Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 15, Number 49, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 30 May 1885 — Page 7

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Farm Conmlenecfc

Tho farmer ot the new time employe every tool and machine -within his means to save time and labor. If he raises berries and small fruits largely, one of the first things be will secure will be a

ffPRI.TO EKBRT CAB?.

One recommendation is its simplicity. The springs, wheels, etc., of an old boggy will do to build it upon. Once made it will last years. Crates of berries can be put upon its table and wheeled from the field to the house or elsewhere without jolting or bruising.

The second farm tool hero presented «. pattern is the SQUIRT FOR KKROKKXE MIXTURE.

It is a gyringo by which both underground and above ground pests may be washed out of I-1" -1 existence. Used above ground, it showers death and destruction upon plant lice and bark lice.

The

scale lice in the past

year did untold damage to maple trees, its presence may be known by the white cottony substance which overspreads the trees. In this Hubstanoe its thousands of eggs are laid.

The implement here shown i» made as follows: Take a piece of one and a half inch gas pipe, b,nine inches long, and have it hammered to a sharp point at a. Screw into it at the upper end a piece of inch gas pipe, r, one foot nine incha3 long. The piston, «, works within this. A curved piece of quarter-inch gas pipe, h, is screwed into a hole in the larger pipe, ft. It pssses up into the bottom of a email tin can, d. This has a screw cover, and holds the mixture. It is strapped to the pipe c.

r=r

Opposite the bottom of the can is a foot rest rushes into the vacuum below. d°wn the rod, and drive it out. By *his instrument and method it is claimed that the cabbage maggot, peach borer and otber grubs that work beneath the soil may be killed if one knows where they are. The fluid used is made ns follows:

KKROHKNK AND SOAP MIXTURB. Put a quart of soft soap with a gallon of water and beat it to the boijing point. Then stir into it thoroughly one pint of kerosene oil. Hard soap or whale oil soap would do as well. This mixture and syringe were prepared by Prof. A. J. Cooke, of the Agricultural college of Michigan. The keroeeneand soap mixture, however, have been known to kill young trees and plants occasionally. For leaf lice and slugs a lighter mixture of kerosene and whale oil soap is used. The Persian insect powder, variously known as buhach, pyretlxrum, etc., is also death to plant lice. It will kill most insect vermin, it it can bo once got on them. It is dusted upon leaves nud plants by means of a small bellow*.

Creameries Ag*ln

One question pertaining to butter making threatens to become as hard to settle as the discussion on original sin. It is whether whole milk or cream alone should be churned. As in most things, the truth lies between the two extremes. When the milk is immensely rich and the cream very heavy, it wiil do to churn the whojj milk. Thick heavy cream churned alone does not produce so good butter as when some of the milk is added. The butter is not so bright and dear, but is apt to have a greasy, shiny look. On the other hand, if the cream is thin and produced from a groat quantity of milk then skim it off and churn alone. No great point, is gained by threshing a gallon or %o of water. When only a few cows are kept the cream jar should be Stirred daily. A good farmer will always take care to have fresh cows coming in in mid-winter, to make the butter coma quickly and be of a bright yellow color. Butter from cows long iu milk acmes very slowly in winter. ntKD FOR Itlt.K COWS.

In August and early September in our country there comes a time of drouth when the pastures are parched brown. During tlh&e hot weeks the cows fall off in their milk and get thin, To provide against this afewaaes of sweet corn should be sown broadcast to come in for fodder during the drouth. It will richly repay the labor. An old saw say*: "Feed your stock and the ttock will feed the land." Fertilise the pasture#, in nddition, with thin top drcssiug before the grass starts. Tou will find the milk increasing iu richness as the pasture fa enriched, Again, "June butter" has the choicest flavor of all. The smell of Ute grass «*m« to hover about its golden rinhnt«s. Therefore, have your hay as near the quality of June grass as possible. One model dairyman cuts his hay In early June and gets it into the barn free from rain. Then he gets another crop tha same season.

