Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 16, Number 15, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 3 October 1885 — Page 3
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WHOSE MARRIED LVES SAVOR DE* LlCIOUSLY OF ROMANCE.
Bawthorn«, EnMfiOii, lonffellow, lowell White, Hovrells, Bttdnao and Curtis —Harriot Fmoott Spofford—
Fnuioa* Hodgson Borne tt.
[Philadelphia Times.]
Nathaniel Hawthorne, strange, shy, morbid, having more than the eccentricities of genius, did not marry Sophia Peabody, also peculiar, until near 40, an age when it is commonly difficult for bachelors to edapt themselves to new oonditiona Tbey were quite poor, too—poverty always adds to the strain and burden of wedlock—and bad vexations and grievances without end. Any one might have prophesied that such a union would have an unfortunate termination, for all the sources of disharmony and estrangement were in it. But it proved exceptionally happy. He and she were brought most closely together by their narrow circumstance!! and retiring disposition, and the closer they got the nearer they grew—the fuller and deeper their sympathy became.
EMERSON-IONQFBLLOW.
Ralph Waldo Emersan had two wivoa. The first, Ellen Louisa Tucker, llvai but five months the second, Lidian Jacksonbe was 32 when be wedded her—still survives, and is an exalted specimen of womanhood. It has been repeatedly asserted that poet* and philosopher* make wretched conjugal partners that they carry neither poetry nor philosophy into the seclusion of their home. Emorson, however, was both poet and philosopher, and yet an excellent husband, performing all the duties of the position completely and faithfully and lending it every grace of his floe nature and development. Hi* rare combination of tho practical and ideal fitted him to be the head of a household, and a delightful head be was. J?o one who ever visited him failed to testify to both bis genuine hospitality and bis admirable maritalism. JUJJjongfellow was nowhere more of a poet than in his own family. His wife, Miss Appleton, was burned to death by the igniting of her garments when she was proparing for a party, and the terrible tragedy never passed from his mind or heart. She was a lovely creature, it was universally conceded, and he mourned hor loss, which came when be was comparatively young, to hi-i dyinj hour. He did not murmur nor vi-ii-bly grieve, but he sat patiently, though pensively under the shadow of bis great affllotion, evincing a beautiful resignation to his widowerhoocL As a father he
Therlate Richard Grant White was an ardent lover of home, having been seen little in general society and not a member of any of tho large clubs. The manifold show* and festivities of the metropolis, exoept a fine play, seldom allured bitn from the Lares and Penates—the chief del tied worshiped—beyond hi.4 vhrethold.
HOWELL8-3TBIXMAN-CUHTI9.
William D. Howoll-t, who wedded the sister of Larkin G. Mead, the sculptor, divides the time betwoen literature and his family. lie is «o much in love with bis wife that some of hi* friend* say that he sees in her all the fine variotiee of her sex, and from her fashions his interesting heroines, looking at her from different angle*
Edmund Clarence 8 ted man, who made a love match when a mere boy, running away with the pretty gtrl who had fascinate! him, has kept up the romance ever sinoe and he is now, although comparatively young, a grand father. Whatever be write* bis wito hears fir*t, and she is, he says, hii gentlest and yet his most exaoting critic.
George William Curtis is so enamored of his peaceful and attractive home at Staten Mand that it is bard to draw him away. He married the daughter of Francis Shaw, who fell at Fort Wagnsr at the head of tho first oolored regiment raised in the north. A fine, strong, oultur*d woman, fond of out-door life,particularly of hones, she and her children have always been the polos of hie being, the »un»hine of hie years.
THB FAIR 8RX.
Harriet Preeoott (8pofford) has written from her early girlhood, change of circumstances having thrown the support of the family mainly upon her. A poet and a genius, she might be thought to be one of those wayward, emotional, Inconstant creature.* who could never possess permaoent feeling and who would be constitutionally Incapable of true wifehood. But the fact is that she is domeetio to the core. 8he and her husband, Richard S. Spofford, went to school together, were In love with one another as girt and boy, and are as much in love to-day as when they were in their teens.
