Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 9, Number 11, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 September 1878 — Page 3

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V*

THE MAIL

A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE

THE HOUSEHOLD.

•I ed* differ

•. OOBJF BOOR

FRIED CHICKEN AXD CREAM QRAVT. Dress a couple of plump apring chickens and cut tbem In pieces wash well but quickly, and sprinkle each piece with pepper and salt and rojl it In plenty of flour. Put some slices of salt pork in a frying pan and when the fat is fried out remove the pork and put in the cb ickens. Cook until each piece is a fine brown on both sides, covering tbem well and watching carefully that tbey do not burn. When done arrange tbem on a hot platter. Pour a pint of milk—part cream is better—into the frying pan and when it bolls stir in a spoonful of corn starch or flour mixed smooth with a lit-1 tie milk. and salt throw in a little choppedI parsley stir constantly, and when the gravy boils turn it over the chicken, which should be kept hot. Garnish the dish with little cakes of

FRIED MUSH.

Mix a teacup of cornmeal with a tea-

cV£0,

for twenty minutes or longer, being1 careful not to let it burn. A double boiler is most convenient for making this as well as other dishes of similar nature. When done, turn the mush into etralebtslded cups or round muffin tins

wet the molda before filling and when the mush is cold turn it out slice in little cakes, which must be dredged with flour and fried ia drippings ana butter at the same time that the chicken is being cooked. A row of these nicely browned cakes, laid round tbe inner edge of tbe platter close to tbe meat, makes not only a pretty garnish, but an excellent accompaniment to a dish of fried chicken. ...

FRIED KOQ PLANT.

Slice the fruit a quarter of an inch thick and pare off tbe skin. Sprinkle each piece with salt, just cover with water, and pnt a plate f»n top to keep tbem under. Tbey should lay in tbie brine for at least an hour before cooking, Drain them well and dip each slice into beaten egg. then into fine cracker crumbs, ana fry in equal parts of very hot butter and lard.

STEWED CADBAQE.

Shred a small cabbage as for coldslaw boil it in water for twenty minutes, then drain thoroughly and cover with sweet milk. Cook until tender season td taste with butter, pepper and salt, and just before serving add tbe yolk of a beaten egg mixed with a little sweet cream. Tbe dish is good without this latter addition, aod a favorite with many who dislike plSltf'bOlled cabbage.

BOSTON CREAM CAKES.

Mix a cup of corn starch with a little milk, and beat four eggs with a cup of sugar stir all together, and add gradually a quart of boiling milk. Put tbe mixture into a double sauoepan stir constantly, and beat until it tblofctqs undisnlinostboilrog.Flavor or vanilla, and «(t aside„, II fifr tbe dissert. For the cakes, pi a pound of butter into a pint or water, and while boiling rapidly stir in three quarters of a pound of sifted flour. Take off, and when partly oooled mix in ten beaten eggs, and finally half a teaspoon of saleratns dissolved in the least possible quantity of boiling water. Drop the mixture on buttered tins in spoonfuls, at some distanoe apart, and bake in a quick oven. It is absolutely neoessary that tbe flour be stirred into the boiling water if the water is poured over the flour tbe cakes will be a very flat and heavy compound, when they should be a puffy shell, with a perfectly hollow center. Cut them on the side while still warm: fill each one with custard, which should be cool, and sift powdered sugar over the tops.

A

ui 16 mioses vor With lwdon »1K» cOoljMa cakes, put naif

VIENNA BOLLS.

Have ready in a bowl a tablespoonful of butter, made soft by warming a little and stirring with a spoon. Add to one quart of unsifted flour two heaping teaspoonfuls of baking powder, mix and sfft thoroughly together, tbe bowl with the butter. milk added, form a dough of usual stiffness, stirring iqto tbe milk first a teaepnlmfnl of salt. Knead the dough and roll it half an inch thick, and out with a large round cutter fold each one over to form a half round, wettlns a little between the folds to make them stick

pli touch each other wash over on top with milk to give them a gloss, and bake im-

lace them on buttered pans, so aa not to ich gli mediately in a hot oven about twenty minutea. It will do tbem no harm to stand half an hour before baking, If It ia desired.

