Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 10, Number 37, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 13 March 1880 — Page 4
4
THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
P. S. WESTFALL,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
PTTBJL CATIOW OFFIC*,
No. 16 south 5thjst., Printing Hone Square.
She Mail Is entered as second class matter, at the post office, at Terre Haute, Ind.
XERRE HAUTE, MARCH 13,1880
BONNER IS reported to have F300,000 Invested In horseflesh, which cost him $800 per week. This is carrying the passion for horseflesh to extremes.
RCMOK has it|that Theodore and Elizabeth bavo made up their troable and will live together again. The Mall predicted such an outcome several years sinoe.
THE boiler of the flax mills at Frank fort, this state, exploded Thursday morning, and ten men were instantly killed. The building was destroyed by the explosion and fire.
THE salaries paid to federal office holders in this country amount to over 931,000,000. It would seem as if the handle to a very large sized presidential boom might be involved in these figures. ______________
NEW YORK is crowing over tbe prospect of getting Theodore Thomas back again. Cincinnati regrets his loss, but says she can get along without him and that the College of Music will go on all the same.
TEN million dollars is the liberal estimate of the expenses of candidates in the parliamentary campaign just entered on in England. A fellow who runs for office in that oountry ought to be "well heeled."
CHICAGO business men will soon be oalled on for money to pay the expenses of the Kopublioan National Convention In June. Twenty-five thousand dollars is the sum needed, and men of all parties will be assessed to raise it.
WHAT with the muslo festival in May, the Methodist conference, the millers' exposition, the Demooratio national convention, and the industrial exposition, Cincinnati expeots to get through the summer in tolerably good spirits.
DURING the month of February 8,000 emmlgrants arrived at New Yorkf against 2,700 for the month of February 1870. This Is the largest February immigration for the past ten years and is no doubt partially owing to tbe distressing situation of affairs in beland.
THE proprietors of the late starch and glucose factory at Vincennes, have brought suit against the E. AT. H. Railroad company for damages to the amount of J200.000. They oharge that their establishment was set on fire by sparks from a passing locomotive on the company's road.
THE largest peach grower in Southern Indiana, Mr. Whitsett, says the prospect is good for the finest crop ever raised In that section that the late cold spell merely thinned out the buds, of which, there were too many to mature well, and that there is an abuudance still left. It is to be hoped the frost will not yet catch them.
THE carriage of Secretary Thompson collided with a milk wagon in the streets of Washington last Sunday. This important item of news having started on the rounds will probably appear in every newspaper in tbe Union. The Mall only refers to it to note thecolncidence of a vender of milk pitching into "tbe lord that rules the water."
THKRS is a movement on toot among the business men of the great cities to secure anew bankrupt law, and it is proposed to petition oongress for tbe appointment of a com mission,composed, at least in part, of business men, to propare a bill that will be juat to both creditor and debtor, and do away, if possible, with many of the objeotlonable features of the old law.
THE patience and long-suffering of the Teutonic temperament was illustrated in New York, last Sunday evening. "Der See Cadet" was to be given *t the Terrace Garden by tbe Thalia Theatre company. Tbe hall was densely packed with people—about two thou eend, who had paid from |1 to |S for eeate. An order oame from the police department that the performance oonld not go on in violation of the Sunday laws regulating amusements without incurring a penalty of $500 and the revocation of the ball lloense. Hie audlenoe
ISilS
TWO EDITIONS JFF
Of this Paper are published. The FIRST EDITION, on Friday Evening hM a large circulation in the surrounding towns, where it is sold |by newsboys And agents. The SECOND EDITION, on Saturday Even lng, gues int the hands of nearly every reading person ui tbe city, and the farmers of this immediate vicinity. Efery Week's Issue is, in iaci^
TWO NEWSPAPERS,
In which all Advertisements appear for THE
PRICE OF ONE ISSUE.