Mrs, Frances Hudson Burnett, the novelist, differs from most non-litsrary wives in the circumstance that she is conspicuously— tbey might say foolishly—in love with ber lord. They are as intimate in every respect as they can be tbey have no thought cr feeling that tbey do not share. They night be termed a connubial pair of spoon*.
Tbe late H. EL, Mrs. Helen Hunk, whose tecoad husband was William 8. Jackson, bad many of the traits ascribed to genius, but indifference to ber hatband was not one of them. Tbey wers very food of one another, and be was always ber last court of appeal The same might be said of Julian Hawthorne, J. W. DeForert, Mark Twain, (Clemens), Charley Dudley Warner, or almost any writer. If there has ever been a time when ink caused matrimonial discord it has long gone by, especially in this ooun*7.
Nevada's Ks|t|«Mat Rio* (lxsodan Letter. Mis* Nevada wears instead of tbe regulation engagement ring a bracelet locked on one arm and bar future husband mrrlas the key on his watoh chain. The design to a five-barred gate with tbe fecoe of tiny gotd
T^g around tbe arm. tbe posia aad ban of tbe gate are stadded alt ovar with
A peculiar tint of wall paper te dead gold groond wftfc small twtnohse ol lilao aad golden rod ran tferongb it
Bog oak aad IrMb diamond Jewel* an
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PEOPLE OF LETTERS*
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1 RES.
an ex
ample of gentleness, tenderness and affection, and his children adored him. For thirty years he lived alone, never »oeking to assuage his bereavement by taking another companion.
LOWELL—WHITS
Lowell has been a shining example of all that mau ought to be in the tenderest and sacred oat of relations to women. He also has been twiw married. His first wife, Maria White, lived but nine year* dying at 83, and leaving behind her a reputation, the aroma of which still lingers about Cambridge, and another generation has arisen since she passed into the realm of eternal silenoe. She was likewiso a poet, and her exquisitely delicate and tender songs, printed privately in a volum^ show that her mind and culture have not been overpraised. The •eoond Mrs. Lowell was long an invalid, and Ms devotion to her was everywhere shown. A man of the world, fond of eociety aud convival occasions of a refined order, he never neglected her for a day.
|Onr little OaeaJ 2S
Oh. the apple pie is a venr good pie, A very idee pie, indeed And some there are who say to ma, «Of all it takes tbe lead." And the minoe pie, too, is a very good pie,
As good as good can be. If the orust is crisp and brown enoughs And tbe raisins—one—two—three. And the pumpkin pie is a very nice pie
For now and then, you know If it'* well made 'tis fairly good— As squash and pumpkin go. And the cherry pie is a vary nice pie,
Of fruit *o tart and red And many a child will call this pia Of every sort ahead. ,i% But the greatest pie* in all the land,'
If you listen will to me. Are the dear sand pies the children make In the summer by the sea.
LUXURIOU3NESS OF LAZINESS.
Outdoing the Ancient Greeks and Bomans—Exercise by Proxy. [New York Cor. Chicago Journal]
It is said that Now York has become the I loet extravagant city in tbe world, having got ahead of Paris in that respect However this may be, and I see no reason to doubt its accuracy, it is certain that some of our residents are outdoing the ancient Greek* and Romans in the luxuriousness of laziness. Tkoy have reached such a point in the art of doing nothing that they now exercise by proxy. The system of physical treatment known as mas-age, and hitherto employed in tbe cases of weak invalids, is in fashion for healthy men and women. It consists of the passive submission of the muscles to manipulation by a strong operator, who slaps and rubs tbe flesh, kneads tbe joints, and flexes and extends the limbs, until every part of the frame has been as thoroughly worked as would be done by two or three hours of hard work in a gymnasium.
But all the while the subject lies languid and inort on a couch, the exertion being altogether confined to the operator. Tbe physicians u*ed to advise this treatment to their nerveless, emaoiated patients only. Now it is complacently recommended, like trips to watering places for fashionable women, to persons only inoapaoited by lasiness for self-exercise. It is a current craze by idle sons and daughter* of wealth. Every Turkish bathing establishment has its rooms for massage, to which especially resort tho»e devotees of dissipation who lack the desire for manly sporU with which to make up for the labor which their circumstances do not require tbem to perform. These apartments are mod extensively by our dandier, and considerably by our bellea
Beside the thorough exercising, the indolent purchaser of musoular exertion is rubbed with perfumed oils, quite in the style of the storied Roman time. Some of the enjoyers of this luxury do not even go to tbe bath* for it, but hire experU to come to their homes. So large has thi* peculiar industry beoome that sohools for the instruction of men and women have been opened under the countenance of reputable physicians. A graduate of one of these concerns came to a friend of mine for employment He brought a diploma also, a letter from one of tbe most socially pretentious young fellows in town setting forth his ability as a massager. What will be tho next development of ujoaied leisure!
