Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 13, Number 3, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 July 1882 — Page 4
THE MAIL
A
PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
P. S. WESTFALL,
EDITOK AND PROPRIETOR.
"TKRRE HAUTE, JULY 15, 1882
THK Eastern war-cloud has broken. True to their word the English opened a bombardment upon Alexandria last Tuesday morning, aHd the war will doubtless be pressed with characteristic vigor until Arabi Bey is forced to succumb. In brief the story of the w»r is this: England owns 177,000 out of 400,000 shares in the Suez canal which she bought of Turkey for 20,000,000. -Geographically Egypt controls the canal and Egypt is under the dominion of Turkey. For some time past, Arabi
Bey, ft brave and able Egyptian, has been in relellion against the Turkish •government and has drawn a large force to his standard. It i« his purpose to free
Egypt from her vassalage to Turkey and other foreign governments, and to expel the French and English tax gatherore from her borders, who are there to protect the interests ol their governments, the bulk of the vast national debt of Egypt—$400,000,000 in amountbeing held by the French and English. The Khedive, legal governor of Egypt, is an incapable and powerless man and wholly unable to resist the growing •inflnence of power of Arabi Iiey, who has the sympathies of the people on his aide. Hence the call for European in .terfervnoe. The history of past efforts like those of Arabi Bey's leave no room for doubt as to what will be the outcome of the present contest. The Egyptians may make a show of resistance for a ahorL time, but the stnigglo against the .military power of England will be of ahort duration, and the rebellion will be crushed like an egg shell. Wherever John Bull's money is invested he will aee that the securities are kept good, cofat wliat it may.
SOME of the Indianapolis papers are 'trying to throw dirt on Mr. Hendricks bocauso he presided at the Democratic Convention of Marion county last Saturday, intimating that it was a sacrifice of dignity for him to do so. So far from tliis being the case, Mr. Hondricks ought to be applauded fordoing as he did. He aet an example which other distinguished citizens would do well to follow. No man, whatevor his social or official position, should deem it a lowering of himself to participate in the political proceedings of his ward, township or county. On the contrary it is his duty io do so, and the refusal of so large a bulk of business and professional men to discharge their political duties in this xospoct, is one of the most unfavorable aymptoins of our political system. It is the absence of the respectable, slippered citizens from tho primary sources of powor, which ronders fraud, dishonesty and corruption possible. Those things Jiave boon said so often, and by all parties, that it seems singular Mr. Hendricks should lie criticised for pursuing the very course which it Is agreed, on all hands, that every good citizan ought to pursue.
"THK evil results of excessive boor drinking are woll illustrated lti Cincinnati, whore tho numlwr of cases in the police court against women for disturbing the joace, and figuring in family quarrels is so large as to attract notico to itbe subject. The Gn/ette says: "This •showing of the docket is the result of -beer drinking in homes. A woman is oasilv p»'isuaded to drills beet under tho itupr««*ion that it gives her strength. OnctMutroduced as a family beverage, the abuse of its use appeal's to generally follow xuier or later." Vet the police tuiv that the ivines which c:"»iue before the police court are but a small per cent, of those who escape arrest by reason of their respe tal)ility. or the contlnement of.their piarrels within doors. This would seem to indicate that leer is nut altogether the harmless and innocent beverage which it is frequently represented to be.
"THK great English irou-clads, with 'tfaoir tremendous gnns, soon battered down the forts of tho Egyptians, at
Alexandria, with litt!o loss to their sddo. But tho Turks and Aral* had thoir revenge. After Arabi Boy had withdrawn froui the city with his army, it was given over to pillage, a fearful massacre of the Kuropoans residents ensued, and tho city was wrapped in flames. How many inoffensive people were butchered is not known, but the report# indicate a large number. The first chapter in the last Bgjptian war is thus rendered as horribles* its numerous oriental predecessors.
