Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 7, Number 47, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 May 1877 — Page 4

A PA£ER

P.

s.

Jlli|§lg|ii§

TH EMAIL

FOR 'SIB PEORII.

TERRE HAUTE, MAY 19, 1877

WESTFALL,

5*

EDITGfi AND PROPRIETOR.

SUMMER SPORTS.

The season of oat-door diversions is upon us. The subtle atmospheric influence that propagates the base ball contagion, which, like cholera and yellow fever germs, lies torpid during the winter months, has been revived by the balmy breath of spring, and the fever rages throughout the leDgth and breadth of the land with all its old time fury and destructiveness. The national lunacy is coming to be one of the most unfailing harbingers of spring. The modest violet may appear prematurely and be nipped and frozen by the lingering frosts of departing winter. Tte swelling and bursting buds are not infallible in their indications, being ofton misled by the seductive influences of a February thaw. Even the bluebird, brightest and most cheering figure in the poet's cal •endar, is erratic in his indications and may stay all winter or delay his coming until rammer is well advanced. But When the quarters in which a company of raging maniacs of the diamond field have been confined for the winter show signs of swarming, when the still sod den and muddy turf cegins to resound to the tread of the canvassed heel, and the scene of coming bedlamitic exhibi tions begins to ring with the strange jar gon of this modern midsummer mad ness, the reign of winter is over and spring is surely at band. There is this solitary value and merit in the nation al lunacy.

Somewhaf^ater, the advancing year brings with it a summer sport older, larger in extent and in the interests in volved, and more dignified and wortny in that it displays thd generous emulation of the nob|ejst of animals well as the petty cupidity, trickery todmeanness of often the most ignoble of men. Differing in this respect from so called sports and contests in which the human animal aloae is concerned, the turf can never entirely lose its interest for the general and philosophio observer un til the caustic dean's satire is realized atid hoiyes become endowed with hu man qualities, sinking the brote nobility in manlike trickory deceit and falseness The simple honesty, noble emulation and unassuming brute dignity of Dexter and Goldsmith Maid, Aristides and Ten

Broek shine through all the small hu man meannesses of their drivers, owners and jockeys and invest the race course with a genuine worthiness and interest renewed with each recurri

summer.

ance

I in

1

s'

Bat the greatest of these shall be the last. As the most perfect flowex* and frutt of nature's product ^nre the slowest to tfpen, so this highest rfesult 6f the American mania for physical training corned latest in the season. There are premonitory Indications earlier. From a youthful stage of the growing year, the eyes of the nation begiu to converge with an anxious interest upon the glassy poidaand quiet streams which have tieen chosen for the site of Ihe various national institutions for the propagation and encouragement of college boat mo lug-—Yale, Harvard, Columbia and Oornell. The brown-skinned, sturdy youth who are chosen out of the whole country to figure as heroes in this midsummer battle of the waters are watched as they pursue their daily training with more interest than the gilded youth of ancient Rome bestowed upon their pet gladiators. As July draws near, bring lag with it the annual regatta on Sarato ga lake, the interest rises to an effer •eeoii* point. All other business is ne gleoted. Commerce Anguishes, trade is suspended and the nation awaits tho i&tilt with bated breath. It is intilibated that when President Hayes proposed to call an extra session of Congress in Jane, hf was assailed with an ayalaache ft IpUeim from indignant members who wanted to go to (he Saratoga regatta, and from distressed constituents who did not want their attention distracted from racing bulletins by reports of prosy, debars. It |s|i bftof secret political hlstocy that thfa was she real cause of the postponement until October. Not until the event ia at last accomplished, tko race won and victory tory declared, doe* the nation's attention reluctantly turn into ordinary channels—and even then it begins to think of next year's regatta. But it is not only by Interest in the actual contest, that the popularity of college boating ia attested. The country is filled with costly and extensive institutions for its encouragement and maintainaoce. Public enterpriee and private liberality combine in the endowment of these astitutions for the training of our youth in the use of the oonqueriug oar stately palaces some of them are, supplied with every means of comfort ild luxury. Another ifrteresting feature ia that most or, all of them, are furnished with libraries and maseuura and corpe i^pald instructors, who while away ttflrweary hours of winter, when the boating streams are locked »p in ice, with that mental trmin-» ing which is regarded as of next import­

to the inmates, to the muscular development. So cooqpicoous is this feature that many of these institutions at certain seasons of the year might be mistaken for halls sf learning. This delusion vanishes, however, with the return of spring, when they resume their true place as centres of interest in the most rational and American of summer sports—college boating.

