Bloomington Progress, Volume 3, Number 7, Bloomington, Monroe County, 16 June 1869 — Page 2

BL0CM1NGT0N PROGRESS

"William A. Gabjc, Ediiiv and Proprietor.

WEIWKSDAY, J USE ie, n5f.

)K THE PKOGBKSS. Sonne or tno Ways and M cans of Improving si Town.. NO. III. In the two prei!eedinj artides on this subject, somi of the niccns of improving the country, were considered, whereby as a e?:nsec ne ice, a Town mighu be improved. J 1 tins article it is proposed . to consider some of the agenc es tie Towi; may employ for its improvement, irrespective of the country. First in order of tim J, and perhaps of importance, among these agencies is, Labor. This has been a means of prosperity since the day God said ''in the sweat of thy f ice shalt thou eat broad." In the Ugh ; of this fact, it would seem like proving an axiom

to argue in behalf of Labor, I ut in :

the light of shoddy aristocracy , ragged idleness and the labor-aversion sentiment of the t rr.es, it seercs appropriate to say a word in i s behalf. The effectiveness of labor is

There are idle men in every community, who would gladly work if they could find work. Having no capital, they an dependent upon others. It thereibru becomes an importiU.it questior. with every ono desiring the prosper ivy of his community or Town to know what can be done to convert those wasted engergies into valuable products. One of the effect ivo means to this end, is Manufaditi y. These persons cannot, as a rule, work in the professions, and they are not; needed in merchandise, but they can work in manufacturing, if they are demanded. Capitalist'! have it in their power to create this demand. 2. Applying the above principle here at homo, it occurs to me that our place being an inland town, and shut of: fro n eomir eroc, we ought, very earnestly to consider the .subject of manufacturing. And, as I sec the facts, it seems '.hat wu are in a most favorable condition to engage at once and successfully, in the manufacture of Agricultural Implements. Our almost, unequalled oak forests, are a rich capital to begin with. Second, we are within 110 miles of the prairies of Illinois via Mitch oil

win ai

and Vincouncs. Chicago,

larcelv surnlies this rosrion. shins

best presented by an illustration. ; tte manufactured article over 200 Suppose ten men unite in bus ness, ; m(. am the timber out of which

forming a firm, or corporation, all

having skill, indi strv, good heads and good health. Unierreasoiable circumstances, success is assured. The first year each man clears i oove allexpenses,one-fif:h or his estimated salary consequently he firm clears the same. But next year two of these men, one-fifth of the nunber, refuse to work, consequently noi hing is made. The third year another member joins the list of idlers the income is less than expenses, and the firm breaks. This firm represents community, whether in a town, city or State. When all labor, prosperity follows : -when only a part labor, prosperity is checked and when the idlers become numerous, want emues.

The drones eat the honev of the

it is made, from Wisconsin, Minnesota, or Michigan. Further, she must pay her hands an excess in wages, equal, at least, to the difference between the rent of a little home in Blooming-ton, and the same in Chicago. Three points, at least, are in our favor, as compared with Chicago. Is not this matter worthy of consideration, as a means of prosperity to our town ? A manufactury and sale to the amount of 50,000 per ainum, would perceptibly increase the commercial prosperity of our place. If, in addition to this, it should give employment to unemployed men, thus blessing thsrn, and converting wasted energies into marketable products, so much the more com-

' i mendable the enterprise. My space

"working bees." Idleness feeds on j (ioesi not permit the elaboration of

this thought, therefore, it is lett with

a mere mention, with the earnest j

industry. The highest prosperity

demands that all .should work. But, says a sharper, let these idlers engage in speculation. Speculation is one of the financial evils of our times. Toe many engage in it for their own goo: , or for the good of the country at large. Speculation does :iot create wet .1th, it only changes its relation. Lt:t a speculator buy all the grain in Lean Blossom township, and have it hauled and stored in a ware house in Bloomington, and there wil! not, as a consequence of this act, be a single bushel more grain in Monroe county, than there was before siid speculator commenced operatic ns. He has nos created, i. c, raisec. a grain of corn, only changed its relation passed fr from the possession of farmers A. B. and C. to himself. Let a whole community go to speculating, and ve wo ild soon see the result. Somebcdy

