Daily Wabash Express, Volume 19, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 9 August 1869 — Page 2

DAILY

TBBEE HAUTE. INU- «. -J I

1—f-**—

Monday Morning, August 9th

The Aasawin'B

Thif

Apologist

Sallivaa Democrat of last week

contauwthie allaatoa to the recent *ob rible attempt at murder ia that county: tFack'Caloiroy, the negro wfco was shot by Jim Dooly at the horse race, a few weeks ago. is now abou* we1^ town last Tuesday.

The Terre Haute Jour/ml of Satorttay copies the above and comment? thereon in this disgraceful manner

This is the case wherein the .toiXPBiss, wrote up a startling article on "a

Sull'7an

county horror" a few weeks ago. Xfiat paper seems to Jgnore the fact that t^e colored individual was not hurt to any ex-

JSTiSd ITnow about well At the «me it was a good radical lick at Soil county, but as the story was all a base laorication our cotomporary ought "1®ll

To show the public what sort of a crea tare is this. Dooly towards whom the Journal's bowels of compassion yearn so tenderly, we reproduce a portion of our correspondent's account of the assault, as suring DoOLT, and all his friends and apologists, that the statements of "B." are strictly truthful, and that we are responsible therefor in any sense in whichjie or they may see fit to accept the term "A horse race had been arranged to take place across the "Wabash in Illinois by parties living in this county, but ow» ing to the high water, the place of running was changed to Gill's prairie in Gill township, Sullivan county, and took place on Saturday. Some time during the day Jack Caloway, who resides in the vicinity of the place where the race was being made, and had been out hunting his stock and getting it out of the way of the back water, came to where the race was5 run and engaged in conversation with persons of his acquaintance there. James. K. Dooly came up and asked him what hewas doing there, and said, if white men could not take their part against niggers he, Dooly, would do it for tham, and ordered Caloway to leave

5

to which Calo-

way quietly replied that he would go, and started and went off some considerable distance to another part of the ground,. where he mat other parties ie «was ac quainted with and stopped and engagi in conversation.

In about one-half hour Dooly agai came upon him. UaloWay, at the linae,' was standing at the wheel or corner of a wagon restihg his elbow on the wheel and his head on his hand when within about fifteen feet of Caloway, Dooly commenced sbooting at him with a small Ave cham* bered cartridge revolver. Dooly fired four shots, each time taking deliberate aim. Not a word was passed between them frojen the time Dooly came up tiU after the firing of the' second shot) ualo^ way never movihghdr in the least changing bis position or offering to defend lunar self, after the firing of the second shot saiq, "Quit shooting, Jim, we are all right—wjB are all civH.

The two first shots entirely missed, the third shot etruck Oaloway in the upper pari of the abdomen, the ball passing backward and lodging on the Inside, the fourth shot struck the wheel of the wagon. At this juncture some person present interfered and took the pistol from Dooly. Caloway was able to ride home.'' "Some four doctors were called in during Saturday night and attended hito that night and on yesterday, {lis condition is said to be quite critical, and bat little hopes of his recovery are entertained. Dooly remained on the raco grounds for several hours after the shooting, and till the race was over, and then returned to Sullivan in cempany with those with whom he hidfoss to the' taoe«-il8 remained here till a late hour Saturday night and then left, aud has not bsen seen here since. It is reported that his friends gave him means to go away on. No ef-i tort was made to arrest him, although it was Wall known here as early is six o'clock on Saturday evening that he had committed the arunqf^after which hout he was walking the streets as though nothing had happened. Caloway is about forty-five years of age, has lived in this county many years, and owns a farm and has a family. He is a quiet, peaceable and unobtrusive man, and is highly respected by all who know him as an honest, industrious and good citizen. There never bai been any difficulty between him and Dooly prior to thai day, and nohe on -that dav. other than stated-'

In the opinion of all honest men, Jim Doolt is just as guilty, morally, as if Caloway had fallen dead under his fire, and all who now attempt to palliate or apologize.for his hideous crime are accomplices, after the fact.

Tou have all "the proper amends" we have to make, Journal. You and your protege can make the most of it.

M. F. Maurt, the reconstructed rebel, he of the Atlantic charts and isothermal lines, has come to the aid of KoopMOMschaaf. Me writes from Lexington, Va., to say that "Chinese labor is much more intelligent, skillful, and effective than negro labor that the Chinese are "the most faitbfnl creatures in the world "tM£tthe1rImportation would be "highly beneficial to the South and—hero Is tbe nub of the letter—the Professor gives an ord#r (or 'I* coolie and two house servants'' to be solected from the first lot. If "Cage-em-Up" doss not respond to that suffering cry, he will hear from tha Fro* fessor again, but probably in a very different strait

TBB Exprea$ Am\et that -W fafoi Stokes for Governor of Tennessee. It only stated that all respectable Republicans would vote the Stosea ticket.—Jour-

nah

A *i^^l

de"

cency and honor makeproper amends.^ Tie Ezfeess did not "wrtfe

^lie ExpISbs does not "deny that it favored Stokis for Governor of Tennes-

l^e

startling article:' to which the Journal alludes. It was written by our regular Sullivan Correspondent—a well-known gentleman of the bigheBt respectability, and published in this paper as a inunication ovor his usual signature, "O.