THE buzz of business makes the croakers mourn. GKN. GRANT leaves Mexico for the United States to-day.
ENGLAND has to buy the flour for three out of every five loaves of bread she eats.
THE picture papers are being sapplanted by the ''Fifteen" puzzle In the eastern barber shops.
TERRE TTA
was too good to be wasted. The situation was explained, and tbe people remained in their places to hear a sacred concert, which was to last from nine till twelve o'clock, alter which the "See Cadet" would be given. The audience, therefore, would get two entertainments at one price of admission. The arrangement was perfectly satisfactory, and promptly, as the steeple bells were striking twelve, the performance of the "See Cadet" begpn. The audience enjoyed, waiting for midnight, the sacred music that was not on the Mils, and also beating the law. They did not break it, they bimply beat it.
IN his speech before the Young Men's Republican Club of Indianapolis, last Monday night, Gen. Ben. Harrison, speaking of the presidential nomination, said tbe woods were full of dark horses, any one of which might be brought out when occasion required. He did not Intimate who the dark horses ware, but a New Albany correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette gives a conversation with a prominent gentleman of aijother state in which the latter expressed the opinion that Gen. Harrison himself la the most likely dark horse, and may yet come'in at the head of the list. Stranger things have happened, and worse ones too.
WE all know how necessary it is for gentlemen to go out between acts at the Opera House "to see a friend for a mo ment." A correspondent tells us that the English ladies have recently hit upon a plan, ingenious and successful, for passing those dull, awkward moments, when their gentlemen friends are absent "seeing" that nameless friend. This new contrivance is a good sized cross of gold, worn at tbe neck, as such ornaments usually are. This cross, made hollow, is filled with sherry, port, or something stronger and, if thia correspondent tells tbe truth, tbe number of gold crosses now worn at theatres and other places of amusoments is remarkable.
DIAMOND stealing has reached such a point in New York that the owners of these precious stones cannot trust them even in the hands of their jewelers, but remain to watch them until tbe work is complete. There have been several instances recently of the removal of the genuine stone and tbe substitution of a paste diamond in its place, while the jewel was in the possession of a bailee. Mrs. John Jacob Astor is accompanied by a detective wherever she goes to display her $80,000 worth of diamonds. He is an elegantly dressed gentleman who mingles quietly among the guests, and without seeming to do so, keeps an eye on his patrohess. Such are some of tbe penalties paid for riches.
IT is questionable whether the Monroe doctrine is not being pushed just a little too far by the present administration, touching the proposed inter-oceanio canal. A canal "under American control" is well enough if Americans have tbe money and tbe enterprise to get the first ohance and carry the work through but if France or England obtains the first concession from tbe government whiohowns the territory, and chooses to build the canal, what is tbe President and Congress going to do about it The people of the United States can say what shall or shall not be done within their own borders, but when it comes to dictating to Brazil or Nicaragua what they shall do, that is a horse of quite another color. There is danger that the supporters of the Monroe doctrine may carry it to greater lengths than the distinguished founder of that doctrine ever anticipated.
THE question of man's descent from, or relationship to, some of the lower orders of animals, will continually come up .in one shape or another. A New York professor lately lectured upon "The brain of man, and the brain of tbe ape—their resemblances and their differences." Tbe resemblances he found, of course, do not prove that the ape is our great ancestor, nor do the differences prove that he could not have been. The professor left the question where it was before, and made the additional suggestion that the anthropoids are collateral descendants from a common stock with man, making a sort of first cousinship of race. One collateral branch went to the Northern hills where they had to fight for a living with nature, and developed the other remained in tbe tropical vales and lived on fruits and became a degraded type. Henoe, man and ape."
