Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 9, Number 29, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 18 January 1879 — Page 2
2
THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
TERKE HAUTE, JAN. 18,1879
TWO EDITIONS
Of thia ^.perere published. Ha FiRST EDITION, oil Friday jcvemng has a large circulation In the surrounding j^owtm, where It la sold by newsboy* and agents. n» aBC»ND EDITION, Saturday Evening, goes Into the hands of nearly every rf fling pecsonjfi the city, and the farm at-atof this immediate vicinity.
JBvety Week's Issue Is, in ftflk-...i,,,»lm.a»r T—*" TWO N1CWBPAPER8, Iar Which all Advertisements appear for
OXTB OHA-BGUS
"01712 OHUJtCH MUSIC." Just now, when the subject of musie is agitating some of oar church congregations, the following from the Northwestern Christian Advocate, may be apropos:
Taming from the hymns and tones to be sang, there are many perplexing
aaesttonsringingthescaroe
as to spirit and method of
niring them. It needs be said that the of hymns is worship. Whatever maybe oar practice, this is oar theory. This being the case, what do yoa think of the propriety of singing
flre or regulating the ventilator! Sappose yoa engage in prayer instead for the B&IH6 purpose! what do you think of the propriety of ringing a hymn over «nd over again, often enough to wear oat the patience of the saints, for the ex press purpose of killing time, and thus affording, as it is thought, further oppor tunity to press souls to the altar revival times! Such breaches of propriety, and others that might be mentioned, certainly Indicate a sordid conception of the mission of sacred song. We ought to approach this part of divine servioe as Moses did in the burning bash. It is not needfal to utter philippics against a style
of
ringing that is flippant and
thoughtless, nor against that style commonly designated artistic. The highest art in sacred song is to be simple and soulful. I woald havtJ the congregation ring. Underscore that, pat a dozen exclamation points after it, raise it to the tenth ptiwer, characterize it dynamically with a doable ff—anyway to make It emphatic, teould have Vie congregation
rdou* believe in farming out this bus* Iness to a select few who, now and then, are not very select. The aggregation that does this needs to repent. They need to 8ingrltM|et their hearts aflame with the glow of sacred song. The souls of ohoruses long since dead muBt be invoked to a hew incarnation. The devil is gleeful at the pallid silenoe that is irritated only by the feeble rasp of a godless quartette. But Wake the echoes and make the rafters tremble with the swelling choruses, of sanctified song and straightway the equanimity of the "devil is disturbed and a ripple of jov breaks on the strings of every harp in heaven gulf yawned the church and the Sunday school. In the latter every one sings with all heart and voice, while in toe former, in many instance!, it would seem as if there had been offered an ecclesiastical premium,on minuteness. Somehow the people must come to believe and act aa though their natural, and moral, and legal, and spiritual, and eoclesiastical birthright were the service of song. There must be some way of leading this
Bervice.
service
The next feature in all the usual social round of New York has been the introduction of 4 o'clock teas, an imported Ixmdon fashion, adopted almost of neoessity because of the growth, of the city and the difficulty of paying the requisite attention to a large circle of friends. Cards are ia*uod for the tea on a specified day, and ladies go eitbjer in walking dress Or more elegant evening array to spend more are less of the hour from 5 to 6. Occasionally a band of musio enlivens the seene, and dancing is allowed to the yonqg people as a sort of dessert after the *mpaoy, but the simple entertainment of tea, cakes and ices is not intended to interfere with the home dinner of the gnestA. Lsdles'^rtiO oannot have all their friend sto a formal dinner thus discharge thelrsocisl oblfgHtions, and prominent strangers in the city are often entertained at teas. Mothers thus "bring oat" their daughters. The young lady's name is put on her mother's card of invitation, and she is introduced to society supported by a bevy of young girls. Tbe fashion* or giving balls at Pefruonico's is also adopt* ed by the best people, who either have too limited accommodations at home or sensibly object to having their nouses torn up. The cost of such entertain ments—an item which every "woman will be glad to know—is from 00# to 15,000. These are perhaps the striking social innovations of the winter in New York. The most sensible reform, however, is in women's attire. The fashionable walking dress actually clears the ground! It is made notouly in the fash ionable cloth material, but even in silks and velvets.
A WAY THEY HAVE J# WLr, W A UK EE. .r l.-i f. Peck's
Hun.
A man comes in with a package of bills. He is a collector. You put your fingar in your vest pocket, and then he begins to ramble. He looks over throe hundred and fifty bills before he ootnas to your*, and when he does you have thought of an excuse to stand him off. At first you are uiad because it takes him so long to find the bill, and then, after you have your excuse framed, you are glad. This is a queer world.
TIRED OF THE UESTION. Reno Gazette, "How shall we become beautiful f" inquires the "Occident." a religious journsl of San Francisco. The same question teas been put to us so often that we are tired of hearing it, and say now, onoe for all, that the secret is our own and we intend to keep it as long there Is breath in our body. After we have faded from earth like a lovely vision the world shall have the precious knowledge.