Proposition lo Reunite tlif Northern aiilSoiitliaiu Methodist C'liur;lieN. The Christian Advocate prints the communications which were exchanged in St. L mis a few dayg ago between the Bishops of the Southern, arttl a deputation l the (;irl of Bishops ot the Northern Episcopal Church (lately in session at Meadville, Pennsylvania,) on the important subject of a general and full reunion of the churches, separated by the formal act and consent of both, in 1841. Bishops, Janes and Simpson, who composed the deputation, on reaching the city, notified the College of their presence, ami of the object of their visit, and were promptly invited to a conference, at and immediately succeeding which, the letter-, and correspondence referred to were passed. The substance of those letters is, that the Bishop of the Northern Church made a communication on their own responsibility, disclaiming any authority of the General Conference, which is the only body tbat can officially and authoritatively order or authorize overtures upon the subject. The reply of the Southern Bishops does not entertain the question of the reunion of the two bodies under one jurisdiction, as formerly, previous to the separation in 1844. It asserts

that fraternal relations must first be I restored before, if at all, such a ! proposition can be entertained, j These fraternal relations can not be

restored except upon an overture made by the Northern General Conference upon the basis of the plan of separation of 1844, implying an abandonment by the General Conference North, of the whole ground assumed in their General Conference at Pittsbu g,in 1848, which assumed that the separation was a schism and secession upon the part of. the Southern church, and implying also that the aggressions as charged by the Southern church, should cease. It is to be observed also, that the Southern Bishops den)' the statement that (slavery was thecause,and assert that it was only the occasion of the separation in 1844, that it simply was the subject which occasioned the assertion by the Northern members of the General Conference of 1844, of authority to legislate upon seculiar questions and concerning the civil institutions of the country. As to the prospect of fraternal relations, this depends up-

hope that it may receive the atten

tion of our business men who have spare capital. Immediately connected with this, and nrotnotive of the same, is our

contemplated liuilroad to the iron 1 on wnetner tnese questions regions. But the importance of this ' can be settled harmon iously, and having recently been presented to nothing more can be done than en -the community, it is omitted here, tor upon the preliminary arrangeTis enough to' say that railroads aid ments, between now and the meeting manufactures, and" manufactures help j of the Northern General Conference, railroads, anil both improve a town, three years hence.

JUt us, tneretore, do wnat we can for each. G.

IXeportt on Condition of Poor AS) 111 mi. State of Indiana, Monroe County. To the Honorable Board of County Commissioners : We the undersigned Committee, appointed at the March term of Commissioners Court, to carefully

must produce, or we all starve, and j Ynm;Ilf. ri, pnAr Aei lnm onn.lirio,

i. xi l e ;i i " v ' .

ui isiger we uuiuuer oi p.u , ; 0 jte inmates &0 beg leave to ii,, t.j... A , i, l.. . i: .1,,. . ' o

the better, after barely supplying he channels of trade i. e merchandise

and the professions. These departments, merchandise and the professions, should not be clogged with a

make the following report :

1st. The House is in good repair, clean, and kept in t.n orderly, systematic manner.

2d. The ki:id and quantity of

Wairplusage, thus superinducing1 provisions,are good and wholesome, what must not inr dc hrmrvv's snkp he i n i

j an(J weu prepai.eu called idieaess, but may more, 3d. As regardg th(; clothing of elegantly be called genteel leisure, the inmaleg as shown by their ap wherein the parties are Micawbav, peararj ce we :udgt! tobc 8ufficient like, "waiting for something to turn j and (;0mfortable! and their treat-

up," That young men who have dreads of speculation, and for whom this portion of our article is intended, may see this subject in its clearer aspect, I torn another side of it to "view. Suppose the above named firm of ten had tJI quit work, and gone to speculating off one another, how

much would the aggregate wealth

ment to be just and humane.

