Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 15, Number 33, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 February 1885 — Page 7

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THE MAIO

PAPK* FOR THE PEOPLE.

NOTED SENATORS.

Fen Picture* of Some of the Prominent ilsa Men From the Booth.

A correspondent of the Chicago Tribune, in a recent letter thus describes some of the more prominent public men of the South.

Lamar has no desire to leave the Senate, as has been stated before in this correspondence, ss his physical health would not permit of his undertaking the labor of any Cabinet position. He is obliged at the present time to atoid everything in the way of excitement. He, through his great knowledge of public affairs and his excellent judgment, has gradually grown into the position of general counselor to his party in the South. His advice is not always followed, but there are few men in the South who would undertake any political act of importance without consulting with him. His health does not

fermit

the amount of reading which

as hitherto occupied the leisure of his studious life. He therefore gives up more of his time to talking with hia friends than he has ever done in his more active days. In his rooms upon First street he is nearly always surrounded by a crowd. He wraps himself up in a red Oriental dressing-gown, and with black silk Mandarin shoes upon his feet for slippers this eccentrioJooking man will sit as a teacher at the head of a class in political philosophy. I was in his room one day last winter when there were a number of Mississippians about him. The Senator sat with a great mane of hair falling thickly across his face, nearly hiding it, and twisting bis fierce long mustache as the lower part of his face sunk down into his long beard. He sat listening and talking to those about him until the room •darkened. Suddenly the Senator paused in the midst of his discourse, jumped up, and said: "Why, really, gentlemen, you must excuse me. I have an engagement to dine. I have only twenty minutes to dress and get uptown.

1

He began tearing off his red

•dressing-gown as he flew across the room ana disappeared behind a curtain which inclosed. a recess opening into his front parlor. In exactly six minutes by the watch the Senator returned in full evening dress, and, with the simplicity of a very much younger man, •called his negro servant to light the gas so that the company could inspect him in his resplendent attire and see if he would pass muster.

The common sense of Cockrell amounts almost to genius. He was one of the most successful cavalry officers in the Confederacy. He fought fairly and honorably during the War, ana when it was over he accepted its results without question. He has never asked Congress to remove his political disabilities. He came here in 1866 and got Frank Blair to go up to the White House and ask Johnson to pardon him. It was done with the understanding that there should be no mention of it made in the nowspapers. Cockrell came hero one morning and wont home with his pardon in his pocket the evening of the same day without saying one word to any one about it outside of those immediately interested in procuring k. Nothing is better illustrative of his shrewdness and reserve than the fact that he never mentioned the circumstance at all until the opposition to restoration of Southern men to their old privileges was practically done away with.

Senator Cookrell is in his 61st year. He was born, bred, and oduoated in Missouri. He is over six feet in height. His figure is very broad and powerful. He has a large hook nose, which stands •out a sweeping line in harmony with the next curve which runs from the top of the nose ovor his nearly bald head. His hair is a bluish ^ray, worn at moderate length about his thick neck. A fierce cavalry mustacho is twisted under his hawk nose. 'A long attenuated beard hangs as straight as so many strings from the sharp chin of his sallow, nigh-cheek-boned face. His eves area pale gray bide, which can twinkle with humor when he is pleased or can be as cold as steel when ho is in the opposite mood. Ho is a lawyer by profession and a prodigious wosker. There is no Senator who looks more carefully after the interests of the Government than he. He is always in his seat in the Senate chamber, and skillfully disguised'indeed must be the job that can pass his vigilantly-guarded desk. While he is tt chronic objector to the thousand and one jobs which are constantly springing up under various forms, he is a mast liberal legislator in what really relates to good government. He is very democratic in his manners, and when not at the Capitol can be found at his house with his wife and children, to whom he is thoroughly devoted.

