Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 2, Number 35, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 February 1872 — Page 7
FOREVER.
BY HESTER A. BENEDICT.
Forever and ever! My lips may be mate, And Hong be sate-sheltered with me Yet gushing unheard, from my life's broken lute.
Will the wall of my lost gladness be. I shall we but thy :orm in the worshipful throng
Thy face In ihc mars' gentle beams— And circle with splendor my whole life long,
I will fly to thee, bird-like, in dream*. In dream*! Pale phantoms, that mock us by day,
Are the vanishing visions of night .*» But I -mile ait they bear me away, away, From Ihe frost-fettered regions of blight. To the myxtical music of moonlighted boweix,
Where angels Ihelr loving watch keep, And my heart Mngs a-low, in its loneliest hours:
Thou art mine—my beloved—in sleep!"
Forever and ever! When standing alone, With the nw«-et, sunny waves atyour feet. You will wander In funcy afar to your own,
And h-r name you will fondly repeat. I a-k 'or no token—I *eek for no sign— I bind thee with never a vow For I know that thy spirit will whisper with mine,
In the far-away future, as now!
A smile, wad and tender—a low. walling KOIIK A sigh that Is freighted with tears— A moan that will murmur of cruelest wrong-
Will find you from ont the lost years And eyes full of pleading will lean to the light
Half hid In the deeps of thine own. Until thou shalt feel that, at noonday or night,
Thou canst not be wholly alone.
Forever and ever! Soul I en pet to soul, Defiant of dooms that divide Poor palms and pale faces—as wild waters roll
Twlxt daisies the clew fall denied! Ho I n*k for no token—I seek for no sign— I bind thee will, m-ver a vow For I know that thy spirit will whisper with mine,
Forever and ever, as now.
Till Ml'no VEl) WEATHER .SYSTEM.
ho
HI.
JtV MAX ADKLKR.
I intend, ultimately, to reform the wliolo ivernineut of the United .Stales. I Hh.tll to.tr it out, reconstruct it, Hhake up
mo kind of an original and surprising policy, and begin all over ag.un. I think 1 will run it on a contract Homehow, and relieve tho people of all thoir present duties, excepting the duty ol supplying cash. lint at present 1 am considering tho cane of the Probability man who meddles with our great American weather. I think ho means well and tries conscientiously to do his best, but his aj'8toiu is radically dofeolivo, and the consequence is that his conjectures are despicably incorrect quite half the time. The inconvenience causod by these mistakes, not only to the people generally, but to me personally, is inconceivably great, and it is not to be ondured any longer.
For Instance, if I read in tho morning that this Probability person entertains a conviction that we ahull have a clear day in my neighborhood, I place confidence in his assurance. I remove the root of my house in order to dry tho garret thoroughly,and I walk down town with a new umbrella under my arm. Now it is plainly evident that if, after all, it does begin to rain, and I am obliged to unfurl that umbrella and ruin it with the wot, and 1 am compelled, when I arrivo at home, to witness my family floating around in tho d.nlng room upon a raft constructed out oftheo.d clothes horse and a tow bed slats and pie-boards, the government for which Washington died is a failure.
Or, supposo that our friend, at the weather olllue asserts that a thunder storm Is certain to strike my section of the country upon a given day. I believe him. I rush out my lightning rods and bucklo them to the chimneys and set them around on tho roof and plant them out in tho yard, and rivet them upon the hired girl and placo niv family safely in feather beds in the middle of the room, and drink all the milk in the neigh borhood, and prevail upon the tax collector to go and stand an hour or two tinner a tree whero ho will bo most certain to bo struck by lightning. And when all those arrangements are completed and I feel equ il to the promised emergency, supnose that thunder storm does not come? when I watch that tax collector sally out from under that umbrageous tree and begin to assess my property.countingin ail those lightning rods atdoublo their cost, is there auy reason to wonder that I sit and sigh for some respon si bio despot who will give us a Proba bllity man who grasps the subject of the weather, as it were in a more comprehensive manner?
