Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 10, Number 34, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 21 February 1880 — Page 4
:«s
mwm
THIL MAIL
A PAT^ FOR THE PEOPLE.
iy$ P. S. WESTFALL,
BDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
5
nmiiOATios omat,
'». 16 flooth 6th. at., Printing House Square.
The Mull is entered as second class matter, aX the post oftce, at Terre Haute, Ind..
TjgftRE HAUTE, FEB. 21,1880
TWO EDITIONS
this Paper are published. JTbe FIRST EDITION, on Friday Evening, a large circulation in the surrounding towns, where it is sold by newsboys and agents. *he SECOND EDITION, on Saturday Evening, gv** lnt the hands of nearly every read 1 »g person ui the city, and the farmers of this immediate vicinity, s, .s very Week's Issue is, in iao»,
TWO NEWSPAPERS,
In wtilch all Advertisements appear for THE PRICE OF ONE ISSUE.
S S I E N E the noted witness in the Beecher-Hlton case, has married abandoned the stage, and gone to housekeeping.
Two million gallons of wine for Cali'fornia last year is a slight indication that some day this may be a wine pro ducing country. '1'
THE corner stone of the new State hoose will weigh 14,400 ponnds and will be laid with Masonic ceremonies in the early part of May. It is the .purpose to make it an imposing affair.
THE New York Republican State con vention, which is to be held at Utica on next Wednesday, is likely to be one of unusual excitement and interest. The Grant and anti-Qrant men will measure their strength.
TEXAS is trying to get the tide of ool ored emigration to set in her direction. As there is plenty of good land down there and a favorable olimate, the State would seem to offer exceptional inducements to the colored people.
THE good people of Indianapolis are greatly tickled over the achievement of their new directory man, who has figured the population of the city up to 94,500. They are sanguine that he will be able to raise it to 100,000 by the next time.
WE see by our exchanges that the Santa Fe railroad has been compelled to pay $10,000 into the pool for transporting the alleged Indiana editors to Denver last summer. That's paying pretty dear for the whistle, and a bogus whistle at that.
THE muoh-tried Hayden is again to be brought before the courts to answer to the charge of murder. Either Hayden must be hanged or acquitted, or the •State of Connecticut will become bankrupt. This last trial cost the modest Bum of $40,000.
THE manager of the crematory at Washington, Pa., says he has a hundred applications from persons in various parts of the country who want to be incinerated when they die. One advantage of cremation over the ordinary funeral is that it costs only thirty-five dollars.
QENERAL A. D. STBEIGHX is looming up as a candidate for Governor, several counties having instructed for him. From his headquarters in the Grand Hotel he is making a vigorous canvass, •ad our own General Hunter will need to got around pretty lively if he means to scoop the persimmon.
THE Presbyterian ministers in New York city are discussing the causes ot church decline. Dr. John Hall is reportod as saying that he has seen as much of wholesale revivals as he ever wanted to see, and that such revivals always meant wholesale reaotion and wholesale relapse into sin. 7
THOSE who want to know just how much a first class war costs will be interested in learning that an offioial statement of the expenses and loss of revenue, on the part of France alone, of the Franoo-German war, puts the amount at $3,787,000,000. That was not as much as we had to pay for our unpleasantness, but it was enough.
RKV. EDWARD Oowunr, the wolf of the Shepherd's Fold, New York, oonvlcted of cruelly treating and starving children under bis care, was yesterday given the extreme penalty of the lawone year in the penitentiary and $250 fine, to stand committed to jail at the expiration of his sentence until the f^ne is paid, one day for each dollar.
HON. JOHN C. NEW, chairman of the Republican State committee, is still of the opinion that Grant -is the strongest candidate for President, and avows bis Intention of sticking to him. It is evident, however, that Mr. New is largely in the minority, so far as Indiana is concerned, and that Jim Blaine, like Abou Ben Adam, leads all the rwt.
THE Grant managers in this State have been outwitted by circumstances. They called the district conventions for the election of delegates to the Chicago convention, to meet In February, in lorder to follow close upon the Pennsylvania convention and procure the dele* Igatea to be instructed for Grant while the "boom" should be on. But the ^ilboom is not on now, and the danger is ^if^itbat |f any instructions are given at all they will be for Blaine, instead of Grant
Which la another illustration of the truth of Burns' maxim that "the best laid schemes," «tc.