GHOULS AND A LECTURER. From Bunday Afternoon. Some well meant apologies for Mr. Robert G. Ingersoll have been spoken by the Christians whom he spend# his days in coarsely abnaing. There is, however, no call for the 'exhMjitioj!, of tenderness to easting pearls
In the lect Moses," with «l)ing the co following as Genesis: "After the
I
The ordinary
method is by means of a choir. When.a pastor goes to anew field and finds a choir in possession he heeds to use a great deal of skill in either using or abolishing it. A cjaoir out of sympathy with its true function is an unmitigated nniaanoe, and tfce pastor will need to be patient until it ban be converted, or peaceably exterminated. Converted, it will be anxious to serve the-Master by a performance of its own distinct work, the leading ot the
!reply.
of song/ Ex*
terminated, the pastor has an open field which he will find himself or some one else at hand capable of cultivating^,,,
HIGH TONED SOCIALS IN NEW •OJfclT Springfield kepubiietil?
1 1
0d#ENSATION
ft ispfcnly
Werauppoaetbat Mr. fngersoll knows his andiepoea it must be a pretty low set of people that are ignorant enough to believe and foul minded enough to endure such a coarse and monstrous falsehood. It would seem that even a man who had ceased to believe in the hiatorical accuracy of the Bible would find the blood mounting to bia cheeks as be listened to thia indeoent fabrication, whose only purpose most be to shock and wound tne sensibilities of Christian believers.
Probably few intelligent Christians at this day believe (hat the identical body which is laid in the gravels raised again. Nothing goes into the grave but the dust that returns to dust. Nevertheless these graves of oar dead are saored to all of us and though nothing of those w* loved is left in them, we tenderly obert ish tbem. and are pained to have them disturbed or deseorated. Grant thSt this is only a sentiment it is a sentiment that most man share and any mad who rudely tramples on It puts himself out of the pale of good neighborhood. The gentlemen who rifled Mr. Stewart's grave did him no injury all that they aid Was to assail in the most wanton and brutal manner those sentiments of his friends that were connected with his place of burial.
Now, even granting that the Bible is all a fable, ana that there is no more inspiration in it than there is immortality in the body that is mouldering under
ground, Mr. Ingersoll's treatment of Jit is just of apiece with tjb robbers of graves. TO a great'many people In this country theBtbleis still a aacred book* They hold it tn theli1 bands with reverenoe th^y- find upon its psges the inspiration of tpeir highest hopes and the solace of their deepest sorrows.. In timea of twmbiei and temptation it has been their guide and comforter it is. bound up with all their holiest memories and tne»r dearest associations. And noW they see this lecturer ramping and pawing over its saored pages: filling the minds of men with the vilest lies aboutJt defiling it with his coarse jokes, and hold It up to the contempt of the peopled W say that no gentlemen would aeal in tbisWav with any genuine human sentiment, no matter how mistaken it might be, is to state the tmtb in a Very mild form. Arid if by this triple combination of untrutb, indecency and inhumanity Mr. IngerSoli has not put himself beyond the pale of go6d neighborhood, it is difficult to see now any man could contrive to do it 48 rt¥\
ploytd
now, enMht mattitivw th#' narrative in
ic
part of I mala were made, God
caused all the"animals to pass before Adam to see if he oould pick out one that would do for him. Read Jt andyou find out that God tided to pa^OTim Adsm as a wife one of the beasts the field."
i_
BOW A MAN Qomro
A Little tescrikttoi "thai Will Make Both Husbanddnd W^eLhuglu
There's where a man has the adva'nt'age. He can undress in a cold room and have his bed warm before* woman has got her hair-pin^ out and. her shoes untied. Monthly. (That's bow it looks' iti print, and this is how it is in reality: ^«f4im going to rbed, my dear. It's hflf past ten." No
"Now, Joi^n, you know you are
alwa^ late in the taofhihg. Do get to Ibed!'? "Yeain a minute,'r ne replies, as he turns the paper wrong side out, and 'begins a lengthy article headed "The Louisiana Muddle," Fifteen minutes later she calls from the bedroom: "John, ioome to bed, and not keep the gatfburnhere all night," and murmuring etbing about "the bill being big pnough now,'' she! creeds between the cold sheets, while Jobb site placidly 6h, bis feet across the piano etool and a cigar in bis mouth, By and-by be,rise^, vawns« btretches himself, throws the paper on the ftoor, and seizing the shaker, (proceeds to that vigorousexer^ie^ shaking the co*l stove. Just it tbis stage
a
not
altogether pleasant voice inquires "For pity's sake! aint
yon
ready for pe4 jet?"
