Daily Wabash Express, Volume 17, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 June 1867 — Page 2
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vr[ Y'".RXto_ESS.
XlfiKRli' AlJTK, INI)-
Thursday Morning. Jane 9ltM86l
tGETTYSUUKa
it. I
THE GREAT BATTLE REPAINTED
fhrililHS Scenes of the Three Days' Battle.
Gforce Alfred Towrtfend, of the New York T' lbuiie, arcomf/aimd Gen. Grunt iu=t week, to Gettjitjurg cetne-. U-o TLa tt.ut.oii afforded the oorre»pmniMit on opportunity of describing i» in. st v.v.d tours the three davs' struggle lit wbtch ,'Teed the .Nor.ii from Aim inVuuin^ army of Xie6. TLiey siiiuti.t tit*. Uiiii.il uruij iii the buttle j1 iv
rjl'-Mriti'iid ilk-i
a to a "ourklethe itsbti
61 in v, he cal+s tt *"fl iil." \Vu extract frou tinr e.itlr .ilu** ••Mtsrt'lo -tisd UeffVll night, working Jik. a Uok ktx-pvr
8,
ktuiiny
and a taieanaan to^etu-
tr, iteming iruei, uis^aUbing Tilt-rue.-, ig up tiii iiuee, fixing his article,!,}. At break this was his lioe ik: Ai li kiu/b, on the scytli liuiid.e, S.ckio/ Tnexi along the scyihelmiiU «, iliiuc-mii in tl.ii uiigte betwrtui iini«j.« itiiUnrjtlii', Newton (. Vir^iuia, ijic »Ji-t Bw-r.yi ite. iiuldt) tiud Howard He *cy iln» ocum.^ Krlpasrick* c.v*iy~wu» tilivQcdAip atthe«uU ot' iL Li.uaic, «ihI liuUitd's at ihd p^int of tli*. |.-Ui«: ix-iweeu U.o two, and in tl.c re.11', Orre^g «''d ^'Wantou lay with their fcuruu in wait. A part of the force
rtierve, but two-thirds of
Vu-lf.r ttWny, inuieniag up, and a fu dnj: maicb lo the £asi the sturdy corjje oi cAu.e eit-aving the clouds cl pi, wuii brans already on the battlf flj.J, ihvir iutjt chafing that tbey could not to«» fjeody. Front the Little lii.unc T«'p. ht«i yeu been t.ere, you could havt fteii, lA'tbtt sun rose warm and unclouded, tho *bolo ri(g» of the cemeteiy a b«iige of yonets-fl jwered with stnrrj and tints lo standards, chequered ivub knot# of brass or iron cannon, and as if tL»i weie digging the graves and rearing tit vaults of the human race, ten tii^uFtt'tii -.a-ii, sweaty and soiled with the labor of the night, were ditching and sodding, iuii.building stone walls, ho that tbf Vast scythe was Utri»d deep in ramparts Upon ilio lin«i of iheir long flail tbe re be It wrired w~eTii'tidily, planting guns and cowrmg them and bo. with scarcely a Voltuy ij
^ircak the stillness, only the
slimier of picket discharges and now and lliun euiu.) lonely cannon, the morning 4('Uwi-u-way.
Mihiiifitiir," Leo, the Captain of the Flail, wu^ riding up and down his impatient hue to w-i tti« point at which the gcytbt Vai .wi akeiit. fitre he directed a cannontec to drive a shell there the picket? V.e,rn,i.#0»- J^lei'tatioufily forward yonder a CHVui'V periy Wu3 paraded to draw thf Viiivui flif. Vv'nerever he menaced tlu rcyilie it s^ruiig up columns of battlo. So he. t.du in tl'U sneiterof woods, teams and "d climbed into the college towir, iiortirof "the town, contrary to all 1. rules of miiitupj courtesy., for he had mnJt -tbe college a ,l o-pital-and covered it with 1l».*''sjlc-eJ flag ot charity. Looking thence
With Ins gbits he could sea down the long se\tl.u iiaudle tl.at at tae far extremity ur Hi»i.uid-Top it Lent outward, losing etrei'gih, ai.d forming an abrupt crook.— Jfar': ASillile directed by Meade to hoki the In lit in ol the ridge, had seen thai Sin*) ly lui.se stond upon a promontorv hi^livf than iiis own. ilv ti'oit toe responsibility of occupying it, t.nil to made the flunk of battlo an ugly and eX|'0ed elbow, ns dangeroun as tbui oi^u 111v• win' kes his arm out from the of train of car*. It eventuated well lli'iii tli.s Mas done, for in the glorious is sufc'Of tliti aciion we note no mistake, but ai roi 'i as L.ee had seen this faulty fi'tiik he galioped out the Hagerstowjn road, asrxs the field" and up avpurof the South ^itnii.tiii'i, full four uiiled from the front Tof Hound i'up. Here, with his cor^p c.Miiinuiiders around him, he reconnoite '•it*' elbow ugitih with his strong nrot,.'unced for an attack, •iibeinatical voice of Longabout: cte Yankee ridge is tod
Jill sacrifice a third of the mi) the right flank of their •ve toward Bnltimore, we •irio coino out."
