Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 15, Number 46, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 9 May 1885 — Page 4

ass

THE MAIL

A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

P. S. WESTFALL,

EDITOR AND FKOPRIKTOK

rXTBLICATIOH onrict,

Nos.

20 and 22 South Fifth Street, Printing House Square.

TERRE HAUTE, MAY 9 1885.

A TOLEDO paper is preparing a list of persons in that city who rent property to persons of unsavory reputation and announces an intention of publishing the names of the occupants as well as the man who pockets the rent derived from the infamous business. A like publication in this city would no doubt ereate a genuine sensation.

THK Boston Globe notes with ap proval the revival of chess. It is a good, strong-minded game and requires braius to play it. The principal objection to eheesasa game for recreation is that there is no recreation about it. It requires deep study and intense concentration of the mind to play it successfully. But considered merely from a Mientilie point of view it is a fine game.

FOB some time past the town of Ply mouth, in north-eastern Pennsylvania, has been the scene of a terrible Sjgidemic which has been killing off the people by hundreds. The disease is of a typhus character and has proved exceedingly virulent and fatal. A critical examination of the water snpply of the town has failed to discover anything indicating a cause for the fever. The mayors of New York and Philadelphia have been appealed to for aid for the sufferers.

THE big task of counting all the coin in the United States treasury, previous to turning it over to the new Treasurer, has been completed. Of all the millions which ought to be there nothing was found wanting except two cents missing from a five-dollar package of pennies in the cash room. The Democrats will find it hard to improve on the accuracy and integrity with which the national treasury has been managed during the past twenty-four years. If they make as good a record in this respect as the Republicans have made the people will besatisfied.

ALTHOUGH less than three weeks remain before the time when the Bar hoidl statue is expected from France the pedestal for it to rest upon is yet uncompleted and a general call on the people of the country for money to complete it is made, Since the great city whose harbor is to be graced by the statue has been too stingy to contribute the small sum needed for this purpose the nation will respond, of course, and su^sorlbe the amount needed. But the experience of France will be a warning to other nations not to send us any more statues and we are not likely to be bothered with these troublesome works of art in the future.

8OMB of the Southern towns are imitating those of the North in vigorously advertising their advantages to the world. The Nashville Union complains that the citisens of that plaoe are not as much alive in this respect as they ought to be and that Nashville is being outdone by Chattanooga and some other plac*ts, whose citizens "talk up'* their respective localities more energetically than the more modest Nashvilliati is wont to do. This is the kind of opirit that the South needs in order to its building up and development. Live business men make alive towu aad in making their changes they want to go to a lire town. Energy and enterprise attract these qualities everywhere.

TARE down your atlas or look upon a a map of the world, and trace the route from St. Louis to New Zealand, away down oat west of South America, and you will have an illustration of the farreaching arm of the law and the rapidity with which news cau travel, for the telegraph tells us that Maxwell, the supposed murderer of Preller, the young English man whose body was found in a trunk in a St. Souis hotel, has been arrested at Aukland. In bis rapid flight the murderer seems to have displayed the sagacity of the ostrich, which when pursued sticks its head in a bush and imagines no one can find it. The circumstantial evidence against him appear* to be conclusive of his guilt. Mtxwell ba* employed counsel and will make a desperate fight to prevent being returned to this country.

MORMONDOM laIn a great state of ex dietnent and indignation over the energetic enforcement of the laws against polygamy by the federal authorities. Contrary to all precedent, polygamists in high places are really feeling the heavy hand of the law upon them, and and some of them are getting into jail where they ought to be. Recent results have demonstrated, what has so often hem denied, that the law against plural marriages can be enforced in Utah if the government will only employ the right kind of officers to en fores them. Just at present there is an energetic set of officials in the Territory, and It is to be

hoped

that the President will let them go on undisturbed in the good fight against the Mormon monster. Unless all outward appearances are at fault the institution of polygamy is tottering to its fail. All that a needed to that the vigorous oraaade which has been made gainst (t ahail be kept ap and there Is a cheerful prospect that the sod will soon

A

LARGE

THE tenement house fire in New York on last Sunday morning, which resulted in the death of eight persons and the partial maiming of many more, was followed on Tuesday by a shocking calamity of a similar character in Brooklyn. In the latter instance an old trap of a building, which has been standing for twenty-sev years, and was occupied by about twenty ipanufaoturing concerns, suddenly collapsed and the whole inflammable mass took fire and burned like a tinder heap. Several hundred girls and women were at work in the building many of whom were buried in the ruins, while others lost their lives in jumping from the uppei windows. The use of suoh a building for such purposes seem little less than criminal. The other oase was ihit of one of those very high buildings so much the fashion now in large cities for tenement purposes, and whica have always proven to be terrible death traps in case of fire. The building was considered above the average and was furnished with a system of fire-escapes, but these appear to have been in the wrong place and at once became useless from the action of the fire. The simple truth is that these very high buildings cannot be rendered safe against fire and they will always be terribly destructive of life in the event of such a visitation. And yet doubtless men will go on building them and people will continue to live in them, such is the pressure for room in our great cities.

