Daily Wabash Express, Volume 19, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 October 1869 — Page 2
I
DAILY
&
TERBE IIAL TE- IJVXK ic. ti Monday Morning, October 25,18C9.
THE system of school government based on corporeal punishment lu.d a very "strikilig" illustration in Chicago a few days ago. The press dispatches made brief mention of the affair, and the father of the victim tells the rest in a note addressed to the St. Louis Republican lie writes:
Willie is very low, and we have bat little hope of his recovery. He started to school well and strong. During school hours he violated one of the rules by playing with some of the boys, when the teacher (a woman) caught him by the hair and dragged him across the room, pounded him with a ruler on the head, neck back, and then threw him against a steam pipe, fracturing his skuU. His right side is paralyzed from head to foot. The second dav lie had eight paroxysms in one hour. This morning he is a little easier.
The Chicago Times gives the name of the teacher as ADELAIDEIIEI P.ICK, "represented to be a person about nineteen vears of age and of a very violent and ungoverned temper." The Time-, after giving an account of the manner of punishment, .^ays:
After school the child went home and reported the treatment he bad undergone, lie complained of pain in tlie head but it was not supposed to be anything serious until, sometime in the night, brain fever ,-et in and the child became raving crazy. In the insanity of fever, the lit lie qne continually cried out: "Don't strike me! Oh, don't, don't strike me!" In this state the child ha« continued since Thursday last. There is said to be no hope of recovery.
We do not know that the io!al abolition of corporeal punishment in schools would re-iitlt in unmixed good. There are, perhaps, cases in which a judicious application of the rod may exert a wholesome influence. Hut such cases are rare and* since the welfare of the entire school, rather than that of a refractory pupil, is to be consulted, we are ftillv convinced that suspension or expulsion is a better corrective than a constant resort to fiogging.
Corporeal punishment, inflicted by an angry teacher, can never be productive of anything but evil. The teacher who, like Miss HERKICK, flies into a towering passion, need not go to the extreme of brutality, as she did, in order to destroy his or her'influence over the pupil-:. And we doubt if severe whipping is ever resorted to by a teacher in entire freedom from anger—the only condition which can divest such a scene of the essential elements of brutality.
Ungovernable pupils are, as a general rule, made so by bad management at home. In many families there is no such thing as parental authority the children have their own way in everything, and not tin frequently reduce their parents to a state of subjection. When these children go to school, and are required to yield strict obedience to rules that are, necessarily, stringent, they often make the most obedient pupils. They find in tli© order and system pervading a wellregulated school room, a happy contrast to their noisy, ill-regulated homes, and fall into the grooves with ready acquiescence. Tli is is the general rule, to which there are, however, occasional exceptions. What to do with these exceptions, is, and has long been a perplexing question.— Turn them out of school, and they go to ruin. Keep them in school and flog them continually, and you do an injury to all the other members, besides impairing the usefulness of the teachcrs.
In our opinion, there is a remedy applicable at least to cities and large iowns. We would have a .separate school room, presided over by the best teacher obtainable, with competent assistants, and to this department we would send all the incorrigible s. There they should be properly treated, and when they become sufficiently reformed to te-enter the other schools, they should be assigned to their appropriate places. This sort of "quarantine" would, we believe, be found to work most beneficially.
As to the case of Miss HERKICK, we think it such an one as is not likely to occur often, but that it should have occurred Jat all, is disgraceful tu the public school system of Chicago. lint it serves the purpose of a text for the discussion of a vexed question, and may, in that way, be turned togood account.
OUR KXCIIANGES mention as an evidence of the improvements made in the matter of collecting the revenue—the case of Tazwell couiuy, Illinois. That eountv, for the year ending September 20, 1868, paid a revenue tax of $134,000 from all sources and for the year ending September 20, 1SG9, paid a tax of'$518,000.— During the former year all the distilleries in Pekin were run most o.'the time, and the tax for the greater part of that tjtwo dollars per gallon. During the past year only one distillery was run continuously, and it alone paid a tax of $135,000, being more than the whole county paid the previous year. The testimony from all sections of the country shows a similar state of facts. With a strict enforcement of the laws, and an honest collection and disbursement of the vast revenues, the payment of the National debt becomes a comparatively easy matter.
A REMARKABLE SCENE took place at a late meeting of the "Social .Science Congress" at Bristol, England. A resolution introduced with a view to prevent the spread of contageous diseases by fallen women, occasioned a scene of disorder and confusion. The proposed legislation was condemned as wrong in principle, in that it would sacrifice the liberty of the subject, and place decent women at the mercy of police spies. Singularly enough a large number of clergymen came to the meeting for the express purpose of pro testing against the act. We are told that excited gentlemen in white cravats surged tumultuously over the benches, and in their enthusiasm fancied that they saw in such disease a Divine judgment agsinst the moral transgressor. The August Pall MaU Gazette declarssi that such "clergv,men as these are themselves diseases in the Church, propagated by irs spiritual vices, and .as much appointed as other evil growths to destroy the system they vitiate."
