Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 5, Number 14, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 3 October 1874 — Page 7
I
I
I
SHHi
Paper
for the
PROW*
JufcMrt of* check, Tlte fiddler tn tiie I Like
MOMSstts
basket «r
On the Wok o*
He feels U* Addte%* picks out the now* wi. And Unu» the tuue wtth nod awn nm»w w»«— ,4
And tUiak* Ha weary white.
All ready! Jtowh* SL"HOO«U
gl\t"S bulks
BJV aD-0-**» e*»U(M UM
vtrtuM»tfd'»wtiw—
.*nntaaitsmaehi&. «'. flits about big Me Brown, \V ko holds b*r bund* iv keep h»-r *»*«, And thinks be: iiirafoMencrown, M^JS,v&&x rvtx~ 11 (dvcw a weootul srMnerset! »uwi
Your stoga boot lia* crush \1 JM r»ihrr daneo with/—-1" You doAMV BuOW 1 I wr—'
Ami &efln*>»JUr
dense MWrt,
TS?^5S/sSs«a' W
Xh«-y briag the dauee about.
Then elasplaff hjuwiall^'rightaak* Ml P* All »wlU' weave the measure d«ft Across the woof la iovinfi weft
And m« Motwfy Mask Is done)
Ob, danger* of the rustll (}od ntybt,
ssSSBe"4"* 4
HEART-TRUE.
Itia each*botherto be
w.
There was along interval ofsilsooeln Mrs. Jameson's sitting-room When Gertie made this exclamation.
What is the new bother, Gertie?" The pleasant voice and toneofkindly inquiry made the young girl blush deeply aa »bo replied: "I wa* only tninkin* aloud.** "Thlnklflg of what?" "Of »ome velvet flower*I saw yesterday, which just matched this ribbon," ana Gertrude held up a bonnet she was trimming. "Velvet flowers are so lovely for A winter bonnet, and this one needs
it leokHvery nloe,CJertie.*
*KiMtf"said the giri, scornfully emword y«s it is very
'Nlee!Maai
y.f.f«i«T.g the word *yes, it it very nice, and that turned-op silk is very oUb and the short sack made out of your Old cloak is nice, and cleaned glove* are nice, and—'* "why,Gertie!" «ikS her motheriua voice of amassment.
But there is nothing atyliah or handsome in cleaned gloves and retrimxned bonnets, and old cloaks turned into sacks and ao I say poverty is a botb^r*^ "Gertie, put away that bonnet aad come here. Now, little daughter,** said the widow, gently, "tell me the meaning of all this tirade against poverty of the restless tossing I heard from yonr room last night of the nervous unquiet of ray contended little girl since yesterday.*' «*ri "r
There was no reply. Gertie, what did Leon Payne say to you last evening?"
He asked me to be his wife." The words were jerked out hastily. And you answered—'' "Jane came in to shut upthe parlor not knowing he was there and she stayed so he got no answer at All."
But he most be answered, Gertie. Ue has spoken to ins, And I told him it must rest with you."
Mamma," twa after a long, deep ri•ho is very rich. When be mar«ry. If~ifit us, aad Jane id school any more. We were on High street the other day and stopped to look into a jeweler's window, and be pointed out the kind of jewels tie would wish his wife to wear, need not wear old silks then, mamma."
Then you intend to accept hts oflfeif' I dona know you ae«Ui«re la Harry."
But Hany cannot oflfer jw jewela." "No poor Harry! If he had only three tbowMwl doBwta Mr. Inmaham voaki take him into the firm. He told me all last w^k. Jlut think how long It will take to save three thousand dollars, ami of course his wife must and save, 4tnd eeonomise tin he to mend more freely." *Ym,
UU Uvi |0||A Uabke
dear, there would be no varia
tion on the turned cloth and retrimmed no vsivet flowers, no jewels." inch »obl% tits* heart! sud|»' love?
#fj
As mudTitt ho loves anythlng be- side over this
cauae I am prffy, mm itW* Ja^t«
"Two valentines,mammaf Ihad^ yytfrp waatfre
fct?JE2%i£?iu2.
sow WWIVU
roweo nam in#4d«. rpon the black v«irftvalac h»*pmmm*X gtttimtagnumoeda, Sashing up where a stray sunn^iri Ml tluKKI into EktiattUESeB SWVUX2 nFU f» cried Gertte, -Are «%jmn nymr uinu -aw «wwwn«m«j V»f
mm mm,
mi
yumwij »•«,• ttOS ^o her
and brifitht eyes, and bw heart «mt up a thing stoout trembling W- sent them t« Jwwr eyw.