A KBW8PAPKB heretofore giving early and full accounts of the marvellous works of Edison, announceajhia illness, adding: "It isj»id he has been making photometric tests of carbon horseshoes, and the fact that thus far these tests have not been entirely satisfactory has had much to do with his present oonditlpD"SS
A CYJJICAL, Southerner living in Atlanta has purchased Confederate currency amounting to over fl,000,000 which he will use as circulars, printing his advertisement on the back of each bill. He thinks that many millions of this currenoy are still in existence, and that there are many who are hoarding it carefully, expecting some day to see it worth 100 cents to the dollar.
THE Supreme Court of California bss recently ruled that females are entitled by law to be admitted as attorneys and counselors in al! the oourts of the State upon the same terms as males, and that the directors of the Hastings Law College had no right to reject an applicant for admission to the college simply because she was a woman. Thus are the boundaries of woman's field of labor constantly expanding.
CONGRESS has under consideration a bill to prevent the adulteration of food. It provides, among other things, that any person having cause to suspect the character of any article of food or drink may demand a sample of the same, and the dealer refusing to comply shall be subject to arrest and fine not exceeding $100. A good law on the subject ought to be passed, but the probabilities are that it will not be.
THE Modern Argo says, with bitter irony, that any piece of church music which does not contain as many solos as there are members of the choir is signal failure. The fact is,'a single solo is usually sufficient to make the minis ter squirm and put the congregation on nettles. But then it gives the soloist a chance to show what he or she can do, and the musicians have to beencour aged if it doe3 bore the Lord's people a little.
THE State board of agriculture has ordered that $1,000 be appropriated for the woman's department at the next State fair, and that the Women's Board of Industry shall have entire and exclusive control of that department. The allowance is only $174^ in excess of the appropriation last year, but the women are made their own masters, and that is something. If they keep on as they have begun they will get their just dues after while.
IT is getting to be dangerous business to wear a crown. The Czar of Russia has reason to think so, at least. His subjects have been making all kinds of efforts to get rid of him, the last attempt being to blow him up in
biB
palace. It
failed, however, because he was not prompt enough, though several scores of soldiers were killed or wounded by the explosion. The Russians seem to have a notion that they could get along without the Czar.
STATISTICS recently gathered show that there are aboHt one hundred thousand more female than male church members in this State. The whole number of both sexes aggregate nearly 800,000, and the number admitted to full membership during the past year was about 75,000. It is obvious from these figures that there is still room for a good deal of missionary work in the State of Indiana.
GEORGE C. HARDING, who has been employed on the Indianapolis Journal since retiring from the Saturday Herald, will start for Minnesota next week, with the view of launching anew paper. He wants to find to find a place where there is plenty of fish and "ozone," and not so muoh hard work as he has bad during the past twenty years. While regretting his depaiture from the Hoosier State The Mail wished* him abundant success in his new field of labor.
IN the last issue of the Quincy Modern Argo, Mr. Dooley gracefully steps ashore from that craft, having sold it to Mr. George N. Loomis, of the!Jacksonville, 111., Journal. Mr. Dooley's purchase of an interest in the Saturday Herald, of Indianapolis, haa heretofore been noticed In these columns, and he will shortly begin work in his new field. The Mail gives him a glad weloome back to the Hoosier State and hopes he may never be tempted again to seek greener pastures elsewhere.
THE third term business is getting a black eye all round. It has fallen into disfavor in Illinois, and in Indianapolis last Saturday night, at the Republican primaries, half the wards in the city pronounced squarely against it, some of them instructing their delegates to the State convention not to vote for any man as delegate to the National convention who is in fevor of a third term. From this time on we may expect to bear some very plain speaking on the subject, and it is time we should, lor the machine politicians of the Cameron and ConkUng type are not fooling any time away. They are hard at work, and "mean business," if not "mischief."