Respectfully submitted, Pleasant Fossett, John T Eller, Gilbert K, Perry. June 9, 1869.

Disgrace of General Jeff. C. Davis;. Says a special Washington dispatch to rha Cincinnati Gazette: "Genert.l Jeff' C. Divis is soon to

of all have increased? If one! be relieved from command of troops

gained a hundred dollars, some one lost a hundred, and at the end of a day, a week, or a month, the aggregate -wealth of all would not be increased a dollar. The two farmer

boys who traded jack knives alii

day, illustrate this principle. They commenced in the mornir g,

with two jack knives and twentr

in Alaska. One of the California

newspapers, same weeks ago, printed two cr three articles that were widely copied in the East, in which it was charged and shown by specifications, that a good deal of lawlessness exists among soldiers up there, that outrages of an indecent

! character have been nernetrated

coppers betwn them ; they traded i Urxn a numbor of women, that some

over one hundred times, giving and j Qf the officers are greatly addicted

receiving dooi eacn :ime, ana wuen they closed at night, thty made an invoice of their stock, and fouid that it co nsisted of two jack knives and twecty coppers just what the)' had in the morning no more, no less. Young men, settle this principle in your political economy, and in your practical theories, that if you speculate off a community, you will not increase the wealth of that com

munity. Therefore if we wish ':o increase the wealth or prosperity c f a community, or a Town, we must fall back on the old fashioned agency labor ; labor of some kind, h&ad, head, heart, or all. It would be interesting to spes.k of the relative merits and profitableness of different kinds of hbor, aut this would lead us into a broad discussion. I therefore hasten to close this-article with a practical suggestion or t wo.

The Cumberland Pef-siiyter rans. The Thirty-ninth General Assembly of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, closed its session at Murfressbor )., Term., a few weeks since, after i harmonious session of eight or nine days. There were near two hundred delegates present, representing the church in th 2 various States, North and South. Rev. S. T. Anderson, D.D., of Lebanon, Ohio, was the moderator ; John Frizell, of Nashville Tennessee, principal clerk, and Rev. J. B. Green, of Kentucky, assistant. This large and influential body of Christians, have never divided upon the political questions of the day. They ignore political animosities. They have one hundred presbyteries, twenty-six synods, twelve hundred ministers, and one hundred and thirty thousand members. Their next assembly will meet in Warrensburg, Missouri, in May, 1870. The South Bend Rcff inter tells of a woman who hit her husband over the head with a rolling pin, after family prayers, one day hiist week, because he prayed for his children and omitted hers. He should, for his own comfort, make no discriminations hereafter.

The measles prevail to such an extent in Lebanon, that the public schools have been closed, and it is spreading rapidly. The same disease prevails to a greater extent in Thorntow n.

to drunkenness, and that others an

openly li ving with abandoned women as mistresses. Official reports showalso that Indians and natives have been abused and maltreated in many

ways, and in a word, that there is a deplorable lack of discipline among that portion of our troops. The President has made inquiry into the matter and finds that the newspapers have bv no means, told the worst of

the truth. An officer more efficient than General Davis has proved in this field, will be sent to take his place. An observer of the changes in human affairs has discovered that Robert Toombs, instead of calling the roil of his slaves at the base of Bun'er Hill Monument, as he boasted he would do, now .meekly contents himself with receiving his

mail enclosures from the hand, of

a colored Postmaster, at Macon,J

The editor of the Democrat, Davenport, Iowa, endorses Hoofland's German Bitters, in the columns of his paper, as follows : Hoofland's Bitterm. In another column will be found the advertisement of this sterling remedy. To it, the writer of this notice owes his health. Having once been completely prostrated by diseases contracted in campaigns in Louisiana and Mississippi, we were unable to regain our health by following regular remedies, but were cured by a few bottles of this medicine. It is the greatest known Tonic, and is entirely free from all A lcoholic admixture. Hoofland'n German Tonic, is a combination of all the ingredients of the Bitters, with pure Santa Cruz Hum, orange, anise, tfec., making a preparation of rare medical value. It is used in cases where some Alcoholic stimulus is necessary. Principal Office, C31 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa,

