Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 7, Number 42, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 April 1877 — Page 3
TfrHE MAIL
PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
Tit For Tat,
[Continued from Second Page.] you have made of the home of other men: sad that I could never do." She turned away from him. ••Is it for ever, Margaret?" cried Hamilton. "I will wait and work." "No, we must part here," she said. "I am sorrier for you than I thought I oould be for the man who would nave ruined Minnie's life. But still, it's best to* part. I could not marry any man so irretrievably associated for me with contempt and baseness. Good-by, Mr. Hamilton."
He did not move or speak. She turned away and walked rapidly homeward. Ho stood a long while where she had left him, his eyes bent on the ground and his arms crossed. At last be roused himself with a heavy pi«b, and walked on and on, far away from the hotel.- It was night when he returned, and be went quietly to his room and packed his trunk. The next morning he had gone before the sun was high, xnd when Margaret waked, the servant brought her a *'note from Mr. Hamilton. He has gone away went by the early stage, miss."
There were only a few lines, and they said: •'I will never trouble you again. I think that you are right, and that you have laid a just retribution upon me. I did not deserve you. Do not be bitter against me any longer. I do not think you will now, and some day, when you think best, please tell ray story to Mrs. Farqubar and ask her to forgive me too. A. H.
Margaret read it twice through, and the second time a tear dropped from her eyes upon the paper. "He is right. I am not bitter toward him any longer," she murmured to herself.
The Crystal Bell.
It was a country tavern, and I sat in the bar room for lack of something better to do. Heaven knows there was little enough to amuse one in that dreary temple of Bacchus. There were five newspapers, the newest a month old, lying on the table—I knew every adver tiseruent in them. There was a picture of the favorite Presidential candidate hanging over the fireplace, which, if it at all resembled the gentleman in question, entitled him to a glass case in Barnum's Museum rather than to a chair in the White House. A book for registering names lay on a sort of desk in the corner, but since :«ay arrival the pages, though dated, were destitute of a single name. Apple Jack, bad gin, and blazing brandy In bottles of eccentric colors, filled a glass press behind a counter, which was called by courtesy a bar and behind this stood a wooden image called by courtesy a landlord.
When a man has no books, and no acquaintances at a country tavern, he is apt to fall back on the landlord. I have met in ray time very amusing landlords —landlords who could talk about fishing and shooting, and politics, and perhaps retail to you some of the gossip of the neighborhood for it is wonderful how a man in the strait in whioh I wai, will find amusement in the doings of people he knows nothing about. But the landlord of the Honiiny House wa» not to be relied upon in such an emergency. You were not to take any such liberties with him, Sir, let me tell you. He took you into bis house, as It were, under protest. He gave you abed with an air that seemed to say he regretted doing it. but still be did not like to refuse and you ate your dinner before him in fear and trembling, lest he should reconsider bis hospitality and older you out of the house.
Whether it was a natural inflexibility of joiuts, or whether it was a high sense UI Uvl •VU»I certainly General Dubbley, tho landlord of tho Hominy House, in the village of Hopscotch, New Jersey, was the most dignified man I ever saw. The halo whioh he threw around a glass ot whisky and water was porfectly woudertul. You might have imagined you were drinking "groen seal" to judge by the lofty expression of his countenance as he handed you tho bottle. At the dinner table be fairly awed the appetite out of one and I shall never as long as I live, forget the thunder-cloud which gathered on his brow when, one day, I unluckily asked to be helped to soup twice. When Lafayette passed through Hopscotch, General Dubbley was one of the committee that j^celved him. I did not know htpi at that period, not having been born, but I have formed a theory that from this epoch may be dated his tremendous dignity. Whethor this interview with the French patriot had anything to do with turniug the General's hair greeu, I cannot say but it is, nevertheless, a fact that he wasjromarkable for possessing a lock of bright vordant olive on either
Bide
of his head. This
eccentricity of color. I presume, must remain forever a mystery. As I
WM
saying, I sat in tho bar-room.
