Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 46, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 9 May 1896 — Page 2
BAB'S LETTER.
Published. 1(8X5. by the Bok Syndicate Press, New York.] 'Y NEW YORK, May 6,1806. "In these*days of old"—that was what I I heard coming up the staircase. The voice that sang the words never knew the days of 5 old, though it was a sweet and clear one.
But the words themselves set me to wonderiug. Were the days of old better than these days? In the days of loag ago, were men and women any better, and nobler, or .. was life more desirable? It is true that, in the days of old nobody got up early in the
J1-
morning, called "Central," and had a row with her to gain the morning amiability. In the days of long ago nobody telegraphed a "How-do-you-do" to San Francisco, and got a "Good evening," in such a short time that it could not be counted. All life was slow, and it seems to me, somehow that all life was better. There were some luxuries missing. We did not have strawberries in January, nor did young ladies start out with black locks in the morning and appear with blonde ones in the evening. In the days of old peroxide of hydrogen was unknown on the toilet table, although there were wonderful mixtures for softening the skin, form making the hair more glossy and the bands more soft.
People did not have as many clothes in the old times. A matron freshened from season to season, the black satin or black silk that was her "best dress," and only brought out on special occasions, such as the marriage of a son or a daughter, the brocade that, it was whispered, came from France. With this brocade was worn, not twenty yards of imitation, but one yard of real lace, and the festivity over, it was carefully put away and remained in the seclusion of a carved chest, with the perfume of cloves and lavender, until another feast day came about. In those old days servants were better. Why? Because mistresses took an interest in them, and the one that intended to marry was assisted in getting her household linen, while the one who nursed "my mother and all her children, me and all my children," was buried from the house of her mistress, often beside her mistress, and laid to sleep forever with that best tribute, love and sincere tears. In those old days,
MKN MADE LOVE TO WOMEX
as they do nowadays, but that love-mak-ing culminated in a marriage. Men spoke to women with more reverence than they do just now, and when young Knickerbocker took to visiting Miss Stuyvesant every Sunday night, both families knew what it meant, and Mme. Knickerbocker and Mine. Stuyvesant looked through their linen chests to see what could be spared, and Mme. Stuyvesant wondered if it would be wise to give these young people, just starting in life, a silver tea service. Nowadays, their descendants demand diamond tiaras, necklaces, and wonderful sunbursts that, too often, cover hearts that have married for diamonds and not for crowns of love. In those old days, a mother willed her fur cloak to her daugher it was worth it: it was real sable or real ermine, and styles did not change with the fancy of every cocotte, as they do nowadays. A well-cut, well-made garment was in the fashion, and the mothers' fur surcoat was gladly assumed by the daughter and willed by her to her oldest daughter.
In those days marriage didn't mean, always, fche union of great wealth and great socinl power: sometimes a man married •entirely for love, and his father could sympathize with him, even though his mother longed for him to wed one of the rich young ladies who came of an after* noou to knit and drink coffee with her. But the father's heart went out to the son, and he settled a dower on the poor girl, and the marriage meant the making of a home: indeed, it meant, more than that. It meant surrounding two young people with six or eight, or ten or twelve little people, born of their love, and each greeted gladly. Nowadays, marriage too often means a hotel*and a puppy.
II.VMKS
imixo
11MMMNK88.
I am fond of dogs, but there is no dog that can take the place of a baby, and uo people who are married can find perfect happiness when they make their family conAist of their two selves and a dog. It is true that there are some unhappy people to whom God doesn't send little children but those to whom l)e does send them should receive them with.open arms and remember that, as they are children born of wedded love, so they will encourage and keep youug the wedded love forever. In these days women forget the wonderful boud that a little child is. What foolish women they are! A husband may be led astray, may sin grievously, but if he can ask his pardon through the eyes of a little child, where is the wife who would not grant it to him? A wife may seem foolish, a bit tiresome, and sometimes even silly, but If her love for her husband lisps itself in the voices of little children, her weakness will be forgotten and only her virtues remembered. And yet there are women who do not care to be mothers!