AT the annual dinner given by Oeo. W. Child*. of the Philadelphia Ledger, the other day. to the newsboys, 760 members of this lively profession •saUxi at the tables, which groaned boneath 450 pounds of meat, 240 quarts of cream, '.XW pi«s six barrels of oakea, five boxes of bananas, and other good things in proportion. This annual dinner is doubtless the finest meal the boys get from the
year's
COURTESY.
Emerson, in
one
AFTKR
beginning to its end,
and that it is thoroughly appreciated, and full justice done to it, is fairly indicated bv the figures given above.
"OtAR* Bm.t.it declares that ail the women who stand ndde before the New York artists for models are bad, and that ail the talk about pure girfa engaging in nach work is pure nonsense. Cisra has the support of common sense on hor in this controversy.
of bis brilliant essays,
says: "Give a boy address and accomplishments, and you give him the mastery or palaces and fortunes wherever he goes he has not the trouble of earning or owning them they solicit him to enter and possess."
Like many of Mr. Emerson's utterances, these words are to be taken in a repiesentative, and not in a strictly literal sense, and so taken they announce an important truth. Who has not, within his own limited experience, seen many illustrations of this fact Young men go out from our schools and col leges, some to plod and toil with the utmost persistence and industry, and yet make but slow headway, while others, with not half so much real ability, but possessing the rare faculty of making friends, surprisingly outstrip them in the race of life. The difference is that one is dependent wholly upon himself for everything, while the other calls around him a troop of friends who are always ready to help him in whatever way they can, and they can help h'yn in many ways. There is never a time nor a calling.n which well-wishers are not able to be of substantial service to any man, as all have found out, sooner or later, in the practical experience of life. The number of one's friends is largely the measure of his success, and the number of his friends depends more on his manner and address than upon anything else.
The value of a pleasant, courteous manner is estimable? It was Lord Chesterfield who told his son that he would better pick up a lady's fan with grace and courtesy, than give a thousand pounds grudgingly. And he was right. It is far less what we do, than how we doit what Jwe say than how we say it, that counts for or against us. A recipient of charity was wont to say that sho did not like to have her food flung at her. No one does. Better a favor refused in a spirit of kindly regret tbau granted with a glum and sour faoe.
There was a time when possibly too much stress was put on tho exterior graces of manner. It is certain that not enough attention is paid in this agejand especially in our own country, to courtesy and politeness. Better a little of the French excess than the American stingeness. The explanation is not far to seek. In tho natur* of things an old country gives more attention to matters of deportment than a new one. But a polite and winning mauuer is well worthy of cultivation, both by nations and individuals. The society of polite peoplo is bettor and ploaaanter than that of boors. All ideas cf pecuniary bonetit aside, tho court sous person is letter satisfied with himself and others, and therefore happier than one whoisgrum, shy or rude. A cheerful, sunny-tem-lered person, whatever his faults or defects may be, draws others around him as by some magic power, while the cynical or sullen repel as inevitably.
In any view of the case therefore, it is woll worth while for youug people of either sex to oultivato a spirit of habitual politeness and parents cannot bogin too soon to systematically train their children in the matter of oorreot deportment. By so doing they can put into their hands a great power for good to themselves and others, by giving them an increased influonoa among men and women.
applying bad epithets to each
other until their powers of patient endurance were exhausted, two Louisville editors, Col. Seal's and John B. Gaines, happened to moet In the street, and began a mutual assault with revolvers. Each man emptied his weapon, making ten or eleven shots in all, tho result being a wound in the foot for Seal's,Gaines untouched, and an inoffensive merchant shot through the arm by one of the stray I mils. This is hardly the kind of shooting we should expect from Keutucky gentlemen of honor.
THK Indianapolis Republicans who count on carrying the election in that city next fall by the help of disaffected Irish Democrats, are likely to oome out at the small end of tho horn. Some of '•the byes" may feel pretty sore just now, but will manage to get to the voting places, In November, and will turn up smiling,with the old-fashlonod ticket in their hands.