General Duboley stood behind the bar counting the contents of the till with Olympian dignity. Quarter dollars •oemed to become thunder-bolt* tn his hands. I was very weary. Weary of Hopskoieb, weary of Dubbley, weary of the Presidential candidate over the maa-tle-niece, who seemed to have been born witna patch of strawberries on each cheek weary of the old newspapers weary of everything, in fact, except the memory of my dear Annie to whom 1 vas engaged, and on whose account I f. lea New York and immured myself, in mid-winter, at the Hominy House, in order, before our marriage, to settle some matters connected with my prop ertv, which lay near Hopskotch. I vawned In the very teeth of Goneral
Dubbley. The door opened ere my teeth closed again, uian entered, and, shaking oft the snow that lay in thick flakes on his coat, advanced to the wood fire that blaaeu end crackled on the broad hearth, and spread out his hands to the cheering warmth. He was a very seedy-looking man. He had but one toat on—an old, threadbare evening coat—which was tenderly buttoned across a chest which seemed afraid to breathe too lustily lest it should burst the frail buttons. His shoes were old and soaked, looking as if he Bad found them after they had been boiled for soup by Lieutenant Strain and his companions on the isthmus. His trowaers were also wet, and very scanty, and shrank from contact with his shoes as if they had not bad a dinner in his stomach, or a oent in his pocket for a long time.
As he entered, the General raised his head from the till and looked at him severely. I saw the poor man shrink a little, but presently he seemed to muster up sufficient courage to go up to the bar. "Can I have a bed here to-night he asked In a timid voice. "Full, Sir, full!" said the General
frowning until bis old eyebrows fairly creaked besides we seldom have accommodationsfor strangers."
The poor man gave a glance at his threadbare coat, and smiled. But, oh how sad the smile was! Patient, but very sorrowful!" "It is a very bad night." said the Stranger pleadingly: "and I am not particular as to where I sleep. Anywhere would do for me."
Unphilosophical stranger! A worse method than a confession of heedlessness of comfort could not have been adopted to win the General's lavor. If ne had blnstered up to the bar and ahouted for a bed of rose leaves with every leaf irened out, the majestic Dubbley might have overlooked the seedy coat but not to care where he slept! that settled him'
Sorry, Sir, but can't accommodate you and with this brief intimation the Jove of Hopskotch commenced once more to make qnarter-dollar3 look like thunder-bolts.
The stranger sighed looked wistfully at the bright fire gave another hopeless glance at the wooden Dubbley, and then moved slowly to the door. It was more than I could stand. Olympus had no terrors for me at the moment. "Stay!" I cried, advancing from the obsenre corner in which I had been seat ed "stay, Sir, for a moment. This weather is too inclement for any human being to wander in at night. I have not the pleasure of knowing who you are, but there are two beds in my room, and I esteem it my duty te offer you one of them. Pray accept it."
I almost lost the murmured thanks with which4he seedy man accepted this impetuous offer, in the consideration of General Dubbley's countenance, I don't think I ever beheld such a picture of astounded dignity. My heart sank after my my speech was fairly out for really I expected nothing more than to be turned out myself and, what is more, I believe that I would have gone. To my surprise, however, the General took another tone. "If Mr. Massey was willing to proffer such indiscriminate hospitality," he said, "be was satisfied."
For the first time the truth burst upon me that the General was not so awful as he looked, and that by the aid of a little resolution he might even be reduced to the position of a landlord. 1 plucked up courage from this supposed discovery, and having opened the breach pushed on. "I want some supper, General D«bbley," said I peremptorily. "Sir, you have had your supper," answered the General, clutching madly at the last rag of his importance that was being torn so ruthlessly from him. "No matter I wish to sup again. I sometimes sup frequently during an evening."
I was reckless with victory, and began to talk wildly. I "You shall be served, sir."
And the General abdicated his thunderbolts and disappeared into the kitchen. I had conquered. A hand was laid very gently on me, and the stranger now spoke audibly to me for the first time. "I am "very, very much obliged to ou 1" he said, "for all this kindness uiut if in getting this supper you pat yourself to inconvenience on my account may I be^ that you will countermand it?" "Not at all," 1 replied dogmatically, "but as you have reminded me of it, per haps you will favor me by supping with me—that is, if you have not supped "I have not dined," said the stranger, with a feeble smile, "I see through your kind ruse," he added and to a gentleman who can acs
so
feelingly as you
have done, I have little shame in con fessing that if I had not dined, it was because I bad no money." "Come come!" said I, trying to bluster away those confounded lears that always will get in my eyes when I hear such things, "Come, we will have a jolly good supper together, and then we will talk of business matters afterward. Let us sit by the fire until it is re .3y, and, meanwhile, drink this.'*
So saying, I invaded the General's Olympian domains, and pouring out a stiff horn of applejack, forced it upon my new friend. It did him good, I am certain, for I eaw the dim eyes brighten and the thin cheek flush and it was not the fire-light that did it, cheery as it WAS*
I nover met a more delightful man than this seedy stranger. He had beeu everywhere, seen everything, done everything, knew everybody. He was a finished soholar, an original critic, a delightful singer, an epitome of wit. He so fascinated me, that we sat up in my room until almost twelve—an unearthly hour in Hopskotch, where the people go to roost with the chickens—and it never once entered my head to ask him who he was, what he was called, or how it was he was wandering about in the snow without any money. I even went to bed without locking mv door, or putting my watch uuder my pillow.
