Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 9, Number 42, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 April 1879 — Page 7
A v~s- 4 •.
THE MAIfc
'A PAPER
PEOPLE^
FOR THE
PANCAKES. -v
BTV. A. CHOFWT.
The breakfast calls the codfish balls And bash (bat make*the all by fatter The hired girl bafce* the amber c.ikea.
And the wild buckwheat leapt to batter. Rush, Bridget, rusu, set the old griddle frying
Speak, Bridget answer, pancakes, frjleg in in
O, hark, all right! how thin and lightt No flouron earth oar own surpasses ..., Take three or four or maby niofe
And flood with New Orlean* molasses! Bridget don't stop the batter spoon keep plying
Work. Bridget answer, pancakes, frying, ftylng, drying. "They're nice at home, or when yon roam,
They're nice on hill or Held or river Tliey i*re so good 1 wlsll 1 coald Eaton forever and forever. Humph yourself Bridget! Keep the old grldule Hying
And answer, pancakes, answer, frying, frying, frying.
A HANDY THING.
Happening to call at the house or a neighbor whose better half was ill, a lew mornings ago, I found him busied -about domestic affaire, doing his best to get breakfast for himself and family. I had been there but a few moments When, with an ompbasls that led me to think thai he bad made some great and important discovery, second only to the telegraph or telephone, ha said: I have found oat one thing!" "Well, said
I, with not a little curiosity, "and what is it?" "I have found," said he, ''that a Wife is a very handy thing to have about the house." I thought that a man who had been blessed with as good a wife as he had for forty years ought to have found out this a little sooner. Nor do I doubt that he bad but just then he had found it out anew, and it came to hitm with all the freshness of a recent discovery and yet it is too true that •we husbands whs have long been favored with what has been called "Heaven's beet gift to man," do not appreciate it as •we should. We are not wont to realize its value till touched by sickness or death. "A handy thing" indeed is a wife, but I recall the word. I will not characterize so great a boon as a "thing." Solomon does not so characterise it, though he is so represented in onr version of the Scriptures. What he does say is this "Whoso flndeth a wife, flndeth good." The word "thing" is not in the original and a "good," a good wife indeed is. Solomon says that "her price is above ruble? and be furthermore says of her: "the heart of her husband doth safely trust In her. 8he will do him good and not evil all the days of her life. She opened her mouth with wisdom, and on her tongue is the law of kindness. She looketb well to the ways of her household, and eateth not the bread of idlenews."
Such a wife Is indeed a classing in the house. How much do we depend on her for our comfort! How many are the things that she does for us! It would take along time to specify them all. It would take a long time to speak of all the things, the leaser and the greater, that she does for us even in a single day. They are numberless, almost and these are to be repeated, day after day, all the year round. There is no end to her work—no place where she can sit down and say: "I have now done up my •work I have now reached a stopping
Cilacerost
whoro I can rest." Rest! There no for her till she fiads 1$ in the grave. The moment that thing is done another claims hor attention, and she Is hurried on and on till at length, worn out with hor toils and o*re«, she rests in a premature grave. Sbo Is ever working, and work is ever making for her. Boion) the washing of one Monday is completed, clothes are being soiled for the next Monday's washing. No sooner is a room swept and put in order for the day, than its dust aud dirt have begun to accumulate for tomorrow's sweeping. No sooner are the husband's and the children's clothes mended and put to rights, than they begin to be out of sorts again and tiima it over is aud a wonder it is that the worn and weary "woman docs not get all out of patience and give op in despair but she ever girds herself anew for her work, and toils on hopefully and cheerfully to the end. Surely, whether it be so or not. her children ought to rise up and call her blessed, and be husband, be ought to praise her.—Cor. Green field Gazette.
SORROWFUL TALE OF A HIRED OIRL. Mary Ann was a hired girl. She was called "hired" chiefly because she always objected to having her wages lowered. Mary Ann was of foreign extraction, and she said she was descended from a long line of kings. But nobody ever saw her descend, although they admitted that there must have been a great descent from a king to Mar} Ann. And Mary Ann never bad any father and mother. As far as oould be ascertained, she wan spontaneously born In an Intelligence office. It was called an Intelligence offic* because there WAS no intelligence about It, excepting an intelligent way they have of chiselling you out of two dollar bills. The early youth of Mary Ann was passed in advertising for a place and in sitting on a hard beuob, dressed in a bonnet and speckled shawl and three ply carpeting, sucking the end of her parasol. Her note began wall, and had ovidently been well oonoelved la an artistic spirit, but there seemed not to have been stuff enough, as it was left half finished, and knocked upward at the end. She said she would never live anywhere where they have Brussels carpet fn the kitchen, nor with a family that wouldn't take her to the sea shore in summer. And as sfce Mnew Absolutely nothing, she said' ih# mural have ten dollars a wwk as a slight compensation for having to take the trouble to learn.