Tbe Thrifty Dragglst. [Washington National Republican.] A druggist of Bast Washington has inaugurated a system of advertising that is proving as popular among the small boys a* it is novel Borne two weeks ago a small boy entered the store with almost a yard of peach kernels strung on a thread and offered them for sola Tbe kernels were of no use to the druggist, but he gave the boy a cent for them, and, hanging them in an empty show window, forgot tho matter. In a day or two yards upon yards of the kernels were brought in, the boys having seen the first ones hanging in view of the street
It occurred to the druggist that it was a good way of getting notoriety among the young America, and he made a standing offer of 1 oent per yard for all kernels brought to the store. The news flew, and every boy within two miles set to work col* lecting and cracking peach stones, until now about SUO yards hava been brought in, and the once empty show window is fully deoorated with them. Twenty to thirty yards a day is about tbe amount now reoeivwi. The boys work from morning till night, and crack their fingers nearly as often as they do the peach »tonus. This has given rise to a source of proiit of more importance than the advertising, as the sore fingers that need the druggist's care are extremely remunerative. The boys come with 1 cent*' worth of peach kernels to tell and 60 cents' worth of sore tinkers to be bound up This is a net gain of 43 oenV»v foi* the druggist, who is well sau.i'.el with his bargain. But the 3 cents is available for taffy, and "pa" pays the druggut'a bill.
Saratoga Children's Parties* |New "York World.] You never see any children at then parties. They are simply dwarf young men and women. I saw the other night a little npintUe-jhanked girl, who could not have been over 10 year* of age, dressed in tbe most elaborate of lace evening dresses. She wore a pair of quite heavy ear-rings and several valuable rings, whioh were displayed as she languidly fanned herself with an expensive ostrich feather fan. She might have been qaiti a pretty child if she had been appropriately dressed, bat as it was she was simply an objsct of pity for healthy minis.
The Prejudice Against Burglars. [W. 8. Gilbert In London Ttateal For my part I could never quite understand the prejudice against burglars. An unarrested burglar gives employment to innumerable telegraph clerks, police officers, railway officials, and possibly also tosnrgeons, coroner.*, undertakers, and monument masons. A» soon as be in custody tbe services of a whole army of solicitors, barrister*, judges, grand and petty jurymen, reporters, governors of jails, and prison wardens are called into requisition. Reality, tbe burgiar dost more good than harm.
Tbeoewphy aad BtctrMtj, (SxchsBg*] Hindoo Brahmin said not long sine* in ditcowtag (be phenomena attributed to tbe stndente of theoaophy: "I can no* explain to yon the nature of the force whioh is developed in the adherents of this forth, the revolts of which I have seen, any mors easily than yon aan explain to me the nature of tbe faros you call electricity. After all the triumphs over epaee aad time claimed by the tbeosophisfes are not more wonderful than those aeeanpUsfced by yoor telegraph aad telephone.*
Te IMettagateh Qnlalws kta Morptilae lOor. Batttoove Herald.} D« ugfbts are freqoently called onforqni* ntae in powder form by psrsatu who prescribe far themselves. As a safeguard to seek I would snggsst a stag# Iert whereby to dWtainM As lti8*eees betnesn quinine aad morphia. Quinine is almost (irety Jssotabl* wlifk mufllls to very sol-
1R
A SCHOOL FOR GIRIA
PLAYIN3 HOSTESS, QUEST Al® WAITING-MAID ALL AT ONCE.
la^astrial Work In Vacation— 8om«tWt for Little Housekeepers—What OMs
Can Do— ICsqnlstte Embroidering and Excellent Cooking f-
•i [New Enzland Journal of SducaHon.] Mrs. D. Kellogg gives a most interacting skotch of Mr*. Hemenway's summer school for girls on Tennyson street* Boston. This school is held during vacation only, and its object is industrial education, giving instruction to 190 girl* from S to 14 years ol age, in various employments. Did every city in the land have similar institutions, they would largely aid in Mttliug the hard question of employment for girls, and would form a most potent aid in guarding,^ youngest against vicious babita.
