Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 9, Number 2, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 July 1878 — Page 3

?THE MAIL

•A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

•.» PAPA 18 COMING ROME.Fivw UtUe nose* agaliwt Uw pane, Five pairs or ere* peering down tn

10 fc4AV

or ere* peering down the lane,

'frying to «ee thrcr the mist and rain. It papa is coining horn*/ «, he clock on the mantel has just struck four.

ThichtcUa they've to trait one half hour more *?m Before the train, with its rattle and roar, OM will bring their papa home. dM Five little tacea, clean and

Dimpled flngero and dancing feel, iv. ., ell-bra khca Jacket* and aprons neat,. For papa is coming home. papa

Stews if

coining ao bright, ighl.

Over the track with its iThe long train And five little

,-i The long tmin glides In its rapid flight, le children ve happ For papa I* coming home.

dren ve happr to-night, minghi

The whistle sounds, the gate's aswing, ifi Footstep* datter and voices ring, :d lip* kiss a»l white arms cling.

For papa has oome home. ... s», THE HO USEHOLD. fV

ft,,"In dressing sal ad, mind this law, With two hard yolks use one that's raw." Good flour should be of a creamy white.

roar a|°iag table with

Ornament dowers. "1 Keep brown flour on band for thicken ^!ng gravy.

made are healthful

and digestible. Lemon jalee is a strengthens of the nervous system.

Coffee which has not been roasted lm proves with age. COOKS make a mistake In thinking all soup should be thin.

Cockroaches.—l*atienoe and perseverance are required te set rid of thiarvermln, when It once takes up ite abode in a house. Inseet powder and borax are apeclOo poisons to drive them away. Paris green, a deadly poison. also to when

ly po

human beiuge, will Kill tbem sprinkled on their bodiee. Tailor's Cbalk la oneof the best thin to remove grease from dresses. Simply rub the cbalk on the spot snd let It remain a few hours or plaoe the dress on tho ironing table with a brown paper underneath, cover the spot thickly with powdered chalk, place another brown paper and a warm iron over that, and let thorn stay until cold. Brush off the chalk, and it the grease is still visible, try again.

Raspberry Jam—Weigh equal quantities of fruit and sugar put tbeDrult into a preserving kettle, boil and mash it let it boil very quickly and stir constantly add the sugar and boil half an hour. Jam made In tlfls way is of a liner color than when the sugar la put in first.

Currant Jelly—I see a arreat many Way* for making currant jelly, some of tbem very elaborate and useless. The following very simple mode will be found to be excellent and all that coald be desired: Scald the currants, strain and measure. Boll the juice for ten to fifteen minutes pour it while boiling over the sugar ana thence into the Jellv

{ow

[lessee without being again boiled. Ala pouud of sugar to a pint of Juice. Gooseberry Jam—Take as nuiny as you require of ripe, red, rough gooaeberries put them into the preserving

8rib,flint

an, as they warm atlr them to out ttio iuice. Let them boll for ten minutes,thi portion or ure evfy pound of fruit, and place it on the fire again let it boll slowly and continue boiling for two houra longer, stirring it all tbe time to prevent burning. Wtieu it tbiokens, and la jelly-like on a plate when cold, it is done enough. Fut into pota anq allow it to remain a day or two before It Is covered.

ien add sugar in the pro-

•f three quarters of a pound to

Bftspberry Vinegar—Put one pound of very line raspberries in a bowl, bruise tbem well, and pour upon tbem a quart of the best older vinegar next day •train tbo liquor on a pound of fresh ripe raspberrle*. urulse them also, and an the following day do. the same, but do not squeeae the /ruit, or it will makethem f&toeut—only drain the Honor te-dry as yo» can Xroin jtbe fruit*« The last time ftaiA it through a cahvatobag,-prdviadsly wetted with vinegar to prevent waste. Put the Juice into a atone j»x with a pound of sugar to every plat of juice stir It, and when pielied put the jar into a sauoepan of 'water, let It simmer a little, skim and remove from tbe fire. When cool, bottle off. •, now TO COOK ORKKJS MSAAiaJf