AN entire and radical change has taken place in the Earopean situation within a week. The war clouds were suddenly blown away and the almost certainty of war has given place to the promise of an almost assured peace. From the beglning it has been evident that Mr. Gladstone was determined to avoid a resort to arms If it were possible to do so. He proposed to refer the question in dispute to the arbitration of some neutral power and Russia has finally consented to such an arrangement. It is understood that either the king of Denmark or the king of Belgium will be the arbitrator. As was to have been expected the war party in England is not satisfied and is taunting the government with imbecility and cowardice. The Times, the Post and the Standard all cry out against the humiliation which the premier has brought upon the country and predict that any settlement which inay now be made will only result in postponing war with Russia, which is sure to come sooner or later. But history will approve Mr. Gladstone's ooaduct. There is nothing in the present controversy to justify along and costly war the spending of millions of money and the slaughtering of thousands of men There is nothing at stake worth fighting for and Mr. Gladstone ia wise enoagh to know that it does not pay to go to war for nothing, or for trifles. The very people who are now so anxious for war would abuse the miniatry in oase a war were entered into. The Russian press is as dissatisfied as the English with the action of the Cxar in agreeing to an ar bitration. From this it is evident that there ia a strong popular feeling in both countries in favor of war and the world to confronted with the spectacle, seldom indeed witnessed, of the rulers of two powerful nations agreeing to terms of peace when their subjects were eager for war. This action will form a valuable precedent for the settlement of national disputes hereafter. It will give the method of arbitration, so happily introduced in the Alabama case, an increased sanction and prestige. The civilised world will certainly rejokae if the present effort to adjust aa International dis-

extent bis party would like and has an- and manufacturers have been looking nounced that hereafter he would goeven for a boom and because the boom has slower than heretofore in the matter of not not come they are disappointed and making changes. This will be sorrow- complain that there is no improvement ful news to the army of hungry place- and not much prospect of any. But seekers but it will satisfy all sensible this is a mistake. 1 here is a safe and and intelligent men, who want to see healthy growth steadily going on the time come when all the official places throughout the country. All the towns in the government shall not be consider- and cities are increasing their populaed as the mere spoils of party, to be tion. Many thousands of acres are begiven to those who have blowed the lag added annually to the producing loudest and struck the hardest for their capacity of the nation. New factories party, but the best interest of the public j,.of various kinds are springing up and service shall be the first object to be con-f better machinery is taking the place of sidered. The reform of the civil service! that which was not so good. While the

has taken a deep hold npon the thought of the people. "fes

A

DELEGATION

of Mormons have gone

to Washington to lay before the President the grievances of the Mormon church and to pray the pardon of President Cannon, lately convicted of polygamy. There is little prospect that they will make any impression npon Mr. Cleveland. He is too clear headed and sound in judgment to be mislead by the specious arguments thst can be made in favor ol polygamy, and he is tco selfpoised to be influenced by the promises and cajolements of these defiant lawbreakers. The chances are entirely on the side of their going bsck to Utah without the least encouragement from the present bead of the government Referring to the recent pronunciamento formulated by the conference of the Mormon church, the New York Post says it sounds more like a wail cf despair than like the cry of boastful rejoicing which the country has grown accustomed to hear from that quarter, and that its tone shows tbat the leaders have lost much of their former confidence and are in serious trouble over the prospect for the future.

pate without recourse to arms shall re- ner.

prosp— that it will.

y:^"-

J*

.........

MARR1A QE AND HEALTH. It has been proved beyond all peradventure that married people suffer less from siokness—have fewer diseases and live longer than the unmarried. This is true of both sexes. When cholera rages it takes away more single than married people, and so of all contagions. Professor Richard A. Proctor, while admitting these facts, warns sickly people against marriage. He says they have no right to burden wholesome partners with invalid companions for life, nor should they run the risk of bringing children into the world tbat may inherit their chronie ailments. The greater mortality of the single may be due to the fact that invalids of both sexes often abstsin from msrriage. The question has been raised whether any one should be permitted to marry without a doctor's permit. Certainly It ia a mockery of a divine ordinance for clergymen to unite persons who cannot be true companions and who are unsuited to each other by difference of age or an inherited tendency to insanity or disease.