every man bearing an alirfs, ?rori •jere and horse-tamers, men to wbotn a jowie-knife waa a third arm, scouts and scalp-takers by nature, and aa their line of tattle flags waved oaVoTm~W5odr plaming tbe bright uniformity of 13,000 sayoaet", tbe artillery behind them made every minute volcano, and concentrated u[ou Sherfy's peach orchard, oa Rose's woods and Slider's woods, and the copses between and beneath the Bounji-Tcps, a delugeof shot and shell clear the way for tbe charge. Riding behind the grand column the assuring face of Longatreet passed, cvol as some leisurely equestrian's, aid the great battle line unfolded in the open fields, double-columned, marching onward, lifting a veil as it straightened out like millenial whoop of all the ravages on earth when Christendom is to expire. The front line of muskets falls a volley like a mile of thunder-bolts rolls over the world Jthe rear line of musket* falls a vol'rey like the laughter of the fi.tmcr cracks the sky a yell pours into loih, in which you gan hear the flenda rhn bJMLJWMi® to first reveroration.
The crooked end of the great scythe, handle is destined to receive this shock lue exposed elbow of Sickles is out of uius'iet shot of the main line. He i& the ",«u wing, or if you like it better, the left nrm"Ot -the grand army. Instead of boldi:.g f.i«t by the Kound Top mountain, and a .\ingiiig straight in with the long strong line of battle, his elbow points outward
:hree-quariera
tnirple
of miie, »nd the great
i.ii means to break it above and- below the joint. An army with a broken arm ra-hlre axrippted nrair struggling Upon •hat dislucnied side his enemies seek t. pierce his vitaH. If the right arm of his enemy be loi.ger than his own loft arm, it will reach behind and stab him in the Liack. And this wcb exactly the superiorly of the rebel right. .By two l*ng brigidea of men—u half tnilo of right arm— ,t stretched around the left of Sickles, tnd sought to pierce the shoulder and pine ol the wuole army. In the old aeh orchr.ni. now full of green fruit and
leuf, the eibow of Sickles rested.—
iha Union batteries of McGilvray above itia below the joint halloed without pausing. Ward and De Trobriand were the lorenrm, reaching back through the or:hard, wood, wheHfield, and wood again to the edge of Plum Run, its "treacherous, raur.iss and gurgling den, but their figncrs could not clasp the head of Round Top, tnd whilo Longstreet's mighty flail struck i,ere" and there", the "muscular arm of sickles, Hood, its right hand," passed Hie un, lay hidden in the den, turned tlTe morass, and felt his way up the side of Little Round Top. In the copses of the ravine under the huge shelves and slabs stone ibat surrounded it, a few sharpibojteiy of the Union lay. They saw the ^rey legs arid bare leet of the Texans come pattering under the trees. Their rifle balls made the slippery rocks of the devil's den as dripping as the blocks of butchers in the market shambles. Lying ow in the grass, yelling defiance across iie gull, springing to their feet and pouruig in a volley, they met the deep infuriated Texnns where the gulf was ino*t unearthly—smothered under its its avai.tnehe of boulders, a wild and tangled ra* vine, Alpine in desolation—and the trickle of running water in the caves below Was tlrowned in the uurses and death-whoops of the co.iflict, With clubbed muskets, with smooth brook stones hurling down* "\9in,d,'~\Vitb Crossed bayonets and teeth set behind them in tho gritting whiteness of murder, the feet of men slipped up in the convulsions of deatb, or staggering with tne sting of flesh wounds, or lo3t footing in the bloody mosses and. rebel and Fedral, in close grapple, dropped into pit?, sank into'crevices, tumbled face downward into abysses and strangled. Tho ^reat surges of tho Rebellion overflowed the Devil's Den, and its gray breakers halted oniy at tin*, loot of.-the.precipice of
Little Round Top. Further up the arm, by Rose's nouse, and through bis fields to the orchard at the cross-road, the swaying ines of battle rolled, undulated, volleyed, unnt and ohrunk as if in fervent heat, lost iow all form and now unfolded like a flag ,o the wind, receded, grew spiral, advanced, fell prostrate, showed a rim of bayoN nets here, an abatis of gun-stocks yonder, now a yell of triumph whose souud was more terrible than death, and again a ^ravclike iilence between the rolling sunders of tbe volleys. Here is a battery with the dead piled round, standing all •lefenselflss save oue lonely grim gucner that pulls tbe string, and in the action uJb dead. The. infantry closes up with hedgy bayonets and heads bent low like the heads of bulls charging 5 11- h»