IRISH STEW,

•Cat two pounds of tbe flank of beef oo*t 15 cents or less) in pieoes about two ioohes square, rub tbem well with pepper and salt peel and slice one quart of onions (cos| cents) plaee beef and obions in a aauoe pan, with just enough cold Water to ooverthem, ana stew tbem gently for oue and a half hours then add one quart of peeled potatoes (coat S cents) and boll the stew until the potatoes are soft, which will be in about twentv minutes. Serve at once, hot* The dish will coat 23 cents.—Juliet Corson.

TO CTTM WART*.

Cut a alice from a raw potato and rub tbe baud each night. Let the water dry on the band.. It will need bat tow applloatlona.

1 FTTJ COCKING MEA..„ I The Housekeeper.

The proper method of roasting is first I to plaoe the meat near the Are, to coagu lale the exterior, and form the ImBexmeable crust When this ia accomplished^ it should be removed to a distance, anc the cooking finished slowly at a lower

temperature. The effect of the roasting thus eon ducted is to increase the propertied of tbe oemaxone, thereby rendering the meat more gratifying to the palate. At I the same time tbe judicious application

Cut the cDrn from a dozen ears first *?split the grains with a sharp kblfe, then uncut a very little from tbe top and scrape Lithe balance. Boil the cdbs for a half. ...... ... of tbe heat has cooked tbe mass without making it tongb and, since the meat is suspended, tbe fat as it melts flows off ana doea not soak into it. In baking, the application of the heat ia more con

hour in enough water to cover- them, nthen remove and pat the corn Into the same water, of which there should be at' least a quart. Boll the corn Xor an boor, then strain it through the oolabder return it to the fire in a clean saufcepan and add a pint or sweet milk. Mix a I tablespoonful of butter with an equal quantity of corn atarch or flour, and stir the mixture into the saucepan as soon as its contests boil. Season to taste with white or red pepper and salt. Beat the yolk of an egg and mix with it a teacupfol of cream, also a few spoonfuls of the hot soup. Just before serving pour this into the balance of the eoop to nest, but do not let it boil.

Itinuous the juices are in a greater measure extracted the confined vapors of tbe oven injure the flavor tbe joint resta in a path of melted grease, the I temperature of which ia not pigh enougb I to prevent its soaking into tbe meat, ana the fat that melts on tlJ6 top of the masa is absorbed and seriously impair* I the digestibility of tbe lean portions, I Roasted meat is juicy, tender and flavor less.- Baked meat is dry, often tough, I and deficient in flavor.

The loss in tbe three methods of cooking we have considered is of some interI est from an economic point of view, and may be stated as follows: 4 lbs. of beef lose, in boiling, 1 lb. in baking, 1 lb. 3 oz. in roasting, 1 lb. 5 oz 4 lbs. mutton lose, in boiling, 14 oz. in taking, 1 lb. 4 oz. in roasting, 1 lb. 6 oz. From this it would. appear that roasting is the most expensive method but when we consider tbe greater development of flavor, tbi* objection is outweighed, especially when we recollect that tbe melted fat is not lost, but may be employed for many purposes,

Kegarding tbe other methods of cookI ing we shall say but little, since tbe

Season to taste with pepper chemical principles involved are similar to those already considered. Boiling requires a brisk fire, if it is to weak the

I juices will be lost and the nutritive power proportionately diminished. Frying is bolting in melted fat instead of water. The fat ahould be hot enough I to crust tbe flesh as soon as it is in-

in I* troduced, so that the meat shall not ab-

,"weet F1 "v •o'b the grease and thereby become inof boiling water salt to taste and cook £i jbj

It l9 an ol( 88

ig

1

Tbey should lay in this I amount of needlework, rest for an hour

There ought to be no such thing as

lack of time for courtesy. It is apart of our training here to giye up to our fellow creatures and if some of our time is wanted by them, it must be given cUeerfully and willingly.

