Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 10, Number 30, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 January 1880 — Page 7
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THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
THINGS THAT WOMEN WANT TO KNOW. New York Evening Post.
Eggs often tarn black wben boiled hard. If they are put in boiling water ten minutes, and tben into cold water, the yolk will remain a bright yellow.
A shallow and almost square dish of cut or engraved glass, supported by a silver standard, is among the latest patterns in ice cream dishes. The dishes may be either of white or colored glass.
Woven petticoats, that now come for little giris as well as women, in attractive patterns and bright colors, are fast taking the place of flannel. They are not so liable to shrink in washing, and while light in weight they cling to the figure and make a very warm garment.
A fact worth remembering in connection with sealskins that after it has been exposed to rain or snow it should be first well shaken and then hung up to dry in a room where there is no artificial beat. If dried by a fire or furnace heat, the fnr becomes matted together and defaced.
Mirrors for the boudoir at present dividing the favor of ladies are the oval swinging mirror, having suspended above and facing it another of smaller size, and the Japanese triplicate folding mirrors which give at once back, side and front views, thus revealing at a glance the whole effect of the toilet.
It is impossible for house plants to do well if the earth about them remains wet for any considerable length of time —say two days. Let the earth be so porous and the drainage so complete that the plants will need watering daily.—Rural New Yorker.
Arm bags of embroidered and hand painted satin gathered on a ribbon now depend from tbe arms of matrons as in revolutionary days. From their resemblance to the one seen in pictures of tbe old lady who, according to nursery rhymes,"searched unsuccessfully in the cupboard, for a bone, they are called "Mother Hubbard" bags.
A good way to keep cut flowers fresh is to lay them in wet cloths. Take them out of the vases at night, sprinkle with oold water, and then wrap them in cloths made very wet with cold water. The weight of the cloth will not crush the most delicate flowers, while it keeps out the air and prevents their falling to pieces or opening farther.
Cork soled boots, while admirable walking purposes, do not make suitable shoes lor children to wear to school, where the child must sit with them on all day. They heat the feet undulv, rendering tbe wearer liable to take cold on golug into a lower temperature. For school purposes a good walking shoe with adouele sole, to be worn with rubber overshoes in raiuy weather, is preferred by many persons. The overshoes should be removed immediately on entering the house.
Beef should be of a bright red color, well streaked with yellowish tat, and surrounded with a thick outside layer of fat. Good mutton is bright red, with plenty of hard white fat. Veal and pork should be of a bright flesh color, with an abundance of bard, white, semitransparent fat. Lamb of the best kind has delicate, rosy meat, and white, almost transparent fat. Fresh poultry may be known by its full, bright eyes, pliable feet and moist skin tbe best is plump, fat and nearly white. The feet and neck of a chicken suitable for broiling are large in proportion to its size tbe tip of the breast bone is soft and easily bont between tbe fingers. Fish, when fresh, have firm flesh, brigbt, clear eyes, rigid fins and ruddy gills. Lobsters and crabs must be bright in color and lively in movement. Roots and tubers must bo plump, even sized, with fresb, unsbrivelled skins, and are good irom ripening time until they rout. All jegln to sprout. green vegetables should be very crisp, fresh and juicy, and are best just before flowering. Never use skewers, as tbey cause the meat juices to escape. Never touch lettace with a knife, as it impairs the flavor and destroys the crispness of the leaf always tear it apart with the fingers.
A VOIDINO THE ISSUE. Golden Rule. When your play-loving boy asks to out after supper, and you don't think best, for any reason, that he should, do not snap out, "No you can't! The
Fflace
for boys is in the house at night." the lad has any of the old Adam in hitn, he will either sulk, or rebel, or manage to make himself and everybody near him uncomfortable until bedtime. You oan rule him, of course, force but it isn't a victory to be prow of. How much better to make him
Ehn
refer to stay in—or at least to reconcile to it. Propose a game with him, •taking a hand yourself or read to him out of a book a little beyond bis range of reading, but qaite within his line of thinking or have a frolic, or corn popping lark—anything to give the boy a good time, ana make him forget bis disappointment. No time Is better expended. In family government, than in helping the children to prefer or to accept cheerfully your way. Things are going wretchedly wrong in that family where the little ones stay in the house as in a prison, or go to bed vnhappy.
