Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 8, Number 29, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 January 1878 — Page 3
THE MAIL
PAPER
FOR THE
••n"'
PEOPLE.^
Home Topics.
""i _____
By Faith Rochester, in the Ame.ican Agrl- •, coiturist.
3
4i I
--•I KEEPING A DIARY. '^1 And it of some advantage to keep a small diary each year. A journal la a different thing. In the latter yoa may apread yourself to your heart's content, bat a diary ia for buslneaa. It should be kept up pretty closely, or be written in every evening, if one would avail himself of all its advantages. Anything will do for a diary, which givea Clean apace for writing, but a little pocket book, made for the purpose, with spacpa marked for each day in the year, is best. Three years ago I had no ready made diary when the year began, so I used a small blank book, making the dates as I wrote. But this got us into a 'pretty scrape* one pleasant summer day. We called it Saturday, and Mr. wbo bad been at home, working on the larirt tor several weeks, bad determined to go back to the city, to work that paid setter 1 am asbamea to say it in an Agricultural journal), on that very Saturday. When a neighbor, wbo seldom left his daily work in the Held at this season, came to the door in bis clean Sunday clothes, and loitered as though quite at leisure, I said, 'I wonder if Mr. J. hasn't lost his reckoning, and taken this for Sunday.' We thought it must be so,and I related how amused my mother and I had been the year before to see my father dress himself up leisurely one Saturday morning, ana sit down in the shady doorway of the same house we lived in, toeing bis Sunday school song book through, in pleasant memory of the days gone by when he was a S. S. Superintendent, while his usual daily work was waiting quite urgently for His care. A little later 1 saw my neighbor's wife, also dressed up for Sunday, and when I asked her about it, she assured me that it was Sunday. The almanac could not he.p us out, but I thought my diary would. Bat that only confirmed my error, because I bad been several days behind, and in'writing up' lately, had
SKIPPKD A DAY.
We then talked it over together, but to the other members of the family, one day bad been so much like another all through the last week. Suddenly we remembered an important event which I had not chronicled at all, and |in slipping that in between the other days, we found ourselves in the midst of Sunday, sure enough. I believe Robinson Crusoe never lost track of the time, but I wonder how he could do so. I have had to go to my dairy to help our folks to a knowledge of the time more than once, and vre have even found bv that we were a Week behind in the days of the month.
Of course people who send children to school, or who live in the neighborhood of churches, or who have daily association with neighbors, are not likely to lose track of tho days of the week or month, but if you think it ridiculous to do so in any case, you should be placed as some reader* of thia paper are, out of sight of neighbors or a public road, and out of convenient reach of schools and churches.
ABDUr KBBL'INO ACCOUNTS.
I am Inclined to agree with Mrs. Stowe's Nina as to the futility of keeping account It does not bring the money back after you have spent it, and I 'ain sorry to say tuat my accouuts seldom add up and balance properlj', but the dally inomoranda in sny diary,of money received and spent, has saved me Irorn loss moro than once. When I write regularly in a journal, I note down 4ll letters received and sent, and I turn to tho diary to see whether it is time for a reasonable expectation of an answer to a business letter. I examine it, too, to learn how long a sack of llour, or a cord of wood, has lasted, In trying to make calculations about iumlly expenses also to loam h»w Ion* since the last rainy or sunny day, and if one of the children should got sluk, I should wish to trace back, through lb.» various entries In my diary, the different steps of the disease from the prolonged exposure to cold or dampness and the taking oold, or the overdid of sweet tbinga and resulting stomach a ?ho, to the actual sickness, in order that I might learn bow to avoid suoh trouble in the future. The diary is an important ally of the memory.
BEGINNING POOR.
A young woman asks whether I think it would IHI s,ife and prudent for her to marry 'John,' when they have less than three hundred dollars to start with. That depends. I decline to give personal aavloo In this case, though the person asking has my hearty interest and sympathy. The subject will allow of some general remarks.