PLAYING AT HOUSEKEEPING. Mr*. Kellogg, taking ber readers through thu school, first leads them iuto the kitchen garden, where a dozen demure little women ate playing at housekeeping with such thoughtful faces and deft fingers that we see at onoe that tbe discipline of head ami hand that underlies all this playwork has been attained, and that definite method and nystem have enteral into the smallest datail Now let us cross the hall and see this same table-setting through a magnifying glass for here is a real dining-room and all ite belonging At the head of an extenskmtable
Kits
the teacher directing six little
girls. To play at host,hostess,guest,«id Wfdt-ing-maid all at once, in an atmosphere of refinement and deoorum, and with as much punctiliousness as can be found in an elegant home. It is a four-course diuner toKla'f (with all but the dinner), and the littls Mk? are going through it all as ceremoniously as the "make-believe" conditions and dsneinf eyes will permit Perhaps thsy are handling real china and silver for the first time fb their lives, but tbey group it •rouoA thai con tor bouquet of golden rod with an enjoyment that shows the woman's lore of baaulp springing up at the first opportunity. BtQ what use is all this luxury to tbess llttla girls, who may never be carried off King Cophetua to fairylandf One can usNi tell, in this republic, where raistresM aad maid are constantly changing places, what position one need be fitted for bnV titrBi observe, the training is for either.
BINTS FROM THE THACHBB.
But we are not listening to tbe qusetloni and suggestions from the teacher going on all the while, which is the very heet ol It alL She is asking the prtoef of the tabfe linen, and these pretty things to tea oh rsl ative values, and suggesting in evejy now that somotblng cheaper and plainer •"would do just as well" if that something wis sort* pulously clean and all was served in goal order. This spirit of making the most aad beet of common place things runs all through this au I the elementary housekeeping we naw first, and these girls will nol carry back false ideas to bumble hones at* ter such a constant reiteration of ttiia truth, but must, we believe, look about tbem with newly opened eyes to »ee where purity, order, and symmetry afs needed, and, with a leaning toward the taautlful they never had before..
Wa c9VllUa^|i|iMN^ti| this fascinating spot, for the click bf dSmb ,bells warns ui we are losing the calistbenios, Dont let ua be caught in the intricate figure*marching that will follow, as we pass Into the kinder-garten-rooms filled with btts of humanity who think they are only playing with weaving, sewing, an 1 clay modeling, and don*t know they are "getting control of a world" with their little nervous fingers. Troebel, looking down from his gilt frame on tbe wall, must feel a celestial joy at the "kingdom come" of his ideal teaching for these wee folks gathered from the highway* and hedge*.
WHAT GIRLS CAN Da
Come t» this other room now, whore nature, beauty and art combine in exquisite embroidery. Yes, theee girls are actually copying thoae ferns, flowers and berries from nature, and transferring them for embroidery from their own designa In the next room dolls' dressmaking is going forward, and the little girls are women enough to be abeorbed heart and soul in it and their work is very creditable, too.
But I have Kaved the best till tbe last Now step down into the basement and see what other things girls oan da Hers is a room thoroughly fitted up for cooking. No makebelieve here, but real oooking. Running around the room in the shape of a horseshoe (for good luck!) is a oounter-like table, around whioh stand the earneet little cook* The teacher stands inside so that a glanoe can sweep it all, and watcher dirests aad deoides all doubtful points hot it a pretty sight, and don't your quickened poises keep time with the whirr of those egg-beaters! It is near enough to lnnoh-hour for those omelets and that beef-tea to be very tempting, but we shall never be invited, so tear yourself away to see tbe last crowning glory of all 1
NOBODY SHOCKED,
All we have seen so far has been "pure womanly" occupations. Nobody is shooked and no conventionality is violatsd. But now you are to pass out of the sphere o! woman in to a carpenter's shopt where young girls are at work manufacturing useful ur. ticks with as commonplace an air as if tbey had never done anything else. Theii teacher is a .young man, and a gooiVtooklng one, too and yet the work goes forward srithout a Rign of recognition of either sex en either side. The -principal told us last year that this ability to work together aa comrades, each compelled to treat the other as that only, was a greater point gained than all the work dona.
