Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 6, Number 20, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 13 November 1875 — Page 3
THE MAIL:
SR FOR THE PEOPLE
TREASURY G1RL8
A wfWjr in Dorm Piatt's Capital, published aCWwhingtou, has the following ing to (*y concerning treasury glrla:
IftbAJxead of any department was to offer and beg me to accept it, boinrof an accommodating disposition, I would take It to oblige bim, bat would rather Mt ivo than
if I tod a daughter I the da»H»* growing over her gra' to have o#r undergo what I see women of i*Cnement and culture undergoing wety dav to keep a position they have been fortunate enough to secure.
I should be sorry to have any voung girl belonging to me subjected to the witticism* of a man such a* I know of. who, having been rained from a mnall position to tne head of a room, called it harem, and finding that considerable objection wan raised to hi* using that pleasant epithet, changed it nd spoke of the ladies under him as his hyenas. I am happy to state that in this instance the "hyenas", Chased) him out.
My advice to all women is to pick hops, scrub floors, do anything, rather than come here and swell the crowd who are clamoring for admission to the departments, and thereby driving the Mcretaries, appointment clerks and otnor unhappy mretrhwi Insane that is those of them who have brains enough to go crazy. 8*vwnty-flva dollars looks like a vast sum to outsider*. Many a farmer who in considered well off doce not clear more than half that but, my dears, if vou /*ofho hert you will find that the 8eventy«flve dollars is lH»ad tea fruit and if you onlv knew how many there are that don't live on that—where or how the surplus comes Is not your business or mine—but listen to the words of one who expects to be one of General Hawlny's curiosities at the coming big nhow in Philadelphia, and don't come hcro—fttav home with the old father and mother wear that pink calico you sold oggs to buy put a pretty bow in your hrowu hair, and marry that nice young f*mn who is casting Hheop eyes at you, and commence housekeeping in one room.
WORK A *VD PA Y.
John Kuskin has some stirring thoaghts which he thus puts into shapo: All healthy persons like their dinners, but the dinner Is not tho main object ol their Uvea. Ho all healthy minded people like making money—ought to like It and enjoy the sensation of winning it but the main object of their lift' Is not money, it Is something better than money. Good doctors would rather cure their patient and lose their fee than kill him and get it. And so with all other rightly trained men, their work Is tlrst, tho fee second—very Important always, but atill second, llut in every nation, as I said, tbcro is a vast lasM who is Ill-educated, cowardly, and more or less stupid. And with those people, Just as contrary, tho fee is first and tho work second, as with brave people the work is first and tho fee second And this is no small distinction. It is the whole distlnctien In a man distinction betwoen heaven and hell lor him You cannot servo to masters—you must norve one or the other. If your work is first with you and your fee seoond, work is your muster, and the lord of work, wfio is Ood. If your foe Is first with you and vour work second, feo is your master, and tho lord of fee, who is tho devil —and not only the dextl, but the lowest Of devils—tho "least orectcd fiend that fell." So there you have it in brief terms Work first, you are God's aorvants feo first, you are tho'fieud's.
PERNICIO I'd JU VtlSA LI'S if. (Krotu I he Boston Pilot.] Thore is no excuse for those who read papers that publish thoso sensational reports. In every city there are decent journals, which may bo brought into the home without danger to children. Parents are guilty of a crying sin who allow their boys and girls to read horrible things that 'should forever be kept out of sight and knowledge. In respectable papers that are ably conducted will be found every interesting piece of news, and all tho commercial information that may needed, llv refusing to buy tho patters that publish these reports, the evil may Iks cured. Demand creates supply. One man .'an do little but let every one who has children or who cares for the good ot noeiety, act fbr himself. Hv arming women and girls with pistols, they may be able to save thoiusel ves at times, but this self-defense is not a cure of the evil. Men will eontinuo to lo stronger than women. This is moral not physical. We must get back our respwjt'for women, by cultivating manly virtues, and tho man who would do thl« should pnt his foot upon every petty and great story of vie® that oomos in his way, and express his contempt for the teller, whcUUec it be a manor a newspaper. .....