Senator Harris is over 60 years of age. Ho, like Cockrell, was bred and educated in his native Stato of Tennessee. Ho has had a large experience in publio life. Ho was a member of Congress at one of the most stirring periods of our history—in 1849—and was reelected in 1861. He was a figure in the debates of that period which resulted, in the Congress after his retirement, in the repeal of the Missouri Compromise. He is a man of slight figure and pf medium height He is quite round-shouldered. His face is regular-featured and smoothshaven with the exception of a long .white mustache, which he waxes in military fashion.. During the War he served upon the staff of the Confederate commander of the Army of the Tennessee. He is a man of moderate means.

Senator Coke is a man of enormous figure. Everything about him appears to have been constructed upon a scale. He is very larjre boned, and these large bones are Oil with great layers of 1 are thickly covered with hair, and he

l'Lc

hand*

has to struggle with a raxor to keep

a

spaco clean around his eyes and month. Ilis greAt-beard and his enormous shock

of hair are still dark brown in color— almost untouched with gray—although he is in his 66th year. He was in the Confederate army, but not as a leader. He is one of the few Southern men in ublic life to-day who entered the Con cate. He rose to the rank of Captain. He is a man of

put federate army as a private rank of Captain. He: intense convictions, with a very high sense of personal honor and an extraordinary sense of his own personal dignity. He has a strong hold upon the confidence of his people. He was elected Judge of the State Supreme Court of Texas in 1866, and was removed therefrom by Gen. Sheridan "as an impediment to reconstruction." This one act made Coke Governor in 1873. He was elected then by a majority of 60,000, and was re-elected by a majority of 102,000. ,He has been in the Senate ever since.' He is not an orator who is appreciated in the Senate, as his voice is the roar of the giant that he is yet his Democratic associates are fond of him and have a great respect for his judgment

Senator Vance is a tall, shamblingfigured, carelessly-dressed man in his 66th year. He was born in North Carolina and educated in that State and Tennessee. Hewas a Colonel in the Confederate service. He has a round, full head, set low upon a short, thick neck. It is surmounted by a mass oi straight, iron-gray hair. His red, fat, douDie-chinnea face is smooth shaven, with the exception of a thick mustache. He is a lawyer by profession, and has a great local reputation as a wag. He is what is called an alleged humorist. His style of wit and humor is much bettei appreciated, however, upon the stump than in the Senate. To do him full justice, though, it should be said that he makes few efforts in that direction in the Senate.

Artificial Goodness.

Some years ago we were startled by the reports of the ill-adapted food on which children in certain parts of the manufacturing districts were fed, or rather were not fed we were startled by the high death-rate of very young children in certain towns. Yet we might have known it would be so. These are the necessary fruits of all such legislation as that of factory acts or of state education and compulsion, which forces on parents a certain view of their duty, instead of leaving them, slowly aqd painfully though it may be, to learn it intelligently for themselves. Official regulation and free mental perception of what is right and wise do not and can not exist I see no possible way in which you can reconcile these great state services and the conditions under which men have to make true progress in themselves. At least, if you are to do so, you must first get rid of certain great facts in nature. At present we live under the condition which, unfortunately, seems likely to last our time or a little longer, that no great human qualities are developed when you take away the opportunities for their development, that they do not grow spontaneously and without pressure, that each action by which for the moment the good and the bad are placed on the same level—for example, the selfish and the unselfish parent or the drunkard and the sober man—tends to delay the emergence of the better type out of the inferior type. Every such kind of action relieves the. unworthy of the consequences of their actions, and takes from the worthy the occasions of acquiring, and preserving, and strengthening those qualities that are good and useful. In a word, so far as you are able to do it for the moment, you make goodness unnecessary and as unfortunately the world was constructed on a plan which makes goodness an essential element in obtaining happiness, by one road while go bv another.—£ tn Popular Science Monthly for January.

The early bird catches the bronchitis, and lovers of early morning walks will find this a true maxim. If we were permitted to make a suggestion, we should whisper: "Use Dr. Bull's Cough

Yucatan Indian Hats.