But is there really anything unladylike about these young girts at work! Isn't that fair girt just as modest and graceful with that plane or saw as thoee across the way with roiling-pinsf When masculinity has settled that "a woman can't drive a nail" isn't it a little satisfaction to look on and see that it is only a matter of simple nsags why she can't) Ah, but there is a good deal of the "woman question" that hoold bs hammered out and driven in by watching this daily work of girls in carpentry.
Odd Instanees of Animal lateWgoa—. [Glob*-Democrat] Bayarl Taylor need to insist thai animals recognise and remember tbe speech of their native laols. Noticing a hippopotamus hi Barnum's maseam that looked dejected, Taylor spoke to it in English, bat the beast did not move its head. Then going to aaotber earner of the cage, bs said in Arabic, 1 know yon, come hers to ma." The heart at ones tsrned its head and listens d, T^yior repeated the same words, when tbe animal eame to him and rubbed its head against the bars aad looked in the face at Ike speaker with evident delight It was probably homadck, and a eoond ft had heard in Us native land was rastly oaenfortiat.
Do aatpatealt tnto soup no til it has bas skimmed, as salt psnrti tfce seam from rising.
Ttoaars seven gamtttng places in Sew York tato wfclefc aode hat lamalM ad«
iSTERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVTSISTITsTG MATT.
Poor Jumbo I
Thousands of our boys and girls havn gazad with wide-eyed wonder on Jumbo, the biggest elephant that was ever in America. He was eleven and one-half feet high. If you vrorj to take a very tall man and stand upon ths shoulders of another tall man thu top of his'head would not reach up to Jtimbo'?. He weighed 14,000 pounds. He used to eat every day 400 pounds of hay, a berrel of potatoes and one whole bushel of onions. How bis breath must have smellod!
But that was not all Jumbo wasn't a temperance elephant He would drink a pailful of fceer every night His, keeper, Scott, drank a little of it, but Jumbo swallowad nearly all After that, with the beer and onions both inside of him, he had a breith to be sure. He was very fond of his b»er, was Jumbo, and refused to go to sleep without it Ho traveled ii a great bo* car. so high that it just cleared railway tunnels. In this car the great beast ate and slept, and Scott, his keeper, slept thore, too. One night, for soma reason, Scott did not give Jumbo his pail of beer, but lav down and went to sleep. Jumbo waited a good while. He pawed and fussed uneasily with his trunk. Bat Bootfc slept away nnd never minded. Jumbo wasirt going to bo put off, though. At last, seeing the keeper did not seem about to stir, he curled his great trunk about him and suddenly brought him up standing upon his fe«t He did not hurt him in theleast, onlf waked him and put him upon his feet very gently. This was to remind SooM that Jumbo could not go to sleep without his drink.
You see from the picture how big Jtuqbo was, compared to tbe man who stands boside him. Bis tough, heavy hide looked like dried, wrinkled mud. When he appeared iu any town Mr. Barnum nsuiklly let him march along tbe streets in tho prooasiion. Then the boys and girts woott race themselves out of breath following him up to get right of him. His hack moved along on a level with the eoond story windows of some houses. When he lifted his trunk it was twenty-six feet high, up to the roofs of many of the homes. Near bis head this tremendous trunk was as large arovad as a man's body.
JTJMBO.
poor Jumbo
But now nobody will ever alive again. He was killed by a railway engine St Thomas, Ont, in Canada, on tbe of September. The true story at hit ddatb is a very -touching one. Yon will think more of Jumbo than ever when 'von beat that he lost his life saving that of another elephant, a little fellow whd belonged to the show.