The editor of the Western Christian Advocate finds a recognition of Christianity in the Constitution of the United' States. He say: "While in the body of the instrument there is no evidence that this is :i. Christian country, at the close we read that it was 'dune in Convention by the unanimous consent of the States present, in the yew of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and eightyseven.' He armies that if the framers of our Constitution had been Mahommedans they Mould have dated the document from the Hegira, or had they been Roman? it would have been marked A. U. O, or had they been Hebrews it, would have been dated for the year of th-? Mosaic creation, Anno Mundi, or had they been infidels the dating would have been after ths fashion of the French Voltaircans, from the year I; but the framers of the Constitution being Christum men, dated it 'from the year of our Lord.' -' He thinks that it wmild have been better to have had a recognition of God and Christ in the body of the instrument, its 'If, but notwithstanding the omission he fails to see the expediency of urging the assembling of a National Convention to change the phraseology. We might fail to be a- christian people with the words inserted and we may become Christian in heart and life, with t ie words uninsertcd. It is not difficult to decide which would be the more desirable. A conservative newspaper savs the R; dwals run everything into the ere mid. They have certainly

run tin Democratic party in:o the j

ground, beyond all hope ot resurrection , Indianapolis is just fifty years old. George Pogue, the first settler, having built his log cabin in the Spring of 1813. Freight from Indianapolis to San Francisco, Cab, is 17 per hundred. Pig ire n would not be profitable at that rate.

New Advertisements

The White Pine News says: ''Down on Chloride Flat, there is a miner's cabin built out of chunks or pieces f high grade chloride ore, estimated to be worth over 2,000 per ton. The house is 1 6 feet square, and the rock in its walls, if erttshci , would perhaps yield in the neighborhood of 75,000. The miners who own and occupy this valuable building, of course are doing so temporarily, and will have the ore of which it is constructed milled as soon as practicable, or when custom mills are started in the district. Never before in the history of mining, we venture to say, d'nl miners who repair the seats of thei," trowsers with 'self-rising' patches, occupy such a valuahe structurs as this."

T

mHE UNDERSIGNED WISH

ES to soil hi 3

HOI AMD lOT, nituntoi i.'ppKi to the southwest corner "f Ilium's VV". K.ils The lioim:: contains five room, with r. ,uod cellar, eit 'fn, &:., and the lot over m Hereof ground, set in shrubbery timi i'rui . ',re i. For particular:), cull on tin nndnrsip-ned. LEVI HllGlIKS. Uloomingti. n, Ind .Juno 1', I8.).

Druggist CHEM

PEACE! !!

0, FEE & C

C 3 OJLiXLi

:JBS3BS- JE3

DEALER IN

PAINTS, OILS km DYE-STUFFS, Ie:rfiiiiiaeiy, Fancy CsS-oocis STATIONERY.

and

WAT. O. FEE. J. FRAXK FV.Eand M '. HARBISON, li iv ne; entered into a copartnership, for the purpose of continuing the General Dry Good and Grocery fiusine w,, At the old stf nd, would tfike pl?a?ure in informing the old customers of Wm. O. Fee, the fricnis of Fee & Hurb son, and the public jretii nil.y. thut they will be silad to meet and sell them Good:! an low, if not A Little Lower,

Than any house VVm. O. Fee tomers, ami the liberality bestow and the new f. business, hope te

enable share ot

Very

Bloomir.gtoa,

in Town. would thank his bid cu?public ger: jrully for their ed upon hint in the past, mi, by str , ct, attention to ' merit and receive a reas-

public patroiiage.

respect ;ull t-, WM. O. FEE, frank fee, m. ?. h,rb:son. Ind., June 16. I8ti9.