THIS is a wonderful age of invention and it seems like there will be little left for posterity to do in this line. A Pittsburg lawyer has applied for a patent by which it is claimed two {persons can see the image of each other while conversing, though separated by many miles and numbers of brick walla. The new invention which is to come and take its plaoe alongside the telephone is called a telepbote, the claim made is the ability to transmit
TERKE HATjTB HATORDAY EVENING MAIL
ph'yalril wave force of light electrically similar to the transmission of sound by t'ue telephone, It having been demonstrated that Electricity is a creation of solar light. Wire practical utility of the invention will foe more thoroughly apparent when it is stated the inventor believes be wfiVbe able to transmit instantaneously from point to point any written or printed document, as for instance on efen tire side of a newspaper. He states tthat by his experiments he
He states ttbat by his experiments ne
"has been able to reproduce clearly and
faithfully in a darkjroomat his residence
the images of persons in another part of roduotion of the images is the result of chemical changes which arejnow utilized in the sciencS photography.
the house." The reproduction of the
images is the result of chemical change
IriBh relief fund, a New York corres pondent says that one of Bennett's greatest needs is to be relieved of a portion of his immense wealth. The Her aid alone brings him in $1,500 a week because of the things they lack. and his income from real estate rents is conscience void of offense an very large. He
is estimated to
fonr millions and has a fine house on Fifth Avenue and another, with twenty acres of ground, in the suburbs. And yet, says the writer, Bennett is known to be an unhappy man and his great wealth can no longer purchase him fresh pleasure. He is one of those men who have had so much of this' world'* good that it has palled upon their taste He is forty and unmarried.
WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY. To-morrow will be the anniversary of Washington's birth. The General en joyed sixty-seven of these .recurrent occasions and left the people of his country to commemorate the rest. The only beervance in this city will be by the military. The infantry companies will go to church to-morrow morning and the artillery company will danee on Monday evening. The daytis not as big as the Fourth of July, and as anniversary succeeds anniversary it is developed that the late founder of his country had some of the minor weaknesses of his fellow men. But no one has yet risen to dispute the truth of history that this modest, incorruptible, patriotic gentleman went through a long war without connection with frauds, and became President of the country by means that rendered unnecessary the employment of returnirg boards. The fact stands uncontradicted that Washington was fortunate in keeping goqd oompany and in having his birthday at a time when moral qualities in the nation's leading men were finer and more universally developed. How would the patriot look alongside some men who have recantly figured in the nation's history What sort of a crowd would he fall among if, revisiting the earth, he should drop in to see what Congress is^ doing. Washington found amoral difficulty in telling a lie. Some of these moderns' find it equally difficult to tell the truth. Washington was heariily a patriot these others are, to put it briefly, something else. It is not to be wondered at that the good man's anfinisbed monument crumbles to dissolution when the air in which it began to grow is poisonous with the emanations of almost every vice he hated, and void of almost every virtue he loved and practiced. He used to be first in the hearts of his countrymen. £ut that was when there was plenty of room in their hearts. The hearts of to-day are constructed and fitted on a different ian "i. pfon-
DISCONTENT.
and
pvua uiwm
Doubtless much of the crime of these jera8aiem: "No no ovation forme in days has its origin in the restlessness city, where my Savior was crucified. mKf
aVi ntA«rol1a
OA winA-
discontent which prevails so widely. Take the crime of suicide, for example, and how many cases are referable to this cause. A few days ago a
young man
tenths of all the rich men were once
poor! What ailed this young man? He
When will men learn that oontentment is the source of all real happiness and that just as certainly envy, jealousy and emulation are its destruction
When
the spirit of discontent begins to work in a man's breast, happlpess takes her swift flight. His town, his neighbors, his business all lose their cbsrm for him, and be beoomes possessed of a desire of change. He imi^ines a fortune lies in waiting for him somewhere and he most set ont on the chase for it. After be has traveled the world around befinda that men Mid women are the same in all places that human nature is uniform that all skies have their clouds and all climates their objections that money is ss easy and as hard to make in one place ss in another and that a man who cannot be happy on the Atlantic o? In the Mississippi
•alley, will not be so west of the Rocky mountains. "They change their skie3 bnt not
:y
Their skins, who run across the sea." The ability to make money resides within a man, not without. One mnn leaves a plaoe for the reason that he cannot do well there, and finds another place where he can do no better yet in the place he has left, another man builds up a flourishing business and .makes money faster than he can spend it yes,