THE English Admiralty have been experimenting as to the fighting capacity and sea-worthiness of their iron-clad fleet, and the result has been decided in favor of the turreted vessels. The Monarch, fashioned after our monitors, has been awarded the first position in advanced naval architecture. "A very moderate swell in fine weather was sufficient to set the broadside vessels rolling so heavily that not one of them could have fought her guns, while the Monarch sat steadilv on the water, and could, it is said, have steamed up at her pleasure, and sent half the squadron to the bottom."
DR. MARY WALKER is in favor of a law compelling all men to marry before the age of forty. The Cincinnati Times thinks it would require a severe penalty attached to the law to compel any one to marry the Doctor. Besides, she ought ty know that the spirit of the age is opposed to cruel and unnecessary punishment.
Miinr- of tbe*newspapers heretofore published in the quarto form, are being Changed back to the folio, that being found more advantageous to advertisers and more convenient for readers.
,, THESE is a general impression prevailing throughout the civilized world that the Boston Coliseum was blown down in the great gale. This, the Tribune asserts, is a mistake. It was only reduced to its normal and appropriate condition of a ruin. But what Nature could not herself completely do, will now be effected by the hand of man. The Coliseum will be torn down early in November. So the newspapers announce but before this dolorous demolition commences Gilmore's Band" will give three concerts in the edifice. But "Gilmore's Band" has only 100 performers, and how they will be able to make a rauajcal noise adequate to the size of the vast interior, passes our comprehension. The great GILMORE himself is in Paris, where he has caused to be manufactured for his own use some kind of golden wind-instrument at a fabulous cost.
Anecdotes of Dueling.
The history of dueling has its comic and its romantic aspect as well as its tragic and its diabolical. Some of the excuses given for not fighting are droll enough. Franklin relates the following anecdote: A gentleman in a coffee-house desired another to to sit farther from him "Why so?" said the person thus addressed. "Because, sir, you smell." "That, sir, is an affront, and you must fight me." "I will fight you if you insist upon it but I don't see how that will mend the matter, for if you kill me, I shalljimell too and if I kill you, you will smell worse, if possible, than you do at present." Amadeus V. of Savoy sent a challenge to Humbert II. of the same duchy. The latter replied to the bearer of the challenge: "That the virtue of a prince did not consist in strength of body and that if his principal boasted of liis strength, there was not a bull which was not stronger and more vigorous than he' could possibly be and therefore, if he liked, one should be sent to him to try."
The French poet Voiture was a noted duelist, but he would not "always fight, On one occasion, having been challenged by a gentleman on whom he had exercised his wit, .replied "The game is not equal: you are big, I am little you are brave, 1 am a coward however, if you want to kill me, I will consider myself dead." Among the duels which deserve to be recorded is that between the celebrated Irish barristers, John Philpot Curran and John Egan, nicknamed "Bully Egan." The latter was a man of immense size, while Curran was slim and short. The chances of being hit were, therefore, in favor of the former for (as Curran said) it was like firing at a haystack. Curran therefore proposed to equalize the chances by chalking lines on Egan's body, so as to mark out his (Curran's) size thereon, and by agreeing that no shot should count which took effect outside of these lines.—Lippineott's Magazine.
A COLORED PIONEER.
How a Negro Soldier Made a Home and Fortune for Himself.
From tho Milwaukee AVisconsin, Oct. 19.] Near the close of the war a colored soldier found his way up the Mississippi and landed at La Crosse. He had a quiet, observant look, and twenty shillings in his pocket. While at La Crosse he heard there was-good deer shooting up in the Northern Chippewa country. He had taste for the woods and a Sharpe rifle. He got a chance at "wooding up" on one of liumsey's line of Chippewa steamboats, and put off at Eau Claire early in Octo ber. Here he procured an ax, ammunition, a course blanket, and a small packload of provisions. He then started eastward for the deer range, taking an old trail through the timber, and avoiding roads and habitations. The second day brought him to a pleasant camping place beside a small stream, where he set up a temporary brush shelter for the night.— He was out at sunrise the following morn ing, and in less than an hour shot a young deer within fifty rods of his camp. This was a good beginning, and fixed him where he was. He now set about getting logs together for his cabin. The noise of his axe soon brought in a Chippewa Indian, who was camped a mile up the creek. Neighbor Indian talked a little English, and was glad and surprised. The day after, the Indian and two squaws came down to his "raising," and helped him roof his cabin with bark. He gatlv ered boughs for his bed and slept like a king that night.
TJiat was five years ago. Since then our colored soldier has flourished. He has now a homestead of one hundred and sixty acres, with a ten acre clearing, a double log cabin, wild fruit trees, swarms of bees a sugar bush, a pasture lot for his Indian pony, and a bank account at Eau Claire. He has been offered a thousand dollars for his homestead, but he is satisfied as he is. He hunts and farms betimes. Last winter's hunting receipts stood him over three hundred dollars. He killed six bears and thirty leer. Lumbermen pay a good price for his corn and hay at his door.