THAT mythical personage, the happy bridegroom, so often apostrophized in prose and verse, but so rare and elusive in real life, has turned up in Memphis. He is a disciple of the new faith of Home Siade and Katie King and hia name ia C. A. 8tillman. His bride is, or was, or will be—the peculiar circumstances of the case make the tense a little doubtful. Miss Alice Roberts, a young lady whom he never saw in the flesh, but to whom be was introduced by mutual friends, "on the other side," and with whose invisible as well as materialized spirit he has long been in terms of intimate communication which has finally ripened into love and matrimony. The courtship was carried on and the marriage ceremony performed through a lady medium of Memphis and the young man declares both himself and bis spirit spouse, as happy as flesh and blood could be under such circumstances. Well may Mr. Stillman declare himself happy. Ee is the envy of all the newly wedded, and expectant lovers of the country. For him, marriage is stripped of its terrors. He has found the thornlese rose. A married man, he has yet escaped the worst of marital miseries and preserved the best of bachelorhood's delights. No wedding trip, no running the gauntlet of his wife's critical cousins for him. No blood-chilling enormity of endless furniture bills strikes terrer to his soul and no agonising experiences of early housekeeping make his days a weary burden and his nights a frightful dream. Then look

at

==sssgB=xs=^

ANOTHER HORROR.

At almost regular intervals the coan try is called to the contemplation of some new disaster. At one time it the sinking or burning of a steamer, at another, a railroad smash-up, then the burning of a theatre or hotel, a reservoir of watter uuddenly let loose upon the sleeping inhabitants of a valley, or some other catastrophe of appalling propor tions. The latest horror is of altogether a novel character. The new court house at Rockford, Illinois, a large brick and stone structure, was in course of erec tion, and when the walls were nearly completed and the key stone just being put into the central dome, the whole suddenly collapsed and. fell to the earth amass of ruins, burying the laborers beneath, and killing, mangling and niaiming a large number of them. The scdue was One that for a time beggared description, and the faYnilies of the killed and wounded workmen were overwhelmed with the calamity that had Allen Upon them. Henry L. Gay, oi Chicago, was the architect of the building, a man who, it seems, has a formidable list of similar mishaps and accidents to account for. It is the general opinion that tnere has been criminal incompetency somewhere and the coroner's jury are making a searching investigation into the cause of the disaster. It is sincerely to be hoped that they will succeed in placing the responsibility for the aocident where it justly belongs, and that the guilty party or parties will be punished to the full extent of the law.

A GOOD deal has been said lately in fa vor of the^abolition^f the death penalty and there is no doubt but public opinion is strongly tendinglnthat direction, but if the statements made by a writer in the New York Nation, In regard to the practical results of the experiment In Maine are true, it will not be best to proceed too rapidly in the direction of abolishing capital punishment. This writer says substantially that from heir admission i%to fhe Union in 1820 Maine hid ft capita punishment law which, in 18f7, was so modified ss to leave the execution of the law optional with the governor, -who rarely enforced iW iFrom 1881 to 1804 not an execution took place in the State, and, as a oonsequenoe, the State beoame notorious for the number of its murders. In 1869 Governor Chamberlain executed a negro for murder and rape, but his successor refused to enforce the law, and In 1S75 matteft came so bad that the legislature passed a law restoring the death penalty without option and in June of that year Wagner and Gordon were hanged for murder. During the year following hut one murder was committed in the State and the murderer committed suicide immediately after the commission of his orim*. In 1878 capital punishment wis entirely abolished and within a year no lass than eleven mtudeis have Ween committed in the SUte. In addition to this, the writer says, then has been a startling Increase of high crimes not capital. Statistics like tfcsse are well calculftted

to

strengthen the opinion that the criml nal*s tear for his own life is the strongest fatfltmei to taking the life of another.

THOOK two pssllfrnw «sd irrspesssible women, WoodhuB sod Claflin, whose lingers instant themselves somehow into every prominent Sew Yorker's private appropriately among the horde of prey-

arch whom

his future, no far reaching

vista of perennial milliner's and dressmakers bills stretches before him hanging like a dark shadow over the whole length of his life's pathway. No lifelong succession of morning fires to build, stares him in the face and, reversing the' ordinary nature of the element, sends a cold chill through his veins. No innu merable caravan of voracious and exacting visiting cousins of his wife troops before his perturbed mental vision, like tne grisly procession that filed before Macbeth. On the contrary, his future glitters with a lifelong succession of bachelor pleasures, lodge nights, club suppers, bachelor friends and associa tions, undimmed by any shadow of con jugal oversight. Only one fact essen tial te his complete happiness remains in doubt. Is his mother-in-law also in the spirit^

expenses of their Weekly. Later, when

they Want the

in its support. The reply is what need

for formal

proofs among such friends?