Com »K»

The "Startling article" waa, howevor, true in every particular and proved Jim jjooi? guilty of one of the'cruelest.mast unprovoked and altogether diabolical attempts at murder ever perpetrated by any human being. It proved him to be a wretch, unfit for any other society than that of murderers, but does Eot seam have"placed him beyond the pale of the Journal's sympathy, nor beyond the reach of fti apologetic offofts

ble Eepublicans would vote the Stokes ticket! i&With these exceptions tha.aJwve

Those people who

rejoiced in the

Anti-Carpet-bag literature »n^ ^illustrations of the Tuscaloosa Momzcrr, last fall, will be delighted to learn, says a cotemporary, that its mild and philanthropic editor, Bxlahd Randolph, is elected to the Legislature of Alabama by an overwhelming majority. So popul»r vras this Democratic journalist and moral iasWiictor, that bis majority is several hundred larger than his party obtained last-year. ...„

A new illustration oflhe proverb that a "lietravels eefren-leagrios 3 while trfctfa ij putting on her boots,' is furnished by the that the statement that General Gbant received a present oI fifty acres of land, on the occasion of his late visit to Bricksburg, near Long Branch, has been telegraphed, republished all over the country, and made the basis of a host of Democratic comments, while nobody no tices the quiet but authentic statement of a correspondent present, that this gift was "respectfully and delicately declined."

It relates

Thk New York Tribune pleasant "ltttle story" showing how the art of nose-pulling was nioely exhibited on a railway train out of Boston the other day.

Me.

Cttbtib, banker and

lawyer, was vastly annoyed by

With t^o superannuated: Xantippes In trowsers, in tha Senate, hurling Tennessee 6tof«4o*ds balderj}f#h at each other's headl, that State will put a sublime figure before an admiring worldly

Once more, Parson, accept our congratulations, and come North again when yon want funds to buy a press and type for another paper. We will try not to forget that you were true as steel when thousands of your old friends and associates plunged into treason. We will let tbe pure light of patriotism that gleams from that portion of your life, irradiate the present, and we will charitably cast the veil of oblivion over the more distant

p"'-

A as

1

Now, then, we defy the Journal, or any other Iriend of Jim Dooly,

to disprove

a single one of these statements. They ooBBtltute a very mildly drawn history o! one of the most damnable crimes ever recorded. A "quiet, peaceable, unobtrusive man, "highly respected by all who knew him," is bunted down and delibar" ately shot by a fiend in human form( a wretch unworthy to black the boots of a respectable negro, and because the victim—with Doolt's bullet in his abdo. men—does not die, the assassin's apologist calls on us, "in all decency and honor,'' to "make the the proper amends.'

From the IndlanapoUs Journal.] The taxes are not heavier now then during the reign of Andbkw Johnson, and yet the debts is being'reduced at thi rate of one hundred and twenty millions a year. Thisisthe difference between an honest President and a conceited and ambitious politician, whQ sotd hiaofficial position to promote his personal ambition. Mr. David A.

Willsestimated a year ago that

a vigorous and economical collection of the revenue would save eighty millions a year. The copperhead orators all over the land "hoo-hoo-ed'' at the statement, called him an incompetent old ass, and procured a fellow named DklmaR to tnanufcr.are correct figures for the use of Deinooratic orators in the then pending campaign. He figured out all sorts of calamities to the country, and a deficit of hundreds of millions a year in the revenue, in ckse Quant was elected President, but airhis statements proved untrue, and Gbant«iceeds Wells' statement forty millions. Gbaiit went to work at tbe "Whiiky Ring" just as to did at tha rebel ho?dto at Fort Donelson, Yicksburg and in the Wilderness. He moved on their works immediately, and in both cases came out the victor, as he will always do when in the right.

Heard an Angel Whisper/'

1

At one of our Methodist churches a night or two since, after a season of prayer, the parson diversified the exercises with an exhortation, ia the course of which he waxed eloquent, and drew tears from the eyes of some of tbe members by the earnestness of his remarks. Finally ho culminated with the sentence: 'IMathinks I hear an angel whisper."

Tha. preacher would probably have oommunicated to the audience the subject' of the angel's whisper, but at this moment a strong lunged jackass In the immediate neighborhood opened out with musical hee-haw, the rising and falling inflections of which might have been heard wlthrn a radius of ten squares. The congregation sniggered audibly, and tbe ghost of a smile played over the amiable countenance of the preacher. All seemed to nnite in the opinion that, for a whisper, ii was a little loud.—Ind, Mirror,

Vermont In tfvYai

Vermont has an anomalous body of fourteen men, chosen once In seven years to consider whether the Constitution has been duly observed during t^&lpst^ppj tennial period, to call a bonvention to amend tbe Constitution when deemed

Mr.

Churchill, who was going to see his family in the country, and who seated himself beside

Mb.

Curtis with a large

carpet-bag and a small toy wagon. Mb, Cubtis expressed his wrath at this bag gage Mr. Churchill said, "You are no gentleman whereupon, said Mb. Curtis in his testimony, "I took hold of his nose and turned it in a moderate and quiet "manner,'! it should have been a satisfaction to M. Churchill to have had his nose not disgracefully pulled, bat moderately and quietly "turned but it wasn't, for he called Mb Curtis "a.scoundrel," whereupon Mr. Cubtis entirely destroyed Mb. Chubchill's spectacles by a ell"delivered blow aimed at the' hose of the unhappy proprietor. .. His turn has come now, for the "moderate? nose-wringer and anni« hilator of spectacles has been sentenced to jail for two months, besides receiving a particular and personal wigging from the judge. Such, says the "Mribune,are the hardships" which await the "quiet nose-turner!

ments as in their judgment come within this condition. Benjamin "Franklin invented this method, and it was introduced in the original Constitution of Pennsylvania, but afterward amended out. This council has just been in session at Montpelier, and lias decided to call a Constitutional Convention, and to recommend an amendment io favor of woman's suffrage. Thus it happens that the advocates of this reform are to have a fair chance to be heard before the people of one of the most truly democratic States in the Union. The convention— comprising one delegate from each town organization, abont two hundred and forty in ail—will be £eld next winter, and now is a good time for the friends of the caun tp Jbegin ls&onjg in and'to concentrate all available effort on the amiable and7 liberal people of that

Stat&iSSdirdBs shSbUJ. to BboJr iL_-rpin. Chronicle.

G.

