Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 11, Number 35, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 February 1881 — Page 3

HE MAIL

PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

HEALTH HINTS.

r'lennliric88

is next to godlinees

Alwava rest before and after a hearty .teal. |Do not cat too much. Do not eat late 7 night. K'ood, especially bread, should never eaten hot. Children should never be dressed in tht clothes. ever sit in a damp or chilly room

Jtliout lire. Ipper just before going to bad is Ijhly injurious. If hunj eatf or cracker will cheek

If hungry, a bit of ill cheek the the crav-

without spoiling sleep fever enter a room where a person is pk with an infectious disease with an *pty Htoinacb. l5\'hen really sick, send for a good sician: and as you value your health ife, have nothing to do with quacks ?V.tent medicines. ,?ho condimeuta, pepper, ginger, etc., _j less injuriout in summer. Fat beef, §eon, ana hearty food may bo eaten lore freolv in wintfer.

ILct the amount of the meal bear some Ration to future needs as well as Ibsent apjxstite but it is better to carry extra pound in your pocket than in fwur stomach.

W small quantity of plain, nourishing *i pis a wholesome first course at dinHich soujwt are injurious to per_as of weak digestion, and a large Iiaiitity or liquid food is not beneficial jl/ldljltK. I Throe full meals daily are customary, hit the number, the relative quantity quality, and tho intorvals between ii, are largely matters of opinion, tit and convenience regularity is the iportant thing.

Exorcise before breakfast should be rv light and it is better to take a picker or some tritle before going out, specially in a miasmatic climate. Early f^eakfast uro a neocsity to tho young Irtd growing.

Kemembor that when the stomach is Lourfafter eating, the food is actually lotting—that is a nauseating word but expresses tho absolute fact in the case .-and it means that some of the rules [hove given havo lxen violated.

Eat in puro air and in ploasantcomany: light conversation and gentle JxefciHC promoto digestion, but hard fvork of any kind retards it. Avoid Bej'ero bodily'or mental labor just before Mid for two hours aftor a full meal.

Most pnoplo dritik too much and too last. A small quantity of water sipped Ilowly satislles thirst as well as a pailful swallowed at a draught. brinks at meals should be taken at live lose, and not too strong or hot. )VHpepticM especially should drink sparingly. Children need more than adults, •ut too much is injurious.

Adults need to oat at regular intorvals two or three times a day, allowing time for each meal to bo fully digostedbeforo nother is taken. It w'ould spoil a loaf [f bread, hair baked, to nut a lump of old dough into tho midulo of it.

I'se good palatablo food, not highly PjseaMonod very in nuantity and quality rveording to age, climate, weather and [occupation. Unboltod or partially bolt1*1 grains are good and sufficient food |«r nioii but naturo craves variety. As the lloah of moat-eating animals 'Mrule,wholesome

nt food. Hot soft broad digests slowly. Don't eat too fast tho digestivo rgans arc something like a stovo, Uhieli if chockod up and out or ordor, tturns slowlv, and if you keep piling in •no!, put in fuel only when noedod. It a foolish notion that food always /oops up tho strength. Only what wo [ligest helps us all beyond that is a tax lipon the system, and exhausts the trength instead or increasing it.

Masticate well

five

minutes more at

inner may give vou better use of an -ur afterward. At meals never drink full glass or verv hot or very cold quid. Never wash down a mouthful, kvoid waste of saliva.

Avoid toiiacco, alcohol in all rorms ^d all stimulants. Every healthy man

Pi,

better, stronger, has a cloarer head, no re endurance, and lietter chances for long life, if freo from the habitual uso Jof slimnlaiUs. The boy who logins tho Inse of tobacco or liquors'early is physi-i-ally ruined.

Avoid colds and broak up as soon as {possible when taken. As soon as conl.scious that tho pores aro closed, keep lwarm within doors, drink warm ginger [tea, relax tho IKJWOIS, and take a vapor kbalth. llreaking a cold up early, often f*#ves a severe attack of congestion, Vnenmonia, often even a fever.

