-tf.
ARLY fr ROACH, ACTTRKKS OF
Saddles and Harness,
Dealers t* Collar*, WktpA, IVamAo, &<. NO. 80 MAIN STREET, North side, between'. snd ttli. "PemHaute, Indians. Afeo U»d« Han* HarnMsOU. 50-T.
"V
Middle Room, Opera House Building.'
Have the Largest and Best Stock
Clothing for Men, Boys and Children in the State, the handsomest selection Furnishing Goods of any house in the city, and prices lower than any other. Our motto is to \*.
u''"v
ERLANGER & CO.,-
'Original One-Price Clothiers & Fashionable Merchant Tailors 17-tf Middle ROOM, Wpeni H««M.
XZEUE RED FROlsTT
Clothing House
IS DOING AN EXTENSIVE BUSINESS, ,..TL
E BECKER
WHO IS ALWAYS READY TO PLEASE HIS CUSTOMERS, IS GETTING RAPIDLY FAMOUS FOR SELLING
41
READY MADE CLOTHING,
CHEAPER THAN THEY HAVE EVER BEEN SOLD IN TERRE IIAUT1SINCE THE WAR, AND FOR STYLE AND QUALITY UNSURPASSED
(acutlcmcii in Looking arnuud when Visiting TVrre-IIaute D011H fUil to
SEE THE ELEPHANT
Which means come to
E. BECKER^S Red Front Clothing House,
93 Main street, south side,
:4 iip One door from ihe Corner, near Opera House.
GULICK & BERRY,
GENERAL DEALERS IN
Drugs, Medicines," Chemicals, Paints, Oils,, Glass, '&c.,
Corner Main and Fourth Streets,
TERRE-HAUTE, IND.
BARR'S PECTORAL^ ELIXIR!*"
NION STEAM BAKERY.
"JJNION CHRISTIAN
1
COLLEGE!
Merom. Sullivan County, Ind.
The Winter Term of this flourishing Institution will commence m.m December 13th, 1871, At 10 o'clock, and will continue twelve weeks. Classes will be formeU In Orthoirrttptiy.
KriMllnir. Ue«Krnphjr, Arlllinicllo,
i„" Vrnmmnr, And IliNtory. TIJP various HriincliPS of Mathematics, the Natural MtMcnces, Lntln, Greek, French. «rman,all the hlKher branches of a full and Thorough College Course, will t.»e tnuglit as lnld down In the Courses of Study In our Catalogue* and Circulars.
Ladli** pursue the «arne cours«-s of study, are subject to the name regulations, enjoy the same privileges, and receive the same honors as gentlemen.
F.XI'i:.\NF.N.
The neeessarv ex|ense of obtaining ao education at Merom does not exceed two hundred dollars a year.
Tnltton. per Term.
In the Academic I»cpHrtment......fi 00 In the Cla*slcnl Iepartmeiit 8 00 In the .Scientific Department 8 00 In each Department, Incidentals 2 00 In«tructions on Piano, extra 10 00 U*e of I'lano, »tne hour each day 2 00
Instructions in Vocal Muxlc, gratis. Bonrl. Both larlies and gentlemen will find good boanii ig. Willi 1" irnUlie«l room-*. In private fami i-«, for PT we»-k. Home board themselves for »bout t2M per week.
For circular*, "r any further information, address THOMAS HOLMKS, Prest. Merom. Ind.. Aug. H. lffli. 0-tt
pi
XSO
TUNING.
P. II. MOKE,
On?
riiHE
'."IV
ee-tt
Tt.NKR BEP11EEK.
HP
lATtRDAY EVEXIIO t- ajme
\r.
MAIL,
For the Year 1871-2
REVl'LAR RATKN.
Tlie SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, an Independent Weekly Newspaper, will b« mailed to subM-llbei-s at TWO DOLLARS a Year OVE DOLLAR for Six Months, and FIFTY CENTS for Three Mouths, and t* Clubs at the following rates: Three Copies, One Year 9 5 00 Five 8 00 Ten 15 00 Twenty 25 00
With One Copy extra to the getter up of Club of Ten. oi more. Mail and office Subscriptions will, invaiiaily, be discontinued at expiration of time paid for.
CMWIIIXtt WITH OTIIKIl PKRI- /, OIIK'AI.N.