Hut I know him now. He shall never again betray me as ho did with that last conjecture concerning the cyclone. Ho said it would sweep over my district on the morning of the 5th. and so I arose before daybreak ana proooedod to a ten acre lot, where I fastened myself to a sheet anchor, filled my pocket* with pig lead, lettered myself to the fence and placed my family in a burglar proof safe, which I tied to my log, and fixed the preserving kettle tightly over my head with a dog chain in order to preserve my hair, 1 staid there until five o'clock in the afternoon waiting for the simoon to swoop down upon me. But It was a lailuro—a disgraceful failure. The only thing of Interest that occurred was the mass meeting held by the people of the neighborhood. When I looked out from under the preserving kettle early in tho afternoon, I was surprised to observe that the feuoe upon the (bur sides ot the lot was filled with men and boys roosting around and watching me. Tue boys whistled upon their fingers and made unpleasant remarks. When I made a threatening jesture several of tho men got off the fence suddenly and contented themselves with looking at me between the rail*. Alter a while four policemen oame up, in company '•with a physician they untied me. knocked me down with a club, applied a blister plaster to my neck and would "have taken me to the asylum but for the timely Interference of souse of my friends.
And the tornado has net corns yet. So yon will percoive that the entire •vsteiu is humbug It is fraudulent It needs to be burst, I may say, into immortal smash, and smashed, in a certain sense, into diminutive smlther* edns: and then I am going to arrange a plan by which this business of thunder storms hurricanes oan be reduced, as it were, for instance, to a condition of positive certainty.
Tho basis of my system is corns. The marvelous accuraoy with which changes In the weather can be fbretold by a man whose feet are decorated with those excrescences Is so well known that It is hardly worth while to consider it at leogth, at this particular oriaia, the human com in its meteeraloficai characteristics. It is oulte certain" however that It will be impossible to expect the Probability being to walk around the country osoe or twice every day, for the purpose of submitting his oorns to the diverse at mosphertc influ
ence
which exist between the Atlantic
and Pacific oceans. It would wear out any man to be compelled to visit each of the States and Territories every twenty-four hours and at any rate, the weather in Massaihasetts might change suddenly after his departure from there, and while he was fooling around in Kansas.
It will be better, therefore, to have him kept stationary. I propose, in that event, that he should buy up any available corns that is in the market in any given Slate, and have it transplanted and grafted upon his own toe. Doubtless there are patriotic citizens in every portion of the land who would i»o willing to lay upon the altar of their beloved country their most cherished corns. I have one that I can warrant to be tried and true in meteorological service, and I am ready to give it up instantly for the benefit of my fellow countrymen ii Congress will appropriate a few thousand acres of public land as a compensation.
The Piobahility official then might obtain, let us assume, one corn from each State and a reliable bunion to represent each territory. When these were engrafted upon his feet in a healthful condition, each one would, as a matter of course, be peculiarly susceptible to the atmospheric influences which prevail in its native clime. All we have to do then, is to compel the weather man to wear exceptionally tight boots while be is not attending to business, so that his barometers, I may say will acquire the requisite amount of sensibility. Then I should have pipes 1 :»id from each state to the office in Washington for the purpose of conveying the different varieties of atmosphere to the foot of the Probability person. Suppose then he desired to make a guess in regard to the weather in Louisiana. I should have a man stationed :it the end of the pipe in New Orleans with a fan, and he could waft zephyrs, as it were, upon the Louisiana corn* which would respond instantly, and we should have the facts about the weather in that state with poetical precision and mathematical accuracy. When wo admitted a new State our friend could weld on a new corn, or, if tho Mormons succeeded in procuring the admission of their Territory as a State, we could plow up the Utah bunion and plant a corn, so as to preserve tho projirieties. "M,1
A
Businkss
PrMPi.ns,
BUSINESS CARDS.
R. rilKAOI.R, Attorney nl l.nw A Nolnry Pnblle No.
80
MainStreet,
JSBKPH
Man.—Hoibrook, tho
late owner and editor ot the New Orleans Pic iynne, used to he a steamboat elerk, and has now retired with great wealth. Although sixty-live years of aj?e, he still looks fresh and youthful. For 3'ears ho was never known to be absent from tho counting-room between 8 A. M. and 8 r. M., for a single day. Editors, reporters, foremen and clerk* pass«i in review before hirp, and all copy passed through his hands. He invariably paid oft' tho employes on Sunday morning. Was one absentor sick, the amount due him was carefully rolled up, labeled with his name, and placed in tho safe, and here sums of this kind have been known to lie un molested for years—a sort of special and sacred deposit. Indoed, old printers have gone away and fought through an entire war, to return and find in the Picayune safe a package of money awaiting them. Q^.
Eruptions,
Itouaii Skin.—
The system being put under the influence of l)r. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery 1Wa lew weeks, the skin becomes smooth, clear, sott and velvety, and being illuminated with the glow of perfect health from within, true beauty stands forth in all its glory. Nothing ever presented to the public as a beautitlcr of the complexion ever gave such satisfaction for this purpose as this Discovery. The effects of all medicinos which operate upon the system through tho medium of the blood are necessarily somewhat slow, no matter how good tho remedy employed. While ono to three bottles clour tho skin of pimples, blotches, eruptions, yellow spots, comedones or "grubs," a dozen may possibly bo required to cure some cases where the system is rotten with scrofulous or virulent blood poisons. The euro of all these diseases, however, fro the common pimple to the worst scrofula is, with tho use of this most potent agent, only a matter of time. Sold by all druugist. !(•'$.
$
Between Third and Fourth. 21.
1^54.
WARANNEstablishedwholcsaleandG.
WOOLKN NILMi, F.
Kills, Proprietor, reUilj manufacturer of Woolen Goods, north-west cor. 1*1 and Walnut street*. 19
VIOO
FOUNDRY A Trrrc»Hn«t« Cur Work*.
Beath A Hafter, manufacturers of Cars, Car Wheel*, Castings and Machinery, corner Canal and Main street. 19
rpKRRE-HALTE 1 Commercial Col I eve. Book -keep! k. Pen mannhlp and A rlthmetlc, cor. 6th and Main street*. 19 R. OARVIN, Principal.
BE4VCHAMP
A KCI.LT.
ATTOKSKrS AT LAW
And N0TARY8 PUBUC, Ohio Street, between Sd and 4th. fiptvial attention paid to Cbtkction*,
WILDY
POTH*.
Currlagt MaaaAtetarera, Cbr. Second and Walnut Streets, Repairing done promptly at low rates.
TAMER H.rilMHRR. Watchmaker and •I Jeweler. Ohio street, aonth ot tbe Court. Houae, TVrre-Haute, Ind. Watchea, Clocks and Jewelry repaired. Rnfrravlng neatly done and warranted to give satisfaction.
B.
«. COX
Wholesale and Retail
BookMller and Stationer,
Ifii Main Street.
pUIES MTU,
Estate & Collecting Agents,
No. 4 8oath P(ithStreet.
BALL,
IV. Dealer In thin, flrslw, fto FlmtOpJt mmd I'rmw Wore, 131 Main Street, North «de.
paum, rAfRTs, OILS. Glass, Toilet Articles, Bniahea, Ac, OVUCK dt BERRY,
Cbrner Main and 4th streets.
17 CPPUHE1HEB
CLOTHIERS, its
A «. •••unr,
€Spera House Bmok Store, Booka. Papera, C%romoa and Pnura.
-VK^ARRRJI, IMIBS 4k
Great Headqaa'n IbrDry CM, Opera Hoi Oww.
STMSNS,
RIPPETOE.
TKKltK-HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MA1I* FEBRUARY 24, 1872.
Wholesale and Retail Dealer In Chalce Tea*, ea. Hsgan, Fancy and Mtuple OrtecrlM,
No. 1K7 Main reet.
THE WKW 1 WHEELER WIMOX Sewing Machine,
Terre-Hante Plow Factory, ft* 1st street, near Main.
^VFEKA, TRADES CO.,
WHOLESALE GROCERS,
19U Main street, Terre-Haute, Indiana.
C. SMITH, Dealers In Stoves, V. Bcnpcnt, Agricultural Implements,
General dealer in
R. Oeneral dealer In sss*. UHOCERIES, PROVISIONS & PRODUCE, National Block, '.65 Main street.
A. FOOTE,
iF. Dealer In
Garden, Field & Flower Seeds,
No. 65 Main street.
CLIFF
A
XO.V,
Mnnnfat'inremor Locomotive, Stationery, Marine, Tubular and Cylinder Boilers, Iron Tanks, Sheet Iron Work, Door Steps, etc., cor. Canal A Main St. 19
JHE NEW YORK STORE
111 if uW 1 Vnil 91 VIlAt 3 Main street, near Court House square, Dry Goods, Carpels. Wall Paper,
Htinilon, A«.
WlTTKNBURG, RUSCHAUPT A Co.
Austin,
shryer a
American A Foreign Watches, JEWELRY, fcc., Opera House.
KI8SXF.R,
1'IAXOS, MKLODEOXS, ORGANS, Musical Instruments, Ac., Palace of Music, 48 Ohio street.
1KRKE- HAITTE MUSICAL IXSTI-
sic taught in all Its branches. Pupils may enter at any time. Agency for Stein way pianos. A. Shide,Principal.