We congratulate the JIon. ,Wm BbownloW upon his grand success as political manager as shown in the Ten neUoe election, one-result of which will probably be the election of Andy John soif to the Senate orf the United States The Pars^[|Seems to have splendid tact in playing^nto tbe hands of his enemies, of which Wol we would not complain sy were it not that, in this instance, hiB ene my is alike the enemy of the Republican party and the BepuBlic. It will not require many displays of this sort of strate £y to dint, the reihemb|anp| of the Parson's glorious deV"otion*to the imperiled Union, and to recall to the Northern mind the fa«t that.be gave the best years of his life to systematic and unlimited abuse of all friends-of freedom throughout the North. ""'SIj

1W1 #9 BersonalMr 1*1««

GurodlkiSfliie ajbeinptbifttift^I Baron Lemnjaand bride are at Niagara Falls. #111W

°c"*-*

Erlanger h&f been decorate^ by the King of Holland. Gen. p. A. CarTjoflnoUan cotorietyijis In St. Louis.

Hon. W. M. Evarts, ex-Attorney General, Is in Hartford. Dumas has been considerately presented with a burial lot.

Roger A. Pryor, who don't like Bowieknife, is at Saratoga. Gen. F. T. Dent and F. D. Grant, the Preiident's'son are at Niagara.

Gladstone has written a book on tbe "Gods and Men of the Heroic Age." A. W. Clark, late United States Consul at Valparaiso, Chili, is coming home.

Juarez spends his week days at the capital, and gees home to Chapultepec on Sundays.

John H. Surratt is in the comtnissioii business at No. 80 liight street wharf, Baltimore.

W. D. Matthews has been re-elected Grand Master of the colered Masons of Kansas.

Bismarck "always intrusts difficult commissions to men with spirited and ambitious wives.

Petreli, now with the Brignoli. troupe, is said to be the handsomest baritone ever in this country.

Olive Logan is said to he the best swimmer at Long Branch. But she flounders in print most awfully.

Dan Bice is building a barn at Girard, Pa., which will cost 120,000—probably to keep old circus jokes in.

Alexander Burns, second cousin of the great bard, is a resident of New Harmony, Ind. He is 80 years of age.

Washington has a "Lady Bates"—an aged African female—who marches up and down the avenue carrying the "stars and stripes."

At Guadalajara, Mexico, CarlottaFer rd, a girl of sixteen, is Clerk of the Court and Secretary of the City Conncil, and teaches school besides.

C. D. McNaughton, a Michigander of the class of '69, Yale, is the tallest man that ever graduated .there,, being six, feet and five inches highly ..

Karl Formes was married last month, at Frankfort-oh-tbe-Main, to Dr. Laura Bauscb. Consul General Murphy performed the cer6mony. I

Phineas H. Strong,. M. D.. of Euffalo, has been chosen Professor of Principles and Practice of Medicine in Howard's University, Washington, D. C.

Senator Sherman has been investing/ some of bis spare greenbacks in a fifty acre lot adjoining the city of St. Paul, for which he paid $65 per acre.

Prof. C. D. Cleveland, of Philadelphia, arrive! at home on Monday, with his family, in the Nevada, from Liverpool, after an absence of three years.

The San Francisco Buletin calls Anna Dickinson an ox-eyed girl. To call Anna Dickinson an oxide girl Is the same as to speak of her as a gassy female.

Mies Jennie Haight, an actress well known in the West, was married at Chicago on Thursday atfernoon to Charles Smith, a gentleman connected with the Western Transportation Company.

It is said that Donald G. Mitcbell recently stopped at the American Hotel in Binghamton, N. Y., and then wrote a slanderous account of it to Harper, for whiob, fn the end, he was obliged to pay $500 costs, and make an ample apology

The late Henry Keep is said to have left bis wife and daughter $2,000,000 of the stock of a single railroad, with advice to keep it as the best perpetual investment fjr the money. It is understood that not less than $8,000,000 more are disposed of In his will.

Hon. Gilbert C. Walker, Governor elect of Virginia, has returned to Riahmond from his Northern tour. The Governor looked as fresh as new-mown hay, and expressed himself delighted with his trip North and the kind hospitality he met with everywhere he went.

A letter from Napoleon, Henry county, Ch^o, says: "About the only sensation we have now is Mr. Snyder. The people talk about Mrs. Snyder. Our editors are qaarreling over Mrs. Snyder. What the result will be is not yet known.'— Who the deuce is Mrs. Snyder j,.

Admiral Charles Stewart, eminently known as ."Old Ironsides,'-' reached the age of 91, on the 28th of July. While his mind is as clear and vigorous as ever, and his general health good, it is reported that he is suffering from what is supposed to be a cancer of the tongu

Mlie. Schneider met with an accident the other night in London, which came near being painful, though she escaped without injury. Her dress caught fire duriog tbe performance of "Orphee aux Enfers," and was entirely destroyed, before the flames were extinguished. Several of the audience jumped upon the stage t« help pat her out

.Miss Sarah Bemond, a gifted colored lady, who studied medicine with Dr. Appleton—tbe friend and physician of Theodore Parker—during the latter portion of his life at Bome and Florence, has been regularly admitted as a practitioner "midwifery in Florence, where she is now residing, with excellent prospects of employment and success. I

Captain Mosea Sargent, private detect^ !ve of Boston, has recently received a letter from the authorities of Saco and Biddeford, Me., "for tha blessings they sow enjoy since his arrest of tbe incendiary^ ot those cities last Spring." The last fire that occurred in either place waa on the night of the 24th of April last, prior to which time fires occurred In, both plaoes nearly every week for a period of two years.