Kjurraut papers liavo several times referred to the terrible trial of Brother M.xnly, the Evang. V»-t, by phonography—a trial to which neither St. I'aul ror Phrysostom was sutyected. Moody, poor urott, is sensible of thla. He said in an Ititerrlew with a reporter of the New York Tribune:
I am the most overestimated man In this country. Ity seme means the pe»pi© look npon ine as a great man, but am onlv a lay preacher, and have little learning. I dent know what will become of rao if the newspapers continue to print all of my sermons. My stock will 1« exhausted by and by, and I must repeat the old Ideas and teachings. Brooklyn every Sunday hear* a score of lietter rmons than I can preach. I cant get up such sermons as Drs. Rndington and itiyler and Talmage, and many other* who preach hero w*ek at» ter week. I dou't know what 1 shall de."
I°v
:,k.?
A ftAP (KtllrWUlf Of rWWt GAH) in »j ynp^. neighboring State fives Jo*»d warning again* the too frequent habit of boxing ch »r*«H The frther of a child rears ojU, was wont to punish him by boxing his ears, and yielding to *udd': *n»t uS*e doubt struck ranch
1
w* mb Intended. From the
cflfaeta of this beeame mUr*.
intent the child has UW. Many paienta
are guii'v of boxing the oars of their ©luMrvo, a tvt.m.iii
pr.,-.r-
which
Si^ a be aba., 1 I and Jemned.]this The car to an '^'.y dohoate or* ui. whoM cwmrnA tqr a thin a. mbranc jieciaJly adspted to the Influence of eiort vw.rrtjon,. sir.
ear the flat ef tha fttotdach
hand fa c-i' olated te .*'n »r BiURt bwk 'his ui 'mbraae,« mc-iksal »i- i.ye« lis -i-.J.-.S that d«-»-nesa Often «n* it ameeflrotn losing the etv-
Censure la the tax a man pays to the sample public for being eminent.—[Swift.
BQ2TTDOIT.
f. {LegaiuQMMt Pharos.]
Don dun a worthleaa debtor. He has done you, and that should settle It. Don't rush Into a lawsuit If your pock etbook be empty. Ton have reached the po4nt by another route.
Don't daun that man exoela woman in the fine arts. Our women paint remarkably well.
Don't attempt toe much. The man who masters the Law has no business with the Gospel.
Don't apologize for a poor preacher by saying "be is a good num." Thero fs not a pulpit for every good man In the oouutry, and vice versa.
Don't sav that an Idle man can not make a reputation. A Logansport grocer has the reputation of being the laziest man on the Wabash.
Don't turn up your nose when you soe a man reading Godey's Lady's Book. The poor fellow is not responsible for his sex.
Don't imagine that you can make a fortune in the »how business. In the outoome you will have nothing to show but your ears.
Don't lail to bo polite on all occasions. No well bred lady will intrude when gentlemen are smoking.
Don't dream that God gave you more than your share of brains. Those whom you think He has alighted will be content after taking your measure.. ..
A FAIR OA MR BUT NOT EQUAL. During the war a Georgian started to Marietta with some chickens for sale. He met a squad of soldiers, and they bought all his chickens but one rooster He ami thoy buy.
should tako him, but couln't
isted they out of monoj', and
The old man said ho hated to go to town with oulv oue chickeu, itud was greatly puzzletf about it.
At last one of tho soldiers said "Old man, I'll play you a game of •oven up for him."
Agreed," said tho old man. They played a long and spirited game. At last the soldier won. The ola man rung tho rooster's neck and tossed him at the soldier's feet, and mounted his swab-tailed pony and started home. After getting sonio two hundred yards he suddenly stopped, turned around, and rode back and said
You nlaytkl a {ar game, and won the rooster farly, but I'd like to know what in tho h—1 you put up agin that rooster."