The wisest and most successful mothers are those who avoid, whenever possible, direct issues on trivial matters with young children who have a very positive will of their own. It is quite possible to "go one eye" on little delinquencies without being disobedienoe or wrong doing, specially, plrlta shot
blind to Those,
especially, who cannot rule their own spirits should be very careful not needlessly to precipitate a conflct with those under them. There is sometimes more courage in running away than iu fighting moro wisdom in avoiding the issue than in asserting authority.
DYING WORDS.
It is probably natural that at the lasthe scenes which have made tbe strong est impression in life should be recalled by memory. The old mountaineer.when he comes to die, with his last whisper says his snowshoes are lost with the stago driver he is "on a down grade and cannot reach the brake," the miner can not get to tbe air pipe, the sailors say "eight bells have sounded," and the gambler plays his last trump. A little girl died here a few years ago, and as her mother held her wrist and noted tbe fainting and flickering pulse a smile came to tbe wan face and the child whispered: "There la no more desert here, mamma, but all the world is full of beautiful flowers.1' A moment later the smile became tranflxed. Iu an Eastern city, not long ago. a Slater of Charity was dying, and at last from a stupor she opened her eyes and said: "It is strange, every kind word that I have spoken in life, every tear that I have abed, has iiaa become a living flower around me, %nd they bring to my senses an incense inefikble."
ABOUT CHILDREN. New Haven Register.
Bless their hearts, how dirty they get their faces. Ho4r pretty tbe hair of a child looks just after it has been pasted down where it belongs by a couple of quarts of soapsuds.
The little aprons of childhood, ain't tbey sweet with their checks of blue and big spots of "gawm."
The children's shoes, bow cunning, with boles in the toes, run over at the heol, and every button gone off on a fly
But their stockings, wudgeted in a little wrinkled bunch between plump ankles and grimy knees, with "this little pic went to market" wiggling through the ravelled tip ain't they cute?
Their little pudgey fists, half tbe time grinding grief out from their eyes and the rest—well, who doesn't like to be pounded lya child's weak fist?
What royal little cooks children are. Mud pies take on more flavor from tbe loving pats of childhood than any veteran can produce with the spices of the Indies.
What questions a child can hurl at tbe head of wisdom. It can upset the theology of the world with one effort.
How wopsical a child can get the bed clothes. Alexander himself never could have cut tbe gordian knot, if it had been a twisted sheet around a sleeping child's curled up form.
No diamond ever dog from tbe deepest mine can show the lustre in a child's eye, that round, wondering opal of brightness. Perhaps children's eyes are peeping through the cracks of the "pearly gates."
How lovingly the little arms of childhood twine about your neck and leave a nico bit of bread and butter on your coat collar.
How tenderly children nestle into your lap, swing their feet and rap your shins with tbeir little boot heels.
Mow pleasant children are at the table how ddliciously wrong side up do tbey go through, tbe bill of fare. Fadding first, with a grand finale of bread and butter with sugar on it.
How remarkably quick children learn—what you don't want tbem to. The inmost secrets of tbe household they retail from the woodshed roof. Then you feel around for the sensitive part of tbeir system and blister tbe flat of your hand.
The man or woman who has never loved, hugged, kissed, played with, listened to, told stories to, or thoroughly spanked a child has missed the cardinal joys of life.
Y- SENTIMENT AMD SENSE.
It doesen't hurt a good man to have bis character investigated neither does it hurt a gold coin to try its ring on the counter.
The hardest thing in the world to do so constantly that you can do it well is to mind yonr own buisness.
A lie will die of neglect sooner than in any other way. The only reason why some lies grow so large and stout is that every body pets and feeds tbem.
It is very easy to believe that everything is for the best wben you are sitting at your oars and floating down stream, but very much harder to believe it when you are tugging against the current with both oars and can't stop to brush away tbe mosquito who has just lighted on your face, and is sharpening his bill for a good breakfast.
