Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 9, Number 6, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 3 August 1878 — Page 5

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•-THEMAIL

A. PAPER TOR THE PJSQPIE.

P.S.WESTF.

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?AH, PJUKTOB.

KDITOA A1TD PR©:

TERRE HAUTE, AUGUST** 1878

NRO EDITIONS

Or this Paper are published. The FIRST EDITION, on Friday Evening fcssalaiseelrealatton IntfcesnziDundlng towns, where it la sold by newsboys and agents. Che SECOND EDITION, on Saturday Even *.lng, goes into the bands of nearly every reading person In the city, and the farm era of this Immediate vicinity.

Every Week's Irene is, In fact, TWO NEWSPAPERS, la which all Advertisements appear for

OHSUHAMT

"L NEW OB&KAKS is wrestling with the yellow fever.

THB month of July this year has had a higher mean temperature than any Jnly einoe HI70.

AFTER the first of September there will be no more petitions in bankruptcy filed. The day of grace will be past.

A CA8B of yellow fever in Cincinnati has excited BO much apprehension that the discussion of beer has been temporarily abandoned.

ALREADY, it is said, there is a much better feeling in basin em circles, in anticipation of there being no more bankruptcy after this month.

IT will cost England about ten million dollars a year to take care of Cyprus and a general squeal goes up at Beaconfield's diplomatic triumph.?

GENERAL GRAXT says he was not "surprised" at the battle of Shiloh, but some of the newspapers insist that he was. The General is evidently mis» taken. ssss===sssggB

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OJTLY thirty applications for the posi tion of national bank examiner for Indiana have been filed in Washington. If it keeps on at that rate the offices will soon have to hunt the men.

IF 1207,000,0(0 of paper money was enough under a Democratic administration in 1860, why is not 1068,000,000 enough under a Republican administration in 1878 is the query the Indianapolis Journal puts to the Greenbaokers.

IT is intimated that the Rev. Dr. De La Matyr, National candidate for Congress in the Seventh district, does not carry the Methodist vote in his breeches pooket. The Methodists respect him as a minister but will think twice before they follow him to the ballot box

DURING the recent eolipse Professor Watson, of Ann Arbor, cot a glimpse of Vulcan, hitherto a hypothetical planet which Leverrier, the great French astronomer, claimed to exist within the orbit of Mercury. Although on the lookout for it, none of the other observers were able to see it.

GENERAL GRANT in

a recent interview

complimented Ren Butler* as "a brave man, full of enterprise and resources," and now Butler retaliates by favoring the passage of an act of Congress creating Grant a Field Marshal.for life with a salary of 125,000 a year. 4

AN archery tournament is to he one of the features of the next State fair, and is expected to attract a good deal of attention. A gold badge with a pendent bugle horn, a silver badge with a silver arrow, and silver cup, are the prizes offered. Tuesday, October 1, is the day fixed for the tournament.

BRAZIL has been "all tore up" about the re-location of the postoffloe which was clandestinely accomplished in the night time recently by postmaster Hussey. Public meetings condemning and approving his action have been held and the lastphase of the controversy is the elreulation of petitions asking for his removal as postmaster. I

THURSDAY night Henry Smith, a Jersey City policeman, retired to sleep with •feis wife, and about four o'clock the next .morning Mrs. Smith awoke to find her husband murdered by her side, his body being full of stabs apparently made with a carving knife. His skull was also crushed by a heavy blow with some Instrument. The murder remains a profound mystery.

A dajuno bank robbery was perpetrated at Bloomington, Illinois, on last Wednesday night. The robbers entered toy a transom over the door and having found the combination of the safe, proceeded to epen it and take therefrom $16,000 in money, 912,000 in trust deed bonds and $4000 in currency. No due to the robbers has been found.

Bse*cs? the Hon. Henry W. Billiard, our Minister to 3nudl, draws a salary of £12/000 a year and Uvea at an expense of

a

day, having but one room in

which he ideepe, dresses and transacts business, some of the American residents there think he is mean and Mingy. Henry evidently believes in the maxim, "when yon get a good thing save it, save lt,M etc.