TUB modern Telegraph Is able to work a miracle. It tells by noon the events at Alexandria until evening, so much does it outrun the.chariot of the sun in his course through the heavens. The difference in time is seven aud one half hours that is, when it is noon here it is half (iast seven in the evening at Alexandria.
POOR'S railroad manual for
IH8S
shows
that during the year 1881,9,858 miles of railroad wera built, the greatest number for any one y«r. Tba greatest mileage forany previous year was In 1851, when 7,379 miles wore built. The mileage for 1882 will, it is estimated, be fully equal to that of 1881, and may slightly exceed it.
Or the nearly %,000,000 farms in the United States more than 1,000,000 are cultivated by renters, a larger proportion than most persons would have supposed. More than one half the entire number.of farms range from 50 to 500 acre*, and there are only 28,578 which contain 1,000 acres and over.
THK people of Kansas have planted 98,10© acres of trees, about 6.000 acres of which are black walnut. At this rate
the western pmirtaa will soon become answer time: "Mak wooded. one.*
TERRE HAUTE SATPSDAY EVHftTOrg MAIL
THK papers of New Orleans,where the Crescent Rifles reside, those of Nashville, the home of the Porter Rifles and those of Little Rock, honored by the fame of the Quapaw Guards, join in disparaging the decision of the judges in the late military contest at Indianapolis. Memphis, the home of the Chickasaws, on the other hand, is of the opinion that the judges were men of learning and judgment. It is, of course impossible to satisfactorily account for this difference of opinion, but as the judges are West Point men, they may be expected survive even such adverse criticism. ...
SAYINGS AND DOINGS.
Oscar Wilde says the Mormons area people "with ofty attributes for the beautiful."
Speaking of a sentence of eighteen months' imprisonment for stealing au umbrella, the Boston Post screams out "Who in this world is safe?"
Dr. Fowler, of Buffalo, knows of noth ing more productiveof disease thau street sprinkling. Heat and moisture, he says, make the germs thrive.
Pork-eaters will take fresh courage. The little encysted auimalculse which they devour are not always trichina?. In many cases they are only harmless spiroptera?.
One of the Malley lawyers described the mouth of a witness as "stretching across the wide desolation of his face, the sepulchre of rum and the fountain of falsehood." No wonder they got off.
A story of a miracle gains credence at Bristol, Pa. Miss Bewley, after having remained in bod sixteen years, was so affected by the prayers of a meeting called especially in her behalf that she got up and walked, and has since been pretty well.
A circus manager arranged to have a wax baby dropped from a second-story window in every town which his show visited, just in time to be caught by one of his athletes. The performance was successful several times, and crowds went to see the hero of the rescue, until the newspapers exposed the trick.
The Presbyterian ministers of Chicago devoted a whole day of discussion to the question: "What are we to lielieve concerning Hados?" At the end of the discussion there was no general agreement on the subject, except that nearly all the brethren thought the more it was discussed the more difficult it seemed.
The Rhodes brothers had an iusurance policy on their mother's life, at Bradford, Pa. She was in feeble health, and the prospect of her early death led tho sons to quarrel boforohaud over tho division of the money. When they began to fight, the spectacle so affected Mrs. Rhodes as to bring on an attack of heart disease, and she dropped dead.
Tho small circuses cannot fill so many tents as the big concerns, but their advertisements are quite as wonderful. One of them, which does not even announce tho name of its proprietor, is "a glorious and colossal consolidation of big railroad shows." It is "an enterprise surpassing in magnitude, outvieing in splendor, and overwhelming in attractions any amusement corporation ever thought of sinoe the world began.
Can anyone compound a hotter receipt for getting along with hot weather than this, by an Oshkosh philosopher? He was traveling with his son, and the youngster, prostrated by the sun beating down upon them as they were riding across a shadeless prairie, complained bitterly to his father. The parent's heart was touched, and out of the depths of his love—a love guided by level-liead-edness—ho said to his son: "Now seo here, Jiximy, just you take a good grip on yourself and make up your mind that vou'll stan' it."