What position In life do John and Mary aspiro to fill? What are their social alms and ambitions? If they must begin as though they were rich, while they are rtally poor, of course it is not prudent to marry. Butttoeroare thousatuls of happy families where a start was made with low than a hundred dol lars. Ml chalet aays that two cab live cheaper than one, and a young lawyer onee demonstrated to me how bo was able to save more from his Income since his marriage, while living for more comfottably #ud happily than before. But his wife knew how to make the most of everything, »nd they had sufficient means at first to set up house-keeping in a pleasant aud comfortable manner.
Two people wbo love each other can b^gln house keeping with a very small outlay of money, if they are so disposed. ,Tbey need only to furnish one room,and that with little outlay of money. _A cook stove, a lamp, a wash basin, a tub, awash board. These are about all the articles of furniture actually necessary to begin with. Then the
SAVING MTTST BBOIN,
and out of the savings there can soon be purchased other useful household articles, until the establishment Is comfortably equipped. I know from experience that carpets and curtains (other than newspapers—and parhaps I should have set down a good newspaper among essential articles), are not among the necessaries of lift* In all circumstances. When they runs l»* had, cheap CUPS can be found to answer the requirements of utility and beauty. If a young oouplo, with very small means, begin In this way, and carefully keep out of debt, paving for everything as they buy It, ttiev will And a satisfaction in tbelr purchases which they could never have ia the possession or treasures balanced by debt. In order to save anything from the weekly *r monthly eamiugs, there must be careful eeonoiry about food and clothiug. The most nourishment from the least mouev must be the alui. and every leak should be stopped, or alt outlay for that which brings no real advantage ia return.
BEGINNING ARITHMETIC.
Some mothers who teach their children at home. And It more difficult to bring them along properly in arithmetic
HI
than In any other branoh. This baa been the case with me. Geography, with a globe anB maps, almost teaches itself. A mother, with a mind at leisure, can manage the arithmetic well enough, I suppose. After the little one has learned to count, it can be taught to put' numbers together, either by using a reg ular Abacus or counting frame, or by using beans, peas, or marks on a slate. The mother can make for It little problems of the simplest character, leading it alon subtraci teaching it and preparing it to use a book intelligently when It baa learned to read well enough. I had never found a book that suited my needs until a friend sent me lately a 'Table Book and Introduce tory Arithmetic, by LvdlaNasb.' This ta-not.word too muoMod ltk»qaiu,
enough. It was compiled by a practical teacher to aid other teachers in drilling their pupils in the simple rules of arithmetic. There is nothing to commit to memory except the simple tables of the four fnndamental rules, and no one need require a child to repeat a table, if disposed to teach addition, subtraction.and even multiplication, in a more practical manner. But here the tables are arranged in the best manner, each one followed by a 'skipping around' table. After the tables, we have reading and writing of numbers, and then simple, gradod examples in addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. There are no rules snd no explanations, because the young child,for whom this introductory book is designed, is supposed to depend upon bis teacher for oral instruction and explanation. Here is simply something to do, in the doing of which the learning comes of itself. This is the modern theory of learning rules: learn to do a thing, and then tell us bow you did it, or bow it can be done. It was the old way to first painfully commit the rule to memory, whose sense it could hardly see, until it afterwards learned bow to apply the rule by familiarity with examples. I don't know where the book mentioned above can be obtained, but mothers who see and like tho idea, can act upon the same theory by using any book, and omitting rules and explanations (or not requiring that they be committed to memory, but teaching how, and explaining why, in her own way), or without using any book at all.