TsxChrisUan Union says, with mucti force, that if there to in the great cities an increasing class to whom the noisy fustian of Kearney seems like real thunder, It is the fruit of those who have suffered them to grow up in comparative ignorance and lack of sympathy and that the power of sach man as Kearney with the uneducated classes is itself the severest condemnation of the past indifference of the educated

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DOCTOR RET,

a distinguished French

physician, pronounces/homesickness to be an actual diasaae, aadglvea It the name of nostalgia. It ia uncommon among children and old folks and is more frequent among menthan women. In, the army the young conscripts are mote liable to it than those from the towns, the latter being

more

Gov. WILLIAMS, the records show daring the period he hss been in the gubernatorial chair, has pardoned crlm inals at the rate of one in about every three days. Thia, it is safe to say, is wholesale abuse of the pardoning power. That power it would not do to abolish altogether, because there is an occasional case where an innocent man is convicted and sentenced, and the only way to correct the wrong committed lies in the exercise of the executive clemency. But such instances are rate, and the turning out of thieves, burglars, forgers and murderers in droves to prey again on society, is a disgraceful abuse of the pardoning power. The power was never intended for any such purpose. The people are tired of this sort of thing and a general belief prevails that if the laws were firmly enforced and convicts allowed to serve out their terms in prison, the safety of person and property would be very considerably promoted.

WILL we ever find out who is lying and who is telling the truth about this money question The Greenback papers assert that the money in circulation in this country at the present time does not exceed 96.00 per cspita against |50 per capita before contraction began and that France has more than twice as much currency per capita as the United States. But the Indianapolis Journal, which pretends to be posted and which gives figures to support its statements, affirms thst the amount of paper money in the United States, and'the amount per capita to the population, exceeds that of any other country in the world. It gives the currenoy per capita of France at 113.30 of Great Britian, at 17.82, and of the United States, at |16.40. The Journal asserts further that there is more government money, psper and ooin together, in circulation in the United States now than there was in 1873 before the panic more than three times as much paper money as there ever was at any time before the war, and that the amount per capita to the population of the conntry ia considerably more than twice as great as it was at the beginning of the war. Evidently some people don't know what they are talking about or else they are lying awfully.

THE city of Indianapolis la having a terrible conflict with the gas company. The city's revenues having been largely reduoed by an act of the laat Legislature prohibiting the levying of taxee above a specified rate, the city oouncil has been earnestly endeavoring to cut down expenses to within Its Income. In order to do this it beoame neosssary to reduce the expenditure for lighting the streets with gas. The gaa company was aaked to make the required reduction but positively refused, whereupon the oounoll determined to discontinue the use of gaa altogether on and after August l, and to light the streets with dll lamps. But the gaa company became rebellous and gave notloe that so long ss the burners remained in a condition to light they would light them aa uaual and thus keep their part of the contract, and gave notice to the oouncil that the tips and burners of all the street lampain the city belonged to the company and that the lamp-peats were in their possession under the contract, and forbidding any interference therewith. Nevertheless the city has awarded the contract for removing the burners and shutting off the gas and there la a fair prospect that the city will be plunged In Egyptian darkness for several nights to come, making it a desirable rendezvous for tramps and burglars. Pablio opinion ia divided on the queetion and the courts will have a hand in settling the controversy.

FROM aNew York letter to the 8an Francisco Chronicle we learn something about the religious bellefb of a number of prominent American writera. Emerson is a pantheist that is, he believes nature is God and God is nature. "Whatever it is which the great Provi dence has provided for us, it most be large and generous and in the style of his great works." Thia la the keynote of his frith. Branson Aloott's faith is much like Emerson's, only more ideal and leas practical. Longfellow is a Unitarian of the broadest school. Whittier still retains his connection with the Quaker church but his religion* views are very liberal. Oliver Wendell Holmes has no religion stall and rather tends

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accustomed

to ehange and bustle. Thoee suffering from it become sad and moody, lose their appetite, want to be much alone, suffer from headache and sleeplessness «nd, if the disease increases, it terminates in delirium and death.