ite-
swamp, and plunge into the woods dust and musketry -aase~-tegetber,~t»--if-il» world were blown to pieces. With gallant front they emerge into the wheat fields a thousand elbows of battle explode in their faces. Gross it down,'«taot to pieces. The reserve column goes forWAid- Zook- dfopa dead at tbe outlet-of this oak trees. witTF an ~hu£za that acknowledges no opposition, Brooke sweeps the wheat as if the great scythe of theJDnion army had uncovered and flashed lit last. Sweitzer, reformed., goes to his support. They put a rebel aeacLman hi every head of Shery's trampled grain. Can* nister and grape vomited where the blue lines gap open. On tbe flanks, down in the Devil's den, the hiding wounded are again Invaded and fresh bodies are hurled upon them. Georgia desperado aad Maine volunteer mingle their blood. From the Round Tops A ell come hurtling into both it is an hour of awful cruelty and remorse* lessness. Back at last, with half its coli umn, falls Caldwell's division. For the elbow of Sickles there are now but two amputated halves of arm Hili'sflank, till now reserved, advances from Seminary Ridge and the moment of disintegration seems to have come.
SALVATION.
A1J the leaders of the army are gather* ed on the side of Round Top. Meade is there with an anxious face. Hancock is everywhere insuring stout 'heartedness,— Sickles with his cigar between his teeth, gone out in forgetfulness, assure* his still iipmitabie. columns. There is no coward—patriot, or traitor—on the visible face of tbe world. The bodies sway but ali tbe hearts are steadfast. Volley and veil and roariog battery go all the while The rebel line of battle straightens out from the Devil's
den
to Corodori'a
houBe,
half way to Gettysburg. The engaged Union line with the swamp and brook and hollow between, stretches from Round Top along the scythe-handle a mile and a half. In tbe mutually waving colors you can read the history or the United States All
tlie
villages"of the
Atlantic coast, from the Penobscott to the Rio Grande, are represented in those two mighty linds. Yonder is the whole genius of secession and slavery—its thinkers, its masses, its symbols, its shields, its tests, its battle songs, its rallying cries. Here is the democracy of the North—its schools, in declarations, its hearthstones, its pulpits, its faiths, its loves, its courage. In this instant, divi-d«4-by-tb» morass, 4he epie -of the war bas reached its climatic stanza.
Over this brook and swamp the fate of the new world lies hung in the scales.— Slavery^has assembled here his grandest resources. Failing to gain this ridge he loses alt: Robert E. Lee would give tbe lives of flfty thoUSfftid of his men to-night to carry,the Round Tops,
General Ayers, with two stalwart brigades of regulars, now moves across the morass at a double quick, coming in from the right. His flank is shot to pieces whilo he wallows in the swamp, and the corps of Hill and the left of Longstreet having cloven the lines of Humph rey and tickles, appear to extend the eighty front of Hood and McLawsi Sickles lies on the amputating table in Tres ties barn. Willard is dead near Wei kart's house. Humphrey has formed a now line of battle at terrible loss- Hancock commands the whole left and left centre. $ut Rarksdals fell in the fulfillment of bfs'oatb begging to be dragged insida tbe Union lines, and he died howling. Anderson was cut down tbe fields wer« piled with rebel dead their successes were ruinous to them. As they stood drawing breath for the last charge, looking doubtfully at the grand tableau of battle array that was defined upon the crests and flanks of the Round Tops,
Meade in person lead a dash of the Maryland brigade of Lockwood, that rushed upon the rebel line with a huzza. Crawford sprang down the cages with the broad line of the Pennsylvania reserves. The bridges of Ayers fell upon their faces to let them pass. They swept by Echelon across the swamp, mowed down and trampled the corps of Hill and Langetreet together, and drove tbe rebel battie line across the Emmetsburg" road.— The disasters.Of the day are retrieved} the bloody ground is recovered! So came the night of July second, upon 'the gory scythe-bandleof Gettysburg hights.