TOO MUCH ETIQ UR'l TE. Yankee traveler out West has written to his mother, telling her his experience, as follows: "Western poople are death on etiquotto. You can't tell a man be lies, without fighting. A few da ago a man was telling ono of his ncig bora, in my hearing, a pretty large story Says I, 'Stranger, that's a whopper!' Havs ho, 'Lay there, stranger'and in the twinkling of an eye I found myself in the ditch a perfect quadruped. Upon another occasion says I to a man I never saw before, as a woman passed 'That isn't a specimen of your Western women, is it?' Kays ho, 'You're afraid of fever and ague, aiu't you?' 'Very much,' says I. 'Well,' replied he, 'that lady Is my wife and If you don't apologize in two minutes, by the honor of a gentleman I swear that these two pistols'—which he he held cocked in his hands—'shall sure you of that disorder entirely.' So I knelt down and politely apologized. I admire the Western country much but darn me if I can stand so much etiquette—it always takea uie unawares."
:E
nOW A DEAD IIOO KILLED A MA N. The Pensacola, Florida, Gazette says A negro man in tho adjoining county of Baldwin killed a largo hog in the woods. Ho opened the animal, removed the entrails and devised a method of carrying the pork which was altogether sui generis. This manner of transportation was effected by tying the hind legs tgether, passing his head betweon them, and, tho heavy carcass bolng In front, easing the weight on his neck bv lifting on the fore legs with his hands. It Is presumed that he got along romarkably well until a rail fence got in liis wav? ami in order to climb this ho needed his hands. Accordingly ho rellovod them by lifting the hog over the top rail and letting it drop on tho other aide. It is presumed th.it ho proposed to follow the hog, but ho didn't. A few days since a congregagatlon of buzzards attracted attention to a locality where a negro man was foynd on ono side of a fence and a hog on tho other, the weight of the animal evidently having pressed his neck down upon Uhs rail until ho was choked to death.
I A HOME QUESTION.", (Detroit h'nv I'm*.] A Detroit lK»y surprised bis father the other day by asking:
Father, do you like mother?" Why, y«*, of coursc." •'And abo likes you?" do
Did she ever say so?" Manv a time, my son." Did she marry you bocauso she loved yon?" "Certainly she did."
The boy looked the old mau over, and after long pause, asked: Woll, was she as near lighted then as she is now?"
Thk difference between perseverance nod obstinacy is that one often comes from a strong will, end the other from a
f\Rm*Pttox in our National afflriia has the same effect on the Government tiuit a severe cough or cold has upon the human system. Political reform in the former and Dr. Bull's Dough Syrup in the Istter case will remedy the evila. At the druggists. 2* eeota. i«pi -H" DYSPEPSIA,
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING
GOLDEN WORDS.
Oar dead are never dead to us until we have forgotten them. The miserable have no other medicine but only hope.—[Shakspere.
They go for the fairest way to heaven that wou Id serve Ood without a hell. [iBr Thomas Browne.
The shortest way to arrive at glory would be to do that for oonscienoe whien we do for glory.—[Montaigne.
It Is a strange desire, to seek power and to lose liberty or to seek power over others, and lose power over a man's self. [Bacon.
Any coward can fight a battle wheu he's sure of winning but give me the man who has pluck to fight when he is aure of losing—(Geo. Eliot.
Ood Is the only being who has time enough but a prudent man, who knows bow tf seize occasion, can commonly make shift to find as much as bo needs. —[Lowell.
Pleasures are but a shield of melting wax, against a sword of power, they can no more keep an evil conscience from tormenting than a velvet sleeve can keep a broken arm from aching.
Thero is seldom a line of glory written upon tho earth's face but a nne of suffering runs parallel with it and they that read the lustrous syllable of the one, and stop not to decipher the spotted and worn Inscriptions or the other, get the lesser half of Tim to give.
Hero is a gem from David C^opperfield "She dieu," said I'olly, "and was never seen again, for sho was buried in th# ground where the trees grow.
Tho cold ground?" said tho child shuddering again. No, the warm ground returned Poily, "where tho uglv littlo seeds are turned into angels and tly away to heaven."
Children are children as kittens are kittens. A sober, sensible old cat, that sits purring leforo tho fire, does not troublo herself beeauso her kitten is hurrying and dashing here and there, In a fev'er of excitement to catch its own tail. She sits still and purrs on. People should do the same with children. One of the difficulties of homo education is tho impossibility of making parents keep still it is with them, out of affection, all watch and worry.
