Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 8, Number 9, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 18 August 1877 — Page 4

4

THE MAIL

A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

TERRE HAUTE, AUGUST 18,1877

P. S. WESTFALL,

EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.

TWO EDITIONS

Of this Paper are published.

1

The FIRST EDITION, on Friday Evening has a large circulation In the snrronndlng towns, where It ia told by newsboy* and agents. The SECOND EDITION, on Saturday Even lug, goes into the bands of nearly every reading person in the city, and the form era of this immediate vicinity.

Uvary Week's Issue is, in Hut, TWO NEWSPAPERS, In which all Advertisements appeiur for

ONE UHAAGK

has been ordered in Tur-

A DRAFT

k®y.

"U

THOSE Btrappiog Nashville barbers are on a strike. They should join the new Wig party.

THJB Turk who don't want to obey the diaft can represent himself as an Asia Minor.

THE illness of Senator O. P. Morton has reached a very grave situation,, and it is feared be cannot live long,

THE editor is spending a couple of weeks in the eastern cities looking up nsw features for The Mail the coming year.

THE Maine Democrat turns sick at the stomach at the idea of inflation the Ohio Democrat can't sleep without more inflation.

EVERY editor who can not manufacture a pun on the war now steals one from the exchanges and is Russian it into print. "BUTLER would Ie a Moses rather than a Caasar." If so, he must radically change his motives. The Patriarch of the Israelites worked for the people while Butler works for himself.

BOASTS of long freight trains by local journals must now cease, a locomotive on the Lake Shore and Michigan South era road having pulled recently one hundred and eight cars from Laporte to Chicago. _______________

F. M. LAcr, a former student of Asbury University, has presented the college with a valuable collection of Japanese specimens, consisting of minerals, woods, vegetable products etc. which he acquired during a two years' residence in that country.

IN various parts of the country camp meetings are in progress. An idea has been held for some time that the old fashioned camp meeting was a thing of the past but the numerous gatherings under the sylyan shades last year and this year would seem to show that the custom is even more popular than ever.

WEare glad to see that our suggestion in regard to the formation of milita companies has received the attention it deserved. We notice that efforts are being made in many of the towns throughout the State to organize companies, and have little doubt but the undertakings will meet with promDt -and enthusiastic encouragement.

THE fact that free labor was regaraed as a disgrace has been the curse of the South. The Democratic party now pretends to befriend free labor in the north, yet it is the same party which has championed the aristocracy among whom this free labor was a disgraoe. This is about what was to be expected of a party whloh in Maine wants contraction and in Ohio wants inflatlon.Jt||5

ON the 11th of September will begin the Twelfth Annual Fair and Exposltion of the Vigo Agricultural Society. The people of the city should oo-operate heartily with those of the county to make the fair an attractive success. The fair is one means of keeping business pushing and of drawing crowds—an important consideration. But above this we owe it to ourselves to maintain the reputation of Harrison Prairie as the best agricultural region in the State. In order to do this we must bring the agricultural people together in sharp competition on the aotual merit of their goods, and encourage the produotlon of the very best or everything.

MR. RRSKIN is reported as saying that in the last twenty years much more general progress has been made in the appreciation of good mnsio than in the knowledge and love of good pictures. If Mr. Ruskln could tell us just woat the advancement has been in each during that time it would be exceedIhgly interesting and, we doubt not, enoouraging to hear it. And if this Seer of the Beautiful oould look forward with the eye of prophecy another twenty years and reveal to us the progress the world will make in the knowledge and appreciation of literature, art and science during that period, the revelation would probably be far more gratifying.

MAURICE THOMPSON, the Crawfordaville lawyer, archer and poet, has been "summer sauntering" In the Michigan lumber region, and this is what he saw, as told io a letter to the Indianapolis Journal: "No Stale In the Union," he aaya, "from Florida to these lakes holds so large a body of almost worthies* lands as does Michigan. From the beautiful and flourishing manutacturing dty of Grand Rapids, to the terminus of the Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad at Petoekey, not one really fine Cum is

and cedar-covered hills poor, stumpy or stony farms: little, comfortless, Godforsaken houses rickety saw mills, tucked away in all sorts of preposterous plaoes lank, liver-covered men and sad-faced women illy-olad and dirty, tow headed ohildren—these are the features, the prominent striking features of the Michigan lumbering region." We venture the prediction that if Maurice ever travels that way again It will be In an impenetrable incognito.