A hot temper will make greater havoo in a household and turn things more completely upside down than a kerosene explosion. 7
When a manias "nothing "to doVnd doesn't even know how to do that well he is apt to -sing, "The World is All a Feeting Show," but it is a pretty substantial old world after all to the man who has a plan in his head and in his heart the pluck to make his dream a reality.
Success is more highly valued because we learn by painful experience how much of effort it requires to accomplish it.
Tbe soul never knows itself till it is illumined by love. Love developes new faculties in our souls. It transforms doubts into possibilities, and dreams into realities.—W. M. F. Round.
A BO rs ESSAY ON CORN Corns are of two kinds, vegetable and animal. Vegetable corn grows in rows and animal corn grows on toes. There are several kinds of corns: nnicorn, caprlcon, corn dodgers, field corn, and tn corn, which is the coin you most feel. It is said that gophers like corns but persons having corns do not want to "go fur" If they din help it. Corns have kernels, and some colonels have corns. Vegetable corn grows on ears, but an imal corns grow on the feet, at the other end of the body. Another kind of oorn is the acorn this kind grows on oaks, but there is no hoax ifcout the acorn. Tbe adorn is acorn with an indefinite, article indeed. Try it now and see. Many a man when he has a oorn wishes it was an acorn. Folks that have corns sometimes send for a doctor, and if the doctor himself Is oorned, be probably won't do so well as if he wasn't. The doctors say that corns are produced by tight boots and shoes, which Is probably tbe reason why. when a man is tight tbey say he la oorned. If a farmer manages well he oan get a good deal on an acber, but I know of a farmer who has acorn that makes the biggest achar on his farm. Tbe bigger the crop of animal oorn the better he does net like it. Another kind of oorn is the oorn dodger. The way it is made is as follows —that is if you want to know, You go along the street and meet a man you know has a oorn, and a rough character: then you step on the toe that has the oorn on it, and see, If you don't have an occasion to dodge
CURE FOR CATARRH. -IT A correspondent of the Inter-Ocean gives this cure for Indiana's worst disease "A good cure for catarrh is crashed cubeb berries amoked in a pipe, emitting the smoke through the nose. After a few trials this will be easy to do. If that it Is alone pipeful clear as a bell. For sore throat, asthma, and bronchitis, swallowing the smoke effects immediate relief. It Is the best remedy in the world for offensive breath, and will make the moat foul breath pare and sweet. Sufferers from that horrid disease, ulcerated catarrh, will find thia r«medy unequaled, and a month's use will care tbe most obstinate case. Eating the uncrushed berries is also good for sore throat and bronchial comnlainta. After smoking do not expose $ouraelf to cold air for at least fifteen minutes, and let the pipe be a commoa clay one, new and clean."
It is a sad sight to see an intoxicated person on the street. How much mofe so ia it to see a dull and sickly Baby rendered so by the use of dangerous opiates? Dr. Bali's Baby Syrup contains nothing injurous and may be given to the most delicate Baby.
HE HERALD.
SKILLED LABOR
.TERRE HAUTE SATUR.UAY EVENING MATT*
We Guarantee What We Say. We know SHILOH'S CONSUMPTION CURE is decidedly the best Cough Medicine made. It will oure a common or ohronic oougb, or bronchitis, in half tho time, and relieve croup, whooping cough, asthma at once, and show more cases of consumption cured, than all others. It will cure where they fail, it is pleasant to take, harmless to the youngest child, and we guarantee what we say. Price 10 cts., 75 cts., J1.00. If your lu^gs are sore, chest or back lame, useShilob's Porous Plaster. Sold by Qullck fc .Berry and J. J. Baur.
We have a speedy and positive cure for catarrh, diphtheria, canker mcuth, and headache, in SHILOH'S CATARRH REMEDY. A nasal injector free with eaoh bottle. Use it if you desire health and a sweet breath. Price 60 cents. Sold by Gulick & Berry and J. J. Baur.
No Deception Used.
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 bur store SHILOH'S VITALIZE®, free of cost if it does not cure or relieve them. Price, 75 cts. Sold by Gulick cfe"Berry and J. J. Baur.