In the Channel islands, whence the famous butter cows come, their feed for many generations has been root crops largely. A crop uf carrots should be raised, to give butter its golden yei!«\v color in winter. But otherwise it is a question whether root feed is so far superior to Amot kan corn as to be substituted for it a.- feed. Our corn will not grow in Europe, or doubtless they would have it over there last enough. The great amount of work required in producing root crops would be an objection to them in this country, where labor is so high.

Corn, mixed properly with other food. Is good enough for our cows, and will continue to be. But the corn aho always be ground. Have one of thcee reliable farm grinding mills. They cost about *60. Get it if you have to do without that ci of acres of ground you have set your Lv,..-t on, "Jining" your corner woods lot. Then when you get it, take care of it. Keep it out of the wet, and don't let the bens roost over it* and it will last you 20 years, and save yew many and many a heavy hauling trip.

For cows, aching is better than a feed et ground com catmeal mixed. They can toe mixed in the grinding. A dairyman has

made an estimate of a good feed for a highquality dairy cow a day. He has mixed tha ration »o as to combine all the food element* I His calculation is as follow*: Tien pounds clover hay, costing 4 osnts tan pounds straw, S cants tou pounds linseed edmI* I oasis* few pouads wheat hrea, aesto two meal, S cents faur Mai

MO, SI sent* fcrt

oan the place of green food, and the tail substitutes for it should be studied the year round. Mullet and fresh clover are excellent foods. V'1

THE KILKUfG.

Hers is something that should be framed and put above the door of every cow stable. The cows cannot read it, but those who take care of them should: "The man who greets his cow with a kick or a blow with a stick is only a few removes above the wifa-bsater. The quantity and quality of the milk are both strongly affected by the treatment of tfop $w, particularly at milking time."

Milk is of a delicate quality, most'sensitive to bad odors and unpleasant influences. Worrying or running a cow, fretting her in any way, fevers the milk, and causes it to decay. Pet the cow, treat her gently, make ber attached to you, and you will get a larger flow of milk of better quality than you would otherwise. The man who would beat or kick a cow, or let ber stand outdoors with tbe icicles hanging from her side3 in winter, is worthy of the whipping po3fc. She should have noue but thu best and purest food.

Perfect cleanliness cannot be too strongly hammered into the heads and habits of those who work about milk and butter. If a man smokes while milking tha fluid will have the flavor of tobacco. No smoke or stable odors must be permitted in the milk room Brush the dust carefully from the udder of the cow before milking, or wash it if there is need.

IfOTES.

The milk crop in England is now £30,000,000, or about $150,000,000. This is more than the value of the wheat crop, and the disproportion increases yearly, as the tendency is to stock feeding rather than to grain growing.

Nothing* indicates the prosperous and wise farmer more surely than the cows and dairy appliances. Fine cattle and a neat dairy —there will be a liberal, intelligent apd money-making farmer. Mark it.

Good dairying fits admirably into mixed farming. There is a suitable return made to the land in the way of manure, and the waste in the manufacture of butter is a great I elp in he feeding of calves and pigs.

C. H. Lyon and wife, of the Dexter, Iowa, creamery, made last year 60,000 pounds of butter, and tho prospect is good for increasing that amount this year.

One hundred founds of skim milk makes pounds of weight upon pigs. Buttermilk is one of the most healthful of drinks. It is a true milk peptone. In a creamery nears town this would be a source of revenue. $

Many creameries make 800 to 1,000 pounds of butter a day. The price they pay for cream varies in different localities. In some places it is 80 cents a gallon. The richness of the cream must be gauged by measurers.