We are enabled to otfpr extraordinary inlueeinents in the way oi clubbing with oth•jr periodicals. We will furnish theSATl'RDAY EVENINC3 MAIL, PRICE S2.IH) I'KR YEAR, with any of the periodicals enutner«ted below at greatly reduced rates. These periodicals will l»' sent direct from the offices publication. Ilere is the list: ..••»«,
'1 4 ... SEMI-WEEKLY.
The Mail and Neinl-U'eekly W, Y. Tribune, price, S4.00 W 5ft
WEEKLY PAPERS.
•a
.-4
Mall and the IndlsnnpollM Journal. price 12.00 Hie Mall and the Indlnnnpoll* Sentinel, price 92.00 The Mall and the N. Y. Trlbnne. price S2L00 rbe Mall and the IndlMnapolla
IXCBBINU WITH
VLu
'ft 'i* *1., ~rr- TfT'tr jftt.riml fHi&tllu '-J•*/.
sv'''
'•'hSt,,vOl
reeetM /Jro
AUenUcn,
R. MORF. Is a flp4-ela« Tuner and competent Repairer be has worked In the oel^ hnitHl piano establishment of Htelnway Hon*, as a llano maker^and in lh most nron .•-n? Piano faetorie* in the coon trv
t* entirely worthy of the hi*I
encomium* with which he Is recommended ANTON SHIDE, f7»tf Principal
T.
H. Mn4eat Institute
TERREPrintingdoe*the
-HAUTE PRINTINO HODHR, lfl Main street, the neatest and eheaptmt Jttb in city. Business met •boald make a note of this. O.J. Smith 4 Go.
98 0»
3
8
Kfewa. price SI .60 The Mall and the Toledo Blade, price 92.00 The Mail and the N. Y. World, price 12.00 The Mail and the N. Y. Mnn, price 91.00 The Mall and the Prairie Farmer, price 92.00 The Mall and the WeNfern Rural, price 92.00 The Mail and the Chlea** Ad vanee, rice 92.50
2 7b
8 0»
800
2 80
800 8 00
8 80 8 60
Mail snd the Chicago Interior, price 9*2.50 The Mall and the Chieairo Republican, price 91.50 The Mall and Appleton'a Journal, price 94.00 The Mail and tlie Rural New Yorker, price 93.00 The Mail and Hearth and Home, price 13.00 The Mall and the Mcthodlat, pi ice f2.50 The Maif and Kvery NaUirdny, price 95.00 Tlie Mall and Harper** Weekly, price 9-1.00 The Mail and Harper'* Barar, price $4.00
xr
2 76
4 CO
8 7
8 78
8
5
5 00
6 00
MONTHLIES.
The Mall and the American AcrriculliirlMt. price 91.50 The Mall and Clodey'al.ady'wBook, price 93.00 The Mall and the •.adie^ Own
92 4 00
Mairaxlne. prlce9l/0 The Mall ami the North Western Farmer. pricV 91.00 The Mail and the Little t'orporal, price tlM The Mail and the Ilttle Chief, price 75 cents The Mail and the MHlefcowcr, price 75 cents The Mail and Ncrlbner'a Monthly, price, 93.00 Tlie Mall and the Atlantic Monthly, price 94.00 Tlie Mail and Onr Yoimic Folk*, price 92.00 Tne Mall and OI«l anil New. pilcefri. The Mail and Overland Monthly, price, The Mail and Harper's Magazine, price
2
1 it)
3 00
2 26
2 26
4 00
4 00 3 00 4
GO
4 ra
5 00
(Ol'STY
l'AI'EBS
We have made arrangement* to furnish tbe MAIL with tlie following Newsjiapcm, pnbllhlKtl in^the neiKhlxrhooti of Terxe-
I .inte, at vety low rate*. TIere 1* the 11st: The Mall and
H'r''van
*1 IN- I :'L
Unitsn $3
01
The Mall and /&» t. '.*Ule Aw# 8 00 The M-.-.l and Jlr i-il Miner 3 00
Una (irren Arch ins....
v,
8 00
Mmh!,"!! 11' rtthl
3 00 3 00
.V- 7
il-.i
rijt 3 00 ... 8 1*
ufji a 11 v.
Pertous getting np clubs for the MAIL,ana desiring to obtain subscriptions for otbftr periodicals on onr list at the same time, wW be farnli&ed a list of the priced At whUli •nch sabMTfption* 3m b* taken sepamtalf by ns, npon appllcutiofli to this office.
Addreas, O.J. SMITH,
Tenre-Haote, Indian^.