I l'Anaeeas are prima facie humbugs -Their makers ami takers, their vendors Fand reeoinmendors are knaves or fools, for both. Naturo cures most diseases, if left alone or aided by diet and proper -.'are. There are no miracles in medicino /"enieinber that to keep or to get health Ivonerallv require* only a recognition of

Nature's powers, with knowledge of Unatotny and physiology, exponence, und common sense.

Never sleep in clothing worn during fthodnv. and let that worn at night be exposed to the air by day. Three pints or moisture. tilled with the waste of the flwdv, are given off every twenty-four hours, and inostlv alworbed by clothing.

Expivnure to aiil and sunlight purltiee the clothing ami betiding cf the poison! which nature iI trvlng to get rid of, and which would otherwise be brought again into contact with tho body.

The lungs should be trained to free, full, and \ltrorous action. ''The breath is the life." A man will exist fordaye without food, but when the breath iscut off life «vases. If breathing is imperfect all the functions of tho body work at a disadvantage. It is a common fault to breathe from tho surface of the lungs onlv, not bringing into pUv the abdominal musclos, and so not tilling the more remote air-oella of tho luuga. jKv this defective action the system is deprive*! of a part of it* supply of air, and by inaction th© alnwls bwoitio disensed.

Kvactmte the l»owela daily, and above all, regularly: the boat time is brwkfast partly to be rid of a physical burden during Ihe day, but chiefly to relieve the towels. Constipation iasafer than dlarrh.va. For the former, exercise. ride home-back, knead tho belly, take a gla«*s of cool water before breakfast. eat fruit and laxative food for tho latter, follow an oppoaite course—toaat, erust. crackers ana rice are the beat food. l*ain and uneaainoss of digestive omt» are wgns disturbance keep a clear conirioinv: n»t, sleep, oat properly avoid strong medicine* in ordinary cast*. II MOHH than one hundred and twentyfive thousand bottle* of Ir. Ball's Cough 8rmp have been sold bv a single firmtu jfikltfmom—.Mesar*. Wm. H. Brown A Bro.

OLD-FASHIONED GIRLS.

"Aunt Sally," In Detroit Free Pre®. "I dun no how it's all come about, bnt tryin* to find an old-fashioned among the gals of to-day would be lookin' for a thimble in amedder. makes me nervous an' oneasy to see 'em, sayin' nothin' of hearin' 'em chatterin' away like so many jackdaws on every subject but one of sense. 'Sposm' you'd ask one of these new fangled gals of to-day to make a mustard plaster, -or set emptings, or wash flannels, or steep up onions and 'lasses and vinegar for the baby's cold? Why, there hain't one in a hundred who could mix two parts of flour and one part of mustard and spread tho stuff on apiece of old cotton, without making more fuss oyer it than I'd make in curing four cases of croup and buryin' six or eight neighbors. Whon I was a iral I could get out of bed in the darkest night that ever crept over a white cow ana lay my hands on the ginger box, the camphor bottle, the kyann pepper, the stickm'plaster, or whatever else was wanted. Jisjt imagine one o' these modern gals puttin' afoot out o' bed if the hull rest of the femily was tied up in hard knots with the colic! Not one in a thousand of 'em could go down and find the pantry door without two lamps burniu' and a guide board on her head! "Yes, I'm puttin' a patch on the Deajn's breeches. I larned to patch 'foro was fourteen years old. Whon I git it sewed on and pressed down you won hardly be able to diskiver which from which. This one patch will give him six months' longer wear of these old breeches. Patchin' was not beneath our old-fashioned gals but lands save ye! Just you mention patches to one of these frizzed and banged and bustled gals of this period! She'd faint right away and fall into it. You'd think sartin queer of a man who would throw away a pair of boots because one of the straps was broken. And yet the gals of the present age aro bein' brung up to throw away garments that half an hour's work with the needle