The huts are oblong, and rounded at the corners. Some are divided in two by a partition. More generally the whole family crowd together in the single apartment. The wall is formed by putting sticks upright in the ground and filling the interstices with mud, or else with a mixture that is afterward smoothed and white-washed. The roofs are slanting and thatched, the thatch being allowed to fall to within two or three feet of the ground, to keep off wind and rain. The surface of the earth serves as flooring, since the inmates can seldom afford to have it cemented. The furniture consists of a few hammocks hung across the room— thev serve as seats by day and beds by night—some low chairs, called butaca (similar in shape to some of the seats used by the Assyrians and Egyptians of old), a wooden bench on which aTe the grinding-stones, and an image of a saint in Some corner of the room. The fireplace—three stones placed in triangle on the floor—is there too. Chickens, dogs, pigs, and babies all frolic together in these poor homes, and appear to be tolerably happy, if not very well fed.

While every corner of the hut is crammed with rubbish, its mistress sometimes sits in the hammock swinging, as untidy as her house,: making artificial flowers to adorn some wooden image of the Virgin.—Alice D. Lt PUmjreon, in Harper's Magazine for February.

PRETTY MOUTHS

Shoold have pretty lerth in them, bat it is not unusual to *«e between rosy lips, te«Mb dtec«»lor«i and decaying through neglect This disfiguring defect should he repaired without delay, by using fragrant SGZODONT, which removes every partid* «»f tartar from the teeth and renders them snowy white. This admirable aid to beauty is perfectly hwrtafass and exhale* a most delightful aroma, and In In every reaped preferable to be ordinary tooth pastes and powders. Try it and ses for youraelf. S-tt

3

THE IiIME_KTL.1T CLUB. Bro. Gardner DIaeonnm on Economy and Charity.

As the meeting opened there was

a

fle

a

strong smell of burning meat in the hall, and the echoes of the triangle had scarcely died away when Elder Toots made a break for the door in a way to upset half

dozen different members

and bring down another large piece oi plaster from the ceiling. He had gone to sleep with his ot oh the hot stove to thaw out the chilblains. They had thawed, and the, hefct had worked down through five years' layer of cement and got at the real flesh. When the excitement had been allayed, and the keeper of the outer door had reported that the Elder was down in the alley with both feet in a barrel of ice water, Brother Gardner said: "When 1 find a sober, industrious working-man who am out o' work I am gwine to reason dat it am de nateral consequence of de gineral depreshun in bizness. When I find dat same pusson in want o' bread I am gwine to ax him sartin queshuns. I want to know what he did wid his wages. If he libed as became a man airnin' $2 per day I want to know why he hasn't suntirin' laid up. If he aimed $2 a day and libed at dfe rate of $25 per week I has no furder use for him. "Each winter wo h'ar dis cry of charity. Each winter de man who has managed to save up a leetle am told dat it am his solemn dooty to hand a part of it ober to charity. We are not to ax men an' women whether they worked or idled de summer away whether deir airnin's went for luxuries or necessities whether they spent wid a free hand or denied demselves a sin-

thing. If de sales of beer an' toacco depended on de rich an' moderately well-off de bizness would decrease two-thirds. If our summer excursion boats depended on de same class dey couldn't run. If our street cars had no other patrons dey would stop deir trips. Our circuses an' theaters am supported by de workin' classes. Our toy stores an' bazaars make few sales to de rich. "Nineteen out of twenty of our workmen use ebery dollar of deir wages from week to week, an' not one laborer in fifty am satisfied to lib on his airnin's. De rich practice economy de poor waste an' destroy. In my humble cabin we practice economy. We remake an' remodle. We color over old clothes, an' peel de 'taters close. If I aim seben dollars a week we stop when we hev Spent six. When de fall eands an' winter comes we has sunthin' laid up. Does dat sunthin' belong to us, who have pinched an' planned' an' saved, or to charity—which means de man who has idled half his time away, an' had his tobacco and beer regularly —which means de woman who has dressed in cashmere when sheorter hev dressed in ealiker—which means de fam'ly who has had oysters on Sundays when I had co'n beef. I ax no man to close his heart or purse agin honest people who hev met wid baa luck, but de so-callcd charity of to-day am a premium on idleness and extravagance —an aid in maintainin' a class of leeches who have neither shame, industry nor gratitude." Detroit Free Press.