Wo canna believe that Thou wouldst gie us ony guid thing, to tak' the same again for that would be but bairn's play. We believe that Thou takest, that Thou mayest gio again the same thing better nor afore—mair o't and better nor wo could ha' received it otherwise just as the Lord took himself frae the sij o' them that loved
Eiaronts
This is the only route between
lit
him weel, thatln-
stead o' being veesible afore their een, he might hide himself in their hearts.—[George Macdonald.
When I look upon tho tombs of the
freat,
every motion of envy dies when read the epitaps of the beautiful, every inordinate desire forsakes me when I moet with the griof of parents upon a tombstone, my heart melts with compassion when 1 see the tombs of
themselves, I reflect how vain it to grieve for those whom wo must soon follow when I seen kings lying beside those who have deposed them when I behold rival wits placed side by side, or tho holy men who divided the world with their contests and disputes, I reflect with sorrow and astonishment on tho frivolous competion, factions and debatos of mankind.—[Addison.
ST. PAUL!
GO NORTH FROM CHICAGO Via the Chicago A North-Western Railway. It is tho route direct from Chicago to Milwaukee. Manitowoc, Sheboygan, Two Rivers, Ht. Paul, Minneapolis, Madison, Winona, Green Bay, Kucanaba, Marquette, L' A use, Houghton, Hancock,and nil |olnta npjrtli.
It is the inly route for
ir!*
JMIIJW AI'KEK,
JarieSVille, Watertown, Fond dn Lao, Fort Howard, Oshkosh. Negauueo, Calumet, (L. 8.) Marquette, lVAna«j, and the shores of Lake Hujx'rlor, under one management.
Chicago and St. Paul,
Via Madison, llaraljoo ami Klroy, ami is the ONLY route running Puilmau Palace v.ui but ween chleajto and Ht. Paul.
This is tlm tthortesl, quickest and Best Route to St. Paul and Minneapolis. Wi t.i
California!
Have jou auy thought of going to Call-
''AreVon Kbina West, North or2s"ortli-Wost? Vou want to Know the Ix-st routes to take The shortest, safest, onlekest and most comfortable route* are those owned by the CbiCa«oaad Kofth-western Railway Company. Itowusover two thousaud miles of
the best l-oad
tm
D. L. Moopt furnishes the world with the following line of conduct which is worth reading, ami more, worth practicing. to-wit: "I have been asked by some If I was going to answer some of the arguments of the opposition. Answer? Ten thousand times No. I have something better to do. If email aU tends to his buainem he succeeds if he gets into controversies ho spends his strength for naught, and fails. Even Job, who eouid withstand a scolding wift\ could not stand the arguments of tho three men who came to him. Young converts, give a deaf ear to controversy, and hasten to the great work Mod has for you to do."
there
Is
in the country. Ask
anv ticket agent to show yon Hs map* and time cards At I ticket ageuU can sell you through tMeets by this route.
Ruy your tickets via the Chicago A Ncgth-, Western Railway for SAX FRAXCIStO, Rirsramento, B*it l#ke ('It)', Cheywine, TVuvcr, Omaha, Lincoln, Cooftcil Bluffs, Yankton, Kloux City, Duhnque. WJnouj*. i'aul, Dulutb, Marqnettc, Green Bay, oskosh, Madison, Mllwsukee, and all noluts w««tor northwest of Chicago?
If you wish the best traveling accommodations, yftu will l«iy your tickets by ihts route, and ill Uke no other.
This txii.u'ar route Is unsnrimssetl far Hpecd, Comfort and Safety. The ftmooth, Well-ltallasted and Hwrfsct Track of Steel lulls, W««tinghouse Air BraKes, Miller's Hafety I'lRtftirm and Couplers, the celebrat•d Pullman Palaee Sleeplna Cars, the Perfect Telegraph Hystem of Moving Trains, the nwularlty wlU» which they ruij, the admirable arrangement Tor running Throu«»i Car* from ChlrtMCo to all points West, Xorth and North-West, secure* to passenger* all UwoJiM FORTS^K MODERSRA1LWA TRAVKL1NO.
