Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 6, Number 23, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 December 1875 — Page 3

A Paper

HOTEL

an

TH EMAIL

for tub

People.

WARSINO TO £ARf.Y RJ&J6R& The Christian at Work (singular n»roo for a paper advancing wich a theory,) advises people to ilwp lata. For fkriuora, It mtx,and Uwwse who lire in localities where people can retire at eight or nine o'clock in the evening, tho old notion about early rising 1* atlll appropriate. Bat he who U» kept up till ten or eleven or twelve o'clock, and then rises at ttva or aix, because of the teaching* of some old ditty about "early to rise/' ia committing a *fn against God and hla own immiL There to not one man in ten tbooaaud who can afford to do without seven or eight hour*' aloop. All the Muff written atxftit great tuen who slept ou ly tbroo or four hour* a night is apocry phal and a lie. Thoy have been put upon such small allowance occasionally, and prospered but no man ever yet kept healthy in body and mind tor a number of years with leas than seven hours' sleep. Americana need more aleep than they are getting. This lack makes them so nervous and tho insane asylums so populous. If you can g't to boa early, then rUe early. If you «*an* not get to bed till late, then rise laU\ It may be aa Christian for one man to rit*« at eight as it is for another to rise ft llv\ We otnncll the readers of The Christian at Work to get up when they aro re*tetL But let the rousing-bell be rung at least thirty minutes before your public ap pearanoe. Physicians say that asudden tump out of bed jjives irregular motion to the puliw-8. It takes hours to pet over a too sudden rising. It is barbarous to expect children instantly to land on the centre of the limir at tne call of their nurses with the thermometer below *ero. Give u* time after you call us to roll over, gazo at tho world lull lu tho Uce, and look before we leap.

CLFHK.S AS DIAMOND JtHUKEHS.

A Chicago corresdondent of the Cour-ier-Journal reveals tho*e nauseous snol» and swells, tho average hotels clerks of tho Northern cities, in a mow characterthat of diamond brokers. Of the busl newt done by them in that city ho aays

At our fourgrcat hotels—the Palmer, Grand Pacitic, Trumont, and Sherman— tho value of diamonds sold by clerk* and their rotunda-brokers exceed $100, 000 nnnuallv. Aside from these palaces we have fufiy a doaen «ther hotels »*ach aa tine as tho averugo American hotels, and at ono of thewo alone, the Matteaon, tho chief clork sold #30,000 of diamonds in UJ74. to my personal knowledge. "Tho Chicago hotel-clerk diamond trade mu*t amount to fully fi!00,000 annuallv. Most of the clerks here who have held exceptionally go»d positions for a term of years aro rich, possessing th«'ir own establishments and fast horse*. 1 have ono in mind, John Hickey, now tired, who was night clerk for Uagv Brim, and Kice for nearly twenty jr«-ai in their different houses, who is to-day worth $150,000. It will bo seen that, aside from tho "tips" for giit-odgid worna, pAsaea to theatres, which ure uii bhmhliigly sold with regular tickets, traffic in stolon or discounted railroad ticko'.s, and hush-money from partis traveling on tiie Kuropean plan, the bona hotel clerk is a man to huinp your vertebra too, for ho is not impudent without the rocks, or assumptive without tho roady. Nine out of ten in Chicago are as rich as snobbish and overbearing, and that Is saying a good aeal.