would

make almost as good as

"Healthy? I guess I'm feeling lively for a woman of seventy-two years old come next April. I haven't got a pain or an ache about me and I don't spect to have till my dyingliourcomes. Why? Because I haven't bent my ribs all out of shape by tight lacing. Because I haven't waded through the snow drifts»f winter in thin shoos and cotton stockings. Because I haven't sacrificed lungs, liver and inusclo to fashion. How many gals of the present day ever sit down to a good, solid meal? Lands alive! but it's got to be unfashionable to eat anything except gum-drops and sweet cake! A gal of sixteen expects to do more runnin'around on ten mouthfuls of such stuff than her father does on a solid meal. It's all right for him to bundle up in cold weather, but it's all wrong for her. It's all right for him to go to bed at nine, but all wrong for her to get under the quilts aforo midnight. O! gals! gals! gals! I don't know what's to become of ye! I feel cousarned about you and I'm going to sit down and talk to you like a grandmother and tell you just what I think."

BEFORE AND AFTER MARRIAGE

THE CAREFUL LOVER TRANSFORMED INTO THE CARELESS HUSBAND.

This is a year before marriage. He is making her a call. He is at tho lront door ringing for her. Ho has been thinking all day of her. There are his boots nowly blaokod, collar spotloss, his form ditto outsido, his tcloves on for the first time, and his hair nowly parted and oiled, his face newly shaven. His heart palpitates for her. "He fears she may be out, or that her parents may object, or, worse than that, some other fellow may bo thero with her. The door opens. She is thero and alone. Ho is happy.

This is a year after marriage. He is ringing at ihe door. His face is unshaven, his collar is much worn, his boots unblackod, his hair unbrushed. Ho rings again in exactly ten seconds. Ho gives the bell a short, petulant pull. Ho is thinking of her. He is grumbling that alio doesn't answer soonor. He has not all day been thinking of her. He has gone 'further, maybe, and fared worse. Now sho opens it. He pushes past and remarks, "Takes you forevor to answer that bell." His unbrushed shoes sound sullen as he ascends the stairs. Sho follows meeklv after. Ho thrashes into tho room and around tho houso, and sings out, "Isn't dinner ready yet?" Sho bids him bo patient but a moment. But ho won't, llocause dinner isn't ready inonominutoafter ho gots homo. Bocause this is tho one year after marriage. Because tho bloom is off tho rye, the down rubbed from the peach, and various other considerations, llecause it's the way of tho world, of man, of matrimony.

NEATNESS IN WO if EN. A woman may lie handsome or remarkably attractive in various ways but if alio is not personally neat, she cannot hopo to win admiration. Fine clothes will notj conceal tho slattern. A young woman with her hair always in disorder and her clothes hanging about her as if suspended from a prop, is always repulsive. Slattern is writteu on her person from the crown of her head the solos of her feet, and if she wins a husband, he will turn out, in all probability, either an idle fool or a drunken rutllan. The bringing up of daughters to be able to work, talk, and act like honest, sensible young women, is the special task of all mothers, and in the industrial ranks there is Imposed also the prime obligation of learning to respect household work for its own sake, and tho comfort and happiness it will bring in the future. Housework is drudgery but it must be done by somebody, and had lietter be wtll than ill don«.

KO MORS GOSSIP. Indianapolis Dally Sentlnal.

If wo are correctly informed, St. Jacobs Oil is now the usual tea-party topic in dace of the formor staple—free gossip, low wise and how much more beneficial. _«______•

CHILDRESS CHATTER.

A little girl living down town was saying her prayer the other evening, and has jnst finished "Give us this day our daily bread," when a precocious foury«af old brother exclaimed, "Say tookies, Mamie!" "Wlll'oo know me, mamma, when we get in heaven?" said a little three year old. "Oh, yes, dear, of course we Khali know each other there. Do you think you will know your mamma?" •»Oh, I will know oo by oo wed hair".

jTcrossba

r.