aB(
g0 to
oftentimes out of the very
bu8ineM the other hgg left#
business the other has left. But it is time to learn that money getting is not the whole of life. A content
ed gpirit i9 a
*ell_8pring
of
After all) the real
pleasure
happine8a
0
life is to
be found in common thiugs-Hhe things whioh nearly all are able to procure. A i- warm house, a soft bed, substantial food
COMMENTING on James Gordon Ben nett's contribution of $100,000 to the decent clothing, good health, the enjoyi. ment of family and sooial intercourse— what more can money give any man than these! The wise are they who make muoh of these and refuse to worry
With
conscience void of offense and with
be worth feeling of duty faithfully performed
they accept what God pleases to sead them and are thankful 'for it. Their lives flow on in a quiet, peaoeful way reasonable prosperity comes to them their children grow up honest, industrious and well bred and life is full of serene and comfortable enjoyment. How much better this than fretting and striving forever for what is beyond their reach. 'Twere better to be content and olever, In tending of cattle and tossing of clover, In the grazing of eattie and the growing of grain. Than a strong man striving for fame and gain Be even as kine in the red-tlpp'd olover For they lie down and their rests are rests, And the days art theirs, come sun, come rain, To lie, rise up, and repose again While we wish, yearn, and do pray in vain. And hope to ride on the billows of bosoms, And hope to rest in the haven of breasts, 1 ill the heart is sickencd and the lair hope dead
THE Milwaukee |Sun includes iome poetry, a great deal of truth, and much common sense in the following paragraph
The distress in Ireland seems to increase daily, and it is announced that 300,000 people are aotuaHy suffering from hunger. The New York Herald has opened a subscription in its columns and headed the list with $100,000. In view of the fact that additional grain elevators have had to be built in this city and Chicago to hold the enormous overplus of grain, it deems singular that the money raised in this country for the relief of the destitute should be sent to England in the shape of drafts. Why is it not used to buy grain in this country, and the grain shipped directly to Ireland? If there is plenty of food in England, and all that is needed is the money to buy it with, it is an outrage that anybody should suffer, and the English dealers don't deserve to have their stuff bought with American money, when their own government is too stingy 'to doit. Let American money be spent for Amerioan supplies, and not for those from Australia or India and if the goverment permits the supplies to rot in the warehouses, as it did in 1847, then Ireland should be annexed to the United States, whether England is willing or not. A "rich and powerful" government that will let Its subjects starve at its very door, is a rich and powerful fraud. In this country, when a seotion is stricken with famine or yellow fever, we drown it out with champagne and oysters, and quail on toast. ,/ 3
1
v:
THE BETTER WORLD.
CHURCHE3, PASTORS AND PEOPLE. •, Dr. Edward Eggleston says that probably one half of the effort put forth in Sunday school work is wasted, and some of it worse than wasted.
I
A.confiding Methodist has written a poem on Gen. Grant's alleged remark in
puoul Uli VJIviii uiaim a
The Rev. Dr. Hatfield, of Chicago, says he would bring up his children in the lowest and most immoral neighbor
D.e io MHO 6 of that city rather than in the most
in one of the counties of this nooa
01
uiwoiior
State violently put an end tohis life, and «fined society in which dancing, card assigned as the cause of his action that Paying, and theatre going were intolerated.
there was no chanoe in this country for a poor man—a country in which nine-
A victim of domestic infelicity, who Is
a V« »•v
ia tbe
habit of dreaming, shthld never
}n
0
was discontented. He imagined be was near Quinoy was somewhat startled last not getting along fast enough was net gabbath when a venerable member willing to wait. There are thousands of exddedly yelled. "Here now, drop that skillet, old woman!"
similar cases. A marked characteristic of this time and country is the spirit of restlessness among all classes. Our parents snd grandparents hsd more patience. They were not in sued haste. Hey were content to go into a wild oountryand make farms for themselves ont of the forest. They did not expect immediate returns but were willing to work and wait. With their posterity it is far different. They are in haste to get rich ever dissatisfied with their present condition, ever struggling to improve it. Their faces bear the impress of anxiety and discontent- They seem not to enjoy what they have in their longing for what is still beyond them. And this is true of whatever state they may be in.
hurch. A congregation
A clergyman recently said that many man while apparently.sigging with all his might the lines,
Were the whole realm of nature mine, That were a present£far too small, was diligently.engsged with one hsnd in his pooket in scraping the edge of a three oent pieoe to make sure that it was not a dime.
Dr. Pruden walked intd a prayer meeting at Benton, Minn., with au open Bible in one hind and a cocked pistol in the other. Jle said there had been altogether coo much controversy over the meaning of a oertain scriptural passage, and that be meant to kill anybody who differed with him on the subject He waa harried off to an insane asylam.