In those days of old, women may have been—tf such a thing is possible—over religious. Aud such a thing is possible—in a way. The hot Sunday dinner was unknown, and children wept over the catechism and went to sleep and were wakened up to hear the clergyman preach
ABOUT THR HORRORS OK HEM.,
»nd the certainty of small boys and small girls getting there, but somehow it made a good backbone in men and women, did that queer religious treatment. I have known what it was to sit upon a bench, that waa uncushioned, at a silent meeting no preaching against hell ever equaled that. For that meant two hours of absolute silence, ending in a sigh of relief, when the older Quakers, who sat up and faced everybody, shook hands. During that
time there came before me, as no preacher bear or the curly mustache of his ancescould hav* painted it the sins I had com- tors. What is the reason Is it his mkt«d. I remembered kicking Ned, the method of drinking, or is it the cigarette? dog remembered sticking out my tongue Or is ft the general mixture of depravity at Henry Clay, the canary bird, and I re-\ taken early and often that has made Jeaomembered. worse of nil. that when I was not the fifth such a poor successor to sent up to the bathroom one day And told Jeannot the first In those days of old, to wa*h my face and hands thoroughly. we did not fly across the continent on a that I only gave them what in my Southern home would be called "a lick and promise." I tell you, my friend, that a
still meeting of two hours will convince a sensitive child that.it stands before God on a par with Judas and Ananias. But this never hurt me. In fact, I think I always felt better, and as I frisked home, hanging on to my grandfather's hand, I would nod at Father Gibbons and stretch my mouth very wide to show that my second teeth were all quite in But those days are only, after all, a little while ago. They seem like yesterday to me. Here is a question for the very learned people—why is it that we forget the wonderful things that happened a month ago, and remember so perfectly everything that happened twenty-five years? The X-rays cannot explain that.
BAB'8 DISBELIEF IX X-BAYS.
To be quite honest, I have very little belief in the X-rays. What good will it do some girl who is horribly unhappy, inasmuch as she feels she is to be a victim to consumption, to have an X-ray thrown on her and make the doubt a certainty? Yes, my friend, I am a believer in hope. It is an old-fashioned belief, but then I am a bit old-fashioned and have a leaning even toward Judas, fully believing that— "While the lamp holds out to burn* (*The vilest sinner may return."
In-the days of old, women who did not believe were unknown. Nowadays we may have cleverer women—I doubt it. But in those days little children hung around their mother's knee and learned to say their prayers, and, later on, when they were big children, and the sorrows of life came to them, they returned to that mother and wept out*on her heart the grief that they could not tell.
Nowadays we have women who know all about the creation of the world we have women who scoff at the idea of prayer and call it foolish we have women who believe there has never been anything greater, or wiser, or more loving, or more forgiving than man. And I am sorry to say we have too many of these women. But, if you felt your heart torn in two, if you felt that you wanted a woman's hand to rest on your head, and a woman's voice to call you by loving names, would it be one of these women to whom you would go? I think not. You would either bear your trouble alone, or hunt up one pf thppe women who in days of old, was
A GOOD WIFE AND LOVING MOTHER.
You wouldn't like to stop a lady who was just getting on her bicycle to come back and hear your trouble. I wonder what the ladies of long ago would have thought of the bicycle? Those ladies who were so careful about sitting down in a feminine way and walking in a feminine way—what would they think of a steel horse that demanded the throwing of their legs across the saddle and wearing kickerbockers? I read a year or two ago about a funeral in Paris the funeral of a man who was a noted rider of the bicycle. He was followed to the grave by 500 men and women on their bicycles. Well, I laughed. I laughed until I remembered how awful death always is and how ridiculous, and how frivolous, and how hideous the bicycle is. When a soldier die9, there is something magnificent in having his horse without the rider to follow the caisson, because the horse knew and loved the dead but what can this thing of steel do It would be just as sensible to have five hundred sewing machines follow a woman who had worked in a shirt factory, as to have bicycle follows a renin uwho was a famous rider.
For me, I like the days of old, when a man rode a horse and it was a triumph of mind over matter—yes, but matter that had some mind, not matter that was controlled by a monkey wrench, or an oiling can, or whatever may be required from the lcit. But I had better not say anything about bicycles. One makes enemies by living. One need not add to them by talking.
Iu those days of old, when Jeannot and Jeannette loved each other, they told much, of the story by looks. Then they went off for a little walk, and Jeannot picked a nosegay of beautiful flowers and Jeannette stuck them in her belt, and Jeannot wished he were that near her heart, aud Jeannette blushed until Jeannot begged her pardon.
NOWADAYS EVERYTHING IS DIFFERENT.