Hah

1

JUf Jxmzt—1

Passaic vineyards of Dr. Speer hare a or er been so loaded with grapes as the vines are this year. If not* injured by too much rain or early frost, tbe qoanuty

the Allegheny mountains, especially the

celebrated wine is mado. Ail kinds of fruits are abundant.—Wwwrk (N. J.) Dai-)y Advertiser. .-^r

There is no mistake about it, Plantation Bittxrs will ward off Fever ss4 Ague and all kindred dieeasas, if used la time. No family need suffer from this distressing complaint if they win keep Plantation Bitters

in the house, ana

use it according to directions. The most important ingredient of this medicine is Calisaya or Peruvian Bark,. which is known to the finest and purest tonic in the vegetable kingdom. The extract of this Bark is the active principle of all the good Fever and Ague Medicines prescribed by intelligent doctors. Calisaya Bark is used extensively in her manufacture of

Plantation Bitters,

as well as

quinine, and we dare say they owe their popularity mostly to that fatf.

An*£^1r

Magnolia "Water.—Snpeifor lb this best imported German Cologne, and sold at half the price. 10-dwlw

In Numbers there is safety, it was upon'this principle that the formula of Judson's Mountain Herb Pflls was prepared. It was not the result of one man's knowledge. Dr. Judson intend ing to spend a fortune in advertising his pills consulted the most intelligent and learned physicians of the age, and the result was the production of a simple bat efficacious medicine the Judson's Moun tain Herb Pills. These pills cttre Bttliousness, Dispepsia, Liver Complaint, Indigestion, Female Irregularities. They have now been used many years by the public and thousands of testimonials bear witness to their virtues. As a family medicine they ^are unrivaled. Give the Mountain Herb Pills a trial. Sold by all dealers, j., Aug.3dwlm

Palmir's Ykqctabli CositiTic Lotion is the sovereign balm for the smallest pimple on the face, as well as the most distressing cutaneous disease can afflict any part of the person. dwlw

I1"

that

I $ vi ,•••-}* a Mv. Kti

FlialoiTs Faplilra Lotlen

for Beaetuying the HIM ail COirUUM Beaeves all KBDPTIONS, FBKOKLn. PIinB, t&MinsR

vAi&.'MoSwrs

For LADIKS la the JiUBSKBI It Is lavalaable. For 8KNTUMBN afterSHATUIS Ithas ae eqaal. "PHAP1AN littTIOA" tke oaly MUaMerea edj for lllseases aid blemlshee of the SKIN. ,1

Iter the TOIMtT.

wlU aet chap the (MM.

PHAL0JCS "PAPHIAN BOAT" M1IB8KRT aad BATH

Price, 25 Oeats per Cake.

"5'onx

.s "FLOK BK MAYO,' "MOB DE MAYO."

A NKW PKHFIIMI FOB THB H^DBITOBlBF. KIUllHITK, DBU0ATK. IA8T1N8 FBA8RAMVBPHALON A SON.NKWlrORK, SoMhjall Uraf. gists. iA

Odwl^.atonn

Biiisa'I teMmd'i »k Mq

READ!

READ!!

A TOTAL

7

tfl9

ECLIBSB

certain effects upon tbe conititntton of the

HnmanBace,! l.liJ Xspscially the Sclips» that is nov taking plac« retpectlng the walurt of nutiiri. All Toilet and Btm Blttsts, and Patent MtdioJncs, are b« log eclipsed by the

Standard Wine Bitters or i'gt-A

ALFRED SPEER,

TheHost Wonderfal Hedloinn Known. Onree In, every esse tbe weak *nd lickly. Children grow robuit. GREAT EXCITEMENT

la all parts of the country on the discovery of this combination of SPKBB'fl NAT IVI! WIN* vlth Perayian Bark and'Herbs and Boota. Or' dera areponrinz in from all partaof tha world.

It uromote*dlgestioii, acta npota the Iiiver and theE.idney«,and creite* a Hasgering Appetite.

MOTHERS,

If yoa lots yonr children, wiS to make tietd healthy and proloag their lires, use theie BlttarS and no other. Don't fail to aik for

Speer's Standard Wlae Bitters If one store has not got tbem, doa't he pnt of with eonetblDg else. The best druggists hart them.

Great Excitement in Salt lake

Over these Bitters. Thousands are belag en red by them. Sen Brlghais Yonng's letter of tbe wonderful enres.

Bee that my signature Is ovar the cotk of each bottlt. A. SPSBB, Passaic, Niw Jersey.

G. T. LUDLOW, Btr«nd, Lotdjn, Agent for Oreat Britain. J. ItA FOT, Paris, Agent for the Continent of Europe. Said by Druggists generally. The Greatest Tonic of the Age*

LEATHER, HIDES &C.

BURNETT,

L.

Uaoofactursr and Dealer in

Leather, Hides* Oils, Shoe Find ings, and Currier's Tools,

Nos. 144£U« MAii9 ST'., itift&i HABTE, IK*.,

aW CASH for Hid«g, Furs, Sheep Pelt#,. Deer Skins, Tallow, and Iieather in tbe Bongb. Consignments always Receive

Prompt Attention.

mayCdwtf

UNDERTAKERS.

8 A A A Ii I

I

(i preared to eiMOto- I or4»ri to b!« ttMtOM« »nd titepftteii .rOfr of third *t] (rwtt. I***UAUU UiiUvB

JJNDERTA^K.

A

»i. w. O'CONWfiiX Having parchaeed back fros B. W. Chad wick, Srnber A Oo., tbe Undertakers Estabilsbratnt, aaA. ba.d aaven y•A.ra experience in the baelneaa, tn uow prepared to lomieh Metauc Burial Oases, Gaskets, aua Wootien Oofflns, of all rtyleaajid aizea, from the best. *a4iargest etock of bortal material tati iTte,vltidlaiia.

bu

W Hwtf

ial In the Statf^at l(H|laln Street, Terre SauteMaf SS.

rpEACUER'S INSTITUTE.

Notice is hereby given that a Teachers'Insti tute for Vtgo ooois-fy will be held ia tbe City of Terre Hante, during the week commencing August 30tb, 1869, under the superintendence of -rref. W. IfrWttey. Verstw #wtiealMa.«ill ba annouoced at the proper time. tbomas b. loso, dwtf School Examiner.