TWENTY-FIVE Cent Dinners for Families of Six," is the name of a little book just published by Miss Juliet Carson, Superintendent of-the New York Cooking School. In the course of its aevSntytwo psges is shown bow a family of six may be provided with three good meals a day at a total expense of £5.25 per week. The book is foil of good advice on the subjects of buying and cooking the various articles of food. Of the two hundred receipts contained in it the costliest 4s but forty-three cents, wad Miss Csrson's figures are reliable, having been tested practically by her in the presence of an audience, during a series of experimental lectures. Price fifteen cents, to be bad of the New York Cook lng School, 35 East 17th street, Union Square, New York. -y r.-»

TAC1IT1T/

toward matertaUsm. Lowellwss once sort of Unitarian but is now hardly a deist. But he isdeclared to W"® glorious good fellow,'* by those #hoknow him. 'George Bancroft hss grown conservative with years and is a frequent attendant at church but la still very liberal. George Ripley begau .life as a Unitarian clergyman but is naw a skeptic and a member of Frothingham's free religioustodety. Psrke Godwin, Bryant's son-in-law, la a philosophic rationalist and takes what suits him from all the various systems. Walt Whitman h»g the religion of humanity (whatever that maybe) end James Partonhatea theology and la conscientiously mortL T. W. Higglnson began as aUnltarian preacher but has for along time been an avowed rationalist. It must not be supposed, however, thst there art no Christian Writers in this country for there are many and able ones.

FIAT MOSEY,

It is the belief of the fiat money men that if the governmentwouldlssue one billion dollars of paper money and make it a legal tender for all debts, public and private, that the paper would never depredate but alwaya be worth ita fjall face value. This theory looks plausible but it seems that the experiment has been tried and did not resnlt satis&o rily. In 1600 Massachusetts emitted treasury notes which were receivable for taxes and were subsequently made a full legal tender for all debts. Accord ing to the theory of the fist money men that money ought not to have depredated. But it did. In ten years it went down twenty-five per oent. and kept ion going still lower and in 1745 the colony redeemed it by paying at the rate of One shilling in silver for eleven in psper The other colonies issued similar paper money which became, for the most part utterly worthless and was a dead lossiin the hands of the people. So with the paper money issued by the continental congress, although legal tender acts of the strongest kind were passed by congress and subsequently by the States, for the purpose of preventing the money from depredsting. Are the fist money men sble to show that a similar result would not follow the emission by the government of fl ,000,000,000 of fiat paper money at the present time "3*

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TR UNDLIN6 A BABY CARRIAGE. A singular case came before Judge Van Hoesen, of New York, recently. The plaintiff occupied apartments in the fourth story of a French flat and the defendant occupied apartments in the fifth story, directly above those of thp plaintiff. The defendant had a baby and kept a parlor baby carriage, very small snd light and made to run over carpet, in which the infant waa wheeled at night when fretful and restless. The plaintiff sought an injunction against the use of the carriage on the ground that the noise of it kept him and his wife awake at night. Judge Van Hoesen in the course of .an extended opinion, says: "A fact which seemed to me to be of some importance in the c«se,' is that one night when the defendant's wife, with bare feet, waft walking up and down the floor, csirrylng the child, the noise seemed to plaintiff so loud and so unbearable that he knocked upon the ceiling to warn the defendant that it must cease. Thatfact appeared to me to show either (hat the plaintiff's neryojus system was in a highly Irritated state or else that 68 Madison avenue ia built like the house in Pentonville described by Thsckeray, 'where you hear rather better outside4he room than in.'"

The injunction waft refused, the court holding that

MWhen

a man makes him­

self one of a hundred gathered under one roof, and selects as his home a house so flimslly built that the tread of a woman's bare foot npon a heavily carpeted floor makes a vibration to be complained over by those living on the floor below, he .cannot expect the immunity from noise snd disturbance which be would enjoy in a house occupied by his own family alone, nor oan he restrain other occupants from any use of their own apartments consistent with good neighborship, and with a reasonable regard for the comfort of otbeis."

