Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 16, Number 6, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 August 1885 — Page 4

THE MAIL

A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

P. S. WESTFALL, EDITOR

AND PROPRIETOR.

ruBUCATuni omd,

NOR. 30 and 22 Booth Fifth Street, Printing House Square.

TERRE HAUTE, AUO. 1, 1885.

Anew edition of the Bible has been printed at two cents a copy, cheaper than the Pall Mall Gazette, but not in Bach great demand.

WHEN England hears that a gang of Texan cowboys are going to assist Russia in case of war, the former will doubtless submit to peace at any price.

IT is said that the guaranteed sales of Oen. Grant's book will net Mrs. Grant 9300,000. This is probably an over-etate-ment, although the sales of the work will undoubtedly be very large.

THE Jenkins of the press went just a little too far.when ttaev described so minutely the mourning dresses ordered by tbe bereaved family of General Grant. There is a rule of decency in such cases, and they went bey or it.

MRS. LANGTBY has commenced advertising tor another tour. Two of the British aristocracy have fought over her charms and favors. Just at present the blue blood seems to be about tbe worst kind and needs some sort of moral sarss pari 11a.

THE Western Union Telegraph Com has subscribed |6 000 to tbe proposed fund for erecting a monument to General Grant. It is expected this fund will become a very large one and tbat tbe -Grant monument will be the finest ever •erected in this country.

BASK ball is not dead throughout the land, by any means, though interest in it may temporarily be slumbering in this community. Even the dignified New York Sun goes to tbe trouble of giving the New York club an admonition to "brace up a little tighter yet" in its race with the Chicago club for tbe championship.

IT is noted that Gen. Grant and Napoleon died of tbe same disease, but in Napoleon's case tbe cancer was in tbe stomach instead of the throat. Napoleon 'ssufierings were much severer than those of Grant and tbe former died in loneliness and isolation while the latter was surrounded by his family and in the midst of friends.

MR. BLAINB'S letter of congratulation to Jno. 8. Wise on his nomination by tho Republicans for Governor of Virginia, loaves no room for doubt tbat tbe writer wishes to keep himself before tbe public eye, and In the mind of bis party until 1888. Say what they please, Mr. Blaine Is not out of politics yet—or if he is he does not know it. •.

IT is hardly thought tbat the cholera will reach the United States this summer, although it has become widely prevaleut and destructive In Spain and has broken out on the French frontier. There Is now more probability of its coming next season than this, but a rigid enforcement of quarantine regulations may keep tbe plague away altogether.

INDIANA is steadily corning to the front. According to Mr. Bell,supervising architect of the treasury, the coming building material is the oolitic stone of Indiana. It is impervious to heat and cold, elastic, durable and susceptible to polish as marble. There is considerable Terre Haute capital Interested in tbe development of the oolitic stoue quarries of this State.

MAUD S. clinched het right to the title "queen of the turf" at Cleveland on Thursday, when she made the fastest time on record, a mile in two minutes, eight and three-fourth seconds, a feat thftt a few years ago was ranked among the impossible thing*. Horsemen prophecy that before the clo*e of tbe present decade the reoortl will be lowered to two minutes.

GIVKN the occasion there is never wanting a fool to improve it. This time tbe occasion was the death of General Grant and tbe fool was one Harrison, a member uf the Alabama Legislature, wbo, lacking the sense to keep his mouth shut, arose in bis place and delivered a tirade against the dead soldier whoso memory fifty millions of people were then engaged In bonorlug. Even In Alabama It is doubtful If tbe career of this assinine statesman will not be cut short. ... .. .. -..'i-i.

Tits Indianapolis Democrats and their "mugwump" friends are btdly "out." In the last campaign they worked together with a true David and Jonathan affection but they pull together no more. Tbe mugwumps are ©Bended at tbe manner in which Postmaster Jones has been dividing the loaves and fishes (or rather not dividing them, for he has hustled out all Republicans in a hurry and filled their places with members of his own family, as far as they would rraeh, and when they ran out, with other goad Democrats). Evidently the "Mugs" thought they wwe entitled to a loaf or two and not getting even a crust they sra^brlngiog a tremendous pressute to bear upon the President for the removal of the odboa Jo* e«, on the charge that he ha* hopelessly fractured the civil service rule*. The Mugs think Jonee will have to gi but June* doesn't seem to think •».