CHAUNCKY ROSE died on Tuesday evening, 18th August. When a rich man dies, the inquiry is, ••What did he have." But in this instance, good an swer cau also be given to those other questions, "What did he do?" and "What kind of a man was hef" It Is not a sudden and shocking death, but the decease of a man ripe in years, whose time had been stretched considerably beyond the three acere' years and ten, and whose physical strength kept him alive long even after it was thought that his time had come. He was a man of deeds, not words. His kindness of heart, and the grand usefulness of his life, have fitting tribute in thfl j&catfiful remembrance of our citizens.

IF we must have fiction,"lot us have the best. It is enoouraging to see that really meritorious rks seem to be more popular of late than the "trash." Munro now issues the standard writings as his "ten cent novels." The Lakeside Company and the Seaside Company publish the works of the best writers of fiotion. Serials written b^- standard authors are printed in very many of the weekly papers whlchcometo our table. These things show not merely that pub lishers are trying to" elevate the public taste, but that there is a demand for the better class of such writing, which it is for themrto fill. Thus the shallow im aginer must stand aside to make room for the real thinkers—for the close students of human nature.

IT is quite beyond explanation, how editors when prejudiced can misrepresent people. Beecher said something in a sermon on the strike, about bread and water, and was accused of asserting that these were good enough for a laboring man but he even took the pains to deny it and explain what he really did say. Yet half the papers in the country keep harping on Boeoher's bread and water. Then again, the telegraph reports Rev. Joseph Cook as complaining that the railroad magnates by running trains on Sunday demoralized and overworked their employes. But up pops an editor "hard up" for subjects on which to write editorials, and makes fun of Cook on the ground that he said the strike was a judgment for running trains on Sunday—an entirely different proposition.

MANY wild and visionary schemes for the amelioration of the laboriDg man's condition are just now being thrust upon public attention by shallow-brained blatherskites which are not worthy of a moment's thought. There is one plan, however, that of arbitration which is entitled to respeotful consideration. Where it has been fairly tried it has worked well. Beginning in the hosiery trade in England nearly twenty years ago, the method has extended generally over the iron and coal trade of England and Wales. A great deal of practical good has resulted from it. In some cases a large advancement in wages has been awarded by the board of arbitration while at other times wages were reduced, and as in the first instance the proprietors had stood by the rise, so in the latter, the men stood by the fall. This method of settling labor troubles has not yet been as extensively attempted in this country as its merits deserve and we hope to BEE it grow in popular favor. It is a reasonable and peaceful method and one which is peculiarly calculated to succeed in this country where intelligence is so generally diffused throughout the laboring masses.

A FEW COMMON MISTAKES. Perhaps there are few things more certain than that too many young men nowadays rush into what are termed "the learned professions." They do so beoause they labor under several false impressions in regard to professional life. Many of them think it is comparatively easy, almost certainly lucrative and eminently respectable. As to the first, no mistake could be greater. Take the lawyer as an example. If successful he Is a hard and incessant worker. He is perplexed and harassed beyond expression. He carries a weight upon his mind, which it is not easy to get rid of. A lawyer in good practice told the writer that he dreamed over his cases every night. He did not want to do so but he could not help it. The popular impression that lawyers earn their fees easily is a great delusion. All this is true in a modified form of physicians. The strain upon a doctor in large practice is terrible. It's work day and night and every day and night. There is no escaping it. The call comes and he is obliged to answer it. The sick and dying are awaiting and, whether sick or well himself, he must attend them. His sleep is disturbed and broken and, unless hia system Is capable of withstanding an Immense strain, be will sooner or later break down.

The next mistake lain regard to the profits of profs—lonsl lifo. And here it may be admitted that lawyers and phywho have attained a large practice, frequently realise handsome Incomes. Bat Is ssldom If ever true that there are not several other men In the commnnlty, merehaets, manufecturera, of one kind or another, whose incomes greatly exceed those erf the foremost piolhsslonsl man. Then again it is to be remembered that the

within the sight of the traveler. Wild tamaracswamps, alternating with pinejmajority of professional men never

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY jiv-max

achieve anything more than a moderate living and, in a great many cases, no* that and many a man who baa dragged out a laborious life as a mediocre lawyer might have made three or tear times ss much in some calling for which he was naturally better suited. Besides this overcrowding of the professions causes the young members to undergo a long and hard struggle before they obtain a foothold. In many instances the struggle continues for years before the s4rority of the trial ia ended. It is something akin to the experience which 'Hawthorne underwent and which he so beautifully pictures in a lettter to hia friend Bridge: "I aat down by the wayride of life, like a man under enchantment, and a ahrubbery sprang up around me, and the bushes grew to, be saplings, and the saplings beoame trees, until no exit apptored posetble, through the entangling depths of my obscurity." How often doea the ahrubbery seem to be growing up around the young professional man, while his oompaniona In more active pursuits are hastening on to success and competency!

