Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 10, Number 28, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 10 January 1880 — Page 4
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A PAPER
OF 4,036 Republicans in Indiana interviewed by the Indianapolis Journal on the subject of their choice of candidate lor the Presidency, 1,406 are for Blaine, 1,152 for Grant, 1,018 for
«i
THE MAIL
FOR THE
PEOPLE.
P. S. WESTFALL,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
PUBLICATION OFFICE,
No. 16 soath 5th St., Printing House Square.
l*he Mail is entered as second class matter, at the post office, at Terre Haute, Ind.2
TERRE HAUTE, JAN. 10,1880
TWO EDITIONS
this Paper are published. !Vhe FIRST EDITION, on Friday Evening, a large circulation in the surrounding towns, where it is sold by newsboys and agents. IheSECOND EDITION, on Saturday Evens' ins.g^ea mt the hands of nearly every reading person 141 tliecity,and the farmers
#f this immediate vicinity. ^Every Week's Issue is, in fact, TWO NEWSPAPERS, In which all Advertisements appear for THE PRICE OF ONE ISSUE.
THE Boston Globe, a Butler paper, says the Supreme Court 1b trying to bulldoze the Governor and Council.
IF a man is up to any political deviltry it isn'tsafe to fool around a Supreme Court. IS you think it is, go down to Maine and ask Garcelon.
ANOTHER new cloud seems to be gathering over Europe, the powers likely to be involved being Russia on the one Cide, and Austria and Germany on the O he 1
ONE great danger to iron bridges'is said to consist ia •'isochronal vibration." We thought it was something of that ,kind, but were at a less to properly express it.
SPEND less time in politics and more in developing the resources of the country, is the advice the Georgia Tribune gives the people of the south. The advioe of the editor will not be taken
BISHOP GILBERT HAVEN, of the Methodist church, died in Maiden, Mass, last Saturday night, in his fifty-ninth year. His death was the result of a low type of fever contracted during an episcopal tour in Africa. 2"
A MAN in New York returned an umbrella that was left by mistake at his restaurant. The Herald considers the event of sufficient importance to devote jto it along editorial. It is probably the (Only cause of the kind on record
Sheaman, 75 for
Hayes, with a number of scattering.
THE 8th of January isn't the big day it used to be when Jackson democrats had hold of the machine. The day passed here wholly unfleticed save the Gazette's two line item that "To-day is the anniversary of the battle of NeW Orleans." ______________
Now comes a Dr. Tanner, of Minnesota, who declares he can live thirty days without food, and offers to submit to a test under the personal supervision of Dr. Hammond, of New York, and as many other medical gentlemen as may toe ohosen.
THE receipts of the State Fair during the past four years present a very enoouraging exhibit. The receipts for 1876 were $6,342.70 for 1877, 111,511 for 1878, 115,991.38 for 1879, $22,915.50. If this rate of increase can be kept up, it will not be long until the State board will be out of debt.
THERE is a suspicion, apparently not wholly without foundation, that an attempt is being made to "set up" the Chicago convention for Grant. It is to be hoped for all parties conoerned that the susplolon is groundless. General Grant eannot afford to take a nomination of that kind, nor his party to give him such a one.
WHAT has beoomeof the Nicuaraguan -canal project—or rather of General -Grant's connection with it? The Philadelphia conference does not seem to have panned out very well. Will some enterprising correspondent please rise up and inform an anxious republic when the General ia positively to be 'heard from again
RAILROAD trains now run froHi New York to Philadelphia in two honrs, and It is believed by some that the day will •oome when the two great cities will be practically united. Already villages extend over much of the intervening •pace, blending with the towns and cities which lie between. This may seem like a wild flight of the imagination, but when the population of the United States reaches a hundred millions, as it surely will, there is no reason why it should not sustain a city as great or greater than London, and naturally that city will been thf Atlantic coast.
THEelectric light seems to be coming surely to the front. Mr. Edison's exhibition of it at Menlo Park was a complete suocess, apparently, and his critics seem to be at a loss for objections. Lamps which have burned for 218 conA aecutive hours are reported to be as bright as when first lighted and the «tock of the Electric Light Company has -risen from $100 per share to $4,000 and
Is still advancing. There to probably but little doubt now that the new method of lighting will be brought to a practical suooess. Edison say* that with--H. |Q iix months an area of a mile In diameter in New York city will be lighted with the electric lamps.