M'
AXTKI.N. URATKK FiirnHcm ami Ranges, Manufacturers of Galvanized Iron Cornice
148 Main street.
SMITH. W. A. WHEELER. OMITH A WHEELER,, j.vn
O Dealers In. Stoves. Grates ami Tin Wnre. Agency Fairbanks' Scales, ISO Main street.
PHILIP HADKL,
JL Manui'ai I'acturer ot' Saddles and Harness, Whips, Curry Combs, Brushes, Horse Blankets. &c., all work warranted. Lowest prices In the city, I9tf Main street, near 7th.
J^TNTIN
A
MADISON,
DRUGGISTS,
lfW Main Street, near Sixth.
11. SCUDDER,
w.
Coil feet ion ery «V Toys,
194 Main street.
n. kvci a
co.,
The Popular House,
Main cor. (itb street.
Sll EAI*. C'oiircclioiicrv. Toys, Fro«ili Oj'Ntprs
W.
Mannfncturers A (rent for Children's Ca., rlagcs, Hobby Horsos, Sc.. 6(h St.. opp. P. 0
SlrtSS atr, a
Havlni
'I ft
R. H. MAGNER, Agent, Corner Main and 6tn afreet.
()LOWH. 1 .„«• PHILIP NEWHARTia
FURS.
partraent in connection with onr dry goods we respectfully explain the scheme. As a first-rate slock of furs requires an Investment of several thousand dollare It has been customary for the dry goods, hat and certain notion nouses of our city to handle these goods In a "small way." This has divided tbe trade to so great an extent that no one has had a really well assorted stock and neither merchant nor consumer has reaped any material advantage.
Last year we were disposed to give up the trade but as no one seemed disposed to make It an attractive specialty we have determined to do so.
This year we will offer these goods In Car greater variety than they have ever been displayed In Terre-Hante.
We anticipate that some who really do not csre to engage In the trade will attempt to close oat the "stock on hand" at cost, and we understand that to make our undertaking a sucecm we most keep below the! prices.
TUELL, RIPLEY dk DEHIH6, Car. Mala Flltk Its.
rpERRE-HAUTE HOUSE,
TVm-flmt*, IntUana.
t. P. HUSTON, MAM AOS*.
The Street Cars pass this House every Ite Minutes, from the Depot and River. TV Artntan BatAt art wsswtrrf sM 1-U. IMMBOUL
J^RS. WATERS A ELDER,
HOMffiPATHIC
PHYSICIANS,
J.
.Nt.Hi 71k
000K A SUM,
Wholesale aad Retail dealers hi
HARD WARE AND CUTLERY,
Heavy Ooada Bar Iroa, Ifail^ Ac. Alsa eewtaratea Honnl Biehmoad now
IWT
I1M TERBJK-HAUTK. IKD.
,,
.IPS -"4
And manufactured Tin Ware, 60 and 52 Main .street.
to.,
Wholesale fc Retail dealers In
HARDWARE, SASH, DOORS, PAINTS, Iron, Nails, Oil and Glass, 172 Main street.
R. FltEEMAX, -I"
17-tf
•Jit 7
Mooke A Haoekty, 181 Main street.
It. FREEMAN,
I The Leading Jeweler,
161 Main street.
SAY YES!
0
riTTItt
A-
0
JONES A JONES.
WICK.
WHOLESALE NOTIONS,
Commission Mcreliauts,
ee-tf
J^-EW FIRM.
O-EITTLEMEIT
WAimO TO BUY GOOD ARTICLES
In ReadyJMade Clothing
WILL DO WELL TO
Call at
s'ErIanger
•*. Ciothingr House
Corner Main and Fourth
^JNION STEAM BAKERY.
& Co.'s,
Middle Room, Opera House Building.
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. Oar motto is to
Deal Fairly with all, and Treat all Alike."
The prices are marked in plain figures on the ticket of each garment, consequently any child can buy of us as cheap as the best judge of goods.
Our Merchant Tailoring Department' Is well stocked with seasonable goods, and Mr. W. C. Miller, late of the i&rm of ft.Miller, is ever ready to give perfect nts to all.
Shirts Made to Order.
CALL AND SEE US.
IS DOING AN EXTENSIVE BUSINESS,
E BECKER
WHO IS ALWAYS READY TO PLEASE HIS CUSTOMERS, IS GETTING RAPIDLY FAMOUS FOR SELLING
A 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 nronntl when Visiting TVrro-IIaiile s.j,!,,,.'.. Don't Itail to
SEE THE ELEPHANT
4
.jn Which means come to
E. BECKER'S Red Front Clothing House,
I 93 Main street, south side,...