THE SPOILED BREAD. **'*•1
,3,j Sft I thought the fire was going down, and I would not need any more for two hours so I set the bread pau in the oven, with the batch of kneaded dough in it, and went up stairs to work. I was detained longer than I expected, and when I came back to the itchen, there was a hot fire (kindled up just before I set the pan in the oven, it seems), and I supposed that my broad was spoiled. I pulled off the upper half of It upon my floured kneading board, and picked out the remainder, which was half baked, as care fully as I could, and set the rough bits on a baking pan into the hot oven. At noon, when the children came hungry from school, they pounced upon these crusty brown baked bits as something quite rare and good, either alone or in tuilk, and so not any of that batch of bread was wasted. ,s 4 „SIMPLE DESSERT DISHES
Almost everybody knows -BrchVn Batty,' made with chopped appiea and bread crumbs. How came it to called 'Brown Betty?'—I know bow 'Joanna' came to be called so. My great aunt Joanna told mother how to make it, a plain but good cake, made with some milk, without eggs, and from being called 'Aunt Joanna's cake,' It came to be 'Joanna.' I turned aside right here to ask my mother, now sojourning with me, if she remembered how to make
JOANNA CAKE.—I-Ie«-e is the rule: One cup of loppered milk, one cup of sugar, one tablespoonful of butter, half teaspoonful of soda. flavor with nutmeg, or spice to suit, and use flour to make a rather stiff batter.
This cake would do well to use for a dessert, which may be made of any plain cake, with canned berries. Split open thw warm cake, and spread upon each half canned or stewed berries of any kind, laying one layer of cake, when spread, above the other. A plain sponge cake is vary nice treated in this way, and makes a rich dessert when served with sweetened cream.
A common cream short cake, split as for a strawberry short cake, and aressed with sweetened cre^u,makes a delicious dessert.
To come back to 'Brown Betty.' This can be made with almost any kind of fruit. Not lonfc ago, and a recipe for Brown Betty, made with pie plant, appeared in the tsket items of the Amer ican Agriculturist. The idea Is to place alternate layers of crumbed bread (buttered or not jrand fruit in a pudding dish, and bake or steam the whole. The other day, I used a quantity of dried peach sauce, which had become rather tiresome, by making a dessert, which gave satisfaction, In tbe shape of
DRIED PEACH BROWN BETTY.—A layer of peaclt sauce in the bottom of the pudding dish, a lay?r of bread crumbs about an loch thick, spfinkled with sugar another layer of ate wed peaches, atd a second layer of bread crumbs and sugar, with enough thiu, sweet cream poured over the top to wet the upper layer of crumbs. Bake from half an hour to an hour, according to the heat of tliP oven. Thltiwns eaten witfe good milk, but sweetened cream would net have spoiled it. A similar plain, everyday dessert can be made with dried apple sauce.
TO MAKE TWIST BREAD, Let the bread be made as for baker's or for w&eat bread, then take three pieces as larsre as a pint bowl eacb strew a little llour over the pasteboard or table, roll each piece undfr vour hands to twelva inches length, making it smaller iu circumference at the ends than In the middle having rolled the three in this way, take a baking tin, lay one part on it, join one end of each of tho other two to it, and braid them together the length of the rolls, and join the ends bv pressing them together dip a brush "in milk, and pass it over the top of the loaf after ten minutes or so, set it in a quick oven, and bake for neatly an hour.
PftKirnicR often rul** in the physical treatment «»f tmbies. They are aliowrd to suffer aud scream with palu from Colic, Flatulence, Bowel Disorders, etc., when some simple, reliable and safe remedy, as Dr. Bull's Baby Syrup, would give almost immediate relief and perfect ease to the little sufferer. Price 23 cents per bottle. MJ,-
*a* A CARD. *®-i4Sr-' To all wb« are suffering from the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weak new, early decay, loss of manhood, etc., I will send a recipe that will cur* yoa, FRES OP CHARGE. This great remedy was discovered by a missionary In South America, Send a self-addressed envelope to the Rrv. JOSEPH T. lira
lit /jtf «.«$.
NOHaa&aedthaBraakiaf
gradually through addition, Hon, multiplication and division ttkirt Uttis hope towsrelieved oillfSii side it to read and write numbers. mn. It tittaia. thw.thattb* popalartrv meat or this terrible dlwm by rtMdiM wtthtathe reach of all passed
AH,
Station I, Bible House, Nqw York City. OcUJS-iy
7
:?t'%
TWO IN ONE.
Thus combined we have two grand mediciS agents In one, each of which performs its function and uAltedly produce more cures than any linl« ment, lotion, wash, or plaster ever before com* pounded in the liistory of medicine. Try one.
