Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 13, Number 45, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 May 1883 — Page 2

THE MAIL

A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

TKKKE HAUTE, MAY 5, 1883

TWO EDITIONS

Of tbis Paper an* published. She FIRST EDITION, on Thursday Evening, bati a large circulation in the surrounding towns, where It is sold by newsboys and agents. The SECOND EDITION, on Saturday Evening, goes into the bands of nearly ever) reading person tn the city, and the farm enof this Immediate vicinity. Bvery Week's Issue Is, in fact,

TWO NEWSPAPERS,

In which all Advertisements appear for THE PRICE OF ONE IHKUE.

SA YINOS AND DOINGS.

Tbe Cleveland Leader thinks tbe new trade paper, tbe Cornet, has come to stay.

Estimate* have been prepared showing that Peter Cooper gave away $4,000000 during bis life.

Young men of the highest fashion now have the soles of their shoe* black—' an idea stolen from Paris.

A glass coffin is tbe latest inveittion. Tbis will give tbe deceased a cbance to •ee wbat kind of a procession be has.

A medical journal says an onion eaten just before retiring is a cure for inaom nis. It's rough on your bed-fellow though.

It is said that ex-Senator Kellogg, of Louisiana, is 8 far a victim to superstition that, although wealthy, he ba* never yet made a will, believing that if he did so his death would immediately follow.

The base ball fever is running uncommonly liii/th In Philadelphia, and has at last attacked the cripnlea. Two team* have been made up entirely of maimed men. One is called tbe Snorkey Bane Ball Club, and is composed entirely of one-armed men tbe other named tbe Hoppers is made up of due-legged men.

Mr. Curtis, in Harper's Easy Chair, believes that woman will never reach her proper development until she ceases to be'under tho dictation of men. "1" a world wh«re the tacit understanding is that women must study to please men, the vanity and lolly and mad extravagance of the fashionable womeu are mainly due to men."

A New Heaven girl's will, which left her property to her lover, is to bo contested by her father, who abandoned his family sevoral years before, but turned up promptly when he heard of her property, and by her uncle who brings claims for board, washing, use of carriages, etc., whon she visited him on his own invitation.

Pennsylvania is evidently no place to play at matrimony. About a year ago Dennis Cronin and Annie Powers of Altooua, slxtoen and fifteen, stood up in a louely place and proclaimed themselves married. Cronin subsequently ofton acknowledged her as bis wife. Hhe became a mother and be deserted her. The judge said he trust support her. In default of ball, Dennis went to jail.

A suit for fl,000 damages has been brought by a Virginian who contracted a bad cold through waiting for a train. Tho train was advertised to stop at a certain station, and failed to do so, and the would-be passonger had to stay all night. Fellows who have tramped around all night,* or waited in vain at some way-station to see the headlight, will note this "reform" and tho decision of the court with interest.

Michael MoCabe was buried twenty feel under ground at Louisville by the brick and oarth of a vault in which he wss at work. Nobody doubted that he was smothered to death at once, aud no effort was made to recover his body until three hours later. Then the digging proceeded slowly, as there seemed no need of hurry, and half a day elapsed before the bottom was reached. Then the voice of McCabe was heard, begging the p»on to work faster. He was alive, and hurt only by bruises from the bricks that protected bim.

Although David Davis weighs only .00 (tounds, he will never, if he can help it, risk his weight with anybody else in an elevator. He pushes in and says: "Now do go right ou don't wait for anybody else." If tho bell rings, be catches the conductor by the arm and says: "Don't take anybody else on it is positively dangerous you know. The thing might break down." Yet his ad diUonal weight is only the weight of a medium aized man. It is the same as if two such men should fear the weight of one or mote to their company—which is absurd.

The Christlon at Work tells the story of a minister in an interior town in this State who, having had the afternoon services opened by the.flighty performance of a somewhat florid and decidedly ambitious choir, roue, and in the most solemn and impressive manner, announced a hymn, only the first two lines of whifh he read—

W.mt various hlndrttiw we meet In coming to the mercy seat! and then after a pause lie added: "Let us alng this hymn as though we felt it." And now thn organist, the first soprano and tbe bellow*-boy talk of realigning.

"I have never .v*C«Ud an old hangman, "seen a man condemned to be banged who did not sleep soundly tbe last night of his life and eat a hearty breakfast before mounting the aoaflold. A terrible mental strata kept up for days and weeks baa a tendency to binnt

the sensibilities. Condemned murderers suffer acutely, or so much, rather, that they cannot saflferany more. Hence as the hour of death approaches, they live in a kind of dream tbe animal in their nature predominates, and they eat and sleep in apparent disregard of the shadow of death that is upon them.'*

In Dayton, Ohio, recently, Kate Denin Wilson, the Lydia Ann of the Madison Square "Esmeralda" Company, made her entrance on the stage through tbe fire grate and was not aware of her error until some urchin, in tbe gallery in quired, "What's the matter with the door The stage car|«nter bed by some mistake placed one of tboueold fashioned wooded fire-places, where tbe doorsbould have been, and from a back view tbe door and mantel openings were about tbe same width and height.

West Indians kave a curious test for telling whether a person has negro blood in bis veins. It is called tbe nose test. The negro has no division in the gristle of tbe carliligenous portion of bis nose, such ss all of pure white blood can feel at its tip with tbe end of the finger. Tbis is tbe last thing to yield to ibe white access! m. Any negro blood is marked with a nose the gristle of which is undivided, and tbe object of putting tbis paragraph in is to prove that no person will read it through without touching the finger to the nose.

ALEXANDER F. VILLEBS, who died in Philadelphia last week, left tbis odd will, which was drawn up in July last: "My last will and testament: I leave my body to the University of Pennsylvania for dissecting purposes, and wfsb to be cremated at tbe same institution, in case 1 should happen to have any money or property at the time of iny death I leave the wbwle to tbe doctor attending me. In case I am cremated 1 wish my ashes to be thrown away, and ot given to or be viewed by anybody that bas been acquainted with me."

DURING last December a sixteen-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Brewer, of East Hartford, Conn., died, having expressed a wish that her remains be not buried. In accordance with this, her body was embalmed, and lias been kept in the parlor ever since, the undertaker making almost daily visits fur the purpose of applying chemicals of a preservative character. Tbe lather was devotedly attached to his laughter, and ever since her death it has l»en his custom to rise and dress himself at midnight aud pass the remainder of tho night in tbe room with the corpse. Atdsylight he generally returned to bis chamber. Frequent visits to the parlor were also made by him during the day, and i» is feared that bis mind has bccome -battered, as he invariably addresses the inanimate form as though his daughter was still alive. Now tTiat the matter has become public, he is building a vault in his dooryard, so that he may keep the body near.

A YOUNG woman who graduated at the Patterson High School last summer joined the training school for teachers, and, according to custom, was last week assigned a place as a substitute for a regular teacher who was ill. immediately on her appearance at the desk, large numbers of the pupils rushed out of school. The others became so boisterous and unmanageable that she was forced to dismiss the school. Angry parents waited upon the Superintendent and insisted on his dismissing her. He agreed, but by some misunderstanding she appeared at the school again, when pupils and parents were on the verge of a mob, the disturbance being quieted only by her immediate disappearance.. Whether she will make a good teaeher or a poor one is not yet known as she had no chance to try. Owing to her ancestors oversight in coming originally from Africa, her skin was discolored. Otherwise, far all that appears, she was a well-behaved and capaolo girl.

THESE doctors and scientists are doing all they can to make us miserable. We have been told of the living creatures in our food aud in our drink, and now comes a French gentleman of scientific proclivities to announce the doctrine that "The air kills more people than the sword,"' based on tbe aphorism of Pringle. The alleged "pure air" with which the doctors advise us to fill our lungs by quotidian expansion has no existence in fact if M. Camille Flammarion knows what he is talking about. It has for sometime been a theory with modern scientists that atmospheric dust is freighted with- living organisms, both animal and vegetable, and it is now determined that even tho freshest country air is filled with a host of microscopic capuscles that throb with active vitality. The number of these germs increases as population becomes denser, and they are heaviest in confined atmosphere, such as i* breathed in sleeping apartments and in assembly rooms. In dusty seasons tbe dangerous elements are in greatest quantity. At such times the microscope has revealed no less than 5,000 bacteria tn a cubic metre of air. During periods of dry heat, when tbe dust is not kept down by rain or artificial sprinkling, from .'.000 to 6,000 microbes are taken in with every cubic metre of air respired. The dust that settles in a room is poisonous, and in a single gramme of such dust Paris micograpbers have fannd 1, 300.000 bacteria. These bacteria are invisible germs—eggs, spores. They produce, when Introduced into the system insufficient quantities, typhoid fever or scarlatina, smallpox or diptheria, according to kind. In hospital wards these germs are found in greatest numbers, though tbey are plentiful in houses of thickly settled portions of cities. These microbe** exist in water also, less in rain tban in running water that traverse populous regions. But if tbeee figures are to frighten us we can neither eat, drink, nor breathe, and might as well fall a poo a sword and have done with life.

A gentletnan who bad loat his wife, whose maiden name was IJttle, addressed tbe following to a Miss Moore, a lady of diminutive stature:

I've lost tbe Little ones I bad My ivmrt issadandsore 8o now I ahoofct be very glad

Tte have a little Moore.

To which the lady sent tbe following answer: I pjlty much the loss yoo*ve bad— itrief *m» mm* endure:

Ah 't by tittle imdemtad A bttle Moors wont core.

pose

Soee

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVEfl IN MAIL

HERRMANN'S CABINET TRICK. One of tbe moat mystifying tricks of Herrmann, the magician, who i-as twice presented it in this city, is known as tbe cabinet trick. How it is done is thus explained by one who has been behind tbe Bcenes:

Tbe cabinet is painted inside in diamond squares of white and black for the puj

of introducing the "sphinx," Or

mirror delusion. In this trick, in which two mirrors are placed at an angle of sixty degrees, with tbe point toward the audience, it is necessary to bavetheadjacent sides and background of tbe same shape and color, as tbe sides are uniformly on tbe mirrors and produce tbe optical illusion that tbe background is continuous, and of tbe same color and material. Behind tbeae two mirrors, which tbe considerate adjusts as soon as be is alone in tbe cabinet, be is invisible to the spectators in front. The trick of transporting a man from the interior of •be cabinet to tbe doorway of the bouse is accomplished in tbis way: Herrmann tells tbe man to go out and get bis butcher kuife and sack to catch and kill the "monkey" in tbe cabinet. This man

into the wings, but another man, resaed exactly like him, comes on with the kuife and bag, and is hustled into the cabinet, where be bides with the "monkey" behind the mirrors. Meanwhile tbe butcher goes out of tbe stage door on to tbe street, and comes iu by the main entrance. Herrmann keep* on talking to tbe man inside the closed cabinet till he sees tbe butcher at tbe back of the parquet circle. He then opens the cabinet, shows that it is apparently empty, and calls out "Where are you?" The butcher calls out, "Here I am," and runs down the center aisle and on to tbe stage. Tbe descriptions can be relied on as being accurate.

HE OOT THAR\

Going down tbe great Jackson route from Grenada, Miss., a regular old homespun native of the State entered the sleeping car and paid for a berth. He bad never been inside of a car of tbe kind, and everything astonished bim. When the porter came to make up the beds I saw that the native was greatly perplexed, but as he made no direct appeal it wasn't my duty to post him. He was the first one to make preparations for bed. He glanced anxiously around, pulled off one boot, and then took a rest for five minutes. When the other buot came oft he had solved the problem. Pushing his boots under the berth be started for the rear platform,and nothifig was heard from him for about ten minutes. Then he put his head into the door and called out: "All you 'una in thar', look out, for I'm coming!"

And come he did. He had disrobed while standing on tho platform, made a bundle of coat, vest and pants, and as he shot into bed after a run up tbe aisle, he gurgled out: "Old Mississip may be a little slow, but she alius gits thar' just the same!"

BETRAYED BY HIS TEETH. Charles A. Bassett was arrested at New Comerstown, Ohio, last Saturday, charged with stealing an express package. The package was a phBteboard box audit was discovered that the thief, on opening it, had held the edge of the box with his teeth while he untied the string around it. The thought flashed through tbe detective's mind that tbe thief must have been a one-armed man, aud from tbat moment they shadows# Cbtirlea .A. Bassett, who has only one arm. Tbe detective got into Bassett's confidence, aud finally induced him to bite into a piece of wax. The impression was preserved ami a cast made, which was found to correspond exactly with the marks on the package, and lJaasett was arrested.

HEAVY PANCAKE GRIDDLES. From the Mechanical Engineer. Rufus Brawn, an unsophisticated Vermonter, accidentally broke the griddle on which flapjaefes for the family were baked. He got a two-inch board and marked out tbe size of the broken uteusil, and sent it to a foundry to have one made, supposing they would "thin it down." When be went to get Jt, he was amazed to find it weighed sixty pounds. —American Machinist.

Well, Rufus was all right, if he had only known it. Pancake griddlea VA inches thick are better than thin ones, for they hold the heat steadily. In large hotels the griddles are 1% aud 2 inches thick, permanent fixtures on tbe ranges. Keep your griddle, Rufus. Don't plane it down.

A TENDER MEETING. No word'was spoken when they met, By either—sad or gay,

Lnd ye And yet one badly smitten was, As was remarked next day, The* mat by chance this autumn eve,

With neither giance nor bow, They often came together so— A freight train and cow.

THERE is nothing in tbe realm of thought quito so extravagant as tho revel, into which tbe mind of a mau with an empty purse, will frolic. An individual of this type put one foot over his knee the other day, and remarked that he bad been supremely happy for five minutes. "I imagined I had 110,000. What a sum that is. I bought me a pair of fine shoes—they were dandies, and six pair of silk hosiery. I bought me two undereuits—the very finest, and two oversuit®—the very latest, Then I went to the lunch house, where it breaks a man's heart to give up a nickle—and ordered a supper, which paralyzed tbe cook, and made tbe old gang sick to hear it given. Then 1 hired a hack, and rode the balance of tbe night. Lord wbat a nigbt it was! I was just baring a gallop of splendor— when I laid me down and died. And that would be my luck if I ever was to get 910,000."

CURE FOR CORNS.

Place tbe feet for half an hour, two or three nights successively, into a pretty strong solution of common soda. Tbe alkali dissolves the indurated cuticle and the corn comes away, leaving a little cavity which, however, apon fills up.

Another way is to soak ivy leaves in vinegar daring tbe space of fifteen days: then place a leaf or part of a leaf over the corn renew it every morning, and scrape off with pumioe stone, dipped in vinegar each time, the hard portion of skin that is detached. Tbe vinegar acts by stimulating tbe absorbents aad tbe friction hastens their action. The pumice-stone and vinegar will answer tbe purpose, if need every morning.

Corns between tbe toes are generally mora painful than any others, and are frequently so situated as to be almost inaccessible to tbe usual remedies. Wet ting hartaborn or cases, core tbem.

LAVGH, MOTHER, LAUGH? Mothers do Bot laugh enough. The house keeping is so onerous, tbe children so often trying to nerves and temper, the servant most exasperating, and even John, kind, good husband that he is, cannotjunderstandlill our vexations and discouragements, and so wearied do we often feel that it is too much for the household to depend on us in addition to all our cares, for social sunshine as well. Yet the household does, and it must. Father may be bright and cheery, bis laugh ring out, but if tbe mother laugh fails even the father's cbeertuliiess seems to lose some of its infection. In tbe sad but forcible liues of Joanna Bailie's dramas— Her little child baa caught the trick of grief And bigued amid its playthings— we may catch a glimpse of the stern repressed life at Bothwell manse, where "the repressior of all emotions, even the geuilest, seems to have been tbe lesson. I remember well hearing a lady say, ••When I was a little child, I used to wishso often tbat my mother would look cheertul."

Then laugh, mother, even if you do feel almost too weary to exert the facial muscles, and you have to make a pitiful effort which aomes nigh bringing tears instead of a laugh. You will feel better for the effort, and so will the children. The little ones, unconsciously to you aud themselves, (.re catching tbe expression of countenance which will go far to brighten or cloud some future home. 1 ben laugh, mother—parlor, nursejy, and kitchen all feel the effect of your smile or frown. Aud when the mother a eyes are closed, the lips and bands forever still, there is no sweeter epitaph which children and friends can give than "She was always brigbtand cheerful."

THINGS WORTH KNOWING. Brain workers should choose their food with care, ao it may not oppress the stomach, and arrange ibeir hours of eat ing so as not to let vigorous brain work come during tbe tiuie of digesting a hearty meal. Tbe brain is a great consumer of fat combiued with phosphorus. Lean people should use fats rather more freely tban fat ones. Three onucv sof fai daily is necessary for a healthy working person.

There is more strength stored up in an ounce of hotter, than in two ounces ol the best meat.

Sweet Htapes may be takeu to great advantage in cases" of dyspepsia, liver complaint and constipation.

Fiuits do not neea imicb digestion. Orange is very easily digested. One before breakfast will often prepare the delicate stomach for a good meal, it said they will cureconsumption.

It is asserted by an eminent Englisli physician that, by the timely administration of the byperphosphitesof lltneor soda, consumption can be stamped om as thoroughly as smallpox by vaccination.

Give your children plenty of brown bread aud milk and well made corn meul bread. Corn meal pudding and milk is excellent.

Many people think they must be physicked out in the spring, but tbis is a vile practice wholly unnecessary. Good brown bread, milk, cream, fruits and oat meal will Keep the bowels in heaitby condition. Use no salted meats, hot biscuits or stale potatoes.

THE SLEEP

THAT MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN t* SHOULD HAVE.

Interview with a Doctor in the Atlanta Con stiiution. "I do not think a person should be waked at morniug, aad for this reason when a man falls asleep he is in the shop lor repairs, as the railroad men say His frame and all its intricate machinery is being overhauled and made ready for the next days work. The wear of the previous day is being repaired. Nature is doing tbat herself She knows what the tired frame needs just as she knows bow to make the beat throb and send tbe blood coursing through the veins. Then she takes that tired frame, lays it down ou a bed, surrounds it with the refreshing air of night, covers it with the soft darkness and lets the man rest. 'Tired nature's sweet restorer, balmy sleep,' visits him, and as tbe hours wear by his euergies are renewed, bis strength comes back, and finally, when morning breaks and the sunlight steals through the lattice, he opens bis eyes aud is himself again. Or if he is early to bed he awakes with tne cocks' crowing. Now who shall go to that man's side an hour before be opens his eyes and say to nature, stand aside and let him get up. He bas had enough of rest? Well, nature will say 'You can take him if you will, but-1 will charge bim with an hour's loss of sleep and I'll collect it out of his bones and nerves and his hairs and eyesight. You can't cheat me, I'll find property to levy on.'" "What would be the result if a man were to lose sleep habitually for a number of years?" "You area reporter "Yes." "You tvork how many hours aday "Fifteen. I go to work at 12 in the day time and quit at 3 at night." "How old are you now?" "Say 23." "Well, when you are 30 in years vou will be55 in aches and ailments—older tban I ain. Go ask your morning paper printers how tboy feel Are their steps elastic—are their eyes bright—are tbe^ fagged out—are they dragging out their lives But tbem b*ide the men who do day work, and bow do they compare TV "Yon nav a man ought to sleep all be wants to?f' "Yea, and so should a child. A baby abould sleep with its mother, a child should be sent to bed early and be allowed to wake up of its own accord in tbe morning. As for school girls, many a girl who has a dozen studies would be better occupied chasing butterflies or training flowers or galloping a pony or dancing. I would prefer to have daughter healthy, sweet-temper-ed, sensible and beautiful without Latin, algebra and grammer than to have one ever so advanced in her humanities, with her health ruined, or perhaps lying under a marble urn in tbe cemetery and as for man I would rather be able to earn $2 a day in tbe vigor and glory of perfect health than to draw rents from property for which I bave exchanged tbe bleasii atitution."

tbem several times a day with! eighteen months since. liko such ammonia will in most} humbugging— H. {Press.}

ing of a sound con-

HUMBUGGED AGAIN. I saw so much said about tbe merits of Hop Bitters, and my wife who was always doctoring, and never well, teased me so urgently to get her some, I concluded to be humbugged again and I am glad I did, for in ISM tban two months' use of tbe Bitters, my wife was cured, and she bas remained so for sh«

T.,St. Paul.—[Pioneer

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THESORRO WS OF GENI US. Homer was a beggar. Teience, the dramatist, was a slave. Plautus tbe roman comic poet, turned a mill.

I«e, the poet, died in tbe street. Cervantes died of hunger. Spencer died iy want. Dryden lived tn poverty and distress. Sir Walter Raleigh died on the scaffold. Tasso, tbe Italian poet, was often distressed for five shillings.

Butler lived a life of penury, and died poor. Bacon lived a life of meanness and distress.

Otway, English dramatist, died prematurely and through hunger. Steele, tbe humorist, lived a life of perfect warfare witn baiiifls.

Paul Borghese had fourteen trades, and ye* starved with all. Cbatterton, the child of genius and misfortune, destroyed himself at eighteen.

Bentivoglio was refused admittance in a hospital be had hiuiself erected. Savage died in prison at Bristol, where he was confined for a debt of £40.

The death of Collins was through neglect, firxt causing mental derangement. Goldsmith "Vicarof Wa efield" was »old for a trifle, to save him from the grip of the law.

Fielding lios in the burying-ground of the English factory at Lisbon, without a stone to mark the spot.

Milton sold bis copyright of "Paradise Lost'- for J75, at three payments, and finished his life in obscurity.

Cauiceus, the celebrated writer of the "Lusiad," the great Portuguese epic, ended bis days, it is said, iu an almsbouse, and it any rate was supported by a faithful black servant, who begged iu the streets of Lisbon (or him.

A PERFECT WRECK.

Such is the condition of tbe man who bas long battled with trouble of the kidneys, liver, bladder, aud urinary organs. No parts of the hutnau system, when ailing, "give out" sooner thau these, or soouer wreck health and life. Be warned iu time. You cannot—must not—"fool'1 with such ailments. Cure tnem at once. There is an infallible cure. It is Hums Remedy, tbe great kidney and liver inediciue. Hunt's Kemedy was never kuowu to fail. It even cures BrigUIs Disease of the kidneys.

DR. BENSON'S Skiu Cure is without a peer. It consists of both external aud internal treatment aud costs only $1. per package, at drugg"*'8-

$10,(H)0 Awarded.

"I was so sick aud low spirited that I thought would give anything to gel well: and ii any one had ensured uie the good health produced by using Simmons Liver gulator, aud charge uie a thousand dollars, would willingly ha repaid it if 1 bad it—in fact, $1(J.0U(J would be worth less to me than what it lias done for uie. GEO. 1". BARRETT,Macou,Ga.'

WILKIK COLLINS' last story is called "My Lady's Money." In this country it would have been: "Mother-in-Law bas got the stamps," or "The Old Woman is Well Heeled," remarks a paragrapher. All Americans, we are glad to say, do not employ such outrageous slang phrases as the above. Iu speaking of Ely's Cieam Balm however, they do say: "its perfect, "it cures catarrh," t's as fragrant as flowers, and certain death .o catarrh" Ac, Ac. This Balm is not a liquid or snulf, and is easily applied. Tbousauds of grateful persons attest its efficacy, and froui every section of our broad couftiuasM "One in' OUT family had catarrh for 8 years," said R. W. M'errill, Secy. Phoenix Mautif'g. Co., Grand Rapids, Micb. "She ineffectually tried other remedies and several specialty doctors in Boston. Ely's Cream Balm bas restored her health and hearing, which were considered incurable.' Try a bottle of it, reader.

CSriggM' (iijeerine Naive. The best on earth can truly be Baid of Griggs' Glycerine Salve, which is a sure cure for cuts, bruises, scalds, burns, wounds, and all other sores. Will positively cure piles, tetter and all skin eruptions. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Only 26 cents. For sale by Gulick A Co. (tf.)

Rock Candy Congta Cure. Warranted to Cure or money refunded Coughs, Colds, Hoaiseness, Throat auc Lung troubles, (also good for children.) ROCK Candy Cough Cure contains the healing properties of pure white Rock Candy with Extracts of Roots and Herbs. Only 25c. Large bottles 1.00 cheapest to by. For sale by Gulick A Co!

Wetla' '-Rough on Corns." Ask for Wells' "fymgh on Corns." 15c, Quick, complete, permanent cure. Corns, warts, bunions.

POHIIIVO Cor« for t*Jlr».

To the people of this Country we would say we have been given the Agency of Dr. Marchisi's Italian Pile Ointment—warranted to Cure or mone refunded—Internal, External, Blind Bleeding or Itching Piles. Price 50c. a Box. Forsale by Gulick A Co.

We All Believe

That it is along lane that has no turning tbat many a shaft at random sent, finds a mark the archer little meant: that no remedy sold will euro coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough ana all throat and lung troubles ao quici^iy nor permanently as Dr. Bigelow a Positive cure that our druggists, Gulick A Co. are very generous to give trial bottles of this remedy free of charge. (1)

Never »lve Up.

If you are suffering with low and depressed spirit*, lew* of appetite, general debility, disordered blood, weak constitution, headache, or any disease of a bilious nature, by all means procure a bottle of Electric Bitters. You will be surprised to see the rapid Improvement that will follow you will be inspired with new life strength and activity will return pain and misery will cease, and henceforth you will rejoice in the praise of bottle by Electric Bitters. Hold at fifty cents a Cook Bed and Oulick A Co'*.

A Great Discovery

That is daily bringing joy to the homes of thousands by saving many of their dear ones from an early grave. Truly is Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs, Goidip Asthma, Bronchitis, Hay Fever, Lam of Voice, Tickling iu the Throat, Pain in the Side or Chest, or any disease of tne Tnroat and Langs, a positive cure. Guaranteed. Trial Bottle 10 cts at Cook A Bell and Gulick 4 Co% Drug Stores Largest**, tt40. (5)

Baeklen** Aralea Kalve. Tbe greatest mcdich.t wonder of the world. Warranted to speedily core Barns Braises, Cut*, Ulcers, Halt Rheum, F«ver Bores, dancer*, Pile*,

ChilbJain*,Ot»rn*, Tetter

Chapped Hands, and all skin eruption*, guaranteed to cans In every Instance, or money refunded. S cents per box. For sale by Oook A Bell and tiullck A Co. (tf.

spi

&XP.

KIT""

Vr®4' A-

Daughiera, Hlveaaad Mslhm. Dr. Marchisi's Catbolicon, a Female Remedy—guaranteed to give satisfaction or money refunded. Will cure Female Diseases. All ovarian troubles, i. flauiination and ulceration, falling and displacements or bearing down feeling, irregularites, barrenness, change of life, leueorrhoea besides many weaknesses springing from the above, lil bV

DUV\MIUUM iiwiuop uiauj nroRucww pritiging from the above, like headache, iloating, spinal weakuess, sleeplessness,

nervous debility, pal pitation oftbe heart, Ac. For sale by Druggists. Prices $1.00 and fl.50 per Bottle. Send to Dr. J. Mprchisi, Utica, N. Y., for Pamphlet, free. For aale by Gulick A Co.

D*ciln« of Man "v

Nervous Weakness, Dyspepsia, Impotence, sexual Debility cured by "Wells' Heath Reucwer."

He All Knew

That water never runs up hill tbat kisses tast better than they look, atid are better after dark that it is better to be right than to be le't that those who take Dr. Joues' Red Clover Tonic never bave dyspepsia, costiveness, bad breatb, piles, pimples, agueand malaria diseases, poor appetite, low spirits, headache or diseases of the Kidney or Bladder. Price SO ceuts, of Gulick A Co. druggists. (1)

"I «could'nt be without Dr. Benson'* Celery and Chamomile pills if they cost $1. a pill. They cured me of neuralgia, qf 9 years standingJoseph Snyder, Paxions, Pa. 50 cts. per box, at druggista.

A CARD.

To all who aresuflbrlng from the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weaknesri early decay, loss of raanhaod, Ac., I will send a recipe that wil cure you FREE OF CHARGE. This great remedy was discovered by a missionary In Igouth America. Betad a self addressed envelope to the Uev. Joseph T. Inman, tat ion D., New York City.

JT*HE SATURDAY EVENING

MAIL,

TERRE HAUTK, 1ND.

A Paper for the People.

A MODEL HOME JOURNAL.

KNTKRTAIN1NU, IN8THUCTIVK AKh NEWSY.

BRIGHT, CLEAN AND PIP IE.

THE THIRTEENTH YEAR

The Mail has a raoord of success seld an attained by a Western weekly paper. Twelva years of increasing isipularlty prove* lt» worth. Encouraged by the extraordinary loiuoess which has attended Its publication the publisher has perfected arrangements bj which for the coming year The Mail will be more than ever welcome in the hoiue circle. Iu tills day of trashy and impure literature it should be a pleasure to all good people to uelp in extern! tug the circulation of such paper as the SATURDAY EVENING MAIL

TKKM&

One year Bix months 1 0 Three months ft

Mail and office subscrir Uons will, invariably, be discontinued at expiration of Unci Address •». ft. WRHTFALL,

Publisher Saturday Evening Mail, TKKKK HAUTE, IND.

WHERE IT IS SOLD.

E. L. Godecke 1 Opera H. R. Baker V. O, Lobby Grove Craft Terre Haute House Richard O'Brien ......National House Walsh A Smith 081 Main street ilotir.a T'm'iatid...«,or. 41h and I.Risy»-t(« HI Mrs. Elisabeth McCutcheon.ll.H E. Poplarm vriu at )y.. Paris, Ilia V. ,Oole...„ Marshall, Ilia W Smith Sullivan lnd H.S. tneheart Clinton, lnd V. C. .....Rockvllle, lnd lohn .Bauna ....Mattoon, His J. K. F/AI *do* Oreencaatle, lnd T. M. Robertson A Co Braail, lnd Foster M. Marls Annapolis lnd Joseph Somes Kulghtsvlllelnd Chas. Lee Charleston, Ilia Dennle Chew .Sacdford, lnd M. Connoway Eugene, lnd Wm. Hunt Montezuma, lnd Andrew B. Cooper Merom, lnd A. N. Wo kman „itootland, Ula W. C. PenneJI Kewas, JUIs Frank A. Gwln Carlisle, lnd

C. Wilson Casey, Uls Charley Hutchinson Dana, lnd John Laverty (*ry, lnd John W. Mlnnlck New Goshen. I nd Elmer Hitch Fcrreli, Ills James BosweH. Jos. A. WrlKht...... Grant Stiles H. A. Pratt W Bucher ... I. K.Sinks J. W. Boyer Frank Bond..

...Bloomingdalc, lnd Catlln, lnd ..Robinson, Ills —..Waveland, lnd .... ..P/NUtfiAle, lad ....Perrysvllle, iuo ^.Vermillion, 111* ».^...Ookl«wn, lnd

Johnnie Delashmutt... Sheiourne. 1ba r. Jones Pralrieton. lnd WTO. J. Duree Brldgetou, lot Harry lb. Plnkley Bowling Oreeu, ino Ernest Owen Westfleld, lip •outius Ishler- —Martinsville, III* Wm Nlchele John A.Clark J. S. Bryan ...... Harvey Stubbe...... Q. A. Buchanan..... K. Mellroy ML. C. Dlckersoo..... JoeT. *tcC/Osi»ey....

Uennlson. Jib ..Livingston, Illi

^..^..Ceaterville.

ID

.Chrisman. fill Juuson, lnd

...».W..-Maxvllle, lad Seeleyvilie, Iftd ...Yoanantown, tn

Henry Jackson Owen Kissner ...Kalibank^ K. Davis Coal Bluff, lnd RC Jackman „.DsrUnirton,lnd Mrs. Kale McCllnUick Hunters, lnd

Morrison Worthlngtoa, lnd David MJddlemus Clay City, In* Palmer Howard Paxton, Inc John A Ira Long Marts, InC Tred Carpenter J*unnton, Inc CO DuvoJ Prairie Creek, lnd W.A Kennett^.....,..-™ .Pimento, lnd Louis Oalney Bloorofleld. Ind BLHmith, P. Bel I ra ore, Ind

Kails C1 overland, ind Harvey Adam Hutsonvllle, Ilia Otlle Devers..... John Strong...

„Newraan, 111* Harmony, Ind

THE

SATURDAY EVENING MAIL,

is sent to any address

3 Month* for 50 ccnte.

Address, P. 8. WESTFALL, Terre Haute, Ind. week in your own town. Terms and outfit free. Address H. Hallett A Co. Portland. Maine.