ASSAULTING editors for publishing objectionable allusions is not as fashionable as it once was. Time was when it was considered qnlte the thing to shoot and knock down an editor when there was something in his paper that didn't quite suit tbe fastidious reader. There are occasional attacks of that1 kind yet, but they are far less frequent than they used to be, although the papers are more outspoken now agaicst all kinds of crime and wrong-doing than ever before. But they are more careful to transcend tbe bounds of journalistic propriety and to have in their possession or at their command evidence to sustain any charges which they may make. In a word journalism has in recent years become developed into a well defined profession whose proper limits the public hss come to understand pretty well. For instance it is generally understood now that tbe editor of no respectable newspaper will publish scandalous reports about any person for tbe mere sake of satisfying a personal spite or of injuring the victim's character. This could not always be said of tbe journalists of the olden time. But when a man seeks some office of public trust or honor for which be is manifestly unfit and unworthy tbe newspapers expose his record as they ought to do not for the sake of gratifying any personal feeling of illwill which tbe editor might have, but for the purpose of preventing a scandal upon the public service. Such was the case of editor Doak, of Memphis, in his recent strictures upon Barnes, of tbat city, whose appoimtor.eat to a public office he resisted on theg rounds of moral unfitness lor the place. A street fight ensued,which owing to the interference of friends, was a draw, but the next day Doak reiterated tbe charges through bis paper and even made them stronger thau before, so tbat the editor may fairly be considered ahead.

A ooon deal of disappointment and dissatisfaction is being expressed throughout the country st the selection of Riverside Park as the burial place of Gen.'Grant. It is said tbat Gen. Logan even went so far as to write a letter to Col. Fred Grant, urging tbat Washington be yet selected if possible. It is felt that the capital of tbe nation would be tbe most appropriate place for the grave of its greatest soldier. It is tbe political and patriotic centre (so to speak) of tbe countryt the place where tbe graves of its great dead are naturally expected to be found. Tbe point is made that while more people go to New York than to Washington, they go their mainly intent upon business and have no thoughts of anything else. With Washington it is different. The visitors at tbe national capital are from all lauds and their thoughts while there are upon matters pertaining to the Government and upon the men who have been most notable in its history. It would seem proper that there should be at Washington a place especially set apart for tbe graves of distinguished men. It would be very interesting to see there tbe graves of Washington and all the presidents for Instance and other noted public men. Such an arrangement would be much more satisfactory than tbe present one of having them scattered throughout the length and breadth of tbe land.

THE mountain region of tbe South seems destined to become a great peach country. The Atlanta Constitution gives an account of tbe immense peach orchards of John H. Parnell, at West Point, Georgia. The plantation embraces two thousand acres and contains 150,000 treee. Each year 25,000 new trees are set out. The fruit is shipped to New York, Philsdelphla and other eastern and northern markets and returns a handsome remuneration, the profits being from 98,000 to $10,000 per year. Mr. Parnell has spent some $20,000 on his plantation and declares that be would not take $300,000 for it. The same paper states that a California man has purchased a large tract of land in North Carolina upon which he Is going to spend $30,000 or $40,000 in cutting off timber after which he idtends to put It into peaches and tobacco. Walden's Kldge, in the vicinity of Chattanooga, is also rapidly developing as a peach-grow-ing district. There many thousands ef trees now in bearing, which are said to yield every year, while new orchards are being set out each season. The Dean brothers, of Madison, Ind are planting extensive orchards on Walden's Ridge.

JCDOK FORAKBR will not debate jointly with Dr. Leonard, tbe Prohibition candidate for Governor of phio, on the ground that Leonard represents a mere division in favor of the Democracy and the Judge prefers to debate tbe question* at issue with the recognized head of that party. As a matter of course tbe Prohibitionists did not expect that their challenge would be accepted, but they thought they could make some capital by having it rejected. It was a smart move on their part but tbe Republicans were just as smart in evading it, as such discussions would have brought tbe Prohibitionists into greater prominence than they can gain through the medium of their own meeting* alone.

I ISN'T it about time for tbe Mexican Vtors to be going home 7 Tbey have dined and wined, feted and banqueted, and hauled over the country in palace ears for the greater part of the summer, It would seem, while the mwe ttrilDcry An "riesn editor ba* bad his nooe down to u*e grindstone through all thfei t«rrid heat, writing away for dear lite in order to keep bread in tbe moutha of his family. If this thing goes on I much longer another Mexican war will

be immli

IT ISwell that some of tbe poetry published since General Grant's death was not printed before that sad event. The poor man's life would have ended long before it was.