Pullman Palace Cars Am run on all trains of this road. This ts the ONLY LINK mnnfn* the*
cats
between Chlcag*) and Milwaukee. At Omaha our me«per» conncct ah the Overland Sleepers on the Cnton l*aclfle Rail ft: River.
eews*
Railroad »r all potnu wtmi of ta« MMouri Ivor On the anrfvnl of the trains fh»m the Bast or ttoutb, ibe twins of thef NortijWextern Railway leave CH1CAUO aa toir^wmeil Omaka and Cnii/omia, two thmneh trains dally, wttb Pullman Palace tn n« Ro»m and Sleeping Qh« throuah .joncJl Blullk.
U,KS£SS^!''
Water-brash, y»m-
Ing up of the food, ited gtwable taste In the mouth, !»alp*Ution of feo Heart, and all toeases of the «o Utfr. Two do«Mi of
Ararsnr KIX.wkr rtllevf1 noe, and there positl y*? »2 in Ee United m»lm it wHI nM you doubt this go to jmori
Imiflixh, droves A Ixjwry, and get a Mmnia bottle for 10 cents and try i^
10
ilpfular sl« 75 cent*.
SSttSSSiSl
lm iiu'ily, with night
trsf«.
,-r-if f..-» vw.
Im6la« .• •. i«ht ''4 (V/ .» -d I tWO l-uilnidti uar* to Missouri
T*u Car«
an) ten
AYER'S
CATHARTIC PUIS,
Far all Uie P«r|Maea «r
FA HILT PHYSIC*..*
Sold by all druggists and dealers in mecicine. tooetltf
.AYEIl'S* v*
Ague Cure,
KOK TtlK SPEKOV RRMRF OK-
Pever and Apnc, Intermittent Prver, Cliill Fever, Rcinlltcut Fever, Dumb Acuc, Periodical or Ulllotis Fever, Ac and Indeed all the nfrectlona which ariae from innlarlouH.mnrsb, or inlasmatic poisons.
Has been widely used, during the last twenty-five years, in the treatment of these distressing diseases, and with such unvarying success that it lias gained the reputation of being infallible. The shakes, or chills,once broken by it, do
not return, until the disease Is contracted again. This has made It an accepted remedy, and trusted spoclflc, for the Fever and Ague of the West, and the Chills and Fuver of the South.
Ayer's Ague Cure eradicates the noxious poison from the system, and leaves the patient as well as before the attack. It thoroughly expels Uie disease, so that no Liver Complaints, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Dysentery or Debility follows the cure. Indeed, where Disorders of the Liver and Bowels have occurred from Miasmatic Poison, It removes the cause of them and they disappear. Notonly Is It an effectual cure,but, if taken occasionally by patients exposed to malaria, it will expel tho poison and protect them from attack. Travellers and temporary residents In Fever and Ague localities are thus enahled to defy the disease. The General Debility which is so apt to en-, sue from continued exposure to Malaria, has no speedier remedy.
For Liver complaints. It is an cxcell*nt remedy. |jPREl'AttEO BY
DK. J. t. AY Kit & CO.,
LOWELL, MAHH.,
Practical and Analytical Chemists,
Sold by all druggists and dealers In medicine. to oct ID
R&TTONIC ELIXIR& LIQUID EXTRACT OF BEEF
CONTAINS BEEF JUICE,TONICS & MILD CATHARTICS & IS AN IMPRO VEMENT ON LIEBICS EXTRACT
Ext. S
a
fi
Sir Francis Handolph'a proc(«s.) O a at I S I Alkaloids of Cinchona, .3 1. Pepsin Sacchsrated, 5 1J Ext. Diostna Deod. .3 1.
•U
Minn'Vtpulit.twothmagb
trains dillv. with Pullman Palace can at-
*br lire*.i MW twO traJrU'laUy. with Pollmwi PalawCanat•jtrhed. ac' running through to Marquette. pST,.VJb f*ur through traliw dally.
't.rooch
.. m.ni two to
••.
K.ytmeaa
iSLtXL.