PERSONAL AND PECULIAR.

Centralis, Mo., has a colored boy 14 years old who has a head as big as a bushel basket.

It is gravely announced that General Grant has solemnly promised to see that his doctors' graves are kept green.

The consensus of opinion just now in regard to round-dancing seems to be that it is not altogether the square thing.

Scandalized husbands,indignant wives and irate papas have burned down six roller rinks in Iowa within four weeks.

An observer of small distinctions in speech says that when you hear a man say to another, "I certainly am glad to see you I certainly am," you may be sure he is from Virginia.

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING AJLu

number of Democratic sen- THE Cincinnati Commercial Gazette that you will condescend to be present atore are still hanging about Washing- says it has become fashionable of late with us at 6 o'clock on the9th of Deceraton beseeching the President for the ap- for business men to complain of depres- ber." On arriving at the house you find pointment of their friends to office. The sion in trade and that this is precisely it spotlessly clean, tasty in arrangement, pressure upon Mr. Cleveland is very the way to help depression. The trou-. and the host and hostess affeble. The great but he has not yielded to it to the ble is, the writer thinks, that merchants bill of fare consists of ten or fifteen

consuming capacity of the country is increasing the producing capacity more than keeps pace with it. And here is one of the troubles. This state of things necessarily tends to keep the margins of profit close and there are no quick fortunes in business, as was the case in the war days. Competition in all lines is sharp and goods are sold at the minimum of profit. This is good for the masses of the people because they get the necessaries of life cheap.

On the whole, then, business may be said to be upon the safest kind of a basis. Staple articlee are as low as they can be produced. Dealers buy sparingly and stocks are generally low. By do|ng so they do not involve themselves much and the business of the country is the ideal and best basis. But while there* is no boom in business there are evidences of steady improvoment. The carrying trade reports an increase. This means that more goods are moving from place to place. There are comparatively few idle mills and factories now and but a small percentage of unemployed men. All tbat is needed is for men to be satisfied with reasonable profits, fair returns upon their labor and investments. When this is done we shall cease to hear complaints of dull times and poor business. jar

i-

Ilk-,

THE capital of West Virginia has been removed from Wheeling to Charleston. The latter city is somewhat more centrally located than Wheeling though neither is as central as a State capital should be.

In Patagonia they fine«a man two goats for killing his wife. The law is very strict on the subject, too, and if the fine isn't promptly paid he is compelled to marry again. That makes him hustle around for the goat.

A saloon in Eureka, Cal., displayed a placard announcing "Positively no admittance." This excited the idle curiosity of passers-by, and the saloon did a rushing trade with the crowds who entered to ascertain the cause of the strange prohibition.

Four tramps, who had made themselves very obnoxious about Anderson, were taken from the jail, Monday night, and made to run the gauntlet of a Ions double line of men armed with switches and plunge in(o the river. They dissp pea red on the other side and will probably not return

Dr. Talmage thinks thousands of families in Brooklyn are being "clubbed to death." Yet that city to reported to have fewer dubs In proportion to Its population titan any other great city in the union. It must be conceded that in the game of modern soda! life in dttoa dubs are trumps.

An invitation to dinner among the middle-upper tlssaM of Japan frequently commences about aa follows: "I beg pardon for thus insulting you in begging your company at my boose to din-

11M

suit in suaeess, aa then to now every( Our habits are rods, and yoq may

house to small and wry dirty,

I got anything fit to eat and yst I hois! thisodaughters with him.

courses, the best the market can afford All the self-humilation of the host is the method adopted to do you honor.

President Cleveland signs his letters "Yours truly." Mr. Hayes wrote "Sin cerely yours." Garfield, "Very truly yours," and ex-President Arthur usually appended "Faithfully yours to his correspondence. Mr. Arthur made the prettiest copy, but rarely wrote. Garfield was a writing master in his youth, but grew careless "in his chirograpby and usually dictated to a stenographer. Mr. Hayes, on the other hand, seemed to delight in writing.