PEANUTS never were so cheap i* at thepreeent time but this fact has a melancholy sadness for the impecunious young man. The time has passed when a five cent sack of peanuts can make two souls happy. The girls have large and progressive ideas nowadays and demond ice cream and cake and French candy and other expensive luxuries. So tbat a fall in the peanut ma*ket fails to produce the joy it once would have done. Nothing short of ice cream at five cents a dish will make the y. m. smile,

DURING the last two or three weeks tbe beat in New York, Philadelphia and other large cities has been almost unendurable and has been tbe cause of a greatly increased mortality among children. So much heat is absorbed by the high stone and brick buildings and tbe streets are so narrow that the temperature at night is not much lower than it is in the day time. The strain day after day is very hard especially upon the poorer classes who are unable to leave the cily and have to live in badly ventilated houses.

THE Saturdsy half holiday system is working wonderfully well in New York. Most ef the leading stores are now closed at noon Saturdays and the employers as well as their clerks find it very agreeable and refreebing to run away to the beach or take a ride on the bay during the afternoon. It is agreed that nothing is lost by the early closing. Tbe sales of the stores are just as large as they were before, customers having accommodated themselves to the order of things. The plan is a good one and will no doubt be imitated in many other cities, large and small, next summer.

THE Washington papers can not see that Riverside Park is a proper place for tbe grave of Gen. Grant, while the New York journals point out that it is tbe best place in all the country. They argue tbat in tbe great, commercial metropolis of the country tbe tomb of the famous soldier will be visited by thousands of people who would never get to see it if bidden away like Lincoln's at Springfield, Garfield's at- Cleveland, or Washington's at Mount Vernon. But why put tbe grave in a public park Why not have buried him in Greenlawn cemetery A park seems hardly appropriate place for a grave

ACTRESSES AND 2HEIR ART.

HOW WOMEN MAY ACT AND YET KSCAPE THE PITFALLS THAT BURROUNBTHEM.^ ^,,

[From tbe Keynote.]

Actresses, like all other women, have to obey certain laws of social life. If

fodgingsalonefromlive

^irls come up tbe country, go into and without personal guardianship or social protection of any kind, they may be Unas and Yirglnias to tbe backbone, but tbey will have to pass through tbe mud heaps by tbe way and their experience will be more or less abominable. Also tbey will be roughly bandied by tbe censorous and loosely regarded by tbe vicious. The fact of being on the stage does not emancipate a modest girl from conditions held necessary for her soclsl preservation elsewhere. And to hold that one daughter may not go to a ball at a private house without a chaperone and another live alone in lodgings, so on the stage without protection ana travel about in a mixed company without the flimsiest pretense of a caretaker, is a stupidity scarcely worth tbe trouble of discussing.

Girls have to i)e protected against their own ignorance, tbelr from innocence, their very selves, until they have learned something of life and its dangers, and to know the look ofla bird lime and bow to avoid springs and snares. It may not be possible to incumber tbe side scenes with mothers, and yet we know of Instances wbere this is done and where girls never set their pretty feet inBide the theater unacccmpanied and unprotected. This is tbe main reason why, in a family of actors and actresses, bred to tbe boards from their birth, tbe women can be, and are, as blameless as a nest full of dovea. Father and mother and brothers are all there to watcb, to guard, to check, to protect—if need be, to avenge. Tbey themselves, these doves in tights and spangles, know all the nets spread by outsiders and the pitfalls dug behind the scenes, and tbey escape where others are caught and fall in. Tbey can even dress in tbose tights and spangles, dispense with petticoats, dance breakdowns and perform acrobatic feats witb their toes, with clear eyes and a pure conscience. They are so accustomed to tbe whole thing from tbe beginning tbat it Is all impersonal and mere "business," no more shocking to the moral sense than is the low cut and sleeveless bodice of tbe present dsy to tbe ordinary lady. Tbey have never had anything to get over consequently they have never dropped part of their moral furniture in the scramble. Tbey are Horn on the other side of the lesping bar, and there is no more difference between tbelr modesty and tbat of tbe primme prude's than there is between ours and tbe Chinese woman's, who holds it a shameful exposure to show her hands, while we have only a gold cord and a bracelet for all covering from tbe shoulder to the finger tips.

The death of General Grant leaves General McClellan tbe only survivor of tbe man who at different times commanded the army of the Potomac.