rYeej yes, I'trf coming. •'Why don't you go to sl^ep and let a fellow alone T" Then he discovers that there's coal heeded. When this is supplied and rattled into the stove, he sits down to Warm his feet.! 47extbe slowly begins to undress, and as he stands aeratchiug himself and absently g»«ipg on the Wirt garment, dangling oyer the baok of the chair, he ^members that the dock is not wound
!yetl
'When
that is attended to, he wants (*.Urink of water, and away *£ie oroqaenades to the kitchen. Of oourse, when ne )retorns his ^kiu vesembles thst of a pWkftd chicken, Sndouco more be seats himself before the fire for last "warmup." As the dlodk Strikes twelve he turns out the gaa, ami with a flop of the bed clothes and a few spasmodic riitvers he sUbsides—no, not yet^ he forgot to see if the frontdoor was locked, blame t.*11# «od auotl^er fl'ip'bfthe bedclothes oringa forth the remark: "Good ghuSionsfif that man riu't enough to try tUepatleecfcor
IN HA NGING)
•iriI7ow^h Fell
flotcH
Mr Mfgee of Padocib, l^mrrwky, Wbft was partially hanged by a mob a short time since, gives the following graphic account of his sensations. There was no pain as long as he was ascending. When he settled back, however, with a slight jerk, hia suffering was excruciating. He tried to scream, out no sound issued fro do his throat. His arms were unpiuloned, and he endeavored to raise bis hands so' as to grasp tbe rope above his head
that he
that be bad
might relievo that terrible
shortening of his breath, whloh seemed, at each muscular attempt at respiration, as if the atr would escape from nis lungs and force Itself out through his breast and back. The miracles of his arms refused to obey his will. Hla joints experienced a sensation similar to that one worildjlmfcgltie the piercing of red hot needles would produce. The knees twitched Aud jerked convulsively. Then a delicious sensation of 'cool numbness,' commencing at his extremities, stole over him. He lost all desire to save himself. But gradually this contented feeling disappeared. He became consciou* of pain again. It seemed as if tmn bonds had been tightened with screw* about his bead and breast. He consciously gasped tor breath and found been saved.
TERRhi HAUTE SAT URD AY EVENING MAIL.
SELECTING HUSBANDS. Baltimore Every Saturday. It has been profoundly remarked, that the true way of telling a^ totetetoqi from a mushroom is to eat it. -If you flie was a Ipadatool, ho
ere is re r. Samuel
nootber crinsen re
marked, the proof of the pudding is in the eating thereof. Some young men that seem unexceptionable, indeed, very deplrable, when they are aiugle, are perfectly horrid as soon a* they ried. AU the latent brute peart flo^es hqt as soon a and dellcattf being seeks her Id jiia fiompuFiipnahip. The Jioneymoon, lasts a very short time, tbe reoeptions aqd the round of parties are soon over, and then the two ait dowQ to make borne happy. If ahe has married a society man, he will soon begin to get bored he will yawn and go to sleep on tbe sofa. Then he will take hls hatand go down to tfee club and see the boys, and perhaps not come home till morning. If she has married a man engrossed iu business, he will be fagged out when he cornea home. He may be a sickly man that she must nurse, and a morose man that she must seek to cheer, a drunken man that she must sit up for, a violent mao that she fears, a fool whem she soon learns to despise, a vulgar man for whom she must apologize—in short, there are thousands of Ways of being bad husbands, and ve*y few ways of being good ones. And the worst of it is that the poor, silly women are apt to admire in single men the veiy traits that make had husbands, and look with contempt or ridicule upon those quiet virtues which ,make home happy. Men with very little personal beauty or style often make the wife happy—and sometimes quite the reverse. The number of ways of being a bad husband is almost as great as the number of being ugly. No one can tell from the demeanor of a single ma^Whirsort oTa husband he will be.] Meantime she, musj. marry somebodyf" Eat it: if y^am-dle it was a sort of toadstool, if you live it was a sort of mushroom.
DANGER OF STAGE LOVEM AKIN Q. Ill
N. Y. Cor. Boston Herald
Booth has never played Romeo since his marriage to Miss Mcvioker, who was his last Juliet. It is said (how truly I have no means of knowing) that she will not permit him to play in tbe part with anv other woman. Well, who knows the danger of Btage love-making to those who engage in itT 1$ was not so long ago that a well known actress made a row at the Grand .Opera House because another actress klssed a little more widely known actor with jgiore realistic warmth than the dramatic situation demanded. It isn't human nature to enjoy tbe sight, of your wife or bus* band or lover hugging anybody but yourself, even in mimicry*." Hugging is hugging* and kisses-are kisses, on the Btage the same as off.
At the Lyceum Katfe Claxton is embracing Mr. Pardoe, while her husband is embracing Mrs. Ljngard at the Grand Opera House. Mrs. Williamson is embraiSrig Will fifarkins, while her husband doesn't get. a compensatory of anybody at (he Park Frank Evans is embracing Alecia Robson, while her father atandsToy and so it goes, nO doubt giving rise to many complications of emotion not apparent to the audience. It is a matter Of gosilp among the theatrical folks that art aotor and actress, brought together in mimicry of love night after night during the long run of a popular play, All tato really loving each other. This would have been Well enough, for thp two are appropriately mated, but that the actor had a wife.
vMiilWHE LOSS OF A WIFE.