While the Rev. Mr. Broadway was conducting revival services in.his church at Brantford, Ont., and wis kneeling In prayer, Miss Clinch strode up the aisle, with a shawl thrown over her head, and began to pound the minister, charging that be bad slandered her and rained her reputation. Amid great excitement abe was finally hustled oot. Miss Clinch tsSOyeanfold.
It woald be very Interesting if some one who has an inquiring torn of mind woald find oat and catalogue the various reasons why people do not go to church, and then puisue the subject still further, and adding a catalogue of the reasons why people do go to church. One goes because the music is good, another stay# away because the music is bad.. One goes because his neighbor goes, and an
other stays at home because his neighbor does. One goes because it is eminently respectable thing to do and gives one a oertain position in society, and another stays away because he delights in being looked upon as a man of great independence of thought. Few, how ever, are quite as honest as the young lady who, on being asked if she expected to attend service the next day, replied, "Yes, if my new dress comes home and fits well I shall go."
If the Rev. Mr. Bacon of Norwich had been as temperate in his language as he is in his beverages, he would not have publicly called Brother Joe Lee of the Taftville Baptist Church a simpleton and a fool, or names to that effect. And if the Rev. Mr. Bacon had not indulged in these opprobrious epithets, he would not have had the mortification of seeing a particularly objectionable grog compounder go free because of Brother Joe Lee's refusal to testify against him.—N. Y. Sun.
Dr. Atwood recently wrote: "It sometimes seems to us that preachers are disposed to pay more attention to skepticism than it deserves. It is an obstacle to the growth of religion, but not the
1
chief obstacle. It is not so much because men doubt as beoause they are worldly, selfish, sinfnl, that they stand aloof from the church. Answering Ingersoll will not meet the need of such. The plain, pointed, personal, persuasive preaching of the gospel is what their case demands." "A Chicago clergyman began a recent sermon with the following story of a man who was noted for his ugliness: Being at a party, he had taken no part in the dance, as his hostess had some difficulty in providing,him with a partner. At last she led up to him a prim and aged spinster, at the same time whispering a few words of an apology in his ear. "Oh, you needn't make any apology," said he, jumping up with alacrity "any old thing is good enough for me."
Dr. Lorimer, af Chicago, while pastor in a southern state, was called to per form a marriage ceremony in a poor white settlement. Alter, the knot was tied, the mother of the bride placed before the guests Refreshments in the form of rye whisky. Dr. Lorimer remonstrated with her for thus starting in life the new couple. The mother, a large woman, about a loot taller than the doctor, placing her arms akimbo and looking him straight in the eye, said: "Look-a-yere, Mister Preacher, yer kim here to marry this yere couple yo've ^married this yere couple, now git."
A proacher who. had been preaching on trial in a country church in northern Pennsylvania was tackled by an older preacher and told that it would please the congregation greatly if he would quote a little Latin, Greek and Hebrew in his sermons, as if Itaking for gTanted that his hearers understood it, when in reality none of them knew anything about those languages. The preacher was puzzled. He didn't know anything of either Hebrew, Greek or Latin himself, but he was a native {of Wales and thought they wouldn't know the difference if he gave them a little Welsh every time. So he made Scripture quotation in his first sermon to them, and said: 'This passage, brethren, has been slightly altered in tha translation. It is only in the original Hebrew that you can grasp its full meaning. I will read it to you in Hebrew, so that you may comprehend it more exactly," and he gave them the passage in very good Welsh. They liked it first rate, and presently he gave them some Welsh as Greek, and then some more as Latin. Then he was going to give them the Chaldaic version in Welsh, wheB he saw a Welshman sitting by the door, almost bursting with suppressed laughter. The preacher didn't let on, but instead of*the Welsh quotation he was going to give, said in Welsh, "For goodness, sake, my friend, don't say a word about this till I have a chance to talk with you." The Welshman never told on him, and the congregation, completely deceived, called him to be their pastor.