Itlflin 'ItlW
UrfwL eMeat iMcrt were born
and they bad come to the city, ler, one of the finest amateur
a-tEcK
class in a large aemin-* ll have singing scholar* -,m with these additional was very limited, tloag
take the Pre amnri a€pi: their income
economy, self-denial, humWe fsre, and plAin dreMs, (iertie could recaM mnefc more distinctly than the wealth bar
IVtV UlSWIftAAjr »MWW
,4 y?y *F I till teiiiaofl^k CU, thou-
up^»
the scene? Geftie scarry kne* He
S5eiaStSaK
fortune. Far aw^v in wntrel wnffl
aarar^sr
i. uuihal% iuJis nitrimanv. 31»e#eintof
.nBy!?
the young clerk, but he hail barn 'win
saad dollars, be, ^ight ba^ pfrtnw rtiofiu&tliaghthrfnirpart ofthat smn, but where was
MM-
rest to come froftj
Hueried «iertie. »Yt,ri^5*'i,s,ne,n" ory a pictore to the little maiden liuaered loviinglv. There wmjio jpart of her life so pleasant to dwell wpon a» tl»at where he figured. Long talks and
liv nioon-ligh lie was no tender and loving, so honorable and t*u«v*o respectAil to her mother, so tender to Jane, and so ready to advise or assist Jaue'fe betrothed—a ifellow clerk wbo Wsa waiting the turn to Vothim to marry. •flBrti®"1"'
Leon Payne came to the scene only six months before this musing fit of Gertie's. She had met him at a party and had bewitched Mot bjr bear pretty, piquant beauty, her gfat* and voice. He had dazzled her by his handsome fta* and his wealth. ,Harry wan not handsome, poo# fellow Wrtle Sighed. But the young girl know, with a woman's intuition, that under the courtly manners, flattering attentions, and devoted air of Leon there was a selfish natore, a cruel jealonsy, and a suspicious and hot temper. Yei he was so rich, and Gertie knew ail thf torture and jmiaery of genteel poverty.
Be trao to your own neart J" she said aloud, as she arose and "walked across the room. "Do I love Leon Payne If he should lose his wealth, would I be a trne and loving wife to him still Could I wear old bonnets for his sake
She took up the diamonds and put -them on while she spoke. They flashed brilliantly against the deep crimson of her neat dress, and heightened the effect of her young, fresh beauty. "If he were poor and ill, could I work for him as I could for Harry
It buret from her lips In a sort of cry, and abe tore ofTthe jewels and replaced them In their velvftt bed. "*I could bear all this for Harry, feut not for Leon Payne. I will be true to mj.wnhMrt',
The winter wis gliding into gpring when Sirs. Jameson Kit In a luxurious boose on street* waiting the comi»g of twobiides. *m»
parlor in which
shew^tedwas richly furnished. Velvet carpets covered the floor, velvet curtains draped the windows, long mirrors threw hack the light of chandeliers, and costly pictures in neavy gilt frames bung upon the walls. Above, large bedrooms were filled with handsomely appointed furniture. In ono room laces, velvet flowers, and silks, fit for a roval trousseau, filled drawers and wardrobe the dining-room was spread for a rich and varied repast, and the widow's own dress, though only black silk, was rich, and handsomely made. "My little Gertie," said Mrs. Jameson, softly, "how will she ever reign over this palace?"
A quieter home, but pleasant, too. was waiting for Jane, whose husband had received an anonymous gift that enabled him to accept a business opening looked upon as an unattainable felicity. Bat Jans was to spend a few days with Gertie before going to her own home, and hence the mother looked for two brides.
It was nearly midnight when the carriage drove up. Gertie was first in her mother's arms: and then as Jane took her place the little bride stood In the center of the long parlors pale with astonishment. She had tossed off her bonnet and looked eagerly around the room. "Wheream I?" she gasped at last. "At home, my darling," and her husband pained his arm around her waist. "Home!" **It*s not sueh a very long story," be mid, looking down Into tor wondrous eyes, "but I did not toll you before because I wanted to see if yon loved me."
