Bloomington Progress, Volume 3, Number 9, Bloomington, Monroe County, 30 June 1869 — Page 1

ft

Potato Biros. Wc hear finch complaint of the potato bug. The ftestiferous little "cusses" are troubing the farmers to such an extent that it has called out on css:.y on their vioionsntss and worth k--MKs$. The writer censures Xouh lot having preserved a pair of potato bu and a pair of flea; in the arl:, and thinks it was 'a raighty small piece of business.'" It thus relates the result of an effort to utilize these insects: "A year or two since, an enterprising liquor manufacturer tried crushed potato bugs to color wine. He gave them a fair trial, but at the end of six months,found that they did not color the vine a particle better than the tit ice of bed

bugs, and that the flavor given the! her parent

. ,1 , w - ,i .... rr.i,;..

Established A. 1. 1S35.

BLOOMINGTON, INI)., JUNE ;!(J, 1869.

New Series.

Vol. 3 No. 9

.

tl

wine was not as that triven v

bed bug juice. There was one mare (that time until objection, lie could catch bed bugs j o'clock Thursday at all seasons of the year, but could I was taken worse.

find potato bugs only about or eiojlit months of the vcar

A Mouse In a C IiiBrt's Stomach. I For a week past the daughter of j Mr. Walshauer, aged about three j vears. and residinir at the corner of j

Spain and Greatmen streets, eomplaiocnl of an itching ache in the stomach, which she attributed to

.is being caused by

nts. This irritation lasted from

halt past seven i

night, when she The father of the

six i child, supposing that worms Mas He ' the cause of her illness, administered

has pronounced curses upo.i potato bugs, and declares them good for nothing."- Indianapolis Sent net.

a worm powder, .she was taken

com nan led bv a

About

seriously ill, ac-

cnoKing sensation,

i and it was ieared she would die

T!;e vote ay which the Cortes of from the effects, when she suddenly Spain adopted its new Consti utio i, i vomited, throwing up, aiftong other was 21-1 against 55. The uev Con-j matter, a live mous", about an incn st i tut ion guarantees freedom :o and a half long, not including the worship, general suffrage, r itional ; tail, which was nearly the same sovereignty, and the monarchical , length. As soon as the young girl principle upon which the Duke af jwas relieved of the animal, she imMontpensier still stands exjiecta.it mediately exclaimed to her anxious or anxious for the throne which parents, "Oh, mother, look, this is Serrano, it fc said, has no ambition ; the thing that has been troubling

to hold even by proxy. Hie neiniblieaus, notwithstanding their

dislike of the monarchical principle, wisely concluded to make no factious opposition. They can afford to endure tin; monarchical feature in exchange for religious freedom.

in i r .1

i me so much. vv hen we saw the I child Friday morning, she was as iwell as could be, and romping about I the street as happy as a "gay sun- ' flower." The mouse, which was so ; mysteriously lodged in the child's I stomach, was captured by Mi.

Albert eilbaeher, the druggist,

The Spiritualists should take a 1 corner of Spain and Greatmen sts., lesson from Sister Josephine, of afln, reserved in alcohol, where the

convent in Belgium, who has turned ; oorious a,s vvell as the skeptical can .

the image ot Joseph to practical ac-;examjne it at their leisure. How, wHint. In a pamphlet, published j wnen and where the animal found under the patronage of the Bishop ; ;ts way (jown h(?r throat, and how of Malines, a letter of the pious sis-!t maintained life, is a matter of fcer to a friend is published, in which j conjecture. A Orleans Times. "A person owed me a considerable j Xhe Sllez canal will be finished sum of money. After repeated ap- ie;70 ts enginecr M. Lesseps, locations for payment, and mauv a ran(f celebration of the nasals and postpone-nont resoi- ftnd ; . ()t hh mruc ved to place the holy imag( of St.j. excursion around the world bv Joseph before the disputed little ac-' t of nw(W1,tativos of all ,m-