IT should not be forgotten that there is to be an important election on the first Monday in April. That is the time fixed by tbe Legislature for voting on tbe Constitutional amendments. Among these proposed amendments perhaps the moat important is the one providing for honest elections and it will be a disgrace to the intelligence of tbe 8tate if this measure is allowed to fall. It la one in which all citizens who desire pure aad honest elections, without respect to party, can heartily join hands. More than half the States in the Union have similar laws and could not be prevailed on to part, with Ufcm. Indiana baa needed such a law for many years and the matter has been often talked of and steps have been taken looking to the accomplishment of the desired end bat so Car without success. Now that the question is to be submitted to the people for their decision it will certainly be humiliating if the measure is not carried. The chief danger is that the people will not be sufficiently impressed with tbe importance of the election and may thus allow it to go by default. We topethis will not be the
^iBlS
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CONTESTED ELECTIONS. The current number of the North American Review contains a thoughtful and suggestive article from the pen of Prof. Simon Newcomb, entitled •'Our Political Dangers," in which he argues, with much force of reasoning, that the most imminent danger to onr republican institutions lies In the ffcct that we have no judicial method of passing upon contested election returns. He calls attention to the importance of the subject in the following passage: "In times when one party or the other was almost sure to have an overwhelming majority, occasional disputed cases in individual States had little significance and could be safely ignored. But one of the curious political phenomena of the present time is the tendency to a balance between the two parties—a tendency whioh seems to be rather on tbe increase. In several States the two parties are so nearly equal that a change of two or three per cent, of tbe voters from one party to the other will chsnge the political complexion of tbe State, and every calculation seems to make it probable that the next Presidential election will turn upon the votes of one or two closely contested States, as it did in 1876. The general subject of the law of elections, national as well as State, thus assumes a gravity never before known in our history."
In Prof.'Newcomb's opinion the radical defect in our present political system is that we have no impartial tribunal to which these disputed questions can be submitted, which are bound to do justice and to assign the reasons for their decisions. A legislative body is not a fit trl^inal for the decision of these questions. "They are neither sworn to do justice, bound to give rea sons for their,: action, nor expected to follow any precedent. They may vote one way to-day and directly the opposite to-morrow without being called to account. As party contests increase in virulence, we see a constant tendency to divide on party lines in all cases of contested elections, and to make it a matter of party fealty always to vote for the party contestant. Unless some moral revolution occurs, the practice will continue growing worse, and we may in time expect to see all cases of tbe kind, in which there is the smallest room for a difference of opinion, decided by a party vote."
The cure proposed by the writer for this state of affairs is to introduce the system of submitting all cases of contested elections to properly constituted courts and thus to build up a structure of political, as we have of civil, law. Former decisions will thus become precedents for after times, and the spirit of party will have to yield to the logic of law.
The writer goes oh to point out objections to the various bills now before Congress looking to a plan for the settlement of contested Presidential elections, the radical defect in all of them being that the action of Congress is, in one way or another, supreme after all whereas what is needed is a purely judicial method of investigation which shall be as utterly divoreed from politics and political influence as the courts of law are.
Mr. Newoomb's essay is pertinent and suggestive, and should awaken more thought upon this important subject than it has so far received.
AN interesting and open question in criminal law has been whether human and animal blood could be distinguished in blood stains. In tbe recent trial of Hay den for the murder of Mary E. Stannard, at New Haven, much careful investigation of the subject was made and some interesting and important testimony by experts in physical science was giyen. Dr. Treadwell, of Boston, who has given special attention to microscopic studies, claimed that he could distinguish human blood from that of all other animals by the size and form of the corpuscles while Dr. Woodward, of the United States Army, a celebrated microscopist, was equally confident that no such distinction could be made. Other distinguished scientists also testified on the subject, and the conclusion drawn from the whole testimony was that by the appearance and measurement of -the oorpuscles under the microscope blood can be distinguished from all other substances, but that human blood cannot be distinguished, with any degree of certainty, from the blood of certain of the lower animals, either by mlcroscopioal measurement, chemical analyais, or any other, test known to scienoe. And this seems to be tbe prevailing opinion among scientific men at the present time.