JJEMOYAL.

JOflX UWiiTBOIO Has removed his Ounsiaith Shop to Mack's taw buildisa, on Third street, one door aorthaf fwriagtoa1* Block, where ba will be happy to si aet all his old customers and as many new oaea as may make it conTeJlient to Mil. afidtf

llM rpeaefc—Bevea-daya fromW«wYork toSan VraacU-

wsst ss ttwrarisaN fall/ dracrlbod ta onr

"BeyQii Ifce 1 fcilnajpiii

Si JksMT

Agents to Wl fiM snu anmi Bkwxks Xaqnaa.H eitjusilew tos Aua «. suk

Lippeneott A Bftkewell's

Patent Ground S«oda fiUbrtutlmateO it ,»a "Sf PaJent"Temier. fwoiw (STAMPED) 000,CH«

estiiftotT

Ir

amrnddnT

Uli

XMQAL JB9MJ OVTSECAUSEANI) Of EREUAXVSt DtCtl^E IN MAN, latinsnt bf'MArvoas and Physical Debility, "Dart unoisaitrr t/ Seoittybyichem thitBook will H»t b* /sand uxtfut, whether suehjperten holds thi rtliuicn qf Parent, Pr*ct$tor or Clergyman,"~ Medical Timet end OamU. -i esM by mall onrscetptaf fifty csnts, Address the Author, Dr. B. Xie F. OtTRTIs, '233 Street. Washington, D.

Be.

-Vi

"si h-

**»••*aMifll toa»UetM»)S!»lK oWaiatUr, tafcaUisjl Ml espM, «afec aew ssimm JS«11 tee •rigiaal, cojapfota tr,1m 1M7 lMt1 Smx* forCtNfttanwM«h*ilI StH-tta wMf atoi?.—

ty„ CT"~P?ir itbH its tin

and Ii eiaal in erery (Ao»sL«Tsr Invented. .8 years* Saad faroir-

tot 6 fttea*. Sandfaroir

Mlw.'lAMnSeJol •ass., Pittabargh. Pa,

Ombk- Co., Boston. ir.Sf.

Ioais(

Ho.

•OA Mtfcralt. AMress A. J. H.T

svsiit 8H0T8UN8 RABIAIITSD To.shoot close and kill 60 yards. Price, 12.50.— Guns and Berolvers. Band staM for price list Bifiea, Shot Oans, Bevojvers, to JOtfKSTOH'8 GUM WOKKS* Pittsburgh, Pa.

1

faff, lor particulars

JC4 addreas 8. X. 8PSN0BU 4 CO., Brattlsboro, Yt.

Looa Hav**, Pa.

Missis LtmaooTX Pittsburgh, Pa. S«lK-Ve have bsaa using your make of Gang gaws In our Mill, and fi&d th*fflQ,tn point-of Quality, saperlor to any we ha«a ever naed*tours.Ao Ji BBAW, BUAfOHABD A CO.j

A

.W if .irfVUV Cll j, lxsaa*i iioffio in bcJj! a A Wft.

Jamestown, N. Y.

Lirrrtcotr Baxiwell:—We have no trouble .with yaur Daws they don't need to be ilaed ap with papas ws pnt than on the Mandrel and ^tfeey gorightalong.

Temcer perfectly uniform and quality unsnr passid. ifaspectlullv, OHAB.A.POX. %lPrENCOTT & Bill WILL, Mannfaeturarsof Oircalar, Mntey, Mill Gang and1 Oroaa-Oat Saws. Cboppii« Axes, all shapes.— CMburn's Pauat Axe. Shovels, Spades and, Mile's Patent Covered Scoop.

yon want a handsome prsssot, address with stamp Bica MakUt, Box 3367, Boston, Mass.

O.

Oreat Distribution ta' th« XetropoUtsn Citt Co.—C«at» duks to the Amount of #H00,0e©.— KreTy Ticket Brawsa frlie.

OaA GMts...:.....^...:.li'..A..- „...Bach ^0,000 ie X."

,40,000

20: 0(i"'- 8,000 40 1,000 too 203 300 ,100

SO Xlsgast Bosswaod Pianos...Bach I30J to §760 ffi Melodeoce 75 to 100 SS0 SewingMachiaea 60 to 175 600 PinftGoidWatcbss 76 to 800

Cash Prises, Silver Ware, 4c„ all yALUBO AT #1,000,000 A Ohanct to Zfraw Anp ef the abort prists for 85c, Tickets dsscribtng Prizes are suitD la Xn velopes and tbsrongbly mixed, on receipt of St cents, a Sealed Ticket Is drawn without choice and ssnt by mall to any address. Tbe Prlas named up an It will be delivered to the (icket.bolder oa pay mant of On Dosbab. Priess are immediately sent to

Lany

Sr

address by express or retnra

mall. Tea vlU luev what jour Prize is before

HI pey farlL Any prize taay be exohahosP another of tbs sans Valne. Mo Blanks. 0«r patreasean depend on fair dealing.

BrrxsEKCn.—We selcot ths following from many who have lately draws Valuable Prists aud kladiy permitted us to publish tbem Andrew J. Barns, Ohiesgo, I1O.000 Mlts eiara 8. Walker, Piaao, 800 Jaaies M. Matthews, Dotroit, $5,000 John 'X. Andrews, Savannah, 96,000 Mfss Agnss Simmons, Charlsston, Piano, S600. We publish no names without permission.'

Opialoas of tke Freae.—"Tbe arm re liable, and deserve their luccse*,"—Wetlly Tritans, Afay 8. "We know them to be a lair deal. log Arm."—N.T. Btrali, May 28. "A friend of ours drew a SM0 prise, which was promptly re celved."—.Daily Nttet, Jane 3.