There is ne white arm over your shoulder, no,. speaking' faee to look up into tBe eyeof love, no trembling lips to mumiUr,*tOb, it Is too^kadt" There is so atrauge ia bushln eve^ji® rOom no smile to uMet yoa at nightfall. And tbe old clock ticks and strikes—it was such ttniric Wheh^she could hear it. Now it seeme to knell on the hours through^ wbob you.watched theebadow ot death
9ay
Job
Setting her teeth hard^ai»e aWAits the final flop, with the aQ(^(manyiug blast of wild sir, ttad tfted quietly inquires, '1r|isissettled tor tbe night/' to whiob he replies by muttering, "If you ainJt the^rovokingest woman!".
athermgon heraweet face. And every the elOok ^peats that ol^ story. Maoy another fcafe- it tellettf, t6rJ—K)f beautiful words and deeds thatare reglB' tered above. You feel—oh, bowdfteui uthat the grave cannot keep her—that •she *111 live again
CHILDREN'S CHA TTER. gf Th« sohool is s'ill a hand i* raised— "May I go out, please sir?" And 'tween his nandker|
mUh
isJ%
In comparison with the loa& ctf
ia
wife,
all other bereavements aretrifii&g. The wife! she who fills so large. A apajce inthe domestic heaven she who busied herself so unweariedly foi* the^precious Ones around her bitter is the tear which falls ou her cold clay. You gtftu^eside her Coffin, and think of the pa^t. It seems an amber colored pathway, where the son ahoue .upon beautiful: fiowert, or the stars hung glitteringly, overhead. Fain would the soul linger .there. No thorns are remembered Save thctee your bands have unwillingly platoted. Her noble, tender heart lies ,open to your inmoftt sightil You think of her now as all gentlMiesi, all purity' all beauty. But ahe is dead. The head laid upon pillow of clay* The bauds that have ministered so untiringly are "folded beneath the gloomy portal. The heart whose every beat, measured- an eternity of love lies under your feet. The flowers she bent over with smiles, bend now over her with tears, shaking the dew from their petala* that *tbe verdure around her may be, kept greeu.ajpd beautiful.
and''you
wu,
Ritil-t
tylSE SA YJNQS BY BILLING& Luv l» one of..them k«?d ov.Uissaaies that
ybu
kaht git, nor git rll oy, with
euny certainty, enrty rtioretfcan'you kan therumatia. The aooicWe iz tbe greatest ov jcowards—he fears li/e more
This world iz so full ofsiu and sinners that we often cum akrost kounterfit lies. The mas who haz finally suckoeeded in cheating himself in all things iz perhaps as^happy as phools ev^r git tgi ^a lp
tbThare
ain't no biy.xn^s#t^r good ^ad
vertise—even if yon hav got a Bible to sell, you bav got to talk it up. The man who marrys a woman, or tne woman who mariya a man, expecting to elevate them to theif level, has taken a hard job to lift.
and nose
Do ruddy stains appea
traifbtway
eti btocapfrojnoff
ran^rry ftom 11 boy cliisesj (Opped|bd^ who was spank
red,o
mar
appin
satiou was tb^iting to tbe extreme. 'Betflilbe vt|obody than a sum body,' groaned a dull scholar, aa he-pored over a column of figures.
•is it done when-it's brown?' Mothertnotlcing her BOtt's greed! ness): 'George, you should always leave the. table feeling that you could eat
a
little
more.' Son 'I do, mother.' Charles Lamb, when a little boy, walking with hla sister in a churchyard, anjl reading the epitaphs, said to her: 'Mary, where are all the naughty people baried?'
A physician* tir rote a' prescription, and as the patient went out of tbe room, said to him: 'I wish y'ou would let me know if that does you way-good, for I have myself been greatly troubled with rheumatism lately.' 'Ma, has aunty got bees in her mouth?' •No why do you ask such a question?' 'Cause that leetle man with a heap o' hair on his fa cotched bold of her, and said be was going to take the honey from her lips and she said, "Well, make haste!"'
A little six year old, upon finding a lone and solitary stick or candy in nis stocking on Christmas morning, mournfully exclaimed, 'Gracious! if I bad been born twins, I'd only got half this much!' —Norristown Herald.
A gentleman who resides very close to tbe railroad was praying one evening, when a train of c^rs came by, and bis little girl remarked to him. 'Pa! pa! what is the use of praying while the cars are going by God eaunot hear you.' 'Papa, me has been baptized, aint me asked a little three year old. 'Yes, dear.' 'Then me won't nave to be baptize again?' 'No tut can you remember anything about being baptized?' 'I dees I can!' 'Well, what did the minister do to you?' 'He shoved up my sleeve and stuck a knife in my arm.'
1'
MORSELS FOR SUNDAY CONTEM-
iii4J PL4JC10N. i. •?. fen
isnAaitm
Yob cannot dream yourself into a characteryOu must hammer and forge yourself one.,
Books are men Of higher nature, and the only men who speak aloud for future times to hear.
Knowledge isproud that he has learned so much. Wisdom Is bumble that be knows no more^
To bring forward the Wad actions8 bf others to excuse our own, is. like wash* ing.ourselves with mud.