The circus had been exhibiting in St Thomas, and they were getting ready to go away. Keeper Scott led Jumbo and the small elephant along the car tracks towards the circus train. The little ono^s name was Tom Thumb. As they were just on the track tbe keeper saw a freight train coming directly down on them. On one side were some oars that had been switched off upon a side track. Upon the other was an embankment ten feet down. The only way to save tho giant beast was to make him go down the embankment The kosper tried to do this. But Jumbo would not budge, although be knew that he was in danger. He merely looked around to see what had become of Tom, the baby elephant. Tom was some distance behind. Tho splendid old follow determined to save Tom at any rate. He turned back and caught the little elephant in his trunk, lifted him high in air, and threw him out of danger, beyond the cars, tracks and aD.
Be oaught the baby elephant in his trunk. Tom fell upon tbe safe, open ground, the keeper raid, whining like a r«ppy dog with a sore foot The fall hurt him, but it did not injure him seriously. He was savsd. But alas for Jnmbol When be bad thrown Tom over the care upon the side track be turned to save himself. But he was too late. Tbe engine struck bim and carried htm along. His great body was squeeasd between it and tbe freight care upon the tide trade. The crush was terribls. Jumbo's weight was so great that it knocked both the engine and tbe cars on tbe opfmsito side from tbe trade. Tbe keeper said he was in a rage when ha saw the engine coming, aad m«A» a motion at it with bis head, as if to but it off the trade. Bat it strode him on tbe bead, toa His monstrous tusks had been sawed off, so, that only tbe ftumps of them remain©! The engine struck tbcee first and drove them into bis boo/l, fracturing his skull Tbe noble brute bad more brains than some men. How many men would have saved tbe hfe of enother'firstf Jumbo
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If you need a perfect tonic or a blocd purifier, take Dr. Jones' Red Clover Tonic. It speedily cures all troubles of the stomach, kidneys and liver. Can be takan by th« most delicate. PHo* oO ots. Sold by all druggists. 19-4
THK BLOOD WOULD RUN—For five years I was a great sufferer from Catarrh. My nostrils were so sensitive I could not bear tbe least bit of dust at times so bad the blood would run, and at night I could hardly breathe. After trying many things without benefit I used Ely's Cream Balm. I am a living witness of its efflracv. PBTKR BRUCE, Farmer, Ithaca, N. Y. Easy to use, price 50 cents.
No one should delay when they have a cough or cold, when a 50 cent bottle of Bigelow's Positive Cure will promptly and saftdy cure them. Dollar size cheapest for family use or chronic cases. Sold by all druggists. 19 4.
Nervous Debt Jitated Men
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BROWN'S IRON BITTERS
WILL CURB
HEADACHE INDIGESTION^ BILIOUSNESS
TYVQPWPQTA
NERVOUS PROSTRATION MALARIA CHILLS AKD FEVERS TIRED FEELING GENERAL DEBILITY PAIN
IN THE
JL« '/V'
carried along
in this horribh manner for a hundred yards, tbey said. He roared with the terrible psrfn, and poor little Tom roared and howled, too, along with his old friend. But it was all over with the brave giant In three miautes be roile over upon his back tad died in agony. Poor Jumbo!
So large was this great creature that some xdsntifie man said be was not an elepbsmt at all, bat a mastodon. This was a mammoth beast that lived on ttae eart* before the time of history, or of man, aa we know him. Bat there are no more mastodons left BOW, unless Jumbo waa -ooa. Be was it years okl aad was stfll growing.
The engineer at the Grain that killed fefcn is blamed very much. It is tbought he was losing, or not paying attsotioa to his but.oaas, sinoe he aid not try to stop tbe car*,
Mr. Barnum wfil hava tbe skin staged I end Bwrnm and siMbtM with Sis shew text summer. Bat boys and girls allow the ouantry will be almost eorry
BACK & SIDES
IMPURE BLOOD CONSTIPATION FEMALE INFIRMITIES RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA KIDNEY AND LIVER
TROUBLES FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS
The Genuine has Trade Mark aad crossed Red lines on wrapper. TAKE NO OTHER*
^rotessionai Carri?
1"
N. PIERCE,
Attorney at Law,
Office i—302%1Main Street.
O. LINCOLN,
DKBTT1NT
Office, 8. H«xth, opposite P. O. tnioilng and artificial teeth specialties work warranted. (d*w-tr
R. W. C. EICHELBERGER. JQR. W. C. EICH
lOenllsOuid Anrlat.