••Jfortna'.kw attainable h'2- -tkslwtaaw.'-.apidyto IAIVIXMIOHITT.
W, H. #TE**STT, Oen 2 Pass. A«t.
nt.
MAJJU
C*atl veaeaa Isas4 i«c,B)r«. pepala,lndlKealiM, •ysealery, Vral Ittnach 3:
and Breath. Er. slat acfce.Ptles, Blien mallim, Ernp. alma and Nkfii Dlaeaa««.Blllans eaa, Liver Com. plalat, Drspay,
Tetter, Tnasara aad Salt Rliram, Worma. Goat. IVenralgia, aa a Ilaaer Pill, aad Parltylag the Blood, are the most congenial put-Rative yet perfected. Their elTecta abundantly show how much they excel all other Pills. They art* sate and pleaannt to take, but powerful to cure. They purge out the Haul humors of the blood tuey stimulate the sluggtab or disordered organ into set
Ion and they Im
part health and toae to the whole being. They euro not only the every day eoralaintsof everybody, but formidable and
euro not only the every day
langerous dlsea.*es. Moat skillful physicians, most eminent clergymen, ami our best citizens, send certificates of cures performed and of great benefits they have derived from these Pills. They are the safest nnd best physic for children, becntwe mild as well as effectual. Being sugar coated, they are easy to take and being purely vegetable, they are entirely harmless.
rKEPARKD DY
DR. J. IYER & CO., LOWKI.L, MASS., ». Practical nnd Analytical Cheitilsts.
Mr Ml _,
vtt *.!«
mm
EIISHA HAVENS
4 Ji'j
•t
•.
n-
5.'^:
S
THIS MEDICINE IS PRESCRIBED BY PHYSICIANS FOR THE CURE OF INDIGESTION .CONSTIPATI ON DYSPEPSJ A, HEADACHE PILES FEMALE.CHILDREN. BL ADDER.STOMACH '.: I ONLY.'.IVER
F.ICHARDSON g, TULLirCF PfiOP'5
URANGS
Rheumati Remed
Will most positively cure any ease of rhenmstlsm or rheumatk* «out, no matter bow loa« standing, oo the faoe of the earth. Hrlng an Inward application It does the
person
loctoV City.' and you will learn that the above statement la true in every particular CUN1E$»EI CEltTI FICATE8.
K*TtO*At.
Ilorxt., mtUiL I vW. liCl.j
Wasbingl
«r«. 1t^lpen'«tlBe 4 lfc*ntley (Him: I v«*ry el«srfuHy nats Hut I need will* drcldod
BMM
STSflhtPHiSS'"
4 m*#* M«mb«r of Cmuirim of ihL
PtUBUOKjmAl. MAXSIC Warittlncton, I April SS, I
It^nt*: For the past seven year* my wife has bmsimt suflVpwfrotn rb*umAtl*rn, -pf t! tors to fdfe her ndlrf. »h« ••skU' 1 unnintV Rhmfttlle R««* mr. nod a pwwuuwat eure wwsthe mmiu
h%4 *yf»
BUTCHE1U4TALU)W..~ WI am nlgnmnit« will
t*'
ff
m- mi
Stmh.}
Means II#tpw»s«lBe Beutiey: For th«
WM. A.C1V*K.
ilfft to Prwddmt Ottni. Waswi^otow, 0. Mareh
*.!.€« mui^a my rhfftitna-
iiu. tt»Mof iwdv scours roy ,, tuivtoc tskm threw 4flw«of I Remedy. My brnlhrr,
I of '*a* doll,- "r six b«»?:".•'« ?"'f A
Itemetr. mtttnf VjlTIXKi UK?»Tl.fV, D".:iijlsts andUtMsw".,
I
WMblngmii ft. t.
Wholesale .Trade of ,Jene-Eaut|r
Ihe following Wholesale Houses of Terror Haute are sappied with a fall stock of FRESffl i. ?RI(M GOODS.whichwiUbe sold atBOTTOM PRII -H?