She nestled dose to him, letting her betid foil upon his bosom. "The form, Gertie," he aald softly, ras full of oil." "Oiir* "I sold it for more money than Leon Payne ever possessor Now, pet, run up stairs mother will show you the worn, and let me sef how spme of the
$§8*#Sneaky midnight.** "Nevermind 1 want a qweti ttrp*^ side over this
upl*fL
MUI kk own nUiinur* AIKX ooftilbite JDBML Jsoiiwofilro the wsy, whito Jsn* {iTfom »oh*rd9and And b#rhtwband•tood ^w^emi as
^(.wnoilPisV^' Attth^yndtmelV?"
"G«rtte, is elevwa ^dock, *«°^wbco
won The urai of* hie, 0 tbepa«
It WL
said Harry
ys^T^g^Snyibto
wKetrt KA ilfirtr fttlfl
her ch«los aAd tb»shintog silk revealed insowy arms and shoulders, while rich bw* fcll in leMto around the swee
P«l,—r
"WlMCt dBUMOGOelsff f.:J "The ones I sent you for ax alenUne." ••Yon MI mm, Harry 1 aent them
It was certainly ton y«a» lale* O^l^'*n«*ption,
lit go to Mr. I-ewis. T« l«^T«ntor- -*b tain oAlers while I ant out, b«t ba trac to your own heart, my dear." liv« a man the neotsuMrlea o^ lifo ««d •fnM |a her own hwnt flutk JaosGK 1 be wanta the emtwaioacew* CMve hiui ™dOwnto%^^en^w^|u«^^ Aftd ^^av« for the
to diamonds. Homebtxly Le«« «w a valentine some
yesjni ago. He never could guess where
hM bwn lnMS
u» ber complains that he has boot cbeatod boOt !. #|,ln|rtic«*nd^tMUHyrf tbeaiildiw.
THE DOCTOR.
TO OOJK9UL BAB TJUW* MMDICtBmt, Tbe bitter taste of qnlnla, colocynth aloea. qumada and other Uttor medklneM Isa^ to be teatantly wmowl by dH»wiag niece of lleortee KM*.
with an ounce it and ask'
TO
disgulae
osstor oil rub two drops oil of cinnamon 'add an will take
«WBW|
The hCtiflnR hi tld lojtfli leat cure for rheamatlsm Half a spoonful of Hoebelie aalta, to be taken every worntng, half an boor before bmikfaMt. Hot drinks, spiriu, wine,
nuiy l»e eaten once a day, but atut moat and fish must be abstained from. roltxs.
Moft corns are cum! by warm water bathings and bock»kt|i i^otr^tons, and no paringn are necessary. Hard uonw on the top of the toes, at the joints, can always be removed in two or three day* warm waaiitt end of the finger white under the water. This hastens the softening, and in a day or two the kernel can be poked out with the linger nail. If the com is shaved off the roots deepen beside, troublesome bleedings sometimes follow, and in several casea have ended flttally. A bit of cotton saturated with ell and bound upon the corn over night, facilitates the softening.
VARIHTY OF LIGHT.
Sick people often crave lor change they often sigh to have anew view. If you can manage for the patient to look out of tbe window, do. Place in his sight anew picture, a plant In bloom, or a few cut flowers. These will give some considerable pleasure. Always endeavor to make the surroundings ot the sick chamber pleasant. Unless told by the doctor to fceep the patient in the dark, never do so. Light Is essential to health, and therefore the patient should he so placed that he mav be able to see the sun and the skv and, if a choice can be made, choose the window at which the sun comes in in the morning. Hick people, as a rale, like to lie on that side which Ikces the light. v. OUR TOSS. 5
Beyond question, we abuso our toes. They are intended In the 11 rat place to give flexibility to the foot, and help us In our walking but the modem custom of cramping them up in tight shoes makes them almost as immovable as if they grew together. So the help they giye is not so much after all. Aad as for putting them to any other use, we never think of it. We cramp *nd torture them out of all llkencss to their original state. Who, for instance, could imagine that the second toe was intended to be longer than the flrst? And yet in a perfect formed foot it always Is, though we are ohliged to go to statutes and paintings to find out. And who. putting a foot and a narrow-toed shoe side by side, would ever suspect that they were intended for each other? The fact is, our toes are our most abused members, and so we don't get half the good from them that we might. The Chinese and the Japanese and Bedouin Arabs, it is said,from continual practice, use their toes almost as well as their hands. Arabs braid ropes with their fingers and toes working in concert. Why, then, should we dispense with the use of these natural aids?
"JTORSE TALK.