Mary Ann waa eccentric, aud she would often boil her stockings In the tea kettl, and wipe the dishes with her calico Jrock. Her brother was a bricklayer, and he used her letters sealed up with a dab of mortar and it was thus, perhaps, she conceived the idea that hair was a good thing to mix in to hold thing* together, and so she always introduced her own into the biscuit. But Mary Ann was fond—yea, passionately foud—of work. So much did she love it that she dilly-dallied with it, and seemed to hate to get it done. She was often very much absorbed in her work. In fact, she was an absorbing person, and many other thine* were absorbed beside Mary Auu. Butter, beef and
eg$s were all absorbed, and nobody ever knew where they went to. And whenever Mary Ann had to linake boned turkey she used to bone the turkey so effectually that nobody oould tell what had become of it. And if she so much as laid her little finger on a saucer, that identical saucer would immediately fall on the floor and be scattered to atoms. But Mary Ann would merely say that if the attraction of gravitation was very powerful in that spot she was not to blame for it, for she h»l no conttoi over the laws of Nature.
Unules seem to have been one of Mary Ann's weaknesses—for she had some twenty or thirty oousins, all males, who came to see her every night and there was a mysterious and inexplicable connection between their visila aud the condition of the pantry which nobody could explain. There was something shadowy and obscure about it, for whenever Mary Ann's oousins came there was always a fading away in the sugar box and low tide in the flour barrel. It was strange—but true.
Mary Ann was troubled with absence of mind, but this was not as strong a suit with her as absence of body, for her Sunday out used to oome twice a week, and sometime* three times a week. But she always went to church, she said, and she thought it was right to neglect her work for her faith, for she believed that faith waa better than works.
But if the beginning of Mary Ann was strange, how extraordinary was her She never died—Mary Ann ending!
P®r
was not one of your perishable kind 'isappei day she was there full of life and spirits
But she suddenly disat
»ared. One
and hope, and cooking wine, and the next day she wasn't, and the place that once knew her knew her no more. Where she went to, how she went, by what means she went, no one oould tell but it was regarded as a singular colncidenoe that eight napkins, a soup ladle, five silver spoons,a bonnet, two dresses, two ear rings, and a lot of valuable greenbacks melted way at the same time, and it is supposed that the person who stole Mary Ann must have captured these also.
A WORD ABOUT TEA.
To make a good cup of tea, the water must be red hot. The teapot must be warmed thoroughly with boiling water left standing in it for a few minutes before pouring off. Then put into the pot a teaspoonful of tea for each person, and one for the pot, pour on the bubbling, boiling water, and place the pot on the back part of the stove, or in the oven, whete it will not boil. Allow the tea to infuse for six minutes, then stir the leave* with a spoon, let it settle for a moment, and then place your teapot on the table and it is ready for use.
Never boil tea. Regulate the strength at table with boiling water.
If you make tea too strong, the flavor is destroyed. Do not buy "fixed up" lead colored trash, so much sold by sharks and greenhorns. Buy tea for its drawing quality, —not for its fine sppearance.
Acquire a taste for good tea and drink less coffee if you are wise. Coffee is death to the liver and the complexion. If you have good, well oured tea, free from ground limestone and other pernicious stuff, you are sure of a beverage that will gratify your taste, aad comfort the weary man or woman.
Allowing the tea to stand on the stove until John comes home is not kind to him.
Much milk or cream destroys the delicate flavor ot green teas. Rnin water is the best for making tea, hydrant water next, well water in this part of the country is not good for drawing fine or delicate flavored teas.
HOW TO BECOME GRACEFUL. The Young Woman's Journal thinks a refined, graceful manner can be acquired by any woman. It says: "The best grace is perfect naturalness. Still, you must study yourself and form your manners by the rule of that art which is but a carrying out of the law of nature. But if it is your nature to be forever assuming some unpicturesque, ungraceful attitude, pray help nature with a little art.