A CARD. -J
To all who are suffering from the errots and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, sec., I will send a recipe that will oure you, FREE OF CHARGE, This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Send a self addressed envelope to the REV. JOSEPH T. INMAN, Station D, City.
New York
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Embracing complete and comprehensive despatches from Washington, including full reports of the speeches of eminent politicians on the questions of the hour. •THE FARM DEPARTMENT Of the Weekly Herald gives the latest as well as the most practical suggestions and discoveries relating to the duties of the farmer, hints for raising cattle, poultry, grain, trees, vegetables, etc., etc., with sug-
by under the head of THE HOME, Giving' recipes lor practical dishes, hints for making clothing and for keeping with the latest fashions at the lowest prices. Every item of cooking or economy suggested in this department is practically tested by experts before publication. Letters from our Paris and London correspondent son the very latest fashions. The Home department of the Weekly Herald will save the housewife more than one hundred times the price of the naner. The interests of
Are looked after, and everything relating to and labor saving is carefully mechanics recorded.
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the latest phases of the business markets, crops, merchandise, etc., etc. A valuable feature is found in the specially reported prices and conditions of
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EW YORK MEKCURY.
NEW YORK MERCURY
ror""""
".
FORTY-SECOND VOLUME.
In entering upon anew year which has every indication of an immediate future favorable to the advance of liberal enter-
S[ercury
rites, the proprietor of the New York proposes to have anew life, as it were, Infused into this so long representa tlve metropolitan weekly repository of lit erature. dramatic and musical specialties and general news. Always a pungently original aad endlessly varied epitome of the most attractive literary novelties, artls tic information, social saliencles, choicest regular contributions and brightest journalistic departments of the day, It is intended that it shall be made yet brighter and more comprehensive in general by the addition of strikingly new features and the aid of an lnoreased corps of first class writers. Any current number of the paper now will serue to show tbeprogress of these Invigorating and rejuvenating improvements, at once recalling to thousands of readers the most brilliant past epochs of their favorite weekly's veteran career and eel pslng all precedents therein. The New York Mercury for the year 1880 will be far stronger than ever In Its great standard specialties, Splendid Serials,
Official Dramatic Intelligence, Completed Stories and Poems, Striking Social News. And its usual unrivaled array of the best of contributions and fresh ideas in euery line of interesting reading and it is designed that inimitable new specialties in Original Humor,
The Romanoe or Real Life, society's Wit and Sparkle, Literature's Native strength And ihe grandest work that liberal indue® ments can obtain from the most celebrated foreign as well as native pens shall be among the future characteristics of the paper. Six HCJTOHKD DRAMATIC CORRKSROXNKJRRS located In all sections of the Union, and in the great dramatic centres of Europe, fill fourteen columns in eath week's Issue of the New York Mercury with all the latest news in music, the drama and all the varieus fields of amusement. No one who is interested ia theatrical literature can do without the New York Mercury.
TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. Tho New York Mercury, with its fifty-six columns of attractive reading matter will continue to be issued at Eelghtcentsacopy,, and add by ail newsmen and periodical dealers in America. To mall subscribers our terns for 1880 will be (cash in advance): —Single copies (postage paid), Three Dollars per annum.
Write plainly the name of post-ofHee, county and State. Specimen copies sent free to all applicants. Address WILLIAM
CAULDW Mercury, No.
Proprietor of tbe Mew York Fulton street. New York
WHERE IT IS SOLD.
B. L. Godi-cke Opera House Harrj Buntlu P. O, Lobby M. I". Crafts... .... Opp. Post Offlc Richard O'Brien National House Alonzo Kreeland...Gor. 4th and Lafayette Bt Joseph Spai row....—..™ .Cor. 12th and Poplar Sheriff' A ily .. —...... Paris, flis V. L. Oole..._
M.....„.M......MNM...Marsliall,Ills
W Smith.... .Sullivan Ind H. Swineheart Clinton, Ind A. C. Bates —..Rockvllle, Ind Hawkins fe Wheeler,..- Brazil, Ind John W. Hanna Mattoon, Ills J. K. Langdon Greencastle, Ind EL A. Pratt Waveland, Ind
Davis JCnlgUtsville, ind W Bucher ..JSosedale, Ind J. C. Wilson....- cr.ar.eston, Ills (. E.