Dairy schools are becoming a feature in Great Britain. There is one in Cork, Ireland. It has raised the standard of butter in the whole south of the island. Girls are drilled in the principles of scientific buttermaking. They have carried their knowledge tered tbe reform far and wide. The Dairy and enthusiasm into their homes, and scatFarmers' association in Cheshire, England, is establishing a similar one. They have a pasture farm of 200 acres, with dairy buildings. They will instruct pupils in milking and butter-making and the care of cows— also in dairy farming. They have been driven to this by the impossibility of getting dairy maids who knew their business and minded it. Would that we had such schools in this country 1 It would stop the ''shoebox butter" business.

A creamery can be started on a small scale, and persons can gradually work into the business, keeping their eyes open and reading enlightening books and papers. But for an establishment on a large scale nothing is so profitable as to visit some of the great successful creameries in full operation. They are in most sections of the country—in Iowa, in Wisconsin, in New York, Massachusetts and nortborn Ohio.

Another source of profit to the farm dairy is the salo of milk cows. They are higher in price this spring than usual. A good one, even of scrub stock, cannot be had for less than $30 to $40, while tho blooded animals are anywhere from $50 up to $15,000.

Ills Crop of Strawberries.

J. M. Smith, of Green Bay, Mich., well known as a successful horticulturist, is reported to have raised 8,751 quarts of Wilson strawberries on a fourth of an acre, or at the rate of 416 bushels per acre. He cultivated in matted rows two feet wide, with a space of two feet between. The plants were mulched for winter and early spring. A good covering of well rotted manure, 15 or 90 loads an acre, or 75 bushels of unleached ashes, were applied early in the season. "All weeds were destroyed at whatever cost. As for watering when dry, one thorough wetting was found better than three sprinklings. But the Wilson is not the be3t strawberry in this enlightened age.

Cleaning Cellars.

A lot of rubbish from unused or spoiled fruit and vegetables will inevitably accumulate in „farm cellars during the winter season. This should be cleared out and the walls of cellars whitened with the first approach of warm weather. At tha ordinary farmhouse cleanliness of the cellar is essential to tha making of first-class butter. Besides, nothing is more injurious to health t.Hfm the odors from decaying fruits and vegetables. Good Health says that a house with a "pit of corruption" under it always has some one sick in it. Vegetable cellars under living rooms are apt to be such pits. They really should not be built under dwellings at all. Beneath outbuildings would be better. A cave or vault in the ground, drained and ventilated would be best of all.

Bow to Start Lln» Been*.

A farmer writes: I heir a great deal of complaint of Lima beans not coming up after planting, on account of insects. Now, I have been in tbe habit, for the pest three years, of soaking my beans until they were sprouted, before planting, and I very seldom miss in my garden. I first soak tho beans in warm water until they are fully swollen tbe® pour off the water, and lay a dampened rag on top of them, and they will sprout in a tow days. Plant in warm ground, and it is surprising how soon they will come through the surface. 11 1 1

7

Thtift to Do and to Know. No potato can take tbe place of tbe Early Hose.

Tbe Wealthy apple it one of the best for winter. An average pencil atop it predicted for Delaware.

Now scatter a lot of sifted coal asbw e»er tbe roots of currants and gooseberries. American peods upon boys.

agriculture 90 years beoce deths training we now give our

Planners in wheat-growing states will graduallr find it to their interest to grow mora grass and live stock and lass grain.

1

Every farmer should have sweat corn on his table until tell frosts. Plant a null plot every ten d*y» from Uiis time until late

•plotof groan* set «nt tabiack walnat and allowed to iamain SO years, it is a*wftt yield a larger prolt than Ia etf iarastMB* em a farm.

-L

9P

re

What Girls Can Do.

If girls were brought up to it they would astonish many people by their business-like capacity. And they ought to be brought up to it. All nonsense for girls to think they must, have somebody to take care of them and support them. They have tbe same mental faculties that boys have. They learn their lessons in school just as well, too. Is there any reason why they should not go on and earn money for themselves after that! Indeed there is not. listen while we tell you what some girls have done. After you have read it, remember that what girls have done, girls can do.