THE development of sport in America has been rapid and profitable. Outdoor exercised is what is needed to build up our frames and make us a nation of stong men. An important and valuable adjunct in this work is Mishler's Herb Bitters, which possesses ample tonic properties, and is invaluable in all nervous disorders, dyspepsia, liver, kidney, Ions and heart troubles, it strengtnens and invigorates as nothing else will.

A MOTHER'S FEARS.

E. W. C.—We know that many childred have died 'mm the nee of eongh mixtures containing morphia or opium. But.the new remedy—Red Star Cough Cure—is entirety vegetable and harm lees and eminent physicians testify aa to Us curative powers.

PERSONAL AND PECULIAR.

Bartholdi will visit this country next September. A widow in Harrisburg has beaten the record by eloping with two coachmen.

A dishonest man is generally the loudeetmouthed in protesting his honeety. Sam Jones, the revivalist, won't give up his quid, but he hates whisky drinking and dancing.

Eight Presidents and ex-Presidents of tbe United States have died since Lincoln's first election.

1

A French doctor claims tbat he can remove a man's eye and replace it with a rabbit's and make tbe thing see.

Omaha, Neb., has ordered "the pay of lady teachers the same as that paid to gentlemen of the same grade in the schools.

Martin Van Buren,grandson of President Van Buren, died this week. He was a bachelor and a prominent society man of New York.

No Japanese bank was ever known to fail. This is because the stockholders know they would lose their heads when depositors lost their cash.

A Macon, Georgia, judge went one night to a faro room and broke tbe bank, and excused himself by saying ''that be could not suppress gambling by juries."

Captain Howgate is said to be hiding in the mountains of Tennessee, but the opportunities for stealing are not so good there as they used to be in Washington, and he wants to get back. $

A clerk who levanted to Canada from Sedalia, Mo., with his employer's funds, has returned and restored $9,000, saying that he would sooner go to tbe penitentiary than live in the Dominion.

Living tableaux in the open air the stylish amusements this summer. Skilled artists arrange them, or famous pictures are reproduced, and the fair amateurs are said (9 outstrip the artists of the ballet.

Roller skating seems to be waning. Many of the rinks in parts of the country where tbe sport first raged are being turned to other uses, and everywhere the tendency of the diveraion is toward unfashionableness.

Prince Henry of Battenberg, the fortunate young German who has just married Beatrice, Queen Victoria's youngest daughter, has hitherto been very poor, his military pay amounting to $400 a year and hip, paterjiaLtilqymce being only $260. 4" *•,, 1 V*

Minute instructions are given to the officers ol the Salvation Army how to behave, what to read, what to wer, and as to marriage. They may not marry or court the first year, and may not become engaged at any time without tbe consent of the General. As to reading, they are tola that it is better not to read secular newspapers but if they do look at them, it is to be only a look. They are to read no novels, to avoid all the ordinary religious books, all tbe twaddle, and trash, and goody-goody, milk-and-water stuff, and to confine themselves to the Bible, general orders,s the hymn book, and the War Cry.

$

HOW MEN DRESS. [BaltimoreSun.]

A tailor took a Sun reporter to tbe back part of hs shop on Saturday, and, pulling a dark gray coat out of the drawer, said: "Here is a novelty you want. It's a Jersey, light as a feather, and fits like a glove try it on." "I wouldn't have the thing for a gift. I'd have everybody staring at me on the street."

Tbe tailor threw the coat back in disgust. "Well," he said at last,4'I'veseen many a city, but Baltimore beats all. 'None of your Hew fashioned things for me,' seems to be the watchword in everything, even in a man's clothes. If a coat or a collar or a hat isn't strictly conventional, yon Baltlmoreans wou't wear it. Here's this coat, as easy and comfortable a garment as can be imagin ed but it's just like everything else everybody isn't wearing it, and nobody will make tbe stsrt. Men here won't wear seersuckers to any extent. Tbey say they're loud. They won't wear linen clothes—well, because somebody might turn arouad and look at them." "In tbe hottest weather they'll wear four-button cut-aways and vests, all buttoned up and snuggly fitting so as to look nice. Why, in New York and Philadelphia you see the men come along looking cool and cheerful, with ooats of tbe lightest, thinnest material just banging around tbem. Of conrse the coats do not fit perfectly, and no one now of solid business men—men of taste and refinement in dress as in everything else. But when tbey are at their work they are unconventional, and tbat is what a Baltimore man is alwsys afraid of being, it seems to me. "Let a Baltlmorean put on a Norfolk belted coat—as breezy and nioe-fittiug a "le wau 7 every—man, woman, and child will tarn