ECZEMA!

Eczema is one of the ugliest and most troublesome of all blood diseases. It proceeds from humors in the blood which are somstimess very difficult to eradicate. For five weary years Mr. J. D. Rodefer, of Oreendale, Va., suffered terribly from this disease. He writes: "Finding no relief in the many medicines till 1 used Brown's Iron Bitters, I purchased three bottles from the use of which I have obtained almost entire relief. I recommend it to every one in my neighborhood for any disorder of the blood and ss a general tonic."

The Lick Observatory.

As the ascending track draws its coils closer and closer round the mountain, the view becomes at every turn more varied and more extensive. On one side the tumultuous Coast Ranges, stooping gradually to the shore, magnificently clad with forests of pine and red cedar the island-studded bay of San Francisco, and farther south, a shining glimpse of the Pacific on the other, the thronging pinnacles of the Sierras—granite needles, lava-topped bastions—lire-rent, water-worn right underneath, the rich valleys of Santa Clara and San Joaquin, and 176 miles away to the north (when the sapphire of the sky is purest), the snowy cone of Mount Shasta.

Thus, there seems some reason to apprehend that Mount Hamilton, with its monster telescope, may become one of the show places of the New World. Absit omen! Such a desecration would effectually mar one of the fairest prospects opened in our time before astronomy. The true votaries of Urania will then be driven to seek sanctuary in some less accessible and less inviting spot Indeed, the present needs of science are by no means met by an elevation above the sea of four thousand and odd feet, even under the most translucent skv in the world. Already observing stations are recommended at four times that altitude, and the ambition of the new species of climbing astronomer seems unlikely to be satisfied until he can no longer find wherewith to fill his lungs (for even an astronomer must breathe), or whereon to plant his instruments.—"Mountain Osbtrvatories," tn Popular Science Monthly for January.

From a single grain of wheat planted in 1881, says the Grass Vallev (Cal.") Record, grew twenty-two stalks, eacn bearing a full head. These yielded 860 grains, 760 of which were planted the next year, producing one-fifth of a bushel of splendid wheat. This was 1 anted last Spring yielding seventeen 3ushels, making 1.020 pounds of wheat from one grain in three years.

"For nearly a whole vear 1 was an invalid, a living, powerless subject of the most dreadful of aP diseases, 'kidney

der myself as wall as ever."—Mrs. 7. Clark, 109 Main St, Hartford,

#.

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.

Just a Living.

"Well, we manage to live, and that's about all,Pop," said a peddler of penny-

?ng.

triced songs to a reporter this mowiThe peddler had under his arm two hundred copies of songs. A varied lot, indeed, they were. There were some favorite melodies, written by an amateur of the genius who composed the beautiful ballads that Mme. Nilsson warbles on the stage, and a majority were such as please the patrons of a Bowery theater picture gallery or a cheap dive. "I cleared $7 in Newark yesterday," said the song-peddler. *1 sell some of these songs for 1 cent some for 6cents. In Newark yesterday I sold lots of songs for a dime each, and in some places 1 got a quarter. I sees a nice young feller with his gal promenadin' the avenue. Says I: 'Nice songs, Jerry Jones' Ode to His Old Love, Pasty Bird's Sweet Lullaby.' I sizes up my customers. The girl smiles. He takes a couple of songs and hands me a quarter. He didn't wait for change. Oh, I knows how to work the racket"