If one say to thee .Thy ears are those of an ass, don't mind it if two say so, then put On'the saddle.
The wealth of a man is the number Of things whicb be loves stud blesses—whidh he ip loved and blessed sn
Popular glory is a perfect coquette hec lovers must toil, feel every inqnietude, Indulge every caprice, and perhaps be jilted at laSt.
A small Bori-oW di^tractsf ft gfeat one makes us collected as a bell loses its clear tone when Rightly cracked, and recovers it If the Assure is enlarged..
As a rule women oa^e little for oomedv, because It makes tiiem' enter into tfiemselvesii Give them the drama, which draws them out of themselves/ tn
A brave man thinks no onehis superior who does him.an injury for he has it then in his power to make himself su^ pirior to the other by forglving it.^"
Women attain perfection in but tw departments of literature—letters and memoirs. They only write well when they imagine that they are talking.
You cannot fathom,your mind,
Is
There
a well of thought there which has bo
bottOHi.' The
tnore ^6u draw
frottilt
the tnore dear end-plentiful it will be.!
What Is even poverty itself,'that a man should murmur under it? I tie but as the pain of piercihg a ipaidei^ ear,
hang precrous
Wouhds^d
cotiht
10O
jewels!
ft! I
I
than,flnduz
deth. I kno lots ov people wlware trifling tb bull the moral msukett thes kah sitag the 20 commandments thru their noze and. not miss a note b^LiflUajL»'ant to borrow 65 dollars ov pie, th.ey have got to find au endo^r.
Notoriety is gained^bi working ftrr tbe applause ov the world. Repotaalufiv.M gained by working foX the applauz^.oi
Thar is plenty of people wfioze virt«r#s are like certain trees they blossom tegular euuff, but bear no fruit,
At a tenrperabce Ittll
A volume in a line. celebration in Newmarket, a little lad appeared in the procession bearing a flag on which was inscribed tbe following: •All's right when Daddy's sober,' 4
in the
\nuimM
In tfie cities bf the 'd^vrtHe'^ettMS are so»»ll and elos® together, auid a thistle is as liable to grow from a rich man's grave as a daisy is from the mound that bovers thd dust of a beggar.
Tfterfe is a burden Of caw in getting rtchee^ fear in keeping theto temptation ia u8i£g,thein, guilt in abating them, sorrow it) losing, and a burden of
§9
»(int to'M given up concerning them.
turn to beaveh,nOt in tbe Hbffr of sorroW, but in that of, joy like tbe #«k', they wait foe the clouds to dispersa» tbKt they feoar up inio their natjve elements. m3Q$UV a 8
DRIVE ST.0 W,s
Jflinoujtl fit io4 Msn*.
BY
QUADP^'
Tbe
otbeV
Fort street, east, to
of
«an't be itopplog^ look
for dogs on,tbe,»ti»et.'(.. -f The children made no rep^y, but,.^a tbeV HvriWhed fiini tittioad the coal, flwy wondered lfhef!itad ttf«AfoMIdreu bf few own» aod if he evarepoke ldodiy 'to them. He may have felt the burdentheir thoughts, for suddenly he looked up and said: ., •Well, I I'A tat tonpf, amf Wingiasl was opming up, I brought «kng an orauge to give to toe*c^A, 3*** owned the dog. Whloh yodjltr 'The dog wewMgfed'td Mttle fttmS Bttty in that bodse there,' answered a girl ft was all tbe dog he ever bad* and Wben vou killed it qe cried himself almost to death. Re didn't ne^ef have *ny plav, rins Kii.
ihing but tbat little dogi* •And will y»a take Wna^MI •I
can't,
?v* v,
be oould ask. I can do nothing now but carry him safely out.' He gently took op the coffin in bis atout arms and carried it oat, his eyes moist and his lip quiverlhg. slid when be bad placed it in tbe velUwthe looked at Uie dtiVer beseeming way and ispered... .«-•'
Drive stow—Aive ^[owJr He was a l|ttle lkme
Idv
,•
Coug.anu v&tu*
The 'ribbiest splfltsjfre p&atiS 8yrupffivfjtd cherry, they will r»*H«Hhi¥rar Joon dlsootli' it"'iiii:vWMy superior to anytbing tbey havef tever tised." It is equally valuabjejnaethmatio and toon-
ea
-1
day wben^the'
tikify
Big
driver of a ooal eati backed' bhrvtlrtole Up
to
the
alley
gate^ an. oH
IT€||IBI«
bouse
pn
dump out a hairtou
c6«1, some bbiiaTifr catrtb
pWt.of |he
side door, ind thi iftiVWfBWSinM WSeStt uear and saidt v, i»d 'Last time I was baTe one.ol the wheels crushed a bit of a dog belon to one Of yoti. I beard'a gr&sft W, outj but
EOMJE
1
sir,,?cos he's dead,and they're
coming to take liim to, thegrayey^, re so ii •The driver looked flf aod down, SBomed to ponder ibe matter, and then he crossed to tbe other house. Tbe little coffin and Its burden Was in the front room, and two or three oM women were Wiping away their team and talking to low tones. The driver put hie band
00
tbe closed coffin and said 'I didn't know it was his dog—I didn't know he W« lame and sick. God forgive me if I made sorrow for bim!'