Paioa, 35 CaaTS. Sold by all Wholesale and Retail Druggtatt throughout the United States aqd Canadas, and by WEKK8 POTTER. Proprietors. Boston, Mass.
"UnqutRtlonably the bestsustaiiietl work of the liird in iho World."
Harper's Magazine.
ILLUSTRATED
TERRE HA DTE SATURDAY EVENING xMAlL.
IMPORTANT LETTER
Into hands at one* eompeteat
aad trustworthy. The sew aad hitherto untried method adopCedsv Dr. Sanfbrd la thajmparaUon of his KAoiOA&Otrn lias won my hearty approval. I believe It likely to saeoeed when ail the nsaat remedies fall, because It strike at the root of the disesse, rlz., the aeUtMmt Mood while it heals the Ulcerated membrane by direct application to the sses. lu action le basea on certain fixed
tuuuMd, mast, la gnat majority of sues, «ffcet score. OTO. BKATO). M. D. SomooTT BLOCS,SO. FsAiinreBAX. Oct. l. iffii.
SANFORD'S RADICAL CURE
*fAT safely claim to bo one -of the few popular lu. remedies receiving the approval of mcdlcsl genttemen. who, In private, not only freely recommend it bat use it in tlielr families In preference to any of the preparations usually prescribed by ''^Tou'ttre aware.l said dlsHrenlshed city physician, that wy obligations to the Maes. Mealed Society aro each that I cunnot publicly recommend or prescribe the Rndlcat Cure hut since I received so much relief from the usa of it myself, after a thorough trinl of tho usual remedies. 1 have pn. Tately advised its DM. end presume
I
have sold
VJ CAXi
CUK*
SXNTOKD'S RIDT-
for nearly one Tear,
und
yrxift-e
'MPORTAJIT TO
USlNESS MEN!
:-5
uacia OIM«M has eatauaa mora mffertac or op of tbe conaUtitloa tfcaa Catarrh. T« IIMI BfUill,ctliili.otii|fcl.
ajwtem
K&IKS2
E
VENING MAIL
OES TO PRESS
O
N SATURDAY,
NOON..
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NOTICES OF THE PltESii.
The veteran Mng-ifcine. which long ago outgrew its original title of the New Monthly Magazine, has not in the least abated the popularity it won at the outset, but has added to It In many way*, and has kept fairly abreast of toe Times, thank* to tne enterprise of the publishers and the tact and wisdom of its I tors. For whatever ia best and most loadable in the literature of travel, discov ry, and Action, the average reader of to-day looks to Harper's Magazine, Just as ex (ectautly as did the reader of a quarter of a century ago: there is the sttne admirable variety of contents and the Maine freahutss and suggestlveness in its edit 'rial di partine ts now as then,—Boston Journal.
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Sub-o ip'lo'is r»*ct'lvel for Harper Period tea's only. Newspaper* are not lo espy this advertlsement without tim express order of Har-
per & Brother*. Address ARPETt A York,
moat-sootl.Ji!g, healing a splendid effect* cl b!i the wtib great «cru«lmy aad energy upon Itver.uiimediately freeing th-system of blltousoeHR, and cleans,!u« tb* blood of
upon the kidneys an adder, of any rem in use and at the same time it jets aud energy upon tbe cT all blliousoew, and cleansing toe blond e| all RneutnatJc ana other this
NEWSBOYS
nave sont to
vour More no less than one hundred of my patients for It.-
fft^PHITESSlL SATISFACTION. /•^ENTLEMES,—"We
ELL IT IN THIS CITY,
*A
can aay
candidly that we never sold a sfwlliir preparation that gave such universal a ti facUou. We liavo to learn the first compliilnt y-1.