Sinks..... Perrysvllle, Ind R. Ed. Boyer Vermillion, Ills Frank Bond- Oaktown, Ind Willie Watts Sandford, Ind Sam'l Derrickson ..Eugene, Ind Frank Jones Montezuma, Ind
Buakirk Shelburne, Ind V. N. Griffith Merom, Ind T. L. Jones Pralrleton, Ind Wm. J. Duree Bridgeton, Ind Wm. Thomas Bowling Green, Ind Ernest Jj Owen Westfleld.IUs Pontius Ishler Martinsville, Ills WmNlchele .. Dennlson, Ills John A. Clark Livingston, Ills J. ». Bryan Centerville. Ind Harvey Stubbe .... Chrisman, Ills G. A. Buchanan Judson, Ind R. Mcllroy. ^Maxville. Ind A. N. Workman Scotland, Ills H. C. Dickerson Seeleyville, Ind JoeT. McCoskey Youngstown, Ind W W Evans York, Ills E. A^Herrlok Kansas, Ills Owen Kissner Fairbanks, Ind E. Davis „..Coal Bluff, Ind
Jackman Darlington, Ind Warner_ Carlisle, Ind Frank Goodman.. ...Casey, 111 T, J. Hutchinson.... Dana,In Mrs. Kate McCiintsck Hunters, Ind Charlie Taylor -Waveland, Ind CE Morrison Worthington, ind Howard T.James Cory, Ind David Mlddlemus Clay City, Ind Palmer Howard JPaxton, Ind Jobn& Ira Long „.Martz, Ind fred Carpenter Staunton, Ind O Duvol Prairie Creek, Ind Wm Ken nett .». Pimento, Ind Louis Gniney Bloomfleld, Ind
Smith, P. Bellmore, Ind Falls Cloverland, Ind Courtney Wllhlte* Hutsonvlllo, Ills Harry Parker Robinson, Ills Ottie Devers Newman, Ills
WARNER'S
KIDNEY&LIVER
E
{.Formerly Dr- Oraig't Sidney Cure.)
Urinary DIMMMU 49*Testimonial8 of the highest order in proof fthese statements. *£e ~Forthe cure of Diabetes, call tor Wu ner'a Salts Dlabetea Core. 0&~Fot the cure of Hright'* and tbe other diseases, call fbr Warner's Saffe Kldtaejr* and UVci*Cw
afiTWARNER'S Safe Remedies are sold by Druggists and Dealers in Medicine every* where. H. H. Warner & Co.
Proprietors, ROCHESTER, H. Y. for Pamphlet
At Who\rsnle by Gulick & Berry
THE ONLY MEDICINE
That Acts at the Same Time on THE LIVER, THE BOWELS, and the KIDNEYS.
These great organs are the Mtursl cleaneera of the system. If they work well, health will be perfect: 11 ther become clogged, dreadful diaesaes are core to follow with
TERRIBLE SUFFERING
Blliowsness, Ilesdatiie, Dyapepsis, Jaundice, Constipation snl Piles, or Kid? ney Complaints, GraTcl, Diabetes,
Sediment in tho Urine, Hllkjr or Ropy Urine or Rheumatlc Pains and Aches,
I are developed becanae the blood is polsontv with the nnmora that should have been expelled natorally.
KIDNEY-WORT gs^^ba18vfiaaf."SiiSa
them snd you will live bntto •nfler. I Thousands haye been cured. Try it
and you
I will add one more to the n«®berI and health wlllonce more gladden your heart. Why suffer longer from the torment %^°bear,euohdlrtre«e from Coneo *Mirfui ^eoauee of dlI ordered urliM?
Krosnrr-WOET will cure you. Try a pack I age at once and be satisfied. 11U a dry vegetable compound ana
OBS Package makes si* qaarts of Medietas# Your Druggist hat it, or teM get ii for wu. Thiol upon having tt. Price, (1X3.
Wilts, BCSAS9803 ft CO., Fnpdstac, (WCl B-rUnd-*,
vt-
Evansville, Terre Haute and Chicago W j.