1:
WHAT IS A BLOODKD HOBSB? He is a horse having more than the ordinary amount of drops or pounds of blood in his system, in proportion to the sixe and weight. This amount of blood acts upon his Bystem through a lai^e heart, and correspondingly large arteries and veins and put in motion, it acts in driving him to speed, t^e fame as an increased amount Of fire nffderr a boiler drives off a greater amount of steam and makes tbe machinery go faster. The large amount of blood also acts in refining tbe skin, making it and the horse finer than in a horse of less blood it refines and gives elasticity to the muscles, the feet, etc. it refines the entire horse, making strong the. valuable parts and fitting the whole system for speed and endurance 1 T3UE SUMWB »Oft TXK KARM.
In an article in the New York Times, Alexander Hyde says: The horse is a noble animal, and is an indtopensible adjunct of the form but a trotting horse, one of the 2:40 kind, in no sense belonj« to the farm. No former can afford either to tend or use trotting horsey and when it is pretended that the r&ee «t»Urse favors the breeding of superior unimala, it hi all fudge. What thefarOierWantak, and what fair* should give pr^mitfms for, is ft good family carriage or ftrm home, worth |20O ur $300: one that can draw a plow all day. And e«t and aleep well at night that can raovetn the road at the rate of five or st* miles arfhour for four or tive consecutive hoot* without excessive Iptigue.
owner nor the spaetator gaf ns agythtag by this forced ZMmpeed. It Is a mere momentary Wirt, and for its production an atftotgnt Wftraitthagia required tfcblch no ft#tnftr can afford. W »t
My bom shlaa at all sorts of things on tbe rOadaiie—at ple»» of papW", wet spots oh the road, ftc. I made il a point to fowalAn up to ihn pt^ec* wbhA frightons nim ^ntll he is no longer uwibleaLfcot hew aa bad aseV«in renext tliln* he meets. I have ig when driving, arid span but the punishment apke£im«p^oauMlihK)
«#ect to) tried w» when pears to plu shies bow cure
Sr npr. when otherwise he =OIM»' side. Oan you tMl me wiW the bene to *effi0Ct a
c*X4f#ii^-Tbe
hsWt of rtiybsf onpe
Ihirly ostablishod is seldom entirely cured, vtekm or Incipient disease!of t|s eyea is a common cauae of this U»jpiai^int habit, Jt will be well to have the horse's eyee^ eaaanined by veterinary surgeo*. If, however, examimitfkm fldls to detect any thing wrong with the eyes* eppettally it the horse is TO otb^rospects qtiipt and tractable, we sre inclined to think that tbe habit may arise from tbe animal being short-sight-ed. There la *o anatomical reason why this dofoct should n^existinboniMas %elllis#ei. Great cire muat le token
hot liberty to make a^«p. rttnlsbmeB_t, or threat of punishment, hi improper. It only timioor hlgh-«»lrited horses that aettoire the habit, and rough naage invariably increasea their agitation and icrror. The. man must be gentle and
A worn-out watch-key can be mades# good «a new by simply fillng off about SM of an inch off tbe end, aa the aoeket i« usually twice aa deep as the poet of tbe wat his high.
BOmKHDW JIELP&
anviwroiso oil.
Take a email buuch of siipj*ry slui bark and pot It in tbe lard, and cook one hour.—(Country Gentleman. fc- MArnmt ^nadaaasweetaa
dropa SraWWWMjeof lime} then wash thoroughly in this ndxtufa five pounds of P*ackl iattm. It must remain In the mixture two hours, "»»en wash twice in pure water and onoe in «weet milk add salt. This preparation of lime contains nothing Injuriom. fiOW TO m?RS CtMtJU
A common mistake in the use of con) is the placing of too large a quantity In the stove or grate at once, foal, to burn freely, should only ba six inches deep In the vessel containing it, ami theii, if properly ignited, there will be no trouble. By ptecing a few oyster ahelte ooaHionaliy in the stove, when
hot, tbeae disagreeable known aa blinker*, will enti|o4 AU«*iJKMUT#
AWKKT POTATO rtrpnrso.
To a iarae sweet potato weighing: two
Kif
unds allow half a pound of sugar, a pound of butter, one gill of sweet cream, one grated nutmeg, and a Uttla lemon peel and four eggs boil the potato unttl done, mash up fine, and while hot, add tbe augar and butter. Set aside to cool while you beat the eggs light, and add the seaaoning last. Line tin piatee with puff paste and pour in tbe mixture. Bake in a moderate but regularly heated oven.—[Cultivator.