TLere was Helen Burdett, an Illinois girl. Her papa had no son, and so brought Helen up to be his boy, which was very sensible of him. She worked and played outdoors, spent much time in the sunshine and became strong, active and healthy. What a jolly girl she was—none of your pale, feeble, cor-aet-waisted, back-aching creatures who are afraid of getting tanned, and who have a fit if a mouse runs across the floor. Helen's papa taught her to know the value of live stock and other property, how to buy and sell, and bow to employ hired men, and raise wheat and corn. When she was 14 years old he let her go and buy a cow for herself. She went out alone and selected the animal and brought her home in triumph. She came leading her home by a rope "her own self." The cow was a valuable one, and the girl got a lot of money from her investment Her papa was as proud of her as he could be. With all her business sense she was a refined, highly educated girl, too.

When the daughter was 18 years old, this good, sensible father died. Then it would have been all up with almost any other girl. But Helen had been trained for business. She planted the crops and went right on with that farm just as the most intelligent man in the country could have done. Among other things, she bought 65 head of cattle. She pastured them through the summer, and in the fall sold them for beef and cleared over a thousand dollars on them.

The moral is that any other girl can do just as well as this if she sets her head to learning bow to, and her father gives her a chance.

Girls in the far west have wonderful energy and good hard sense. Out in Nebraska and Dakota they take up homesteads and timber claims from the government lands, and in a few years own a fine farm of 820 acres. If they plant trees upon a 160-acre claim and tend it for a certain length of time it becomes theirs. A homestead claim is also 160 acres. They must build a "shanty" and cultivate the land, and it becomes theirs at the end of five years. Soma of the smart Nebraska girls have built their shanties with their own hands. Farmers' daughters out there often begin by teaching for small wages. They save their money veiy carefully, and thus often pay their own way through college. Then they teach again, and, having a higher education, can get better wages. But they save their money in any case, take up land claims and improve them with their earnings. Thus in a few years they have both a fine education and a farm. They are excellent scholars, excellent teachers and first-class fanners, for they work faithfully and do their bost at everything they undertake. That is the way to succaed. There is no success without it. Any girl can take up a homestead and timber claim who is 21 years old. But they become teachers before that time, so as to hava some money and be ready. These brave girls are not all teachers, however. Sometimes when they have finished the district schools their fathers let them have a little money, and they buy cows and calves and go to stock-raising. They can begin this when very young—not more than 12 or 14 years old. With ordinary luck, by the time they are 21, they can really have considerable property of their own.

These are the girls who are worth something. They are not weak and idle drones. One unmarried woman in Nebraska, not yet old, is half owner of a creamery, has her farm of 820 acres, is postmistress and has a gmnll store besides, connected with the office. She wears a gold watch and drives a fine horse and carriage, and is "somebody" in that country. She has earned it all herself, too.

This is what young women in the country have accomplished. Agaiu the moral is: What girls have done, girls can do. rt'

A Bird Village.

Boys and girls who study out the ways of birds, insects and little wild animals discover some very interesting facta. They can never learn these things so well as when they are young and bright-minded in their country homes. Everything must be learned from observation in the first place, and it is much better to get information in this way than from books.

Meantime, however, we will tell them here about some birds that are found in South Afrioa. They are called

TERRE HAUTE SAIURDAY" EVENING MAIL.

N

SOCIABLE WRAVXR BIRDS.

The sociable part of the name comes in because they all live together in a colony. They are about six inches long, with brown becks and yellow breasts. Five hundred to a thousand of them live in the umbrella shaped village shown in the picture.

They select a smooth-barked tree so that «rm»n animals cannot climb it Then all go to work with might and main upon the umbrella roof of their common houses.' It is so large as to be sometimes IS feet Across, ft is built of grasB and twigs, woven together, and thatched as neatly as men could do it After the root is finished each pair of birds buikia its own separate nest. Yoa see in the picture thh openings to the nests, just under tbe edge of tbe roof. They use a nsst only one year, but they do not move out of the bouse. Tbey stmpiy build a new nest next season under the same graa»-thatched roof. They continue this, and would keep I tup forever if tbey could. But after a few years, some day when a heavy rain oomes, tbe roof gets soaked through and through, and beoomes very weighty with so many hundred nests hanging to it Then, lo! all at once the whole fabric cones down, like a chimney swallow's not after a week's rain, and that fc tfas ead of one sociabls weaver bWffllife.