If you are stout, avoid the smallest chair in the room, and be sure you sit on it, not to lean back in it with your bands folded in front of you just below the waist, especially while the present fashion lasts.
If you are thin, do not carry yourself with your chin protruding, and your spinal column curving like the bowl of a spoon.
Do not wear flimsy materials made up without a ruffle, or puff, or flounce, to fill tip the hard outlines of your bad figure, so cruelly defined by the tightly pulled back draperies.
Study the art of dreee. We once knew a very plain woman who dressed so tastefully that it was an absolute pleasure to look at her.
If you have been moping until you are sick with the thought of your own hopeless ugliness, be up and doing. Forget your disappointments, forget the past and the sneers or your own family over the mistakes that you have made."
PA 1ST, PUTTY AND PIETY. A lady writes thus to the Christian at Work: "I wish you would say a word about putting ones religion into one's work. Lost year I built a now house, and got a professing Christian man to paint it. He makes good prayers at the prayer meeting and says a good word of advice to the young. But ne did not fill the nail boles of the outer and upper trimmings with putty, aud he didn't paint the top edge of the doors «f the upper ptory. He took care to slight his work where he thought It wouldn't be discovered. But the nails were drawn out by the sun, causing a leak, so thst his neglect in this direction was discovered then having occasion to have the top of one door planed so it might shut—again bis slifihted work told its story. I have "discounted" that man's piety and prayers ever since. Perhaps this painter treated me as he did because I an a widow. Anyway, I prefer Christians who will fill up the naif holes with putty, and paint the tops ^iJjhe upper door
4
TRIED RECIPJ£S. ™jISO KB SIMJK*.
1
1
One cup molasses, one cup butter, one cup sugar put together in a saucepan Sod let it come to a boil, then add two teaspoonful soda, two of cinnamon, one of cloves, and one of ginger place the dough near the stove to keep warm so that it will rell easily.
MOTlUERS' COOKIES.
Two t%ps white sugar, two eggs, cup butter, one cup sour cram, one teaspoon soda flout to roil thin lay esch one on granulated sugar, and turn it over.
OIXUKB ptrnnwa.
One cup suet or butter, oue cup molames, two cups of flour, OU3 tablespoonful ginger, one cup of milk, small teaspoon soda steam three hours sauce of drawn butter sweetened and seasoned to taste.
BY HKLBN JMUHBST QHAVJSS,
"Of all things, a night Journey is the most tedious," said Clarence Hatfield, as he let himself fall heavily into the stiff aud uncomfortable seat of the railway car, with the faded velvet cushions, and its back at exactly the wrong angle for aught approaching the luxury of a uap. "I say, Cliltou, do yon think we might smoke?" "Well, I rather imagine not," said I, with a motion of my h*ad toward the other passengers. "There appear to be ladles on board."
Hatfield shrugged his shoulders, -t "Sucu ladies 1" "Well," laughed I, "they don't appear to be particularly stylish in manner or oostume, but nevertheless, my dear fellow, the divluity of their sex hedges them around like a wall." "Divinity of their humbug!" shortly interrupted Hatfield. "As if these halfdressed dowdies, with babies and bandboxes, oould belong to the same world with Beatrice Hale I"
To this I made no answer. It did not seem to me exactly appropriate to lug the sacred name of Beatrice Hale into a discussion, in a plaoe like this. Yet what could I do, except to feel my cheeks flush, and the roots of my hair tingle For I was unmistakably in love with Bee Hale, and so was Clarence Hatfield.
JTERHE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.
GRANDMA HALE.
ON THE MIDNTUUT EXPRESS.
If I were to waste quarts of ink and reams of paper in trying to desoribe her manifold charms and exoellenoies to the reader, it wouldn't do any good. Such things have been tried before and failed. Let him imagine the fairest brunette the sun ever shone on, and he may come somewhere near the mark. Suffloe it to say that she was as beautiful as a dream and that Hatfield and I were both slaves at her leet.
Which of us did she like best? Ah, that was the question! It was something like the children's old game of see saw. "Up I go, down you come." Sometimes I fancied I had the ghost of a chance—sometimes I wasNjonvinoed that Hatfield was altogether the preferred, and that I had better emigrate to Australia at once. "Hello!" cried Hatfield, breaking unoeremoneously in upon the thread of my musings, "there goes the whistle. We shall be off directly. Thank goodness for that!"