Colonel Robert Ingersoll, in the opinion of a critic, is a melancholy example of the influence of too much prosperity upon the growth of an ungrateful heart and a captious spirit. Had he only a few real troubles, like owing his landlord or milkman, he would not go about abusing bis Maker and suggesting improvements in the motions of the planets and the wise allotments of human disdpline. What he needs is, suggests the critic, for one hour to dedper what Thomas De Quincey finely calls the hieroglyphics of suffering.

There is now living in Pickens county, Ga., a man who during the rebelion donned his wife's dress, kept his face closely shaved and wore a big sun bonnet, in order to avoid being conscripted and sent to the front. The officers in search of recruits frequently visited the house and asked his wife where her husband was, and at the very moment he could oe seen working in the field in female garb. By the time be had worn out seven of bis wife's dresses he became tired of masquerading, enlisted and became a good soldier. .i-n if

The publication of Mrs. Custer's book has revealed the fact, previously known to intimate friends of botn, that the -most perfect congeniality existed between the two. It is related that at one time the General returned home and said: "Let me get a book that I have been reading, and which I have marked for you." At the same moment Mrs. Custer produced a novel which bad been the companion of her lonely hours, and It was found that the two books were identical, and the two congenial readers had marked, almost without exception, the same passages.

CAN HE BEAT THE RECORD. [Burdette Col. Ingersoll says he would have given Moses better commandments than tbope the great Hebrew received on Mount Sinai. Well, now, it isn't too late to sail in and beat ^loses's record as a lawgiver. The colonel can make his entry now and start In any time he wants to. He has told us so often what he would have done if he had been there people are beginning to feel a little curious to see wbat he can do now that be is here. This is a good place and a good time to start. A man of Moses's ability aa a leader and a soldier and a lawgiver could not fall to make a marked Impression on the world even in these busy days of gallop and gulp^ Any one of us oould. have done a great deal better than Moses at the palace of Pharaoh, at the Red Sea, at Mount Sinai, at Meribah, in the wilderness-^in our minds but we weren't there, and now all that we can do ia to beat the record now. And with all our superior advantages tbat ought to be a very simple thing, and we would all be greatly pleased to see Col. Ingersoll do It. He says could have done it over 8,000 years, ago, and he must be much wiser and better equipped by this time. Moses baa done bis best and gone of the track. Everything is clear for the other contestant. We are all wait-, iog- Time, Robert I

THE PERSIAN MINISTER.

BAYLESS W. HANNA WON'T PAY FOR .. A SHAH'S RECEPTION.

WffcJ

[Indianapolis Newa]

Bayless W. Hanna, the new Minister to Persia, is in the city to-day en route to Washington, where he goes to recdve bis final instructions preparatory to leaving for Teheran, the Persian capital.

"The papers have bad a good deal to say about you and the foreign mis-

I

alons," was remarked to Mr. Hanna Yes they have done me an injustice in that respect. I made no application for the Mexican Mission because after going to Washington I learned tbat Cerro Gordo Williams wanted it. My friends mentioned my name in connection with the Japau Mission, but it fell to the lot of Governor Hubbard. I had a talk with the President, and it was practically understood tbat I was to be minister to the Argentine Republic. I was looking over the route and informing myself concerning the Argentine Republic when a crowd of friends approached and congratulated, me npon my appointment to Persia. Secretary Bayard urged me to take it. saying it was a classic land and one of the most important of the Oriental missions."

The government baa given Mr. Hanna thirty days for preparation and sixtyfive days in which to reach Persia. He will go by way of London, thence by an East India steamer down the Mediterranean to Malta, thence to the Black Sea, sailing ita entire length to Poti thence by rail to Baku and the oil regions on the Caspian and across to Peraa. The new Mi Bister to informed tbat the Persian eourt to the most Isshing in the world. He says: "In the light

of

of

my predecessor's ex­

es I have prepared against the nd

reception the

8b

Bet^amln."

Shah gave Mr.

they greet yon with salvos of

artillery, and present you with a thirty room house, turktoh baths, etc., with end thai present you what will you do

etc., bill.

the

Politely declins to receive their ad vances. My instructions are that while I am to BBset all these offers kindly, I must give or receive nothing. Ofoouiss I must be ingenious in my declinations, bat as I set by authority of my govsrnit I oootomp'ats no trouble."

Mr*. Hanna will take Ids wife and

PROGRESSIVE EUCHRE.

[Champe Carter in St. Louis Magazine.]

Never was game so cosmopolitan, to equalizing! Behold, Clara Vflre de Vtie at the head table with, O, miratrile dictu! St. Elmo Shoddy as a visa vis I The bell tape, down to the foot tbey go, side by side, and Lady Clara looks sorry to loose him, when Socrates Bloo, who can talk but can play, becomes her partner.