Finally, here is a question for oar bajsaad girls to answer. If tfasy don't know. 1st thesn look around and find oat: Are tnsre any weaver birds in this country any, tha* h, which bafld their aests ia tree twlgsf

OLD A OE SEEKING RELIEF. HARTFORD, KY, Match 24,1885. Dr. John M. Johnson:

Dear Old Friead Puffs einiilar to the enclosed (Rev Jessie H. Campbell's "Two More Important Cases") occur almost weekly in oor paper iu relation to Swift's Specific I presume upon our old freiudship to inquire of you in relation to it—its curative qualities, price and manner of procuring it. Haveing lived eighty-three years through the most im portant part of the world's history, the prospect of d^ing from caucer in the face is not very consoling. Let me hear from yr.u at earliest convenience.

Very trulv your old friend, HARRISON D. TAYLOR. 1" ATLANTA, Ga, March 26,1885. Harrison D, Taylor, E-q, Hartford Ky.:

My Dear Friend —Your very highly esteemed favor of the 24 th inst. reached meon tbe 25 th. You want information in regard to the celebrated medicine man-' ufactured here, known as S. S. $. I have watched with much care the effe« of this medicine upon those who used it,, and bear willing testimony to its good result in a great majority of instance.: Tbe firm engaged in its manufacture are gentlemen and captalists, and are far about falsehood or deception as any men in your community. Yon may couflde implicitly in any of their statements touching its ntility. You can get it at tbe drug stores in Louisville, Evansville or even in Owensboro,Ky.

I am sorry for your affliction, but I believe this medicine will cure you if persisted in. I would not stop under one dozen or more large size bottles, which can be secured at reasonable coat.

JOHN M. JOHNSON,

72 Marietia street, Atlanta, Ga. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.

Your Interest First.

Beware of worthless imitations of Dr. Jones' Red Clover Tonic. The genuine cures all trouble of the stomach, liver and kidneys and all the blood disorders. The best Tonic and appetizer known. Price 50 cents, at Gulick fe Co'r (1).

"Better Late than Never." Better never late when you are troubled with a cough or cold. Take Dr. Biglow's Positive -?ure at once, which cures all throat and lung diseases speedily, thoroughly and permanently. Large bottle$l,at©ulick & Co's. 7 $ (1.)

I HAVE USED Ely's Cream Balm for Catarrh (to which every Eastern person is subject who comes to live in a high al titude.) It has proved a cure in my case —B. F. M. WEEKS, Denver, Col. Easy to use. Price 50 cents, i-'

4

The Best In the World.

Dr. J. W. Hamilton, of Merrillon, WK, says, I have sold Warner's White Wine Tor Syrup for years. It is the best cough medicine in tne world and has no equal for asthma. 9-4t.

Wabash Scratch and Itch cured in 80 minutes by Woolfords Sanitary Lotion. Use 1 otber this never fails. Bold by Buntin A Armstrong, druggists, Terre Haute

GERManreMEDV

CareiEienaatinn,

rUI 1 dill

Fifty

Cent*.

ED&TAR

TRADE WWMARK.

Absolute!