THB Indianapolis Journal plumes itself upon being able to support a "weather map." A weather map might be a very good thing to have in the house if a fellow bad six hours a day to spend in studying it, but otherwise we should think it was about as useful as a page of Confucius in the original language.
DURING the week the trial of George C. Harding, editor of the Indianapolis Saturday Herald, for his assault upon C. A« Light last summer, has been going on in the Marion Criminal Court. Gov, Hendricks, assisted by other counsel has conducted the defense and the opin ion seems to prevail that Mr. Harding will either be cleared entirely or will get off with alight sentence.
THB nomination of Mr. Garfield for United States Senator by the Bepnbll cans of Ohio is a fitting recognition of bis claims upon the party. All his 00m petitors withdrew from a contest which was seen from the outset to be hopeless, and the favorite of the people was nom inated by acclamation. Mr. Garfield is one of the purest and ablest statesmen in the country to-day, and his entrance into the Senate will be a source of new strength to that distinguished body.
THERE is no doubt but a strong antl Grant sentiment is developing throughout the country, in the face of which it would seeui to be a veryTunwise thing for the Republicans to give him the nomination. With Grant at the head of the ticket the campaign would be large* ly a defensive one on their part, for besides having the third term prejudice to overcome, they would be considerably handicapped by certain features of the ex-President's former administrations.
THE Indianapolis News is of the opinion that the gas men will prove able to take care of themselves, in the approach ing contest with electricity, by putting the price of gas as low as the electric light can he furnished. Such may be the case for a time, but if Edison's invention proves as successful as he anti cipates, the new light is bound to press the old one to the wall for the reason that it will be superior to gas in other respects than mere cheapness. It will be a step forward in the art of illumination as marked as was the transition from candles, to gas, and as always happens with new inventions, the longer it is used tbecheaper it will be found pos sible to produce il.
BEFORE the delegate State Board of Agriculture, at Indianapolis last Tuesday, Mir. J. J. Billingsby presented an interesting paper on farm drainage in which he showed that during the past three yeais 280 tile factories have been established in this State, making in all 480 now in operation. The number of tiles manufactured increased from. 50,' 500,000 in 1878, to 70,500,000 in 1879. This shows almost a doubling of capac ity in a single year, and?speaks well for the development of our agricultural in terests. It shows that farmers are bebeginnlng to appreciate the advantage of draining wet and heavy soils, thereby rendering them fertile and productive. Doubtless the increasing use of tile will continue and not only add to the productive power of the land, but con tribute very materially to the healthful ness of the climate. ,,M it#
THE women of Indiana demand "enlarged opportunities for the exhibition of their work at thejfannual) state fair. They remind the board that "women do half the world's |work," and that the fund set apart for them does not equal that offered for hogs. Continuing, the report says: "Now with all due respect and deference for the value and importance of hog raising and pork packing industries of the State, we are not prepared to admit' that the hog interests equal the woman's interests. We are inolined to believe that there is more taste, ability, education, culture, and brain represented by woman's work than by hogs. And we are morally certain that where one person visits the State Fair to contemplate the hog penis, there are five who go purposely to see the [woman's department.''
The ladles are right, and^we hope they will press their olaims until they meet with proper recognition by the State board.
A
it'
-DOWN IN MAINS.
The attempt of the Democrats, or "Fusionists," as they call themselves, in Maine, to overturn the result of an election by counting out Republicans enough to change the Senate from a Republican majority of seven to a Fusionist majority of nine, and the House from a Republican majority of 29 to a Fosionist majority of 12, has met with a severe rebuke from the Supreme Court of that State, and will end iu the disgrace and contempt it deserves.
In answering the questions submitted to it by the contestants the Supreme Court announces with vigorous emphasis that "a representative la not to be deprived of his rights because municipal officers have neglected their duties," that the government was made for, and is to be administered by "plain people," and their voice is not to be strangled by idle technicalities nor their meaning distorted by captious criticism. Speaking of the official returns the court says: "They are not required to be written with the scrupulous nicety of a writing master, or with the technical accuracy of a plea in abatement. Sentences may be ungrammattcal, spelling may deviate from recognised standards, but the returns are not to be broaght to naught because the penmanship may*be poor, the language ongrammatical or the spelling erroneous. It is enough if the returns can be uaderders$ood, and It tpdengood, the fall
TEREE HAUTE SAr
effect should be given their natural aiid obvious meaning." 1 To this doctrine honest Hen of all parties will assent, for it 1s nebessftiy to the stability of a repubtte^V*®111' ment. If there has been. fraolior intimidation used in carrying ai eleotlon, that is quite another matter lnit the only ground of complaint ia thiftt there were several trivial and technieal errors and irregularities in the returns, though without even the suspicion of fraud, it will not do to tamper with the returns and attempt to foist upon the people a set of officers which they did not elect nor intend to elect. Such proceedings are not to be tolerated, and the Booner they are frowned upon by the courts and all law abiding citizena the better it will be for the country, Let the purity of eleotions be preserved, no matter what party sucoeeds or is defeated.