From tho Floyd co., (Iowa,) Gazette. Pursuit of Knowledge In a Sawmill. Last Monday a ( Icrinan called at

j Goodhue, Andrews & Co.'; sawmill, j to gaze in wonder at th various and i complicated machinery. Among : other things that he saw, was a small circular saw, saw i ig faster ; than anything he ever saw saw

betore. Its rapid motion iascinated him ; he reached out his right index finger toward its ill-defined periphery (for the circumference of a saw in swift motion looks to be at the base of the teeth, and not at their points,) when to lis surprise the end of his finger d isappeared in an instant and rolled away to the other side of jhe sajv. The man tied up the stump in Ids handkerchief, whereupon Mr. Andrews, noting him, came up and inquired what was the matter. The victim of misplaced confidence replied : "Misther Andrews, I never comes to see

your mills before. I seed (lis ting j going round so fast, I takes mein j

vinger to him, like uis, and mein Gott !" In explaining his first mishap, the German touched the saw with his left forefinger, and that flew off. Turning to Andrews in almost breathless astonishment, the man exclaimed: "Misther Andrews, I never comes to your mills before ; I see him : I never comes to see him

Divorce in Connecticut. The statistics of divorce in Con-

During last

year the divorces numbered 478, or more than one'tenth of the number of marriages. President Woolsey, of Yale College, has lately been calling attention to this" subject in a series of aide articles in the New Pmglander, and the new Governor of Connecticut has recommended to the Legislature a modification of the

existing divorce laws the provi

sions of which ...re so lax that there

again I" And wrapping that finger

rount, Icehnir sure that he would

iake up the case,nnd glory be to this illustrious saint, at the end cf a few days I ot my money." A spirit that could be persuaded to do as uiu4j would be in demand awnug :'red5tors. Cin. Comncrcial.

tions, to the u umber of one hundred. They will meet next spring in Paris ; thence go to Egypt aad open the canal ; thence to China and Japan, across the Pacific Ocean to San Francisco, and thence across the continent to New York. The ex-

of Ak -on O i cursionists will prove by practical ! nvtippi mnnr linvi- tlif iviilrnnfl nnd

saved a ! i'"" . , Y"T , "

fortune of $35,000 at his pre fission, j can1 VI" nave snp"? anu snort- : ! eri id the process ot putting a girdle

A colored barber

cueu last wsck, having

Xottee to Farmers A SI) T( THE CITIZENS OF HLO0iU!N(iT0N.

HOLAS NOLAN ilJasoiKri i.-:, u now

around about the earth.

Kn forniftrly tvcupd fr Ch-ib Howe, on the vii?t side ?? ifhe itilitt ffjut re fciiil has nn hnnd si nil f.in tw i:-ef. n lull stock of Stnpie nnd F;irvey (2eerir T-bacei. tOigws. ContVctions. :s. in f:u t. c' vi y artiil(; usually found in i Gnwery Store. An extra article of N- (. M la.ses. :it

I Yc are to have tea a. id coffee in j abundance at home. A large nuiiii her of Japanese families have ar- ! rived in California, with the tea plant, and will commence its immediate culture. It is believed many ; portions of our country are .veil ; adapted to the successful cultivation

into his handkerchief, h'2 started for

a doctor's ofhee. Yeast for Hot Weather.-

The Scourge of Utah.

Countless myriads of grasshoppers

have lately made their appearance

on the north and east shore of Salt

Lake, and are marching, or hopping toward the city of the Desert. The ground around Promontory Point, is literally black with the young and rapacious insects. They are now about three-fourths of an inch in length, black in color, and more resembling a cricket than a grasshopper; but as they increase in size their color changes to brown. About two weeks since, these pests made their first appearance in that section, being then about an eighth of an inch in length, and having the nppearance of a sand-cricket. They grow rapidly, and are very voracious, destroying everything in their way. For miles the track of the railroad is black with these destroying insects, the ties and rails being hidden from view, by the thousands perched thereon. Salt Lake City has been cleared of vegetation before, by these pests, and in each case the countless hosts have made their first appearance to

the north and west of the city, devastating the fields and gardens

when passing through on their way to the south and westward. Two years ago such a scourge swept over the city, destroying every green

not not long since, in

middle counties of Virginia.

Sudden Destruction. A man whose name need not be

rnenTioued, attended Divine service

one of the

He

was wickeu and profane. Ihe

minister preached a sermon full of

warning to the impenitent. At the close of the services this man got into a quarrel with another young man. The preacher gently rebuked them, and warned the profane man that if he were to die in the state in

i l which he then was. he must nerish.