Then the delightful uncertainty One becomes fairly dazed with success for awhile, and proudly points to the "headtable punches" on bis "chip," thanks fortune (in an under tone) that as yet his partners have been good players, when—bell taps! Chaoge places,—presto! he finds himself opposite that execrable woman who always leads her left when the right is out, and throws away when she ought to trump. The mercury falls in the tbermometor of bis spirits, the zest goes out of the game, already be sees himself a medium player and longs for even the distinction of the "foottable punches."

Bell taps!— mercury rises as he is pro moted and finds his vis-vis the bee player in the rooms.

Crowning recommendation! nobody has to talk One may be awfully stupid and not advertise it. One may be witty and wedge in many a brilliant remark, in a sub r»sa way, if one's partner is witty also.

Then you don't have to wear something new and full dressy. You don't have to borrow your married sister's diamonds, and exist in aBtateof distraction lest "something happens,."

GRACE AT THE RESTAURANT. [Syracuse Standard.] A derk and his country father entered the restaurant on Saturday evening and took seats at a table where sat a telegraph operator and a reporter. The old man bowed his head ana was about

Jor

"r CuWcTnc^w Gas

Baking Powders, p^,.

eac

Vs

gave:

orders and the former again bowed his head. The young man turned the color of a blood-red beet, and touching his arm, exclaimed in a low, nervous tone: "Father, it isn't customary to do that in restaurants!" "It'scustomary with me to return thanks to God wherever I am," said the oid man. For the third time he bowed his head, and his

Bon

bowed his head, and the telegraph operator paused In the act of carving hip beefsteak and bowed his head, and the journalist put back his fisbball and bowed bis bead, and there wasn't a man who beard the short and simple prayer that didn't feel a profounder respect for the old farmer than if be bad been the President of the United States. -.««

S'

WHAT MR. OOULD EATS. [From the Cook.] "I am very fond of baked potatoes," said Mr. Jay Gould the other day. "They are about the simplest thing one can eat, and I find that the simpler my food is the better for my head. At home I do not care for what you call 'fancy dishes.' Plain meats and vegetables, good bread and butter, good milk, sometimes porridge or grits lor breakfast satisfy me. As you may suppose, I find my time filled up pretty well with business, and I certainly find that I can get along better when my food Is the plainest of the

ilain. I have never lost~my fondness the country food I used to be accustomed to in my boyhood."

BAKING POWDERS,

HftSli

INTERESTING TESTS MADE BY" THE GOVERNMENT CHEMISTS. %t

i.

Dr. Edward G. Love, the Analytical Chemist for the Government, has made interesting experiments as to the comparative value of baking powders. Dr. Love's tests were made to determine wbat biands are the most economical to use, and as their capacity lies in their leavening power, tests wore directed solely to ascertain the available gas of each powder. Dr. Love's report gives

S

ounce of Powder.

"Royal" (cream tartar powder) 127.4 "Patapsco" (alum power) ~...125.2« "B,umford'8" (phosphate) fresh —122.5*" _Jumford'8" (phosphate) old 82.7* "Hanford'a None Such," fresh 121.6 "Hanford's None Such," old 84.85 "Redhead's" 117.0 "Charm" (alum powder) 116.8* "Amazon" (alum powder) 111.9 "Cleveland's" (contains l(me)).... 110.8 "Sea Foam" 107.9 "Czar". 108.8 "Dr. Price's" (contains lime) 102.6 "Snow Flake" (Groff's, St Paul 101.88 "Louis's" Condensed 98.2 "Congress" yeast 97.6 "C. E. Andrews A Go's" (containsalum) 7817* "Hecker's" 92.5 "Glllets"„ 80.5 "Bulk". 80 5

•In his report, the Government Chemist says: "I regard all alum powders as very unwholesome. Phosphate and Tartaric Add

powders

Kxcoroloo to Northwest Iowa aad Southwest Minnesota, Messrs. Sutlln A Florence, 90 E. Randolph St. Chicago, dealer* in western lands, will run their next roootli ly excursion to toe above unexcelled regions of cheap, choice lands. May 30th, 188&. This is a nice opportunity to visit the west at a very

W.B.

liberate their gas too freely

In process of baking, or under varying climatic changes suffer deterioration." Dr. H. A. Mott, the former Government Chemist, after a careful and elaborate examination of the various Baking Powders of commerce reported to the Government in favor of the Royal brand.