Wm. U. Aktok, one of the richest men In the rnited States, died Wednesday o. last weok, leaving behind him a sugar plum amounting to some eijjhly millions of dollars. The announcement of bis death wai U-lgraphed from one end of the world to tho other, not beoaum he was «reat orgo«xl, lut for tho simple reason th:»t ho was the illustrions |*hs«ssorofati extraordinary estate. liblife was devoted to saving up thon»l lions left by his father, and adding oth or millions* which e*me to him a* the naitiral Increase of his orlglna' pattjmny. lie left no evidence uohlnd of any isirtleular Interest In his kind, and the vast wealth which did him no good and of which he made so little use, will doubtless, either In this generation or the next, be dissipated by some spendthrift, The money waa of eoumo his own, and iiia rt*ht to do with it as he pleased none will deny, but people will still have their own opinions, and we predict that most of them will think, with vis, that the man who hoards vas» sums «*f money for the simple ploasun of hoarding, 1* not a profitable member of society while living, and when dea'l deservttt tw» eulogy. Nit i»*« bonum tie moi^mm is a sentiment older than the Aslor estate, and while not Intending to disregard It wo are painfally conscious of toe fact, that to apeak nothing but good of Mr. Astor would render it neotmaarv to make no reference whatever to hla Itfc, character and demise.

T2IK COMING WINTKR. ,t In a recent publication, the far-fatood Prof. Tic*, of St. I/nils, takes direct lahu« with his lately discovered rival, Prof. Cru®g*r, of Wisconsin, by saying:

Tho coming winter certainly will not be an agreeable one. Flrat cold, really so, will sot in about tho 'JUh of November, and continue fbr nearly a week. It will be warmer about the nib of December, and then cold tor another we«k. will be warmer from the 15th to the 18th, and then cold again. About the S*h it will be warm, and abont the 30th cold to very cold until January 8 then wantMr UU Ui« lfeh then very cold to the 2Mh then warmer tor a few day*, fallowed by cold weather till about the clote of tb© "month. Tt»e month of Kebruary will be very boisterous generally warm, but abort spelia of Intensely cold w—tber.

WHA TI HA %'RSKKS.

An old man of much experieneesayt: I have tmn a ytmngtna* sell a good Rum, turn wertnent, end die In an inaaneaayluta.

I have eeeft a tkrm** travel abont so oinch that th#re waa nothing at bo too worth looking at. ,n 1 have wa man fppwid more mortey h» tolly than wtmld support hla «Mttlly in com tort and ludepeswerKie,

I hs% wen a man lisstttt

pmwy a

depart from truth

wl r# oaftdor ted veracity woold have served I to tatiefc terttwr porp«f»-

GOLDEN WORDS.

He wbo establiabes hla argue that noise and oommand shows son is very weak.

God accepts men's hearty desires, and the will InMead of the deed when they havo not the power to fulfill It.

A woman dictates before marriage in order that she may have an appetite for aubmbaiou afterward*—[Georgo HUot.

Tbe eervloea of God is the similitude of a grain that hath produced seven ears —in each ear a huudred gndn».*-^M bammed. &S&3 1 here is nothing like taking all yon do at a moderate estimate, it keeps ind and body tranquill whereas grandiloquent notions are apt to hurry both into lover.—{C. Bronte.

The tbougtitloss man, even If bocan recite a largo portion of the law, but is not a doer of it, has no share in the priesthood, but is like a cowherd eoantngthe cows of other*.—[Buddha.

Poetry Is not made out of the understanding. Tho question of common sense is always "What is it good lor?" a question which would abolish the rose and bo triumphantly answered by the cabbage.—(Ijuwell.

Tho man who lives right and is right has more power in his silence than another has by his words. Character is like bells, which ring out sweet music, and which, when touched accidentally even, rosound with swoet music. 'Tis sad work to be at that pans, that the best trial of truth must bo the multitude of bcliovers, in a crowd where the number of fools so mneh exceeds ihatof the wise. As if anything were so common as ignorance.—[Montaigne.

Tbe wonderiul contradictions of tbe human heart are never seen so clearly as when after a long and arduouscliHse, wo reach ami catch the Hying, wishedfor good and immediately throw It dowu as worthless, because, forsooth possessed.

One cannot lfear to pay for articles he used to get for nothing. When Adam laid out his tifst penny upon minparoil at some fruit stall in Mesopotn »ia, 1 think it went hard with him, reflecting upon his old good Iv orchard where he had so many for nothing.—[Lamb.