! . I II. l1.' t i , ...'

is naruiy any application ror mvorce i and tnat he was in danger ot dying

me judges couiu legally The Norwich Bulletin

which

refuse.

speaks forcibly on the question, saying : "It is a worse admission of rottenness and corruption than appears upon its face. All the marriages celebrated in the State during the year arc included in the total of 4,734. A large proportion of these are marriages between foreigners, communicantsof the Roman Catholic Church, who, except in very rare cases, never trouble the courts. The twenty-five unhappy couples

of the city, ; whose names adorned the Superior i t : v. . i , . . . . ...

and gardens j court docliet i:or this county at its

last term, are, without exception, native citizens., Add to this the number who are practically divorc

ed, but who frotn family or other

and vine of the previous season. Millions of the insects perished in the lake, for it seems that nothing turns them when on their destroying march. In a day, the beautiful

gardens and orchards of the city were left as bare of verdue [sic] as though

a fire had swept over them.

thing, even to the growth of wood

lega

separation, and the extent of

the evil will be made appare .- 4W . Mr. Landrcth the well known seed man, savs : The troublesome

"Boil two ounces of the best hops in four quarts of water, for half an hour ; strain it and let the liquor cool down to a new-milk warmth. Then put in a small handful cf salt and half a pound of sugar (brown.) beat up one pound of the flour with some of the liquor, and mix all well

little insect, which deposits its egg in the pea while in the pod, might be even more mischievous than it is.

From the account given us, it

it is taught to avoid the germ of

appear: that the city will again be

visited by this scourge. We learn that this scourge, which passed over Salt Lake two years hence, continued its march, and the following season made an appearance in the lower end of the Great Basin, where the

scenes of the previous year were re-

enacted. This season the hordes have appeared in the extreme southern Mormon settlements, where they are destroying everything before them. They are now some five

and keep near a fire. Before using;

stir well. It will keep two or three months in a cool place." "I kept this two months in th." cellar, where the thermometer ranged between 90 and 104 degrees." "This yeast is very strong, half the usual quantity necessary for a baking is sufficient."

F

ARM. FOR SALE.

Tim undoreigned oflVr? for ale one cf

',v . .. . , i

Spglinii, .? to ;V) . r gal. ; protltabl COUNTRY PRODUCE. i

of the vilant. and if commence, bv i the fliu-n stock farm in Mtmroo county;

persons familiar with it cultivation, eorvtiding of 1C0 o.,vw, situated can be made both successful and ; five miles north-emt of Blooridnnton.

A Inrgn portion is v,,'ll sit in grass ; water

uwiiv.s plenty and conveinrit, n good bnrn,

'The 'highest market enr. will be paid for Turkrys, 'Glii-ikos. Buttar, Eggs, B;ans, Dried Appk-s nnd Pi-itchcs. iBloo nii.gton. Ind . February A, 1SG0.

H

OMI

C.

I

NSURAXIB VOMPA.Y

Mew Haven, Conn.

. .S-s nrHLCjoo on

Many people suppose t he Mormon

capital is on the L uion Pacific h ab

road, but it is not. lho.se who go to San Francisco will not see the Mormons unless they take considerable time to do it. Kverybody wants to visit Salt Lake City, which is forty miles south of Ogdcn station, the nearest point thereto. The branch road from the Mormon capital to the Union Pacific is in

Iwdlinj house, tvc. terms easy. For further particulars, upplv to GEORGE SliEEKS. Blonmington, Ind., niiirSl-Um

TH, DILNN & CO.,

hundred miles from Salt Lake, the

life; and strange as it appears to the inexperienced, pt?as which are nearly eaten to a shell, vegetate with almost as much certainty, though with not equal vigor, as those untouched. It would be well, however, if we were rid of its attentions, and a method seems within our reach. It is simply as follows : So soon as the pea is dry enough to harvest, let it be placed in a tight vessel, and pulverized camphor, at the rate of two ounces to che bushel, or a tablespoon ful of sulphuric ether to a similar quantity be applied ; in a few days, if not hours, the bugs will be found sickened, and ultimately dead. If each person who saves peas would adopt the course described, ws should, ere long, rid ourselves of a pestiferous insect. On the Sou thern shore of Georgia, near Brunswick, the choicest oysters are found on trees, which is explained by the fact that numerous

prostrate live oaks obstruct some of

the creeks near the town, and the on Ktviii 1 1 mils rV fluid a i ntiArif1

Indiana State University. , 6" .