One would scarcely think that a row hours' standing .ooyId .make '.such a di fference as, it does In tbe flavor of green peas TtioSe whd are obliged tcr buy them, or go without, must submit to losing some of the sweetness and de liciona tisvpr, but who "d*?

theni

frequently suiftr quite as mttdb loss, through ignorance or oawlessness. It ehoula be remembered that eauh hour that elapaea between the picking and cooking of green peat detracts from thei^

Another error whleb peopl#

often mi often make, ts washing them after shelling, instead of before. If they are clean tobegin with,and are properly handled, there will be no occasion for deluging with water and soaking the sweetuess and tUvor away from the contents of ao dalntv a ooverfug as tbey rejoice In.

Peas should be picked, washed and. swelled only as short a time as possible before, cooking ir the aheUlng cannot be conveniently delayed until a late hour, cover them with some of the pods until wanted, then throw them Into ju»t enourIi boiling water to cook, and cover lightly with the pods. When they have cooked twenty minutes remove the latter, and put into the saucepan a very little sugar, a spoonful of butter, pepper and salt to taste, and some sweet crea.u, or in Ueu of tbe latter use rich milk with a rerv little oorn starch dissolved in it.

If preferred, tbe peas may be drained from the water and eerveddry, seasoning them in the dish with pepper, salt and butter to taste. Many persons eohsider soda a requisite in oooklng peas, but, however appropriate it may be tor the dried article, those which cannot be oooked tender In twenty minutes without its aid, should not be considered ^UtaMch cooks mix a xmall particle of carbonate of ammonia with the water in which vegetables are boiled, to preserve the color we, find that boiling In an tdoo versa veeael answers otfllcjeaUymil it re or & a a a

Foreigner* very generally consider mint and panley lo ue an impreveeoent to the naturally delioate flavor of green peas, but we have diaoovered it to be an excellent way of completely destroying it. ma nionim.

Boll half a cupful of rice In water with a little 'salt, until perfectly tender, but be careful not to tweak the kenxMa by atlrrlng. When tbe rice la almoaft done, dissolve an even tablespoonfnl of oorn starch in two tabtenoons of milk beat with it the yolks of two or three eggs and half a coffee cup of sugar pour onto this mixture three teecapuils of hot

constantly to prevent

milk, stirring curding. Beta hot rice and continue stirring tantll thickens, then flavor with vanilla? the mixture into ... color slightly in the oven. Beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth add tablespodnfal of powdered sugar for each egg, and' some lemon Juice ores seoce. When the frosting Is stiff spread over the top of the pudding aift powdered sugar over it and return to tbe" oven to color a delicate brown. To be eaten bat or eold we prelteftho latter.

Betbrn all to the fire, add the It Turn a pudding dish, and

DA ZTOHTEB AND WIFE. A bad daughter seldom makes a good wife. If a girl la ill tempered at home, snarls at her parents, snaps at her brothers and sisters, and shirks her ordinary duties, the chanoea are ten to one that when she gete a home of her own abe will make it wretched. There are aome girls who think themselves so fsr parior to .their parents that the mere privilege of enjoying their company in house ought to be all the da people eugbt to have tbe assurance to aak While their mothers are busy with domestic duties, theyjsit in the easiest chain, or lie on the aofteet sofas and read cheap and trashy novels and cherish tbe notion that they are very literary individuals The household drudgery is too coarse for such fine ladies as they. The business of their parents is to pro vide them with nice ciothee, and to be content with admiring their handsome appearance In the intervals of labor. Girls of this sort are generally very anxious to be married, that they may escape the disagreeablea of a home where tbey are held, more or less, under subjection therefore are smilingenough to eligible bachelors, quiekly smoothing down the frowna which they, alone give to tbe members of their own families. A caller who doeen't have a chance of seeing how they behave as, daughters, may be excused for fancying them lovely and loveable beinga out one who does see it is foolian to odmrnlt himself by. offering marriage to a girl of this sort. She is not fit to be tbe wife of a worthy man. If abe will not aeslat her motoer in tbe domestic duties, and badgers the servants, will she not be equally elotbful and ill tempered when ape marries If she now thinks herself too fine to work, is it safe to expect that her view as to that matter will radically change if she becomes a wife