FIGHTING IK THE ZENITH, While this main battle invplving twothirds of both armfes, had for its object the possession of Sickle's false line, an episodical combat had taken place upon the scythe-handle itself, more limited but furious. When, at tbe beginning of the tight, the Texan line overlapped the left of Sickles and burst across tbe Devil's
A.
How the strong moanUin seethe blood liuqf.spilt down grew into ft volcano, palpitating, running ovfcr with Are. Great blaze 'tig-caged down, hia eyes were shot through with the oaken tangle* of hia hair own climbed ttUfdtecsr iir perches, leaped oat with a yell of rage.
Steadily,- deadly, murderously flialltans, column after column, wound up the Jedgei^ yjncen^ ammipijtjn'' ing. His men robbed tBecai of their slain comrades. They rolled the bowlders down, and half way to. tbe baae stabbed and parried with cold steeL Side swords were crossed. Heads opened scabbord cats. The devilish things that *?1 were done half-way to Heaven on that, sacred knob, will naunt it a thousand years. Tbe hot battery quaked- over all through its natural graniteembnti&eB. Line after line driven back, new columns
of yelling savage.: leaped .upward. Men of Maine, Midhiganders, New Yorkers, Pennsylvanians, hurled them back. From a series of charges the enemy's attack resolved into a volleying rest, lying upon their faces. A cry ran thro' tiie Union line almost plaintiff iia itijjgov-
"The amuuition 5* cut." ^Tben ^d^yoiilig Ch^mbf?r|dii of Maine, a bjy-fi professor: "Men, our only hopo is in the steel charge with me I"
Like the swooping cut of the clouds of a flock of black birds,gold-daggered, upon flelds[of oor», the lumbermen and wattermen of Maine whistled down the'4 jrfecipices the rebel lines were swallowed, as if tbe ground had opened, into the gorges behind the Devil's den, and Round Top was saved to thy Union, of whick-jt be« came the Keystono indeed, on tbM^detiisive day of blood.
Standing now on Itound Top, who can revive all the stong or beautiful episodes that wero.written on the scorched parchment of this landscape the tendernesses, the atrocities, the crying of deaf men to help and blind men to have mercy. A hundred and fifty thousand fighting men represent -tbe population of tho greatest city. Set this city afire, loosen tbe jftils and dens of it, make fiends' howl in the flames for lust, or fly in despair send charity and heroism upon bold ahd noble errands, and ydu have superficial battle. What noble hearts ceased to beat at Gettysburg and got no fame what awful crimes were committed and got no in* famy. Droppedjinto the century and the republic, the good and the evil thlt $U that day were but as the poisons and the sweets that ripen in the purple,apple.
Instances: these— As Weed took post on Yincenfs lefk, and was strengthening his' line aind directing his regimental oommariders, a ball came oat of the woods across the morass, and stretched him gasping^ under the oak trees. His artillerist, Hauitt, hastened to his side. Bending above Weed1 ttf -wft, almost in tears: "General I Friend 1 you will live for the brigade—for me!" "I am done for, Haelett I am-dying.,'
A volley like a knife-blade swept over the rocks. The commander of the battery fell upon the body of his General, and' they died almost in each other's arms.
Jimmy Dunn, of battery B, United States regular artillery, lay bleeding to death upon the rocks. He cried piteously to one of his .comrades for water. "For the love of G«d, John give me a drink."
The comrade's canteen was. empty.— "Jimmy, I haven't a drop of water, and if I go to the brook the battery will lose a man. We can barely hold it now." "Never let them get the battery, Johnny," sighed the wounded cannoneer, "I can do without the drink. But turn me over."
The burnt hands set the soldier on his side. "Now go, Johnny! Never give up the battery."
When they formed anew line of battle across the peak, the artillerist was dead whero had fallen but the battery*was saved. As Chamberlain's coltun dashed down the flank side of the hfll,iicaHng the rocks, turning the hollows, leaping like tigers, tfeeir flag torn by the tree boughs, Vincent .looked on with a sweaty face, and smiled as he heard their hucza at the bottom of the glen. Over themorass came his bird of Paradise, straight-wiagin| with remorseless beaki He fell in bis blood on the mountain side he had redeemed.
The gallant O'Rourke, full of the flush of the instant, tumbled also into the shadto death in the
nightmare,
death)
nion battle-flags.
avail is it to speak of the third
A.Ghj.