Rkv. (hues Nurr, D.D., Prudent and "- '-"-"-"- J Profe.ssw of Mmtai, Moral and Political j of the largest size and of peculiarly

localities over which they passed having had one year's respite from their ravages. It seems that when these insects reach maturity, they deposit their eggs in the soil and die. The following season, the eggs are hatched by the warmth of the spring, and a new army follows on the march. ---<>--- Why is a dilapidated shoe, like ancient Greece? Because it once had a Solon!" =====

GENERAL DIRECTORY.

it t i

suddenly ana being

lost. "Before

to-morrow s sun goes down, said the man of God, "you may be dez.d and in perdition." To all this the man replied that if he went to bell, the minister had nothing to do with it ; that it was none of his business. With some other words of warning and admonition, the minister left him. The next morning the profane man was at a railroad station, but a mile or two from the church where he had received the solemn warning from God's faithful servant. The ears stopped at the the station diouse, and began to back for wood and wattrr. He attempted to get on the cars. The conductor told him to wait a few minutes, until the train returned to the platform in front ot the house. "No," said he, "I will

jump on now, or 1 will go to hell

trying, and with these words he made an effort to jump on the step of the car, but fell under the wheels, and in one moment his head was crushed, his body was mangled, and his spirit had gone trembling into eternity. Beware how you trifle with sacred things. Be careful how you insult and grieve God's Holy Spirit. "He that being often reproved hardeneth his neck, shall suddenly be destroyed, and that without remedy."

A poetaster in the Hartford City Democrat inquires, in six awful stanzas "Is there a hell, a burning hell, Filled with scorching flame.," on the other side of the river Jordan. If there isn't there ought to be. A Lafayette German hooked a Wabash pike, and in endeavoring to take it off the line, the fish bit his thumb off'. The Anderson Herald says there is si man in that county who is opposed to the 15th Amendment, because a negro can't part his hair ia the middle.

A Back.Trood;8 Adventure. A "Virginia baak. r who was the chairman of a noted infidel ckb, was or.ee traveli&g through Kentucky, having witfi hira bank bills of the value of 25,000. When he came to a lonely forest, where robberies t.nd murders were aakl to be frequent, he was soon lost through taking the wrong road. The darkness of the night came quickly over hira and how to escape from the threate aed danger, he knew not. In his alarm he sudd enly espied, in the distance, a dim light, and urging his horse onward, he at length came to a wretched looking cabin. He knocked, and the door was opened by a woman, who said that her husband was out hunting, but would soon n't urn. and she was sure he would cheerfully give him shelter for the night. The gentleman put up his horse and entered the cabin,

but. with feelings that can he better imagine! than described. Here he was, with a large sum of money, and perhaps in the house of one of the robbers whose name was a terror to the country. In a short time the man of tie house returned. He had on a deer skin shirt, bear skin cap, seemed much fatigued, and in no talkative mood. All this boded the infidel no good. He felt for hi? pistols in his pocket, and placed them so as to be ready for instant use. The man asked he stranger to retire to bed, but he declined, saying that be would sit by the fire all night. The man urged, but the more he urged the more the infidel was alarmed. He feh assured that this was bis last night upon earth, but he determined to sell bis life as dearly as he could. His infidel principles gave him no comfort. His fear grew irto perfect agony. What was to be cone? At length the backwoodsman arose, a:ad reaching to the wooden shelf, tcok down an old book, and said : "Well, stranger, if you won't go to bed, I will, buc it is my custom always to read a chapter of Holy Scriptures before I go to bed." "What a change did those worda produce ! Alarm was at one? removed from the skeptic's mind. Though avowing himself an infidel, he bad now confidence in the Bible.

He felt safe. He felt that a man who kept an old Bible in the house, and read it, and bent bis knees in prayer, was no robber or murderer. He listened to the simple prayer of the good man, at once dismissed all his fears, and laic, down in the rude cabin and slept as eali&ly as he did under his father's rooit From that night he ceased to revile- the gucd old Bible. He became a sincere Christian, and often related the story of his eventful journey, to prove the folly of infidelity..

DEAL ills IN

Capital fitock is . . .