HULMAN&COX.-
WHOLESALE 6E0GER8I
AND DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF
Domestic and Foreign Wines and liquors,
Cigars and Tobacco, Flour, Salt, Nails,
CORKER HAIN AND FIFTH STREETS,
HAYENS & GEDDES,
WIIOLENALK DEALERS IN
Staple and Fancy Notions,
White Goods, Shirts, Hosiery, Glores, etc..
BETWEEN S1XTI?AND SEVENTH.
J. 9. BUTTON E. B. HAMILTON.
BUTTON & HAMILTON!1
WHOLRSALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
BOOKS and STATIONERY,.
"CENTRAL BOOK STORE,"'
529 Main Street, Terrc-IIuute, I ml.
WILSON BROS. & HUNLEY,
Nnceeasora to TUKLI^ RIPLEY A DEWING,
WHOLESALE DRY GOODS 11
CORNER 5th AND MAIN STREET,
TEHH^HAITK, INDIANA. '•3ms
CRAWFORD, O'BOVLE & CO.
:-.m KXCI.r.SI VKL.Y
W O E S A E
.u T. RIDDLE}
W O E A E E A I
Millinery, Straw Goods,
,:M!j RIBBONS, FANCY GOODS, dee. toll*, Cinrlnnatl or CklCMgo' trade Solicited.
W111 Duplicate liidianaj^
Good
IIOLEMAU: li:.VLEH IX
•f* ii» rmcM or
2*
BLOOD DISEASES.L0S3 or APPETITES GENERAL PROSTRATION 01" THE NEF.VCUS SYSTEM LAF.ClBoTT„cs^ TK.aLS /1 sc*
3IDKH, green light, 2« to 6# llm ilo green, heavy (10 lbs bjiiI over
1
ft
1
.SsWi
if
x. .i
SS-ls-J. i'-- 4 ?f
&c.,"
Terre Haute, Indiana.*
'K ,Z,V*rTS'*i ,« .rs
»».!'»•
ROBERT OEDDK
Mtssmmwvaam
mm
.*
Boots and Shoes,
ISO Main Street, Terre Hante, Indiana.
•-S fl.'
1,
_. df
1' H- *$
I
V»v
ii
r(
ti*** (iAAtrl tm JSihnr i*
Laces,
¥iiih
If. RIDDI.B, 151 Bfnln Hi., Terre Hkiilc,
BTJRITETT,
LEATHER and HIDES
CALF KIP
"11
"I
1 ,r
140 MAIS ST., TERRE HAUTE, IM».
to-dat, ak» wot tomorrow,, Unlestt agreed upon by »p®cl«l Contraou »i TA TtT
flQ
do grryrowilt rnrctl trlmmwl. do dry fltat, trimniod do dry wait, irimamd 10® 11 CALK, 7 to 15 ft., It' K!P,«r«»n, lflff5o2Stti (Ball, Long Unlr, out and dam iMCcd *'1 Piic««) li^pHlclnn. citybnt^hrr*..... fl 80112 80 ijamoand Hhnrrllng»i...^»«..«...— ^. SWQ-40
tit.
LEATHER.
BEST PLAtTOHTKIl HOLE OAK HAH^^*H UPPKR, FKH FOOT,
KHENCH CALK HKIN K11' jrri.l, AMNORTMKfrr or Topping*, Llnlagfi 4t Sh*« riRil«|f.
Ing aui selling Rtoclt almost excli»lve for cub. All order* and oon* •tstmmc^liite nnd pmmpt attention.
I JOBTIKBS KSV DBAUIRH OT
(tneeoawAre, OlanwtNii^ ut, f-ampi, Etc. j,
HEAlHiUAltTERfl FOIl'
wuRWlsrs P»? FJitiafc ti A aarconntfy Jobbing Trade •oUott*d.*n4 (imnntMvl l«w aa any Woatern QweaimeEoaN.
ham arsEEi^
the HIGH HIT CA»n PRICE PAIlJ FOB PRODBQt
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fl
OOIDUOTWE
BIPPKTOmS
Rlppeto«*a
Yon
will alway*
and
Tna BMt
RVOAWI,
TEA 9,
And »11 0tffU and Fancy
Qroeeriea.
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