It was the gray dawn of the morning when some one sitting on my bedside nwoke me suddeuly. I started upright in au instant, and beheld my friend. He was completely dressed, and in the aim light seemed like a departing ghost. For a moment, in the incoherence of my ideas, I had a confused idea that he was about to rob me, and seised him instinctively by the arm. "Don't be alarmed," he said, with a smile. "I intended to awake you, and, before I went—for I am going iminedt lately— I wished to thank you for vour extreme kindness to me. God bless you for it I I have but little to offer you in the way of return, but what I have is yours. Here is a crystal bell," and he drew a tiny glass bell from his pocket, a thing like a child's toy. "It was forged In distant land *, where the sun makes the rocks vocal, and its maker sang over it in the furnace the spells? known only to the children of the East. It is the touchstone of truth. Whoever utters a falsehood to him who bears it about, that moment the crystal bell will vi bra.e. Scoff at the story now, if you will, but try the talisman—it will never betray you. Farewell!"
Ana laying the little bell upon the counterpane, before I could sufficiently collect my scattered senses he glided to the door and went out, closing it softly after him.
I took up the bell mechanically, and examined it. It was entirely formed of what seemed to be the purest crystal. The tongue was also of crystal, busflexible as the finest watch spring. I he ball at
did
not emit the slightest sound. I tried it again and agaia, and always with the same result. 1 got up and looked for my watch. It was safe. My pockets were untouched, my drawers intact. My seedy friend, therefore, was not an impocter. Again I returned to the mysterious bell, and agitated its crystal tongue in vain. Not even a muffled tinkling was to be drawn from it. Had the pendulum been a feather it could not have been more silent.
All dav long I felt wretchedly uncomfortable Viththo crystal bell in my
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY. EVENING MAIL:
pocket. I scarsely answered the sneering inquiries after my seedy friend with which General Dubbley assailed me. I scarcely took the trouble to inform him that I had not been robbed. I was indifferent to the display which he made of his Granting his spoons in my presence. The last words of my mysterious guest continually rang in my ears—
Wheever utteis a falsehood to him who bears it, that moment the crystal bell will vibrate."
Annie Gray! sweet, truthful, pure eyed Annie Gray! why was.it that your face continually rose up before me whenever I touched the magic bell? Whenever I drew it forth, and looked through its crystal walls, why was it that your fair countenance seamed dimly Visible within, but clouded with some horrible shadow? And when I thought of you, why did the name of that hateful Aubyn always flicker in big letters before my mind's eye?
I suffered positive torture. Here was I, engaged to be married to one of the sweetest girls in New York, beloved by her to my heart's content, and rich enough to satisfy her every wish, when in come3 a stranger, who puts what he calls a talisman for testing truth into my hands, and straightway Ibegin to doubt the dear girl whom I had never doubted before. Did she really love me, or was it only for my wealth that she became mine? Did she not rather prefer that horrible Harry Aubyn, who danced so well, and who talked so chiymingly about nothing? The more I tried to conquer this abominable phantasy of jeai ousy the more positive it became, until at last I had worked myself into such a fever of excitement that I could bear suspense no longer Yes! I would in stantly hurry to New York and test this wondrous gift! It was folly—madness I knew that well enough, but still 1 would test it—test all the more willingly, for I had such faith in Annie. But Why did she encourage that empty dandy, Harry Aubyn?
In less than two hours I was in New York, ringing madly at Annie Gray's door.
As I entered the drawing room hastily, out walked Mr. Aubyn. We saluted coldly, but I could have strangled him at that moment, if such things were per missible in this century. I must have been rather pale and disordered-looking, lor I bad scarce entered the room when Annie's first words were: "Oh, Gerald! has anything happened?"
Dear girl! bow could any but a madman doubt that anxious, fond look— that quivering lip? I kissed her forehead, and reassured her. "Annie, dear, why do you haye that Mr. Aubyn here in my absence? You know I don't like him." "Why, Gerald, I really can't help if he calls. 1 don't care about his visits, I assure you but I cannot be rude to hira, I have known him so long."