,pljPdl.nI"'';;L.'V'ii,;)v"'lw" 00 iVrocess of construction, but it will 9h on huud aucl in hands of ! be s('veral months yet before it is Agents $374 7t7 84 completed. Keal Liute 43-. iws 1,1, ' ,.,.. . AJnitatt -State Bonds, 5-20 1 VJ.2S') 37 ftttwr Bonik ixt Loans 6;3,!ilii 18 1 A J OLD FIRM

Total Act8 $1,622,974 SO I Ttal Liabilities B8.6B3 00 i BJgT Special attention given to ho Tnsui'- ' Ance of Dwellings. Hateti rewonobie. Tae Borne is an old, reliable Company. M. Is. Snodgrass, tgent. fy Can be found at the Post Ottlce. ffl j BlooiDingtoi), Ind., Feb. 17, 18( 9-9m j .-. J. AI.I.EN. H. L. OSBOR.S. I

L.llC311 & Oo., JSouth Side of Ihe Public Square, UEAI.EKS IN HARDWARE AND CUTLERY, And all kinds of Stems and Tinware , fiails, Sash, Glass, Paiuls, Oils, and Farming Gten.-ils, MASVFACTCKEB9 OF Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron Ware. Bloominjrto", Ind., March 24, 186 ).

A.YE purchased nnd fitted up a new

wux's-rooni; cm the south side of the

public Miunre, and in it have placed the

IN A New Location. SHOWERS & EIENDR1X,

H Dubl i

1:iri;e t stock of

Ever before seer, sn HluomingUra. "VVe have an irr, tense quantity of BEDSTEADS, BUREAUS AND CHAIRS. Both eori)iTi:n and Hrst-cla. and will sfll

to 01 r customers at lower figure tlum vtsr. Mucii of tliU Furniture by:, been made in our own Factory, and we will warrant every article sold, to be just as lejiresi nted

GEO. A. BUSK IRK- J. S. SMITH II UM Kit. nUSKIRK & HUNTER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW Aft PRIVATE BAIWER BWington, Ind., office north side of the UWeX'attendto aU businwu entrusted tt our care, in the Courts of thu State, and ws also prmwred to dtc sunt gxd bnd solvent paper, on reasonable terms. ernea Messrs. McDonald & Kot.cn Attorn Indianapolis ; Messre . AVinsl ,w, Lmmw k Co., Bankers, So. 53 'Vail strec, NewYerk; Mr3. HcCaila & Co, Merelnt, Woomiagton Ir.i. mBP

mim jet v

jmt am

Dry Goods and Notloms, BOOTS AND SHOES, HATS AND CAPS, SC. Call nt t'le north-ast corne r of Mb and Railroad street. rnarlfi-y 5)35 Acres of ILamd

For Sale. DESIRING TO GO WEST, I will sell at private sale my two farms in Monroe county. One of '.lfi!i Ales, in Richland township, two ni It ; nor t i west

of Elletts ville, with two house two barns

and two orchards. Land all in grass, One Farm of 2-1(0 Acrcu, three miles nortbi-nst of ElletUville. Thi.-f farm is well in proved, in the matter of fencing, nnd is all in grass. The farms will be sold in a body, or separately, to suit purchasers. For terms or salk, applv to D. M. WOODS, mar8 3ra Ellbltaville, Ind.

ANDERSON & HAMILTON, Booksellers and Stationers, And Wholesale Dealers In Blank Boohs. U'ind-iw HI, ., and every M itclielL Indiana. 8" "SVe guarantee our price as low as any house in the west. may'JOy

AIwkvs on hand, read v-miide, and will be

trimmed and furnished to our customer

at one-tlfilrd less money than m-i

been heretofore charged in Jiloomington. fflffU- Don't forget the ilaee: In the new block, south side of the public square.-igjs SHOWERS & HENDRIX. Bloom in j;ton, Ind., May 13, '68.

FOIt S A 1L 13 . A firet-rate PEDDLING WAGON, almost new, for Mile cheap. Enquire at Small's Hardware Store.

i Qttle Bi;ls printed at :;atia!actary

y J at this

nitu

For Salle.

T Wn.L SKT.L ON lU'ASONAlSLE

1. term.;, my farm, five mil -s west of the

town of Uloominpton, In:l., containing

22 Acrea of Land.

The Farm is in excellent condition, and is supplied with many modern conveniences.

mar.i i;y-:sm N. S. MA V FIELD.

rTandhillH printed uxp:litiousl.y LJ. cheap y. at the l'ro;i i- otlirn

FARM FOR SUE.