TAKING CARE OF BABY. Yes, there are some men who really help their wives t*ke_$arejof the children that Is,- they try to do so. Yet tbey rather overvalue their services. One of these good, husbands will bolp dress tbe children for breakfast, and apeak of it with a grandly virtuous air, wbile tbe fact is that be only washed the face of one while his wife washed and dressed the other three. He helps get the children ready for church that is, be buttons up IMck's boot», sud helps Jenny put on her gloves, after-he has leisurely and comfortably dreseed himself, wbile bis wife ties sashes, and hunts up old gloves,'and puta on collars', and curls one child's hair end washes another's hands, and, in tbe interval,

Mdoee

up" her own hair, and saves the baby from thetraser and Jenny's bonnet from the baby. He waits in tbe hall with elaborate pattern**) coot and quiet, his own toilet finished, and repeatedly reminds his wife—now flashed and nerv« ous—that it is getting lose* Then, when they are at last on thefr way, he impresses on her the necessity for punctuality, and wonders how it Is that she is always late for church. Poor Maria I

EFFECT OF BARD WAXES VfON ANIMALS. 7^ Horses have an instinctive love for soft water, and refuse hard water ii they can poasibly get the farmer. Hard water produces a rough and staring ooat on hones, and renders them liable. to gripes. Pigeons also refuse hard water if they can obtain access to soft. Cleghorn states that hard water in Mlaoroa causes dlseaaes in the system of certain animals, especially of aheep. So much are race borsea influenced by the quality of tbe water, that it is not infreqnent to carry a supply ol soft water to the locality in which the race is to take place, leat, there being only hard water, the hones ahould lose condition, Mr. Youatt, in his book called "The Hone," remarking on the dlairahlereaa of soft water for the borse, aayat 'Instinct or experience has made the horse himself oonacious of this, for he wUi never drink hard water If he baa access to aoft he will leave the most transparent water ef the well for a river, although the water may be turbid, and even for tbe muddiest pool.1 And again In another plaoe beaaye:

4Hard

if.

At

water drawn treeh from

the well will assuredly make the ooat of a bone unaoeuetomea te it stare, and will not infrequently gripe or farther tenure him.'

Back*** Antes lalttw The Bnrt HATTO tn tbe world far Cute, Bruises, SowaJDlcen, Salt Rhetun, Tetter, Chapped Bands, Chilblains, Corns, and all kinds of Skin Eruptions. Thla Salvs la guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction in every one or money reftinded. Price 35 cents par box. For sale by GUL1CK A BERRY, Terre Haute. (je6-Sm)

DR. PRICE'S

"f

THE LOSS OF A WIFE. tn comparison with the lota of A wife, all other bereavements are. trifling. The wife, she who filled eu laige a space In tbe domestic heaven she who busied heraelfao unweailly for the precious one» around her, bitter is the tear which falls on her clay. Yon atand beside her coffin and think of the past. It seems an amber colored pathway Where tbe sun sbone upon.tbe beautiful flowers, or the stars hung glittering overhead. Fain would the soul linger there. No thorns are remembered, save those your own hands hay» unwittingly planted. Her noble, tender heart lies open to your in* most sight. Yon think of her now as all gentleness, all purity, all beauty. Bat abe la dead. The hands are laid upon a pillow of elay. The handa that have ministered so untiringly are folded beneath the gloomy portal. Tbe heart whose every beat measured an eternity ef love, Ilea beneath your feet. Tbe flowers she bent over with smiles bend now over bpr with tears,shaklng tbe dew from their petals tbst verdure around her may be kept green and beautiful. There la no White arm over your sboul der, no speaking face to loos up into tbe eye of love, no trembling Upa to mur mur, 'Oh, it is too sad!' There is so atrange a hush In every room, no light footsteps passing around no smile to greet you. at nightfall. And the old oloek ticks and strikes—it wss such music when she could hear it. Now It seems to knell on the hours through which you watched tbe ahadow of death gathering on her sweet faoe. And every day the cloek repeats that old atory. Many another tale It telleth of beautiful words and deeda that are registered above. You feel, ob, how often*—that the grave cannot keep her—that she wlllllveagain.

j" -j. u.: rX/ tKlY T,/. cvTr:ru£. arjAii mumr

VERMIFUGE.