And so Mr. and Mrs. Hlgginson go on trundling their baby carriage the same as ever—and worse, no doubt, because they gained their lawsuit—and poor old man Pool and his wife can't sleep a wink of nighta for laying awake Wishing the baby, carriage and all were in the fabled tree-top and that* the wind would do what the song says It will.

SENATORIAL ASPIRANTS. Present indications are that there will be a lively fight in the next Legislature for the United States senatorship. In a racy letter to the Cincinnati Commercial Laura Ream gives an interesting account of the various aspirants asshehsa learned of them. On the Democratic side Mr. Yoorhees will of course be the nominee. On the part of the Nationals James Buchanan and Major O. J. Smith are mentioned, with the tide setting strongly toward the latter. Among the Republicans there is greater diversity. General Ben Harrison is the first name mentioned but his nomination Is by no aeana certain. Judge Grssham is also prominently mentioned for the place

and,

as his salary aa judge Is small, it is thought by some that it would be but a sort of political justice to give him the

Hon. John Henna and Gen.

Tom Browne are also on the list. Major J. W. Gordon's many friends would be glad

to

Baker and Albert G. Porter, present Comptroller of the Tressury, are also fevorably mentioned. Lastly John M. Butler, the law partner of Senator MbDonald, and Judge E.B, Martindale, proprietor of the Indianapolis Journal, ace suggested in the event of a dark

a H'l'TJi.Tt- TCFTTST

TTATTTFn S ATimDAYWENlNG MAIL.

Acme besoming necessary. And we may add, although Miss Ream doee not, that Judge Tyner, preeeut Assistant Postmaster General, and Hon. Morton "C. Hunter have not been forgotten is making up the Senatorial slate. Here Is eartainly timber enotfgh for the Legislature to select a United States Senator from but it may be very interesting work to do it.

MR. AND MRS. PHILIP F. WAREHAM ought to lead a very happy married life. They have only been married three daya but they waited nine long years for the bridal day to come. The way it happened waa thus. Sadie Williams (thst was Mrs. Wareham'a maiden name) was betrothed to Philip, who unfortunately got into a quarrel and killed a man in Cincinnati, in 1860. He was convicted and sentenced to prison for life but Sadie remained firm in the belief that the deed was unintentional, and with a true woman's devotion, waa ceaseless and untiring in her efforte to procure his release. Petitions were prck sented to Governors Hayes, Allen, and Hayes in his second term and finally to Governor Young. She alsb made personal intercession to obtain his pardon tad, at last, after nine years of effort she wss successful. Sadie is now twentyeight and her husband, thirty. Nine years of dose confinement hsve changed him for the better, it ia said and he ought surely to be a happy man in the possession of a wife so nobly devoted to him. Under all the circumstances we are not disposed to grumble much at this exerdse of executive clemency. It is proper to say that Miss Williams is a production of Dayton, Ohio.

ON Thursday last a monument erected to Capt. Jonathan Walker, the "man with the branded band," was unveiled at Muskegon, Michigan, with appropri ate ceremonies. c»

Shows and Show Folks.

THE SEVEN-ELEPHANT SHOW. [V, The Sells Bros, gave a good show to lsrge audiences, both slternoon and evening, last Saturday. Both the menagerie and drcus are far above the average. One noticeable feature of the entertainment was the remarkably quiet and peaceable lot of lemonade venders and "peanuts"—one of the most orderly that ever visited this city.

The full, singular and cumbrous title of Leonard Grover's new farcical comedy is, "But—a disjunctive conjunction, otherwise H. R. H. the Prince." That is a title to think over in the silent watches of the night when no other nightmare is around.,

One George W. Burleigh, a barber at Capron, 111., issued a card on the 2lBt, stating that he would deliver a lecture on the 23d, and then shoot himself through the forehead, charge one dollar and net proceeds of receipts to be partly devoted to his funeral, and the rest InVested in the works of Huxley, Tyndall and Darwin for the town library. The haU Was crowded, and after the delivery of a very able skeptical lecture, he drew a revolver and ehot himself through the head before any one ceuld prevent him.