THK '^Church of the future" is thus beautifully outlined by Rev. J. Freeman Clark, of Boston. May his ideal be fully realized "The church of the future will become more spiritual as it becomes more rational. What we often call unbelief will turn out in theond to be the deepest belief of all. We are not to have less religion than our fathers had, Out more, infinitely more. Our fatuers saw God in the interrupted course of nature, in special Providences, peculiar answers to
fous
rayer,
isolated prophecy, one miracurevelation. We shall see God In the majesty of universal, unvarying law in a Providence which cares for the worm below the sod no less than for the seraph before the throne in the Spirit of God answering prayer by a law as sure as that of gravitation and in revelation, which ntme not merely once to Moses or Christ, but which has come to God's prophets in every age and land, and which comes now to every open soul and waiting heart. Religion will not hereafter begin with anxiety about oar soul, but in a wish to help the souls of others. A man will not lie considered converted when be has gone through some inward experience which is to make him sure of Heaven, but when he has given himself to helping his fellow-men. He has begun to be good who has begun to do good. We are born again when we pass out of selfishness into generosity, out of love of our own happinem into the wish to make others happy. We are not in Christ's way of salvation until we are forgetting 'all about onr own salvation in sympathy with those who are most needy."
HE TOOK THE HIST.
A clergyman aroeo to address a Sun-day-ecbool class, and to gain time to arrange his thoughts, he oegan: "Well, children, what sort of a speech shall I make?" following the qoery with an appropriate pause, and intending to go on with the lines which he had selected. To his astonishment a hand went op in the bade part of the room. Thinking that a choice by the scholars might suit them, the little fellow and help tbem, given leave to speak, and the good man was taken «?nlirelv by surprise
GAMBLERS AND CARDS. AN
INTERESTING TALK WITH
punctually 5ss (as, inde
rise when the a short
The hint was taken.
AN
OLD
GAMBLER.
TRICKS OF THE TRADE EXPOSED.
A reporter of the Philadelphia Sunday Item had a talk with an old gambler the other day, in the course of which the latter said the most wonderful card tricks done by a prestidigitateur are mere child's tricks compared with what a skillful gambler will do with a pack of cards. France, England and the United States furnish nine-tenths of all the cardsharpers—what we call the experts. This is, perhaps, because we have the most
Sepended
erfeqt cards in the worid, that cau be on everv time. The French cards, which are also used in England and America, are better made, better printed, and more reliable than any others. The best cards of all are made in America, but they are still called French cards, as distinguished from the Span ish, Chinese and others. The Spanish cards are ornamented with soldiers, swords and guns, and are generally rough, and very poorly made. Some of our best cards'in this country are what we know as "crooked," made by special dealers expressly for professionals. These are marked cards, and of course there's no use of auy outsider playing against them. They cost a little more than the others, but they are always better made and worth more money. If you want to make a suretRing of game of poker, use one of these packs. But don't get caught at it: it might be dan-
Ana vou must make
gerous. up your
mind to give the pack at least a week of hard stuav before you try to use it, so that you can tell "every 'mark on the backs as easily a9 you could tell the letters of the alphabet. "Then it is actually a fact, is it, that some manufacturers" make cards with marked backs for the use of gamblers?" "True?" exclaimed the gambler, stirringinanotherspoonful of sugar. "Bless you, I didn't suppose there was anybody in the world that was fresh enough to doubt it. They make them ana sell them, and we use them. If there is any doubt about it in your mind I will show yon one of their catalogues which I happen to have in my pocket. But first look at this pack, which is marked by hand."