THE tile makers of the State will meet in convention at Indianapolia on Tuesday and Wednesday of next week to consider queetiona of intereet to their business. No class of men are doing better work for the State, unless, perhaps it may be tbeee who purchase the products of their factories and put them in the ground. The greater the amount of underdrainage the less fever, ague snd other malarial disorders will we have. The tile makets and the tile layers do more good in the long run than tbe doctors, for tbey prevent, while the latter can only curs disease.
SHXBXAS denies that he la off tbe track as a ^presidential candidate. Chi the contrary he is poshing his canvass with as much "vigor aa be poseeaesa, and is not at*all sure that any of tbe other follows have longer poles than be baa. At all events be Intends to be somewhere in|the( neighborhood of tbe persimmon^tieeCwbm that inteterting fruit is knocked.
SATURDAY jfiViiiNING MAIL.
THE FIREARM FIEND. Can any philosopher explain how it is that children playiqg with firearms seldom fail to shoot and kill somebody if they have a half a chance. It appears as if some sleeping fiend in the gun or pistol is awakened by the touch of a child's hand, seizes it and makes it the medium of a certain death to satisfy its tbirat for blood. The weapon, however old and rusty, and apparently harmless, too frequently goes off, and going off is almost sure to reach some vital spot. Family pistols that have been lying and rusting for years in neglected drawers, and would be deemed no sort of defense against a sudden inroad of robbers, anfi sure to miss fire in such an emergency, are equally sure Bhots in the hands of little playful children who happen to waken the presiding death fiend in their chambers. Scarcely a week passes without record of an accident of this kind. This week it comes from Delaware, Ohio. Daisy Price, eight years of age had been playing with a toy pistol, and when she found her father's pistol she showed it to her little cousin, three years of age. It looked much prettier than the toy pistol, and tempted examination. They always do. The little shudder occasioned by thoir cold touch fascinates. Tbe illttle $iKr%ttempted to get possession of it. The fiend waa awakened by the gentle fingers, and directed the muzzle towards a vital spot. Then, of course, it had to go off, and the little three-year-old was a corpse. Let parents remember that firearms in the hands of their children are dangerous play things. Do not awaken the sleeping fiend.
THE committee appointed by tbe State Bar Association to consider the subject of the election of county commissioners, have presented a report which contains some important suggestions. Tbe committee is composed of able and experienced lawyers who have evidently given the matter serious thought snd whose opinions are entitled to consideration. Deprecating tbe present mode of electing county commissioners, because it enables the party having a majority in the county to keep perpetual control of the administration of county affairs, the committee recommend tbe adoption of the system of minority representation that is, givo the voter the privilege of voting for one or two or three men, as he chooses. If he places but one name on his ticket it will count three votes for that name if two, it will count cne and a-half votes for each and if three, it will count but one vote for each. By this means a minority exceeding one-fourth of the whole number of voters, can al ways elect one commissioner by uniting on a single candidate. There can be no question but that such a result is desirable and it is diffloult to see what rational objection can be made to the plan sug gested. Minority representation has been adopted to a limited extent in several of the States and has been found to work well. It would be worth while to try it in tbe election of county commissioners. ______________
THE Supreme Court, Judge Worden pronouncing the opinion, has decided the act of 1872, exempting certain property of widows and unmarried females from taxation, to be unconstitutional. It conflicts, so say the court, with that provision of the constitution which requires a uniform taxation of property. The Marion Superior court, in general term, held that the law was not in conflict with the'constitution and that it could be put upon the ground of an exercise of charity, but the Supreme court could not be brought to take that view of the matter.