We are not In the habit of recommending petent medicines, but your preparation meets tho wants of thousands, end wo tnlnk those eJSIctcd should be convinced of Hsgrcnt merits that thoir suffering will be relieved. We bir been In tho drug business for ttio p.ist wel ve years constantly', and.sold evcrythinKforCaturrli, hut yours leads all the rest. If
An Elcrtrn-Rnlvanle Battery combined with a highly Mcdh-nted Htrcsgtheninf l'iaeter, forming: ikn bent Pla»ter lor p-tiris and ucli«s iu tho World ol SIcdi* cine*
ELECTRICITY
As pr«nd curative and restorative ajrent"ts not nailed bv nn element or medicine in the history o? the lieaiinpflrt. Unless the vital spark lius flei the body, rentorntlon by means of clectriclty Is possible. It is the last resort«f all physicians and sor-
?rom
:eoire, and has rescued thousands, apparently dead, an untimely grave, when no other human asrency could have succeeded. This is the leading curative element In this Plaster.
BALSAM AND PINE.
The healing properties of our own fragrant bal« •am and pine and the gums of the Ea«t are too well known to require description. Their grateful, heallng.soothlng, and strengthening properties aro known to thousands. When combined in accordance with late and Important discoveries in pharmacy, their healing and strongthenlng properties are Increased tenfold. In this respect our Plaster is the best In use without the aid or electricity, fm a:
GENTS SELL THE MAIL IN
IXTY SURROUNDING TOWNS.
EDITIONS EACH WEEK,
1
proper yi.u c*n use this letter
or any part of It that you wlslr. Very truly yours. S. l. BAT.TVWrS & CO. Wholesale nri'l Utnil Dealers In Prti|f-, Books and
Stationery, Washington, lud., Feb. 23,18i6. Each pneknee rontni is Dr. San ford's Improved IrhalinK Tube, and f"ll directions for ttso in all coses. Prlc1?. $1.00. Forfait? by all wholesale and retail dmiffr'stn nnd alersthronuhont the United States unaCaniulHS. WEEKS & POTTER, General Agents and Wholesale Druggists, Boston, Mass.
GOUINSl
VOLTAIC PLASTER
j*!.
CHARGE ONLY FOR BOTH.
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mWENTY THOUSAND READERS. I tM I* Taking Horace Greeley's estimate of the number of readers to a family—on an average—every issue of the SATURDAY EVENING MAIL is perused by over Twenty Thousand People.
THE
SATURDAY EVENING MAIL
tm IS ON SALE EACH SATURDAY AFTERNOON, tfwtnu*
nY
A.. H. Dooiey Opera House 3. R. Baker A Co P. O, Lobby M. J*. Crafts...™, ..Opp. Post Office ITerd Feldler Cor. 4th and Lafayette St Ely & Conner Paris, Ills V. L. Cole...- Marshall, Ills Dlx &
Thurman Sullivan Ind Ren. Allen Clinton, Ind A. C. Bat«s. -...Hockville, Ind P. L. Wheeler Brazil, Ind Chas. Tlllotson Mattoon, Ills J. K. Langdon Ureencastle, Ind H. A. Pratt Wavelbnd, Ind Chas. Dickson .Knigbtsvllle, Ind P.M.Curley St. Marys, Ind Charles Taylor Rosedale, lud J. (J. Wilson ....Charleston, Ills airam Llckllghter AnnapoMs, Ills f.E.