Jeannot goes to1 a smart florist, hands out twenty dollars and his visiting card, and when Jeannette gets the result of this visit she tips her nose in the air and wonders why he did not send orchids instead of roses. Years ago, Jeannette put on a white muslin gown and a pale blue sash, and polkaed and schottisched and danced Sir Roger de Coverly until broad daylight, and would have been shocked if any one had suggested that wicked dance peculiar to France—the waltz. And Jeannot held her very respectfully. Nowadays she scoffs at every dance but the waltz, and Jeannette is whirled around by Jeannot in a manner lacking in respect, and only noticeable because of its quickness. It is sadly true that Jeannot does not long to linger in the ball room. He wants to get off with the other Johnnies and have a little absinthe. How he is changed! Long ago he stood in the doorway and watched the girl he loved, and envied every man who spoke to her, and who touched her hand. To-day he thinks he can get her any time he wants her. and he doesn't hurry himself about telling the story of his love.
The Jeannot of long ago had bright, clear eyes and rosy cheeks it is true that, as he got to be an elderly man, he took his brandv and water or his Scotch whiskey, or whatever drink he fancied after dinner, and he smoked a pipe, the pipe of comfort, every evening. But the Jeannot of to-day, alas! He commences with a cocktail before he has had a mouthful to eat, and he ends with a pousse cafe, or au absinthe, while in between there have been all sorts of mixtures not to mention the deadly cigr.rette that makes Jeannot pale, nervous. and I am strongly tempted to believe, hairless, Look at him. He lacks the fall
train that had a library, a diningroom and wonderful sleeping cars attached. Oh. no. We went in carriages, stopping over at
/-V "V "/-V
this comfortable inn, and the next night at a friend's house, and as we said "good-by, we were furnished with a basket of luncheon that showed, sticking up On one side,
A BOTTLE OF GOOD WINE,
wiile so good that even the children could have a sip of it. We have gained speed, but we have lost politeness. We can go from New York to California in five days and live on the train, but compare that table d'hote with the meals at a friend's house or those eaten at a country tavern.
We are .very fast nowadays, but is the game worth the candle We drop when we are forty we don't live to be magnificently old and to recognize our great-grandchildren. We work brain ttad body until some awful disease attacks either one or the other, and too often our women are busy wondering what they shall not believe that they count it not worth their while to consider those sick in body or soul. I am tempted to believe that those days of old were better. Suddenly, there stands beside me a pretty maid in knickerbockers and short skirts, in sailor hat, low shoes and leggings, and she says to me, "I am the girl of to-day." I look at her and because I am the girl of yesterday, I say to her "Read the story of the past steal from the Past all that is best. Our grandfathers were wise. Our grandmothers were wiser. You are overindependent. Stop your bicycle before.it throws you over the hill that means destruction, and remember that men are only worth considering when women are godly, loving, unselfish, sympathetic, hospitable, and possessing all these virtues becomes womanly."
v.
BAB.
—a
BULLETS TO1SXTTLE.
An Old Soldier Tells Shot.
-•if
Be
The old soldier, with a hot toddy berfore him, was communicative. "How did you feel when you went into your first fight?" the reporter inquired, as most people do when they begin to ask a soldier questions about his experiences.
I felt as though there were a million plaoes in the world I'd rather be iba" where I then was," was the frank reeponsa "Were you afraid?' "Of course I was. I knew those fellows shooting at us weren't doing it fear their health or for ours, either, and J. knew enough about guns to know thait they were dangerous." "But you overcame your fear as the fight progressed?" "Anyhow, I didn't mind it
»i&L'C%r 'jR#*
HO'much.
After awhile I got mad, and then I forgot about myself and wanted to^liok the entire army against us.''