Send fer circular. Liberal inducements to Agents. Satisfaction guaranteed. Kvery pack' age of Sealed Envelopes eontsin one cash out. Bix Tickets for «1 IS for 3 34 for «5 110 for (16,00. ,. I

All letter# sbooll be addresscd to H4BP2B. WILSON CO m24w&1! 178 Broadway, S, T. 7ni..i.:tiuni o.-ioai i. •»wT WsaooQsJI ,£•? i)

Agents Wanted for

For the People!

GoaVAINIMG

Full Instructions aad Practical Formi, adapted to JCverF Kind of Business, and to all tbe States of tbe.Oaton. ,,

PBABKLIM CHAMBEBLIN, I Of the Dnltsd Stale* Bar.

'There Is no book ol tha kiad which a

rank

with it

ill

for

v.'-I'D I

'IS*

4uuJ( an.ifSfiho' 4 eJS«4t »H

-~'da'l 2k i" isj-i a iiS'j: at iw I j3hj.ve»$S ita io baahl .Uifswo I S a 4 a ssetjoiq W. -x*m eda of. hum ,IB» .=« roiqati fnr» .j im baa wuA .cqt e*!.dw meJseW tave s« eieitt eieiw ba« tltrt alqoeq *ii) ,Ua oi Uiw baa aaaeq gaieaialsoiu iscoi woe aafdU Jbaa ,!«al eai obMmJ aad fca we dti-

ol

4ed 'v.4

iter

Qui

ABKyaar Doctor arDranUt 8WKKT |rilTiaK-it equals (bitter) nine. M'Fd by F. BTKABN8, FA Bit Cbamists,HswXork.

mcM rWw fl«rnsyrsp'Aue vue«|p«e» omi publishsd—containing nearly 800 p»ges, and 180 floapiatea and angravings orthe anatomy of tb» huoan organ* i» a atata o,f healtU and dlseiiSe with a trsatlss oh sarty snrurs, itsdeplof able con witn aaann«ip*"j sequences upon tbeiiliad aact body, with tha an thor's plsm of twa*me(t—the only rational and snccsssfui mods of cure, as shown by a report of cases trsated. 'A trathfdl advissr to the married and tboseconteaiplatiag marrlage who entertain doubts of thetr paysical ooadition^ Sent free ot postage to any.a4drsssonreo»lpt Of. 2(rcents, in •tambi Or postalciirreacy, by aadressing Dr. LA OhOlX, So. St Maiden Iiaae, Ubany, N. I.TlWkSltot may ba coasaited upon any of the diseases npon which his books treat, elthe personally or by mail and medicines seat to any part of tke WQcld.

-L»U JtHIM y*J ii left

t!»

31

take

authenticity,

intelligence, and

eompletencts."—Sfringfitld (JKan.) Btptblita*. This Is tbe OHI»Y KBIT BOOK of the kind published for maay years. It is prepared by an able PBACTIOAfc UVTCB, of twenty-Ove years' •xperlanse, aad tj jq»t woat everybody needs for daily ass.

If it higttf Ttetmmmied bg tmmy emimmtJmtgti, incimdimf tht Chi /Justice aad other Jtt4gttqf,Mittachmetts, aad tke Chit/ lyutict aud entirt Bene* «f ffaRAMtfettfe

Bold oalybyBabserlptlaa. AGENTS WANTED tVUTWHIBI. Send for Circulars O D^OASBACQ., Publishers, Hartford, Conn. No. 1 Sprace St^New York Cincinnati, O. and Chicago, ItT.' 1

CACflM: r~r

SincetMs work wsa pnt to press, an old law. book, published many years ago, aad loag siaoa on! of data, baa bean hastily re-issued as a "new hook." wlthcat evsn a suitable revision of its obsMata statamenta. Do not eoafound that Wet* aitfc (M*MS*U*'e Iiaw-Boox roaTaz Pcona.

'STJDHBJMriON

W.

*i=". -pf

ilSSl

aaw A, .a* ,-iini iwrntti

t}

,:bn~i'S 1o I

£11!VSftAJfEHAM, .i ,i»H .Stag a «rfj i#. aur*? 1 fi V.-J Hi'i-,'

jj'«.

vu: i.•••-*• of f.r-t-'J .»•

AIs&EItMA&&I/ADl*,* mat GEO. W.

W. cARBOLL ,, WM. AZPEMMJ^rr & 'St SAM H.JOSJSJPH,, .•» I .&•> £.«» astasfceni

Vr t'

a

&»aH imit ,Ti:: I

aiqueq uU oi £i

For Oae Day. Only!

{.MisslqqA) 4«aasan»», *tturj5 XA1US6

1

{Afc-OJ Mll tl mad ern AAR

mm "Mb

'.-.''a: "v ,1 a il-ulw -iief I.-.I .....

wi .iu it irjiu tt •Ja»u=:j*e tj.aj. J- $ •aif «dl be^aooatoM

*4 ««S im, Proprteto+8 rjUfs* Manager -«£quts. Director, -cisutto? ^MMWer Jiaaifi adj Qeneral Agent .»J)at 3»s «6 ham S a lo imdi hu!p« saw lot taw eJi Las •ed #!«,- curij t»f«cut

.*.

fj

r,

if :e.