What is this world? A dream within a dream. As we grow older, each step has an inward awakening. The j-ontli awakes, as ho thinks, from childhood tbe full grown innn despises the pursuits of youth as visionary—the old man looks oil manhood as a feverish dream Is death the last sleep? No It is th« last final awakening.—[Sir Walter Scott "I cannot call riches letter than the havrgage of virtue the Roman word i.better impedimenta. For »s bagK*g' is to an army, so is riches to virtue cannot be spared nor left behind, it hlndereth the march,—yea, and the pare of it sometimes losetb or disturbeth the victory." A consoling thought of Ba ••oil's for those who are in light marching order, or subsist on the conntrj'!

No mocking in this world ever sound to me so hollow as that ot being told to cultivate happiness. What does such advicomeau? Happiness is not a pota to to bo planted in mould and lilhd with manure. Happiness is a glor\

Inning far down upon us out of heaven. SUe is a dhine dew which tho soul, on ortain of its summer evenings, feels dropping upon it from tho amaranth bloom and golden fruitage of Paradise [C. Bronte.

They are strong who suppose that life must be a continual struggle to be pure, good and worthy. The earnest desire, which when opportunities occur manifests itself in generous or useful service, is sufficient proof of the loyalty of the soul. Thoso who are so placed that enleavor and achievements in practical well doing is cherished there, may rest isstirod tliat their impationco is tho indication of their own worthiness. They also servo wbo only stand and wait."

FROM T1IK A F»y OF DEA TJf.

Thrilling Situation of a Little Chitd.

A thrilling sceno waa enacted at the Fort liomestead tunnel. Gold Hill, asnn ore train was passing down on its way to the Carson river. The train, drawn hy the locomotive "Tahoe," Al. Yoo man, conductor, and Johnny Klkins. engineer, left Virginia at 1:30, and was Just passing out at the wost end of the tunnel when tho engineer was horrified at seeing a small child lying upon tho track, and more than thirty or forty f*ot ahead of his engine. Ho instantly whistled "down brakca." Fortunately the conductor and a brakenian happened to bo back at proper points on the train, and both put on brakes with a will, knowing from tbo wild »nort of the whistle something unusual was tho matter. At tho moment of whistling, tho engineer reversed his engino and let on all the steam. It seems that the mother had heard the train coming, and missin her child, ran to tbe railroad to see if it had strayed thither, tihe came in sight of tbo child Just as the whistle ••onnded and the eaglno was revered, and ru*hed forward to snatch It from the track. The engine still came thundering on, and was so near tho child that seetned certain that the nondereus wheels would crush tjio infant before she eon id ranch It, Uttering a wild crv, tbe mother fell to tbe ground in a awoou when within less than ten feel of her child. This accident to the mother sent a pane through the heart of the engineer, aa ue bad hoped that she would reach and rescue tbo child. All had been done that could be done to stop tbe train, yet it Mill moved forward, But, to lunakce prev when the loeoraotlve feet of tho unconscious little "crawler." Br this time a doaen women mine ninn(ng to the twin, and wbea the* took in tbe situation, they shrieked and cried and hugged each ether, and waved their bonnets and aprons in benediction to Johnny Klkins mod when tbe vonngster waa lifted from tbe track and Johnny save his black steed the rein again and started alowlv down the ft«de, h«* stoker said: "\Vby, Johnny, y«o aee a* white aa a ghost see bow jour haw! shake* on the lever, and d—-n me if I (foot believe ymi are crying."—{Vlrjiiiia (Jtev.) Jfiotirpria#.

n, yet it still moved forward, the joy of all. steam and tbe rev ailed, and Um train stopped locomotive waa within three

wtrarft nt yrsiNo mm wkr* sfspwit '¥^4 ALf mwrui* NywiU

•7*™" naavrv, wm

4 is

1 have Use extrnvagaooc and follv of children bring their parent-* to \~ertv and wwut, and tbewwelvw to