Sinks Petrysvllle, Ind R. Ed. Bover Vermillion, Ills Charley AicCutcheon Oaktown, Ind
C. Sparks..... .. Hartford, lad uhas.D. Rlppetoe Bandford, Ind ara'l Deriickson Eugene, Ind Otis M.Odell Newport, Ind
uti8 M.uaeii Krank Watklns Montezuma, Ind B. F. Bollinger Shelburne, Ind H. A. Dooiey Merona, Ind T. L. Jones Prairieton, Ind \Vm. J. Duree.... Brldgetor, Ihd J. 15. Hocbstetter Bowling Green, Ind Albert Wheat. Rosevllle,Iud Cbas. L. Hlnkle Farmersburg, Ind Walton M. Knapp~ Westfield.Ilis Pontius Ishler Martinsville, I lis L. Volkers DennlBon, Ills John A.Clark .Livingston, Ills Harry Westfall Tuscola, Ills Ulysses S. Franklin, Aehmore, Ills Will DeArmond Areola, Ills Edwin S. Oweu., New QoRhen, Ind John Hendrlx Bellmore.lnd Wallace Sandusky New Lebanon, Ind Samuel Lovius..., Majoilty Point, Ills Richard Cochran Centervllle, Ind Harvey Stubbs Clirifunan, Ills d. A. Buchanan Judson, Ind rt. Mcllroy Maxvllle, Ind J. 8. Hewitt Dudley, Ills A. L. Burson .Scotland, Ills H. C. Dlckerson Seelevvllle, Ind Rose Ann Palmer..... I.Lockport, Ind Ben Francis Darwin, Ills J. J. Golden.................. Hutsonville, Ills H. M. Pierce Turners, Iod O. P. Strother Mlddlebury, lud F.J.S Robinson „.„Cloverland,Ind JoeT. McCoskey Youngstown, Ind W. B. Hodge York, Ills A. O. Kelly .Bloomingdale, Ind J. D. Connelly A nnapolis, Ind J. W. Russell A Oo. ArmieSburj?, Ind B. A. Herrlck Kansas, Ills J. H. Roeder —Center Point, Ind Owen Kissner Fatrbanks, Ind C. ii. C. Bradfleld Palermo, Ills Tho. High Fountain Station, Ind E. Davis .......Coal Bluff, Ind David Lewis, Darllnnton.lnd W. B. Martyn Carlisle, Ind
Mart yn
BOTHERS, New
lilOXEY and t'DKK.
•fc-I*
I.IVCIS
jt~t r?iii-xlv fhf deranjfm^ftt
of tli* i'N KY-. liLAl't'^KI*' V* is j»r. 1!* omiiOBDtl Kidney H»«t Mver n»e. li »x»Ti-ts»t-s tin-
ddr or
colored urine Vca Wing and Ir itnltmibont the neck of the a-tder. Do uo' tail to uae it for all Kidney. Blad er and Liver afTec^ tlons and far all Rheumasisn sand Keuralgta. Ibis a* a curative aol regulator ol tb«M orgaa* abaolutely baa Bo e^oal.
WForfcale by Berki aud Btrstut AAnwrRdSe, Dragtbita, Tem-Haote.
F48IIIO!IABl.B i" IWI1 «IC a ike, with name, ICc a) Scroll, with #3 name. !te. gents*ootnt 18e. Lll GEO. 1 REED 4t OO^ Kaasau, N.Y.
CABPS No two Scroll, with
-•J-f-V'C:
•mMmmmsm
Clement Harper Middletown, Ind W. R. Laudreth Casey, Ills I). K. ^tcliett Cftrterebtirg, Ind *•, J. Hutcblncon. Dana, Ind E. A. Kurtz Oakland, Ills
50 LOTS FOR SALE
A Good Opportunity for a Desirable Home.
50 lota for sale in BalrsdofTs subdivision (of the old Phlegan garden) on Fourteenth street and Liberty Avenue desir ably located, will be sold on reasonable terms. These lots are convenient to the railroad shops, city schools, and in a desirable part of the city. For further information call on
JAS. H. TURNER,
W. S. i'LtrT. J. H. WLLUAKS.
CLIFT & WILLIAMS,
MAJSXJYACTVKXBA O# fc
-ft*
Sash, Doors, Biinds, &c.
A56 UEAUtBS/X
LUMbER, LATH, SHINGLES, GLASS, PAINTS, 0118. aad BUILDERS' HARDWARE.
Professional Cards.
MAG1LL,
imilBT AT K.AWi
Offlee with N. O. Buff, north side Ohio street, between ThUd and Fourth. Special attention to collections, probate bualneas and bankrupt practice. THOMAS H. Nxtsox. 18AA0 N. PlKBCK,
N
ELSON & PIERCE,
RW.
Mulberry Street, Corner Ninth, TERRE HAUTE, IKD.
Attaraeya mt Law, -f-' TERRE HAUTE, IND.