coat as you can want—and if he walks along Baltimore street ever -almost

around and look at him with a halfpitying, half-contemptnons look, and some will say 'dude,' and some something worse. "You always want your clothes to sit just so you're like old maids, so prim and particular. If you wear anything that will make people look a little you feel bad, and rarely wear it again. Wbat can be nicer than a loose, easy, jsunty coat of white linen You look cool and feel cool. But I'll wager yon won't see a dozen men In this lively, enterprising, go-ahead town wear white linen coat* this summer. No, you wonld far rather pull through tbe hot weather, puffing and grunting and perspiring, when, if yon would only lay aaide your vanity, yon wonld feel as cool and cheerful as a turtle. "There's one other reason," be added, after a moment, "The average Baltlmorean does not bny mote than one summer suit a year. That aolt most last, and so he prefers to have It strong and thick enough to hold out,, and also to fit well enough for wear Outside of business hours. So tbat between conventional scruples and economy, Baltimore men, I believe, wear tbe hottest summer clothes In the country."

KEEPING COMPANY AND LONG ENGAGEMENTS. [N. Y. Sun.]

Questions substantially the same as those of the following letter are put to ns by many, correspondents: "I have been keeping company with a young lady ior the past few years, but am not in circumstances so get married. Would it be proper for rae to ask this young lady to wait for me, and would It be considered an engagement It may be three or four years before I am in clrcums'ances to be married. I am 28 years of age and am greatly in love with the lady, would It be necessary that I should present her with a ring

By keeping company with a young woman our correspondent means what is known as paying particular attentions to her, even more than tbat. He not only goes about witb his girl and visits her, but slso expects to enjoy her society to the exclusion of other men. He would probably resent her appearance in public witb another young man not of her kin as a breach of propriety, if not as a flagrant offence against himself. At any rate, he would mourn over it as an indication that she was disposed to break witb bim.

He has thus kept company with her for several years, and isgenerally known to tbeir acquaintance as her particular "company," so tbat other young men stand at a distance and yet he has never confessed his love, and never sought her hand in marriage. Tbey know tbat each like the other, and both may expect tbat an engagement between tbem will take

Jn

tlace in due time, but betrothal is always the distance. In old days, under such circumstances tbe father of the girl would long ago have sought a private interview with tbe young man, during which he would have asked bim to declare bis intentions as to bis daughter—whether be seriously proposed marriage, or was only amusing himself at the expense of ber prospects of settlement. In England that is still the practice largely, but here it no longer prevails. And yet a girl ought not to be left in the uncertainty in which our correspondent keeps his beloved one. Her whole life may be spoiled because of it.

We therefore say to bim that be should come to the point at once, at once put the momentous question, and go forth either an engaged man or cast down into tbe misery ol a rejected lover. He should not compel ber to draw inferences only, but tell her plainly the state of his feelings, and declare unmistakably what his purpose in seeking her society is. Xben It will be for lier to bay whether she will accept him with the prospect of a long engagement and of course he cannot ask her to wait for bim without formally and firmly engaging himself to her.

Such engagements are unfortunate, but necessity forces them in case of many young men who have their own living to make. His prudencein hesitating to assume tbe responsibilities of niatrimonv until lie is ready to sustain tbem, until he can support a bride properly, is altogether creditable to him It indicates that be has good sense, selfcontrol, and the desire to worthily provide for the object of his affections. He does not rush iuto marriage blindfold, careless of her welfare, but stops to make ready for her a suitable home and adequate support. If she is a sensible girl she will like him all the better because of bis prudent regard for her comfort, and will wait for him accordingly.

Let bim make the engagemeut no longer thau necessity forces. But an engagement of indefinite duration, ob-

iactionable

as it is, is far bett^- than

eeping company indefinitely without an up and down betrothal. Ob, yes, give her the ring to commemorate the ecst&tic hour, and to symbolize tbe endlessness of your devotion.

LOW NECKED DRESSES.

THE LAW SHOULD PROTECT A MAN.

[Peck's Sun.]