While Henry Dixie was performing some.of his grotesque antics in "Evangeline," at the Globe Theater in Boston the other evening, his gauzy skirts caught fire from the footlights, but instead of losing his presence. Of mind and going all to piecea, as a ballet girl would have done, be merely skipped to the middle of the stage, put out the flames by sitting down on them, and went on with his gyrations, never losing time to the music.

Frank Chinfrad "opens the dramatic season at the Boston Theater, September 16th. He has for six successive years been the first dramatic star at the Boston, and has realised from hie engagements there, upward of 980,000.

Col. Robert G. Ingersoll Is reported aa having beeif engaged by James Redpath for one hundred nights, at 923,000 and Axpenses, for a starring lecture tour, beginning September 24. The first series will end on December 4, when Congress meets, and the second aeries will begin March

5, after Congress adjourns.' Col.

Ingersoll sails for Europe to-day, to gather material for a lecture on "Robert Burna."

Marie Rose, the prima donna, summer* ing at Richfield Springs, found a little Episcopal chnrch, with a large debt, a discouraged minister snd a congregation often persons whereupon she said to the minister: "I will seeng wis veree great plazeer songs and ce heems." Last Sunday she sang for the third time begtnnlng with "Greenland'a icy mountains," which she sang with her sweet French accent aa Greenlens e-oee monteens," and dosed with the "Sweet by and by," with W. T. Carleton, the baritone, to support her. The effect of yfm» Rose's ainging in the little charch has been electrical. It is packed every Sunday to the aisles, and hundreds go away. The collections have increased, the church debt is sliding off, and the struggling church members feel like Opting her as the patron saint of the partirti. ____________

FIOOM AT TBS TOP. Burlington Hawkeye.

Never fear, youn* man, nevw fetter.

Press

see htm have It and Ex-Governor

forward with ttving courage burning In yonr heart: "there's room at the top." TSo.2,889,fiveatoriw*yonlthe elevator, ris£t under the tin roof thermomnter S in a cool place, no fire escapeTno bell, no water in the pitcher, only one towel and no soap, and the only window In the room opening into a dark hall. Yes, young man, there's alwaya room at the top and the dustier you are, ami the more weary and travel worn you look, the more abeolutely certain is the derk to send you there.

A HA WKEYE TRAMPS

His Reflections by the Way—A Long Array of Unanswered Conundrums— DhquisitiOH on the Press

Editorial Cor. Burlinglon Hawkeye. On my way from Hudson I fell to wondering. I dont often wonder. Sometftnea when I aeea strange man walking rapidly toward me I wonder which one of my business acquaintances has employed a new collector, and then I wonder what l'll say to him bntaa a general thing I don't wonder at anything. There'eno satiafeotion in it. But after the train left Toledo it waa too hot to sleep or think or talk. So I just wondered:

Why it is right to steal from the government? Why Jim Anderson should get off so much esaier than Ananias

Why it is wrong to kill the man who says he told you so Why the boys who msde the Fourth of July odorous and hideous with gunpowder from 1840 to 1856 indusive, are speechless with indignation at the depraved and vidous tsstes of the boys who want to enjoy the same kind or a celebration in 1878

Why people always discuss European politics as though they understood them?

Why a man should always get mad if

Siou

frankly and for his good tell him he making an ass of himself? Why it is so bard to find a man when you want to borrow money of him?

Why it is so bard to borrow the money after you have found him Why somebody doesn't come ont and explain the Louisiana muddle?

Why a man always wishes he hsd chosen some other profession Why Mrs. Braddon doesn't write a book?

What Mrs. Jenks is talking about and what she means by it? Why a man is always going to take a vacation "next summer"

Why people should oonsider it disgraceful to be sent to Congress? Why a man thinks every year that he won't be as big a fool this year as he was last?