DANVILLE ROUTE.
THROUGH TO CHICAGO WITHOUT CHANGE OP CARS.
drains leave Union Depot, Terre Bfaate, ss fellows: 6:40 a. m„ daily, except Sunday. £50 p. in., daily.
Through sleeping cars on all night trains. Close connection is made at Danvilie for Peoria and points west, also with Wabash trains both east and west.
JOB. COLLiETT, Superintendent.
J. a HUNT, G. T. A.
FOR
3
CATABBH SUFFERERS, ATTENTION. Saad your address aad a three eent stamp tod receive pamphlet, information and testimonials regarding the most succossfol Catarrh Core fn the world. Catarrh has, and can be cared. One Thousand Dollars will be presented to any one whom it fails to core. Get oar "Special Offer toCatanh Bafflerers." Address, HfFXLKY MEDICAL. DISPENSARY, Palmyra, N.
A Trial Will Insure its Popularity Everywhere.
WHITE
Shuttle Sewing Machine
When onoe used will retain its place forever.
It is celebrated for its advantages, in that it is one of the largest sewing machines manufactured—adapted alike to the use of the family or the workshop. It has the largest shuttle, with a bobbin that holds almost a spool of thread.
Theshuttle tension is adjustable without removing the shuttle from the machine. This machine is so constructed that the power is applied directly ever the needle, thus enabling it to sew the heaviest mate* rial with unequaled ease. It is very simple in its construction, durable as iron and steel can make it, all its wearing parts case hardened or steel, and ingeniously provided with means ror taking up lost motion so we are justified in Warranting Evsrjr Machine for 13
Years.
It is the lightest and easiest running machine in the market, it is, also, the most e'aborately ornamented and prettiest machine ever produced.
With all these advantages, it is sold from $15 to 925 less than other first-class machines
J. N. Hickman, Gen. Agt.
304 Main street, Terre Haute, Ind.
W. 8. CMST. H. WILLIAMS
CLIFT & WILLIAMS.
KANUFACTCTRBBS OF
Sash, Doors, Biinds, &c
AND DEALERS IN
LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES, GLASS, PAINTS, OILS and BUILDERS' HARDWARE.
Mulberry Street, Corner Ninth, TERRE HAUTE,^UNI)
IIANO TUNING.
makes a specialty of tuning and repairing all kinds of instruments. All repairs executed the same as at piano and organ manufactories.
Pianos tuned and cleaned, moths exterminated and wires prevented from rusting without extra charge. Pianos tuned by the year at reduoed rates. Prices greatly reduced for rebuffing pianos. The best of references given when desired. Leavo orders with W. U. Paige, 607 Main street, or send your address through the postolllce to
KNOW THYSELF!
Two hundredth edition, revised and enlarged, Just published. It is a standard medical work, the best In the English language, written by a physician of great experience, to whom was awarded a gold and jeweled medal by the National Medical Association. It contains beautiful and very expensive engravings. Three hundred paras, more than 60 valuable prescriptions for all forms of prevailing disease, tne result of many years of extensive and successful practice, either one of which is worth ten times tbe price of the book. Bound in French cloth price only S1.0U, sent by mall postpaid.
The London Lancet says: "No person should be without this valuable book. The author is a noble benefactor."
An illustrated sample sent to all on receipt or six cents for postage, 'he
GAtr»TT. M. D.: H. J. DODCKT, M. D. R. H. KLIKK, M. D. J. R, HOLCOMB, M, D. N. R. LtkcHj" of the and Surgery. liverslty of Philadelphia also Hon. P. A. BXSBELI* M. D., president of tbe National Medical Association.
Address Da. W. H. PARE ft, No. 4, Bulflnch Street, Boston, Massachusetts. The author may be consulted on all diseases requiting skill and experience.
rthepen
CENTS!
Y.
My Country Hen and My Women from Country—As yon come down on die street 'cars froin the depot* tell the conductor to stop at
R. W. RIPPETOE'S
|H "White Front," 155Main St.,
Where yon will always find the best *s
SUOAKS, COFFFEES, TEAS, TABLE SUPPLIES*
And All Staple and Fancy Groceries
At the Lowes Priecs.