Room 18, Savings Bank Buildin#. Terre Haute, In' 9—12 a. m. Office hours, 2 5 p.m.
J, RICHARDSON. B. W. VAH VA1AAB
RICHAKD8OK ft VAH VALZAB
DENTISTS.
Officb—Southwest corner Fifth and Man streets, over National State Rank (entrant* on Fifth street. Communication by Tel** phone.
EE.
GLOVER, M. D.,
a
Practice Limited to Diseases of THE RBCTTJM. No. 115 south 6th St., Savings Bank Building. Office Heure:-9 to 12 a. m. 2 to 5 and 7 to 8 m., Sundays—9 to 11 a. m.
SAVE
EVERY THING
AND CONVERT IT INTO
MONEY!
The 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 Btef 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. IB south Second street, Terre Haute, Ind.
HARRISON SMITH,
ti,} Terre Haute, Ind.
w. 8. curr. J* H. WrtMAif*, J. M.Cun
CLIFT,WILLIAMS & CO,
tuitvrAvrviuuM or
Sasb, Doors, Blinds, etc
Aim pBAi.aas at
LCKBKK, LATH, 8HISHLK8 GLASS, FAJDIT8, OILS and BUILDERS' HABDWABK
.J •. MUbenjr Bwet. IMk mutt,
W tkrbbthautk,
.. .i':r-
.-a -rr-f
JJUT
I^JELGEIFS £^^3*. ^, STEAM DYE HOUSE,
660 Main 8C, McKeen's Block. The only Steam Dye Home in the city. Dyeing and Hearing of ail kinds of iAdlea Gents' and Children* wear, audi aa Silks, SaU&s, Cfeshmeres, Alpacas, etc., cleaned or dyed In any deattab'e shade.
Kid Ktoves or Idd slippers cleaned or dyed, iaoe enrtaina and lace ties cleaned, shawls cleaned or died, plumes, cleaned or dyed, cents' garments cleaned, dyed and repaired.
All my work is done by a steam prooeaa, which make« it look as nkwaa new. A man can aave buying a new salt by taking his old clothing to Nelgen and have him ta clean, dye and repair It. Ladies can do Um aame with their dresses by having (them eteaaed and dyed.
JOK* B. WKUUMj
Take AU in All.
—Take all the Kidneys and Liver Medicines, —Take all the Blood purifiers, —Take all the Rheumatic remedies, —Take all the Dyspepsia and indigestion cures, —Take all the Agae, Fever, and billous specides, —Take all the Brain and Nerve force revives, —Take the Great health restorers. In abort, take all the best qualities of all these and the—best —Qualitiesof all the best medicines in the world, and you will find that—Hop —Bitters have the best enrative qualities and powers ol all—concentrated in them, —And that they will care when any or all of these, singly or—combined. Fail —A thorough trial will give positive proof of this.
Hardened liver.
Five years ago I broke down with kidney and liver complaint and rheumatism. Since then I have been unable to be about at all. My liver became hard like wood my limbs were puft'ed up and tilled with water.
All the best physicians agreed that nothig could cure me. I resolved to try Hop Bitters I have used seven bottles the hardness has all gono from my liver, the swelling from my limbs, and it has worked a miracle in my case otherwise I would have been in my grave. J. W. Morey, BuffUlo, Oct. 1, *81.
Poverty and Suffering.
"I was dragged down with debt, poverty and suffering for vearf, caused by a sick family and large Dills for doctoring.
I was completely discouraged, until one year ago, by the advice of my pastor, I commenced using Hop Bitters, and in one month we were all well, and none of us have been sick a day since, and I want to say to all poor men, you can keep our families well a year with Hop Bitters for less than one doctor's visit will cost. 1 know it." —[A WOHKIWGMAN.
Prosecute the Swindlers M!
If when von call for Hop Bitters (see green cluster of Hops on the white label) the druggist hands out any stuff called C. D. Warner's German Hop Bitters or with other "Hop" name, refuse it and shun that druggist as you would a viper: and if he has taken your money for the stun, indlet him far the fraud and sue him for damages for the swindle, and we will reward you liberally for the conviction.