It is very trying, certainly, when every hour of one's day has been marked out, to find at the end of the day tbateaeh hour has been more or leas disturbed by unforseen circumstanoee, so trying that it is wisest not to mark out any definite plan for tba day, but merely to make a good lasting resolution not to waste a minute. ^5

USEFUL INFORMATION. Saturate pails snd tubs with glycsrlne and tbey will not shrink.

Hard water becomes nesrly soft by boiling. A piece of chalk will soften hard spring water.

Filling for Cracked Celling.—Whiting mixed with glue water, or calcined plaster and water makes a good putty for filling cracks in plastered ceilings.

To Destroy Ants.—Wbere ants are very troublesome plaee a bone of meat. They will all collect on it and must then be destroyed by soaldlng.—Aunt Addle.

To Keep White Hands.—Our readers nsed not sutler from having their hands sffected by wstsr or soapsuds, if tbe bands are dipped in vinegar water or lemon juice immediately after. The add destroys tbe corrosive effect of tbe slkali, and makes tbe bands soft and white.

COSMETICS.—If

Haw Fat Can a Pvnsa Beee*sef Mir* beau, alluding to a very corpulent person, said, 'He hss only been created to shew to what extent the human skin would stretch without bursting.' Then oorpulenoe was Mieitd to be a naitu-a! txmditioni now, it ia knotm to be a disease. Hundreds who bad considered themselves useless for life, by reason of too much fat, have, by tbe It abort. There* no useof Allan's Anti-Fat, been reduced to Ing up bad English. a bealtby and natural sirs. This great remedv for corpulence Is purely vegetable ami perfectly harmless. It aet® on tbe food in the stomach, preventing its being converted into fat. It cures indlgesJtpn and tones up tbe system. Sold by druggists.

ladies would eat meat

but onoe a day, pickles but once a month, and sweetmeats never if they would bathe freely in cold water and live as much as possible in tbe open air, they would not require an/ other ooa-

A French scientific authority states that the ordinary rate of a man's walking ia four feet peraeoond of agood bone in baraeaa, twelve of a reindeer in a sledge on the ice, twenty six of an English race boras, forty-three of a bare, elghtyelgbt of ft good sailing ship, fourteen, and of the wind, eighty* two.

To ttnp blood, take tbe fine dust of tea, or tbe scraping of the Inside of tanned leather, and bind it close upon the wound, and tbe blood will soon esses to flow. These articles are at alt times as ceeeible, and easy to be obtained. After tbe blood bas oeessd to flow, laudanum may be advantageously applied to tbe wound.

Ox a certain oooaskm, Kdward Everett visited the oompoaing room of the Bo*' ton Advertiser at a late bour

to read

proof of an oration which be had fellefl to see at an earlier bour. Extremely Ucular about his style, he wss alterng sentences snd making additions white the forms were wsiUlng, which «D irritated tbe foreman that be roared out.

Cut it short, Everett—confound it, cut It short. There's no tin* QPW for paitck-

Ir you select good and healthy food for veur fomily, you abould*alao look to tbe welters of your Baby. For all trosiolee of early childhood valbUw i* betft* than Dr. WVBaty agjpj. 8$cenH bottle.

:i§®£

/$

3ltr

DB. PUCE'S

yjng in ar-

mfes that tbe frying pan kills more men I than the bullet, ana this is unfortunately too true if tbe frying pan is not properly conducted. Stewing, sauteing, steaming and other methods, all have their special uses but their consideration appertains rather to tne amenties of the art than to the ohemiccl and physiological actions with which we are called.

REGULATING THE TIME. The housekeeper who regulates time well and discreetly has acquired the art of making business and pleasure friends. Their households will run smoothly. Tbe power of regulating time is a gift with some people, that others, however well meaning, can never attain. There are some women who find time for everything—to manage their households thoroughly and comfortably, look after their children, get through a certain

or two every day—who never neglect their husbands' comforts, and are always ready for any social pleasure. :be well known sentence, 'I have not time,' is never said by them. How they may manage this is a mystery to those who have not tbe gift, tbougk tbey will explain it in these few words: *I never dawdle, and I never waste a moment.'* I

A great deal of valuable time is wasted people thinking i( is not worth while to do anything in the few minutes there are to spare between finishing one piece of work and beginning another.