A questiou that has agitated tbe country for years is about to be decided by a court of competent jurisdiction. It is the question of how low a low-necked dress may be worn. A New York lady attended a ball and was expelled by the management on the ground tbat ber dress was too low in tbe neck, and she has brought suit for damages and for vindication. The court will be compelled to decide how low a lady may cut ber dress at the neck without being improper. However wicked a man may be, it ives him a chill to see a dress cut so ow behind as to show where a porous plaster has been taken off tbe small of tbe back, and if he has courage after tbat to go around in front of the lady, and find tbat tbe dress is even lower In front, he is liable to have fits. Tbe law should protect a man, and it is well that this case has been taken to tbe New York courts. How many respectable ladies, wbo wear low necked dresses in public places, would consent to appear as witnesses in this case, attired in the dresses tbey have worn low, and testify that the woman wbo was refused admission to tbe ball did not outrage propriety, though ber dress on that occasion might not be as low as theirs often are! If dresses have to be worn low on account of ventilation, or bealtb, ladies ought to put screens in front of tbem, or a pane of glass.

—Band Tournament at Evansvllle tomorrow. Low rates, and a good time. Enquire of H. L. Brelnig, Manager.

POWDER

Absolutely Pare v?

Tblr powier never varies A o' parity. itid wh^^Ji^eno*. U**r* eoonoai I tic -tbe naiy klasis, iivMtd in -0® with ttt* tlto »f lowtartj r: .ubt.atimorptx* r*x. BASXJTOP

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HOBERG, ROOT&CO

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,518 and 520 Main Street.

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Summer Bargains!

TO-DAY

And Next Week!

1,800 yards Suram? Silki' in. Checks and Stripes, at 28c, 35c,* 40c, and 45c.

10 Pieces Extra Heavy Black Grot? Grain Silk at 98c per yard. Regular price $1.35.

15 pieces 22 in. Colored Silk in ^street shades only, at 75c per tyard, regular retail price $1.00.

3,000 yards Summer Dress Goods -^in Plain Colors, Checks and .^Fancies, reduced to 10c per yd.

2,000 yards White Victoria Lawn and Figured Piques reduced is «c per yard. Worth double.

1,800 yards White India Linens, extra fine, 33 in. wiee at 10,12| 15, and 18c, extra good value.

500 yards Printed Satteens in. Light and Dark grounds, exquisite patterns, reduced to 5c.

Summer Bargains in House Jerseys. All marked way down.

Lawns! Lawns! Lawns! The finest stock in the city, at greatly recuced prices.

See our Great Bargains in Plaid Dres Ginghams at 8c per yard Marked down irom 10,12^, 15c.

HOBERG, ROOT & CO.

WIS WANT 1,000 MORE BOOK AGENTS FOU THK I'KRSONAl, HISTORY OF

4 *u". s.

Send lor special terms to agents, or secure agency at once by sending 60 ctn in stamps for outflt. Address FOKSHKE & MoMAKIN, Cincinnati, Ohio.

/I W. BALLEW, -.

DENTIST,

Ofltee, 4SIS% Wain Mtreet, over I old eonfrctlonery «»»««•+. TERRK HAUTHJ, INt dan be (ound In oflloe nlg)i an*

EE.

GLOVER, M. D.,

Practice Limited to Diseases of

THE ZRIECTTJIIVr. No. 115 south 6th St., Savings Bank Kuilding. Office Hdurs: f» to 12 a. m. 2 to 6 and.7 to 8 p. m., Sundays—9 to 11 a. m.

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IM

W.' *.»-*•-

.FRANK PRATT

V^^DKALK* IV

Italian Marbi* and all kinds of Amort* canandForelgn Oranlto

"MONUMENTS

CORNER FIFTH ANI) WALND1, STREETS TERRE HAUTE,IND. I

taught by a new system Any one can readily

ac­

quire the Fanhlonablo Dances at Home, ttend

11.00 and receive by return mail a Chart Illustrating and clearly explain Ins the waits. Rtate whether i»dier or gentlemen's movement is desired. Address (MAR DL'ENWEO. Terre Ha ate, Ind. (Member of the Anvricon Hoclety of Professor* of Dancing, New York.

RH

HWFtVER

Wall st.

Y,

rsi/sr's

Cream Halm, a Head. Allays In(lamatlon. Heals the Pores. Kewtore* the Senses ofTa*te, Hearing ft Smell. A quick Kelief. A poslrive Care. Cream

USA.

BJ AViCEVEB B»l« has gained m..wm

MU

enviable repu-

tution. li«piti iiigiill other preparation*. A part trie 1* app led to each nostril no pain agreeable to use. fiOct* at Druggists. 60 cts by mall Bend for drcu'sr.

ELY BliOTHEKS, Drugglsta, Owego, N. T.

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