Ibaw -n a prod wife tttn*^ thf when the busbai md the mpil 1 bare **o a wl» d«^4a-

,. luntriniiw

lei '.

fort'!!:«a «4 family l«ti "i-'d at i-' »er

tf mi

At a rocont funeral of a IMnlmry tuan One of the neighbors, a female of a very sympathetic naiur», waa Mxfoepiy afleethe attention oi Uiose atmmnU The wile of the doceassd, a chraacfc ir*ia 4*Uy. tan. rA-lamed woiban, noticing the s* «a tent# paid to the neighbor. Anally ap- hrat»»s dally, with Puiiouui

.. Hsrs 't Ji-

W't* i-t mnn: ibis fuiKscal? Yoa jhh or d- I'uslnifn tsrt t# .*•**

ment by people are often tike little boys bathing, his rea-

Wbo

J.

to* m..u«er*» care fa» »-o pr«. «1»t# Il»-M .'..{air-*'- S"l ft-.-.n-uh-m rl-V-.- -c-r.'., »|-Iadiice' ||o,?*enei», Ir. IttiU** fVmjfh Syrtm HrttlllTT

Mthoe^^d. «mt «d la bo kept la «ty ami l'Hoo, stoaoiiu. i, w. u. nrMNtrY, UmI nw*.a»i.

TEKRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAHj.

UU TORTUS A TM MAMRIAQX& AoooMlng to the old joke, aurrtflS

cry with chattering teeth to the boys on the shore. "Do come in, ftli so warm," but It fa not always warm. There is no sadder picturs-4f It were not sueh an every-day picture—than two young people, married perhaps for love, at any rate for liking, but married In haste, to repont at leisure which they piteously do. Knowing little or nothing of each other's temper, taste or character, thoy slowly wake up to find these so diverse that it was morally impossible they oouhlbave been happy for very long and here they are, tied together, in the most intimate union that life allows, forever. A thought absolutely maddening at first, and with people of sensitive or impulsive natures. 1 fear, if we cobld look Into our neighbor's hearts, tbo cataloguo of suicides never committed, of elopements uuscoompllshed, even unperpetratod murders, would be, to those who see no diffurence between tbe thought and the act, something startllug, nay, appalling.

But these tragedies uo not happen—at leteat not olteu. They drop nt"geutee! comedy." "Can two walk together unless they be agreed Vary inasy oouples are not "agreed," far from it, ,yet seeing they must walk together somehow, they make up their minds to do it, and thoy do do it. Ayo, in spite of good-natured fnends, who cannot

help observing how uubappy they are and perhaps how happy they might both have been if each bud been married to a different sort oi person. But this is not the case they are married to the person whom they themselves chose, or fate chose for them. Tho thing is done, and there is no undoing it.

DRIJSKIJNQ A ASHINU TON. (Correspondence of I lie C'lnciin.all Commercial.]

WARniNOTOX, Nov. 27.—The eighth now seon here daily and nightly, and all day and all night, are sickening and alarmiug. I have seeu drinking in Washington before, and hard drinking at that, in saloons, at hotel bars, up in tne private rooms of boarders, down in tne basements of oyster shoos, but I never before saw such "gulping" as I see here now. Tho fiery flood is literalh ,.oured down by the half tumbler full without water/wiihout sugar, williout uiything to abate it# fury or lessen iitintense heat. Hell-lire could hardly be hotter and hell-lire, is what it will bi found to be. I havo seen a littlo of such wild drinking here before, but chief!\ unong Western men and men from the S luthwesfc But thaso class aro sur passed now by ca-Uarn men—nay, more, by New England men—and, stranger still, bv Connecticut men! And main id' the host of thent, or rather tho worst, country-born, village-schooled, collegeoducated.

COULDN'T WAIT.