Some ladies never go about without some knitting in their pockets, which they can take i\p and wotk if they have even five minutes to spare.

To the rule that everything can be overdone, this is no exception, for there are people who carry It to tbe extent of rudeness, who will hardly look up from their work to greet a friend,- and forget the impulses of good breeding in ty to waste no time.

45 Years Before the Public. THE CENUINE

DR.C.McLANITS

CELEBRATED

LIVER PILLS

FOR THE CURE OF

Hepatitis, or Liver Complaint,'

DTSrEKIA AND SICK KSAOACHS.

Symptoms of a Diseased Liver.

PAIN

in the right side, under the edge of the ril», increases on pressure sometimes the pain is in the left side the patient is rarely able to lie on the left side sometimes the pain is felt under the shoulder blade, and it frequently extends to the top of the shoulder, and is sometimes mistaken for rheumatism in the arm. The stomach is affected with loss of appetite and sickness the bowels in general are costive, sometimes alternative with lax the head is troubled with pain, accompanied with a dull, heavy sensation in the back part. There is gen-! erally a considerable loss of memory, accompanied with a painful sensation of having left undone something which ought to have been done. A slight, dry cough is sometimes an attendant The patient complains of weariness and debility he is easily startled, his feet are cold or burning, and he complains of a prickly sensation of the skin his spirits are low and although he is satisned that exercise would be beneficial to him, yet he can scarcely summon up fortitude enough to try it. In fact, he distrusts every remedy. Several of the above symptoms attend the disease, but cases have occurred where few of them existed, yet examination of the body, after death, has shown the LI\E,R to have been extensively deranged. ,t,,u

I AGUE AND FEVER.% DR. C. MCLANE'S LIVER PILLS, IN CASES OF AGUE AND FEVER, when taken with Quinine, are productive of the most happy results. No better cathartic can be used, preparatory to,: or after taking Quinine. We would advise all who are afflicted with this disease to give them a FAIR TRIAL.

For all bilious derangements, and as a simple purgative, they are un-„

elualed-

'I BEWABE OF IHITATMira. The genuine are never sugar coated., I Every box has a red wax sesd on the lid, with the impression' T)it. MCLANE'S LIVER PILLS.

The genuine MCLANE'S LIVER PILLS bear the signatures of C. MCLANE and FLEMING BROS, on the wrappers. -,

Insist upon having the genuine DR.'* C. MCLANE'S LIVER PILLS, prepared by Fleming Bros., of Pittsburgh, Pa., the market being full of imitations of the name McLane, spelled differently but kame pronunciation.

TERRtt HAtlTE SATURDAY EVT^NTTTja MATT.

.SPECIAL FLAVORING EXTRACTS:

Eminent-Chemists and Physicians certify that, these goods are free from adulteration, richer, more effective, produce better results than any others, and that they use them In their otfn families.

STEELE A PRICE'S LUPULIN YEAST OEMS. Thm But Dry M*p Tmut in Iks Wmrld.

1

3wiIT»ni. Plmpl**,

t. una

Kuni«mi

won1f^

flit nowOr*. l»Hr«Blood!«tli« Rtinr*nt«^ «mauh. 'Rradj MSMWT. #root«, run—iii*, a "it cy^J

A. Prk* II. S-E-SELLtHStCO ftop'H KMTATSFC, r*i JM T* DruffUU mU

S I S

Tvt ten yesi •i Twit's Fllla ihare Imu tbe KtwpindlHaaAM ItaMlf Mldas In the ATLANTIC STAISS. Scarcely a family can be found Irom MAINS to MRtifeo that does not we them. It ii now proposed to make their virtues known in the

WMT.

A Single Trial will Establish their Merits, Do They Cure Eyery Tiling? NO^Thsy are for OlMatst that result from MALARIAL POISON ami a D1 RANGED LIVER, such as Dyspepsia, Bilious and Typhoid Tevers Chills, CatM, Bick-Hsadscha, Chronic 3ianrhcea, garv6uapaaa.IHsslnass.gaIpitation of tb* Heart. Saaralxia. Rheumatism, Kidney Disease, Chronio Con* sttpation, Piles, 4te. aarx-rtrsfca WARira YOXT

That Your LIVER IS DISORDERED.