The vehicle sent to convey the body to the cemetery drove up at that moment and the burly big man continued. 'If he was alive I'd buy bim anything
&
hejlriv^r wo|iaered, but he moved eway|)nowfy, and tbtlooal cartman Btood in tbe middle of tbe street and anxiously watched till he was off the cobblestones. Then, as he turned to his own vehicle, be said: •I didn't mean to, but I Wish he had lived t? jofgiyf loel'
f,. 11^ Everybody to Kaow.
Rev. George H. Tbaver. an old citizen ot thia vicinTty, known to every one as a most influential citizen and Christian minister of the M,. E. Church, just this moment Btopped in our store to say, "I wtsh everybody to know that I consider that both myself and wife owe our lives to Sbilob's Consumptive Cure." It is
ing else has done. Bourbon, Ind., May 15,1878. Drs. Matcbett A Franoe.
Sold by Gulick ft'Berry. Ho Deception uied.
It is strange so many people will continue to suffer day after day with Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint, Constipation, Sour Stomach, general Debility, when they can procure at our store SHILOH'S VITALIZER, free of eost if it does not oureor relieve them* Price, 75 eta. Sold by Gulick & Berry. *1 ide or Chest use
For sale by Gulick A Vwcy and by Groves fc Lowry. .. viJaJtml Bdeklea'i Arnica
The
BE&T1 SALVE
fn tbe world for Cots,
Salve is guaranteed to
gite
perfect satis
faction in every caie of money refboded. Price 25 cents per box. Kor salejhy GULICK A BERRY, Terre H^ute. .1 (Je8-8m) a 11 J. 1 MtdBaagaga
MRS. SAJIH
A. fixiioxx, the authoress
of "Mrs. Elliott's Housewife," Oxford, N. C.j writes "I Was among' the first that used the 'London Hair Color Restorer' in this section, and recommendedit to M.. A. A C. A. Santos, Norfolk, Va., as the most beautiful hair dresser and preserver 1 had ever wen. I was advised by:art eminent physician to Use it. Sinoe jdoiUig so, it has provt*d so sat isfactory in restoring and beautify! my hair, iS Bell as strengthening eyesight, that I have recommended itto my druggists here. in Oxford, Raleigh, and a great many of my friends,,and I believe I have, from whit others say, caused it to have a wide and extended sale, and deservedly so, as it is certainly the most cleanly and effective!l»irre«' storer now before the American people." The "London* Hair.' Restorer" can be obtained at all tne leading druggists at 75 cents a bottle, er, |4
ii*g
Pf
f0r
six bottles*
Sold by Runtin A Arinstrong, T«rre .Haute. W I I
A FRAJrKroBTyKY., PHY8icEA^ writes to Dr. Swayne A Son, Philadelphia,: Some months ago the dattgnter of one of our prominent cftiz^ns Was pronounced a hopeiess consumptive end to have seen ber at time one would' bave sup* posed there was ground for the decision, as she was Very much reduced in flesh, htd a,l©rfibl©o6uffbf 6kp6ctoritfld blooa, streaked tubereuloos matter, very ner vous. that ahe could scarcely sleep. She had been doctored along while with cough a fid various specifics, and several physiolsDs bad tded *belr skill on her. but without avaiii vber life gradually wasting away. 1, recommended her to use tr. SWayne's Compound Syrup of Wild Cherry, which bhe did,' and a few weeks ate waaf fne from all oMsh, aqd other symptoms ol di®l»e, and it Was considered a m{raole in tWs section, as she fa now rbeyandf^altby. Let alf irbo are predisposed to wiak' lhngs, and Coltiai Tbfoat, Breast end
Swayne'sCom-
philttdefphla. •THal' towttles, 25 cents, large swe(koldingl»e:of tbe itoall), Tl» or haU dcoen f5. Sold by Buntin |A Armstrong, Tflrre Haute.
ferers from Itobing Piles, the symptoms at above described, tbe
••tflfrt iii
MT.'d^RYMAN
E)
by
street, Philadelphia, 't leadii
THE
SATURDAY EVENING MAIL
IS ON SALS
EACH SATURDAY AFTERNOON,
J.43.
9
ASTER. Priee,
Gulick A Berry.