::. aA.watVi
,%-«P
the flail vf t*e iOwpLxin
swJ?,
"i?"
w*
It Happened, as was fitting, that Pennsylvania HhuuWitff UfB" grandest part in this bloody tragedyl&f which her soil wa^ the stage. Tfeercoi^i»MKiot4«-¥h hert. TDltoot1' and &jr .tfiff.mqsl losf tflefo, arf tiie The battle of the second day the left by her noWe di.vlgtoa .of reserves-, led by tbuwn Fort Suin»er*be -ftraVgaa o£tf»«u«p|Aut| apd on:t^ri^ttfqbittipiW^vii^itdw Ber ciyifctdnmniMrsMr. ihe cafiter fAood Hancock, aMo scf^eui^rlvailian^ ikhd-'fie broke the heart of-imTaaion on the last dreadfiU ^ajr,o^§tnaa^fc-wfaU»l the highMt point^ ground ^upon the field upleld
reptsilBWiVWaa^rip^'^rthW naid
State, "Virtue, Libertyi ^fld1'Ihdepeh4« ence." Virginia., «mk gave so deadly
ajgfttijluft£3)r #eiffi^b4i^d%ow'U derous Keyitone^i^ed Uteiii at' burg.,,
I HATH bea*d it heartily extolled, and have sieen' its WondMfuT writes Martha M. Johnson, of ahouti
acteistiooftbe
uable and distinctive Mason^BsralitFiBiti^eftliisAi&douptedly their quality liquid smNrthai)K)^iWUs^^ft«Bdim i^in'iiOThneiy^^tft^n^jS'of'^bsirttcfer,
Their iostrain«nta asaac ^tpproac to ttait ro«cid s«writy»^i^ si6tight for
which'tlMP^e«fee)^nA-t'W^uir1'ic9y
touched is also .^ta^ .QX^ilencei— Their perfection in this ^xespeet taM6ds their eapacity tolight,rtpidpteuiiic^as wellM wofM-faqgnfow i^ soljiKfe straws which nave been classed as organ -aiusio. —N. Y. World/i^v-r. y.u
eUf 5ttfisaoa
ei'1
-a-a torn* ,zirrral gitlvg
\i'beingdoae.j^
BIOHMOND and INDIANAJOJiJS AtiBBy8,
fuBlr# «M
Also, BUOVXb'PIiOW^ /tift sal irtew
MtMfaction. jfAttttKBS VAX iBOT-OOODs^OWSi0
E^fe.lroBWorks.
CARRIAGES
i*—#'
A W S
1
sneoasMk *o M»nnfactnrar
snd.Dealer in
Corner 8eeond and Wnlnnt flta., Tei^
fcaacl^ hs^itkjp fcpcciiU--aeaVltfi 4co.,
Ks«p cov^9MlT'ioa iiaild$ afrtiia bUMt styiMoi'
E S
AND
DEALERS IN.^,„
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aiz St.,
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Oon*ert at 80 S.t ioro lb« Hew
(3on»fl'diU!6 .0
ii^W^bNd to paand, 4e£sat^ Go,
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Msn"ml "'iii*"Q"
sH'snTssi'tiirflnt
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uf fl.T
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ruto-ut ?»cari b* oi^dited or
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C0MMIS510J MERCHANTS, 5e
E
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ii.i.il ft' .ft i: '. 'i J.
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LiVINflbTON & CO,
TAUSSIG, .• ,8aoov
Commission Merchants,
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DRIED SEP.DRO HEBRIEs sell at C6o. per iurt iD Olijf'm .ilioi*.* wjji.vcas f*tTKT Oasaax BToasa wi.i t.u#tlirfl" 'junlieis |Kt auar, and a parittea tiw sotd irorn llio fruit. Sent bj Bzpr*i««n reoaipt of 9 50
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a CO.
eadla* Hardware Work), Fa.
f|NV IJTVEMTOBS.— Patents obtila*d is ,JL mer^cu and KUi up IJo Ooarga an rejected caiasauteuaocoea lat. & A S ii & 0 a A
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OIL, TOUR HABXESS. fNMfc'ftffiie&a' !»'UlcW5i'CUaABiJ*S8 I'li ItU' d:, fiir Harn^aa, L'liriiig- O'tfi, 4c. CranK JH-ller's* iiit-U Piir.oEBVAXt\ E and W.uer i'looi Oil Blackia lur.Bjais and Sio's Oiie-hnlf at leant isadtel to the curability o. Leathar by tbuir timely Frank Minor's POLISH
tanua
sup fluuus.