Hurry back from church, for I want to hear what tho preacher says about Jesus," said Matthias Smith, of Kittan ning, Pa., to his wile, as she left tho house for church on Sunday morning last. When she returned homo alter church she found her husband hanging bv hi neck to a rope from ono or tin beams in tho kitchen ceiling. Ho was dead, and this .note lay ou tho kitchen table:

Dear Wife—You stayed too long. I was so anxious to hear about Jesus that could nouivait. I have gone to see him.

Mattiiias.

Deceased was soventv-two years old.

ST. PAUL!

UO JfOKTII FROM CHICAGO Via the Chicago North-Western Hallway. It is tiie route direct I'rom Chicago to Milwaukee. Manitowoc, Hhelto.vjjim, Two Kivers, su Paul, Minneapolis, Madison, Wino.a.UrecnJjay.Efcauaba, Maiquette, l/Anse. H. URhton, Hancock.and all points north.

It Is theenly route for I W I I E E JancsvIUc, Walertown, Fond Iac, Foil Howard, Oshkoah, Negaunee, Calumet, (1. H.) Marquette, l/Anse, and the shores oi Lake Superior, under one management.

This Is the only route between yhie ago ond I*nnl, Via Madison, Naraboo ami Kirov, and is th ONLY route running Hullman l'alace Car.1between Chicago aud Ht. I'uul.

This Is the shortest, Quickest aiv Test Route to8t. Paul and Minneapolis. I

California.

Have ou any thought of KOlng to California? ... .. Are you soinc West, North or North-West

You want to know the b.^t routes to take? The shortest, safest, quickest and most comfortable routes are those owned by the Chicago sad Noith-Western Hallway Coinjmnr. It own* over two thousand miles o* tbe bewt. roml ih«*re Is In tbo country. Ask

any

ticket agent to dhow you It* map* ami time cards All ticket asenlscan sell you through tickets by this .route.

Buy your tickets vlatheChlcago dt NorthWestern Hallway for NA* IRAKChfO, Saeramenio. Ogdeii, wall iJikc Ctty, t.1if• cnne, Denver, Omaha, Lincoln, council BlufTs, Yankton, sioux City, Pubnque. Ainoun, St. Paul. lHiiuth, Marquette, Green

Onkoslt. Madlsou, Alilwsukce, and all points west or northwest of Chlcaijo? If you wish the !w«t travelln* sccommodatloos,you will buy your tickets by thin route, and wl.l take no other.

This popular mute Is unsurpassed far Hpeed. Co nfort and Safety The Smooth. Well-Btt'lasted snd Perfect Track of Steel Kails, Westlnahouse Atr Brakes, MIllerN Hsfery I'lsiforin and Couplers, the celebratrsl rnllmsn I*slsce Slceptne Cars, the l»erfe Tele«raph stem of Movin* Trains

and North-Wi*t, secures to oawena^r*all the IXiMFDHTH' IN MOUKKlTRAILWAY TRAVKI.rNO,

PHllman Pilw* mrn I Are rvo on *11 train* of Uts toad.

This is lb* ONLY LINK running these can between Chicago jujd Mllwanlree. AtOmabsoar Hlcepcrs coon^ot with the Overland Sleeper* on the Vnlon l*acMe RnUrood for sir potnU went of the MbMoaii **On^he arrival of the train* from the Eh*I «w Sooth, tb« tr*

Ins of the ("h»."S«o Nectb-

Westera Raliwag CHIUAUO as lo»-

,0/%r

rbtf-nI JBmfi. OmmKa and fbl^brw«. two tbr*»u*h trsto* dally, with Pullman PiUac* (r»«tn« Room aad tl)««ff)ac Ou* through to Council BlufTV. rwm. PmIcwImmMesfHrite, I

trains dallr, with Pullman Palac* Cars attached on both trains. J%r Mm* «ad iMke At^rise, two trains dally, with Pullman ralar» r*r» a»nwtied. and mnnln* tbrowgh to Manjaeiie.