Offloe, north aide Main at. near Tbi.d. sr. o. SUIT, & x. BKSCHXB
BUFF
A BEECHER,
ATTOBNK1S AT LAW,
OFFIC*—No. 820 Ohio 8treet, bet. Third and Fourth, north side. R. J. P. WORRELL,
Treats ezeluslvkly Diseases of the
£Y£ AAD EAR!
Ofllcet If*. S21 Obi* Street, TERRE HAUTE, IND. Office hours from 0 a. m. to 1 m. and from 8 to 5 p. m.
OSEPH RICHARDSON, M. 1)) '-w-
Hr
Office OB Ohio St, Bet. Srd A 111, TERRE HAUTE, IND.
O. LINCOLN,
Office, 221 Main street, near Seventh. Extracting aud artificial teeth specialties. All work warranted. tdAw-ti)
H.
BE PUT,
M.
1 1
Real Catate Agent
Office OVA- Prairie Clfy Bank, Sixth St.
THE^'I
A,
VSICIAN
& SURGEON,
^00ec, 0^, Cor. 6tb A Main ata. -n. tuver Drugstore.) Calls In the city or country answered promptly from my office during the day, and at night from my residence i&Nortn center street.
R. J. MILLS
would most respectfully announce to tne citizens of Terrc Haute and vicinity, that he has opened, on the corner of ISth aud Chestuut atreets. a Medical Othce, where he will treat all classes of Chronic and acute diseases, of both sexes, in tbe most selentitle aud successful mauuer, either with or without electricity.
Offioe and residence on corner of 18th and Chestnut streets, three streets east of Vauda11a depot. Visits made to the country, li required. (febl7-Iy)
DRSnrgeonBARTHOLOMEW.
E
MlW
aud Mechanical
DENTIST,
Xental
lCooiu, 157 Maiu Street near Oth, J«#
FEKKE HAUTE, INI,
,P0 OJj
Nitrous Oxide Gas adminlstertxt tor paj ess Tooth Extraction.
GW.
SW'
BALLEW,
v. ..
1^9^ if
DENTIST, iL«j'
Office, 11V Mala Street, over H»h+-
old
eonfertlouery stand, TERRE HAUTE, IND.
Can be found In office night ana day.
-^»^Business Cards. AL THOMAS,
Optioiau and Watchmaker For the trade, Maiu street, near Sixth, sigti of big man with watch.
W«P.
MYER, ML
Tinware and Job Shop,
114 south Fourth st. opp, Market House, a full stock Of Tinware. Special attention given to Job Work.
RIPPETOE
Gene al Dealer in
GEOCEFTEg, «VI8I0NS AND PRJ|
n||
UWE,
National Block, 155 Main strw
KISSNEFC,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer In Pianos, Sfelodeo'ns, Organs, Musloal Instruments, Ac.,
Palace ot Music, 4& Ohio
ENRY BROWN,
wm-
HOG SHIPPER, (i TERRE HAUTE, IND.
Buys bogs every day In tbe year, "cash up and no grumbling." Office on south Fourth str wt, one half square south Of the market he use, one door south of Htndersin house. All I ask Is to try me. Trade with,me one a ndyou will trace with me again j1
^TTACHMENT NOTICE.
William O'CoMlngs vn, Francis M. Cox, befort Bluford Steele, Justice of the Peace of Linton township, Vigo counts, Indiana.
Said defendant Is hereby notified that on the 22d day of December, 1877, au ,ord of attachment for the sum of one hundred and forty dollars was Issued by me, the above named Justice ol tbe Peace, against his goods in the above entitled action, and that- said cause will be beard on tbe 29th day of January, 18"8. at 1 o'clock p. m. of saW day. BLUFORD STEELE. J. P. 6-41
BIBBOIH, FAUCI (JOODS,
Will Duplicate Indianapolis, Cindunatl or Chicago
vt ft V«l«% t-hrB A IvH fr A 4 It
ir 4
Satifrflay Evening:
j..
MAIL/
-FOR THE YEAR li
1877
A MODEL WEEKLY PAPER *I FOR THE HOME,
A SA* TERMS:
One year 2 00 Six months, &1 00 Three months, -60 cts.