WIXJ DTJCKS.
ready clean hours
After they are cleaned and for cooking, wrap them in a cloth, and bury them twelve in the earth, to remove the strong flavor of this bird. They are usually cooked without stuffing. Three-quarters of an hour will be sufficient to cook them. When yon dish them draw a sharp knife three times through the breast, and pour over a gravy of a little hot butter, the juice or a lemon, and a sprinkling of Cayenne popper. This ia poured over aa they go on to the table.—^Cultivator. i.Cr7r,t\ CHKSSK
FRITTERS. "„(j
Slice, thin, half a down large tart apples, and prepare half as many thin slices of nice cheese. Beat up one or two eggs, according to the Quantity required, and season high with salt, mustard and a little pepper. Lay the slices of cheese to soak for a few momenta in the mixture, then put each alioe between two slices or apples, sandwich style, and dip the whole into the beaten eggs, then ftry in hot butter like oysters, and serve very hot. These fritters are an addition to any breakfast table.—[Country Gent.
BREAKFAST ROLLS. .»
Take a coffee cupful new milk, two beaten eggs, half-cup of fresh yeast, a teaspoomul of salt, a tablespoonful of sugar, two tablespoonfuls of butter or sweet lard stir in oriskly enough sifted flour to make a stiff batter. They should be mixed in this way at tea time, amb covered up to rise. Late in the evening, when the dough is light, mould it out on the board and put back in the pan, and cover again. In the morning tear off, but do not cut, in pieces of sufficient size to twist up into rolls, working it as little as possible when they puff up, bake in a quick oven, and eat tnem while hot.—[Country Gent.
PEACH MABMALADE,
Take the small and imperfect clings, as they do not admit of being removed from the stone in pieoes of uniform size and shape, pare them, and after cutting from the stone, place in a poreelain kettle, with one pint of water to two quarts of fruit boil until soft take off and put tkrough a sieve with a wooden potato smasher then return to the kettle, adding one pint of sugar to every quart of prepared fruit bring to a boil and seal while hot. It can Be sealed without the addition of sugar, and when eaten let it be sweetenea with white sugar to the taste, and it greatly resembles fresh peaches.
ABOUT THE FARM.
Sbmebody iftg^niousiy Calculates that in planting and garnering twenty acres of corn a former must travel at least nearly nine hundred miles in the cornfield alone. "I have," he says, "a twenty acre field forty by eighty rods. To break this up would take one hundred and sixty-six miles harrowing it, about forty miles furrowing out, ninety miles planting, forty-five miles, if with a planter: and if dropped and then covered, ninety miles and for each ploughing of two furrows in a row. ninety miles: or, five ploushings, four hundred and fifty miles. Thus you will see it takes atiout eight or nine hundred miles of travel to raise twenty acres of corn, not counting going to and returning from the field. Besidea. there is some replanting, thinning, rolling," etc.
Greasing buggies and wagons hi of more importance than some imagine. Many a wheel ia ruined by oiling too plentifully. A well made wheel will endure constant wear from ton to twenty years if care ia taken to use the right kind wad proper amount of oil but if tkla ia not attended to tbe wheel will be used up in five or six yean, or poasibly sooner. Lard abould never be used on a wagon, for it will penetrate tbe hub and work its way around the tenons of the spokes and spoil the wheel. Castor «il 1« a good material for use on iron axlea lust oil enough (should be applied toaaptndleto givealight ooatin«-4bis is better than more, for the surplus put on will work out at tbe ends, and will be forced by the shoulder and nut into tbe hub, around tbe outside of the boxes. To oil tbe axletceo, flrst wipe the spindies dean with a doth wet with turpentine, if it doemrt wipe withbut it. On a buaxy or carriage wipe ami eJeaa off the baokand front enda of tbe hubs, and then apply a very small quantity of castor oil, or some more osp«Jrtally prepared lubricator near the shoulder's p.»lnU
WJTA* TBS MICROSOOPB SHOWS. I«nwenho«k teili of an fawect eeen with tbe microscope that twenty-eeven million would only equal a mite.
Insects of various kinda may be seen in the cavities of A grain of aand. Mould ta a fotew of beantifW trees, with branch**, leaves aad fimit.
Butterflies are fully feathered. HsirsJire noUow tubes. The auritae of our.bodies is covered with scales like a flah a tingle grain of sand would cover one hundred and flity ofthese scales, am! yet a scale coven five hundred pores through these narrow openings the sweat forces itself like water through a sieve.