VkM rtm htn

M»alsiatMMNiMM«l StWciiMiBtlMi rt mmmr SrsctaUawi Avcv*

Bl ABVIMB, sad AT SXCK

A E S I S XI neltatdsM pi«)h wrfelcli ellca srtssbhw tfce asftner, •art lasatMrttiaM Mtows «sAf feUtf, gae« Blfllss, SOLID RUBH HA&D XUBCLJS.

THE WEST SPEAKS. "BEST PILL EXISTCHOK/' Da.

TPTT

UNIQUK PERFUMES ire tbe Gems of All Odors. TOOTHKNI. Anapsssble, bssttbfsl Llqaid Dentifrice. LEMOM SUGAR. A Substitute for Lawns. EXTRACT JAMAICA CINCER. Twm pare Boot

STEELE 6 PBICS^ Xaofrfc, Chicago, 8ft. Ionia, and Cincinnati

Protessional Cards.

S

AMUELMAGILL, ATTOBITET AT LAWI Offlee with N. G. Buff: north side Ohio street, between Third and Fourth.

Special attention to collections, probate business and bankrupt practice.

v. o. Bcrr. S. X. BKECHKR

BUFF

& BEECHER,

ATTOEHKTS AT LAW,

OFFICE—No. 820

Ohio

8treet,

Office: K«. 091 Ohio Street, TEBRB HAUTE, IND. Office hours from 9 a.' m. te 1 p. m. and from 3to5p. m.

"OSEPH RICHARDSON. M. Dt

•fflee oa Obio Srd lli, TICRRE HAUTE, IND. O. LINCOLN, »«afW8T.

Offloe, 221 Main street, near Seventh. Extracting and artificial teeth specialties. All work warranted. (d£w-tf)

DRRsricoaBasd•eehasiealE

M. C. RAFFERTT, Proprietor.

'E. W. LEEOS)

Watchmaker and Jeweler

No. 3t South Faurtli Street. WAtehes, Clocks snd Jewelry repaired, and all work warranted.

'i

HPOBTMT TO

USINESS MEN!

rjTHE SATURDAY

YENING MAIL

E

OES TO PRESS

bet. Third and

Fourth, north side.

jQR J. P. WORRELL, Treats exclusively Diseases of the EYE AK© EAR!

O

150

A O O W

DENTIST,

Dental Room, 157 Main Street, •ear 6th, HA I W f, 't Nitrous Oxide Oas administered for pais as Tooth Extraction.

W. BALLEW,

DENTIST,

Office, 438% Malsi Street, over Sac* a old confertlaaery stand. TERRKHAUTE, IND.' (i l.i

Can be found in office night and day,

Business Cards.

AFFERTYS GERMAN KITCHEN.'

Ai nBST*CIiMi:Bni AVBABI MEALS AT ALL1HOUBS.1« Best Cook employed in the Statei The German Kitchen is the place for fine meals.

NEWSBOYS

Sm

For the trader Main street, near Sixth, sign Of big man with watch.

RW:RIPPETOE

Qene ^lDealer in

GROCERIES, ^oVIWNS AND PRO-

.,,ii National Blodk, 186 Main strsa

L.

KISSNER, Wholeaaleand RetaU Dealer in

MtSdealInstnuaents, to, Palace of Music, A Ohio Bt

T|^rAGNER 4 RIPLEY, ltn porters and workers of

11

Resttk 6rssft« ssi Itallaa IsrUc

MONUMENTS,

iTitiAiT, mil. r. Ho, «1« Cherry BL, beL 4th and «h. yfth&mOM HAUTE,IND.

S

/vctteM«rui»

MM DranrMa. or Ml fcjr Mall •a NMlyteraBcMta. p, sa Xurrajr li., Xew Terk.

HAUTE BLEACHERY

ro. 101, corner of 4th land Mulberry Sta.