.• •.' -''-'j. SYMPTOMS OF WOBMS.

Ta

HE countenance is pale and lead-en-colored, with occasional flushes, or circumscribed spot on one or both cheeks the eyes become dull the pupils dilate an azure semicircle runs along the lower eye-lid the nose is irritated, swells, ana sometimes bleeds a swelling of the upper lip occasional head acne, with humming or throbbing of the ears an unusual xetion of saliva slimy or furred tongue breath very foul, particularly in the morning appetite yariable, sometimes voracious, With a gnawing sensation of the stomach, at others, entirely gone fleeting pains in the stomach occasional nausea and vomiting violent pains throughout the lomen bowels irregular,-at times costive stools slimy, not unfrequently tinged with blood belly swollen and hard iirihe turbid respiration occasionally difficult, and accompanied by hiccough cough sometimes dry ancl convulsive uneasy and disturbed sleep, with grinding of the teeth temper variable, but generally irritable, &c. .Whenever the above symptoms are found to exist, DR. C. McLANE'S VERMIFUGE will certainly effect a cure.

IT DOES "NOT "CONTAIN MERCURY in any it is art innocent preparation, not capable of doing the slightest injury to the most tender infants

The genuine DR. MCLANE'S VERMIFUGE bears the signatures of C. MCLANE and FLEMING BROS, on tho wrapper., •—:o:—

DE, O. MoItANE'S

1:1

LIVER PILLS

are not recommended as a remedy "for all the ills that flesh is heir to," but in affections of the liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dyspepsia and Sick Headache, or diseases of that character, they Hand without a rival.

A E A N E E

^Kobetter cathartic can be used preparatory to, or after taking Quinine. As a simple ..purgative thg^ are unequaled.

HEW Alts or IMITATIOSi.

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MATT

5FECIAIFIA¥ORING EXTRACTS.

Eminent Chemists and Physicians certify thst time goods are tree from adu'teration, richer, more effective, produce better results than any others, acul that they use them in their own' families.

UNIQUE PCRrUMSS arc pu Gem* of AU Odors. TOOTH ENK. Aaegreeshle, haptthfbi LiquidDtatifae*. LEMON SUGAR. A ftsbstttste for Leaoas. EXTRACT JAMAICA OINOER. Frost raw j*»t

STEELE it PRICE'S LUPttLIN YEAST OEMS. Thm A*( Dry Mop r«U 4m tike Wmrld*' STB1LE ft PRICE, Manfirs., Chicago, St Lonia, and Ci-.-fmiati.

THE GENUINE

DRaCeMoLANE'S Celebrated American 'j'

vWOKM SPECIFIC OR

1

.The genuine are never sugar coated. Kach box has a red wax seal on the lid, with thejrapression Da. MCLANB'S LIV&R rius^:,

Each wrapper Dears the signatures bi*» C. MCLANE and FLEMING BROS. Insist upon having the genuine Dr. C. MCLANE'S Ln'KR PILLS, prepared by Fleming Bros., of Pittsburgh, Pa., the market being fall'of imitations of the name

McLatie,

spelled differently but

same pronunciation.

LSELLERS' LIVER PILLSi I har« atoM for tO r»»r» th* Staadmrd tor Ik*

ear*

of

Uff ComplaiKf, Cotivnu**, Sic* Jnta-

Ud «tt-im«u»»iu»au Sflton' LIw PliU cured a* «f Ll»«r Crartalat.

b.r h»r»»«»d W!l». —Tkw. Aduu, Bl* S*ody. K«at«skj. ISM SHt rtl Df«l

LI agLi.ru**

iWMd amvy KMp«.i PrM'l, pltubwlfc. r«.