Nothing is »o conducive to a man's remaining a bachelor as stopping for one night at the house of a married friend and being kept awake for five or six hoars by the crying of a crow baby. All cross and crying babies need only Hop Bitters to make them well and smiling. Young man, remember this. Traveller.

A NEW YORK school teacher writes concerning the inhuman way in which parents dress their children Tor school, and says: "If the lives of these children are not prematurely sacrificed, how stupid and ignorant ia for parents to express surprise when their show and vanity shall have produced in their •victims the assured results—rheumatism, consumption, pneumonia, and a like train of diseases. The parents are now indulging in a panic because of the warnings against school buildings, tenement houses, non-ventilation, etc. These are fruitful causes of diseases and death but I ask you if improper dressing is any less so? If the weakness and unreasobing vanity of parents have not an equal share in these affected bewailing over a mysterious Providence? My sympathy for the poor, ill-used children of the rich and poor compels me to ask your attention to this erying abuse, and to risk the unpopularity of putting the blame where it rightfully belongs—upon physicians too tender spirited, or to make parents |full sharers in the blame which Delongs to neglect buildings and ignorant teachers in the murder of the innocents."

HURRAH FOR OUR SIDE. Exchange. Many people have their interest is politics a»d in amusements because they are so out of sorts and run down that they cannot enjoy anything. If such persons would only be wise enough to try that Celebrated remedy Kiduey-Wort and experience its tonic and renovating effects they would soon be hurrahing with the loudest. In either dry or liquid form it is a perfect remedy for torpid liver, kidneys or bowels.

ON TIME AS USUAL.

Jones now goes to business regularly. That attack of Neuralgia that laid him up, and which was only a fresh visitation of an old enemy, disappeared, because he took a friend's ad vice and used Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil. Rheumatic pain, cuts, bruises throat and lung complaint, etc., are invariably conquered by it.

THK only secret about Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is in the selection of the best materials for the cure of coughs and colds and skilfully combining them by chemical processes. This all men are aware of, as they are furnished with the formula of ^"preparation.

WHITE to Mrs. Lidia E. Pinkham, No. 233 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass., for pamphlets relative to the curative properties of he* Vegetable Compound in all female complaints.

For Falling Premature Gray lift r, Use London Hair Restorer. Insures new growth. London Hair Restorer. Restores the color. Loudon Hair Restorer. Exquisite dressing. London Hal Restorer. The onlvcleanly and London Hair Restorer, effectual Hair ReLondo:i II ilr llostorer. storerinthe market.

A toxlct luxury entirely free from all obnoxious or unpleasant odor. Pliysiaans use and recommend it:

Some eight years ago my hair commenced falling top becamo quite bald. I applied "London Hair Color Ro.storer." My hair not onlv stopped falling, but is now growing ffnely, and I consider it an invaluable article for restoring the hair. J, W. ABKL, M. D., Druggist, 1024 Beach street, Philadelphia. Price 75 cents a bottle, six txttles S4. Sold by druggists. Buntln & Armstrong, Terra Haute.

Facts that We Kuow.

If you are suGbring with a severe cough, cold, asthma bronchitis, consumption, loss of voice, tickling in the throat, or any tickling in the throat or lungs, wo know that DR. KINO'S NKW DISCOVERY will give you immediately relief. We know of hundreds of cases it lias completely cured, and that whore all othor medicines had failed. No other remedy can show one half a* many permanent cures. Now to give you satisfactory proof that DR. KINO'S NEW DISCOVERY will cure you of asthma, bronchitis, hay fever, consumption, severe coughs and colds hoarsenoss, or any throat or lung diseases, if you will call at Gulick & Berry's drug store, Terre Haute, you can get a trial bottle for ten cents or a regular size bottle for $.00.