Ua0u^ciur«dkb,y tUAl\K MILLEE & CO., IS A Ji0
Cedar Strtei. 2fuw Yuk.
tMA *a miss™ ALSBEUG'S^fl^
O A I N E A sabstllote for Homer's Milk, J,./ AKD ?0uu KOil
STJRE
PILE
lllil WA8I~
-J.,
NEW YORK,
THIS
BAIL WAT SXTIVM TBOK
Dunkirk to
Afao
York
460
Mdu,
BuffaU to Arno Fork
433
Mil**,
bialamamca to Htw Fork
416
22tO iZllllJUtiirilllBU
X'H., fSka).Sna
a
aftenioctt.
All'
our care,
KTary
IN*'VAL1.1i3.
Soli?, by all Dru^-ist.. rriw 60 cent* per can. HALL & 'laKJKKX, Aigeiits,
:-.'lie :.
Ure..n»lcU street, 4t«w Yurk.
CURE!:
Df. Oilbral'a Pil« luatraaient, for the radical, enroot Pijua, ProUpau*,——4c., without aa 0(e^ rtvtloo or juwiciuB, Wn in lite Oiinutea, »nfl lin-
west the wont oast ever fteitrd *u effect Circular. 8old.b Ohcbnnt to D«*alcVa.— bv mail,
NI cuie. ^ki
Miitt,
All Traias ran fliwUj throoch to M*w I«a S W 4 0 a a a a a
rraBkD^-mftw^WWMaBSIhk, IMS, Tralu wtti 1mt« in coaawdoa with all
Wmni
follows: 3S3tnrra From llaakirk ss
f:^m»ru*il*ilh 8.00 A. M. (bkfi) WRwIUi'Um 6.1)0 A. M. Day Kipro*
frtim
»ud mriVt* l^ M»j# T»(dt«tlT«eiXlS'**' S5 A.1L JExpreea luUUilcoa eXO*ifuA). liii)|«M91ii(DtllMMii^
4.15 H. *. from Uua^ WK%e«a«ii
.fi.66 f. M.' Olean T.3&P. M, (Soft).
9
6b
At lit30 .il, cuniMotinK «fUa Attmrtirii Trsini fbr Boiton and K«w'SDglandt)iti««.
From Bulfklo—By Sew York Tina 'from i»,il
c»t.
KyfiiiSjwgo aad XMugaB ckraaw::
xM.
tatda, mK* gaarraa-
l*ain «f N^
Bcittt.
& BETTLE,
6
39
PkUaildpbla, Baltimore and WaaUaMoa. ,. 8.0O 31. tziirena' Salt, vja £i»n a^d Hijrurljiivtllu (»nadaJ»«#««|)f«dK' AxHMatej "2So» York at T.Oo A. Si. Conntcta at Klmlr*! tilt .NorUibni'Ue|»ttai!lail#ay ft»r Harri»-:
jhii (oap.2, arrlT«» .ln: UonuucU at Jariwv City with Horning Kapres* Train.
«t £ew
Janey ilaliroad Pawpaw
and Waibiuatun, and at Mew Xork wita^ALorDa£f Kxpraa* Train fo^ S6st«M*au&MMr Ktt^-
Kew Tork jri(bt icit^Ma,
VAiiT. bMtpa at Uojr»atwii«10.»r
(JSuVOi
intenaQtlDg with, tb* 1.1S F. M. Train
^Mmiocb ia£klrfc,
S&U
il.JU.l'.
ardr«8 ih Hew YMk*\
III.
Ai|o coDc^ci#
at JUaira for
and .rMC^iiag Kaw koik aii2.30
1
Boaionsni) New Kagrand Pasatmgera, with tbair Bagaass, are ttatufamd
Jrm if dmg»
in Naw
Vork. tiie b«tt Viraniatad aad in4t'Kaifttr&tli SIe«p. inj Coacboa *WtN TH8 W0BLl/*n aocoupany lng ail night train* on this railway.
Baggage CBeok^ ^ifebugli!
And Fare at low at ty any oifttr Rout*. ASJt.FUB IHlUU fU IUii UliAK
W^hich can ba obtainedat
WaketOf-
all
floe* in theWsit untf Soulb
o0v«Wtr
EXP RES$ COIM PAN1E8 -—•—v -t.-.i n'. n?V7 btfj nW pATEOliiiE •JLOM#Sio3^#M«,
INSTITUTIONS.
THE MEHCHAKT'S'
wrn
Hoah'sror aud Baffaio.N Y.,
aoifSs ma.
Having put their Direct and. Oreat Tlirougl Lhra* ia perfbot worUng ajrder,' art now ptMai% t» do a general Xxprea* butlaf** with tBe a!a*t, Weat, Soothweit and Mortliwatt, including the carrying and collootigg of XoaBy^Yala^Ma*, 4c.