4
"Did you ever get shot?" "Once only, and it was queer about that You read stories in the papers about how it feels to be shot, and I suppose they are correct, for every man has a different way of taking his cold lead. I've seen men shot square in the forehead, stand for an instant as if turned into stone and then drop without ever bending a joint. SOme I've seen run screaming away and fall dead with the scream on their lips. I've seen some grab and clutch at themselves and spin around as if they had been hit with a club and didn't know what the matter was some drop quietly and say nothir^ about it some jump high in the air' and fall stiff as pekers, and so on through a list of them, no two alike. "In my own case, I was fighting in the woods in a skirmish in Virginia on a terrific hot day. It was lively in there, I can tell you, and I wasn't thinkiLg about myself at all. We had started rn a run through an open space after the Johnnies, and just as we slowed down— when we saw they had got too close to the main body for us to go after them— I began to *eel sick and weak and told the man next to me that I thought I must be sunstruck. He began to say something, and everything grew dark. The next 7 knew I was in a hospital with a hole through my chest. When I got it or 1 iw, I never knew, but i* couldn't have been more than ten minutes before I collapsed, because a mancouldn't stand up long with that kii-d of a ventilator in his bosom. V—'Washington Star
Popular Corsage Decorations.
It has been the habit to laugh at the Johnny with his enormous chrysanthemum. Now the women are taking to the big flower, although not necessarily a chrysanthemum. To be up to date the feminine corsage must be decorated with a flower of tremendous proportions —a poppy, a wild rose, a lily or a single dahlia. Any of these flowers will do, but the blossom must be as big as it can be got.
The idea is a great deal like the sunflowex craze of 10 or 15 years ago, when the emblem of sestheticism was worn by everybody. It is true that the sunflower was not so handsome as some of the flowers that are popular now, so that the woman of today is better than she was when everything was "precious" and angularity was regarded as the outward significance of inward culture. The single blossom must be fastened in the middle of the corsage, and if the woman has some difficulty in seeing over the top of it, so much the more stylish she.—New York Press.
The man who should invent a machine so that people could drop a penny in the slot and pick out a name for the baby would surely make a fortune—it would take so many tries to get a name to suit v'
For Your Protection.
Catarrh "cures" in liquid form to be taken internally, usually contain either Mercury or Iodide of Potassa, or both, which are injurious if too long taken. Catarrh is a local, not a blood disease, caused by sudden change to cold and damp weather. It starts in the nasal passages. Cold in the head causes excessive flow of mucous and, if repeatedly neglected, the results of catarrh will follow, and oftear times an off ensure discharge. Ely's Cream Balm is the acknowleged cure for these troubles and contains no mercury nor any injurious drag.
No Kndearliijf Ties Tween Kaat and West, But there is another view, most potent of all, which must be consider-d as affecting the solidity of the United States as n^w constituted. Until the present time the west has been bound to the east by ties of parentage and home. The western man who was sent to the sen? or the house of representatives was b-ro in the east the western merchant who had accumulated a little "money turned his face to the east to visit the old homestead or the last rest ing places of his parents. He loved the east because it gave him birth. The present generation in the west feels no such thrill, is bound by no such endearing tie. It is of the west, western it has breathed a new atmosphere it has imbibed new likes and dislikes. In the generations which are yet to come the bond of sympathy will be still further removed. 4
The representative in the Fifty-fourth congress from Wyoming until he visited Washington recently had never been east of Chicago. There are men inCali fornia today to whom Washington is as distant in every sense of the word as China is to us here in the east When President Harrison went to the Pacific slope a few years ago, he was a visitor from a strange country. The present chief executive has never seen the Rocky mountains, much less set foot upon the broad domain which slopes from their snowy peaks to the ever blue Pacific. Henry Litchfield West in North American Review.
Loaf of Bread Over 600 Years Old.
The Soar family of Ambaston, Derbyshire, England, have a curious heirloom in the shape of a loaf of bread which is now over 600 years old. The founders of the family, it appears, were great friends of King John. When that mon arch died, he made several land grants to the Soars. One of these tracts, it appears, had always been conveyed with a loaf of bread as a witness of good faith. When King John made over the papers to the original Soar, he sent the traditional loaf along with the "writings, and the deed and the loaf are both kept to this day as sacred relics.— St Louis Republic. V4 vc
WiTlie Biggest Fool at Large Is the individual who persistently neglets his health, and the means of preserving and restoring it. Many person! who are not constiutional idiots do this. They are genuine objects of compassion as well as censure. A failure of appetite, loss of sleep and flesh, impaired digestion, an uncertain state of the bowels and symptoms of bllliousness are so many warnings of the approach of disease. To disregard them is abject folly, which offended nature in due time punishes severely. If not fatally. That genial and thoroughly reliable preventive of bodily mischief in the shape of chronic disease. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, will, if resorted to in time, avert those disorders, to tBe removal of which it is also fully adequate. Among these are chronic indigestion, liver complaint, kidney troubles, constipation, nervousness, rheumatism and malarfa.