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.

(2)

Remarkable Cnres by lr. Swayne'a Compound Syrup of Wild Clferry. It will cure tho most stubborn cough. It wl]l cure bronchitis, asthma, sore throat. It has cured very many cases of consumption.

After an elapse of 25 years we have received from Naomi Wilcox,Angola,NY., who was cured of Catarrhal- Consumption by Dr. Swayne's Compound Syrup of Wild Cherry. This is a convincing proof of the permanency of cures affected by this valuable remedy. For a worrying (cough, throat or lung trouble. tightness of the chest, asthma and other evils which undermine the strongest constitutions, we know of no better and pleasant remedy than Dr. Swayne's Compound Syrup of Wild Cherry. Price 25 cents and $1 alxttle or six Ixittlesjo. The large size bottle is the most economical. Sold at the leading drug stores. Swayne's Pills are the best for the liver, biliousness, and to ward off chills and fever. Try them. Buntin & Armstrong, Tern? Haute.

Oh, What a Cough!

Will you heed the warning. The signal perhaps of the sure approach of that more terrible disease Consumption. Ask yourself if vou can afford for the sake of saving 50 ceiits, to run the risk and do nothing for it. We know from experience that Shiloh's Cure will cure your cough. It never fails. This explains why more thau a million bottles were sold the past year. It relieves Croup,

Cough at ouec. Mothers do

not lw without it. For Lame Back, Side or Chest, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster. Sold by J. J. Ltaur. Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint.

Is it not worth the small price of 75 cents to free yourself of every symptom of these distressing complaints? If you think so, call at our store and get a bottle of Shiloh's Vitalizer. Every liottle has a printed guarantee on it Use accordingly, and if It does you no goec it will cost you nothing. Sold by J. J. Baur

We nave a speedy and positive cure for itarrh, Dipthena, Canker mouth and Headache, in SHILOITS CATARRH REMEDY A nasal inlecter free with each bottle. Use it if you desire health nnd sweet breath. Price 50 cents. Sold by J. J. Baur.

PILU! PILES!! PILES!!!

A Sure Cur* Foua4 at Last! X*Oa« Need Suffer.

A sure cure for the blind, bleeding, itching and ulcerated piles has been discovered by Dr. Williams (an Indian remedy), called Dr. Williams' Indian Ointment. A single box has cured the worst chronic cases of 35 and 30 years' standing. No one need suffer five minutes after amAying this wonderful soothing medicine. Lotions, instruments and electuaries do more harm than good. Williams' Ointment absorbs the tumors, allays the in tense itching (particularly at night after get ting warm in bed), acts as a poultice gives instant and painless relief, and is prepared only for piles. Itching of the private parts, and nothing else.

Read what the Hon. J. M, Ooffinberry, of Cleveland, says about Dr. Williams' Indian Pile Ointment: "I have used scores of pUe cures, and it aflbrds me pleasure to say that I have never found anything which gave such immediate relief as Dr. Williams' Indian PUe Ointment."

For sale by all druggists, or mailed on receipt of {Mice, flJOO. HENRY A DA VIES, Prop's,

tor

CLKVKLAXD, OHIO.

Areata sad Caanaaen

Make from *33 |M per week selling goods

E. G. RIDEOUT

A

CO., 10 Barclay

Street, New York. Send for their catalogue and terms. Aogfldyr.

16

»JWEiKT

Itehlac Piles

Is one of the most annoylnpdiseases

in the world, and yet all can find sure relief by the use of Dr. Swayne's Ointment. It has been tested in thousands of instances and invariably makes a sure cure. The symptoms are moisture mm perspiration, intense itching, increased by scratching, very distressing particularly at night, as if pin worms were crawling in and about the rectum the private parts are sometimes effected. Reader, if you are suffering from this distressing complaint, or tetter, itch, scald head, ring worm, barber's itch, any crusty, scaly, skin eruptions, use Dr. Swayne's Ointment ana be cured. Sold by all prominent druggists- Buntin & Armstrong, Terre Haate, Indiana.