Then the Woodhulls tel the reporters

that they could a tale unfold to harrow

up the souls of the surviving Vander-

know

agmiiist tuo

f100,000 it is a little strange that William M. Vanderbilt should have been fright ened oflf by that. Law suits are looming up around him, however, more than he anticipated. Some of the gilt edging has been rubbed off of Central with the general mangling of other stocks, and altogether since his father's death the Railway King's successor's head has lain as uneasy as any other's that wears a crown.

AN English naval engineer makes some curious predictions astOtthe probable chMiges to be wrought fn naval ar chitectureby the Introduction of the torpedo ihto maratlme warfare. The stately battleship of our fathers, with her symmetrical lines and spread of snowy canvass has already been strangely modified by the introduction of steam, big guns and iron sheathing but the changes now declared a necessity as such as to revolutionize ship building. The introduction of efficient torpedoes changes the point of attack -m)A attlpVe to below the water line, and there must be a change in form to meet the new danger. This writer declares that no more ships of the present long, narrow, boat-like form must be built. The bulk of the ship must lie, not above or below, but around the engines and Vitfcl parts, to protect them, from submarine attack so that the battle ship, of the, future will be a short iron clad, nearly as broad as long, with its vital machinery in the center of its bulk. Like the wise men of Gotham, our maratime heroes of the future will go to sea in a tub—an iron tub at that.

MR. A. R. SHEPHERD, a somewhat well known citizen of Washington, lately coined some of the superabundant snobbery of that republican court into shining ducats, or at any rate rustling greenbacks. He rented a furnished house to Count Hogos, the Austrian minister, for a few weeks, lately, and after the glory of the Count's title departed offered the furniture, largely pots and saucepans, at auction as the effects of the Austrian minister. It sold for enormous prices, the ladies of the capital struggling in generous emulation for the honor ®f adorning their kitchens with the cast-offfc«ttIi#«f a titled foreigner. When it transpired that the pots were the property of Shepherd, and were mementos of a Washington ring, instead of an European court, there was wailing in the kitchens of the capital,,

CAL WAONKK'S minstrel quartette sang in the Congregational church, at Kokomo, on Sunday evening, the 6th Inst., and of course the church was paeked by the class of good people who look with horror upon a negro minstrel in an opera house, but are ever ready to at-

GKORQK H. BOKBR, United States

Minister to Ruasia, is reported to have

ration

is

for

TTATTTB SMAIU

Sis upon the Vanderbilt estate. TheyP GLADSTOJ**B nreeofutlonpf declaring ooly Want a trifling hundred thousand! that Turkey had forfeited all claim on or so being willing to accept this Insigj- England for moral or material support, nificant sum iu plaoe^f the half mil|ioh were rejected by the House of Commons promised them by the venerablo piM- on Monday, and an amendment, to the

they lojed so devotedly, ift jerfect that the House would dceline to was like a father to these tender mstd- 'embarass the government in carrying ens, you see indeed treated them too

out

much like children. He set them up in debate the Marquis of Bsrtington said business la Wall street, and paid the

they got Jtilh be invested their money Stafford Northeote said that England's for them. In 1871, U«LfiSl»fiding

gave |10,000 wmeh soon grew

to 970,000. This sum the commo-

dow never repaid, paternally telling own interests with a jealous eye the girls it was safest in Ma juris. Now

OD*.

with oompeiwd

William H. Vanderbilt, the exeoutor,

laughs at the claim and ask. for papers

its policy, was adopted. During the

that

sooner or later England would have

to

Interfere ia the present struggle. Sir

Tennie route to Indis by wsy of the Sues canal

must

be kept open and safe. Evidently

the

"Britishers" intend to waf^h tb««r

Thk tWQ barde8t

that of

fought battles of the

Turkish war, so far, that of Batoum and

Sook-goom-kale, in Asia Mino#,

hay0 resulted in completo

victories to

Qt Batoum tfae RaMian(l

fter a hotl

p]&ce admiral

biits—but their lips are sealed^, A bombarding the Russian fortifications, gether, it is quite the^oid^story. jande{j jjjg forc€8 and after a severe A NEW YOBK correspondent ssys the struggle drove the Russians out of the sudden departure of William M. Van- town, captured it and set it on fire. It derbiltfor Europe, on Saturday, has looks as if the road to Constantinople given rise to all kinds of wild specula- would not be a smooth and easy one for tion upon the subject. Noone seems to the invading Cossscks.