An old man, an ex-fireman and a soldier in the Mexican war, whose long gray beard makes him look venerable, may be seen at midday on Nassau street nearly every day in the week. He carries a basket and sells shoe blacking. The old man earns from $1 to $1.60 per day. He is a veritable Yankee, and manages to keep over half a dollar "for stock" each day. His earnings go chiefly for rum. If he can get aD the drink he wants he is satisfied to get a 15-cent lodging. Another old man of patriarchal appearance visits residences on the east and west sides, ingratiates himself into the favor of the women folks, and obtains an order for a window curtain, a table-cloth, or a. dress pattern. He was once a clerk in a drygoods store on Broadway later owned one and did a prosperous business. Rum brought him down. Another sells combs, another neckties. 'J hey par tronize the cheap salopns, eat

free

lunches and sleep in cheap lodging houses. A majority .of them are poor —very poor, often hungry, and too frequently drunk. "Half of our patrons are peddlers," said the keeper of a cheap lodging house in Bleecker street to a reporter. "They make money, but spend it as they make it They never prosper. I tell you, sir, think what you please, no man can ever prosper who stops in a cheap lodging place. I never did. I once kept books in & Co.'s on Broadway and got my $8,000 a year. Now I'm clerking in this place for $6 a week—and devilish glad to get it I sleep in a 15-cent bunk and—well, I'm broken down now, but grateful.—New York Telegram.

THE RICHEST MAN IN THE WORLD would be poor without health. The dying millionaire consumptive would exchange all he is worth for a new lease of life. He could have had be used Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery" before the disease had reached its last stages. This wonderful preparation is a positive cure for consumption if taken in time. For all disease* of the throat and lungs it is unequaled. All drug-

Jigging for Frost Fish. W ing for frost fish is now the sport iere. At this season the fish crowd into the shallow water along the shores of the Thames. When the first ice makes the frost-fish jigger is out for business. He needs no bait, but, knowing the habits of the fish, relies wholly upon stratagem. He provides himself with two sticks two feet in length. Upon the end of one he ties a cluster of oak leaves, and at the end of the other he fastens a sharp hook, making a miniature gaff. He takes his busned stick and puts it down in from eight inches to afoot and a half of water and begins to oscillate it patiently, and the frost fish come to it as pet dogs or cats come to meat. They swim slowly beneath it, rubbing against the leaves and expressing signs of gratefulness at finding such shelter, when the jig is deftly lowered alongside of them and they are jerked out of the water with a suddenness that must astonish even a fish. The fish do not seem to get frightened, bnt continue to swarm beneath the leaves and be hooked up as long as the jigger has patience to pull them. In this way bushels of torn cods are caught annually from the Thames.—Norwich (Conn.) Bulletin.

Certain druggists begin to complain that the only cough remedy tbey can now sell is Dr. \Vistar's Balsam of Wild Cherry. Thi* goes to prove that intelligent people are determined to get the best cure for coughs, celds, and consumption, and willnot take a substitute.

Extermination of the wolf is not considered possible on the Continent of Europe. Many neighborhoods have been cleared at one time or another, but after some years of quiet it is found that the wolves, have gathered from all quarters. There is, in fact, a steady migration of the brute from Siberia upon Europe. Asiatic species are constantly identified in the Vos^es and in the Pyrcnnecs. The eradication of this plague must be began in China.

Colonization schemes are cropping out As during the last industrial de-

farge

»ression, so during the present will numbers be driven out from manufacturing centers. ANew Jersey com-

{and

any

has just purchased.4,000 acres of in Florida, and saw-mills are being erected. The best machinery is being contracted for. Laborers are wanted who can put in a .few hundred dollars. •, "A WORD TO THE WISE 18 SUF­

FICIENT."