Then as to respectability. Let us have done with this foolish notion that one business is any more or less respectable than another. Each is respectable if we make it so otherwise, not. In truth, respectability usually attends success and never waits upon failure'. So that even if it is this element that is sought it is far from certain that it is not to be found in commerce, agriculture or mercantile business rather than in professional life. It is a false notion, too, that the active practice of a profession allows of more spare time for mental culture and discipline than other pursuits. If professional men as a rule are more cul tivated in art and literature than others, (a proposition which we are far from as serting) it is only because they have had stronger natural inclinations in that direction and ,bave made a better use of their opportunities than men in other pursuits and not because their opportunities have been more favorable.

THEB USINESS O UTLOOK. The business prospect is steadily and daily improving. There can be no doubt of this. The orops throughout the West, Northwest and South have been so far much beyond the average, while there is an excellent prospect for those yet in the fields. It is estimated that when the entire crops of tLese sections are put into market each State will realize a clear revenue of f25,000,600 over and above the ordinary returns. Such a surplus will go far towards accelerating the wheels of commerce. It will carry comfort and hnppiness to thoussnds of homes and banish the spectre of want and deprivation.

In New York the indications are that the fail trade this year will be the largest since 1873 The Herald, after an interview with many of the leading business men, says the conviction of the great majority of them is that business will be better than it has been for several years past and they feel cheerful and hopeful. "The indications are that the country is rounding slowly to better times," says one of them. Southern buyers have already made their appearance and a larger Southern trade is expected than for any year Jgpce the war.

Of course nothing (Midden and extraordinary is looked for by sagacious and careful business men. They know better than to expect an instantaneous change or even to desire it. .Relief must, in the very nature of things, oome gradually. "Rounding slowly to better times," expresses it admirably. Patience, hope, confidence, these arc the qualities to be exercised, now. When we are fully satisfied that times are not getting any worse we shall pretty soon be satisfied that they are getting better. And when we are once quite sure that we are on the upward grade, confidence will speedily return, energy quicken, and the wheels of commerce begin to go round again with something of their old time velocity. The outlook is certainly encouraging and, on the whole, satisfactory. ta-a=--======-,v

THE ORANDh UR OF TIME. The generations of the earth—how many have thdre been? Is there any that can count them? Traces of man's presence are found by the truthful student of nature in strata upon whose deoay lies the debris of countless ages, The people of this earth have been as the sands of the sea-shore and almost every individual of all the mighty hosts —every one of the human beings who now remain as the piled-up mummies of Egypt and Peru and India, every plaindweller on the wide stretches of Ada, every dusky member of (be multitudes of Africa, each of the great Caucasian race, each one from the throngs which onoe peopled ancient America and prehistoric Europe, whose very tones have gone back to the elements long ago —every one of these many millions had in his breast the spirit of progression, of at least maintainance or better, and of, let us say, improvement, even though it were from a selfish motive. And yet where are we to-day?

The very idea of a God, a being who looks down with an eye of ever-watch-ful but unlimited patience, is sublime. The thought of a Being wboee source to from everlasting, wad who watches these toiling millions coming and goingwatching them without haste or anxiety, waiting In that divinity to whom eternity Is but a day—is the grandest and most awe-lnapiring theme that can take possession of the human soul.

And now when we picture In our minds this infinite Being ss everlasting, end as having seen the birth of the world itself, and witnessed its slow sue osssive changes, we can think of Him a" one who regards not time, who counts not the years, and who reckons the hu­

man

nee

only by generations. Then in

grasping one more Idea, that of a m|llenium, the mind most not only reach backward among the long

pestages^but

must bound forward toward an indefinite time tbst we can not yet see, and which we can only hope for as representing perfection. The Bible teaches such an Idea, and the prophets of Israel foretold it. The desire for ultimate perfection ia one that is universsl, including in more or less degree all hearts. Infidel and skeptic, Christian and pagan, savage and idolaters-all, vaguely though It be, look forward to some golden era far away in the dim future, when the best Is to be realised

Such happy state we choose to 1&11 Millenium. And now it is but natural to clothe thia infinite Ruler, whom we have just considered, with a great purpose, whloh is that of attainment, gradual, and to the human mind immeasurably slow, though it be, toward thia millenium. This makes it even more eaay for us to think of Him as reckoning the millions of mankind only by generations.