,1*4 *9-

MRS.

A. GERARD.

M.

Straw Hats and Bonnets bleatitied altered, colored ami finished in a superior manner. Millinery Work deneat trade prtoes, ar on short nottce. Patronagq rs^tsettWlyi lieiied.

EWINO MACHINES itPUBB AlB ANtHTIB In the very best manner and warranted to wark, by JOSEPH FOLK, No. «B Mats street, north side, between Sri aad St streets, us Sttin. Dent eottdasan your soa ehlneunttl Mr.FOLK has hadalaafc at It fOrthsrsal trouble ssay be terr lUht tnd theeoetof repairing amen tflae. Tttsksa

FARMERS' GRIST MILL. sffklrtStrwL A) THIS new mill to now In full blast, ma*laga No. 1 artlele of

FLOUR AND MEALI

It Is being ran exclusively on inttM wortt, and the fullest

satisfaction

ELL IT IN THIS CITY, I tifi?

GENTS SELL THE MAIL IN

IXTY SURROUNDING TOWNS.

EDITIONS EACH WEEK,

CHARGE ONLY FOR BOTH.

1

FJLHE

MAIL IS THE

EST MEDIUM

OR ADVERTISERS.

ECAUSE

"T IS A PAPER

OR THE HOUSEHOLD.

pWENTY THOUSAND READERS.

Taking Horace Greeley's estimate of the number of readers to a family—on an average—every baueof the SATURDAY EVENING MAUi is perused by pver Twenty.Thousand People.

v.

PROVISIONS

-AT. i?

WHOLESALE,

In store and for sale in Job lots, at

118

My Com try HcnudlljrWoncii Wtm Conntry—A« you|' oooie dovn on the street 'cars ftoiA the depw«{Ull Abe .c4nddet»r it«p at

It. W. RIPPET6FS

Whi^ Eront," 153 Main St.

Where you will always find the best 2

SrOARS, COFFFEE8, TEAS, TABLE SUPPS.W, 5 .5. 0 -i '-"^r

And All Staple and Fancy Groceries

At the Lowes Priccs»(

THE HIGHEST CASH PRICE PALD loB PBMirCIS

r*

N SATURDAY,

NOON^

STREET

MAlir

Chbice sugarourpd hams,shoutd««iand

•ftt ii S.

JJUSINES8

CHANGE *1

FOUNDRY

.r'7"n Terre 04.

SUCCESSORS TO F. H. McBLFRBSH. The undersigned having sucoeeded to the business ofr. B. MeSinesh, are now prepared to reoeive orders for ui

FiourMili,8

Iron eonv^ear^^ir^^wl^^ooden OOgS Of We have also secured the agenor tor the best quality ofPfench BUrrifill Btones, OefourA Oo% Duteh Anehor Belting piwi, variety of Grain Cleaning Masnlnery, idfingi Purlflen, Flour Packers. Bcalest Mil Corn Bfieilsrs, Wtss

The well-known

Isguaiaateed.

A

IkrnMH" brtnginghis own wheat to the mUl ean rely oo jetting flour ftwsnhtoowa grain, and by thos doing ir ake a great Mving over seiUag the wheat at one plfoe and ooying floor at SMUM*. 4

-M—--

Packers, Scales^ of. the nu* the

ehlnery and castlna manufsctured by the PtNMlx fMafliy ssd ISAM Werka will be fully maintained, and the eapaelty of

theirorks

We are plsased to inlona the public e«r Mends sad patros» sspsels11yf that we have succeeded in getting a large supply of superior nwthem

LAKE ICE

With which to serve them the ewsitng season. Onr pdess are aa aheap as the cheapest. WE ARE CITIZENS OF TERES HAUTE, ana respectfully ssk a continuance of their support.

F. PERDUE,

qm? feat# TSneHatlle let Oompany, gBMainStrsst

3

TERMS:

one ye«rr.. a 00 Six mon tbs. 00 Three months,. 50 cts.

Mail and offlee Subscriptions will, invari ably, be disobntinued at expiration of Unas paid for.