Gracious heavens! was it fancy? or did I bear a faint, crystalline tinkling in my pocket? A cold shiver ran through my frame but I endeavored to dissemble my agony, and, with a forced smilewent on. "So you don't like him really, you lit, tie puss! Come now, confess that at one time you did care a little—a very little—for Aubyn, your old playmate?" "Wbv, what alls you, Gerald? You look so'queer. I assure you. I never cared anything for Harry Aubyn."
Tinkle! tinkle! tinkle! in my pocket. I felt the blood rush to my bead It was a Niagara of emotion, but.I subdued it. "And you love your poor Gerald, then, better than any tiody else better even than the old "school-fellow you have known so long?" "What a fool you are, Gerald! Of course I do," and she kissed me gently on the forehead.
Tinkle! tinkle! tinkle! in my pocket. Plain, clear, distinct. Every vibration of the crystal bell thrilled through my frame If the bells of every cathedral, headed by Tom of Lincoln, had pealed together at my ear they could not have moved me half so much as that sharp, shrill, crystal tintinnabulation from that horriblo bell.
I could bear it no longer. "Traitress!" I shouted, flinging away the tender arms that wound around my neck. "Hypocrite I despise you! Yes, madam, the eyes of your dupe were opened in time. You shall not laugh at the credulous Gerald Massy." "Gerald! are £ou mad?" "Not quite though a week after our marriage I would hitve been, imposter that you are! But I know you. Know that you don't love me. Know that you have lied to me three times within this last half hour."
She tried to embrace me but I flung her off. She wrung her hands, and the big tears rolled over her cheeks, and her gentle head was bent, as if strickened with some great blow. She acted her part excellently well. "What can you mean, Gerald? I have never deceived you in thought or word. If you have proofs of my hypocrisy advanco them, but do not storm me down with assertions." 'My proofs are here!" I cried, holding up the bell triumphantly—the triumph of despair. "Here! look on this talisman, falsest of women, and tremble "But Gerald, are you sane? I see nothing but this bell." '•And this bell, as you call it, has told me within the last half hour that you are a worthless woman."
One tigress-like leap, and she caught it from my hand. With flaming eyes she held it aloft, and theD dashed it on the ground. A crash, like the bursting olathousand hand-grenade*—a thundering of cathedral bells, that seemed to shake the world and, looking up, I saw Goner Dubbley standing over me in a difrnified attitude. •Mr. Massy," said be, "the dinnerbell has been ringing these ten minutes but you appear to have been sleeping so soundly that you have not beard it. Dinner waits
And so it was a dream. No seedy friend—no talisman—no falsehood in sweet Annie Gray. I rubbed my eyes and went in to dinner but as I ate my soup under the awful eye of the General, I confess I regretted the non-reality of that portion of my dream in which I had subdued the Thundererof the tavern.
I never told Annie Gray that I bad ever doubted her even in a dream, until we bad been a month married.
COUOSNO MORS.
There need be no Conghs or Colds where DR. KINO'S Naw DISCOVERY for Consumption is used. The most severe caws of Croup, Hoarseness, Pain in the Chest, Bleeding ol the Longs yield to its wonderful power almost instantly. A few doses will invariably cure tbe worst cough or cold. For Asthma and Bronchitis it is a perfect specific. Consumptives and Congh worn patients never foil to find relief in this great discovery. We would advise any one tired of experimenting with physicians prescriptions or quack medicines to drop them at once and use DR. KINO'S NEW DISCOVERT. Give tt a trial. Regular •izs $100. Trial bottles fiee. For sale by Groves & Lowry. (3)
rpHE
Saturday Evening
S5MATT.
FOR THE YEARr
tii tmwn .nmM
1877.
ium
m**
•rftrA Utiti One year.. Six mont Three mon
TERMS: fijjnf n##1*
CLUBBING WITH OTHER PERIODICALS. We are enabled to offer extraordinary inducements in the way of clubbing with other periodicals. We will furnish THE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, PRICE 82.00 PER YEAR, and any of the periodicals enumerated below at greatly reduced rates. These periodicals will be sent direct from the offices of publication. Here is the list:
SEMI-WEEKLY, IF •,
Semi-Weekly New York Tribune, price 13.00, and The Mail 50
WEEKLY PAPERS.