Free from Opiates, JEmet les and, I*oi$ons,

PROMPT. SAFE. SURE

Cure for Coach*, Cold* and other Throat and Luf Affections. Firrr CnmA ottlk. iT lluwoninDuuili nut CHjUUJESA.YOUSl.ta CO^BalUaur, Bd^C.S

it S&

ache ftil over!" What a common expression and how much it n^eaqs to rr\any a poor sufferer! These aches fyave a cause, and n^ore frequently thaq is generally suspected, the cause is tlie Liver or Kidneys. No disease is more painful or serous than tfjese, aqd no rerqedy is so p- rqpt aqd effective as

MISHLEITS

BITTERS-

No remedy has yet been discovered tt\at is so effective »n a" KIDNEY AND LIVER COMPLAINTS, MALARIA, DYSPEPSIA, etc., and yet it is simple end ^arn)* less. Science and rnedical skill have combined with wonderful success t^ose fyerbs whicti nature tps provided for tip cure of disease. It strengthens and invigorates tf}e whole system.

HOB. IhMwtlii—mupitti*OemguMiiiii. ones wrote to aftOow mam ber wfaows nSMar ftoa tDdigMtlMI Ud UlB9 iMM: -TtrMUdefsBerto ttttan, I taBnettwOI eote m. I bin OMd it tor bo6 IndiiatioB cad aff«cme( ChefcidMfs.aadKitfte aolvoataM wWwinf niMrlssl tarts I MTWWT.«B HZBB £ITTZR8 CX, 688 OoauBMDt Philadelphia,

Virtu's PleewstWens VmrMk

PRANK PRATT

DEAIIEB IN

Italian Marble and ail kinds of A|neri" ean and Foreign Granite

r.

Griggs'^Glycerlne Salve. 'j *a

Tne great wonder healer has no equal for cuts, bruises, scalds, burns, wounds and all other sores will positively cure piles, frost bites, tetter ana all skin eruptions. Satisfaction or money refunded. '25 cents. Get the best of Gulick ft Co. tf.

I HAVE SUFFERED from Catarrth to such an extent that I had to bandage my head to quiet tbe pain. I was advised by Mr. Brown, of Ithaca, to try Ely Cream Balm. When suffering with Catarrh or Cold in the head have never found its equal.—C. A. COOPER, Danbv, N. Y. Apply with fnel. Price 50 cent-

MONUMENTS!!?*

CORNER FIFTH AND WALNUT STREETS TERRE HAUTE,IND.

T^ELGEN'S

1

STEAM DYE HOUSE,

660 Main St., McKeen's Block,

GAGG,

R.

Nwralgia,

Lnr fl I BgHarfcarhe, Ilrxltrhe, Toothicbe.

At DtttggUts and Dealer*.

Tire niARLKS A.TOflEI.KU CO.. ItaHlnorr, Hd.,U.S.Al

s.« i"'u

ACHES !L PAINS!

4

The only Steam Dye House in the city. Dyeing and Scouring of all kinds of Ladies' Gents' and Children's wear, such as Silks, Satins, Cashmeres, Alpacas, etc., cleaned or dyed in any desirable shade.

Kid gloves or kid slippers cleaned or dyed, lace curtains and lace ties cleaned, shawls cleaned or died, plumes, cleaned or dyed, gents' garments cleaned, dyed and repaired.

All my work is done by a steam process, which makes it look as nice as new. A man can save buying a new suit by taking his old clothing to Nelgen and have blm to clean, dye and repair it. Ladies can do th« same with their dresses by having them cleaned and dyed.

JOHN H. NBIiOBN

AYE EYEEY THING

AND CONVERT IT INTO

MONEY

£4

Mr

Tbe undersigned has opened a Receiving Room, No. 13 south Second street, where he is prepared to receive Rough Tallow and Grease of any kind. Pork and Beef Cracklings, Dry or Green Bones, for which he will pay the Highest Cash Prices. He will also buy Dead Hogs by single or car load. Hog? received at the Factory, Southwest of the City on the Island. Office No. 18 south Sec ond street, Terre Haute, -Ind.

HARRISON SMITH,

3 Terre.Haute, Ind.

GLENHAM HOTEL,

FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, Bet. 21st and 22dsts., near Madison Square V','' EUROPEAN PLAN. ^*S N. B. BARRY, Proprietor.