Since the above was Written tor the first edition the matter has come to a very different issue from what it promised. On Wednesday the Fusionists members of the Legislature assembled at Augusta and organized with a majority in both houses, [electing John Lamson governor. Thus it BeeoQ8"that legitimately elected members of the Legislature have been thrown ou^ and the will of the people of Maids, as expressed at the polls, has been overridden, and that too, in the very face of the decision of the supreme court pro nounclng the action of Gov. Garcelon erroneous and unjustifiable. This Will make poor campaign material tot the Democrats in the approaching presidential contest, and will injure the party far more than the loss of the Maine election could possibly have done. The case is too clear. Indeed many of the leading Democratic journals had repudiated the oonduct of Gov. Garcelon before before the decision of the supreme court was announced and those which supported him, did so upon the plea that his action was justified by the constit.u tion and laws of the state.
It is a bad precedent and certainly a surprising one to be est^lishedfin New England. It bodes evil to the country, for it shows that partyispirit runs high er than patriotism. There ia no greater danger that can menace a free govern ment than the willigness of parties to disregard and annul the expressed will of the people in order to accomplish partisan ends. If the spirit displayed by the Garcelon party in Maine is ndt emphatically rebuked by the people in the next campaign^ it will be a matter for deep solicitude to every patriotic citizen.
WHO SHALL PAY FOB NOVELS9 We are very much inclined to boast that we are a reading people, herein America. So we are. But when we learn what it is
}that
is read it
ates somewhat the pride withWhl boast is made. Twenty of the largest publicjlibrariea In the country have recently made a report which shows that, on an average, more than two-thirds of the books which are taken out are novels. Even in the boasted "Athens of America," in Boston, with its library of more than 37,000 volumes, the average of novels taken out is more than twothirds of all the books issued. And what is still more humiliating is the fact that the novels most in demand are the lightest and trashiest. It is aaeri ous question whether the public library, with its shelves filled with novels, is not a source of greater harm than good, The pupils in the public schools rush to these libraries, and find these novels far more interesting than their text books, more interesting than the reading which would be of benefit to them in the process of education. Taking time from studies is not, by any means, the greatest evil resulting to the pupils from this excessive novel reading. Worse than this is the debilitating effect upon the mind. The young person becomes accustomed to "skim" in reading, rushing on to'find the resHlt of the story, and in that way loses the power to do anything thoroughly. Added to the loss of valuable time there is the loss of power. Instead of gaining strength of intellect by reading, they are actually weakening the intellect. Instead of aiding in the school work, the reading is actually making more and harder work for the school, is undoing what the school attempts to do. It is like an athlete In training for a race, who, every day, by some excess or wrong kind of food, does himself more harm than his training can do him good. And out of school it is much the same. It may be safely set down, for the statistics make the most favorable conditions, that a large majority of the books sold in this country weaken Jthe mind rather than add strength, saying nothing of the moral influence. We are not inclined to make a raid against^all novel reading, not even to forbid all.novela to pupils in the schools. Novels have their place, but all the place does not belong to them, nor even the chief place. Novel reading is chiefly ian [amusement, a recreation. Amusements area very^impoitant element in life, and to afford the proper kind and amount of recreations is a very important object to be secured. But sause boys and girls need amusements, it Is not wise to send them to a party, ball, or theater every night in the week. It is not the part of wisdom to keep them cLiefly at games. All these matters should be made sources of true recreation. Ditto with other people. And it Is a question worthediscnssing whether the public ought to be taxed to provide amusement for the people in the way of reading, any more than in other directions. In France the iheatuN some of them—are maintained laigeljr at public expense. Bat to this country it is thought beat to make these entirely
4
£f EVE^TlkG MAIL.