Port Grape Wine.

This wine is made in New Jersey, and is

of its properties was published by James R. Chilton Co., thoee who could afford it adopted its use in preference to foreign wine^ Prof. Chilton used it in his own family, and has written to the public the following card:

LABORATORY OF J. R. & Co. NEWCHILTON YORK, March 11 We made a careful analysis of the Port

Grape

Wine produced by Mr. Alfred Speer, and do not hesitate in pronouncing it pure it contains all the properties of the Oporto

Krape,

and therefore, for medicinal uses, it is superior to other wines. Its principal effects upon the system are mildly stimulating, diuretic, sudorific and tonic. It will prove beneflcial in affections of the kidneys and chronic diseases, with general debility of the constitution. Physicians may recommend it to their patients, in place of the many doubtful mixtures too often sold as pure wines.

City

JAMES R. CHILTON & Co., Analytical Chemists.

This wine can be had of J. J. Baur, and is a most excellent article for weakly persons, especially females. It is a very superior table wine, and the most healthy drink now in use. It is not a spirited or manufactured article, like most native wines.

A CARD.

To all who are suffering from the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, fee., I will send a recipe that will cuie you, FREE OF CHARGE, This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. SeHd a addressed envelope to the REV JOSEPHself

T. INMAN, Station D, New York

HE SATURDAY EVENING

MAIL,

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

A Paper for the People.

A MODEL HOME JOURNAL.

ENTERTAINING, INSTRUCTIVE AND NEWSY.

BRIGHT, CLEAN AND PURE.

THE ELEVENTH YEAR.

The Mail has a record of success seldom attained by a Western weekly paper. Ten years of increasing popularity proves its worth. Encouraged by the extraordinary success which has attended its publication tho publisher has perfected arrangements by which for the coming year The Mail will be more than ever welcome in the home circle. In this day of trashy and impure literature it should be a pleasure to all good people to help In extending the circulation of such a paper as the

SATURDAY EVENING MAIL

TBRMS:

One 00 Six months

Three months

1

ou

Mall and office subscriptions will, invariably, be discontinued at expiration of time. Address P. 8. WESTFALL,

Publisher Saturday Evening Mail, TERRE HAUTE, IND.

IMPORTANT TO

NESS MEN

IHE SATURDAY

VENING MAIL

E

OES TO PRESS

N SATURDAY,

O

NOON.

250

NEWSBOYS

ELL IT IN THIS CITY,

GENTS SELL THE MAIL IN

IXTY SURROUNDING TOWNS.

EDITIONS EACH WEEK,

CHARGE ONLY FOR BOTH.

1

1HE MAIL IS THE

EST MEDIUM

ADVERTISERS.

ECAUSE

18 A PAPER

!OR THE HOUSEHOLD.

fJtWENTY THOUSAND READERS.

Taking Horace Greeley*s estimate of the number of readers to a family—on an average—every issneof the SATURDAY EVENING MAIL is perused by oyer Tweotv Thousand Pecrle.

EMOVAL.

J. P. Worrell,

OCULIST and AUKIST, 856 Main Street (McKeen Block), TERRE HAUTE, IND.

CFCNOQK

HOCKS—# a. m. to 12

SOU,

2 to

6

p.

M.

»"V,

A Itial Will Insure its Popalarity Ererywhere.

WHITE Shuttle Sewing Machine

When onoe used will retain itsKplaee forever.

It is celebrated for its advantages, in that it is one of the largest sewing machines ir anufiactured—adapted alike to the use of the family or the workshop, it has the largest shu tie, with a bobbin that holds almott a spool of thread.