Childhood oounts the very days eventful but gray-haired age sees only the few major points of interest that have been included in three-score years. Thus must be a faint realization of the com' parison between the conception of time and events as seen by the human mind and by the Infinite.

Speculation on the character and mode of manifestation of the Almighty belongs to the sects. But now codsidering only His unfathomable existence and this one stupendous purpose, how little and simple must be to Him the things that to us are so great in otir lives! The everyday worries and triumphs which rack our brains and seem so big to us, are of no consequence. His considers tion, as regards our relation to that grand future culmination, is only the part each one plays in the real struggle —the niche each fills in the whole immense system.

After such retrospect we can now oonceive of this Deity as appointing tasks for men, and on their failing to fulfill them he don't compel them to do so, but merely gives the work to somebody else. If this generation are enervated by the vices of the preceding one, it is a different matter, but if we waste ourselves, if we give ourselves up to pleasure and lust and idle vanities, if we live as the inhabitants of ancient Pompeii evidently did without even the redeeming traits of the Spartans and Phoenicians, if we weaken before the little tasks imposed upon us, God is not going to send angels to help us—he will merely wait for another generation. He may send to us Jonahs, He may provide the tools and the directors lor our work in the vineyard, but if we refuse to dig and prefer to lie dreaming in the shade he will not take up the spade and do the work himself he is in no hurry he has plenty of men and will have plenty more he can afford to let us dio and get out of the way.

If this Ordainer appoints any certain maa for some extra task in the great work, and that man turns out to be a bigot or a drunkard or a libertine or a miser, his gifts will shine just as clearly in some other man a hundred years hence. This infinite patience tries one after another. Here is one that would give a great impetus toward that golden realization, but some trifling and unnecessary defect turns him aside among the little nothings which stand outside of the one great purpose. Here are another and another and another, each well fitted for the work, but each showing some fault. What is to be done? Shall the worm eaten and wind blown orchard be trained and cultivated? No, there is plenty of time, the Gardener will just root out the whole, and plant new trees. He will try another generation. Edch may be better than the last, but none are yet perfect.

We worry sometimes ss to the hundreds of drunken drones that defile the streets o' our cities the vile wretched who in every land are postponing the millenium the consumers who are not producers and above all the worse than worthless women who are poisoning the race with scrofula. What is to be done with all these? The solution is easy— they'll *|11 die off!

This is a terrible subject, and in contemplation of such seemingly endless succession of generations, the mind stoops low in humility. It must have been in such feeling that the song was written, the favorite one of Abraham Lincoln, "O. why should the apUit of mortal "be proud? Lift a swift-fleeting meteor, a fast-flying cloud, A or the lightning, a break of the Manpames fl-om life to his rest in the grave. The leaves of the oak and the willow shall Be scattered around and together be laid: And the young and the old, and the low and the high, Shall moulder to dust and together shall lie."

Akin to this feeling also wss that In which was penned that eld song, Where, where will be the birds that sing,

A hundred yean to eomet

The flower* that now in beauty spring, -. A hundred yean to comef Pale, trembling age, and flay youth, And childhood, with Its heart of truth The rich, the poer, on land and sea Where will the mighty asllllons be,

A bandied yean to come?

THE attraction of to-morrow is a leoture in the morning at the Congregational church and another in the evening at Centenary, both by OoL A. B. M—remembered by all aa having narrewly eeoaped the mssssnra of the U. 8. Ctommlssioners which led to the war with the Modoc Indiana. Notwithstanding the terrible wooods he received, his object is a missionary one, to speak In behalf of the peace policy and for Christian dealing with the .Indians, and to inform the people on the true standing of the red man.

A CURIOUS FAMILY.