S^Ss!&TLiJiiic8XA]m ficaroelya family can be found from Mxm to Mxxico that doea not use them. It Is nowpropoasd to make their virtues known tn the W10V.

A Single Trial will Establish their Merits.

Do They Cure Evtry Thing?

MO.-Thoy MR* for DISMCM that result from MALARIAL POISON and OCRARCtD UVKIK, Ndi as Dyspepaia,Bi1ioas aad Typhoid ftwri Ohitta, OoUe, Biek-Headaeha, Chronie ttwrtas, gw oasa—A,P1h1ims,1sI. ^ttattoaoftto Swrt,Vnial|ii,Xhn* asatUm, Xidn«y Piseaae, Ohroale Con Upatton, Pilaa, Ae. & O

That Your LIVER IS DISORDERED

CssMn

mm mmmmmm, mm* At tio ., TAKE TUTT'8 PILL8II

pWlfi |SS* touonJDi*

IXMTIttOB.

NU IN

MlVMflSllWTl

I

mw

Professional Cards.

QAMUEL MAGILL, O. ATTOU1T AT &AWii Offlee with Vi O. Buff, north sHUi Ohio street, bftwsen Tbird and Fourth.

Special attention to coile«Uons, jwohate business and bankrupt pracuee. H.o.Bmrr.

8.

V. BKMBKlt

TUFF A BEECHER, JD AROiinriATb Ornca—No. SM Ohio 8treet. beLThird And

Fourth, north aide^

J. P. WORRELL, TreaM ezelu^vely Diseases of the^* EYfiAND EAB! OflMt Ve. SSI Okie Street,

Offlee nourafttrat 9 a. m.tel p.m.and from: 3 to 5 p.m.

OSEPH RICHARDSON, H.

•0M«1 Ohielt, Bet. dk lttr TERRE HAUTE, nn. O^WCOLN,

DfixiiiT.

Offlee, 821 Rain street, near Seventh. Extracting and artificial teeth specialties. All work warranted. (dAw-tf)

DR.

/HAL THOMAS, OptlciMB sad Watehaa«k«v For the trade. Main street, near Sixth, sias of big man With wateh.

T» W. RIPPETOB aenr^i Dealer In GROCERIES, mo VISIONS AHD 'PRO*

DUOE,

O

L. HI BARTHOLOMEW. largNasMlMkMlMl a-

DENTIST.

Deatal Beom, 187 Halm Street, 'm ,: iter 6th» •••'i

rii™KKMaAVTM*in'

Kitubus ss Tooth

.de^as administendfor pau

FT W. BALLEW,

DENTIST,

4B9K Ksia Street, ever Bsyei sUteeafMisatrjr atsaA TERRK HAUTE, I»D. Can be found In offlee night and day,

Business Cards.

National Bloek, in Main eta*

LEISSNER,

Wholesale and Retail Dealer lii'l PUuiea, Meledetiis, Oifui, 'l Musical Instruments,

Palaoe of Music, 48 Ohio

Oa H. BRIQGS, Produce and commission meb.t'ri

CHANT,

-5 and Dealer in

HIDES, PELTS, RAGS, BUTTER, EGGS, AO, .. Corner of Fourth and Cherry

TERRH HAUTE, INP-streets,

TTTT AGNER ft MPLEY, Importers and workers Scotch ClriUilte as4 Ilalisn MarMa

MONUMENTS,

S A A S S "a iU Cherry St, bet. 4th and 5th.

TERRE HAUTE,

HHERRE HAUTE BLEACHERY •No. 91, eecner of 4th and Mulberry Sts. Conducted by

MRS. M. A. GIRARD.

StrSw Hata and Bonnets bleached altered, Colored and flnisfaed In a superior manner. Millinery work done at trade prices, and on short notiee. Patronage respeetfbuyi liciied.