The west half of the Farm of the late Ellin Stone, situated t MUcm West of Bliioniingtoii, containing 110 acres. For particulars, inquire of D. LUNDliRHAJN, Blkominoton, Feb, 24, 69-?.m I:;ha:;a.

PhUnsonnu.

Rev. T. A. Wy:lie,D.D., Professor of AV turol Philiisrphy. Kiciiarii Owen, M.D., Professor of Na

tural Scii nre and Modern Languages.

J'ANIKI. Kirkwood, Lth.D., Professor of

Mathematics.

Rkv. 12. BVLLENrriNK. A.M., Professor of Greek and Greek Literature. C. M. DorP, A.M., Profrssor of Latin and

Latin Literature.

Hon. Okorqe A. Bickktxl, LL.D., Professor of Law. (3r. AV." Hoss, A.M.. Professor of English

Literature, and ike Theory and Practice of

Teaching.

Officers. - Clerk

- Sheriff

Audito-r - Recorder School Examiner Coroner Commissioners.

del

ICIOUS

fla

vor.

J.

GLASS MoPHEETEK;--,

News-Dealer and Stationer.

Complete stock of Fine Writing PapersCap, Letter, Note,, Bath.

Counts

Robekt C. Fostkii,

Lawson K. McKinsby

Henry P. Pkrry, D. V. BrsKiRK,

Wm, II. Jonks,

EliWARD WRIOHT, Wm. H. Slocomii,

T. Y. Rabkr, 1

8. II. Phillips,

Jamks Small, J

Wm. F. Browning, Chairman of Union Central Committee of Monroe county. E. E. Sluss, Asse.wor of Int. Revenue. Courts Ore-nit Court D. R. Eckels, Judge ; John C. Robinson, Pros. Attorney. Sessions April ar.d October. Common. Pleas Court 7' W Woolen. Judge, James H. Reeves. Prosecuting Attorney. Sessions-

April, August and December. Township Officers M. I,. Snodgrass, Tovetishin Trui 'ee; F. T. Butler, Jes.se T. Cox end C. IK. Henderson, Justices of the Peace, Corpohatios Officers Clerk, John C. Orchard ; Pros. Attorney, J. p, Pittman ; Marshal, Gscar Sanders ; Treasurer, J. I''Manley. Tbi.'STEIW 1st ward E. H. Voss ; 2d ward .V. L. Qsborn ; 3d ward J. Misener ; 4th ward Parker Pearson; 5th ward John Wo.ldron. Si'hoo, Tbi stres. Milton Highi, Geo. M. Chase, and G. W. Hoss. Churches. Methodist Episcopal, corner of Madison and 5th streets; Rev. Henry R. Naylor, Pustor. First Presb terian, Walnut street, bet 5th and 6th, A. Y. Moore. Pastor. Second Presbyteriuv, Cth street, bet. Col lege Avenue and Railroad; Rev. E. Ballek'UNK. Chr'ttian, 5th stroot, bet. Washington and Linejln ; Elder W.B.F. Trent, Pastor, Baptist, corner of Washington and 4th streets!; S. Bvkton, Pastor. Reformed Presbyterian, College Avenue, bet. 8th and nth; Ilcv.T. A. Wyi.tk. Pastor. United Presbyterian, west end of 8th street ; 'Row Wm. Tr1iNK.1t, P.-wtor. Catholic, corner of MiulU.n and -ith sts.

Envelopes, every grade, quality and size. Pocket Boo::?, Ink, Go'd and Steel Pens, DIARIES, NOVELS, SONG Books, Pencil.1!, Blank Books and Mucilage. Post-Offlce Building, west side public square, Durand's old utand, Bloomington, Ind. BOB' I will supply any order, for any book, at publishers' lowest cash prices.

I8TCIJT THIS ODT.-QR

From the B.oominorton Progress. THIS ADVBRTISEJ9ENT

GKji.1AUK WILL PAY FOR

$20 Worth of Goods! AT THE

New York Store O F TUI.EY OO., On the miUh ide of Pullio Square, BLOOfltlNG-irOfV, IND.