Prof. McMurtrie, late chief chemist for the U. S. Government at Washington, says: "The chemical testa to whic I have submitted tbe Royal Bakin Powder, prove it perfectly healthful, anc free from every deleterious subst ance.'

GOOD FOR THE CHILDi W The ailments of childhood need careful attention and wise treatment. Some people think "anything is good enough for a child, and there isn't much the matter with it anyhow." But judicious mothers know better, and do as Mrs. H. W. Perry, of Richmond, Va., does. She says: "I take Brown's Iron Bitters and give it to my children with the most satisfactory results." Sold everywhere.

OI.IVT.

low

mm

OfiSRS

COMPANY.

518 and 520 Main Street

-vt, jeU

DEPARTMENT.

V'V**

SPECIAL!

TODAY

AND

]SText "Week,

We will plaoe on sale

1,100 yards of 40in All Wool

CASHMERE,

In all the fashionable colors and black, at

A cents

tJv/per yard,

Never before sold for less

J1 H.

^te-

Writetothem for fall information regarding rates, time train leaves, advertising mattyr eta Excursion train will he over tbe Ufa. Central and B. C. R. 4k N. R^. to Sibley. Iowa, and Pipestone, Minnesota. Rotu trip tickets nodforW days will enable inventoia, cattle men and farmer* an nnusoal to view a splendid country and make Investments In great bargains.

A man attacked with Bright'a Disease, or any kidney disease, don want fine words—but Its conqueror Hunt's [Kidnay and Liver] Remedy.

We most tell of the great spodllo— Hunt's [Kidnsy aad Liver] Remedy. It I never fails to cars Dtobstsa, Dropsy,

Bright's Disease, Ac.

thftx.

75cta. A Great Bargain. ALSO

... vV'

10 pieces

(jenuine China Silks,

19 inch wide, pure silk, at Acents t) per yard, Or, $8.00 for a pattern of 20 yds.

6 pieces

Black Gro Grain Silks,

Extra Fine, Satin Finish, at QQ cents, actual tJ O value $1.25.

Samples Mailad*

HOBEEG, K00T & CO

518 and 520 Main Street

COCHRAN, & HOWARD,'

SUCCESSOR TO

FOUTS, HUNTER & .CO., 123 south 3d street.

We will have an

Auction Sals every Saturday,

at 10 o'clock of hones, wagons, harness, vshides etc* All iiorses.etc.. bought and sold on commission. we give particular attention to families wanting horses. All orders for horses or males, large or smitll. promptly filled. Cash paid for hones and males at all times. Orders solicited and satisfaction guaranteed. Young men can ride in style, we have put new buggies, new harness and, first clasB hones in ous livery.

VLUIUV,

J. M.GLXTV

CLIFT, WILLIAMS & CO,

XAifUrAOTUBKBS OW

Sash, Doors, Blinds^etc

AJID DBAliBBS XJV

LUKBEB, LATH, 8BINOLB8 GLASS, PAINTS, 0IL8 and BUILDERS' HABDWARK.

Mulberry Street, Corner Ninth,

TKRRK^HAUTE. INI'

gAVE EVERY THING

AND CONVERT IT INTO

MONEY,!

The undersigned has opened a Reesivlag loom. No. 13 south Second street, where Ne •4 prepared to receive Rough Tallow and Grease of any kind. Pork and Beef Craolh lings. Dry or Green Bones, for which he wm pay the Highest Cash Prices. He will alas bay Dead Hoc* by single or car load.

Ham

received at the Factory, Southwest of the City o» the Island. Office No. 13 sooth ond street, Terre Haute, Ind.

HARRISON SMITH, Terre Haute, lad.

N. FIERCE, j_

Attorney at Law,

V"iwsife-

Office:— 309% Main Street.

SIGN OF THE 8ILVEE GUN

No. 22 North Fourth Street.

A splendid assortment of Breech Loading 6ans, Gan Implements, OasvSs Costs and Vests, and Amtnanitos. Loaded Shells always on hsnd for sale.

R. R. TEEL A BRO.

Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription" is not extolled as a ''care-sll," bat admirably fulfills singleness of purpose, being most potent specific in thoee chronic weaknesses peculiar to women. Particulars In Dr. Pierce's pamphlet treatise on Diseases Peculiar to Women, 96 pages, sent for three stamps. Address WOKLD'S DMWWSA*T MBCJCAL OIATMN,

Buflklo,

NTY.

I