dependent upon the patronage of the people, Who desire to]sttend|tbese. If a man w%nts to go to'the theatre o* opera or send his family, he can do [so by paying for his tickets—«omust he in France —and he can have as good a theatre or opera as the patrona choose^ to pay for. Why not put the aaaueSment of novel reading on the same footing? Let those Who want novels either buy them, or support the circulating library out of their own pockets.) ^There is notsuflldent beneittCeemingtto the public from novel rea&ng,to have libraries largely mad* apof novels, supported at public expense. The Mail ia a strong advocate of fk^abiic I4blWf iu IthlsJidty, and beltivss^ln ievfteg a tax to found and supfgnt one, or to sssist in so doing, but is inVfery serious doubt as to whether it is desirable to4found ami support here a public library of the general character of such libraries. Books of reference, of history, of travel,#! biography, of poetry and of science,'and such like, with a few of the higher standard works of fiction, are what ahould go into a publio library which asks or receives]|aid !„from the taxes of the people. "Let those who danoe pay the fiddler," is a good rule applicable to all kinds of amusemenMf
And the suggestion should be msde In this connection, to tbe young, that they avoid excessive reading of fiction. And parenta and teacherSjcan render no better service to the young thsn]by looking after this matter. Children andfyoung people are not to be shut up to Baxter's Saints Rest, the writingsjof Huxley and Tyndal in science, Gibbon and Macauley in history, and so on. Nor are '.they to be allowed to read little or nothing but Dickens, Cbas. Reade and Sylvanus Cobb. Not all solid reading, but chiefly the useful. Not all novels, but enough to cultivate the taste and the imagination, and to secure the needed rest of mind to prepare it for vigorous effort. Novels are well enough for recreation, but not for steady mental diet. "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy," but all play and no work makes him a duller boy.
THE HORSESHOE..
This has long been regarded as an emblem of good luck—but until within a few years few have attached muoh importance to it. Those who looked through the holiday goods during the past few weeks were surprised at the prominence it was given, and the many qseful aoO^a^i/uUeajgoaiilfevwhich it was wrought.!? Thefeudden- padslani for it is thus explained 4y- theL Baltfmorean: A "The foge for sueh anlH-Bhapehtancy commenced In Baltimore Qnly jwo or three years ago. About, tut time Miss Nannie Thomas, one of our most fascinating belles, was indulging in a fcflt of equestrian exercise, escorted by-her affianced, Mr. D. Duval. Espying in the roadway a horseshoe, she expressed a wish to possess it, and the wish was no MOdbt expressed j—ooft dismounted, and handed his betrothed the coveted prize. It was plaoed in the hands of a skillful manufacturing jeweler, heavily silver plated and gold mounted, ana will be kept in the family as a sort of heirloom to go down to future generations. Since then, and especially during the Christmas holidays our people are now enjoying, we have the horseshoe in diamonds, gold and silver. The florists furnish them in floral garniture, and the candy makers, cake bakers ana cabinet manufacturers have all embarked in the horseshoe bus iness. Now no wedding can be celebrated without a big floral horseshoe tacked upon the wall, and each groomsman must have such an article In gold, studded with diamonds, upon his necktie. Note paper has a horseshoe stamped upon one corner, and envelopes display the same prominently. It seems that there is a sort of mania for horseshoes, and like other freaks or phantasies, it must have its day, and thon retire for something else."
PECULIARITIES OF ACTRESSES. New York Star,, Lotta sleeps three hours by daylight, but if she should wake up ten minutes before the usual time (just the time to rush to the theater) the fates are against her, and she will not do well that evening. If any one whistles in a dressing room within her hearing while she is donning her costume, sne Is sure the person is "whistling away her luck," and the house going to be bad.
Fanny Davenport would not, for any consideration, miss rearranging her wig before the green room mirror just previous to going on the stsge. She has a regular, unvarying formula to go through to guarantee suooess. She first presses her handa to the aides of her head to be sure the springs we firmly fixed (although ahe has just had her dresser make that sure in her dressing room), then gives the "bang" three smart tugs, puffs up the frizsss with a nervous twitch of her fingers, presses the entire wig down from the top of her head, gives her silken trail a final klok to induce it to unfold itself, and then ruahea pell-mell to the stage in anawer to the alarming cry of "stage waiting." Without this formality ahe would not be herself the whole evening.