The shuttle tension is adjustable without removing the shuttle from the machine. Tne great popularity of the White is the most couviuclng trlbu to 'ts excellence and superiority over other machines, and in submitting it to the trade we put it upon Its merits,aua In no instance lias it ever yet failed to satisfy any recommendation in Its favor.

The demand for the White has increased tosuch an exteut that we aie now compelled to turn out A Complete Mewing Machine Every

Three Minutes in the Day ta Supply the Demand. Every machine is warranted for 5 years, and sold for cash at liberal discounts, or upon easy payments, to suit the convenience of buyers.

J. N. Hickman, Gen. Agt.

I have erected soalee and feed pens, and respectfully solloit the patronage of all honorable farmers, shippers aud butchers.

I will buy all you have to sell and sell anything 1 own. Pay cash on delivery, as ever, and sell In the same way.

Butcher Stuff always on hand. No thieve* or legal advisers wanted. W. H. BROWN

GAGG,

DKALER IN

ARTISTS' SUPPLIES,

PICTURES, FRAMES, MOULDINGS.

Picture Frames Made to Order. McKeen's Block, No. 640 Main street between 6th and 7th.

NICHOLS.SHEPARO & CO

Cattle Creek, Michigan, tfiWTITAfltllMM Or THE OKU OJLNU1HB

VIBRATOR

THRESHERS,

Traction and Plain Engines and Horge-Poworg, Mtrt i'**1 Th—h—.yiMtorr Established la UeWorM. 5 1848

Ufiaa of continuous and nccetf-ul J'i lUlllvnaM, without chaom or noma, •J M_ maajMMDent, or locatkm, to"oaek *p SS broad tearranif given on all o*r good*.

'A iMfrfhrifr mmd Improvement*

roar

tfsai

at 9

runpiraw*

V.

304 Main street, Terre Haute,. Ind.

N

OTICE,

THE

Eldredge Sewing Machine Office

Has been changed to

Fisk's Stone Pump Building,

No. 117 South Third street, between Ohio and Walnut, west side.

It is Warranted.

It Is the most complete, desirable machine ever offered to the public. Being the latest, it has the advantage of having very desirable and new improvements.

Dont buy until you see i*. Harry Metzeker, late solicitor for the White, will be glad to see his old customers.

Office, 117 South Third street, second door north of Fouts, Hunter & Co' Livery Stable.

W. H. FISK, Agent.

THE

IMPROVED

VXITEB STATES SCALES, Wagon, Railroad, Track and others. I will guarantee them the best scales made, and furnish them at prices that defy competition. Be sure and inquire into tho merits of this scale before purchasing elsewhere. For circulars and full particulars, address

O. SUIT.

CO.

S. J. AUSTIN, Patentee, Terre Haute, Ind.

Scales of all kinds tested and repaired promptly. Shop on Gulick st., south Otu.

w.

H. BROWK,

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 oi Henderson House, stock yards one mile southeast- of olty.

to

12

TIUUmMQMMES

LINCOLN,

tavtteato

NICHOLS, tHKPARD A CO. •attto Creek. MtoMpti

ifrmtMi'iiii miiffi .4*,. tk

OBee, 48SH Main Street, over Sage* •Id eomfretionery itand. TERRK HAUTE, IND.

Can be found in office night and day,

Business Cards. IAL THOMAS,

H. B0EG1SMAN,

MANUFACTURER

*v -ff

Professional Cards.

8.

H. BBKGHBB

"DUFF & BEECHER,

II ATTORNEYS AT LAV, OFFXCB—No. S20 Ohio Street, bet. Third and Fourth, north side.

.K'i: DENTIST Office, 19% S.'Sixth, opposite P. O. Extracting ana artificial teeth specialties. All work warranted. (dAw-tf)

W. STEWART, M. D.,

Pbyeleian and Snrgeon.

Offioe and residence in Marble Block, 630S Main street, between Sixth and Seventh, Terre Haute, Ind.