Ar MBtmmbmt. throogh traiaa dally. sd* pole^ii'lf to a, On» T-sr-i thlt- it ua RUM m. pun*", -via m-i »•,. dally. «.u« iViil f-ttt

t«s Mw

l*«il Vail#!?

',.1 YE R'6 "CATHARTIC PILLS,

For all (he Pnrpoaea ot

M'

VAHUY PI11M4

crmfNn Cos11 veaesa, Jaund ee. Dyspepsia*. IndlgWM* llM. Dysewtery, a N a and Breath. Kryalpelas, Ucadaene.PHes, Rhenmnllsm, Krnplions Mud Mkfa nt«eases.HIII*as iia. Liver Co*nplaial, Dropsy,

Teller, lumora and Nslt Hhean, Worms, Oont Bfenralgin, as l»iuaer Fill, and l*arllylng the Ulood, arc the most conm-ntul (uiritntivc yet perfected. Their effects abnnuantly show how inuoh they excel all other Pills. They are suto and pleasant to take, hut powerful to cure. They purge out tho foul humors of the blood they stimulate the fluuglsh or disordered organ Into action anil they Impart health and tone to the whole being. They cure not only the every day complaints of every body, but formMnbte and dangerous diseases. Mont skillful ptiyslcluns, most eminent clergymen, and out best citizens, send certificates of cures performed and of griml.

Im*uc(US

IHt. J.

AgueCtirS,

S VOIl TltK SI'KEnV KKl.IEP OF

Fever and Ague. Intermittent ever. Chill Ftver. Remittent Fever, llnmb \irne. l*erio«lierai or BIIIoum Fever. »Vc and Indeed all the alTeetlons which arise from malarious, marsh, or miasmatic poisons.

wnirn nnar or miasinati

Has b'-on widely used, during tie last .venty-five years, in tho treatment of these distressing diseases, and a-lth •Oil unvarying successthat It tas gained the reputation of helnit Infallible, 'the Rhakes, or chills,once broken by it, d-

not return, unit I the disease Is contracted again. This has made it an accepted remedy, and trusted specific, for the Kcvcrand Ague of the West, and the Chills and Kovei of the South.

Ayer's Ague Cure eradicates thenoxloun poison from tho system, and loaves the patient a* well as before the attack. It thoroughly expels the disease, so that no Liver Complaints, llhciunatlsiu, Neuralgia, Dysentery or Debility follows the cure. Indeed, where Disorders of the Liver and Bowels have occurred fri in Miasmatic Poison, it removes the cause of them and they disappear. Xotoniy Is It an ell'ectual cure, but, if taken occasionally by patientsexpo-ed to malaria, it will expel tne poison ami protect hem fro.n attack. Travellers and U-m porary residents in Fever and Ague localities aro thus enabled to defy the disease. The-Heticral Debility which Is so apt to ensue from continued exposure to Malaria, has no speedier reined v.

For Liver complaints, It is an excellent remedy. ruKrAiiKn BY vt.'i •.

DR. J. C1. ATEtt & CO.,f

LOWKLL, MASS.,

Pt-nctlral and Analytical Chemists,

Sold by all druggists and dealers In meliclue. to oct 10

K&TTONIC ELIXIR& LIQUID EXTRACTOFBEEF

CONTAINS BEEF JUICE.TONICS& MILD CATHARTICS & IS AN IMPRO YEMENT ON LIEBICS EXTRACT.

Ext. Camls. I 1J (Mr Krsuris llando'ph't proceu.) O a at I on 5 1 Alkaloids of Cinchona, .5 1. Pepsin Bacchsrated, 5 lj Ext. Dioama Dcod. .5 1.