Clara Morris believes in the efficacy of a small medicine vial, which ahe carries (empty) through every scene, she says, througn habit, thougn it ia foir to presume through superstition. Without the vial ahe could not get along.
Neilson has also a vial—a special one —which she insists shall only be used for Romeo's poison portion. She will handle no other, and haa been known to have the bill changed because the vial waa mislaid, and would not allow Romeo or Juliet to be put up for performance until it waa found.
Frank Mayo thinks his magic liee in an old fur cap and a hare'a foot {for rouging) which he has had ever since be haa been on the stage.
Boucicault trembles and is sore of failure for any one of his pieoes which is greeted with commendation by all the actors, without a dissenting voice. If the players condemn his jneoe at the rehearsals, he is sure the audience will like it. But in any event, no play of his can be a suooess unless he tears off the cover to the first act, and makes away with the title page at the last rehearsal.
Maude Granger has a certain magic
fmailing
bottle, which ahe puts to her
BosteUijust before going on the stage. Ifaigto Mitchell attributes ber sucosw iiTlftuichon to an old pair of shoes which She wears in that pieoe.
Weathersbv hatea blrda, doesn't
like whistlers, and haa lor her special
charm an embroidered rose, which always appears on her dress or. tights according totheatyle of part she msy be playing.
AMATEURS AND CRITICISM. Itm Indianapolis Herald has recently stirred up a hornet's nest by criticising an amateur performance. The criticism was by no means harsh. The whole truth, probably, was not told. But it wont do, if peace In the ismily is de •Ired, to tell the plain, unvarnished truth, for as the Herald remarks an amateur is "one who attempts something he cannot do, and grows violent and un managable when told he haa not done it exceedingly well." What we quote below from the Herald will apply to other localities than Indianaapolis. It says:
A bunch of amateurs conclude they will give an entertainment. The first
fireliminary
is to sponge their advertis-
ng. The expect every newspaper to contribute six or seven dollars' worth of advertising. They ssk for it, and they generally get it, because a newspaper proprietor would rather be out of pocket than be bored by the Importunities of an amateur bent on getting a chance to bore the public. Tickets to the oostly afflotlon are left, and the newspaper is expected to send a representative. It sends one because the doings of amateurs are generally funny, and the public en joy an account of them. If every woman who makes an attack upon harmony, and every man who scranes a fiddle or pounds a piano, is praised, and toasted, and flattered by the newspaper, they accept it as something they have honestly earned, and never so much as dream that they are under obligations to the newspaper for its good opinion, generously expressed, and seldom return a word of thanks. Let a little adverse oritioisin be bestowed upon them, and they resent it as a piece of flagrant injustice. They and they only are to be the judges of their own performances. They badger the press and the public into sitting under the vccal antics, and then quarrel with both If they are honest enough to declare themselves bored. Amateurs who can not endure honest newspaper critioism have no business on stages and rostrums. Their sphere is at home. There they can wail out as many doleful songs as they please with out other complaint than their next door neighbor chooses to aonpke.
HOW IT IS DONE.
In these days of adulteration, it is difficult to tell when we are eating or drinking a pure article. It is stated that last year's crop of gennine champagne is six million dollars short. But there will be no falling off of well filled bottles, properly labelled. How the supply will meet the demand is told below by the Philadelphia Bulletin. It throws some light upon the methods by whiob many kinds of wines and liqnors are prepared for the market:
There may be seen dsily on Chestnut street a man dressed in faultless apparel, with a great diamond on his breast, vainly endeavoring to out-glitter the magnificent solitaire on his finger. In a German university he learned chemist
aIsand
not even Liebig knew it better. business is the mixing and adulter atlng of llquers. Give him a dozen calks of deodorized alcohol, and the next day each of them will represent the name of a genuine wine or popular spirit.
He enters a wholesale drug store, bearing a large basket upon his arm Five pounds of Iceland moss are weighed out to him. To raw liquors this imparts a smoothness and oleaginous ness that gives to Imitation brandy the gllbness of that which is matured. An astringent cateohu that would almost close the mouth of a glass Inkstand is now in order. A couple of ounces of strychnine, next called for, are quickly conveyed to his vest pocket, and a pound of white vitriol is as silently placed in the bottom of the basket. The oil of oognac, the sulphuric acid, and other articles that give fire body to liquid poisons are always kept in store. The mixer buys these from various quarters, They are staples of the art."