Fw&JPesrton* Leading a Secluded Life •lwr Who WiU not Marty The Timee and Dispatch of Reading says: "Albany, the township of snakes and catamounta, possesses one. of the most curious families in the country, whose history is quite remarkable. Knndel ia the navae of the family, which consists of five persons, four old bachelors and one old maid, brothers and sisters, who are bound together by the most affectionate tiea ana refuse to be separated. The sister is in her seventieth year, and ia noted for her excellent management, wielding a great influence over her younger brothers, who range in age from fifty to aixty-five years, the youngest being upward of fifty years old. They are all over six feet tall, possessed of herculesn frames. The farm upon which they live has been handed down over a hundred years, and was acquired by their ancestors over a century ago. Their house was erected more than one hundred years ago, after the style of the first settlers,* split logs for a floor, filled up with clay. They do all their own work, and are neat and dean in all they do. Their farm is in excellent condition, and produces annually large crops. They ao not have thtir horses shod in the winter, only In the summer. In winter the shoes are removed, and the horses are not taken further than to water. They carry all their grain to the mill and back on their shoulders, never using the horses for this purpose. The barn roof and a number, of the out buildings are thatched with straw. The family is much respected, and is .reported to oe wealthy. A sister who married a number of years ago has been utterly discarded, her singular brothers snd sister having paid her the portion to which she was entitled out of hervfather's estate, and will have no further intercourse with her. This curious family resides near Wesnerville, in Albany township, and have never been out of the county, and it is believed, never out of the township. They are said to have relatives in Philadelphia whom they have never seen or visited.

WANTED TO SUIT HIS CUSTOE [Oil City Derrick.] "Cut my hair," said a customer, ss he seated himself in a barber's chair, "and be sure you let it run down the back of my neck," referrlng.of course,to the particular style of the cut.

The barber was a Western artist, having lately arrived in Oil City from St. Louis.

After clipping away lor some time he: concluded that perhaps the hair wasn't running down his customer's neck ss fest as that Individual might desire it—although for the life of him he couldn't see why he should want it to run down stall —and when a quantity had accumulated inside bis shirt collar, the accommodating barber shoved it down and out of sight with tha handle of the brush.

This performance repeated two or three times, and the customer began to realize what was going on. Henceforward he took a lively interest in the proceedings. He said: "What in the name of the bird with the broad and sweeping wing are you doing "It didn't seem to run down," said the barber, apologetically, "and so I crammed it down with the brush."

The customer acted like a man who had just made the discovery that a rat bad built her nest between his shoulder blades and had kittens there so he yelled "Cram your crammed head tocramnation!" ana then turning a double summersault out of his chsir be kicked at the reflection of the barber in the looking glass, and fell to knocking it forty ways for Sunday. While he was knocking the daylights out of the barber in the seventy-dollar looking glass the barber in the flesh escaped.

aD0WN

AT THE HEEL.

Down at the heel" is an expression »PJ first stages of

frequently

:presi

lied to individuals in the There is more

of a man toward the region of impecuniousness, is a neglect, intentional or unavoidable, of the heels of his boots, ahd the dilapidation of the extreme lower portion of his nether Integuments. Why this is so is not readily explained. None of our social economists have undertaken to explain the mystery. All we know is that it is one of the almost cer-

rarely fortunes are waning, aud especially if bis misbsps have been caused by indul gences in drink, almost invariably. Thaokeray says: "Poverty seems disposed, before it takes possession of a man entirely, to attack his extremities first the coverings of bis feet, bead and hands are its first prey."

SHABBY-GENTEEL PROVERBS. A patch well put on is as good as a new shoe.

A paper collar never goes to the wssh. Always put off till to-morrow what you cannot pay to day.

In a shower of rain an'old bat looks as good ss anew one. The man who goes often to the tailor gets the account at last.

Half a pair of gloves is better than none at all. It is a short bill that has no renewal.

Never leave off a brass chain till you got a gold one. Level boot heels and a light heart always go together.

WHAT TO EAT IN SUMMER. Dr. W. H. Vail publishes an article on Sammer diet, and makes the following argument: "God, in bis providence, has stocked the polar regions with the seal, the wbele andtue bear all!be personification of fist and oil—while vegetation is comparatively unknown. On the other hand, as you approach the tropics, oranges, bananas, lemons, and all our luscious fruits greet you on every hand, and vegetation runs wild. This disposition or Providence teaches us—what our appetites confirm—that in cold weather our diet should consist mainly of oily substances, or such food aa is converted into fat by the process of digestion while in the Summer we should select such articlee of diet as are not convertible into tot." Dr. Vail ad da that vsgstatlon, the edible parts of which ripen underground, such as potatoes, carrots and parsnips, are beat producing, while tboee that riate cooling. The including especially asparagus. Isttnoe, peea, beans, tomatoss, corn and all fruits, should be freely eaten. Meat should not be eaten oftener than twice a day, and lean is preferable. He particularly reoommeodstometoss.

Tbersie not a joyful boy or an innocent girl buoyant with fine purposes of duty, in all the street full of eager and rosy feoee. bat a cinkscan chill and diehearten with a single word..