AlsoJHOWLAND HCTEL, I LONG BRAJ

NOH, N. J.

CRAWFORD

II I S

Corner of 6th and Walnut Ste. CINCINNATI,IOHIO.

!f-'

Entrance on Sixth Street.

-LEWIS VANDEN

PROPRIETOR.,

ic I

RATES:

$1.50 and $2.00 per Day.

W .i

i)«AL«R IS

ARTISTS' SUPPLIES,

PICTURES, PRAMttS, MOULDINGS.

Picture Frames Hade to Order*

McKeen's Block, No. 646 Main strati tween 6th and 7th.

1868. 1885. Terre Haute Ice Co.

^Wholesale and Retail dealers in

Pure Lake Ice."

Orders handed the drivers or left at the office, No. 28 6th St., will receive prompt at tentlon.

L. F. PURDUE-

Manager and Proprietor, "... Telephone 168

W. 8. Ctatt. J* H. WtiitA*', J. M. ClOl

CLIFT,WILLIAMS & CO,

..W- mWOFACTDmBM OF

Sash, Doors, Blinds,Jetc

A.ND DIAUnS I*

LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES GLASS,'PAINTS, OILS and BUILDERS' HARDWABB.

Mulberry Btreet, Corner Ninth, TBB&BCHADTK, IDS

Qf^ejrPfo'S

3ar£ Liver Bitten ithe Left Liver Bitters? Because the human liver is oor trade mark and

Sfour

trade mark and left liver,see^ on each bottle, none genuine without It

BITTERS

Why use the human liver as trade mark? Bee a ace

Patented April 14, J«74.jiver bitters t» a specialty for Liver Complaints in all tbefar forma. Being compounded from pore root herbs, and old peach, tbe (treat appetizer of of tbe age, a favorite family tonic and a warranted medicine. Liver bitters get at the mat of all dlaeaiw* by tbe direct action, opening digestive organs of the liver at the same time acts directly on tbe kidneys, sleanan the lungs, enres brightsof the kidneys, pari tbebiood and beautifies the skin. lies and beautifies the Art yonrdraadtas for them. Manufactured by Baibero ACallendar, Peorta, Ilia. Sold la

Terre Haute by tne following drnggtat* Adamerm Krttenetlne, Ml Main si-, Cook A Bell, 101 Main aL, J. J. Baur Son, 7M Main C. V. Zimmerman, 1341 Main, C. C. Leek. Poplar, J. A. Wmlson, »1 «tti, Allen A Havras,S0On 1Kb. J.M. Homes, V. Obr. ffh and Ohio

rpHE SATURDAY EVENING

MAIE,-

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

6fir?

A Paper for the People.

ih:

v** t?

A MODEL HOME JOURNAL.

N. PIERRE,

JLm js

A

ENTERTAINING, INSTRUCTIVE AND NEWSY.

BRIGHT, CLEAN AND PUKO,

THE FIFTEENTH YEAR

The Mail has a record of snooess seld JBK attained by a Western weekly paper. Fourteen years of increasing popularity proves it# worth. Encouraged by tbe extraordinary success which has attended its publication the publisher has perfected arrangements by which for tbe coming year Tbe Mail will be 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 help in extending tbe circulatlon*of such a paper as tbe

SATURDAY EVENING MAIL

TERMS

One year Six months ga Three months §0-

Mall and office subecrli tions will, lnvart» ably, be discontinued at expiration of Address P. 8. WE8TFALL,

Publisher Saturday Evening Mali, j? TERRE HAUTE, IND.

WHERE IT IS SOLD.

TERRE HAUTE.

E. L. Godecke Opera Home S. R. Baker p. o. Lobby Grove P. Crafts Terre Haute Hovee News Stand National House Clarence Hart South of PoetofBoe Walsh A Smith. 661 Main Street Mrs. Elisabeth McCutcheon, 1134 E. Poplar SI.

ILLINOIS.