THE PEOPLE WANT PROOF. There,
ia
no medicine prescribed by
physicians, or sold by druggists, that carries such evidence of its sueoess and saperior virtues as Boschee's German Syrup for severe CougbB, Colds settled on tne breast,. Consumption,- or apy disease df the jThirajt and Lungs.- A proof of that fact is that any person sample, bottle for 10 or effect before
afflicted, can get' a sample, pottle for 10 oenftrand try its superior 'effect before buying the regular, sne for 75 centa. It
baa lately been introduced in this country from Gel-many, and its wonderful cures are astonisbfng everyOrie tbit use it. Tbree dosps wiil relieve any o»se. Try it. owJ..ir
$
"BT~
L. Godeoke....^^— Opera House Harry Buntin P. O, Lobby M. Y. Crafts... Opp. Post Office Richard O'Brien^.. National House Kerd Feldler .....Cor. 4th and Lafayette St Sheriff & Sly Paris, Iils V. L. Oole...„— -....Marshall, Ills Dix&Thurman_ .Sullivan Ind R. Swlneheait Clinton, Ind A. C. Bates
Rockvilie,
Ind
Hawkins & Wheeler.... Brazil, Ind John W. Hanna....„. Mattoon, Ills J. K. Langidon„...,„...._^ Ureencastle, Ind H. A. Pratt... Waveland, Ind Chas. Dickson „Knight«vllle, Ind f.M.Ourley. Si. Marys, Ind Charles Taylor Boeedale, Ind
WilMn..^....M..M.........M..vcar
eston, Ills
alram Llckll(^iter....„^...„...Annapolis,Ind I.E. Sinks .PerryBville, Ind •ft."Ed. Boyer Vermillion, Ilia Thomas Grizzle
C. 0. Sparks... Chas.D. Rippetoe Saml Derrtokaon.....«~.... .^...EJngene, Ind
Oaktown, Ind
^.Hartford, Ind '.. Sandford, Ind
Otis M. Odell....—^-......j.-Newport, Ina Frank WaOcint.4...«.»^~."Mo«i«eznma, Ind B.F. Bollinger... ^Shelborne, Ind V. N. Griffith.. ....Merora, Ind T. L. Jones ^^.^.Pralrleton, Ind Win. J. Duree.,.*~ .Bridgeton, Ind Wm. Thomag.„.^. BowllUg Green, Ind Albert Wheats- .Hoseville, Ind Chas. L. Hinkle Farmersburg, Ind Walton M. Kn^pp_ Westflela, Ills font!us Ishler.. ..^...^..Martinsville, Ills L. Volkers Dennison, Ills John A. Clark ...^........HLlvingston, Ills Harry Westiall Tuscola, Ills Ulysses S. Fran kiln,As bmore, Ills Will DeArmond„ Areola, Ills EM win S. Owen......— .J7ew Goshen, Ind John Hendrix. ^..Bell more. Ind Wallace SandoskyJNevfLebanon, Ind Samuel LovlnS....»«..^,.JMaJorlty Point, His Richard Coohran.^„—.... ...2.Centervllle, Ind Harvqr StnbbS^...^.. i.^Chrlsman, Ills O. A. Buchanan...... Judson, Ind H. Mcllrov Maxvllle, Ind J. S. Hewitt.. .i..,. Dudley, Ills A.N. Workman..........,——.......Scotland, Ills H. C. l)lckerson —.Beeleyville, Ind Rose Ann Palmer...«...,.....«..._Lockport, Ind Ben Francis Darwin, Ills J. J. Golden .Hntsonville, Ills H. M. Pierce.,.., Turners, lad O. P. Strother.......... ^...L»Jilddlebury, Ind F.J.8. Robinson ...Cloverland,Ind JoeT. afoCoskey^.^ Youngstown, Ind W. B. Hodge...^..4—f«.w.^.»..*....York,Ill8 A. O. Kelly...... „..»Bl0omlngdale, Ind J. D. Connelly Annapolis, Ind J. W. Russell A Co.„...r.,,..^Armlesburg,Ind E. A. Henick..................... Kansas, Ills J. H. Rfflden*...~ui-j~.i.J-Ceiiter Point, Ind
E. Davis. .......^..i—^Ooal Bluff, Ind Wm. Lewis Darlington, Ind W. B. Martyn.'.v. ..........Carlisle, Ind Clement Harper Middletown, Ind W. R. Landreth Casey, Ills D. E. Fltdhett. .i.Cartereburg, Ind T. J. Hutchinson^...-.-....—Dana, Ind E. A. Kurt* ....Oakland, Ills Beth B. Melton ..iv....i. .t .....Hnnters, Ind W. L. Flannerg Cloverdale, Ind
8®
The only reliable remedy for All Throit and Lung Diseases, is a scientific preparation, compounded from,the formula of one of tbe most successful practitioners in the Western country. It has st/xid the test for the last twenty years, and will effept acure after all, Other femedlbshaye failed.
te* the Following: pi!
ILAXLIOF RKPKKSKNTATJFVSE, Indi-^APOLIS, IND., eb 15.1WL
Dit' J. H. Bnowy:— v^e lufve uised your' "Browne Expectovaut," ao«4 take pleaaarei fii say Ink that w« founcHt Uie best medicine, ever nted for OougbSi Gold*, and Hoarse-1 ness, and cheerfully reooiniuoni it to All who may betroublw with Tljroat and Lung affections.
_j.Vm Mack,Speaker. Houwi
r,t
ReP-
j!" *1 31
ZtUOi-, Kep Harrison county,
rnsH Uautboro, R*-pKnox county,:, uo*i
A.