Our line*, now opened, embrace the route* be-, tween Mew York, Boiton, Buffalo, Batrolt,- CM** lam, Cincinnati, Chicago, Hilwaokoe .LaiOroiaa, Fr*lrle-da-Jbre&,'ftdiaM!»Oll» Si.^dl^and: all intermediate points, aad are bami raBtdtJaatwrt*-. ed over all the route* of trad*. ,,.
The Capital of 'ibf* Onttpaay'V
of tbe public. Our rates arealwaya aa low-at these of any reapoualble £xpren Company.
Office
Ho.
OIL BlaCKIKG.-
Tu« opultrity uf thcae articles re^uora commen
Slain Street, bet. 6th A 6th 8ts.
T. W.8TEWABT,
Oct 9dtf Aseat.
A
MEEICAJS EXPiiESS
COASOIIOATKl) tAl^lTAjL,
GOAt
§Wfi00,0fl0l
The above named Uuiuunuy baas ianel^argeal experienced 'aad t{a*t]|" MeMrafter^ leaving and arriving at Tort» Baata, a«• ioflpWa«r_
Two Szprcu^ Sew York, ClerSland, -Boston, -piw mum
And all other point* la thedBMtwa^ftataaiMd
OAN#.,D,A.
ConnectIng at New York wltb Wall*. EargoA.Co'a JBttropeao attd California
taptmiftti
ail p^thtt la
Kurupa, California and Orego^ .,
Three Expresses J)Rilyf to
_H.
:uid
from
Cincinnati, Ohio, Indlanapoli*, lad Ouluinbaa, Klcbmentl,
-tea
,veavillef- jj«.»..'aJ£. *-^tru, "d ail point* la Indiana and Ohio.
JF%\ '*f
XEBBE HAUTE lOADEMY
of
music
-t«
Xba
•In Un
tmpplya
•adaMeattl aeoamnllahmaiit.
,' Tkarlluia
Haw,
Sslwsaca-
(tsw: iro« Omon MyoWl
vaoaam
growing city, aad la
ob*di«aae to the loudly aapre**ed wUhes of a large aaatbar of the citiseoa ot tUa«Kt, aoaoaxoe to the pnblle dntlkQ haaa ojiwM aa
ACADEMY Ot' MUSIC
in tha aacoad atory of Xiaaoar1* "Palaca of —arapiypared to giu ins true-Mb-thia
+119B MTfupn*
bia bcaatilul
fn
all branches ef I
Waonn ara large, well vaatUated
1*4 iigktcd, albd eaiy of aooaai, and are aifflM :5lflkwWy -tarirtj of butraateat*. aad ruplia o*B reoaiva iaatractioa oa t^a Plaau, CulUr, vi» Ua. Oraaa. Bra** Inatrynagata. Faitlcolar attMIS^SlE«£m eaM«ailM of tho -roeft-«fa. straotloas la Thorough Baas Composition*.
Iter Tarnaa of Iaatiuctioa apply ta the nndpralgied.at the Academy of Mn*to, aecoad itoryof KiaeL«r'a Palace of tfnsic, or at the Mttais Store below. The beat ef refcMacee given aa to qaaliatluU, jo. Q. A. UABTUNO, aeclMU' AHOKLO DEPJtOSSK
,w MUSIC..
J.G. L1NOEMANN,
OCALKlt
s®
IW«*ar^Ji»'rtUiW«n*ii''WebtS
era £ailroad,aadat Uity jfiihllldBiatiri
Ams
r'sbttrg, FhtladnipMa'atid Couth. 11.20 A». ttU auci»««tl Kx»r«aih C^uBotkti uoepted). btopt at buavaabanna 7JO 5g' A. 11., (Bktt.)t Turner'* l.ttr *.. CDtaa), and armrei In H»w tvrkat 9.46 F.U. ConW"S9 o«ala at Qreat Bend wlta Iiackawanna A SV e«teruBallroad/oiSpf»n»n, Treutoii and PblUcalpUa,' and at waw York wltn
AlMtneoOu Traiiia aad gaaaww far.'AMWB and Kaw England Citlea. Only one Train last oU:,8Utlii^y''4ati*{Uf Bo*, falo at 6,101*.
JPIMOS, H£IOD£OKW ORGANS, Violin*, Oultara, Vlutte, and all kind*
of MiuMa
Merchandioe, No. 91 Wabaab atreot. S jAr -. 9»RBS UABTK. INU1ASA.-: 3$. TUNING AMB BJCPAIR1SO of PlANtW anB other laatrnaient* will b«
uroiupilr
attendi-d t».