SWELL LUNCH PARTIES. New York Cor. St. Louis Republican. The extremely rich are just now trying to outdo each other in the magnificences of lunches and dinners. As nature revolts against more than a certain number of courses and a fixed quantity cupidity of the guests is
of food, the catered to as well as their a
grand
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illSBSialiSI
?t
refer
as the
Accordingly, it is now regard proper thing for Mrs. Nabob when she gives a dinner or lunoh to provide from one to five presents for each of her guests. While the most cultivated society will probably pronounce, ere long, its sentence of disapproval upon this return to the Bhoddy display of the Jim Fiske era, at present the custom is in vogue. Mrs. William H. Vanderbllt a few days ago gave a lunch to a number of lady friends, each one of whom carried away four elegant presents whioh were placed about her plate. The lunch cost several hundred dollars, and was, of oourse, in the highest art of tbe French master of the kitchen, and in itself was sufficiently complimentary to the guests. When the presents were heaped upon tbe favored friends of tbe rieh man's wife, they made such a monument of magnificence that for along period, in ambitious New York society, Mrs. Yanderbilt's entertainment will stand unsurpassed. Those who partake of these
affairs say that tbey never carry away ligbt hearts because of tbe feeling that in some way they are expected to do aamuch for society, and they are keenly conscious that they cannot afford it. They would prefer a modest, chatty affair with no more of a souvenir than a tea rose and a sprig of geranium. Then they could meet the very rich with ease and entertain them with comfort, but the immense parade of wealth saddens their social delights. The daughter of D. O. Mills gave a lunch a week or two ago to some young lady friends where there were numerous presents at each plate. There waa matoal chagrin between hostess and guests—tbe former goring the disappointment evinced by thelatter at the parade of money, and the latter thinking It was a neat way their bootees bad adopted to obtain an Isolated and enviable position among her young friends. Mills is the well
known
California speculator, and tbe
aeciety newsmonger* relate that he and Ws family havegiven up "their place" on the Pacific coast for the pleasures of New York lite for tbe winter. Miss Mills, however, proved herself much of a ladyon the occasion referred to by for the display, and assuring her friends that abe really bad not intended to have eo much of a lunch. This so grace tully said that the oompany
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psrted in good cheer. There is always a ridiculous-tinire to every shoddy custom, and In this one it appears when tbe grand meal, on which emphasis is laid by tbe hostess, Is over. Then, each guest, instead ot being at ease to enjoy the social converse which should follow, is anxious to get away as soon as possible to show their presents to friends at home.
PABISION FASHION POINTS. Boston Herald. Short Bkirts for walking dresses are found to be so oomfortable that mpny ladies are abolishing all trainB exoept for full dress occasions, and are having morning wrappers made short enough for the skirt to escape the floor. These are especially pretty when made with great clusterings of gatherings that are now so much used to hold tbe fullness of tbe back breadth. A pretty model of this kind is of pale blue cashmere, trimmed with collars, cuffs and square pockets of oriental silk in palmleaf designs of many colors combined. At tbe back, just below tbe waist, the fullness of the skirt is massed in a long and broad cluster of gathering. Another wrapper in pompadour colors is of light blue camel's bair, with a jabot of lace shell, filled in with loops of pink and blue satin ribbon. Tbe edge of such wrappers is left plain—at least, it is not trimmed with a flounce or with a border but there is a very pretty fashion of cutting the border of the skirt into battlements, binding them and placing beneath them a plaiting ot the cashmere or of silk, and occasionally below a balayeuse of plainted white muslin and lace. One of the most elegant morning dresses lately seen is made of bordered camel's hair shawls, cut up for tbe purpose. The center of tbe shawls Is arranged to form the greater part of the ^garment, while the borders trim tbe front, the sleeves, neck aid pockets. The printed cashmeres, once so popular for morning robes, are again introduced. Among thesesftre dark or pale blue, garnet brown, gtaflPt or black grounds, with palmleaf 1 •signs of gray colors. For flannel morning dresses many now
fine white gauze flannel, and have richly embroidered with fine floss silk.
NOTES ON DEPORTMENT. Keep your nails pared, and keep pared yourself. Single blessedness is an empty mockery.