Montgomery, Reu Johnson county,
ul.
BTarfton, Jtep JQhnSoh and Morgnh toi counties, .FSchell, Doorkeeper House Rep, *»N Warum, Rep Hancock eotvnty,
s4
jC Abbett, Rep Bartholomew county
1
!LCalkins, Rep Fulton county,
4
«nrno WCopner, Rep Montgomery county I
K°P
Putuam county. ft i£eui
«1(Kn tfc Acts Like Magie !«b»j
oKBTCS m. aad 1. a- b.00,,
JWFBRSON VXLLK. XXD., APRlIi 6,1871D"R.r. H.BRoW!f :-Having suffered with a Severe cougli' ftr some tiine paat, I was ln-i duced to try one bottle.o/ your "Brown a
Eipectoranl"
I
unbertlslngly say
I
I
found
it pleasant to the taste, and toaet llket^ uiaglc. A few doses.done the work for tnoj congli, and
am" well,
1
k«*a Whattoeilj:Kltti)all Sayg.^ IwniANAi'OLis, Imo., Dec. 80,1860.
"BxpeCtc o*,m:
I)H. J.H.BROWN-—After having used yoar toraut Syrup" long enough to know predate its good qualities, Icaa( «..TC,^uily
lbe«^,
testimony to
e«l
'The symptoms
are moiature, fike perspiration, intenee itcblog, increased by scratching, verv (dastreesingf* ^artldulariy at night, as ff pin worm* w*** crawling in and about iber rwfwa^tke j*ri?virte parts are sometimes aflected if allowed to continue, very serious results may follow. DR. SWATxVe is a pleasant
~4Xit
use of
short time
SWafAeHi Ointment Iff"*
poe House,
S. Kighth
'^i^deiyff you'are aufl^ring from this distressing Uomplafnt,, or Tetter, Itch,
is
any Crastv, Scaly, Skin Eruption, use Rwivns'a 6iatment and be »red. Sent any address on receipt of by
rice On currencV or oosUge stamps), cents a box, three Boies fl.22.Addresa letters, Dr. Swayne 4c Son, SSO N. Siirth street, RWladelpWa. No char fbr advfce. Sold
leading druggist
In Tteri* Haute by Buntin A Armstrong. !M*
ui NEW FIRM.
U'. aiDDLE,vt.A.
MAMILTO/*, J.
RIDDLE & CO.,
ibsuranca, real estate, loan
and
oolleoting
agemx. Ovl-r fifty iflillions capital repre scnUnl In ftrst»ckuB oompante^. AgeuU for Travelers' Life and Accident IuMiranee Co. Money to loan. Hpeeial attention paid to collections.
No. 2 and 4 Bench'* Block, Cor. Sixth and Main*
ri.ij Any worker can make 112 a
UOlU
dress TRUE A CO., Augwta, Maine..
MW
day AU-
at home. Costly otitflt free,,
its
uniform
Sueoess ia curing the most otwdiaate ca«es of K|
rep. and always found it Hw Vtfy »«ll wm»lL°L,-|
iat
ximnttw* mtiw-rwmwt vt
swt^uA
...»••«.•.—rrr- ... !rt*adi
of Coasumptiouib
tmt 2 «{*hm 8ay»» ttonei *m Hiw
DtkVid AfHamls.of Dsrlington. Montgim'fia
ery
county,says:
"My
wife
iKw
been
adorning any
amict-i
Witlieoirtuinptlon foraeuinber of years,1™ and during that time has tried most all tneiJo medicine^ recommended for that disease,**, without
reMef.
1
theree uamendaUons of
was inmiced»A
Dr. Kirk,
drug-sn
Expecto-'
gfi« at uarunguHi, io irf fast Syrup,' and 1 ai» now happpy tofcayf tbatmy wife is somuch i»uprove41 amcon-r
tUlent. It Will entirely r-«tor» lief health hv Its gOPtlneed
i)
nsorftuU tq ««3 wm
It C^ires BronSiYisf ^^ni Koinburoh.Ind^ August28,1871.
PROVISIONS
ii ,AT
I. aio0L».
k—WHOLESALE,
8{J
-,
'^lA^o certffy tliAt'Hiave used vtlrown's litpecl-raatMn my family since its first in-»" troducUon. lt ha* never failed togivesat-,^ IsfftCtlon. My wife subject to^ronchitls. and 1 have found no remedy eqnal "Brown's Expeetaraut." I recommend it a%ft
M. I».
Browns Expectorantf^
lFtft
ffeleby All O^dgglsts.,
a -k iefbr
INDIANAPOLIS.
•ms •ii'A
'j
In store and for sale in Job lots, at
118 MAIN STREET:
Choice sugar cured hams, shoulder* andl-.v. breakfast bacon also heavy clear baooir^ aides and shoulders, and kettle rendered? leaf lard in tierces aud bucket*.
SAM S. EARLY.
$5 to «20«yMh?^* 'SSSK-'
trtlNSOS 1 CO., Portland,Maine