And be put up his feet on the opposite seat and prepared for as oomfortable a four hours' ride as possible.
Clarence Hatfield and I, be it understood, were employes in the extensive business of Messrs. Jenkins, Jumberton & Co., auctioneers, and had been down iu the country "patting up" a sale of swampy lots, cut into streets and squares, according to the most improved metropolitan methods of doing such things.
It had been a dismal business. November is not an inspiring month at the best, aud a three days' fog had con spired against the suocess of "Mount Morra Park," as Jenkins, Jumberton «fe Co. had ohristened the new speculation.
Yet we bad done reasonably well, and were now thankful enough to get back to New York.
As the train gave its starting lunge the door flew open, and in came a tall old lady, in a prodigious black bonnet and a fur cloak, surrounded by aperfest chevaux de frise of squirrel cages, leather bags, brown paper parcels, and sandwich boxes. She was followed closely by a younger lady, dressed in black, and closely veiled, and paused hesitatingly in front of our seat. "Young man," said she, in a low voice as gruff as that of a man, "is this scat engaged?" "Yes," said Hatfield "it is."
For your feet?" "No matter what for," superciliously replied the head clerk of Jenttins, Jumberton & Co. "Please to pass ou, old lady. You'll find seats enough beyond."
But this was a stretching of the truth. There wero no seats beyond, as the old lady could easily peroeive, unluss she chose to sit directly opposite a red hot coal fire, or nnon one of those corner arrangements close to the door, which are equivalent to no seat at all.
The* old lady hesitated and ohanged her heavy carpetbag from one wearied aroi ta the other. I thought of my owu good Aunt Polly at home, and rose at onco. "Pray take this seat, ma'am," said I. "And let me put your parcels up in the raok for you." "Clifton, what a fool you are!" cried Hatfield, in an impatient sotto voice. "Why couldn't you have sat still and minded your own business?" "It is my own business," I answered brusquely, "to see that every lady is made as oomfortable as it is in the nature of things to be. Now the squirrel oatre, ma'am—it'll go very comfortably '"-ill under the seat, I think."
Hatfield uttered a contemptuous grunt, but he never offered to talce his feet from off the opposite cushions, although the younger woman stood in the alftle, uncomfortably swaying backward and forward with the motion of the train, until a woman beyond, observing the stste of affairs, drew a sleeping child into her lap, and beckoned to the other to take the place thus vacated.
By this time the old lady had established herself to her entire satlsfactloc, and opened her sandwioh box. "Much obliged to you, young man," said she. "U's easy to see that yo'vea mother of your owu at home, aud that you're in the habit or doing reverence to her gray hairs. As for this person"— with a nod of her poke bonnet hi the direotion of Mr. Hatfield—"if he's got a mother, I can't say much lor her bringing up of him. Perhaps he may be old himself one dsy, and stand in need of a little politeness aud consideration from the young." "When I'm anxious for your good opinion, ma'am, I'll let you know," returned Mr. Hatfield, rather flippantly.
The old lady oould only express herself by a vehement sniff. And even I was a little annoyed at bis manner. "Hatfield," said I, in a lo* tone, "you might behave like a gentleman." "So I will," he retorted, with a shrug, "when I find myself in company that calls for such treatment." said no more, but leaning up against the ««ide of the door, prepared to make myself as oomfortable as possible, until the train should stop aft Stamford, its first way station, and some descending passengers might make room fbr me.
Reader, did you ever stand 1n an ex-
rees train in full motion? Did vou ever yourself swayed back ward and for* ward, bumping oue of your phrenological developments against one side of the oar, and bringing the base of your spinal column against the top of a seat at the opposite swerve of the train? Did you ever grasp blindly at nothing for sup* port? Dia you ever execute an involuntary pm sad, by way of keeping your balance, and then grind your teeth to see the two pretty young ladies beyond laughing at your antics? If so, you will know how to pity me during the hour and a half between and Stamford.