Offioe hours—7 a. m. to 9 a. m.—1 to 3 and 7 to 10 p. m.

W. BALLEW,

DENTIST,

Optician and Watchmaker

For the trade, No. 629 Main street, sign of big man with watch.

KISSNER,

Jm Wholesale and Retail Dealer In Pianos, Slelodeons, Organs, Musical Instruments, &c.,

Palace of Music, 48 Ohio

AGNER & RIPLEY,

Importers and workers of

geoteh Granite and Italian Marble

MONUMENTS,

S A A N S 4 1 8

A»n

DKALER IW

Home-made Boots and Shoes!

And also keeps a

General Stock oi Boots and Shoes

No. 118 So. Fourth street, opposite Market House,

RPHE ARTESIAN BATHS.

The Terre Haute Artesian Baths cure rheu-, matlsm, neuralgia, catarrh, chronic dts* eases of the liver, dyspepsia and cutaneous diseases. They are of the most healing and powerfully alterative and tonic waters known in the world. On Water street between Walnut and Poplar.

ARTESIAN BATH COMPANY.

LUNCH ROOM.

a rCNTC WANTED EVERYWHBRK AuLil 1 OOOD PAT I STEADY SXPLOTKIXT BBLLnra THK STANDARD AGRICULTURAL BOOK,

Farming For

Proflte

Complete Farm Lttmry. Sara OOLDA to SoooMafot Farm Inf.

TELLS HOWiPn Mako Money IU

Book ever publlibed.

tot

I mil

Ooltlnta .11 Firm Crop*. Breed and Cin For Live Stock. Grow Fruit, H»n*ne BuilntM, And tail. lUpplawa.

But Bock tor Farm*n and Form*r$' Soft. Bndorttd 5» Ltadine Paptrt and Abhmt Wrltrrt at a Thoroughly Practical Manual cf Farm Affair t. Savt* many timt* U* COJI tvtry union. 880 r»m.

140 niMtratteni. Bandaoraut and Beit Farm

Svtiy Farmtr tKould have a Copy,

Descriptive Circular and Termi to A(ent, Addrcu,

j, C. UeCCSD? ft CO., 632 Cfcsstaut St., PhiladilpUA, Fa, fUnnlnnatl. Q. GbiMffO, X1L or Bt. Loull, Mo.

E N E S O N S

COMi:i*,rD

CATAfrOOTT. OF

be 2lailed Frrtt all who apply by Le'lcr.

Our Experimental Gronnd* In which we tent our Vegetable ana Flower Seed* are m»»t complete and our CJrccnhouwca for Plant* (covering 3 acre* In glaee)j are the largest In America.

PETER HENDERSON & CO.

33 Cortlandt Street, New York.

Portable Mulny Saw It mar be operated br

With improvement recently mad. 1» neqnalta a* neighborhood Bill. It can be ran by cither iu*m or water power, and

either two or

three men. and wilt

cut tnoeh lumber in proportion to the power and nnmber

it

especially adapted to the encinei nied for threthiai

bane

f,for Ma or krNMwr.

gf

hands employed

ii mill* of larger capacity.

ft makes inovUi utfirn iakiber^Teavef no itebibot, and will eat any «i»»d «P to fo.r feet ia diameUf. 11may be transported from •••locality toasotfcer and re-rrecud ready far sawfnn ia from two to three days. a. "e.Vti. We profitable I. totalities where •at saSeient Umber to jastify the erection of I

FOIJTZ

HORSE AND CATTLE POW3ERS

F0UTZ

"will care or prereo Vfeme.

Ko Bom will die of Couc^Borsor Lvxo T» «n if Fontripnrlen are wed la __.

core or_prr*ent alrooet rrarr

vEEniwill

dattleare wbjert.

Forrrt Powow wuxerra ixrwAcno*. gpldeverrvtere. DAVIS M. TOUTS, Proprietor, saxTtMoax.