The City Directory.
Ebel & Co.'s twelfth issue of the Terre Haute city directory will contain all the old features that were good and new ones will be added. No place of business will be complete without a copy. A city map, with ward boundaries and voting precincts, will also be added. Inflammatory Rheumatism Cured in 8 Days.
Morton L. Hill, of Lebanon. Ind., says "My wife had inflammatory Rheumatism in Werv muscle and joint, her suffering was terrible and her body and face were swollen beyond recognition nad been in bed for six weeks and had eight physicians but received no benefit until she tried the MYSTIC CURE FOR RHEUMATISM. It gave immediate relief and she was able to walk about in three days. I am sure it saved her life." Sold by Jacob Baur, Cook, Bell & Black, and all druggists, Terre Haute.
Save Your Life
By using "NEW GREAT SOUTH AMERICAN IVIDNEY CURE." This new remedy is a great surprise on account of its exceeding promptness in relieving pain in the Kidneys, Bladder and Back In male or female. It relieves retention of water, and pain in passing it almost. immediately. Save yourselves by using this marvelous cure. Its use will prevent fatal consequences In almost all cases by Its great alterative and healing powers. Sold by all druggists In Terre Haute.
To make your Sunday dinner complete, go to Fiess & Herman, 27 north Fourth street, where you will always fiud an abundance of the choicest meats of all kinds. They have also on hand sausageB of all kinds of their own make. Telephone 252.,
tl
Land and a Living
Are best and cheapest ia the Great New South. The northern farmer, artizan, merchant, manufacturer, are all hurrying into this rapidly developing country as pioneers. The open climate, the low price of land, and its steady inscrease in value the positive assurance of crops, with but little effort to raise them, all combine to turn all eyes southward.
To assist in this movement, low railroad rates have been inaugurated over The Queen & Crescent Route from northern towns and villages, both round-trip and onp-way tickets being on sale at about half the usual rates. Round-trips selling on April 7th, 21st, and May 5th one-way tickets on the first Tuesday each month.
Now is the time for you to go and see. Much has been said and written about the fruit, grains and grasses along The Queen & Crescent Route and about its climate— no blizzards and no sunstrokes. Summer nights are cool. Grass grows green ten months in the year. Less wear and tear in living than you've known in the north. A million acres of land at $3 to $5 an acre, on easy terms. Now is the time to go and see for yourself. WritetoW. C. RHIXKABSOS,
G. P. A. Queen & jCrescent Route, Cincinnati, O.,for such information as you desire before starting.
"Personally Conducted"
Tours are not more enjoyable than the every day service of the V.-P., VandaliaPennsylvania, the short line from Terre Haute to the east. for Your Sunday Dinner. Spring Lamb, Steer Beef,
Sweet Brawls, Pig Pork, Tenderloins. Spare Ribs, Beef Tenderloins. C. H. EHRMANN, Fourth and Ohio.
Clean Meat Market. Telephone 230.
Why
Do people buy Hood's Sarsaparilla in preference to any other,—in fact almost to the exclusion of all others?
Because
They know from actual use that Hood's Is the best, i. e., it cures when others fail. Hood's Sarsaparilla is still made under the personal supervision of the educated pharmacists who originated it.
The question of best is just as positively decided in favor of Hood's as the question of comparative sales.
Another thing: Every advertisement of Hood's Sarsaparilla is true, is honest.
Sarsaparilla.
Xs the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $L Prepared only by C. I. Hood &Co.. Lowell, Mass. ,, nan are the only pills to take
Mood
S HillS with Hood's Sarsaparilla.
CONSUMPTION
To
THE
ers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy free to any of your readers who have consumption if they will send me their Express and post office address. Respectfully, T. A. Slocum, M. C.,
507 Ohio Street.
C. F. WILLIAM, D. D. S.
DENTAL PARLOUS,
Corner Sixth and Main Streets,
wis TERRE HAUTE. IND.
QK. L. H. BARTHOLOMEW
ODentist.
Removed to 671 Main St. Terre Haute, Ind.
J. _A_. DAIL.EY,
S03 OHIO STEEET.
Give him a call if you have any kind of Insurance to place. lie will write you in as good companies as are represented in the city.