Encouraged by he extraordinary success which has attended the publicatlen of THS SATURDAY BVKNING MAIL tke publisher has perfected arraagementa by whleh It will henceforth be one of the most popular papers in the West.

Jbf*ni^,''prico*H.'o*i"iad''ihe

Aural andThe

JfU0toS%**pr(cer•"'ia'iiir'tad^The'iiiaU

WeefUy, prUm HM, and The ^dTiTe'!

priee MM, aad Tke MalL......^.... ...?.n fOO LMUM Chimney Corner, an^^ The Mall ~..f. 5 00

CWV#MKy,prloe«L50, and,

The Mail —i. :.. 17ft -r MONTHLIES.

The Mail.....r.... 00 180

IHertort'* Mail American AffrteuUutSt^noiJiM and

The Mail

.7..- ......77.

jPwaflWJt's MtnUKty, prloe lStOS, an/1

«sMaU

Mail^

J.W.»AKKKTT.

ls sdch tF1

guaraotee, prompt Silpmsntat with which we may be favwed. respsstftrily soiielt a- eonttnuadee of tiadei liberally lishment receive market xates

bestow id upon the eatabwltlch shall always atien, at the lowest

mm

fKV-r -f:

si

Saturday Evening

C-J

uu.

THE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL Is an Independent Weekly Newspaper, elegantly printed on eight pages ef book paper, and alms te be, in every sense, a Family Paper. With this aim in view, nothing will appear in its columns that cannot be read aloud in the most reSned fifeSlde circle.

CLUBBING* WITH OTHER PERIODICALS. We are enabled to oflter extraordinary Inducements In the nay of clubbing with other periodicals. We will furnish THE SAT* URDAY EVENING MAIL, PRICE «M0 PER YEAR, and any ef the periodicals en* umerated below at greatly reduced rates. These periodicals will be sent direct from the offlqes of publication, ilere is.th^ list "S "tl SEMI-WEJEKLYRR,,..-1^,

WEEKLY TAPERS.

ItoUanapoiti /o«rnaI, prlce' #2.00, and The Mail 18 25

Itutjancwoii* WteMv -We** and? Thai. Mil 11 If TO Y. Trtbwna, pricet^ and3%eMail S 60

Prairie Farmer price 12.00 anf The Mall. 8 CO IPiMfuriiJlirtl)priceMtandTheMaO IN Advance, pi^|r9l4P, ai^l The OMea^'iMsrier," price' «^7and' The

'S

•B

MAII4-, FOR THE TEAR

"B 1878. ^i

A MODEL WEEKLY PAPER FOR THE HOME. «t .v-.wi »it"..,

"5

A

-1

:1

IN 400 38 B8S as 860 500

800

425 4 36 815 620

JTenM|^!priee •CflO.andTbe

Magmtne, price 84UW, and

Gardener't ifoniw^price tU^.'and Tlie

Ab JVUheias, pdceHjOO, and The Jttdl ^ejs wulisiw pgSiedby tBc—ovopttb Usatlmis are li^sdi^ls U||i «|ubtdM armtm .s

Addiess F.». Fablia^ec Ssturday Evening Hail, TERBEHA^EylN

TT

jl

5 0 $ W W

mrr.

To I

BARNETT

BOM aid driy Scotch OMHttii AND ITALlAN MARBLEMONUMElrtb,: TMDH MM ••rts, Hm*-

EsstMsln street, between TlreMftsnd TMfteeatb stresta, v.,! nRRBBAUT^HTD. All work waifantsdteglvssntlstteaon.

A Good Opportnnltj ftp besbiideHraie.' f» fiO lots fcrf sale In Balrsdo^a subflltkion (of the old Phlogan vardan)on KQxteenth street andLlberty Arennsidisir ably looated, will be ao!4 on fwssrmi)le torn Theee lota are ems venientlo|he ndlionddx9a,cAty acboola, gndinnde•iiablepartof the city. Wok fostterinImnstlonfll im

JAS. H. TURNER,

ItdlMeUntf'

Ofttse tw Prairie City Bank, 8btfli flt.

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