[ndianapolis Journal, price 52.00, and Tne Mail
ndianapolis Sentinel, N. Y. Tribune, price'
Arthur's ttJme Magazine price 12.50 auu The Mail 54 00 Peterson's Magazine, price 52,00, and The
Mail 8 6® American Agriculturist, price 51.60 and The Mail 8 00 Dei nor est's Monthly, price 53,00, and
The Mall 4 25 Godey's Lady's Book, price 53.00, and The Mail 4 25 Little Corporal, price 51.50 and The Mail 8 15 Scribner's Monthly, price 54.00, and The
Mall
All the premiums offered by the above pub
E
NOON.
150
NEWSBOYS
ELL IT IN THIS CITY,
GENTS SELL THE MAIL IN
IXTY SURROUNDING TOWNS.
EDITIONS EACH WEEK,
1
CHARGE ONLY FOR BOTH.
HE MAIL IS THE
EST MEDIUM
OR ADVERTISERS.
BCAUSE
'TIS A PAPER
*OR THE HOUSEHOLD.
TWENTY
RAIRIE
... i: ... Si 0( „50 cts.
Mail and offieo Subscriptions will. Invariably, be discontinued at expiration of time paid for.
Encouraged by the extraordinary sncce* which has attended the publication of THE SATURDAY EVENING MAUL the publisher has perfected arrangements by which ii will henceforth be one of the most populai papers in the West.
r4
THE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL is an Independent Weekly Newspaper, elegantly printed on eight pages of book paper, aod alms to be, in every sense, a Family Paper. With this aim in view, nothing will appear in its columns that cannot be read aloud in the most refined fireside circle.
93 0j
rice $2.00, and and The Mail 3 GO
Toledo Blade, price 52.00, and The Mail 8 .fit N. Y. Sun, and The Mail a Prairie Farmer price52.00 and The Mail 8 6o Western Rural, price 52.50 and The Mail 3 ot nhicaao Advance, price, 53.00, and The
Mail 6" Chicago Interior, price 52.50, and The Man 00 Chicago Inter-Ocean, price 51.50, and
Th^ Mail 3 26 AjgleUm't Journal, price 51.00, and The Rural
Mail 26 UHhodut, price 52.50, and The Mall 8 fit Harper'i weekly, price 54.00, and The
CITY
soft i. .^J—
wMr11**
A MODEL WEEKLY PAPER FOR THE HOME
C1
THOUSAND READERS.
-HT?
LIFF A SON,
28
Atlantic Monthly, price 54.00, and The Mail Harper's Magazine, price 54.00, and The
Mail- 5 50 Gardener's Monthly, price52.00, and The
MalJ.. 8 60 Young Folks Rural, and The Mail 2 76 The Nursery, price 51.50, and The Mail 8 10 St. Nicholas, price S3.00, and The Mail 4 4u
1
licatlons are included in this elubblng arrangement. CLUBBING WITH COUNTY PAPERS.
We have made arrangements to furnish THE MAIL, and any one ol the Newspapers in the neighborhood of Teire Haute all for 53.00.
Address P. S. WE8TFALL, eubllsner Saturday Evening Mai), TRRRKH ATTTH5. I
MPOllTXSra1
N
I1
."•If
•USINESS MEN!
1HE SATURDAY
VENING MAIL
OES TO PRESS
0
N SATURDAY,
***',-
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,:Z
A
I jr^i It
Planing Mills,
CUFT & VTT.T.TAMS,
a Manuflwtnreis of
Sash, I)oors, Blinds,
I, ^--A-
Windoiv and rfoor Frames, moulding Brackets, Stair Railing, JSaUusters, Jewell Posts, Flooring, Sidlag,
.y And all descriptions of
FINISHING LUMBER
i- Wholesale and Retail dealers In
Pine Lumber, Lath & Shinges Slate Roofing
AND
KOOFDTG Ji&i.
.r**?
»--.*».v'
lvr{'
Custom Sawing, Plaining and Wood Turn ing done to order. All irork warranted.
Cor. 9th and Mvlbcrry Streets.
GRAINING,
1
60
Harper's Bazar, price 54.00, and The Mai 5 60 Frank Leslie* Illustrated Newspaper, price 84.00, and The Mail-. 6 00 Leslies Chimney Corner, price 54.00, and
The Mail 6 CO Bous'and Girls' Weekly, price 52.50, and The Mail 8 75
MONTHLIES.
MAIN,
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,v
BET 8TH and DTK
W. M. CLIFF. HKHBT ourr
AinnrACTUIUBS OF
LOCOMOTIVE, STATIONARY MARINE
TUBULAR AND CYLINDER, First street, bet. Poplar an4 Watast Repairing done In the most substantia manner at short notloe, and as liberal in price as any establishment in the State.