SOCIAL CLEARINQ-HO USE.
FASHIONABLE CALLS.
The Springfield Bepublican is of the opinion that a social clearing-house is now greatly needed. Starting out with the declaration that "Among women, a call has ceased to be a scheme for meeting people, but a tedious and laborious way for not meeting them," that paper continues: "The crying need of society among women is clearly a plan under which cards can be exchanged and calls made without the risk, that now exists, of finding people 'at home that catastrophe whioh wrecks the best laid schemes for paying one's social debts In a single afternoon. What is wanted is a social clearing house. The banks of New York long sinee tound it past their patience to go from bank to bank with ohecka against each other. They accordingly devised a'clearing bouse,' where their representatives could meet and work off their balanoea by mutnal exchange for social debts. A room ought to be fitted up down town nSar some popular millinery atore and as far as possible from the neglected public library, with little pigeon holes marked Mrs. A—, Mrs. B—, Mrs. C—, and so on through the social alphabet. A woman with oalls to pay could go there, deposit her eard in the pigeon holes or her acquaintance, aecure that ahe would find none of them 'at home.' She could go to her own pigeon hole, obtain the caras there deposited, and triumphantly return the call on the spot. The work of weeks oould be done in a day. Every end now subserved by calls oould be accomplished at a great aaving of time. All the useful information with regard to aervanta, the weather, and other people's business now laboriously disseminated bv calls, could be stereotyped on the cards." ___________
For best New York State Hulled Buckwheat Flour, 30 lbs. for $1 an extra 3 pound can of tomatoes for 121c, or 9 cans for $1, a bar of soap for 5c, equal to any 3 or 4 bars sold for 26c, go to Wright & King's, who have stock of groceries unsurpassed any in the city, at the lowest prices.
WE COMMENCE
—THE—
NEW YEAR
—WITH-
An
—IN OUR— IV
Housekeeping Goods
Department
SHEETINGS, .V MUSLlNS, *u
fccC
TABLE LINENS. NAPKINS,- 1 TOWELS, CRASHES, BEDSPREADS,
Etc. Etc.
The largest lines and lowest prices to be had, anywhere
HOBERG, ROOT & CO.
OPERA HOUSE. /r
L. MALLORY.
T. W. STEWART.
DEALERS IN
ite Coal
And all grades of Soit Coal
A large stock of Anthracite Coal on hand. Coal haa advanced In the East to about the price sold here.
They weigh on disinterested scales, and Insure good weight aud ptOmpt delivery. Prloes as low as tbe lowest.
Offices at 846 Main areet, and crossin? of Thlrteeth street and Vandana railroad. 13-4
"yiCK'S FLORAL GU^jjE. 1
VICK'S
A beautiful work of one hundred pages, one colored flower plate, and 500 illustrations, with descriptions of the best flowers and vegetables, with prices of seeds, and how to grow them. All for a five cent stamp. In English or German.
VICKS SEEDS are the best In the world. Five cents for (postage will buy the Floral' Guide, telling how to get them.
The FLOWER AND VEGETABLE GARDEN, 175 pages, six colored plates, and many hundred engravings. For SO oents In pape
1
covers 9108 In elegant cloth, in German or English. VICE'S ILLUSTRATED MOKTULY MAGAZINE—82 pages, a colored plate In everj number and many fine engravings. Price 9125 a year five copies for 55 00. (speolmen numbers sent for 10 cents: 8 trial copies for 25 cents. Address,
JAMBS VICK, Rochester, N. Y.
THE
ELDREDGF
SEWING MACHINE
ZS THE BEST
IT SURPASSES ALL III W0S2MAHS2IP.
ITS SIMPLICITY miSZZlLlZd.
ITS DTOA3ILU7 ITSV22 CTST:«.'SD.
1 IS ELE3ANT IN APPlABAtfCZ,
THE WOBLD CHALLENGED TO ITS JKUAL. jjj
W. H. FISK, AgSnt!
Offloa, opposite Poatoffloe.
R. J. D. MITCHELL,
Physician and Surgeon.
Offiae and Residence—No. 220 north 8th street. Dec6-8m
$15 per quarter, Or $5 per month
will purchase a five octave, nine stops. new Mason A Hamlin Organ, warranted for Ave years. No on deferred: payments. W. H. PAI6E4 CO., 607 Main street.
•Pit