anything about 4t, neither telatives, nor business acquaintances, but he went off as suddenly as if ho had been Tweed's most intimate and nearest been Tweed's most the state of New York. Yet such is the to4h..dty-tpeM»rjrrIendlu tha» hJ-

fort|fica_

^tented engage-

meut'of four hourP with

^ted loss

of 4000 in dead and WOUnded.

At the

Hassan Pasha, after

THE general public is not probably aware that the old relic of feudalism, imprisonment for debt, still prevails in

alt|i-Id tllIt

oyo„d»y.wl,«. the r.M debtor, in tbe city of New York New York. The conuectiou of Teon

who bav„

C. Claflln's name with his departure is ,,. „,ollvl prison bounds in twenty years. It is odd Thftt sbft should hftVO Mftd8 ft clflim oau. AU»K OU stated that a respected physician of that old Commodore's estate is by

a

city,

tbeirtwoker when they w«nt Into W»H ™,^7n "ail .'or .Xbt of jl" .Such Uw» S a a a

peculiar paper. Still if Tennie did claim

th,re „„for-

been ouUlde of their

who a few years ago was worth over

rmh,stim„s

I 1

are simply a

disgl'ace

t0 and

it seems incredible that they should exist in an enlightened commonwealth like New York.

AN elaborate carnival in Central park New York, In the month of May, may seem the propor thing to metropolitan citizens who have been treated to every other form of expensive absurdity, but to an inland inhabitant it app9ars like a piece of snobbery and anachronism to which only the volubility and facial expression of a recently imported Italian could do justice. Anyhow readers of the daily papers in the ramote west could have spared that half column report transmitted by the associated press.

NEW encouragement and inspiration comes to the weary wielder of the journalistic plumbago from an elevated quarter. It is said that the President is possessed of an abiding awe for the newspapers, gets up before daylight to read them and preserve all articles about himself, in an enormous scrap book. This is a grateful change from an executive who never read a paper and humill ated the Jove like launcher of the press's thunderbolt by not caring a continen tal whether he smiled or frowned.

THAT "time makes wondrous changes," was illustrated last week at Chatta nooga when the United States troops joined

Inlaying the corner stone of a

monument to the confederate dead, and it must have been a pleasant sight to the I tetter class of New Orleans citiiens to see, on the same day, United States soldiers marching the streets with boquets in their muskets.

THE enthusiastic citizens of Apple Creek, Ohio, will present President Hayes with a gorgeous rustic chair made of apple boughs and frescoed with varl" ous patriotic legends, among them the names of "South Carolina" and "Lousi ana." Is this an ultra Republican scheme to compel the president, after all, to sit upon these unhappy States?

As IF the extravagant waste of our precious forest timber under the wcod man's axe was not enough, the destruc tion of immense tracts of woods by fire is getting to be a matter of annual recurrence. During the last week, destructive forest fires have teen raging in northern New York, New England and Canada

LIKE most distinguished foreigners who visits our shores, the grand duke Alexis recognizes a certain obligation to figure as a more or less munificent patron of American industries. He paid |200 for a diminutive pug at the New York dog show, and tbe bull-pup's nose is out of joint.

ion thffc this prodigious military prepa- Godey's Lady's Rook for forty years, is

the purpose of utterly crush- now

THE Chicago Inter-Ocean is bsppy, In

SST.'SS iplte of mortgage^ Jodgmenta tnd therbull labelled »«cred ctlle .tuched. «&. It 1. to have Eoro^an letter fWm The minstrels concluded tbe «rriee. by an ex-rfminUttatlon. Mr chanting the last chapter of Ifccle*.. »ho,"Compile. ,hl* tea! commencing "Remember now thy fWher abrmd a. private """tarT. Craator in tbe days of tby yoatb," and In bwnpr«™U«i upon to Indict the letters the course ef which occurs "and tbe in question. grasshopper shall be a burden." All THfe Treasury Department having anwere pleased with the singing, and one