The gambler produced from an inner pocket an ordinary pack of cards, and a search of ten minutes or more failed to disclose the slightest mark on the backs that did not belong there. It was only after the marks had been pointed out that they could be found by any ordinary observer. The backs were covered with little five-pointed stars, and by au ingenious system of marking on diagonally opposite corners of each card the dealer could tell the "size aud suit" of each card dealt, and, could,of course, tell just what cards bis opponent held. The system was nothing out tho use of tiny dots, a dot between two of the points denoting one thing, and in some other understood position signifying another. "An outsider dooen't nave much chance, unless he can flnd a 'square game,' the reporter suggested, after examining into the mysteries of the marked card's. "A square game!" echoed the gambler, throwing as much contempt as possible into his voice. "When you see the devil looking about for a place to warm his feet you may expect to flnd a 'square' faro game. Some people believe there are square games, but that's only a sign of their freshness, If you will think about it seriously for a T8w minutes you will see that it is utterly impossible for any gambler to be honest. I will go as far as to take myself for an example— and every man 'has a pretty good opinion of himself, no doubt. I wouldn't pick a man's pocket, nor raise a check,as you know. And I make a point never to pass a beggar withont giving him something, but that's for luck. But if I were playing poker or faro with a man and saw a chance to make a big stake by merely shifting the cut, do you suppose I'd shift or not? Of course I!would so quick it would make your head swim. Unless a party of outsiders sit down among themselves for a little amusement there is no such thing as an absolutely 'square' game. I hear about So and So and What's his Name, both celebrated gamblers, being thoroughly honest men, and Jso charitaole1.! It makes mo sick to hear it. They can afford t$ be charitable for they get their money sasilv enough, and plenty of it. It is a hard thing to say about one's own companions, but no real gambler is thoroughly honest. However well he may keep" up appearances, get right down into his heart and you will see.be is a tbief. "You look upon me, I suppose, as a sort of demon in breeches, aud half expect to see my cloven foot. lam not as bad, however, as you think. It is not the out-and-out professionals, like myself, who are to be feared. Outsiders with any brains atall know whatweare, and keep away. I will tell you the people to look out for when you play cards. You won't play with a professional unless you are a fool: but you will play with the card-sharper who haunts the clubs, respectably dressed, with passable manners, and a knowledge of card tricks that no honest man ought to have. There is hardly a club in this city where card-playing is not allowed, and this shark is to be found on hand every day as iness
as if be were going to buseed, be i»—the only busi-
ness he has), watching and waiting for victims. Oh, I know Dim so woll! with his foreign accent, his snave manner of talking, bis wrinkled face and hyena eves, waiting for prey. Spot him when you seo him. He is the lowest and meanest kind of a thief. He sits about a clnbroom waiting for a chance to swindle young doughnuts who have more money in their pockets than they should have. If this shark is caught at any of his dishonest tricks, he immediately falls back upon the threadbare argument that he is a gentleman playing with gentlemen. A pretty gentleman be is! A snake of tho very worst kind to be trodden upon. Professional gambler as I am, I look down with contempt upon theeard sharper, who continually pretends to be what he is not, and continually tries to conceal what he really is. If yon knew bow many of these fellows there really are in this city, you would then know how many nets there are for silly young men to walk into. Why, I ate a swell dinner last evening with an old fellow who wouldn't have a dime to bless himself with if his young friends didn't consider it a privilege to be allowed to play poker with him. And be makes it an expensive privilege for them, yon may depend." _____________
A very rich man lately died in New York, leaving two families with who* he lived in turn one was his family by a lawful, the other by a morganatic marriage. He provided handsomely for both by bis wi!l, with a thin disguise for the one in millions, for the other in hundred thousands only. And one of New York's first clergymen holds this man ap to young men as a model! Great the power of the golden calf!
THE PROCESS OF DEATH.
A SPIRITUALIST WHO SAW HER MOTHER'S SPIRIT SEPARATE FROM HER BODY.