Kinb drop of atagnant water ctrntohw woridT of animated beings, swimming with as much liberty as whales In the
Each leaf baa a colony of iraaecta g»sing on it, like cows on a meadow. Moral: Have some cam as to the air you breathe, tbe food you eat, and tbe water you drink.
s«»e*ew *nwe%
akT?
EO. W. HABERLY,
THE LARGE AND SPLENDID FARM,
BEPRJEMBNTED BY TUB ABOVE CUT,
18 NOWJOFFEBED FOB SALE ON EAST TERMS—ITMfl IN EVERY WAY DESIRABLE.
640 A§es in all, in Parke Gonnty, Indiana,"
7 miles northeast from Kockville, IX miles from Logaiwport A Sooth Western RailroaS, and only 2 miles from the erasing of that road with the Indianapolis A Montezuma Hail road. 4 *f
About 2SO
mcrea
(Sl«««VMr to CHAJfCE A CO.,)
Dealer in all kinds of
DRESSED LUMBER.
North 2nd St.. Corner of Linton, TERRE HAUTE, LND.
ear Custom work done promptiyand warranted to give satisfaction.
pRAIRIE CITY
5
CUPT & WILLIAMS,
Manufocturcn
»t
Sash, Doors, Blinds,
Window and Door Fnuqes, Moulding Brackets, Stair Railing, Ball asters, Xewell Posts, Flooring, Hiding,
And all descrtptJoaa of
FINKING LUMBER!
Wholesale and Retail dealei* hi
Pine Lumber, Lath & Shingles, Slate Roofing,
AltD
BDOLLKG F1XT.
Custom Sawiag, P)ain«agaai Wood Turning dons to Older. AH work warranted.
Cor. 9th and Mulberry Street*.
5
In good cultivation,
Gently rolling, and to situated aa to be worked to tbe beat advantage about me 150 acres ofXo. I vreods pasture, and balance, n/3IO acres in heavy Umber, Poplar, Maple. Hl» kory and Oak. Oak predominating. Fences are all to pferfe# onfer. There is a
Coiutant supply of the bent water,
There being 6 living springs, no located ia to afford eauy access to them from all' parts of the place. g®i
There is a Good Frame House
Of 5 rooms, 1 stories high, almost new, near the upper part of the form— Hollows are not deep, except in extreme south, where they are short—ground can be plowed in almost all ones to the waters' edge of the small streama which flow through the place. No waste land. Neighborhood is good. A store, school houso--and church within a half mile.
The ffcrm ean be divided
Iifffee centre to best advantage if desirable. Will sell all or any portion •aw For terms apply to JOHN W. DAVIS, of Law Firm of Allen, Mack
Manufactories of Terre-Haute.
w"'
W. X. CLIFF.
A
IFF
A
^*IR: •-•-V
Planing Mills.
Davis, or'
FRED. A. BOSS,
Heal Eslmt« Axent, Terr» HMle, lad.
intintT curr.
SON,
C"
UAjrvTAcrvaxsa cr
v»
K^COHOTIVE, STATIONARY A MARUVE
BOILERS.
TUBULAR AAD CYLDfBER, First Street, bet. Paplar an4 Walmrtt Repairing dona in the most substantial tanner at short notice, and as liberal it* price aa any establishment in the Htate.
Orders solicited and carefully attended to.
NION STEAM BAKERY.
FRA1K 11£1K1G Jk BBO« Manufacturen of all kinda of
Crackers, Cakes. Bread,1 And CANDY I
DEALERS IN
Foreign dc Domestic Fruits Faaef aad Cteeeriea, uMTimnntnrr, "j (Between the two Railroads,)"
Terrs Haute, Ind.
SCOTT, "THE"
Terre Hante Pnmp-Haker, North «h Pt, bufwsen fberry and XntMr* 4 qr, Dealer ia all kinda of
PUMPS,
And PI SP FIXTIJBBI#
MflWClAITTi
The Ohio Wood Pump,'
(fade from Wild Cucumber and Whit? Wood Tlrolwf—tlw» bent and etetayst pump to swe Pituted Uaaiaateeand Dlrestteas fareAstf ctl with each and every pump.
Order* by mail leceiva onr Uoa. Call aroand and examine our ITimpS a&d Prices before purchasing.
THE HIQH»STCANVI PRICK IV1) FOB FBOPUOS.
Ton win always find TfceBest
SUGARS,
COFFECS,
TEAS,
And an
and Fancy
Grocj rlca.