Boanced

young lady said "that grasshopper song dollars, for the conscience fund, just splendid." really contained sixty-five, has been besieged by letters requesting tbe return

that a letter, said to oontain

of vhe orerplufc

wbat a

said in a recent interview, that Germany is a vast camp, stronger than ever before and better fitted for war. It is his opin- MRS. SARAH J. HA

ft2

ing France, so that all hope of revenge and sound in mind. Besides her editorby that nation will be ont of the quae- ial work she has written and compiled t^n. Germany did not dare to under- about thirty volumes, embracing plays, take the job while Russia was disen- poems, romances, and cook books. g^but nowth* she oua Secretary of the N..y, CoL the war with Turkey, Mr. Boater seems

it i» gratifying to see

beautiful thing conscience is get-

L.B, who has edited

years old, still vigorous in body

visited

to think tbe auspicious hour for Germa- The people down there ny draws on apace. wanted to extend tbe hospitalities of the THB people are every day more ami city, but Col. Dick gracefully declined, more pleased with President Hayes' and returned to Washington on Satur^ common sense policy. ^*3^

the Norfolk navy

Lowkrx, Massachusetts, has a model prohibition mayor who refuses to sign liquor licenses which have been issued and paid for. As this proceeding is merely felerlcal, the courts will probably be called in to aid in stretching his stubborn conscience. $

THKKB is a painful rumor that Charles Fiancis Adams hss retired rrom ponwcs. Not that an] body cares for Adams, but a good many people read the Springfield Republican with Interest and wouldn't like to see Bowles commit harl kari.

THE oontrsctor and superintendent of the Rockford court bouse were in the dome of tbe building just before it felli but it considerately waited for them to descend in safety. Bo there is no more poetic justice, after a'1

Twin other day an Englishman committed suicide, and left a letter giving as a reason for his depsrture "thst his wife was too good for him." There is a novelty about this cause for suicide that is positively refreshing.

A TIDAL wave of temperance is coming west, and our people may look for its appearance here. If it affects us as it has other communities It will far surpass any temperance awakening that has ever occurred here. .' .7*'

THE Boston Lyceum Bureau has recently handed to Henry Ward Beecher $42,800 as bis portion of tbe past season's lectures. The Plymouth preachf has not yet "stepped down and out." .......

GEN. OEO. B. MCCLKLLAN is in New York, says an item in the personal column of an exchange. That man remains unburied aftqr death longer than any man on record,

POLITICS will not figure prominently this"season, for which let us give thanks.

*,* 4 QUITE TRUE.* Chas. F. Adams (Interview.) But, as I remarked before about newspapers, they sometimes get a great deal too much in them, and often considerable matter that never amounts to anything.

SINGER SEWING MACHINES are now being rapidly sold at the new prices. The fact is that people appreciate the stand of The Singer Manufacturing Co., has taken to reduce tbe prices of their machines and do away with the old long winded time plan of doing business, and sell for cash. This enables them to save a large expense, which

saving

they give to their patrons. Now

is the time to buy tbe acknowledged "best machine" in use for little money. Office 306 Main street. si'it

T. H. RIDDLE

Seems to have struck a Bonanza with his recent opening display of Millinery. Since then this department of his house has been thronged with orders, and the

large

corps of milliners in his employ pushed to them utmost to meet the demand for the tasty and elegant head coverings, or rather adornments, for there isu't much covering to the head in the present styles of bonnets and bats, and of course Riddle's milliner's are up to the very latest styles.

I may not kro& thing.* I don't profess that I do. But I know who keeps tbe best groceries, and who sells 'era the cheapest, too. It's R. W. Rippetoe at tbe "White Front"—He's the man as gives sixteen ounces to the pound, and a square deal, and as my Johnny says, he's takin' in shekels by tbe shovel full. Why, while other grocers find one

goods, Rippetoe has two wagons, and mlty lively bosses they sre too. Why, I never sence I was born seed tbings a sellin'like his groceries is. But it's no wonder. A dollar '11 go furder in Rippetoe's, than it will go in any other grocery store in this town, an' I do think in my sole that folks is fools that don't trade thar. An' how you hear me 1

HERZ is now done building and is ready for business. Anything thats new and desirable in his line is now on exhibition in large variety and at prices to suit the times.

Received an enormous lot of Parasols, Fans, Linen suits, Children's dresses, Lace bibs and collars, Ribbons, Ties, Corsets, Kid Gloves, Hosiery and a .thousand other things at prices to please everybody.

Goods will be shown with pleasure and prices are guaranteed.