Religio-Philosophical Journal. A complete description of the spirit's departure from the body was recently given by Kyra Carpenter in a letter to Mr. Joseph'Baker. She was treated by mesmerism for epileptic tits, and soon became a good clairvoyant, and eventually a seer of spirits. "My mother and I had often talked of death and immortality. She frequently magnetized me when she was in health, and I was in the clairvoyant state, by her assistance, when the spiritual sight was first given me. By your assistance Baker's) acquired the power of putting my.-elf in that state without the assistance of an operator. She had often requested that I would, at the time of her decease, put myself in that state, and carefully notico the departure of the spirit from the body. Her failing health admonished her that her end tor this life was near, but she viewed it with calmness, for her boughts were full of the life to come, and hopes placed on her Father in Heaven. Death bad no terrors tor her. When she felt its approach she sent for me, as I was absent attending an invalid. I cameand remained constantly with her until she left us for a belter home. Her last words were addressed to me. Perceiviug that she was dying, I seated myself in the room, and'was soon in a state of spiritual clairvoyance. With the opening of the inner sight, the painful scene of mother's deatu was changed to a vision of glory—beautiful, angelic spirits present. watching over her. Their faces were ladiant with bliss, and their glittering robes were like transparent snow. 1 could feel them as material, and yet they communicated a sensation I can only describe by saying it seemed like compressed air. Some of these heavenly attendants stood at ber head and sonic at her feet, while others seemed to be hovering over her form. They seemed so pure, so full of love, that it was sweet to look at them as they watched the change now taking place" in my mother. "I now turned my attention more directly to my mother, and saw the external sense leave her. First the power of sight departed, and then a veil seemed to drop over the eyes then the hearing, and next the sense of feeling. The spirit began to leave the limbs, and they died first the light that filled each part, in every fiber, drew up toward the chest. As fast as this took place the veil seemed to drop over the part from whence the spiritual life was removed. A ball of light was now gathering just above her head, and this continued to increase as long as the spirit was connected with the body. The light left the braiu last, and then the silver cord was loosed. Tho luminous appearance soon began to assume the human form, and 1 could see my mother again! But oh, how changed! She was light and glorious, arrayed in robes of dazzling whiteness, free from disoaso, pain and death. She seemed to be weloomed by the attending spirits with the joy of a mother over the birth of a child. ''She paid no attention to me, or any earthly objoct, but joined her companions, and they seemed to go away through the air. I attempted to follow them in the spirit, for I felt strongly attracted and longed to go with my mother. I saw them ascend, till they seemed to pass through an open space, when a mist came over my sight and I saw them no more."
UTTERMILK AS SUMMER FOOD, DRINKAND MEDICINE. A recent writer asserts that for a hotweather drink, nothing equals buttermilk. "It is," he says, "both drink and food, and for the laborer is the best known. It supports the system, and even in fever will cool the stomach admirably. It is also a most valuable domestic remedy. It will euro dysentery as well, and more quickly than any other remedy known. Dysentery is really a constipation, and is the opposite of diarrboBa. It is inflammation of the bowels with congestion of the 'portal circulation'—the circulation of blood through the bowels and liver. It is a disease always prevalent in the Summer and Autumn. From considerable observation I feel warranted in saving that buttermilk, drank mcderatefy, will cure every case of it certainly when taken in the early stages."
£-1FE LOTIONS FOR FRECKLES. The following-are safe for use in "domestic medicine:" 1. Moisten the finger with water, dip it into finely-powdered nitre, and apply it to the freckles. Patiently continued, this remedy is said to be a sure one. 2. A solution of borax in water—a drachm to the pint—applied night and morning. 3. Sal" ammonia}, one drachm pure water, one pint lavender or cologne water, one-quarter ounce mixed, and applied with tho finger night and morning.
Besides these, there are various mercurial washes and ointmeuts, such as the citrine,which are efficacious in many skin troubles, but are attended with such danger that some skilled physi clan or some educated druggist should direct their use in every case.
POWDER
Absolutely Pure*
TtaJr powder never varies. A marvel of parity, strength and wbotaeomenn*. Morn economical Chan the ordinary kinds, ami cannot be
HM
In competition with the mul
titude of low tent, short weight, alum or phosphate powders. Hold only In can*. ROYAL BAKING POWTJKBCO„ 1M Wall st N.