The articles most lavishly illustrated i: Harper's Monthly, for June, are "The Auror;:. Borealis, or, Polar Light,'" "Winter on the I'latrs," and "Military Pyrotechnics ct' Former Day-:." The number contains an interesting memoir of Saul Pasha, ti e late Viceroy of Egypt, ami a picturesque article on " Luther and Lee " As usual, the "Easy. Chair" is one of the most attractive of the properties of the number. An intelligent fanner hoy in Illinois, observed a small flock of quails commencing at one side of a corn field, taking about five rows regularly through the field, scratching and picking around every hill, then returning and taking another five rows. Thinking they were pulling t;p the: corn, he shot one, and then examined the field. On the ground they had been over, he found but onest.dk of corn disturbed, but in the quail's eraw he found one out worm, twenty-one striped vinebugs, over a hundred chintz bugs that he could distinctly count, and a mass apparently consisting of hundreds of chintz; ougs, but not one kernel of corn. Programme of the Fortieth CouimcEicemient ol' Intl. State University. Tiursciay, June 24th, to Monday, June 28th, Exam nation of Classes The Committee of Examination will meet Juno 24 Lh at 8 A. M. Friday, June 2 5th, 1 1-2 P. M., Valedictory Exerci ics ot the Athenian and I'hilomatliean Literary Societies. Siturday, June 2(1 th, li V. M., address hefc-re the Aiheuiari and Philonmtlie&n Liiiii.rv So ietiofl by Rev. 11. It. Nay Kir, A. M.,of Bloon ington, Ind. S jtiday, J ine2' th. o Y. M , Baccalaureate Sermon by tie Pr.'tsiik-nt, Rev 0. Nult, i. 1). Monday, June '8lb. 3 P. M., meeting of the Joint Board of Trustees anil Visitors. At. H P. ,'V1., Aidreis before the "ISkta Tiieta Pi" Fraternity by T. A. Purvin, M. I), lntliannpolis, ind a Poem by Hon J 11. Black, Reporter ol the Supremo Court of Ind ana. Tjcsday, June :9th, P M., address before ttie Alumni by David E. Deem, of Spencer, Ind. Wednesday, June 30th, 9 A- M., business meeting of the Alumni. At 71 P. M. Alumni Reunion and Entertainment. Thursday, July 1st, 8 A. M, Graduating Kxerois"9 ol the Senior Class. Ma.jti:h'8 Oratioh By Prof. A. Ativater, A. M ,of Hi rum, O. And Uonl.Trin ct Dcgiees by the Presi dent. If ytm go into a store and find the clerks asleep, or enjoying

a (jiuct game of chess or checker, yoi: may knnv the firm don't advertise. .Anything for a quiet life, you know.

Notice lto R'on-Uiisldcnts. The State of Indiana, Monroe county, in (he Common Pleas Court, Angus' term, 18G9. 1)1 vorce. Clarissa Dextsr vs. On- arus Dexter. Now com; the plaintilF, by James T5. M-ilky, Attorney, and files her complaint herein, together with an aft davit that said

defi-ndant is not a resident of the State of

Indiana. Notice is therefore hereby giver, said defendant that unions he he ui.u appear on the tirt day of the next, term of the Common Pb-rts Court, to hi h leu on th?. third Monday of August. A I'., I860, at the Court House in Bloomington, in said county, and State, juid ansv;r or demur to s.ii.l i-ompbiint. the same will be heard and determined in hi.s absence. Witne-5. my i. atne. and the 5a; of said Court, affixed ut Moo!)iinj..t.oii, this 15th d.y of May. A. D. 8;t. kOISEKT C. msTER Clerk. June lii, 180'j, wH.

oitmvtvci: wo. xxi. Of the town of Bloomington, Ind., adopted May M, 18H9. An Ordinaries providing for the appointin. -ut of the Marshal :f tb town of Ubioniiriton, ns Supervisor, the mode sf working mid improving streets arid alleys, and ' he time in which such labor .-hull be p M-foriried, in ao-ordanee with 'an act parsed by tl:e (Jetioal Assembly of ths State of Indiana, entitled "An Act to enable incorporated towns to lay

out. open, grade and improve streets nnd alh.-vs, &,c." Approved ..7tt day ot' May, 1809'