A. HERZ.

HERZ' Linen Suits only need to be seen, the styles and prices speajc for themselves.

HERZ will open on Monday 10 doz. Diamond Bustles at 70c each worth 1.00. 100 Children's Parasols at 40c each worlh 1.25. Several cases of fans at your own prices.

MOTTO frames taz&ahed cheaper than ever by J. F. PROBST.

GRENADINES! LAWIJSI

-AND

•WHITE G6ODS~*

1I7E have just opened a very elegant as-

yV

»ortment of Black and Colored Grenadiutt, for

SUITS A OVEBOKE&SES,

With Fringe# and and Laees to Match. BLACK IRON FRAME

E N A I N E S

25,80, $5,40,50,00,75c, up to »i.» per yard, AIL SILK GRENADINES S In handsome uew designs, Matelaase effects, etc., 50c, 7ic 11.00, fl 50, *2, *2.75 pervd. The most elegant goods ever shown in Terre Haate. WHITE GOO DP LAWKS, PMIBHI,

SWISSES, TAELETASS,

WHITE PIQUESI.

10.12%, 13.28,25c and upward. All new and„ under price. White Victoria Lavai, White Llnea

Lawaa,

White Goods of every description for

Commencement and Graduating fu pr"iDrft8se8.

•»"&

The largest aisorttbehT'ln the city.

LADIES'BEADY MADE SUITS

In Silk,Worsted. Bunting, Linen, Cirubric, Percale, Lawn, etc.

HOBERG, ROOT & CO.' OPERA HOUSE.

Wanted

Ml

PASTURE.

Wshade

ANTED-HORSES AND CATTLR TO pasture—plenty of bluegrasa, water and 82.00 per month. JOS. GIL« tfERT, "Fruit Ridge Avenue, 3 miles east of city.

For Sale.

jfaAMfcs&iI

tX)R SALE—BUGGIES—ONE. SIFTINtt, top "Piano Box" Buggy, nearly new. one Basket Pliaeton both in good repair. May be seen by enquiring at Adams Express office. It

For Trade.

TV

TJ»R TRADE-A IT ty in Indianapolis for near Terre Haute. Apply opposite postofnee.

RESIDENT PROPERproperty in or RT KESrER,

lliiv. 19-tf

For Rent.

,OR RENT—DESIRABLE OFFICE rooms in second story of building comer i«ain and Fourth streets, in jear of C. E. Hosford's office, lnqui re of C. M.

W ARREN.

CJTRAW HATS

FOR THE MILLION Ji s-k

Hats for faces broad and burly Hats for straight hair and curly Hats for gentlemen of standing Hats Chat give a look commanding .. Hats broad brimmed for sturdy farmers Hats for youths, some real charmers Hats of quiet style for pastors Wats low crowned, your knowing castors Hats for walking, riding, driving Hats young men will look alive in Hats for any age or station Hats for every creed and nation Hats that would a *aint entice Hats for all, at any price,

In fact, the cheapest in the city, at

SYKES' HAT STORE.

TTTTTT TTTTTTTTrTTTTTTTT

.TIEIAIS...

TTTTTTTTTTT TITTTT TTTTTT TEAS FOR TEAS

TEAS A FINE TEA! TEAS TEAS A FRAGRANT TEA I TEAS TEAS A NEW TEA OR A TEAS TEAS TEA OF ANY DESCRIPTION TEAS TEAS For less money tkan you TEAS TEAS can buy It any where else, bo- TEAS TEAS sides havi/Jg It warranted to TEAS/ TEAS suit you. Call on TEAW TEAS

wf'HAMRFR S""8"

TEAS TEAS

«-•, TEAS Near the Post Office. TEAS

vWi'mZFto uuVS XTTTTTTTTTTrTTITTTrfTTT

rpo

SAVE MONEY !f

MY- WIFE

Days to get my Old Clofhes

KENOVATED

It will be done best at

H. F. REINER' DYE HOUSE,

ai*7-4w.

4

No. 650 Maiu

Street.

BARGAINS/

te

For the next THIRTY DAYS we will make a Special Offering of ouj Immense Stock of

DRY GOODS NOTIONS,

&c.

At a GREAT SACRIRIFICE, in order to reduce Stock.

5

We hare marked prices »o loir that everybody ean buy. Call and make your purchases

once, for

first come, flrf

served.

Remember,

we WILI

NOT be undersold.

B.^EHRLICH

Cor. Fifth and Main 8ts

*s a

-rrs*.

"r