Catarrh is not simply sn inconvenience, unpleasant to the sufferer and disgusting to Others—it is an advanced outpost ot approaching disease of worse type. Do not 'neglect its warning it brings deadly evils in its train. Before it is

too late, use Dr. Stage's Catarrh Remedy. It reaches the seat of the ailment, and is the only thing that will. Ton may dose yourself with quack medicines 'till it in too late—Hill the streamlet becomes a resistless torrent It is the matured invention of a scientific physician. "A word to tbswiaelssufflcisnt."

AFTER SUFFERING ELEVEN YEARS. DAWSON, GA., August 30,1884.—I suffered witb tetter for eleveu years. It was on my face and body, and gave me untold trouble and pain. I tried the virtue of many remedies, and was treated by some of the best physicians in the country, but found no relief, and had almost despaired of my life. I was induced to try Swift's Specific an a last resort. After taking six bottles the tetter was removed and my skin smoothed off, and I am perfectly well. 1 feel like a new man. Swift's Specific is undoubtedly the beat blood purifier in the world, and I recommend it to sufieHng humanity everywhere. L. H. LKX.

THE 8UPREME BENCH. From experience, I think S. 8. S. a very valuable remedy for cutaneous dis* diseases, and at the same time an invigorating tonic.

JAMBS JACKSON, Chief Justice of 3a« Atlanta, Sept 23,1884.

CUBED WITH TWO BOTTLES. JuBsaYViLLB, III., Ansr. 2, 1884 For over two years I was afflicted with a ring worm on my neck, wbieh would peel off and burn like fire. Calling on an M. D. be pronounced it a cutaneous eruption of the cuticle. This frightened me, and after trying everything in the market, including Fowler's solution of of arsenic, without success, I was advised to try S. 8. 8., which I did, and after taking two small bottles a permanent cure was effected.

ROBT. H. MALTIMOIUS.

Of the U. S. X. and Pae. Ex. Co.

A CHILD.

My little son, now seven years old, broke out when a babe three weeks with what the doctors called eczema, beginning on tbe bead and gradually spreading over bis whole body. He was treated for five years or more by various hvsicians without relief, and tbe little _jy's health was completely broken down. About a year ago I was induced to use on him Swift's Specific, and two bottles cored him sound and well, and tbere has been no sign of a return of the disease. F. O. HOLMBS.

Talbot ton, Ga., 8ept. 12,1884. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free.

Tn SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga.

Ministers, Lawyers, Teachers, and others whose occupation gives tbem but little exercise, should use Carter's Little Liver Pills for torpid liver and biliousness. One is a dose. Jan. 17-4t

1 He Speaks With a Clear Voice. I do not write favorably of your medicine Iteeuuse it ia fashionable, but because 1 have tried your White Wine of Tar Syrup, and am aatlHfied it wll relieve a oold er aore throat quicker than any other medielne 1 have ever tried. At tlraea it has treub ed me a great deal to speak, bnt your medicine has enai me to speak with a elear and dlstinot voioe. I remain truly yours. Rev. J. D. CBAIO.

Miami Station, Carroll Co., Mo. 7-4t

The Value of Thought

Cannot be told. Just so with tbe beat of everything. Take Dr. Bigelow's Positiye Cure for all throat and lung diseases if you appreciate a speedy, thorough and permanent cure. Pleasant to take. Large bottle $1.00 at Gulick A Co's. (2)

Dr. Warrens Dyspeptic's Delight cntee 19 cases of dyspepsia out of 20. For sale by J. J. Baur A Son, and Cook A Bell, Terre Haute. tf.

A True Friend.