!eel
Hatfield went to sleep and soored the
old lsdy in the gigantlo bonnet ate sand wiches and drank from a wicker flask of excellently smelling sherry the young lady sat as noiselessly as a black veiled statue fretful babies whimpered, old gentlemen uttered strange sounds in their sleep the lights flared like sickly moons overhead, and the shriek of the train as it flew through the sleeping villages, sounded like the yell of a fierythroated demon. "Stamford!" b.twlod the conductor.
At last I succeeded in dropping my weary and stiffened limbs into a seat, where slumber overtook me in jnst beei asleep on my legs once or twiee, even in my former disadvantageous attitude, and I oould scarcely believe the evidence of my own senses when we finally thundered into the eohoing vastness of the Grand Central depot in New York.
Hatfield, alive to the necessity of catobing a oar before the whole world of travellers should orowd into it, stumbled over the old lady's ankles with small oeremony. "Ob, take care! You've knocked the squirrel cage over!" cried she. "Confound the squirrel cage!" shouted Hatfield, gnashing his teeth, as the auoient dame placed herself directly in the aisle to set the furry pet up again, thereby completely blocking up hia egress. "Serves you right, Hatfield," said I, as I stooped to assist.
Just then the youngcompanion of our lady advanced, flinging back her veil. "Grandma," said she, "the carriiage is waiting. "I'll send Thomas for ths parcels. Mr. Clifton, I am very much obliged to you for your politeness to my randuaother, who is unused to traveling. As to Mr. Hatfield—the less ssid about his courtesy, the better." And Beatrice Hale's black eyee flashed disdainfully on Clarence's cowed visage. "Miss Hale," be stammered, "if I'd the least idea who you were—" "You would hsvs regulated your conduct accordingly," impatiently interrupted Miss Hale. "Thanks—I prefer to see people in their true light. Mr. Clifton," turning graciously to me, "you'll call and see bow grandmother stands her journey, to-morrow, won't you? Oh, tnank you, the carriage is close by."
And to this day, I believe that is the way I won my wife for Clarance Hatfield was a brilliant, showy sort of a fellow, who far outshone me in general society, and I think Bee had been disposed rather to fancy him until that night. But she was disenchanted now.for good and all. And Grandma Hale comes to see us every Christmas with a hamper of good things from Hale farm.
THE TRUE WIFE. Oliver Wendell Holmes.
Oftentimes I have seen a tall ship glide by against the tide as if drawn by some invisible tow liue with a hundred strong hands pulling it. Her sails unfilled, her streamers were drooping, she had neither side wheel nor stern wheel still she bad moved on stately, in serene triumph, as with her own life. But I knew that on the other side of the ship, hidden beneath the great bulk that swam so majestically, there was a little toilsome steam tug, "with a heart of fire and arms of iron, that was tugging it bravely on and I knew that if the little steam tug untwined her arms and left the ship, it would wallow and roll about and drift hither and thither, and go off with the refluent tide no man knows whither. And so I have known more than one genius, high-decked, fullfreighted, wide-sailed, gay-pennoned, but that for the bare, toiling arms and brave, warm beating heart of the faithful little wife that nestled close to him so that no wind or wave could part them, he would have gone down with the stream, and have been heard of no more.
DON'T Uli UMBLE.
Don't be a grumbler. Some people oontrive to get hold of the prickly side of everything, to run against all the sharp corners aud find out all the disagreeable things. Half the strength ent in growling would often set things ght. You may as well make up your mind, to begin with, that no one ever found the world quite as he would like it, but you are to take your share of the troubles and bear it bravely. You will
ep fit
be very sure to have burdens laid upon less you are a shirk yourself, but don't
lie, unl
you that belong to other peop] ilf, grumble. If the work needs doing, and you oan do it, never mind about the other person who ought to have done it and didn't. Those workers who fill up the gaps and smooth away the rough spots, and finish up the job that others leave undoue, they are the true peacemakers, and worth a whole regiment of growlers. __________
M* OVERWORKED. Day after day the bonse mistress works hard from morning until night. When she is unequal to the performance of her tasks, she takes tea, and as her nerves become more diseased, more tea. With neuralgic pain often seizing ber in the beginning of that slow decline whioh saps the life and happiness of so msnv of our women before they reach middle age,he is Irritable, Little trials cause her torture, and as she sees herself constantly falling below ber ideal, she loses heart, and blames herself for a hasty temper. But what ails ber is not temper, but tiredness, and tea, and too hot rooms, snd a laok of variety and cheer in ber life. Rest and amusement will soon produces marked change in her thoughts and acts. ... —I I I P? if A Gootf Accomnt. "To sum it up, six longyesrsof bed ridden sickness and suffering, costing 919)0 per year, total, fl,500—all of whioh waa stopped by three bottles of Hop Bitters taken by my wife, who has done her own housework for a year since without the lose of a day, and I want everybody to know it for their henefit.