Part your hair neatly. Part your fortune fairly. Toe out, not In. Especially if you are an employer, you would better turn out your feet than your hands.
Keep your face cleanly shaved, and stop there. Don't shave your customers. Don't talk with your mouth filled with food. And there is no call for your talking much under normal conditions.
Keep your clothing well brushed. If you have no brush, tell your wife how you long for your mother's cookery, and you will have one instanter.
See that your collar button is secure before you leave home in the mornibg. Else you will find your choler rising before night.
When talking, don't keep fumbling your face, as though you were fingering a musical instrument.
Don't smoke in the presence of ladies. This does not apply to the meerschaum and brier pipes your lady friends have given you from time to time. Smoke in these ladies' presents as often as you please.
Don't walk the streets with your cane or umbrella thrust under your arm at right angles with your body. The policeman may take you for across and take you up.
Don't interupt a person in his talk. Tbe natural limit of man's'.life is threescore yesrs and ten, and he can't go on forever.
Never put your knife In your mouth. The mouth is a very poor place to keep a knife. Apt to make it rusty,
Don't tuck your napkin under your shirt collar. The waiter may think you would steal It.
Never say "I won't," even if It your wont to feel that way. Don't speak so low that you have to be asked to repest every thing that you have said. Tbe second time of a thing will frequently impress you with its flatness.
be
Don't speak so loud that everybody's ears are outraged. It may injure your trachea.—Boston Transcript.
OBITUARY.
Comf&unicated. Died—In Grandview, 111., Tuesday evening March 9th, Mr. James H. Langford, aged 85.
The deceased was born in Albermarl Virginia, Jan. 3,1795, and was married in 1815 to Mies Jane Martin, of Albermarl county lived in Augusta county, Va., until 1847, when he moved to Edgar county, 111. At the age of fifty-five he united with the Presbvterian church, of which he has always been a useful and consistent member.
Their toils are past, their work is done, •e fullj ly blest They loughtthe flght—the victory won,
And they are lght
And entered into rest.
—Mr. John Muhlig, Poyner, Iowa, sends us the following communication: I have been a sufferer with Rheumatism for the last six years I tried lots of medicines without any success. Visiting one day the atore of Messrs. Wangler Bros., in Waterloo, Iowa, thesft. gentlemen induced me to try tbe St. Jacobs Oil, telling me that it had a record as a very effective remedy. I bought a bottle, used it regularly according to directions, and was relieved of tbe ailment from which I bad suffered for six long years.
DRS. BARTHOLOMEW & HALL,
DENTAL PARLORS,
532X Main street, Terre Haute, Indiana.
WANTED.
Your Old Cook Store you hare condemmed Iso much, in trade as part pay for a new one which is goaranted to ^Ire perfect satisfaction* *jr
E. L. PROBST.
No26 south 4th gft. bet. Main & Ohio.
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f*)Uin—THAT WITH ONI STROKE OF ths pan you oaarsaeh, with an advertise* In the Batorrtay Evening Mail, almost martini family In this city, as well as widentsof the towns and oountry sor
tvsry reading be residents of «irtwH»«y iwm Hints
Warn
SPRING
Stylee printed cambrics, percales, foulards and shirting prints, at 8,10 and 12K cents per yard, just put on sale. We also offer all the popular brands of brown and bleached sheetings and shirtings at much under present real value.
HOBERG, ROOT & CQ.
HOBERG, ROOT & CO.
LINENS.
The largest and ohoicest line in the city—at old prices—of towels add towelings, table linens, and table napkins. tea doylies, toilet quilts, glass towellngs, Scotch diapers, bosom linens, turkey red tablings also, 500 doz. large huch towels, at 15o each, worth 25c.
Hoberg, Root & Co.
October Election.
Announcement lee—Three Dollars. N. B. KENNETr, of Pimento, Linton township, is announced as a candidate for County Treaaureij subject to the decision of the Democratic Nominating Convention.