When you need a friend select the best. Dr. Jones' Red Clover Tonic is the beet friend mankind has for all diseases of the stomach, liver and kidneys. The best blood purifier and general tonic known. Price 60 cts. at Gulick A Co. (2)

1 YOUNG MEN!—BEAD THIS, f' THE VOLTAIC BKLT CO., of Mai shall, Mich., offer to send tbeir celebrated ELECTRO-VOLTAIC BELT and other rtv days, to men (young or old) afflicted with nervoua debility, loss of vitality

ELECTRIC APPLIANCES on trial for thirt ing lity, 1 and manhood, and all kindred troubles. Also for rheumatism, neuralgia, paralysis, and many other diseases. Complete restoration to health, vigor and manhood guaranteed. No risk is inenrre ae thirty days trial is allowed. Writ tbem at onoe for illustrated pamphlet free. jaSly.

bottle free to Fit canes. Send to Dr. Kline, 881 Arch 8»reet. Philadelphia, Pa.

rrrut

PILLS.

CUBE

BIck Headache and reHere all the troubles lad* dent to a bilioas state of the system, such as Dis* ctnees, Kanaea, Drowsiness, Distress after padhoin the 8 Me, Ac. While their most able success has beea ahown in curing

SICK

Headaehejet Csrter'sLittle Lirer Pillaare equally valuable la Constipation, coring and'pMnrenlinjr thia annoy tag complaint, •while tbey also correct all disorders of the stomach, sthnciate the Ifrer •ad regulate the bowels. Even if th?y only cared

HEAD

Ache therwooM be almost prtoekea to those WBo snfifar from this distressing complaint batfortasateiy their goodness does notendhcre,andthoea

ACHE

others do sot Carter's Uttle IJrct PUIS are rery «n*fl imd vefy easy to takes. One or two pflla makaa dose. and do not gripe or wbo 8eV* Sy&agsMaeraywhen, or seat hy CABTEK VEDICI5E CO., New fnk

TnrcDfT UAC. VUP vt ww They are strictly vegetable and do sot gi pmws bat by tb«r gentle act km please a tMielhem. fnv!alsatJiSccnte flvefor|l. diaarfsts everywhere,

AND OONVERT IT INTO

MONEY li

The undersigned has opened a Beeeivto» Boom, No. 13 south Second street, where bt 1* prepared to receive Roush Tallow *wi Greens of any kind. Pork and B» ef Cractcllngs, "Dis or Green Bone*, for which he will nay tbe Higheat Ca*h Prices. He will ai*r boy Dead Hogs by single or car load. Ho» received at the Factory, Southwest of th* City on the Island. Office No. it south ISesstiwet, Tern Haute, Ind.

HARBISON

8MITH,

Tens Haute, XML

rj\HE SATURDAY EVENING*

MAIL,

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

A Paper for the Peoples.

HOME JOURNAL*

ENTERTAINING, INSTRUCTIVE ANB NEWSY.

BRIGHT, CLEAN AND PURE,

THE FIFTEENTH YEAR

Tbe Mail has a record of sneosss ssM an attained by a Western weekly paper. Foa*» teen yean of Increasing popularity proves it* worth. Encouraged by the axtraonUnaip suooeas which has attended its publioatfcm the publisher has perfected arrangements which for the oomtng year The Mail will be more than ever welcome in the home dnia In this day of txashy and Impure literatim lt ahoukl be a pleasure to all good people help In extending the eirculatioai of sodi* paper as the

SATURDAY EVENING MAIL TERMS:

Six months^.^^^ 1# Three months™ Mall and office subecriT Hems will, Invasfe ably,.be discontinued at expiration of ttaa

Address P. S. W BSTFALL, Publisher Saturday Evening Mall, TERRE HAUTE, IND.

WHERE IT IS SOLD.

TERRE HAUTE. *VL

E. L. Oodecke— Opera Houss S. R. Baker -P. O. I Grove P. Crafts .........Terre Haute House News Stand ...» National Hones Clarence Hart....... South of Postofllea Walsh A Smith Ml Main Street Mis. Elisabeth MoCutoheon, 1184 E. Poplar

St

ILLINOIS.