S1KSPAItM)

EWINQ MACHINES AID ABXmrrSD In the very best manner and warranted te wwrk, by JOSEPH FOLK, No. KB Mala street, north aide, between and 4tt streets, op stairs. Dont condemn your aoaeliine until Mr. FOLK haa had »look at It for the teal trouble may be venr liaht aai tneeoetof repairing a mare trifle..The bee needles and oil constantly on

JaneU-tl

ARMERS' GRIST MILL. Lever MmM et T|lvi Street^

JOSEPJI Al—TT, FtepritUf. rpHlSnew mill Is noWin fall blast, mak' ing Ka articie of

FLOUR AND MEAL I

It is being nm eadoslTsly on and the fullest ssrtsflawtionlsguaranteed. A tanner btingiog his ownwheat to tbe mm ean r^ongeMMg floor ftvaahlaowi grain, and by thus doteg isakeagieel saving enrer place selling the wheat at one and ouylng

OPIUM^IsSIir

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fi«

if

Meiui,

"And

1 4.

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tJSINESfeMtN!

WE SATURDAY

E

VENINGMAIL^ k\ I 1 jsxi UBH. QESTOPfiESS

N SATURDAY, to

hts*si vm .a

150

E E HA E I

NEWSBOYS ui Btni «rcn\ "v

GENTS SELL THE MAHi IN

S'™ v™

EDITION^ EACH WteEK,

GHABGEONLY FOB BOTH.

IJIHE MAaiSTHE »jiuiU

EST MEDIUM

ADVERHSE£S.T

ECAUSE *yj "iiOJ Oil *r-%

mil

'TIS A PAPER,

BUSINESS .pS4NGtU,.

PH(ENIX :^QUNDR^

^-AXH^ .*• alt

MAGHIN& WORKS.1 •v TernHiute. W.

SUCCESSORS T6 G. H. MCETFRKL&fe The undersigned havlny succeeded to the business of.F. H, MoBureirti, are now prepared to re^eite orders lor p3 iteaniEnadtieir

Ironeonareypr ^Sti '^^Woodey, Cogs .of otir own7manufacture. «. We hronleo seentert the agsnevfo* the

a variety af ^Ondn leaning Alaownwy,

thinery and rkmilx Warka will.-be fti

UID.

capacityoftKe wrttt W Btioht luatrancee teompt riiipmeitt Of withwhlehwem*y 'ectft'ty to liberanymmuwca fljxm the eetab-^

JQRAIK ACT SEWER PIPR,

THE TKR1UB HAUTB e|igr»

CancntPlpeaadSteneCo.

Bave on hand

a^MEilothap«b|iel

AT W SWT

unm

«H *7

CMnlip^ls yni twi* dowM Uie street an frsii Ike ittf the Madaetor

While^Front," 155Maia St.,

Where yo« will always filid tbe best

CNVHBRI, T£i8,

At lheLewcs Prfccs.

"-Mil

t«w A ti'i

E I

OR THE HOUSEHOLD.

TWENTY

T4

THOUSANDREADERS.

Takiox, Hora^ Greeley's estimate df the number of readers io a family—on an average—erery irisne6f the SATURDAY, EVENING: MAIL ik pWoaed by oter jr 1 0 a W

rr

iaiad Fancy Groceries

-*wr

T^ .,

K?

*aii.

A MODEUU WEEKLY PAPER FOR THE HQME.

•t.ii

...» TERMSt

yey»mMi,ny««H»w".

M0ylBBiiemi«Mw»

•e*eeei**«»eeeeeeee« Vi

price CLOO^ and The Mail 180 irice £oo/and The MaU S6S

jrr. 7. Ani, and The Mail ...— 9 to jAs mar price gjOOand The Mall 8 65 prioe

SsOand The Mail SOU

oa, pHee, 0L00, and l$e

.4 -A.