4
TERRE-HAUTE, IND.
Agency for Barr's Pectoral
FRANK HEINIG & BRO.
Manufacturers of all kinds of
Crackers, TJakes, Bread
vAND
A N
DEALERS IN
Foreign & Domestic Fruits,
FANCY A STAPLE GROCERIES,
LAFAYETTE RTKKKT,
(Between the two Railroads,)
21-tf. Terre-Hante, Ind
WHOLESALE MOTIOMS.
WITTIG & DICK, (Saooessors to A. C. A. Wlttlg,) Ha. Ill Mala Street,
Jobbers & Commission
Merchants, »,
II MTIMB, fAICT OMM, CIOAM, KlfULIBH, GERMAN, AND AMERI
CAN CUTLERY,
Perftamery, Soap, Coiton Tarn, Batting, Ac.
Witli increased capital and New Stock we are prepared to offier ftiends and eostoaaer* superior inducements to bay of an
Special attention will be paid to Cash Bayers, Peddlets and Anettooeen. NO. Ml MAIN STRUT, Between Fifth and Pixth, in the Room tor merly occupied by Oox A Son- «t
Farly
broach,
•Ainrvactuum«v
Saddles and Harness,
Owfiri im flllai, Whif, IVwii, Na MAIN 8TRBKT, North side, betweeai aad 4tk, TernHaste, ladlaaa. Agea IMe Ma
OIL fHf.
'HE
-il tt
ERLANGER & CO.,
Original One-Price Clothiers & Fashionable Merchant Tailors,
THIE RED FIIOITT
Jll«l«lle Room, Opera Honae.
-A -4«'
J."
ii*-**
-One door from the Corner, near Opera House.
GULICK & BERRY,
GENERAL DEALERS IN
Drugs, Medicines, Chemicals,
Paints, Oils, Glass,
&c.
.16^'
-If?#
Streets,
ii ti* (-m
El
•JJNION CHRISTIAN
ee-tt
COLLEGE!*
Herom, Sullivan Coniitv, Ind.
The Winter Term of this flourishing Institution will commence Deeeaber ISIh, 1871, At 10 o'clock, and will continue twelve weeks. Classen will be formed in
0r,fSK3T.V.'
.T Craiatar, Aid Hlstarjr. The varlons branches of Mathematlai, the Nstnral Sciences, Latin, Oreek, French. German, all tbe higher branches of a fall and thorough College Course, will be taught as laid down in the Courses of Stndy in our Catalogue* and Circulars.
Ladles pnrsne the same courses of stndy, are subject to the same regulations, enjoy the same privileges, and receive the same honors as gentlemen.
EXPEMRES?
The necessary expense of obtaining an education at Merotn does not exoeea two hundred dollars a year.
Taltlaa, per Tmrm.
In tbe Academic Department IN In the Classical Department S 00 In the Scientific Department S 00 In each Department, Incidentals 2 00 Instructions on Piano, extra 10 00 Use of Piano, one hoar each day 2 00
Instructions in Voeal Music, gratis.
Both ladles and gentlemen will And good boarding, with tarnished rooms. In private families, for lUt per week. Some board themselves for about 1240 per week.
For circulars, or any farther information, address THOMAS HOLMES, Prest, Merom. Ind., Aug. S, 1871. 0-tf TIANO
TUNING.
P. H. MORE,
PIANO TDNEB* SEPAIRElL
Order* Ufl
mt
the 1*rre-Hmde
,*14 vi
For the Year 18
iffc
KEiil'LAR RATES.
Tlie SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, an^ Independent Wot'kly Ncwsnnper. will bej mailed to subscribers nt TWO DOLLAUS u, Year ONE DOLLAR for Six Months, nnH FIFTY CENTS for Three Months, and to® Clubs at tlie following rates: Three Copies, One Year S 5 OOi Five 8 00 Ten 15 00* Twenty 25 00|
With One Copy extra to the getter up of a Club of Ten. or more. Mail and oflire Subscriptions will, lnvniia«* bly, bo discontinued at expiratlou of time* paid for. y-.-' ,# .. *.•»
nXBlilNO WITH OT1IKR OII(AI.N.
rice 14.00. Mr tP
pr
84.00
MumM Jm*
t*U, Ron BwOMng, Btmtk HX BU, wOt riiKw Prompt Attention.