THIS MEDICINE IS PRESCRIBED BY PHYSICIANS FOR THE CURE OF IM0IGESTI ON .CONSTIPATION DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE PILES FEMALE,CHILDREN. BLADDER STOMACH KIDNEY.lIVER BLOOD DISEASES,LOSS OF APPETITE& GENERAL PROSTRATION OF THE NEBV3US SY-STEM

URC[?0TTLE-5it:TRI*lSiUc!

I A SO N & E O S

URANCS

Rheumati Remedli

Will noit pofOilTeljr care any oun of rheumatism or rheumatic gout, uo matter how lone utindlng, on the face of the earth. Being ad Inward application It doea the work quickly, thoroughly and permancntira atrenitaad hea"" rite to any amtnloetU Demon In W

ly. leaving the ayateni atrenit *ud haaltiyr Write to any pmtnloetU pernon In Waahinnton City, and yon will learn that tbe above atatrnnent la tree In every particular.

Q0XPXNHKD UKHTIUCATBH. -"misiszsb.

7

wo thma«h

I

they have de­

rived from these l'llls. They are the safest and ts-st physic for children, because mild as well as effectual, lielng sugar coated, they are easy to take and being purely vegetable. they nre entirely harmless.**

t'UKI'AKKn 1IY

AY Kit A CO.

LOWKLT., MASS.,

Praetlenl and Analylleal Chemists.

Sold by all drugvlsts and dealers in mcclclne. tooctltl

AYER'S

V*

wa 5-- n-

ELIBIIA HAVhNH^

*.-p

I*

S

DTM*

HelpcouUr

Meeara. (ienta Daran«

Ine A Deatley

(irnU: I very cberrfully mate that I uaed Rlmn*l« lUMn^dy with A. H.HTKI'HKNH,

M#mhcr of Confriwa, of Cwu PiUBUDKsnrtAt. •4 Wanbtninon, l». r„

"KawaUnUkrk to lYtihleai tiiwn," WA»ni3»f»ro», D.CMatrh IM. IWl. In thm*p*r*o( ttmltmbMn my ritmmatiMtt vrMim«,baTlBtUlwfl Uim" dnar* of IWnma** Illwn»mtUfi! RPiwdjr. My hmtbflr. 2. it, Owu. of MAmt, l*a_ waa can*! tor a kUdlUur amount JiMiN CKh«'A,

WHOLESALE IlKALKR IX

.'s

iv

Hscml Ji pri^.)

V7Tiolesal& Trade of Terre-Hautai lhe following Wholesale Houses of Terr6Haute are sappied dth a fell stock of FR-CSH. GOODS, which will be sold at BOTTOM PRICES.

HULMAN &CoX.

WHOLESALE GROCERS!

AND DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF

Domestic and Foreign Wines and Liquors,,

Cigars and Tobacco, Flour, Salt, Nailst &c.t

1 CORKER IRAKI A1VD FIFTH (STREETS,

i«4»

j-4- fi

Wliit Goods, Shirts, ttosfrry. GIotch, etc., NO. 623 N(IX KTREET,TKjUlKHAFTE, INDIANA, BETWEEN SIXTH AND SEVENTH.

Ww*pHkln* el I hotelier*.- —II fiO Iaiud and sh«frlfii|P 30m40 BUTCHERS TALLOW 7^8

iil •rtit (S

tm

ijtr ttM

1 1 »:i*

AMiiakiwi.)

Mram HHdmuiUb*A BMtlk-y: (Mwtat lT»r U»o fMMrt wwb yrarm my *if»« baa b««a a nuffrfrr front rhmmail^m, h*-r doeton fiilfln* to bwr r»1 l#f. «b«qimkI Uttw MUt Bm-

—k«lv»tUiamaiio s?s n-siswr

MemXxtr of ftMU'wa of 1%.