A STORY is told of five children living in Colorado, who give promise of making energetic as well as accomplished members of society. There were five of them in one family, their sges varying from six to fifteen years. They wsnted an organ, and promised to earn the money for one if their father would buy it. The bargain was made, and thirtysix chickens snd sn acre of land given them as cspitsl. The ground was planted with onions, and yielded the remarkable crop of three tons, for which $145 was received. net receipts from the chickens WA $f, making tbe total receipts $200. TO* organ cost $118, leaving a balance of $82 still in the children's tressury. Parents cannot educate their children better than to devise similar plans for teaohlng them industry and the value of money.
KNIT undergarments are now made for tbe most part of cotton, and it is simply a mere convention to call tbem "flannel*." At first they were made wholly of wool, but, as the Scientific American says, "it is probable that at present fully one-half of all the knit ahirts snd drawers made in this country are manufactured from cotton exclusively, and where any wool is used it forms a very small proportion of the weight of the fabric. We know of one manufacturer who, two years ago made np a lot of gooda in which be put 20 per cent, of wool, bat as be found it difficult to get more for his goods than others obtained for all-ootton articles, he concluded that fabiics containing so much wool were too good' for general market and be has since used cotton only."
Styles printed cambrics, percales, fonlards and shirting prints, a 18,10 and 12Ji cents per yard, just pot on sale. We also offer all the popular brands of brown and bleached sheeti ngs and shirtings at much under present real value.
HOBERG, ROOT & CO.
Spring silks at 50, 55 and 63c per vard? which are very cheap. Trimming silk» in all shades. Black silks of best known brands, including American silks, which we warrant to wear well. Also an elegant line of cameo brocade silks, Pekin and satin stripe silks fo: trimmings.
HOBERG, ROOT & OO.
A
Edgings, flounclngs and insertions, perhaps not as large a number of pieces as some of our competitors advertise, but certainly the oboicest styles and best made goods, combined with lower prices that are offered in the State.
HOBERG, ROOT & CO.
HOSIERY
New spring styles ladieB' brown and fanoy balbriggan hose, 25. 35,50,60 and 75c per pair, just opened. Also, children's fanoy nose, gent's superfine and Buper stout and fancy half nose also, full stock of our popular brands of French kid gloves, in all sizes.
HOBERG, ROOT & CO.
LINENS.
The largest and oboicest line in tbe city—at old prices—of towels and towelings, table linens, and table nap^ kins, tea doylies, toilet quilts, glass towelings, Scotch diapers, bosom lineus. turkey red tablings also, 500 doz. large huch towels, at 15o each, worth 25c.
Hoberg, Root -A Co.
Brokaw Bros
ENLARGEMENT
GPIF -OF THEIR- IK
CARPET EOOMS. HO. 413 MAIN STREET.
In consequenco of their largely increased business, their former Carpet Room proved inadequate, and forced them to
OPEN ANOTHER BOOM
Id the adjacent build ohanf has doubly increased their space, and glyes tbem, beyond question, the largest and most convenient rooms in Terre Haute devoted
Exclusively to Carpets.
These rooms are handsomely fitted uf. and well lighted, and make an unrivaledf display of
1!
1, 4 _AND OTHER—
Xfh. «S»
Customers will find the Selections every Department unequaled in variety quantity and quality in the city. The invite the personal inspection of th oommunity and a visit from all their friends. r^f*
We hold the only
Large Stock 'of Carpe
in Terre Haute bought previous the advance, and shall sell tbemf during tbe remainder of this month, old prices. No one can afford to this opportunity.
Broka^r Bro
413 Main St., terre Haute, Ind.
PIANO AND ORGAN
t*S
For an artistic Job leave or send orders KUSSNBKW PALACB Oi' MUSIC. As only prac leal workmen In this city, ha ins worked both iniOtgan and Piano ra ufactorles, with a fully equipped works at oar command, all repairs are cxecu' the as at manufactory. Call or sent for pamphlet giving list of references and treatise on bow to take proper care of piano. PARTICULAR NOTICE TO 0UT8ID
RESIDENTS.
No traveling agents or solicitors ployed. All calls promptly attended either by myself or son Albert.
Respectfully,
c.
L. KUS8NER,
Palace of Music, Terre, Haute.
W CARY.
J. McCLINTOCK.
CART & McCLINTOC
DKAXKBS IK
Groceries and Proyisio
(Successors to J. W. Mand)
H«. West Main St., Terre Hant Country Produce and a full stock of oeries and Table Supplies always on ban at the lowest living prices. Give us a ca'
Jan. 24«G:
