Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 15, Number 3, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 July 1884 — Page 2
1
THE MAIL
A Paper
for the
sJier
People.
TERRE HAUTE, JT7LY 12, 1884
TWO EDITIONS
this Paper are published.
-if.Tue FIRST EDITION, on Thursday Evening has large circulation In thesurrontuling 41 town*, where It Is soldby newsboy* and t*_V agent*. ^TtM 8EOOND EDITION, on Saturday Even lag, ®oes Into the bands of nearly every {, reading person In the city, and the farmers of this immediate vicinity.
Every Week's tone is. In fact, TWO NEWSPAPERS, ,* In which all Advertisements appear for
THE PRICE OF ONE ISSUE.
*,*4 MORMON ISMS SAD SIDE.
WOES THAT ARE SUFFERED FOR THE MOST PART IN SILENCE. 1
The Effect of Polgamy Upon Original, Lawful Wive*—Incidents that Illustrate Ihe Wretched Condition jo/ Af- •*. fairs.
SALT LAKE,
Jnly 1.—The sad jside of
Mormonism is not very often touched upon. Many observers see its ludicrous features, and others the dangerous political tendencies of the hierarchy, but few discover the heart-breaking sorrows to closely veiled in hundreds of booies by fanacticism and terror. When Joseph Cook was here the other day he received a letter from Mrs. Paddock of this city telling the following story: "A short time ago an educated young newspaper tnau came to Utah from England with bis young wife. They had fallen under the influence of a Mormon missionary, and were devout believers in the teachings of the Saints. For a time they lived there unmolested, but the priesthood st length exerted their influence on the,husbana to force him into polygamy. Th? wife finding opposition In vain, at last gave her nominal consent. A second wife was brought into the bouse. In a short time the first wife became a mother, but the infant never cried aloud. It came voiceless into the world, but it wept in silence all the time. Sleeping or walking the tears flowed from its closed eyes, and in three or four weeks it died. The mother
Bald
£ile
it died of a
broken heart. Every day of its life it shed the tears that the mother had re-
Eerself
ressed before its birth. The mother soon followed the child, and both rest together on the hill."
Isaac Langton and wife have grown cray in the faith. For years they have resisted the appeals of the priesta and have lived for each other. They have poor all their lives, and both have "e hard to keep their home children. A happier old could not have been found in
ad to struggle hard to keep their home their
and rear cou
te com.*, mw. until last week. Both being near
"the end of their earthly race, the fond old wife had long ago given op worry or apprehension concerning her busband^a loyalty. In his old age, however, the wiles of the priests caught him. .It was represented to him that the bard lot he had experienced through life was due to God's displeasure because he had
tiiot
followed the teachings ot the brophetsrand that if he hoped for better Things in the world to come he must quickly take another wife to his home. The old fallow tried to communicate his determination to his aged partner, but lacked the courage, and finally concluded to surprise her. He went through the Endowment House with a youthful woman, and, presenting himself at Ibis lowly home, Informed his first wife bf what he had done. The old lady was staggered by the blow, but, restrainin
Jeelings, told the newly weddea pair that she would soon be out of their way. Lang ton and bis bride went off on a visit, and on their return on a street car. Mrs. Langton No. 1. in abject despair, threw herself under the wheels of the vehicle. The driver chanced to hare control of the break, and stopped the car before tho old lady was crushed. Her clothing was torn from her, however, snd she was seriously injured in»rnally.
A decidedly different result was reached in the case of Israel Pinkham and »wlfe, another old couple, who moved »«Jroui Maine many years ago to this Territory. They passed through Salt Lake the other day oh their way to their old home, and ihe old lady made no secret of the caune of their return. To a reporter for aGent tie newspaper she said: "My husband and I have lived together these forty-three year, and though we lined the Mormons twenty year age nothing was ever said about polygamy until this spring. Then some sneaking priests came arouud and got the old man worked up with the idea that he must have one or two more wives. 'Not much, Israel Pink ham' says I 'we've travelled together this fur, and no Mormon will separate ua now. We've got twn sons and a dartsfr back East, who aha'n't have anybody poking fun at tbeui and there's the two little boys what we buried back in*
Maine, who
won't have no occasion to p'int their ftrirfers at us when we cross over to the other shore. This thing has gone Just as fur as it's going to. Israel Pink ham, we're going back to Maine,' says I, 'and, whether we've got one year or ten years to live, we'll end this here pilgrimage decent,as we begun it.' Ain't that what 1 told you?'' «ftid *he, addressing the old man, who had t" a silent listener.
He ainilM In faint way, and nodded ftsatmu WtM going back to Maine,' coot int. "4 the owi Inly, "p'Ma'r ih.Ul wlfin we c«a!n ^Hit We, but wwer uid j-. »nww,»of m1 know. Tbeie'll bono tn.r» Mormon iu this family."
G,v,rge Walker had two wives and mat da third, a woman amh bandj. m,r than either the others. The I rst .c died in a f-'W weeks and the na went insane and was sent I :ae !ter parent*. Wife No. 8, who thus imetht only wife, led a very nt- nied ii' f-ra while, but she is .w rage and grief because Ler id married another woman, maintaining her in good style in ikw hTpartof the city. og C1«w*on, a son of one of the l««ding sainte, has just married bis third wife in two yean. 'He Is not vet 22, but minis.** to rival Brigham Young in I' number of his spouses if be lto» as 1 He Is rich, and his father takes prick* in pointing to him as no example for all of the youth of Zion to follow. One odd feature of young Clawsou** operations in the matrimoalal line is «aid to be a fact that while the second wife knows of the existence of the first, and the third is aware that she has two predecessor*, the first does not know there I* a ssoond or a third, and the second te Ignorant that there to one later than herself. Some time or other it to confidently expected. feat the young man will have to m&ke a wrtai of ftaMtiOMa *5^
The strenuous efforts which the leaders in the charch are making to stimulate polygamy, and the necessity, which exists for keeping plural marriages secret, have induced many of the faithful
to keep the fact of their later marriages from even their previous wives. Knowledge of this state of affairs has driven many Mormon wives who are suspicious of their husbands to the verge of diadistraction, and not a few of them have adopted extrsordinnry measures to discover whether their apprehensions are well founded or not. Nothing makes the average Mormon woman's lot harder than the suspicion that there are wives of whom she knows nothing. It is bad enough to put up with those whom she is well aware divide With her the honors of wifehood, but the idea ihst others ef whom she knows nothing may be rolling in luxury somewhere is intolerable. Nearly all of this wretchedness is concealed. The most extraordinary devices are resorted to to cover up any scandal among the faithful, and were it not for the fact that there are many keen-eyed Gentiles hete, the snppresaion would be winp.ete. A young girl named Annie Elmore, who came here from England a while ago with a batch of converts, was immediately beset by several old Saints with proposals of marriage. She was unusually pretty and intelligent, and the rivalry of the elders was great. To all this she turned a deaf ear, however, and one after another was flatly refused. Then one of the Bishops called on her and undertook to terrify her into marrying. He told her that if she remained obdurate he would be compelled to cut her off, not only in this world, but in the next, and explained to hpr that to be cut off was eternal ruin. She defied him to do his worst, and told him that in England the Mormon missionaries had taught that a woman should marry only the man she loved, and that she was round to do so. The Bishop did cut her off, but learning soon after that she had married a young man who had followed her to this country snd joined the church, the excommunication was withdrawn. Just now this troehearted girl, who withstood the blandishments and threats of her elders so heroically, that she might lemain true to her absent lover, is a raving maniac, because be, three months after bis marriage with her, brought home another wife. Suppressed, denied, and made light of as these things are by the Mormons, tbey crop out occasionally, revealing the depth of the woe which exists nere for the most part in silence.
The pronounced opinion of the ablest physicians all over the country indicates that Dr. Bull's Baby Syrup is the best Remedy for all the sufferin remedy for all the sufferings of little children caused by wind Colic, Dysentery, Diarrhoea or Summer Complaint. Price 25 cents
TOOK IT FOR A USTLE. Com.-Guzette. A very pretty, modest young woman came shyly into "Hawley's" yesterday. Approaching Henry, she pointed to a base-ball catcher's mask in the showwindow, and with a demi blush timidly said: Please let me examine that." "Certainly," beamed the gallant Henry. Then he extricated the mask from among the other bcseball good, while he whispered to a Cincinnati CommercialGazette reporter: "One of the female nine, sure ss I'm sinner. Didn't know they were in town."
The young lady turned the mask around giugerly in her daintily-gloved bands, examined it critically and asked with a pert, upward glan=e: Isn't it rather short "Ob, no—they come in that size always," smiled the blonde chief clerk. "I never saw one made exactly like this before—new invention, I suppose?'' ventured she. "Oh, my, no been in use three years, at least," said Henry. "Indeed! How strange. Do you think they are better than those made' of whale-bone?" "Undoubtedly," was the ready reply, though he mentally asked: "who ever heara of a whalebone mask "And the Strings?" said she, turning It around. "Strings?" echoed Henry luperplexity. "Tnat is, the straps-^the fastenershow does one keep them on "Let me show you," said Henry," reaching for It. "Oh. don't trouble yourself," cried she, with a half scream, and then she turned pale as death while Henry took the maslk into his hands.
As he stood loosening the straps preparatory to adjusting the affair, tne customer seemed paralyzed with deep emotion, and on the verge of a dead faint. But when Henry pulled the mask over bis face the color returned. She gasped for breath, opened wide her eyes, and panted: "Why, what in the world is it?" "Why, a baseball mask, to be sure didn't you know?" smiled Henry through the wires. ««I—no—that is—I thought It was a— oh, dear J"
Her prostrate form was laid upon the counter.
THS
Worst cases cured by Dr. Sage's rrh Remedy.
TO CURE ROUND SHOULDERS. Letter in New York Tribune. More than thirty years ago I got a habit of being round-shouldered. In trving to find a remedy, the following plan, which grew out of my knowledge of anatomy, came in sight: Hook the fingers of the hands together raise the elbows as high as the shoulders and pull like a shoemaker. The muscles about the shoulder-blades, to keep them in place, are thus strengthened", and in a short time enabled to fulfill their proper office. While lyiosr on the back press the he*d on ii pll so as to raise the chest up from the
bed on which you are
reclining. This strengthens the muscles that should hold the Bead
erect. When
standing or sitting, where the head can press against something solid, repeat the operation. By a little thought st other times to use tMse muscles, the difficulty may be overcome.
WERE VERY DECOLLETE. "The price mit hat," said a clerk, picking up a remnant of silk, "is quite de-
"What?" tho vartled customer. "The price is quite decollete, I said." "Young man. do you know what decollete means "Yes, madam, I do." 'Well, I think you are mistaken." "Oh, no, I am not," "Wtat does It mean?" "It means cut low, and that's what's the matter with the pries #n this piece Of goodb it's wsy down."
SramsnnD, Mm, A"For diseases of the
Rxxjcdy. 1
188$. liver, received
bladder, and urinary organs I received great benefit from Hem [KMsnr and Llvwrl
pronounce ft the
"—H_ W.
beet,"—H. W. Payna, Manufacturer 417 Main St.
It is a good plan to have soft ginger bread on hand for the children's lunch this warm weather. They generally like that when nothing else tastes good to them, and the ginger helps to ward off bowel troubles. Here is an excellent receipt and not troublesome to make:
One cup butter,two cups sugar,one cup sour milk, four eggs, four cups of flour, teaspoonful cinnamon, tablespoonful ginger and one teaspoonful of soda, dissolved ins little hot water and strained.
Cold potatoes, hashed very fine, And put Into a skillet into which has been, placed a lump of butter, a pinph of pepper and salt, and enough milk to boil up through and over it, is a very nice dish for tea. Let It warm very slowly, or the milk burns and the dish is ruin6cl«
Cold codfish gravy and potatoes can be warmed to be just as good as at first. If done slowly. Put the gravy in a tin basin set on tne back of the stove, and add the potatoes cut in slices stirring carefully so as not to break the slices, and spoil the looks of the potatoes.
fine. Take equal quasitltles of the fish snd finely hashed potato, and egg, a small piece of butter, cayenne pepper, and a little sweet milk. Mix these ingredients together until the fish and po tato are perfectly indivisible, for in this thorough mixing consists the chief art of making codfisn balls. Roll Into round balls between the hands, dust with flour and fry In boiling lard, as you do doughnuts. Just before frying them, if you take two eggs, a half cup of sweet milk, a pinch of salt and a heaping teaspoonful of baking powder in as much flour as is needed to make a batter as thick as can be stirred with a spoon, you will have excellent fritters to be dropped into the boiling lard, and tkey are extra good with the codfish balls. You can keep them hot in the oven while the balls are cooking.
Sometimes I make a nice syrup of coffee A sugar to eat with the fritters. It is just as as economical aftd far better than any syrup you can buy.:
PLACING HER AT HER EASE. New York Sun. Dumley had accompanied a friend home to dinner, and, as tbey seated themselves st the table, tbe hostess remarked. "I trust that you will make allowances, Mr. Dumley. My girl left me this morning very unexpectedly, and I was compelled to cook the dinner myself."
l'EERB HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MATT
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
In the Cottage Hearth for JMay are some very good suggestions for making a pretty home without much expense among them being the following for an odd and effective table: "It had been one of those common wooden washstauds with a lower shelf, a drawer, and a strip of wood on three sides,a dilapidated old thing too common for any bedroom, so the lady concluded to put it in the parlor. She knocked off a*.ili«back,and maroon colaip and gilt tacks.' The wood was —ebonized—a tiny dash of gilt here and there. The knob of the drawer gilded the lower shelf covered with felt like tb top. On the lower part of the stand was a low, gilded wicker basket filled with fruit. On the top, the books and a monthly magazine, a paper knife made of a corset steel, one of the stays worn in the sides of corssts, gilded and ornamented with a bow of ribbon about three inches from one end. Above the ribbon the steel was psinted black to form a handle."
Reading the above directions reminded me of apiece of furniture which was constructed by an ingenious lady friend, and which she called a "conny," which she said was short for convenience.
It was a pine table with two shelves. She bad obtained foursquare lots, painted them black, with a pretty design on each plain side. The top was covered with olack broadcloth from an old coat,a wreath of scarlet geraniums and green leaves,worked in crewels around the edge, a pretty bunch of them in the center. The cloth was put on with fancy tacks, which also held the deep lambrequin of scarlet twine which formed a finish.
The two under shelves were covered like the top of the table, with broadcroth and twine lambrequins on the edge.
A very convenient breakfast, palatable, nutritious and easily prepared, is the old fashioned one of scrapple, which has almost entirely gone out of fashion. It is prepared in the following manner:
Take apiece of beef, any cheap piece will do, and boil until very tender, then take out, and when cold, hash until as fine as mince meat. Strain the liquor in which it was boiled and set aside for the fat to raise, half of which must be taken off. Then put the liquor back in the kettle with the hashed meat, season with salt and pepper, and when it boils thicken with corn meal until as thick as hasty pudding, then pour into a pan to cool when cold cut in slices and fry in a hot skillet. Of course you want to prepare it ready to fry the day before it is to be used, so as to have nothing to do for breakfast but fry it.
Codfish balls are "perfectly splendid" rilling to 9
by or
made by one wi gh be well soaked an
enough
to do it
"Ob, certainly, my dear madWme, cersponded Dumley, with much 'I can put up with any thing."
tainly," resi manner
2HEIR NAME IS LEGION. Legions of people have have bad their lives saade miserable by Piles. This painful difficulty is often induced and snd alwavs aggravated by Constipation. Kidney-Wort is the groat remedy for all affection of the bowels, and soothes and heals the inflamed surfaces. It har cured hundreds of cases where mil other remedies and applications have failed. Sold by sl druggists.
1F.XS OBLIGED TO HTM. Physician—How are you feeling this morning?
Undertaker—Very well, indeed, thank you. Physician—Family all well?
Undertaker—Yes, all in excellent health, thank you. Physician—And business? n'dertaker— Busi oess is in a flourishing condition, thank you, Doctor.
CAPITAL COMFORT.
WASHIKOTOX. D. C.-Mra, Mary K. Sheed, 1110 Maryland avenue, Washington, D. (X states, that for several years she had suflfered terribly with facial neuralgia and could find no reliel. In a recent attack which extended to the neck, shoulders and tack, tbe pain was fotanM. She resolved to try St. Jacobs Oil, the great pain-reliever. Rubbing the parts affected, three times only, all pain vanished as If by rnsgk, and bas not returned.
If fott are tined taking tbe large oldgriping puis try Garter* tie liver inils and take eome comfort.
TOM THUMB'S WIDOW. New York Correspondence. The little Widow Thumb is casually a resident of New York, and a welcome visitor in a considerable number of rather wealthy and fashionable famMtwa, Sbe is a lady now so mature and dignified, notwithstanding her diminutive sice, that nobody in tbe way of soda! intercourse dares, or is much inclined, to treat her as a human trifle. To see her in the midst of a round of calls is to get the impression, at first sight, that your eyes nave somehow suddenly become telescopic inversely, so exactly Is she a miniature of the conventional dames of ceremonious society. She dresses for an afternoon or formal visiting in a toilet of semi-morning, suitable in style for a quiet woman of 45—which age sne acknowledges—and orders from a livery stable one of those eonpea that,
as to liveried driver and general appear anoe, are scarcely distinguishsble from private equipages. Provided with a visiting list, and easily commanding an air of well-bred balance, she lscks only in stature to be tbe ideal of a middleaged millionaire's wife. Of course she attracts staring attention whenever she alights, but her manner of silent reproof is usually effective as a cure for impudence, and she is able to go about with far less annoyance than might be supposed. She is now 3 feet 6. inches in height or a foot more than when she was first put on exhibition by Barnum, and it was only within a few years that she stopped growing. "It would not surprise me,"shelately said, "if I should take to growing again at any time. My case is one of retarded development, you know, and I may yet catch up with the rest of you. The majority of the dwarfs exhibited are really children, phenomenally small, but by no means the adult midgets they are represented to be, and consequently they grow out of the profession. That has been the case with many a 'freak,' as the showmen call them."
The pertinence of tbe fair, fat and forty-inch widow as a topic here is the fact that she has a suitor for her band. The account current in her circle of acquaintances say that a mine operator, who came Eastward a year ago with a comfortable fortune, began seriously to woo her soon after malting her acquaintance in this city. He is a handsome man ot no more than 40, with cultured taste, good morals and weighs about a hundred pounds, his stature Doing limited to an Inch or so more than five feet. That he is deeply in love with Mrs. Thumb is not doubted by any of their mutual fi lends, but he does not seem to have made much progress toward capturing the estimable dwarf. It is said to be her firm intention not to marry again.
"Oh! But I Salivated Him!",
was the actual exclamation of an honest physician, spoke of one of bis patients to whom he bad given calomel for the cure of biliousness and a diseased liver, And he had salivated him for certain, from which be never recovered. All these distressing consequences are avoided by tbe use of Dr. Pierces "Pleasant Purgative Pellets," a purely vegetable
bTiiousness, constipation and druggists.
take time
pro
»perly. a well
The fish must boiled, picked
I. pic]
clear of all bones and skin, and hashed
x^_SS!!SSSSg!^t
Mr. Beecber says it is tbe duty of parents to have their children's pictures taken once a year until they are 21.'
Almost every person has some form of scrofulous poison latent in his veins. When this develops in scrofulous sores, ulcers, or eruptions, or takes the form of rheumatism, or organic diseases, the suffering that ensues Is terrible beyond description. Hence the gratitude of those who discover, as thousands yearly do, that Ayer's Sarsaparilla will thoroughly eradicate this evil from the system.
HAY-FEVBR.
FERRIS,
Lit-
A man can't stand everything. OnepAll a dofe«. *2-4t»
My brother Myron and
myself weie both cured of Catarrh and Hay-Fever last July and August by Ely's Cream Balm. Up to Dec' these troubles have not returned—G'28,
ABRIEL
Spencer, N. Y.
HAY-FEVBB. I
was afflicted for
twenty years with Hay-Fever.
I
used
Ely's Cream Balm with favorable results, and can recommend it to all.—ROBERT W.
TOWNLEY,
N.J.
(ex-Mayor) Elizabeth,
To Err is Human.
But you make no mistake if you use Dr. Jones' Red Clover Tonic for dyspepsia, costlveness, bad breath, piles, pimples, ague and malsria diseases, poor appetite, low spirits, headache, or disoases of the kidneys, stomach and liver. Price 50 cents, of Oultck A Coi 4
The Longest Pole
Knocks the parsimmons, and Dr. Bigelow's Positive Cure knocks all throat lung diseases, such as coughs, colds, croup hoarseness, bronchitis, asthma, influenza and consumption. Pleasant for children to take and cures safely, speedily and permantly. Free trial bottle at Qulick & CO. 4
Griggs' Glycerine Salve.
Tbe great wonder healer has no equal for cuts, bruises, scalds, burns, wounds and all other sores will positively cure piles, frost bites, tetter and all skin eruptions. Satisfaction or money refunded. 25 cents. Get the best of Gulick A Co. tf.
PILES! PILES!! PILES!!! Sure cure for Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles. One bottle has cored the worst case of 20 years standing. No one need suffer five minutes after o4ng William's Indian Pile Ointment. It absorbs tumor*, alleys itcbing, acts as poultice, gives ttwtant relief. Prepared only for Plies, itching of the private parts, nothing else. Hon. i. M. CoSfenbnry, of Cleveland, says "I have used scores of Pile cores, and itaffords me pleasure to say that I have never found anything which gives soeh immediate and permanent relief as Dr. William's Indian Pile Ointment-" Sold toy druggists and jailed on reeeJ pt of price, fl. j(or sale by Ooofc 4c Bell, wholesale drogglsts.
LYON'S KOZOTHItTM.
scnmtusiMC. ArrtnuMitc. A GIFT TO THE GRAY. Lrcsrti Komna not a dm, fat idstfomet oeL mad matt tamely sm twe M&etats» daad trnMhsf rifnilniaii «T the »c»te, wbweby 5t ttesMsi Uk aatufai action, sad ss aieiut yvtCMngf $k* mmturml evbr to Ac kar, lenr«| n41 sad fc—nrW. Uafibt aB other »oU mluusw, fa itlmly free from SmffUmr, N#rmU SOtmr, sad •3 asouBMi asd dtto»rioMi tlwwhah. It it aa tUgmmtHmir Dmtimf, I dan mat mm ik tfaa. tor soildw awst
»pHE SATURDAY EVENING
MAIL,
TERRS HAUTE, IND.
A Paper for the People.
A MODEL HOME JOURNAL.
KNTKBTAINING, INSTRUCTIVE ANT N E W S
BRIGHT, CLEAN AND PU.HK.
THE FOURTEENTH YEAR
The Mall has a record of SOOOSGB said an attained by a Western weekly paper. Twelve years of increasing popularity proves lta worth. Kncouraged by the extraordinary auoceaB which has attended its publication the publisher has perfected arrangements by which tor the coming year The Mail will bt 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 tbe circulation of such paper as the
SATURDAY EVENING MAIL
TKRM&
One year....... .J....—.-- 13 (_c Six months 1 00 Three months 60
Mall and office subscrir tions will, invari* ably, be discontinued at expiration of time Address P. S. W BAT
WHERE IT IS SOLD
TERRE HAUTE.
B, L. Godecke Opera House S. R. Baker P. O. Lobby Grove P. Crafts „...Terre Haute House News Stand National House Clarence Hart South of PostofBce Walsh & Smith 661 Main Street Mrs. Elizabeth McCutcheon, 1134 E. Poplar St.
ILLINOIS.
Areola, Ills„ Harry Moore Casey, ills .B. F. Miller Chrisman, Ills..- McKee Brae Ferrell, Ills., Elmer Hitch Hut®onville, Ills Harry Adams Marshall. Ills V. L. Cole Martinsville, Ills J. H. Ramsay Mattoon, Ills J. W. Hanna Paris, Ills W. B. Sheriff & Co Robinson, Ills John M. Harper Scott Land, Ills ^.....L. O. Jlnklnt Toledo, Ills Edmund E. Park Vermillion, Ills J. W. Boyer Westfleld, Ills Bird Barlow
INDIANA.
Annapolis, Ind.....»..«..» Foster M. Maria
Brazil, Ind T. M. Robertson Bowling Green, Ind....... Robert Boliannon Bridgeton, Ind W. J. Duree Clay City. Ind .......P. T. Jett Carlisle, Ind..... J. M. Warner Cloverland, Ind H. D. Falls Clinton. Ind.... Edwin Cunningham Catlin, Ind ...... ..Joseph A.'Wright Coal Bluff, Ind. E. Davis Coflfee, Ind .....J. H.Curry Dana, Ind Chas. Hutchinson Eugene, Ind..... J. A. Conaway Farm erf burg, Ind ......Jennings A Reed Fontanett, Ind Ed. C. High Greehcafftle, Ind^.t,. K. LangdSn Harmony, Ind........... J. H- Strong Lewis, Ind J. S. Bryan Merom, Ind .«.A. B. Co« per Montezuma, Ind Chas. E. Hunt New Lebanon, Ind Lee Burnett Newport, Ind Bird Davis Pralreton, Ind ••••T. L-J°np" Pimento, Ind W.T. French Perrysville, Ind...... .. E. Sinks Rockville.Ind..... «..A.C. Bates Rosedale, Ind W. Bucher Sullivan, Ind W. S. Smith Panford, Ind ~........Ed. May Soonover, Ind A. D. Jenkins St. Marys, Ind M. Curley Shelburn, Ind Chas. Froraent Waveland, Ind H. A. Pratt
^Y. REIM-A.3ST,
DEALER IN
FLOUR, PROVISIONS,
And all kinds of 4
Building Material,
"Delphi and Greencastle Lime, Newark and Michigan Plaster, Lath. Hair, Cement,
Fire Brick and Fire Clay, Piping, Draining Tlfe, etc.
815 Main Street, Terre Haute. Ind.
JQANVILLE ROUTE.
Chicago and Eastern Illinois Bailroad.
Chicago, Milwaukee, son, Gre Minnear
[adison, Green Bay, leapolis, st. Paul, Cedar Itapids,
s-
Omaha
JtU Vwl
And all points In the North and NorthwestThe Popular Route to the many SUMMKB RESORTS
Of Wisconsin, Michigan and Minnesota THREE TRAINS DAILY Between Terre Haute and Chicago arriving In time to make close connections with trains on all roads diverging. mr Woodruff pAlsce and Sleeping Coach** on ail night trains.
Tourists Guides giving a description of the tAriooKSnnime'' Resorts will be furnished upon application to R. A. CAMPBELL, Oenl Ag^.
OM Main st. Terre Haute, Ind. wm. hill, g. p. a. Chicago, Ills.
THE COMPLETE H0ME.«^
I 1 ~w e&t*ea<~JK-* :X«r» '"-Witr"* I I- taiga*. Sua* s»r mpt Ki*1 '3 (Iwi. Se it rig).. wan xc*LUBrtT*mn».
the
b.
WM. AHo athct
gHMd Mnr bootn fa4
96
nend six cents for postage, and ve free-a costly box of good* which will belpalL •to more money rial
of either sex it away than tatones await
anything else Intbis world. Pc the worker* absolutely snre- At once add re* TRUE A CO., Augusta, Maine. ttly
Hiram
MmATnmBftW.
8AVK TOUR BTBS. Terre Hsots Eye Infirmary Dr. R. D. Ha!ey,of New York, late of wntoo. Ma and Dr. J. E. Dtmbar.ofiH. Lqutojateof
__ Winchester, Propctet*i»
will treat all, diseases of the Eye, 10 days, fret will treat all. diseases of the Eye, 10 days, fret
where one of can oaooars dteiog the day. Ctar nf* Mustek, drngglst, next door to ai^mtS^Kerln agrfcol ta, west side pnblie soaacs groosrman, earner 1st aad
Vital Questions
Ask theikost eminent physicidH Of any school, what is tbe best thing in the world for quieting and allaying all irritation of tbe nerves, and curing all forms of nervous complaints, giving natural, olildlike refreshing sleep aK ways?
And they will tell you unhesitatingly "Some form, of Hops CHAPTER I. Ask any or all ot the most eminent physicians: rWhatistbe best and only remedy that can be relied on to core all diseases of tbe kidneys and urinary organs such as Bright^ disease diabetes, reteutloh, or inability to retain lee, and all the diseases and ailments peculiar to Women"— "And they will ted you explicitly and emphatically*B%tehui!n
Ask the same physicians "What is the most reliable and surest cure for all liver diseases jOr dyspepsia constipation, lnd'sestiou, bfl'ousoess malaria, fever, ague, Ac.," and they will tell you:
Mandrake or DandMion /.' Hence, when these remedies are combined w.'th others eqnal'y valuable.
And compounded inio Hop Bitters, such
Women
FALL,
Publisher Saturday Evening Mail. TERRE HAUTE, IND.
pos
sibly exist or leslst its ower. and yet It is Harmless for the mosc fraU woman, weakest Invalid or smallest ch id to use.
CHAPTER n. "Patient*
"Almost dead or nea-ly dying." For years, and given up by the physicians, of Bright'9 and other kidney diseases, liver complaints, severe coughs, called consumption, have been oured.
gone nearly c:xixy 1!
From agony of neuralgia, nervousness, wake C11I oess, find various diseases peculiar to women.
People drawn out of shape from excruciating pangs o-' rheumatism, inflammatory aud chronic, or suffering from sc.ofula.
f,
Erysloelas! "Saltrheum, blood polsooing, dyspepsia, indltrestlon, a ad, In fact, almost all diseases frail"
Nature is he' to Have been cn -ed by Hop Bitters, proof of wuich cao be found in every neighborhood in the known world. •arNoue geau«ne without a bunch of green Hons on the white label. Shun all the vile poisonous stuff with ''Hop" or "Bops'* in their name.
Ostrich Feathers!
COLORED IN ALL SHADK8.
Ladies' Dresses,
iS, E&.,
Shawls, Cloaks
Of all Fabrics, Cleaned and Colored.
Gents5 "Wear
Cleaned, Colored and Repaired.
The undersigned would respectfully in* form the citizens of Terre Haute and vicinity that he has forty years experience in his
firofesslon,
which assures satisfaction in ali I
ts branches.
H. KEINEftS, I 655 Main^Street.
THE APOLLO BAND
AND
Respectfully oall attention to tbe announcement that tney are fully prepared tofurnlsn music for
Balls, Parties, Parades, Funerals, Serenades,Political Meetings, Pleasure Excursions,
Picnics, &c.,
&
Or any occasion upon which the services of a band or orchestra may be required. Terms, liberal, for which apply to George Burt (leader) ftt band office, s. w. cor. 4th and Main st*., over Myers clothing store, front room, 8d floor, or to Thos. McKennan, at his place of business, Ohio St., bet. 3d aud 4th one door west of Shannon's Bank.
Military Band fnlly, Uniformed and Equipped. Entire satisfaction guaranteed on all con* tracts. 1
yMSB
FRANK PRATT
DEALER IN
Italian Marble and all kinds of American and Foreign Granite
MONUMENTS •i'
CORNER FIFTH AND WALNUT STREETS TERRE HAUTE,IND.
WHOLESALE
Candy Manufactory
—AND—
BAKERY.
A. B. Mewbinney & Co
••nth 6tb street* Terre Hssts, Isd -vlOraacce and emon*.
GLENDALE 1 FEMALE Xr.~.~r:E(
TliUty-flnrt year bfgtn* Beat facilities in one co»ui»iete 'i»*r Course—EnglMi, Kjlenuflc Superior ad vantage* 1 Musics Address: BKV. lL IJ. rOTTRl. ».
Jy5-10t 6lcsd.4«,Oiiv
Mount Auburn
YOUNC LADIES' INSTITUTE
CINCINNATI.
sura
tuts vmac au tut fails. estOsragbHyrap. Tasfcwjood. GaeloUtoe. HoM by tru«glsta.
4V'
1
Agent* wanted for authentic edition of bis life. Published at A11311*ta, bis hone. largest, handsomest, cheapest, best. By
the renowned historian and bfograpb«, Col. Don welt, whose life of Garfield, pubjlshedby us, outsold the twenty .gibers by 80j000. Outsells every book
ever
published In this world
many agents are selling fifty daily. Agents aking are eking fortunts. All
Agents
aew beginners
•tur-emful srand chance for them JM3-50 made by a udy scent the flist OMstlibemL Paruculani free.
it the flist day. 'Terms Better send
Augusta, Maine.