GLENHAM HOTEL,
FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, Bet. 21st and 22d sts., near Madison Square, .j EUROPEAN PLAN.
«rad
CATHARINE REEVF, Admx. Attest: MERRILL N. SMITH, Clerk.
-s4
:tea
N. B. BARRY, Proprietor.
AlsoJHOW LA N HCTEL, LONG BRANCH, N. J.
O
As BUTKRS* OUIDK Israed Sept. and BIarcl% each year. 4vfl56 pages, 8% 11 tnehwsfwitli 3JBOO Illustrations a whole Ptetvre Gallery. GIVES WlMlcaale Prices
to consumer*
on all goods jbi
personal or kmily nae. Tells how t* order, suad givis exact coet of everything yon IN, eat, drink, wear, ox ksvs Aua wiOb These nrVAlUABLK BOOKS eomtala information gleaned from the market* of the world* We will mall a eopjr FREE to any address upon receipt of 10 eta* to deft-ay expense of mailing. Let us hear from yon* Reapeetftally,
MONTGOMERY WARD A CO.
»ie WakaSfc Aveaae, OMeagat IB.
Notice
of fin.it settlement
OF ESTATE.
In the matter of tbe estate of Elias Reeve debased. In the Vigo Circuit Court, September Term, lWtfi.
Notice in hereby given that the undersigned, as Administratrix of the estate or Elias Reeve deceased has presented and filed her account and vouchers in final settlement of snld estate, and that the same will come up for the examination antl action of Clrcnft Court., on 10th day of October, 1886 at wnlch time all persona Interested In said estate are required to appear in said court and show cause, if any there be, why said account® and vouchers should not be approved. And the heirs of said estate and all others Interested therein, are also hereby required, at the same time and plsce aforesaid, to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of the estate.
Why call Calendar's Liver Bitten the Left Liver Bitters? Because the human liver Is our trade mark and our left liver, see it on each bottle, none genuine without 1L
bitters
Why use the human liver as trade .mark? Because
Patented April 14, l#74.]iver bitters is a specialty for Liver Complaints in all their forms. Being compounded from pure root herbs, and old peach, the great appetizer of of the age, a favorite family tonic and a warranted medicine. Liver bitters get at the seat of all diseases by the direct action, opening digestive organs of the liver at the same time acts directly on the kidneys, cleanses the lungs, cures brlghts of the kidneys, purifies tie blood and beautifies the skin. Ask your druggists for them. Manufactured by Barbero Callendar, Peoria, Ills. Sold In Terre Hante by tne following druggist* Adamson & Krttenstlne, 641 Main ft., Cook A Bell, 301 Main St., J. J. Baur A Son, 703 Main C. F. Zimmerman, 1241 Main, C. C. Leek, Poplar, J. A. Willison, 001 4th. Allen A Havens, 500 18th. J. E. Homes, N. E. Cor. 6th and Ohio
J^ANVILLEROUTE. Chicago and Eastern Illinois Kailroad.
Short and Direct Route
vo, Milwaukee, Madison, Green Bai Mlnneat
Chic ..
Jreen Bay, leapolls, fit. Paul, Ceaar Rapids, Omaha
And all points In the North and Korthwettj
THREE TRAINS DAILY
•iving with
Between Terre Haute and Chicago arrlvli In time to make close connections trains on all roads diverging. •ar Woodruff Palace and Sleeping Coachee on all night trains. WH
Tourists Guides eiving a description of tbe various Summer Resorts will be furnished upon application to R. A. CAMPBELL, Genl Ag't 924 Main st. Terre Haute, Ind.
WM. HILL, G. P. A. Chicago, lite.
Oyer Henderson Bridge!
Evausville Route!
1
FAST LINE!
1
To All Southern Points.
Pullman and Woodruff Palace BnTet Slecpt ing Cur* to
Naabville Without Change
Where direct connection to made with through ti aiM for
Atlun."** Montgomery, Savannah and ackson vllle, Fla.
No omaibos or steamboat transfer*. Tickets or any information may be obtained at R.
a. CAMPBELL,
Gent Agt,
flB4 Main tL, Terre Haute, lay