Skctios I. Be it ordained by the Board of Trustees ni the town of Blmniington, Indiana, that the Marshal of said town .-bail, by virtue of his ilfics, be and is hereby decUved Supervisor of said town, who shall perform all the duties, and exercise nil the power of road supervisor in referent e to a road labor tax, no; to exceed two days in e; ch year by each person, liable to work on rods in to wnships and shall be governed by the same laws i;:iw in force in reference to the to lection, enforcement and expenditure of the sam. Sec. II. "Whereas, an emergency exists for the immediate taking effect of this ordinance, thiTOt'ore the s:ir:ie shall trike effect a:id be in forcu ron and after its passage and publication in the Bloomington Progress. I certify t ie foregoing to be true and co 'rect copies of ordinances No's. 20 and 21 of the town of Bloomington, Ind., passed by the Board of Trustees thereof. May 24, 1869, taken from tha records rf said Board. Attest. JNO. WALPKON, Jko. 0. Obchakd, I'res't. Board. Trusteos. Clerk.

The Neeraljria EKternisator. THE BISHOP PILL ! THE BISHOP PILL ! THE BISHOP PILL ! Not 'Bran drcth's,' not Ayer,I' not W right's

but 'OosUir' Bishop PiU, "Which is bound to take the placo of aB others ; a puily regetai le Pill (sugf or coated,' and of tatrf ordinaiT etSoacy fr Cosi tiveness, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Head- : aches, Nerro-JB Debifify Til l fSniijiTMni,

(Sc. Meatctxl Journal, .sept B. Positively the best Pill in the "World. Thousands of loies now used. For sale as F1SE A WYLIB'S Grocrj Store.

AGENTS

WANTED!

OHERIFFS SALE. b By virtue ot three execution? to modi reefed from the Clerk ot the Monroe circuit :ind common pleas cmrts, I wil'. expose at public sale, to the highest bidder, on Saturdav, July :.0th, 1809 between the hours :f 10 o'clock a. m., find 4 o'cloek p. m., y said day it the door of tho court house of Bloemington, Monroe cmtnty, Indiana, tho renls and profits for a terra not exceeding seven years, of' the following described real estate, to-wic: Tho south east quarter of section sixteen,

ir towmh.p Ao. 10, north ot r;-,nge :wo west. And on failure to realize the full amount judgment, iriierest and i-osts, I wil . at the same time tnd place expose at public sale ihe fee simple of said re;il estate. Taken as the property of Larkin tfvf afford at the suit of Aclams, Karl, et. al. Said sah1 will be made without any relief whatever from viihuUioii or appraisement laws. LA VVSON K McKlNSKY, June 16 09 3t Sherit)' Monroe en.

Gen. Washington, it is said, would use no stimulant but Bininger's London Dtx;k Gin the finest tonic ever discovered. "I FEEL ten years yo-inger, since I begun to use Bioingtr's London Dock Gin," said an old gentleman, as he bought five more bottles of Shoemaker tt Co.. several days ago. "How dees your Biniuger agree with you?" is the common form of salutation just new. It agrees with the weakest; and most debilitated stomachs. At Shoemaker & Cos.

8- tn.-fr

Vfeti. J JT? W. fill

SPECIALLY designed for the use of

.tuj tn Ajxetuutl t'fte.mm ana tne rmmy.

i posscssin:; those int"insic mdtciunl properties which helme; tt an Old and Pure Gin

I Indispensable t? Petnah.. Good for

'. Kidn.-v INmiplaints A del -fious Tonic.

; I'm:, up in Citses c mtai ainc one dozen

! hot! Us e.ien, and sold by all druggist-1 j en.eers. &c. A.M. Binin ;er& -Co.. estab ! Hfhed 17 VS, No. IS Beaver st.. Sew York, i For sale bv shoemaker & Arnoli.