Areola, Ills. Fordle Moos* Casey, Ilia....... B. P. Miners Chrisman, Ills McKee Bras Ferrell, Ills Elmer Hiteto Hut'onville, Ills Harry Adams Marshal). Ills V.L.Oo»s Martinsville, Ills.— Geo.Ramsay Mattoon, Ilia.... J. W. Hwinj.. Paris, Ills ...W. B. Sheriff A On Robinson, Ills W. G. Daneqr Soott Land, lite1.—

W

L. O. JinkiS

Toledo, Ills Edmund E. Padc. Verml'lion, His. J. W. Boyer Westfleld, Ills. Bird Barter*

INDIANA.

Annapolis, Ind Foster M.Masli Atherton, Ind —Geo. H. Dennr Armiesburg, Ind....„..—.....~ »..A. E, Boys oomingdale, Ind Conner Brazil, Ind T. M. Robertso* Bowling Green, Ind Walter Bobannoa Bridgeton, Ind W. J.Duroe Clay City. Ind ......P. T. JeH Carlisle, Ind —J. M. Warner Cloverland, Ind H. D. Falif Clinton, Ind John Battr Ciitlin, Ind .Joseph A. Wright Coal Bluff, Ind E. Davis Coffbe, Ind -J- H. Ouwy Dana, Ind ...Cfaas. Hutchinsoa Eugene, Ind MWatocm Farmerfburg, Ind Alfred Parky Fontanett, Ind .....Ed. C. High Greencastie, Ind K. Lantfdoe Harmony, lad H« Sunns Lewis, Ind Fred Cochran Lockpoit, (Riley O) John Smtfte Meroiu, Ind FrankRemminatoij Montesuma, Ind Chas. E. Hung New Lebanon, Ind Je Burnett Newport, Ind BW Dav* Praireton, Ind W .Tones Pimento, Ind W. T. Freneto Perrysville, Ind J. E. Sink* Kockviile,Ind A. C. Bates Rosedale,Ind -»W. Buchsr Sullivan, Ind Ethan Allen Panford, Ind ....^..Ed. May Soonover, Ind A. D- Jenklns St. Marys, Ind F. M. Curtagr Shelburn, Ind Chas. Fromeot Waveland. Ind H. A. PsaCt

JjANVILLE ROUTE.

Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad.:/,

Chicago, Milwaukee, fadison, Green Bay, ,, Minneapolis, St. Paul, 'f „.

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Cedar Rapids, Omaha

And all points in the North and Northww*'

THREE TRAINS DAILY

Between Terre Haute and Chicago arriving in time to make close connections wUn $»- trains on «H roads diverging. «,« ear Woodruff Palace and Sleeping Coaches on all nlgbt trains,

Tourists Guides giving a description of thy various ummer Resorts will be furnimsa upon Bppllcationto "j: ,, R. A. CAMPBELL, Genl Ag't 824 Main st Terre Haat*\ Ind.

TRAINS GOING WEST AND SOUTH. Leave Indianapolis a« 11:56 a and 10:45 pm Terre Haute at 2fl0 and 4:00 a in. Arrive Evansville at 6:20 and 7:35 a m. ^,-4

Passengers for Indianapolis, on the 130asa FI train, can remain in sleepers until 7:00 a m. These curs contain the latest improved ventil*tors and heating appartus, making tbena -i absolutely free from dust and smoke. No w* more luxurious cars are being ran In Ameelea. E' A. FORD, G. T. A.

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G. J. GRAMMER, G. P. A.

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The New Leve and Alden Parlor aaA Sleeping Coaches, A "Hyacinth" and "Margurlte" are now beinx run between Evansville and Indlanapolis by the E.4T.H, and Vandalia lines.

TRAINS GOIH0 WORTH AND EAST. Leave Evanaville at 1030 a. m. and 8d6 p.m. Terre Haute at 2Mp and 1:20 a as. Arrive Indianapolis at 4:50 and 8:80 m.

STOPPED FREE

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