And why he is, though, all the same? Why the tramps don't aak for something to eat, if they are hungry

Why a man never tries to beat down the price of a railroad ticket Why everybody affects a profound knowledge of growing erops and crop prospects

Why men always lie about the size of fish they catch, and the number of ducks theyshoot?

What a girl ever sees in a great selfish, deceitful, hulking snimal of a man to marry him for, anyhow

Why so many foreigners should spesk German or French, when it is BO much essier to speak English

Why it takes five grown people to take one sleeping infant to the drcus to "see the snlmals"

Why a man who doctors himself with patent medicines, three bottles for a dollar, always, in referring to his health, spesks of "his pbyscians" as though he were constantly attended by a retinue of fifty or sixty doctors?

Why reslly generous men are always so ready to admit that you were in the wrong?

Why President Hayes—but that stopped me. I have ceafted to wonder at anything the President does or says.

TOYS AT THE WORLD'S FAIR. John Thomas, the Paris correspondent

and millions.and lots and cords of toy fish here aa big aa California salmon, whioh would swim in a tub of water as well as any live fish when wound up by a key which went into their backs wbsn 1 saw the real toy locomotives and steamboats which had real machinery and went with real steam: when I saw the toy balloons, some of them made in the shspe of a man, which you oould hold by the cord while he went up in the air and floated and bloated in the clouds on his back when I saw a toy girl in a bathing dress, about half as long as your arm, In a tub of water swimming around just as well and a great deal better than a great many live girls, for she struck out with her arms and kicked with her legs just as natural as life, and wound up like the swimming fish, by a key that started some hidden machinery in the small of her back, whioh went until she ran down, and then she floated around loose she could swim on her baok, too, when you turned her over. I say, when I saw all these things, and a great many more that never were beard of or made at all when I was a boy—when we had little tops, old dsy marbles, oorn-cobe, clam-shells and ssnd-hilis to play with —I felt sorry that I hadn't pot oflT being born until a little later in life, that I might have had some of these toys to play

wlth*"=!B^=assa==SB

NO DEMAND FOR SILVER. I Washington letter. I said to the treasurer the other dsy: "Why don't you order more silver paid out, tbedollar of the daddies included He replied thst people did not want it. Of course they could be made to take it, but unless a force of policemen were present to preserve order the unhappy victims would swear the roof of the

ilU VWVMIUK nuwnwu diver," or words to that effect. The treasurer laughed as he pictured to himself a man going off—or trying to go— with a thousand dollars of the dadaiee in his pocket—weight about sixty-three pounds. If the day was hot and the man waa wicked, and nobody to help him down the steps, the treasurer wuula not be reeponsible for the consequences. Where twenty men come to the treasury snd want dollars In exchange for larger bills, nineteen will call for paper

Jy with the poor womanv distress when she saia to a man on the front platform with a cigar in Ida month, "I wish you wouldn't amoke that cigar, sin it has made me awful sick," they looked ss though they desired to scalp the fellow. Doubtless they wouM have bounced him from the car, hsd he not. with a most bewitching smile, showed her thst the dgar had never teen lighted. It was too much for her. She waltzed from that car, waltzed dewn through two rows of smiles and two rows of as beautiful titters as ever rode on a Juno in tho neighborhood of Fifth street.—St. Louis Spirit.

Closing-Oat Prices.

HOBEROi ROOT & CO.,

OPERA HOU8E.

Have made reductions in all departments and will offer from this d^ all Summer Goods at lower prices. '4i

White oorded Piques, 5c per yard worth 8c. 4-4 Percales, ?c per yard wprth 10c. 500 yards Bourette Dress Goods, 6&, 8 and 10c per yard former price, 12K and 15c. 100 pieces Grey Dress linen, 15,20,25, and 30c per yard. 275 White Crochet Bed Spreads, large size, |1.S5 each. 500 Linen, Grass Cloth, Percale and Calico Suits for ladies, misses and children at one-half former price. SUMMER SILKS.