186?j

,J*

Aa refitted, re-arranged and re*organiee£ for tita Spring and Sonmer Tantiog Season

li4Te ?n*n|9reted Uietr campaifn, and will appear .,T9teo )vs#» loeqaa erf) aiad^ .ttosihotf 'vjtsii-dt-idw sitm #oa*lbm a*hiun itdi 4aaa0e KJ svol

.1*

.—^JdjiM

KS1 .C3i *-~--"t 1 -eb*ro vi«ooi*e"»| SfW)f}aii'itni »xf.i edlle rufrtFi {(Ji no Pdi*r+ aid* Bnidw owl ,atqi(ca ad! SKV«1 did*

,1^ a

M0NPAY, AI!4JI ST r: 9tH, 1869. lo evtJoufeoia ,}Ha»e{#fi«a ,j j«dT jut itfllm of*iSte, fcaa *aiisa mm ba* iv* *dt lo e^ a •tedieX'i wno\ battod »d ^am^r «A at aetoaaidO a t*ai

:t

ba* nou'jaioiq #j|i{ -qad -so'i d'jiaas li^dj

.qidsboartl

found those «nly ^:gnnttMsaM ^e.UM^efac^ 'witli feeling of gratifieation, ukes I ogr«tpl«uqpein flaQing

b^rfi

perfect in albitf ^efafls, as to make it the. aril irfrffam ba# kiuiil oedi-nn eJi

fits INFANT DAUGHTER4 i'-M Xmiiafo r"*

•use „(r.

9C(

4

•3 Vi

fcetoia xnt-olj gmaiei'j ,iti erfT .bhow edj ^asi«nioisf{i niaaa —. ebaooesSS feue ee4i) atai .v isatiaa esq

e.1/ x^'a^oi adj tfrvavoT tats^t^ .a!«Jl*if emaoscf aootii Jo 1? aaemoflodq" 6tu lo muio ndt 7*s htm B-I0W absW rahaS ^iif, di xaibmix*p&Twtdt Ua nj»b •/:& }0 Vetcaaed aaqeJj j,i etew eaanatuKto aiK» sdllo doiii

iaiol ti!? i.

saw obs edi iliuj t-63

EiT KXTK40RDINAR!

bsmtir. «!»uo edij otueonr.ii Q*o. DbKavbh, iliMlurniag his sincere aad heartfelt thank ^exito tbepuWio tot ^he patronaga so liberaily bestowed upon him iB the pesW Mkkfi pleasate in assuring the atntuement lavieg peopie ttst ha ha» nnsperiogly lavished time, energy •ad meaBato.eoilecl in One.Grand combination, the best talent •Corded by eitfter hfemispliere. Among bin Oompaoy will be hsre irached the sethe or prefessional

the pablioan organization so

•adwtthi|it'ide abnQUQcea to th public the names of those member* ot bis Company,' who help to form the great |.o&alaxy of Talent attached to thtfimparalleled insliration

MAD^M£ AMSLIA BRIDGES,

Premiere Eqaestrienne, frorn Beatty'a and

Tha Ghild jwonder of the NineteenUi Century.

Kmnb Mi««B• t.""/ .iii'l MU *au3»- WASTER WILLIE MOM §«»iiC

Whose petllOyS feats of hdrsmanship are the ne plus ultra o' *i«4 perfection. i-mib a ot at term itduW moil

"THREE] GREAT?:CL0WNS I

MR. SAM LATHROP

I *i»9(K ,rtWt»^''j!rheKjBntu^ty^lown/* boot* ii 'irfw f. 6 dJtj .•lili /nl »As 1" ai 0*1 ba*,} '3^ i-3j» iui8

'.WJ MR.WALLAII1I, PRINCIi (IP JB8TRRS

s»nMsa--» otui

Mfed

JS

The Indomitable LASIELL Brothers!

Rivals of the great HANLQNS ia their Gymnastic Exercises s-T* Horirontal Bar Acts and Imposing Trapeza Feats.

MRfijOE TINKHAM, -a

^ga^w^edjro^iguer and Double Sommersaultist. The (ar-

til

itiilion of-: the lBch Ceiitury„ j? tr of a fei

A9tley'a

Amphitheater.

?«dw **tq WO^fiEBFtJL OABROLt FAMlL^1'^4 ei 5W.v5K)J 'b

td!^^reime Eztraardibany, irom the Oir^ae Napolean, Paris

Roya

W B, cmrole 'V:"

w») si n.i«m,H tg t-im l..f

ANDREWS

Aralf-TrolEifS^,

-Trtsnivji

iO Jn Lheir Classical ^MQptn^i''an3 Native Aordbatio Peculiari-,j-,a ties together With a full and efficient corps of %alUoo ^auxlllarlrtln the way of5^'«1f^^t.

gymnasts, Acrobats, Athletes and lanestrlaiif, im ^Forming a comUnation of Artists unrivalUed. -by any traveliotr Exhibition.

4

,e-"-

),«. I .*,« I

Fishers Silver Cornet Band!

»T«W .*««At

[0W

I vws# if

aifljDeen engagaa at.an enormous expense, for tberseason. In addilioirto the management have seccured

•'•'awmnTii^ Vwhich

1*Ba#lon

^^a'.treupe

PERFORMING DOGS AND MONKEYS.

jrj«io oil Y, At each ExhoEitfon thi

€0ni(T%6Uti WILL Bfi IilTKOOIiCEO.

., Admission 90 ets OhiMreii under lO yrs, 25 cts

-K. .vmwmvj www timtmq -j 11 eltfj a- wt

JO ftOCiJ/ftcq

t»tmz wuat Jo Li* IJ fieimem sfdj

I

9& tyltutb satH i\ jMpti

URANCr

MOraHM if .'naira^i/

'/JL

LIFE INSURANCE 00MP

fih!i

(a

A I 0 A

«»es saw wnrj"

LIFE INSDBANCE CO"

3 **9 *0 A fitia,

:c,

||««s..tyr Vt Mti *k« ^lat.u«d« 3 I edl a A j*

United States of* America -i»« *. idgii •?-1« »,aeeet*r»jf. -•lay.asj-^'L bam .* I it*.* ^..Ji+ %. p/

UUIiUI I) smiil Ml rf «*«USi

-folli

biim {itoeN|Nfw«r

ni b»Jtoiaeaa atcJsetaeN^ %o afc»a«t.jri 1

CASi

oiraiL m^es^sa

•j tfVlll -*3? ..ttfn notified .* *:{. I lg.e eeftJosli- halt BRAXCH Otticb, PHI LADSLLPHLA.