JOHN WKEKS, Butler, N. Y."
"To Be or Mot to Be."—it Is a question of importance to all aitlictod creatures whether they will be cured of disease by remedies which leave a long train of bad after etfocis, or by a medicine thatstrikes at the cause of the malady and eradicates It, without doing any more harm than that much water? CLIFFORD'S FEBRIFUGE, for the cure of all disease* caused by malaria is a palatable, powerful antlperiodic and tonic, and yet never produees headache, noise in til rtirs, tieafneis, or any of the evils consequent on the use of quiaine, arsenic, etc.
J.C.RtCHaxnsox, Prop'r,
For sale by ail druggists. St. Louis. (19-4t)
A CARD.
To all who are sulTcring firom the errors and indiscretions of youth, nerveu* weak ness, early decay, loss of manhood, iec., I will send a recipe that will cure you, FltKE OF CHARGE, This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Send a self addressed envelope to the REV. Joscqvt T. larXAjr, Station D, Kuir Yorlt City.
pasMi ^Ifpls® mmm
iilMiilii
Edward R. Harden, Judge county court, Quitman, Ga, writes: bwayne's Ointment lias cured me entirely of itching piles, after suffering for years. James ». McOomb, attorney at law, Millersburg,O.. writes: I have foand your All-healing Ointment a sure and pleasant remedy for Itching Piles. 8. W, Shurp, Newville, Pa., writes: 1 have found Swayne's Ointment a sure cure fir Tetter or Salt Rheum. L. Tailor, Hinsdale, N. H., writes: For thirty years I have been greatly troubled with Itching Piles have consulted several physicians and tried many remedies, which proved to be no remediei at all, until I obtained 8wayne's Ointment at Thomas' drugstore, in Brattleboro, Vt., which cured me completely. The symptoms are moisture, like perspiration, intense itching, increased by scratching might think pin worms existed. Swayne Ointment is sold by all druggists. Seat by mail for 50 cents, or three bow» fl 35, by Dr. 8wayne Son, 330 north Sixth street, Philadelphia. Sold by Buntin fc Armstrong4 Terre Haute.
Professional Card».
MC.BLOCK—TEKRB
HUNTER, JR,
a
ATTOBJfET A* LAW.
BEACH HAUTE, IND. Collections made throughout the United States. N. G. BUFF. B.
BUFF
Surgeon and Mechanical
DENTIST,
Dental Bd©m, 137 Hals Street) taear 0 th, TXBRR HATTTB, IND. Nitrons Oxide Gas administered for pals ess Tooth Extraction.
GW.
BALLEW,
Can be found In
CALtrade,
]Hy Country 9Ien and My Women firom the Country—A« yon come down on the street can from the depot, tell the conductor to stop at
At the Lowes Prices®
THE HIGHEST CASH PBICE PAID FOB PBODUCE
Why Will You
Allow a cold to advance in your system and thus encourage more serious maladies, such as Pneumonia, Hemorrhages and Lnng troubles when an immediate relief can be so readily attained. Boschee's German Syrup has gained the largest sale in the world for the cure of coughs, colds, amd the severest lung diseases, it Is Dr. Boschee* famous German prescription, and is prepared with the greatest care, and no fear need be entertained in administering it to the youngest child as per directions. The sale of this medicine is unprecedented. Since first Introduced there hae been a constant Increasing demand and without a single report of a allure to dolts work In any case. Ask your Druggist as to the truth of th*sae remarks. Large size, 76 cents. Try It and be convinced.
For »ale by Gulick & Berry and by Groves A Lowry. ItcbiBff Pllea—Evltfeaee Indlsp«t»» ble.
rjlHE
H.
BNECHBB
& BEECHER,
ATTOHHET8 AT LAW,
OFFICE—NO. 320 Ohio Street, bet. Third and Fourth, north side
J^R. J. P. WORRELL,
Treats exclusively Diseases of the
EYE A1VJD EAB!