3

CIIIEREFF S S VEE. Bv virtue of c.n est cut ion to mo directed from the Clerk f the Mcnroe Circuit court, I will expose at pub ic sale to tho highest bidder, on Saturday. July 3, 10'), between the hours of I!) o'clock A. M., and 1 o'clock P. M . of sa d day. at the door of the court house of Monroe county tho tents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following described real estate, to-wit : In-lots in the ;own of Stinesville, Monroe county, Indiana, No's, sixty-rine and seventy, and In-loti No's, eighty-one, eighty-two, eij;h:y-tbr;e and e ghty-four. And on fitilur) to realize the full amount of judgment, interest arid costs, I will, at the same time and place, expose ut public sale the fee simple of eaitl real estate. Taken as the property of Kufus E Goble at the suit of .Ja-'MW Smnl'. Said sale will lo nude with relief from valuation ami appraisement laws. LAWSOX E. Mr KIN FRY, JuneO 'fi9w3 Sheriff Monroe co.

WtiLft B. W1LS0H BWOKLKY would respeiti'ully an- , liounee to the citizens of Monroe county, that he is t.etii. g as Ap-nt fertile above" nam. d popular first-class machine, with his headipirt ters at Smith & Cochran's Jewelry Store, wl ore he can be iViund when not eri(riic;ed in ciinvassirtg. Needles. Thread, Machine Oil, and jveryt lint; used in connection with the iiiaeliin), will he t'urnisbeil. upon applicution to April 21, ltU. Ii. WO rlLKY.

8" Buy Bininger's Gin! Buy Bininger's Dock Gin !

Buy Bininger's London Dock

Gin !

Buy Bininger's Old London

Dock Gi a i

"Give, me another bottle" is the

request one hears almost hourly, at Shoemaker & Go's Drug Store, as persons come in who have before

purchased Bininger's Dock Gin.

Notice of Appointment of Administratrix. NOTICE IS H KliEBY GIVEN THAT tfce uudorsigned has been appointed Administratrix of the estate of Matthew Kelly, deceased, lute of Monroe county. Said estate is supposed to be insolvent. MARY E. KELLY junei:, 69-3t Administratrix.

Administrator Sale. OTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT

ii tho undersigned has been uptiointed.

by the Clerk of Monroe County Common Pleas Court, Adm mUtrntor. with the vill annexel. of tho es ate of Frederic Wisely, decea.sed. late of Cloa.r Cr-Jek township, Monroe county, Indiana. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. JAMES WOODWARD, juneHS Administrator.

Ailiiiinlla-;Uriv'N Sulc. I WILL SELL AT THE L AT K HKSIdence of Matthew Kidly, drceased, late of Monroe county, Ind., in Ellettsville, on Saturday, Juno 2'5, iSf'&, the following articles to-'.vit. HotHehold nnd Kitebeii I'lii'iiture Medical Hooks,

I and lust ruments Ae. I neing t !i" property

of Matthew- Kelly, deceuMHl, l.-ili of Monroe county, Indiana. A crm it of nine months will be given, the. pun ba.'er eivinu note with approved security, 'vaiv.ng val.iition and appraisment luw of the Slate if Indiana. MAHY E KELLY. juito2t3 Aduiinistrairix.

Ctai'llS of all kinds printed to order, at ) tho Bloomington I'rofiruss office.

IT'savim. for ?4a,le. T WILL SELL MY FARM, I situated four iitiles west of Bloouiington, containing FIFTY ACRES: There is a good house, with three rooms, on the farm ; also, a never-failing spring, and a good orchard. The fencing is in good repr ir. For fimber particulars, in.piiraoi' SIMPSON NEELD. Hloor iington. (nd , M.ti-eh 17, 1869 8m

To sell the bei t executed nd mot pop. alar Engraring ei er pnblijLed in thistonntry, entitled "ON THE MARCH TO THE Illustrating Gen. Sherman's Grand Match. The Engravinf; is highly commeided by General She man; Getxtral Schoiield, lata Secretary of War ; Gene ral Logan ; &eaerai Kilpairick; 1 'resident of the American Bank Note Company; Piesid.nt ol the Daited States Bank Note Compauy, and other Bank Note Engravers; also by Mr. B'.in tington.