Mall and office subscriptions will, invarl* ably, be discontlnned at expiration of time paid for.
Encouraged by the extraordinary suooeea which has attended the publication of THE 8ATURDAY EVENING MAIL the publish* er has perfected arrangements by whieh it will henceforth be one of the most popular papers in the West.
THE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL is an Independent Weekly Newspaper, elegantly printed on eight pages of book paper, and atm« to be, in every sense, a Family Paper. With this aim in view, nothing will appear in its columns that cannot be read aloud lu the most refined fireside circle.
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 S240 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.
Semi- Weekly New York Tribune, price $8.00- and Tke Mall GO fc't.T
WEEKLY PAPERS.
InditmapolU Journal, price S2.00, and The Mail W
Mall
fc
Jtural and The Mall Methodist, price 82.5V, and The Mail 8 60 Harper's Weekly, price $4.00, and The
Mall
sr-i»r
•"rarr-"""'.
'•v3
2o
jndimnapolu Sentinel, price «t00, and The Mail W
00
Indianapolis Weekiy New and The Mail..... S2
70
N. Y. Tribune, price $2.00, auu The Mall 8 60 IWecto Blade, price 12.00. and The Mall 8 65 N. Y. Sun, and Tbe Mali 8 tu PraMe Farmer price 12.00 and The Mall 8 65 Western Rural, price f2.50and The Mall 8 60 VMoaoo Advance, price, »8,00, and The
4
Chicago Interior, price 12.50, and The Mftu. 0® Chicago Inter-Ocean, price 11,50, and
The Mall 8 2# Ajtpleton't Journal, price #4.00, and Tbe
6 60 6 60
Harper's Bazar, price #4.00, and The Mail Frank Leslies Illustrated Newspaper, price 94.00, and The Mailr Leslies Chimney Corner, price M.00, and
6 00 6 00 8 76
The Mall Boys'and Girls' Weekly, price 82.50, and The Mall 'I^
MONTHLIES.
Arthur's Home Magazine price 82.50 auu The Mail
Peterson's Magazine, price 82,00, and Tue
00
8
American 'Agriculturist, price 81^0 and The Mall.....i 'J
8 00
Dei nor est's Monthly, price 83,00, and The Mall Godey's Lady's Book, price 88.00, and
The Mall Little Corporal, price 81.50 and The Mall 8 15 Scribner's Monthly, price 84.00, and The
M&ll. 5OT Atlantic'MorUfUy, price 14.00, and Tbe Homer's Magatine, price M.00, an'd"^e Gardener's Monthly, price 82.00. and The
Mail-
Young VoIks Hural, and The Mall........ 2 78 The Nursery.price81.50, aud The Mail 8 10 price 88.00, and The Mall 4 40
All the premiums Offered by the above pub llcatlons are included In this clubbing arrangement », 0.:
Address P. 8. WESTrALL, Tubllsher Saturday Evening Mall, TERRKHAUTE, IN
J. W. BARWETT* K.A.SWIFT. ARBLE WORKS, rftilvf
CAENETT & SWIFT, IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN Rose and Gray Scotch Granite and ITALIAN MARBLE MONUMENTS,
Tombs, and Stones, Vanlts, Man-
East Main street, between Twelfth and Ilnlrteentb streets, :::R: TER RE HAUTE, IND.^% All work warranted to give satisfaction..
RIDDLE & HUNSAK3P,
i*HoinAia maw i*
Milliiiersv Straw Goods, Laces,
1 F. H. Mf tnt•'FRESH, Manufacturer ox*"'
Steam Engines, Mill Machinery, &c., &c
orner Nintb and Eagle St*., (Near Union Depot,) Terre Hacte, IBL
mw special attenUou paid to Coal Shaft Machinery-Repairing done promptly.^,
twi
Good Trade Solicited. Ko. 1Q1 Hsln St., Tern Hsnk, Ina.
PHffiHIX FOCSDBT AS© MACHINE TTOKKfl.
mr
OOHDUOR*
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RIPPETO&8
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street- p,
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