Areola, Ills Pordle Mote* Casey, Ills...... A B. F. Millar Chrisman, Ills McKee Brae £eneH, Ills...... Elmer Hitch Hut® onyille, Ills Harry Adams Marshall. Ills V. Cole Martinsville, Ills Geo. Ramsay Mattoon, Ills— j. w. Hanna Parts, Ills w.

B. Sheriff A On

Robinson.Hls, W. G. Danoey Scott Land, Ills L. O. Jlnkins Toledo. Ills...... Edmund E. Park Vermillion, Ills j. \y KnvmWestfleld, Ills .Bird Barlow

INDIANA.

Annapolis, Ind Foster M. Marls Atherton, Ind.. Geo. H. Denny Armiesburg, Ind

A. E.

BovS

oomingdaie, Ind Oonne* BraziL Ind t. M. Robertson Bowling Green, Ind Walter Bohannon Bridgcton, Ind wj nuree Clay City. Ind JtaS Carlisle, Ind J. Waraa Cloverland, Ind -n Faite PftfifnD1»

tn3d J°hn Bally ii n'l Joseph A. Wright

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Coffee, Ind j.

Hi Ca_Dav*

2®°®' J'Vj.vy Chas. Hutchinson Eugene, Ind w&twut Farmerfburg, Ind ^..Alfred ParkS Fontanett. Ind... Ed, c. High Greencastle, Ind j.

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Langdoa

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H-Strong

Lewis, Ind Fred (VmhrnS Lockpoit, (Riley O) .. John FSmUh Merom, Ind. Frank Remmingtoa Montezuma, Ind cha«. E. Hunt New Lebanon, Ind .Lee Burnett Newport, Ind.. Bird Dav* Praireton, Ind W Jones Pimento, Ind Perrysville, Ind .—jTeFranditw Rockvillejnd a BA«M Rosedale,Ind yy Bacher Kvan lnd :.:..Etlmn AllSf pftnrora, Ind.,

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Soonover, Ind. D. Jenkins St. Marys, Ind

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Curlev

Shelburn, Ind Chas Froment Waveland, Ind l....„„.H. A

PrlSt

Professional Cards.

Attorney at Law,

Office303)^ .Main Street.

EE.

GLOVEE, M. D„

Practice Limited to Diseases of THE BECTXTM. No. 115 south flthst., Savings Bank Building. Offlce Hours:-9 to 12 a. m. a to 6 and 7 to 8 'n. m., Sundays—Q to 11 a. in.

O. LINCOLN,

BEIT1ST

psice, 19% 8. Sixth, opposite P. O. Extracting and artificial teeth gpeclaltle*. All worit warranted, (dAW"tf)

J)R. W.V. EICHELBERGER^

Ocall«t 'An«l Aarlet.

Room 13, Savings Bank Building. Terre Haute, Ind. Offlce hours,

3. RICHARDSON. 'B, W. VAW VAXXAH

RICHARDSON & VAN VALZAH

DENTISTS.

Omcs—Southwest corner Fifth and streets, over National State Bank (entranoe on Fifth street. Communication by Telephone.

W. BALLEW,

DENTIST,

Offllee, Hmtm ntr«et,over Hace*f •Id eoafeptlonery itssd, TKRRK HAUTE, I»D.

Oan be found In offiee night amd day

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Terre Haute ^Eje Infirmary,'

P«npanendy established HALEY, of N. Y., late of Trenton, Ma, wba

by

DB.

R. D.

hasmadetbedisease of the^ea' specialty or riUJVtl V.0Tvtr piam.or

the pa« 28 year* and trwit*" days free or etiarae. pryglom and Kntw Inverted

patients tea

LF'

IJdn,KuooeMfullyoperated

oo In a few moments. Office and roomaaw. 2,r »rd ant' Ohio street opposite HU Charts Hotel. Offlce horn* from a. no ram 1 to 6 p. m.

m. to \2 ui.

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