I resident of the Academy or Design, new

York, and others to numerous to mention.

N. B. Fre ghtH on prints is only ono-tenth

part ol what it i on booics per $l(M) in value.

(Jail on or acurtsa, u. blEBBJLNb. KartJord,

Connecticut.

O ATARRH X

TTTHY suffer with Uiis dangerous uni W loathsome disease -when it can be

cured and entirely eradicated fram the system by the use of

Dr. Seelye's Uqrnld Catarrii Hemcdy T Catarrh will surely result in Consumption unless checksi ir its incipient stages. Dr. Seelye's Liquid Catprrh Ketnedy never fails. Cure warranted if dire-;ti6m are ftdlowedt Single Bottle -vill last a month ! Cold in the head relieved in a few minutes 1 Bad Breath caused offensive se retions! Weak Eyes ca ised by Catarrhal affections! Sense of Smell -wheri'lt sseried or destroyed I Deafness whn caused by Catarrha": difliculties, all are cured by this remedy I Tbroat Affections are more fwquently tbtn otberwise caused 'y a thick, slit ty mnt as falling from the head, especially du ing the night, and rest lting fnmi Ootarrh, and are cured by Dr. Seely.j'b Liquid Catarrh Remedy. 11. H. CAMPBELL, Agent, Blsoniing. ton, Ind.

Symptoms s The symptcms of Catarrh are at Brit very slight. Personti find they have a cold, that they have frequent attacks, and are more sensitive to una changes of temperature. In this con iition the n.we may be dry, or a slight discharge, thin aid acrid, afterwards thi;k and tdhesive, ma;? ensue. As the disense beco mes chronic, the discharges are increase-1 in quantity sad in quality; they are now thick an I neavy, and are hawktd or coughed off. Taeaecrot ions are offensive, ca using a bad breath ; the voice thick and nasal; the eyes are weak; the sense of itmell is lewnoc1 or destroyed ; deafness froonently tak.s place. Another common ana important symptom of Catarrh is that the person U obi jjed to : lenr his th -oat in t'le morning o'aslick or slimy muw us, which has fallen from the bead during she night When tli s takea plueo, the person rosy he sure tihat his diseisa is on its way to the lungs, nnd should lose no time in arresting- it Seelye's GaUrrh Care ia tho only specific For aale by IU BL CsmpbaU.

IMillinery floods, Qlerea, lli-

Colkfje A&mw, fiorth qf Siaih St. OL'K SPRING STCCS, which has jm been opened, is by &r the mist foil and complete ever brought to Bloomington In addition to a com pi ate stock of tim most fashionable Millinery (Joodi, b,e mm a full and curefully sUectod stock at Gloves sati Hosiery. We DrODOAl to do a nash hnainAs i nTn

sivoly, and will sell goods at a small profit.

Bleaching and Presriaj Done in a satis&ctorv man tier, and on tim

shortest notice. An in spec Lion of oir new stock u respectfully solicited.

MBa E. J. BB1K8, HISS I. If. Bloomrngtcn, April SI, 18w6

E

1 O It S A K. in ,

A flrst-iato

PEDDLING WA130N, almost new. for salo cheap. En.qu .r3 at Smull 'i Hardware Store.

TfA&M FOR SALE.

I will soil -.17 Farm, situated in tr northeast, cornor of Bloomington township, containing i jo ae-res, 80 iwsres enclosed with a god fiinca, 40 acres wll cleared, tjtwen thirty and forty fruit trees; good hi we and baru j ftood vtll and aitring. Price, fpl 000; nvt hut dm' dollare cown, the remainder in one and two years, with interest Pot further j.-rt cularg, in mire f Jol, STaab. or Jackson .tot. April 1 1, 69-6m