Corsets and Shoulder Braces.
as. DOUGHERTY iovltea the ladlea desiring an elegant fitting corjct, made .n in color, or any way to salt. Call and leave your mewrare. 10S N. itbstreec.
tn &i
An Old Story!
And Nothing Unusual.
"BETWEEN SEASONS THE lUY "GOODS TRADE, FROM THE ATLANTIC TO THE PACIFIC, REDUCES "PRICES TO REDUCE STOCK. "WE HAVE TOO MANY GOODS "FOR OUR OWN SAKE, HUT "OUR CUSTOMERS WILL REAP "THE BENEFIT IN OUR "REGULAR SUMMER CLOSING SALES.
Our Heaviest Stocks
ARE IN
GINGHAMS
WHITE GOODS
HOUSEFURNISHINGS
YOU WILL FIND
nrivaled Assortments
—At—
Our Closing Prices
WHITE SPREADS
—AND—
TABLE LINENS
Will be sold nt
A Reduction that Counts.
SUMMER SILKS
—Ami—
LIGHT DRESS GOODS
—Ale—
Heavily Reduced in Price
—HUT—
Call at each Counter
—FOR—
REDUCED GOODS,
you will flnd them.
EXTRA BARGAINS IN PARASOLS SUMMER WRAPS
SUMMER SUITS
SUMMER HOSIERY GLOVES FANS.
HOBERG, ROOT & 00.
518 and 520 Main street.
Professional Cards.
R. ANGELINE L. WILSON
Offers her service*
To tho Ladles mid Children of Torre Haute.
Office and limidenoe—231 sooth Seventh Street. Office bourn from 1 to 3 p. in.
J. RICHARDSON. B. W. VAN
VA
UAH,
RICHARDSON & VAN VALZAH
DENTISTS.
OFFICE—Southwest corner Fifth and Main streclH, over National State Hank (entrance on Fifth street. Communication by Telephone.
DR. 11. F.TOM LIN'. I»i J. P. TOM MM. Ft B. F. TOMLIN'S, llMp«*iiMir null ('little
No. 41".U. Ohio Street,
TKHKK 11AUTK, INDIANAWill devote hi* entire attention to his specialties. .Send tor pa]cr containing certllicutos of cure*.
I)r J. F. TO.M LIN will do a gem-ntl practice giving all calls prompt attention, duy or night
VX. II. HPKNCEU, (Late of Illinois)
HATIJKMH W. 1IANNA
JJANNA & SPENCER,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW. OFFICE: Houthwent oorner of Third and Ohio Ktreebt up Rtairw, Terre Haute, Ind.
Will practlcc In the court* of thin and adjoining countIOHall
and In the federal court*
of Indiana and IlllnoiM. Will give *trlct attention to collections, examination ot titles and settlement of eatate*.
W. BALLEW,
DENTIST,
•aee, 4»S »*re«», over «®nre*tian»rjr TKKKKHAUTB, IS I).
Can be tount) In offloe night and day,
CO.
LINCOLN,
DBiniT
Offlee, H'xth, oppoaile P. O. Kxtracting and artificial teeth upeclaltlea. AU work warranted. frtAw-ir)
C^ALTH0MA8,W*«etoaa*k«r
•ptlelu aad
For the trade. Ko. 615 Main street, «1#B of big man with watch.
N
OTICE.
THK
Eldredge Sewing Machine OMce
Has been changod to
Fisk'8 Stone Pnmp Building,
No. 117 Booth Third street, between Ohio and Walnut, west side.
It is Warranted.
It is the most oomplete, desirable machine ever offered to the public. Being the latest, It has the advantage of having very desirable and new improvement*.
Dont boy until you see It Harry MeUeker, late solicitor for the White, wil.1 be glad to nee his old customers.
Office, 117 South Third street, second door north of Foots, Hunter A Co' Livery Stable.
W. EL FISK, Agent.
&££* week In yoar own town. Terms and outfit free. Addrew H. Uallett A Co. Portland, Maine.