Orders solicited and carefully attended te.
•is
igQiioiKfounfir,
Cor. First and Walnnt
sta.
J. A. PARKER & CO. Managers, ASN DKALIKRS IW All Kinds of Castings,
K)
Hill Famishing Machinery, Saw Mill Machinery,i Flour MillMacjrinery, Coal Shaft Machinery,
Iron Fences,
a
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11
Steam Engines,
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Ai Corn Shelters,
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ORSE SHOEING ABT1
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JOB WORK
*."1
1
KIZER & CO'S New Shop,
THIRD STREET, WEST 81DE, BET WEBB WALNUT AND POPLAR. Having net completed and pnt lnaottrs operation onr large and commodious briefc blacksmith shop at the above location, we desire to inform the citizens of Terre Hants and surrounding country tb at wearenow fal« ly prepared to promptly and satisfactorily d« all work in our line ou terms defring'oem petition by any other establishment lnths city. Our work for over fifteen years pestla Terre Haute, warrants ns in saying that oui Shoeing Jobs cannot be excellecf, and in every Instance we have ne hesitation In as snrlng customers of the beet work, and oeta* plete satisfaction.
We use nothing but the best material, and have the work done only by the most experienced and best practical workmen In th city. KIZER A CO.
CORN
MEAL ,,,
—AND—1
GROUND FEED.!
A
M.I MA •&*
mt-
WILLIAM BARRICK CO.,
At bis mill on Seoood and Ohio streets, doing the very best of work, and invites thi patronage of our cltlxens.
He may be relied on to give the fullest satisfaction.
IMPORTANT
TO OWNERS
-OF-
Musical Instrnmente.'
John Dierdorf the accomplished Ptan6 and Organ Tuner and Repairae, vasnUn^p polisher, etc., is prepared to put hi good order all kinds of musical instrv
DRAIN AND SEWERPIPE
STOITB'i'WORK.»» TERllE HAUTE
CEMENT PIPE-AND STONE COMPANY^"*7'
MANUFACTURERS OF ARTIFICIAL STONE,
-AND—
POWER PRESSED HYDRAULIC CEMENT
DRAIN AND SEWER PIPE,
From 4 inches to 80 Inches in^nsivt. Also Stone for Building Fronts, Window Caps, of different designs, Window Mils, Key Stones und House Trimmings complete. Horse Blocks, of fancy designs. Beautiful Stone Vases, Fountain Basins, of Plain and Ornament tal designs Well Curbing, Stone Sink*. Filters, Cope* Ing, and Posts for Cemeter Lots, Stone Bases for Slonuments, Paving Stone, &c. Ac. at Greatly Beduced Prices, All Fancy and Ornamental Work at about one-half the price ot natural stone. For particulars, address A. M. FABXHAM, Pres't.
Office on Ohio Street, near Sixth. Works on 18th Street, north of Hospital-
T. HUDDLE
Millinery, Straw (foods, Laces,
RIBBONS, FAVCY GOOBS,*e*
aw Special attention paid to Coal Shaft
n* is*
El Will Duplicate Indianapolis, Cfaetiaatt or Chte*|0IBIlSi Jkt GoodTrMie Solicited. T. U. I1BDLI, 181 Mmim ST* VWN U—F.G
PHOUV1X FOIJHDKT AMD •1CHIII WOBKS.
F. H. McELFRESH, Manufacturer or S" Steam Engines, Mill Machinery,
Corner Ninth and Eagle Sta., (Near Union Depot,) Terre Xante, lad.
Machinery—Repairing
00VDU0NB
BiPPBTOE'8
THE HIOH£STCASH PRICE PUDj*OH PBODUC4
if-"" iii,'
In good ems tbe Ion
mak-
4th, or where he lives, over Goets's ftarnlture store, on Main, between 6th and 7th streets, will receive prompt attention. a, (ootl4-8m)
WANTED—ALLanyKNOW
TO THAT THE
SATURDAY Ersxiiro MAIL has a I ir circulation than newspaper pnb .. .. .. .. 11*.
alarg« ubllan-
id in the State, outside of Indlanapol that it Is caremlly and thoroughly read in I be homes of its patrons, and that It is the very bee ndiana.
that it Is
best advertising medium In Western
•iff-
&e., &t..
5
done promptly.
J-
KI6AM,
corns*.
And nil BIspSs andranoy
Groceries
f1