Office: Ho. 021 •bio Street, TERRE HAUTE, ilfD. Office hours firom 9 a. m. te 1 p. m. and from 3 to 5 p. m.
c.°-
LINCOLN,
DENTIST,
Office, 221 Main street, near Seventh. Extracting and artificial teeth specialties. All work warranted. (dtw-tf)
R. L. H. BARTHOLOMEW,
k:.
DENTIST,
Office, 433% Main Street, over Sage*a old confectionery atand. TERRE HAUTE, IND.
offloe
night and day,
Business Cards.**
THOMAS,
Optician and Watclbmakor For the Main street, near Sixth, sign of big man with watch.
RW.
RIPPETOE
Gene ti Dealer la
GROCERIES, .vuVISIONS AND PRODUCE, National Block, 166 Main stresi
LKISSNER,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
Pianos, Helodeons, Organs,
Musical Instruments, Ac., Palace of Mnsic, 48 Ohio ft
NEW FIRM.
T. H. RIDDLK, W. A. HA.MILTOS,
J.
I. HIDDLB
s, RIDDLE & CO.,
Insurance, real estate, loau and collecting agen s. Over fifty millions capital represented in first-class companies. Agents for Travelers' Life aud Accident Insurance Co. Money to loan. Special attention paid to collections.
No. 2 and 4 Beach's Block, Cor. Sixth and Main. w.».CMFT.
OLIFT & WILLIAMS,
1
KAirtrrACTCMBS or
Sash, Doors, Biinds, &c
$ Li AICD DBALKBS ITT HBU mmm
LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES, GLASS, PAINTS, OILS and BCILSEBS' HABDTflBE.
is be S re or N in TERRE HAUTE, INI)
NITED STATES SCALE3.
STOCK,
Vs&
GRATN, WAGON, TORMANT AND k. R. TRACK.
With protected bearings, and otherwise highly improved. 'Warranted superior to all others. Hold the cheapmt. No pay till tested and found strictly as represented.
Scale books at reduced Tate*, suitable for any scale. Several pairs seoosd-hand Fairbanks wagon wilts for sale cheap. 8. J. AUSTIN A COm Terre Hacte, Ind.
Office at E?gls Iron Works.
4 r{*?* -f^W
B. W. RIPPETOE'S White Front," 155 Main St.,
Where you will always find the best
BUQAHS, COFFFEE8, TEAS, TABLE SUPPLIES,
And All Staple and Fancy Groceries
Saturday Evening
MAIL,
FOR THE TEAR 1879. A MODEL WEEKLY PAPER
FOR THE HOME.
TERMS:
One year,- 2 00 Six months. II 00 Three months, _.50 ots.
Mail and office Subscriptions will, invariably, be discontinued at expiration of tims paid for.
Encouraged by ha extraordinary suooesa which has attended the publication of THE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL the publish* er has perfected arrangements by whleh it will henceforth be one.of the taost popular papers in the West.
Address T.
S. WESTflLL,
Tabllsher Saturday Evening Mail, TERREHAUTE, IN
THE
SATURDAY EVENING MAIL
IS ON BALI
BACH SATURDAY AFTERNOON, —BY— E. L. Godecke ...Opera House Harry Buntin. P. O, Lobby M. P. Crafts Opp. Post Office Richard O'Brien National HooBe Alonso Freeland...Cor. 4th and Lafayette St Joseph Sparrow .Oor. 12th and Poplar Sheriff A Ely Pans, Ills V. L. Cole ...Marshall, Ills Dix fe
Thurman~..._». Sullivan Ind R. Swineheart Clinton, Ind A. C. Bates -...Rockville, Ind Hawkins A Wheeler..... Brazil, Ind John W, Hanna„ Mattoon, Ills J. K. Langdon Greencastle, Ind H. A. Pratt Waveland, Ind Chas. Dickson .........Kniglitsvllle, Ind F.M.Ourle St. Marys, Ind Charles Taylor Rnwadalc, Ind J. C. Wilson ...cnaneston, ILls Blram Lickllghter .Annapolis,Ind F. E. Sinks Perrysrille, Ind R. Ed. Boyer ^..Vermillion, Ills Thomas Grlszle Oaktown, Ind C. C. Sparks Hartford, Ind Chas.D. Rippetoe. Sandford, Ind Sam'l Derricxson ^-Eugene, Ind Otis M.Odell -Newport, Ina Frank Watkins ^.....Montezuma, Ind B. F. Bollinger..- ^..Shelburne, Ind V. N. Griffith Merom, Ind T. L. Jones .Prairie ton, Ind Wm. J. Duree..... Bridge tor, Ind Wm. Thomas —Bowling Green, IM Albert Wheat- Roseville, Ind Chas. L. Hlnkle Farmersburc, Ind Walton M. Knapp— Westflela, Ills Pontius iBhler .Martinsville, Ills L. Volkers Dcitnison, Ills John A. Clark Livingston, Ills Harry Westfall Tuscola, 11 a Ulysses S. Franklin Ills Will DeArmond Areola, lite Edwin a.