4
Reduced Rates to
EDITOK—Pleaseinform your read
No. 183 Pearl Street, New York,
DR. R. W. VAN VALZAH,
Office, No. 5 South Fifth Street.
C. I FLEMING. M. D. VETERINARIAN
Special attention given to diseases of horses, cattle and dogs. Office 811 Main street.
CRUSHED
$4.50
COARSE,..
Delivered
$4.00
Uellvered-
Sample order. 3 bushels to test, 25c. Equul to Anthracite Coal.
Citizens' Fuel & Gas Co.,
CATARRH
DIRECTIONS. Apply a particle of My Into the nostrils. Draw through Use
re a
£*mbai
gn the nose, three times
1
day, after meals preferred, and before retiring.
ELY'S
fyjpRES
CREAM BALH Opens and cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores, Protects the Membrane from Colds, Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. The Balm is quickly absorbed and ives relief at once. Price 30 cents at I)rugirlsts or by mall. ELY BROTHERS. 56 Warren St., New York.
COLD'N HEAD
PBLSENTHAL, A. B.
Justice of the Peace and Attorney* at-Law.'
28 South Third Street. Terre Haute, Ind.
Gerhardt
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR
Vienna.
S. L. FBNXBR,
Builders' Hardware, Furnaces,
and First-class Tin Work,
1200 Ji&JLTlSr BTEEET.
JLOOJK: HERE!
If 70a are going to build, what is the use of going to see three or four different kinds of contractors? Why not go and see A. PROMMB,
Greneral Contractor
416 WILLOW 8TBBBT,
As he employs the best of mechanics in Brick Work, Plastering, Carpentering, Painting, etc, and will famish you plans and specifications if
VandaliaPennsylvania
Indianapolis
ONE FARE FOR ROUND TRIP.
Republican State Convention of Indiana. May 3th and 6th. Tickets good returning May 9th.
I. O. O. F. Grand Lodge and Robekah Assembly of Indiana, May 18t,h and l»th. Tickets good returning May 22d.
Grand Lodge F. & A. Masons of Indiana. May 36th and 27th. Tickets good returning May 28th.
Grand Lodge Knlghtsof Pythias of Indiana. June 1st and 2d. Good returning June 5th. For tickets call at City Ticket Office. 6S9 Wabash ave.. or Union depot.
G. E. ARRI Mi TON. Gen. Agt.
TO THE
Big Conventions
I2ST 1896.
NATIONAL REPUBLICAN CONVENTION, St. Louis, June 18. NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION,
Chicago, July 7.
NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIAT'N, Buffalo, July 3. Y. P. S. C. E. CONVENTION,
Washington, July 3. B. Y. P. U. OP AMERICA, Milwaukee, July 1ft.
NATIONAL ENCAMPMENT 6. A. R., St. Paul, Sept. 1 to 4. Elegant through trains. Wagner sleeping cars, buffet parlor cars, exqufsit-e dining car service.
No tunnel at St. Louis. Best terminal at Chicago, Best line to Buffalo*. Through sleepers to Washington. The popular line of theG. A. R.
E. E. South, G. A., Terre Haute.
D. B. Martin, Gen. Pass. & Tkt. Agt. E. O. McCormick, Pass. Traffic Mgr. CINCINNATI. O.
TheTerre Haute Trust Co.
Pays interest on deposits*
Lends money on mortgage and collateral.
Buys and sells mortgage notes.
Buys street improvement certificates.
Administers estates.
Makes loans and other in vest ments for other people.
Cares ior property. Call and see us.
Office 30 South Sixth St.
I. H. C. Royse, President. M. S. Durham, Vice President. Charles Whitcomb, Secretary.
HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID FOR
Also Tallow, Bones, Grease
OF ALL KINDS.
At my Factory on the Island southwost of the City.
Harrison Smith,
Office 18 8. Second St.,
TERRE HAUTE, IND, Dead Animals miles of the city.
removed free Telephone 73.
within ten
We want a few men to sell a OHOJCELI
NK of
Nursery stock.
We cannot make you rich In 11 month r»ut can give you Steady Employment and will pay you for it. Our prices correspond with the times. Write for terms and territory.
THE HAWKS NURSERY CO., Milwaukee, Wis.
8ANTC. DAY IB. FRANK J. TURK.
DAVIS & TURK
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
420Wabash Ave. TERRE HAUTE, IND.
Young America
Rye and.
re ad