Good Calicoes, at from 8 to 14ct8.i?yd. Bleachod Domestic, s low an Seyd. Brown Domestic, fK.m 10 to laeyd. Good Bel Ticking for I6e Pyd. Good Paper Collars, 15cts box. Di osii Gc ivls very ehoap. Whitu Cotton Hose, ircts "P pair. A full line of Parasols).

An endless variety of Notioiiirvery cli.eap.

A very large itiick of Summer Hats.

We sell Boots and Shoes very low, ac tho

NEW YORK STORE, May 26, 1 8i?3 TU LEY & CO., Props,

A patent has been obtained for

the manufacture of water-proof

paper. It wilt be no uncommon

thing, by ami by, to carry a quart of milk lion:e in a paper bag.

3. W. BHOflM UCEtt.

X. J. ARNCIJ).

Union Drag Store, South Side Public Square. J. lmwk & Cor, Wlvoltaale and JtdaU Dealer in

M A. DUNN. B. BATTEBTON. F. C. IUN". J-UNN & CO., Geneml Produce, Commission Aind Forvmrdin; Merchants, Wholesale a:id Retail O RL OCE TEt S , And dealers ir Nails, Kanhawa and Lake Salt, White Fish, &c, Bloomington, Ind. May9 G7-v

(1ardN of all kinds printed to order, at ytho lUoointogton Progress ofllue.

uoK.eye

RttlPKRS AND MOWERS! J UST REC EIVED in store by the undersigned, a Car Load of those eelebrated machines. They are so universally known in this county, that I deem it unnecessary to set forth their advantages over other machines; suffice it to say that improvements have been mado this season, that add to their value, and make them Without a Rival in the market. The manufacturer's inform us tlmt they have rncra orders in already, than ihev will bo able to nil. Those wanting the BEST MACHINE, will do well to leave their order early. Also on hands 2 DOZ. REVOLVING RAKES, 1-3 do. Buckeye Wheel Rakes, SCYTHE SNATHS, FORKS, Rakes, Hoes, Spades, Shovels, Axes, &c. Alao, a general assortment of Builders' Hardware, Piiiats, Oils, GlasK, Steel, Iron, Nails, Slaves and Till ware,

i'c, etc. Thankful to his numerous friends nnd customers for the very liberal patronage heretofore received, ho hopes by close attention and fait dealing to merit a

conti:(iumce of the same mayo-y JAMES SMALL-

DRUGS,

CINES,

OILS AND

MEDIPAINTS, GLASS.

Also, a large stock of Furaanre, Ociaclt

and Japan Varnish.

Coal, Lard, Linseed aad Fish

Oils. Ames' And Adams' Ililat, VarnisL and

Whitewash Brushos..

Wall Paper, Window Shade, &c Schoo . and College Text Books, and StatfoBery of all kinds, Tobaeeo and Cigars, LAMPS AND I.ANTERNS. We keep on hands a strictly pure s:ock of Blackberry, Port and Grape Win;; French, Peach and Blaokben-y Bit d ; Bourbort, Wheat and Rye Whisky, for Medical Purposes Ordy. We hold all our Patont Sfediclnes l prices before the war. We feel thsnkfui for past favors, and solicit the jfctror.iig' of the publie, and will guarantee satisfaction to all. J. W. SHOEM AK EE CO. nov25,'63. BIooBiingrton, Ind.

VfCWLXY.

r. .

UEOO.

14irery9 Feed and Sale Stable, W0BEET& LEG6, OpposiU Uu Swth and of tie R.R. iVw, TT AVE Me of lite laigefi lutd bwt, arXI ranged Livery sm& its SilJ'' Monroe, or in any otiter ewtntf to Soat -ern Indiana. Stiddle horses, of horms ai d buggies will be furnisied at any hour of tha day or night. ComameKial travelers. t others, will be furnird witk eoKveKi. . to neighboiing towns. Good, (toady bet furnished to families. Homes fed by the single feed, day or week, at reasoasblo rates. We propose to kopp a ftrsKisns stable, and ask the public to give as 9, triJ. Blcoiainjrton, Ind., June 23, 186.

At 1I aad complete st (; f Cards always on band, at this office.

Wairaaty Detds and Mortgajroi for sale nt tfc Progress offi,w.

TJostOTs done on wt ite or colored papt

the l'rogressi'fflct'.