Owen New Goshen, Ind
John Hendrix Bellmore.Ind Wallace Sandusky New Lebanon, Ind Samuel Lovlna.... Majority Point, Ills Richard Cochran Centerville, Ind Harvey Stubba Christian, Ills G. A. Buchanan Judson, Ind A. Mcllroy Maxvllle, Ind J. S. Hewitt...- Dudley, I Is A.N. Workman Scotland,Ills H. C. Dlckerson iJeeleyvllle, Iud Rose Ann Palmer..— -Lock port, Ind Ben Francis .^.....Darwin, IUs J. J. Golden Hutaonvllle, Ills H. M. Pierce ~-,- T}ir1"ers' O. P.
Strother Middlebury, Ind F. J.8. Robinson -Cloverland, Ind JoeT. McCoskey Youngstown, Ind W. B. Hodge r"£°yk
1'1®
A. O. Kelly....— ... Bloomingdale, Ind J. D. Connelly -Annapolis, InU J. W. Russell A Co Armlesburg, Ind E. A. Herrick Kansas, Ills J. H. Reader CenterPoint, Ind Owen Kissner Fairbanks, Ind C. L. C. Brad field P^ermo, Ills E. Davis ~.~~.«Coal Bluff, Ind Wm. Lewis Darlington,Ind. W. B. Martyn ...„-..Caxlisle, Ind Clement Harper -...Middletown, ind W. R. Landreth Casey, lit D. E. tttchett CarterSburg, In T. in a In 1 E. A. Kurts Oakland, UW Seth B. Melton Hunters, In W. L. Flannerg„.._ Cloverdale, In I
Evansville, Terre Haute and Chicago It'y.
BA*TriI.E ROUTE.
THROUGH TO CHICAGO WHH®Ur CHANGE OF CARS.,
Trains leave Union Depot, Terre Haute, as fellows: 6:40 a. m„ dally, except Sunday. 10:15 p. m.. daily.
Through sleeping cars on all night trains# Close connection Is made at Danville for Peoria and points west, also with Wabash trains both east and wwt.
JOS. COLLETT, Superintendent.
J. 8. HUNT, G. T. A.
H. Williams
QITY MAKBLE WORKS. 2 M. HANRAHAN,
Manufacturer and dealer in American and Italian Marble and Scotch Granite Monuments, Tomb Stones, Urns, Vases, Garden
^HSop? UW southThfrd street, between Ohio and Walnut, east side,Terre Haute, Ind. Flist-elass material and workmanship.
TJTTAGNER A RIPLEY,
importers and workers of
Scotch Granite and Italian Marble
MONUMENTS,
STAT CART, UBNM,
ISO. 418 Cherry St., bet. 4th and 5th. TKHRK HAUTE, IND.
A.saR
CER.
Neither Knife nor l'olsons {J****!. i. (craduiUe.and e, ilioro'i.iily «1bc*1«1 phj*lcl»n, *!ti lii 20 jrr»r», made tho trw-m t,t .f tJAXCKB a »p«cialty. Pa. I. «SS b*n a larjp practical ex-
In Throni, Lb»9, Catarrh,
Sen/mla, I.-yrprpii*, Femule DUeam,
imd nil Cfcwte, 1'rtmte ami K'atimg JMttam. Whrn it inconvenient
to rtfit the citT for trealnwnt (rxonpt in Cancer m«!ictoe*can i*prtrateljrby nt«H orwepresaewry wher*. hntum oonfbimtial. Circular* lVee. AddraaS Dr. D. D. BOSS, On, Slain fnVAdaaia at. Peoria, In.
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