MR. MORS Is a flrst-etaasTawand eeih patent Repairer be has worked In the brated Ptano estshlWimsat at Stela way 1 Sons, ss a praetlcal Piano maker^nd In
Om
most protnlneot Piano faetories in tbe eoan-
ANTON SHIDK,
|7-tf Prlndptl T. H. Mnsieal Instltnte.
TKRRB-HAUTC PRINTINO BOtmrM I Main street, does the neatest and cheapest Job Printing la the eitv. B—la—
*,r
ii
SATURDAY EfEKIICI
«. Ha
ill
MAIL,
iV-
4f
7 1 2
,4 **J '3
*t"
-i.«
PKKI.
We are enabled to offer extraoitlinary in-^ du ements in tbe way or clubbing with oth-* er periodicals. We will furnish the SATUIIDAY EVENING MAIL, PRICE 12.00 PER| YEAR, with any of the periodicals enumer-s ated below at greatly reduced rates. These? periodicals will be sent direct frorh theofflcesl of publication. Here Is tho list:
SEMI-WEEKLY.
k' 1 'I* 4
I
f-
The Mall and Keml*Weekly N, Y. Tribune, price, tt-i.OU
s-" j. ttWKKKLY PAPERS.4 h' Mail and tlie IiidlnnapoIlN Jonr itnl. price SV.OO Tlie Mail and thr liitllananoIlN Nrn* tinel. price fti.OO The Mail and tbe X. Y. Tribune, price 82.00 The Mall and the IndlnnnpoIlN !Vewi», price J1.50 The Mall and the Toledo Illiule, price 82.00 The Mall and the JIT. Y. W«rl«l, price 12.00 The Mail and tbe N. Y. Nnn, price 11.00 The Mail and the I'rairle Farmer, i)riee f2.00 The Mall and the WeMfern Rural, price 82.00 The Mall and the Clifrniro Advance, price 82.50 Tlie Mail nnd the Chicago Inferior, price $2.60 The Mail and the 4'bicairo Republican. price 81M The Mall and Appleton's Jonrnnl,
50|
-Ij.
S3 00r
8 001
8 00*
2 76
8 00*
8
2 St) fr
8 00
•he Mail and the Rural New York* rice 13.00 Hearth and Home, irlce
The Mail and
13.00
05.00
I
8 00
8 50
8 60
2 76
4 50,:
8 7
The Mail and the Methodist, pi Ice I2.ee The Mali and Every Saturday, price
8 76 k.
8 00
Tbe Mail and Harper's Weekly, price
6 60^
500
Tlie Mail and Harper's Rasar, price 14.00
5 0^:
"/*.
fw
MONTHLIES.
5
The Mall and the Amerlcaa Agrl ealtarlat. price fl.60 Tbe Mall and feadey'sl.iady'aB—k, _prlee IS.00 The Mall and the Ladlee* Ova
92
fO
4
Mamalae. price 11 JO Tbe Mall and the Itsrth Western
280 ta»
Parmer, price 1140 Tbe Mall and the Little Corporal, _pirtee I1JS0 The Mall and tbe Little Chief, price 76 cents. Tbe Mall and the Little Rawer, price 78 cents. The Mail and Serlbaer's Msethly, ^priee, iBilO..
8«
J» 2»
A
.»
Mall and tbe Atlantic Month* ly, price 1440. The mil and Our Ysasg Folks, _jrloe ®40 ........ Tbe Mail and OM and New. price |4. Tbe Mail and Overland Monthly,
OLVMMINO WITH OOVNTT PAP!
We have made arrangements to furnish the Mail with tbe following Newspaper^ published in the neighborhood of Ten* Haote, at very low rates. Here Is tbe list: The Mall and Sullivan —IB 1 Tbe Mall and RockvOe New. S The Mail and BrasQ Miner 1 The Mall and BowUng Green Archives..1 Iw Mall and Marthall Herald 1 The Mail and Hooeier Mate.. 1 Tbe Mail and Newport TranecripLSj Tbe Mall and Aurora BoreaUt 8 01
'4# ____ ^0, M*. ^ij._ 4 f®
K*
5«
fk
rSSiu Mdl^arp^VVMa^irfiiie^ price S® {1^rt jlt* S
800
4
Persons getting np elnbs for the Mail,and I art ling to obtain subscriptions
tor
AMrta, O. J. SMITH^ 4
bms
shoald lake a acts of ttk O. J. lallli 4
ethsi
periodicals on our list at tbe same time, wUi he fhrntsbed a list of the prices at wbleb ••eh subscriptions can be takes by us, upon application to this office.
Terre-Haute, Indisad