PH#*».«i*46llar» bottia, oral* bottle B* tfoi anu Aak jrottT dru«gi»l or Kbe :"U»tlf »IK' rllKXMIHRA f.UJfTLK^. 4 lUUgB^:.-. !. .n

K«raalaby«' ... Moid by rfc„..,ici:u armuP** Ckmvs nt

-.U a-

tiJ IWO^/ A -t'

J. Q. BUTTON. ... A E.B. HAMILTON.

BUTTON & HAMILTON

"WHOLESALE ANT) RETATTj DEALERS IN

BOOKS and STATIONERY,

"CENTRAL BOOK STORK,"

V/.4. 525 Main Street, Tcrre-Hnntc, Iml.

WILSON BROS. & HOLEY*,t

NucccwMori* 1» TI KI.L, KII'LKV A j,is

WHOLESALE DRY GOODS! I

CORNER 5th AND MAIN STREET,

CRAWFORD. O'BOVLE & CO. KXCI.rSIVEI.Y W1IOLKNA \.f.

T. H. RIDDLE

WIIOI.ENAI.EDKALKKIN

Millinery, Straw Goods, Laces,

HI ItKOXS. FANCY Z:

Will D(i|»Iicate liullnnapoll*. (inrinnntl or Clilraro Rlllw. ood Trade Kolirlted. T. II. RI1DLE. 131 Main Nt^T«rr« H*nl«.

L. JL_ BTJi^IsriE'X'T, 'i

LEATHER and HfDES,

tft% itffS *1

*:?. PRK'KM OF TO-OAT, AND NOT TO-WO BROW, Unlem agreed upon by HpecJal (^uirari^ HIDES, grotn light,28 ioj#llw» A# «lo hoiivy CO lbs and over do orpc'iimill cuml irltnmod "c4 do dry flint, trlmmwl

Hh'-®12

do dry nail, trimmed10^11 CALF, 7 lb to 15 lh '°a Kll'.jjiwn, l#mto25m H0S (Bull, Lou# Malr, cut and dam*

fe

ICHIAJ4

3

Terro Haute, Indiana.

»«|l',#l#,,»

HAVENS & GEDDES,

WHOLESALE DEAI-KIUIIIV

taple and Fancy Notions,

ROBKRT UKDDK

»inHi

s.

(III..'*

Boots and Shoes,

ISO Niiiu Slrrcl, Torre Hail(o9 Indiana. «t

a

wttrt

n*J-?

I

»i

m**-

Id UI\ ST, TtKKP. IIAl'TK, 1KB

LEATHER.

ltirn

BEBTBLAUGHTkttHOLK.- S3* ft OAK HAitNl-SW....*. ......... #h 87 I'pfkh, PEK FOOT.. I

X'ALK 1 U0 ll K1 71W il 00

FRENCH CALK iiKIN. 1 7&( fl 80 KIP. .. 1 28$! 60 rui.t. or TopplMff*, LI

MV* I am hn.vlns and wll.'njf atosk alraoat exclnalvn for oaab. All order* and ooa* xlgnmcnta will recwh'v lmtn«diat« and prompt attention.

nine* A Rboe riadlaia.

rrwfx-* 4 ?/).,')[ I -tjl '^4 1

-tf. 0 I

1

R.S.RItll8DS0lliC«,

JOBBRIIH AN'I) DEALERS IN

Quern*i«rare, GlaMware, Iamp«, Et«,

HKADQUARTKIU FOR

Chandeliers and Bar Fiitarts«

***CoantTy Jobbing Trade aallclted, and prtcen Ktianintrcd aa low aa acty W«tem UtMMD«a(M« Mooaa.

W»In fltrMrf*

WerliniiSe. fc»t*»*a 1H 4tll Uta.

TIIE HlUlll^lTCAIiH I'ltKI, PAID lOttJ^RODCCBi

4 j- *i "it"ff *t»'/ 'i. Aft

Ton will aJwayv Ab4 Tli« B«li

RUtiARJI,

COFFKES,

Mm

$

And all Btepta Wd IftLUGJ

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