HOBERGT ROOT & CO.,

OPERA lIOCSiK

Decided Bargains

Now is the time to buy

BLACK SILKS! -.B"0* Black Alpacas

LARGE STOCK

,— AMD

BLACK ALPACAS. 20.25,30. 35,40,50c per yard. BLACK CASHMERtS, all-wool,

40 inch wide, 65, 75, 85c anC $1.00

per yard.

BUCK BROS GRAIN SILKS! Particular attention ie invited to this the

LARGEST STOCK OF BLACK SILKS EVER SHOWN IN TERRE HA0TE, and at prices lower than they have ever been sold.

eral honsework or as nurse girl. South Eleventh (treet.

•USIVOVOK BVBOXnABS. AanniwmaMdMMTUI tor BOMLAIALABV, Ju«paMqta* nrMtu4 itHpM rnmin-orn»-mM BWt tttillt rilnr-pUtOd •MWUHMM Cta b. ptowi fl* Miyuo* •r wMav, Md w. defy. Braat*a to opra with•to, (wp. ud all oonpM., rMdjrIW wl* lilutrmtod oliwriM, nat

FOR

Fi"OR

-Vfc

.ASHMERES

!v'.

LOW PRICES I

Thev were all bought by our Mr. Root at forced eales for caslw and will be sold at a small ad-«i

vance over cost. Elegant Black 1.15. 1.25. 1.35, I and $2.00.

mm**-' *"JiV

Many of these can neve ere-^, placed at the price. v.. HQBERG, ROOT & CO.V

OPERA HOUSE.

Wanted.

ANTED.

4-

E*

sm

Ft-3JJ-

Silks at 1.00, .1 .50, 1.60, |.75«

-h'Si

Wer, having- experience, license and good recommendation. Address MARY A. PARKER, Terre ante, I nd. 1

Wmangirl

ANTED. A SITUATION

BY

A GER-I-I»

in good family, .to do gen Call at 205'

7,

NMipt

WANTED—SITUtinne

of

BO casta. County Hgktilbr nfe IUIM, BOBOliAB ALABlf OO, SatM BLOCS, IKDU1UF0US.

A TION.—I

Bltuation asa thishi. Address" HETNRY

tools, and or will sell EASTON, City.

WMound-builders'

r. I have a pet oC^V'1 or Without tools, N.'^

ANTED-TO BUY INDIAN RE LICSff Implements and Geological Specimens. Cufl at Mall office or 1 address Lock Box, 1865, Terre Ha«te, diana. Jy'28-0mfs,U iy LOVERS KEEP YOUR SECRETS. RE'^| oelpts for INVISIBLE INKS. (7 varleties) mailed for 12 cents in stamps. Addressf VARIETY INK CO. Indianapolis, Ind. •fri*

ipaper gal

itate

Also

I drculat |d in th6BMI«V,Vl.W*HVV. bat it is carefully and thoroughly read lrn the homes of its natrons, and Chat it is the^jgp tery bestadvertising medium in Westernndlana.

t-Hfr

For Sale.

north of town. ii Si tOR SALE ON EASY TERMS, OR IN exchange for real estate in rerro Haute, 1®) acres ot tlmberland In one body, 4 miles southwest of Casey, Ills. Apply toG.Kerck-.' hoff, No. 19 south Fifth Street, Terra Haute^ uoo. nu. Indiana.

SALEr-ALDV

teen montbs qU, fayra coiorw imnasomw and good IM dam Is aWperlor cow. f.. I S O N O W

SALIS OTF/mAbE^TJ^KE OOOD^IF or 482

FOR

SALE-THE PROJ ERTY KNOWN as the "TUTTLE MILLS,"

ANT,

at Ellsworth

Indiana,-Consisting of flouring mill, five run of burrs, and all the necessary machinery, warehouse, cooper shop. flfty to tiixty acres of ground with several dwelling bouses, for sale at one-half its vaftie on long, credit. For terms or any Iniorfnatlpu in ro ganlta the property apply toT2

Palace of Music

213 OHIO STREET,

North Side of the Public Square, Sells the best and cheapest

ORGANS

PMNOS

-IN THE

CALL AND SEE!

HIANOS aad Organs for rent and Isale easy monthly payments.

CI ,r,c

R. BRY­

Agent Adams ierre Haute, ladn

fiWUND-^fHAT WlTa.ON£STRpKEOF I? the pen jou can refech, wltb«n advertisement In tha Saturday Evening Mall, almost avery readiri| family in this city, as well as the residents of the towns fuuj: country sur sounding T^rre Haute.

USSNER

b1-

H-A