"C 9SDHA1I(» wfll b« taken lo tawfc fbi N(C*
QMSS. aulOSdwtt J. Q. LINDKMAKS.
I S S N E S e{ $9 C% *4t JSBiW
Of MISK11
take great pleasure
in inviting tho hv,
teatlcn af ay aid irienda and cuitomar*, ar.il »l" a«»
on«a in
want of aaytblag tatna a
..rtsMMJSIC LIN ,TJ»i -9 TO MY
NEW Ai\D SPACIOUS STORIf
WO. 48,
Oik
So
.7 r.i "--n
Having personally selected my New"? with great earo, at Saw York, I am nowati» t. the.. Mjuic^ HabileibV&.s
Largest Assortment
Musical MercliaiidisS IN4 '}TI9tE NORXH-WKS'^ Tbe
first
TOt Bj BA&B,
H. RIDDIJE, Oenll bup't.
Floor will be stocked
uaall
aaban.Oroat*
J,-
j8etckii,
-v-
with
flheet Jluala, Stalng Oeods, Hoaio Booka, aad all kinds of
Iuatrurnenta, auch
aa
ViuUn*.
Braaa
aad
SHver Band Io*tru^
ments, Flatinae, QuUara, CenoortiDoa, Aooerdeoif* oi all
ilEaa
Oortl,
aad prioe*, jriaaeol*la, flaus. Jteom.
Drum BeIu, Calia!iiu Ilium
""", -»™.. «.««
irenj uujiuu
vi
on
aiH
1
Twenty. Hiftllon Dollars, and is an ample gnarantlN ttKtha-y^)Uo of lt* rer sponaibiilty.
licadi,
HtaSe^kin Uru* Heada, BraaaMbtfth-Plocea, (W-^StotMopsh-Pieo*, BaaJe*, «ntea, Tambov rloa*. Gtefjnan Vioiin*, French Yiollua, (now., fNBca VteHii,'
l(HB{tinon
old Btifiuario*, Gufc
aa*iu*,,and other Crsmonapatterna,) VinlinoeilW Banbleiiaaaes^VipUnnnger^Board», Viollu lntaa Po.uble
Bam i.uitar
Bowa
and
OarpMrin|Sf Talf' Piece*,• P*gt, Bridget, UuteS,
Sned Bocia Gna»^*ft)r J'futoa, OlRru'aeta, Vtnlin, ijBtTGuitarajjUUnk Ma*lo Book*, BlaakJftMSro
Qat dstajkd^{9iiefaiier*..orallaiaM.
... -JiieSbcond frlotfr will bo stooWd villi
r?
Pianos, Melodeons & Organs' Alwayaou' handta *irtwiutd anortluoiil SI I'luu... frum tbe well known Jlfaunlactorier ol Uulwrl Nm *, N.Y., the celebrated Patent Cycloid Plann* 8t«** Co., N. ¥., A. U. Gale & Co., N. V— Knc.be 0o., Baltimore, and ortlor nrtt (lnrtV
Carliart ik Needi&E^
Celebrated Bodolr Church Organ*, Pat lor Org«ti« sod Melotim'Df. Those Iuttiuoienta •land nlt*nether unrivaled, a fact wlUcb erary ll*tet»ar «nd judga will oe at one convinced of by afmrfty'rf.ia-c par tag them with .th*r*. 7 rnW fiend for a Circular.
"WO
BkiNO a
PRACTICAL P14N0 MAKER, By trade,' cosieqnently a Judge oflnatrumetita, then nnalng order* from tbe distance can fully Irely on ebtslulng Sa good and fine auartlole aa it jperaonally aelecied.
Uliefatdiseen-" "^minariea, SohDoli, MibU|tew and Tear «f uio. 1 Bead fbr 'Mitt» .ud Price*. Kvery Inatrtiment warra. year*. •, -.../A 3end order* u. jfci#8NKa'8
PALAOE OF MUSICS 4® Oihio Street.
wr
Terra Hante, Indiana.
"jl imfi
HAT«AND
CilP
EW YORK ti'A
N
.-a?"** Daily, to and froni Vhioago, Hlhtift Itieh.
[li.D&j •ji*
O. Yaten,
Joseph 3T IN RKGEIPT OF Mind*,
JUsr iw B:
ot
I Hats
-ii
1
Mens' Hats
a
•n
ot
aU kinds,
1 Missea'Hats of all Srlnd^.
Infants' Hat* ofiUl kit
And at all price*. liat« made to order on »hort uoitc*
VPBIMG HT1
r- -:.
Ters'e Hanti
•nb