W&H§9i>8i

8 enint

**w

OVAMXHOM B. OIO.BK, Philadelphia, Presideat. JAT OOOKI, Chairman TTtoacaaid Ibrsea Ocasmlttss. .r HX1TBT ft.OOOKB, Wasslnglsa, Vlce-Presideot. XMSBSOB W. VSVT, B^iladsl^i^^reUi^

FBANOI8O.SMITH, M.D., Phtlh%i^ta, *e*I"' (cat:

This Company issdsd. in ths Vt$t TIW CWTWaf ltae*istsaos nT

5,395 POLICIES,-

by Its Cash pald np Capital of OnsMillion DoHnrs, sadgnaraatsss ts lasarsd, by its

Low Bates vf Jhretnittmi lab si simim iir imiret Or a Beveraionary DIvMsad of 100 par ctnt by Its

Return Premium Plan

GENERAL A&MSirmP1** jtmr w. Bui* dk wf id?»* rdi otNontMAm omra, leneral AgMts for Ohio aad Osatoni aad Boutk ern Indlaaa.

Timi iiftiss fum oiiti

fj wmi ij i.«f-. rto w*u* fajyj 0MIW. Terre mU OUim^n^

Condensed Tim* Schedule, Jtoy 15,1&69'

BilJ

i)

7j

nee? fit

|ORJ433lfiW

^$15,142^800:?! |v. ..-ffS! *-.1. .-Sis edj ii fi/oti jirnliflod il .v

This Company effers to its Pollcy-Holders!11'**1

PERFECT SECURITY

I

.1 it

J. A. FOOTE, 'Vl

SSdwly ^|MT fir-fftt* Hhits, lad.

RAILROAD

INDIANAPOLIS AST. lOUfS 9L JR.^

SUMMER, ARRANGEMENT. ."}!

OSUy BtsryPayeai ipi Nmisi

T.,„^r.:rst Eeg?fszii»x Mattooa, arrtts

-2 1

1fS{S'«JW4S!S149aa

OentraUa, .tssisasfff-'saw o»iro, s-.eefa pmrnrntzamrnm

SKU. *!a."-2teMh""' .. Ko.B.B- ls»vf 9:Qa -4?30 9:30 am

PaetflaB.lt: SrlSaft' 4:4a^kd^«t»a rsz*

ass

Kansas Oly, II ae asi. .fcsfta :m 0 a|« Leavenworth U:19a i.awr*nee, Kh9f a s$5*k. awvtvi'smt: Oaaha, j*** 7^aja 8 S»y

Ac«ominodatloa traia leafss Terrs Baate dally, exceptSaaday, at arrival at BtlMa 7:Sepa^Tataaal4Be »ae»0Wfs«P f^eaw.,

,*toe"

«3t3&lS5?

aayBl

1 1

I'M.

•»at» n«r-.. »?1 (mbl »«{ii'ja «haa e4l Real Estate Oolnasai v. ioeaa itliisw «i!' Io jdais OW

HENDRICH & LANOR.

Ofloe over Tirst Hattonal list, 9. Omsk of 7earth aad Mala Streets,

Terre Haute,... Ind.

fUiw '••& tee lsi boa Sda»(i Abstracu of title tanHMtA, Lb so* aegotiated, aad Meney layeeted

1

W*1

Baggage Cheeked Through?,^ 3. T). 1TBBKTHCB, OABLa^Wka

MiiMi

LANDAGKitCre

3r-

twos i«

t^7ia

FOB SAlsKc -,3oo ie$

UIII PBOPXBTT.

Forty Lots in Linton's Addition to Terre Baits House and lot, saSt ublo stiasc JoS' Honse aad lot, ta SfoMarralD's Addltittea^ Hoaseand lot In Sibley's addiHsa oa Ma screet, Hoass and lot In Base's addition on 8th street, Honse aod lot on Poplar, tfetweao Sth and 7(h streets,

Boos* and lot on Mortb Stb, batweea lAnttl and Linton streets. JTwo bnstnees tioasM on sat str*ri„1M

OOONTT PBOPIBTY~_°^

IT BBttXTKi PAlH:' Those who ka*o aoandfc »ra»ses, ca*s at all kinde, or sorts, Feloae, ocratckrs, lfoe dot to Bites, frirrt PHttn Tslats Bean T.liV,*nfcMlsill

goiagtoMd.

u«y

4,

I

Mll,

a^

Farmer 89acree1n Hooey Or .-t''rZ.rfo«hip' ITS mtm ia tintu uwasktoi a Aoree below ib* Bolllaf MUI, •«eeel4eoaaal. iSSWH ^'iJ -"-•'Til

beeo'S

ONI VERSAL RUSSIAN HEALING

(jJ

This valoahls carts, (to*.

(ALTE11

Vfea diecAvaisr of SbSblalTf hasaMiled it With eminent snsosssln thoasaads'orsastsdaring ths Chimera War, aa* %m* sarsd dsagMon^ ttttzvesssrcft. ahie secret of maklaartja Batas ta# h^ uperience In nstnc It In Earopa %nd the jabcess t. tendtac IttapiUeatte* tkara,M Baa kaea taducSd tolntrodaoe it into the Itytsdfitat*.

u,

dUldsan's Beochntlc .Qossplafnts on Had and Face are spssdilir carsd.' It has pravsd «T'trent .* 1*WV«17 adopted IprgatluredJbreaatj.eoreis(s,Me., tarbhfVcoo•

BasmSat, and other nansss It sots lika and Cntase6ns faUy °W, Ban loaa aad.sda Throat,

by.

."XS.'TJ'ttftSiiSa

let,

e*ternally every «tehtn before

j^A:xreBftfe regis

For sals by Joha *. Henry, Ho 8 College llaca -]aiy3dly