OuA

Saturday Evening1 MAIL FOR THE YEAR

et 4-'

1878

$

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1

$

"V

jl

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Mali and oflleeSubeerlptioai will, invarl^bl^, bs discontinued at expiration of time Eaeouraged he tttraoiftltttfy sueeess whieh has attended the pnUleaUen of THI SATURDAY EVBNIN€bMAIL-the publish* srhas pwieoted airangementa by whleh it wlUheneeftuth be ,e^^ of tJt^f saost popular a in he

THE SA.TURDAY EyENINQ MAIL is an Independent Weekly Ney^aper, elegantly printed on eight pages or hook paper, and alma te be, in every sense, a Family Paper. With thla aim In view, nothing will appear in itg columns that eanttoi be read aloud In the moat reflno&flsesldsqirele.

CLUBBLNG WMRCITHER PERI-1 ODICAIV9. LL We are enabled to oflnr extraordinary ln« dueementa in the way of einbbing with other perlodteala. Wa will Airnlsh THEBAIC URDAT RVENINQ MAIL, PSUOB «j09 PER YEAR, and any of the periodicals en* uinerated btiow at greatly reduced rateg. Theae periodicals Will be sent direct Axon the oflleee o^ phbllcatlon. Xtere la the 110t ,*"*8LS)TI-WLFEKLY.J

fS

qrtm i„ WEEKLY PAPERS. MkMNih Vcrnnapdee «too, and iti---u-prlee WOO, and JndiqnapoHt WfeWV N«m and *he

A

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I

490 400 IB 681 4 88 880 660 688 6 00 600

eedeeoite—wseeesiwteeeeeaxeeeceeeyataf »a»—e

GMsape J^Ur-Oottm, prlee 91 JO, and Joiirwatt prlce tMO, and The

..,and The,ce H^OO, and The ••eeUaifceeeM* aiiMhii^ae*

f&mr'i Auor, price MM, and The JVonA ""LmMi* "llMriw'N ImNB amitti prii»iiOb',''and

The Mall— S 71

MONTHLIES.

OWwrWr I

rlniu)uractureL

byWe

'±un* •seaiae

,p

mramfimmtmgettit* jirllnetoJB'gna The Mail. 84 00

wsrsssPBzt

Oanlwi^liM^ jj^Vand ?ixe

rangement.

pipe

«rvMioas jdSMi,for

Sewen ml Drains.

Fartios wishing any article In this line will eaii atoOee, with MotganV eoai ofliee, On Ohio stmt, at weeks, or address through

i.W.

P.O. BOS 77,

MILLER, Sup*t»

4

•-J

".-*5

'M

I

IW

reurmm't Maputo*, prioe lSMX), and The AmniotM AffiieuUvri+prie* |L80 and

8 00

4 86 4 89 816

9

,"p«iee 84^','Md'ftiie

680

offered by tne above puh

lleatlons are )w

th|1

clubbing ar­

AddreM P. S. WMffALl,

•r

Pabileher Saturday EvealngMailJ TERREHAtTTE, IN

K. A. SWIFT. s.. t' i-

J.W.BABVBTT.' HJARBLBWORKa 3.

BARNETT & SWIFT,

niPd»nns Aim nnAuau nr

Rose and Griy Scotch Granite

AND fTALLAN MARBLR MONI711ENTS, ^gmJb§ ,. »nd Stones, Van^te, Ifoq^ Srffr Jtt# -t C§ ft East Main street, between Twelfth and

XbirteeathHrtreeta, TKR.REHAUTS, INIX

All work watranted.tp give satisfaction.

50 LOTS FOR SAP]

A Good Opportunity for

ifamble Home.

Mlofatoraololn BairadoflTa gfabdlriflIM (of tho old Phl«fMif««don) do Fopfleonth street and liberty Arenoo deaft aMj located, will bo aold on reaoono^ld Ion, Theae lota are oonvonient to tlf railroad abofnydtjfldbotia, and InadOr rinbloyaiiM( thoei^j. Vor fiothertiK laxmaUonoalloa

tS JAS. EL TURNER*

Offloa or«r PrdiioCttyBinl^axA^t.

p^r day at home, worth 16 free.

OO,, Portland,

'1.