For Sale.
FOR
For Rent.
170R RENT-TWO OR THREE ROOMS, Jj fronting street in Koopman's block, water, water closets and coal bins handy. Ceilings high, location healthy. None but ,ble tenants need apply. Cor. 0th respec ana Cherry streets.
Wanted.
rANTED-SEVERALSMALL
W
Wst.
WANTED-TO
-sfe
rv-~wi^fr-
ILK S.
Spring silks at 50, 55 and 60o per yard which are very cheap. Trimming silks 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 for trimmings*
HOBERG, BOOT & CO.
A
Edgings, flouncings and insertions, perhaps not as large a number of pleoes as some of our competitors advertise, but certainly the ohoicest styles and best made goods, combined with lower prices that are offered in the State.
HOBERG, ROOT & CO.
HOSIERY
New spring styles ladles' brown and fancy balbriggan hose, 25, 35, 50, 60 and 75c per pair, juat opened. Also, children's fancy nose, gent's superflue and super stout and fancy half hose also, full stock of our popular brands of French kid gloves, in all sizes.
SALE-JERSEY CATTLE—1 BULL, 2 years old 1 «ow, 4 years old, has made 12 pounds of butter in one weclc 1 Imported Registered cow, has lost tho use of udder— an excellent breeder 2 heifers, 2 years old 2 bull calves, 3 months old one from imported cow would sell heifer calf 3 months old with one of the bull calves. All the above pure breed and from excellent butter' stock. Prices low for tbe kind.
Box 1841. I. V. PRE3TON.
F0RSALR-8EVERAL0H0ICB
FORBALE—ONEL.
BUILD-
inglots on North 7th and 8th streets, and two 9-acre lots adjoining city, suitable lor gardening purposes, very cheap also, dwellings and vacant lots for sale, cheap, in all parts of th city. R0Y8E & R0Y8Ei 503% Main street,
TWO STORY DOUBLE
dwelling house on Chestnut street near Seventh balance on
ng nouse on unestnut street, near will be sold cheap—half cash, time. A. BURNETT, Agent.
DWELL-
ings to sell to customers now wishing such to sell
to purchase. Persons havini will please call on RO YSE 4 R9YSE, 603% Main street,
ANTED—1500 OL1 STOVES AS PART pay toward new ones, at No. 20 south 4th between Main and Ohio. E. L. PROBST.
BUY FOR CAHH-A
WELL ESTABLISHED COUNTRY NEWSPAPER. Address, immediately, "PRINTER," care MailOmco, Terre Haute.
H. BROWN,
W.1
Dealer and Shipper in
Hogs, Cattle and Sheep.
Cash paid for Hogs, Cattle and Sheep all the year ronnd, Office on Fourth street, one door south or Henderson House. Stock yards one mile southeast of city.
I have erected scales and feed pens, ana respectfully solicit the patronage of all honorable farmers, shipper* a^d batchers.
I will buy all you have to sell and sell anything I own. **ay cash on delivery, as ever, and sell in tho same way.
Batcher Staff always on hand. No thieves or legal advisers wanted. W. H. BROWN".
LIANO AND ORGAN
For an artistic Job leave or send orders to KU8SNBRW PALACE OS MUSIC. As the only prao'lcal workmen in this city, having worked both in Organ and
Piano
man-
for pamphlet giving list of references and a treatise on how to take proper care of tbe piano. PARTICULAR NOTICE !"0 OUTSIDE
RESIDENTS.
No traveling agents or solicitors employed. All calls promptly attended to
FF. L.KC8SNEB,
Palace of Music, Terre, Haute.
DBS. BARTHOLOMEW A HALL,
DENTAL PARLORS,
13K Main street, Terre Ha e, Indiana
$5 to $20
bome-'ftample8Address,
worth |6 bee,
STINBON A CO.. Portland, Maine.
A Sri** X.S 5V'::-VL,
..
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