THE HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID FOR PRODUCE
Professional Cards. C. HUNTER, JR.,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
302% Main street—TERRE HAUTE, INJX Collections made throughout the United States.
N. a. BUFF. S. V. BEBOHXR
BUFF
& BEECHER,
ATTORNEYS AT LiW,
OFFICE—No.820 Ohio Street, bet. Third and Fourth, north side.
R. J. P. WORRELL,
Treats exclusively Diseases oi the
ETE ANB EAR!
Ofllee: No. 881 Ohio Street, TERRE HAUTE, Office hours from 9 a. m. te 1 p. m. and 3 to 5 p. m.
c.°-
LINCOLN,
DENTIST
Office, 221 Main street, near Seventh. Extracting and artificial teeth specialties. All work warranted. (d&w-tf)
W. BALLEW,
DENTIST,
Office, Main Street, over Sage'a, old confectionery stand. .-.TERREHAUTE, IND.
Can be found in office night ana day,
Business Cards.
CAL
THOMAS,
Optician and Watchmaker For the trade, Main street, near Sixth, of big man with watch.
L«KISSNER,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer In Pianos, JHelodeons, Organs, Musical Instruments, Ac.,
0
rpHE untold miseries -1- that result from indiscretions in early life may be alleviated and cured Those who doubt this assertion should pur-
HBU chase the new medical work published by the ^^B^^^APEABODY MEDICAL
INSTITUTE, Boston, en-
titled TMjk MCIENCE OF LIFE or. SELF PBKSEBVATIOSf. Exhausted vitality, nervous and physical debility, or vitality Impaired by the errors of youth or too close application to bnsiness, nay be restored and manhood regained.
HUL
THYSI1F
)TTND—THAT WITH ONE STROKE OF yon can reach, with an advertise ment in the Saturday Evening Mail, almost sry reading family in this city, as well he residents of the towns and country sor oondins Terre Haute.
$66
a week in your own town. Term* and SS outfit free. Address U. HALL*CTT A
VO.. Portland Maine
iNOA WEEK. 913 a day at home easily il» made. Costly outfit free. Address Myl7-iyr TRUK a IXX. Awcosta. Maine.
$5 to $20
I
HTINBON A (X.. Portland, Maine
IITY MARBLE WORKS.
M. HANRAHAN,
Manufacturer and dealer in American and Italian Marble and Scotoh Granite Monu ments, Tomb Stones, Urns, Vases, Garden Figures and Statuary.
Shop, 120 south Sixth street, between Ohio and Walnut, east side, Terre Haute, Ind. First-class material and workmanship. A
M. BLEDSOE,
820% Main street (up stairs).
Repairs All Kinds of Sewing: Machines, And furnishes Needles and parts for.aU kinds of machines. Drop a postal card through the postoffice, and he will call-at the house.
A. C. COMBS.
A. H. PAIGE.
All orders from 26 cents upwards Ailed promptly. Office, 122 south Third street, at St. Charles Hotel, Terre Haute, Ind. P. O. Box 1219.
55 cents for One Month
TO HAVE THE
DAILY TIMES
Sent to yon by mail, postpaid,
12 Cents a Week
If delivered by carrier.
Dollar Weekly Times
One Tear, postpaid, |1.0U.
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Palace of Music, 48 Ohio Bi
^TAGNER & RIPLEY,
Importers and workers of
Seoteb Granite and Italian HsrMt
MONUMENTS,
STATUARY, URNS, No. 418 Cherry St., bet. 4th and 5th. TERRE HAUTE, IND.
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J. L. ROGERS,
COMBS & ROGERS
Dealers in all grades of
Hard and Soft Coal 'and Coke.
Block and Block Nut a Specialty
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IT COSTS ONLY $6.00 for One Tear: $3.00 for Six Months. |||5 $160 for Three Month*
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CINCINNNATI TIMES 00., 62 West Third St., Gin., O.
returns in 80 days on $100 in« vested. Pou«r Wlght A Co..
1,200
vested^ Offlc laljret urns
j^tos profits weekly on stock options of J. Bankers, 35 Wail street, N. T.
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