SUMMER DRESS GOODS,

SUMMER SHAWLS,

•i SUMMER SKIRTS,

All Reduoed.

Housekeeping Goods.

Towels, Napkins, Doylies, Table Linens, Crashes, etc., at reduced prices. 100 dosen Fringed Towels, large sines, at 75c per dozen.

Large size all Linen Napkins, 1 per dozen, worth 91*50. Turkey Red Table Damask, 65c,75o and 91 per yard.

Loom Table Linen, 25,85,40 and 50o per yard. ir

H0BERG, ROOT & CO.

OPEKA HOUSE.

October Election.

We are authorised, to announce Hon. JOHN T. GUNN, of Sullivan, Iudlana, as a candidate for Judge of ihe 14th Judicial Circuit in the State of Indiana, at the ensulng October election. Mr. Qunn has only consented to the use of his name ia connection with the Judgeship upon the urgent solicitation ef many friends in Vigo and Sullivan, without regard to party poiltlos.

'Wanted.

ANTED-TO RENT—A HOUSE OF 4 .. or five rooms, within five squares of The Mail office. Addreos. Immediately, "Printer," Care P. O. Box 334, city.

For Rent.

RENT-THE PINE STORE KOOM —LV I »V classes of business together. Also for rent. upstairs rooms, by September 1st, the most desirable In the city. Enquire at our office, Sixth and Cherry streets. flt B. W. KOOPMAN & SON.

F^corner Sixth and Cherry streets, 80 feet by 140 feet.

Can

Jy27-ly

This la regarded at the treas­

ury aa evidence the dear people dont want silver eo much .as they thought they did when they were filling the land with a mighty din in favor of it.

=ss^=sss

Hxnx is a troe street car incident: A woman sitting mar the frontdoor was taken suddenly ill, eo very ill that ahe bad no alternative but to hang her fair bead out of the window andpart company with her breakfast. The passenone and all, seemed to sympathize

be arranged for one, or two

For Sale.

nOR SALE—ON GOOD TERMS-BEAU-J? tlful lots on North 6th and streets, 80 by 198 feet also, lots on East Chestnut and Ingle streets. J. L. HUM

THERMALINE

A safe and reliable substitute for |nl•las. The great tasteless medicine for all diseases caused by Malarial Polsaalng, being a preventive as well as a certain remedy for

FEVER and AGUE,

CHILLS&FEVER

Dumb Aff«e, Agse Cake, lemlttcst, Intermittent Vevers, KMaey li* ease, 1.1 ver aad Bewel Camplalat, Dyspepsia an4 General Del tilty the best general Tanle for debilitated Systems. Price 25 cents per box. Family boxes 11X0. Sold by Druggists. Mailed on receipt of price.

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Largest Stock, Best Assortment, Lowest Prices, At J. F. PROBST'S, 528% Main street, between riftb and Sixth. Have your pictures framed before they are soiled. Prices far below any ever given in Terre Haute.

PROVISIONS

-AT-

WHOLESALE,

In store and for sale In Job lots, at

118 MAIN STREET

Choice sogsr cared hams, shoulden and limsfrfast bacon: also heavy dear bacon aidss shoulders, snd kettle rendered leaf laid In tierces and backets.

sm Wi

ASTON.

The Only 85 Cent

AGUE REMEDY

IN THE WORLD,

JlSff

-.18 •'PHI N

A

DUNDASBICK & CO.,

gg

85 Wooster Street, New York.

'Ten cent explanatory book mailed FKEE on application. Sold by D. P. COX, Druggist.

si

J. J. BAUR, Druggist. MOULDINGS,

ncture

SAM S. EARLY.

Hnmss MseCseien.

Those who improve the quality of our daily food become human benefactors. By laborious experiments, Dr. Price's Cream Bfridng Powder has been perfected. Great oare is taken in selecting ingredients, so that when used in our food It will render it wholesome. Eminent chemists advise its use.