During the sjiring and fall he makes trips to Eau Claire stays a week or two with liis barber friend, Howler gets trim nied and posted up sends provisions around by lumber teams going to the woods, and then puts back home by way of his old Indian trail.
Hunters and woodsmen who visit him at his cabin speak of him as exceedingly friendly and hospitable. His cabin is a model of neatness and his farming admirable. He has a hundred dollar rifle, which puts him up high among his Indian friends. We saw him not long ago in our travels up the Chippewa. He talks with intelligence and spirit, and i? well booked in all wood craft. He never lacks company, he says, Indians come in to see him from Lake Clietac, the Flambeau and Count Oreilles. They often crowd his cabin at evenings, when he takes down his fiddle and gives them a lively set-to in both rooms. Indian gii-ls take great delight in "break-downs," and will liold out the night long without intermission.
Our sable brother reports that he has had frequent offers of young Indian girls in exchange for his pony or rifle. So far he has stood proof against all the blandishments of the forest maidens, and has shown no ambition to perpetuate his name or his race among the tribes of the red man. He will be known hereafter as the first colored soldier in Wisconsin who had the manhood and independence to push oft' alone in the forest and hew out a farm and fortune for himself.
THE PANTIN HORROR.
The Scene of it as a Place of Attrac tiou for Society to Assemble.
From tho New York Herald.] Your readers who have read an account of the monstrous Pant in crime—themur der of eight members of one familv, bv young man of twenty-two—will riot iail to comment upon the bon mot of tlie.Pari coachman who was hired to convey the victims to the fatal field of onions, in which a deep grave had been prepared for them. Had he been an accomplice of the murderer, or acquainted with the mo tivas of his customer, the said bon mot would be too cynical to bear repetition here, but he was one of those men who for two francs per hour are told to go and ex ecute extraordinary orders, whose powers of curiosity and wonderment are totally worn out. He now stations on the confines of the onion field, and attracts visitors by calling his fiacre "the victoria of the crime." His number is 910S. The victoria is spactous, and, says the coachman, "it contained the six very comfortably then it was a splendid night, such a night as one likes to spend in one's own family."
The aspect of the people assembled round the fatal field is mixed, but even here there is a society. Ladies who have dressed to come and see the earth plowed up. Here, too, are sold peacocks, feathers, red balloons, gingerbread and drinks.— Every now and then the dogs, which arc let loose to scour the field, stand still and bark. This is a signal^for the Parisian fair, who could not crush a worm, to start forward and stand round the animals in expectation until diggers come up and turn over the clod which may conceal another victim. To stand there and view whatever may be exhumed is a novel sensation. Since yesterday the whole field has been plowed, and this entertainment is over, but long, den^e lines of visitors do not cease coming and going. The space rendered thus tragically famous will be
come a paved square, from which several routes will branch off. As the murderer a^d his victim are the great excitement of the moment, I will attempt a description of him. His namn is John Baptist Trauomann, and though his features are irregular, still he is not particularly disagreeable to look at. His forehead is high, but retreats towards the brain his nose is very strongly peaked his mouth small his chin short his lipd thin his hair, moustache and Eye-brOws black. He is the youngest of six children, all of whom are married and in business his parents are both alive. He refuses to make any avowal, and will not say what he has done with the body of the first victim, John Kinck, the only one not yet discovered. He showed some emotion when led to the corpse of Gustave Kinck, the eldest son, and said, "he only wished he was in his place, that that old ruffian, John Kinck, had certainly murdered his own son." Such an example of ferocity has never yet been recorded in the annals of crime.
Vox Popnli.—The voice of the People is unamimous in praise of one thing at least, that is Morse's Indian Root Pills, and it is well deserved. The best remedy in the world for almost all diseases that afflict the human race. They act directly on the blood, stomach and bowels. Keep your blood pure by an occasional dose of these Pills and you will not be sick. The blood is the life, keep it pure by useing the only medicine that will completely eleahee it, Morse's Indian Boot Pills. Use the Morse's Pills in all cases of Billiousness, Liver Complaints, Female Irregularities, Headache, Indigestion &c. Sold by all dealers. dwlm
PLOWS, DRILLS, &C.
SAY
"5TIBS!
JONES & JONES,
East side Public Square,
IlaVc a large selection of first class
PLOWS,
FOR PALL PLOWING!!
-AND-
CUTTING BOXES,
From $5 to $50.
B. Kl'HK'S latest improved
G-ZR^insr
IDIRXLIL,-
It cannot choke or break the grain, the feeding being done by a seris of flanged wheels UNDER THE BOX that PULL the grain down and FORCE it into the tubes the quantity sown being proportioned to the speed of the flanged wheels, which speed is regulated by a number of cog-wheels forming a cone, and perfectly under control of the driver who is euided Dy a very simple and efficient Land Measure attached to the Drill. The cog-wheels are not loose and liable to be lost, but are fastened to the Drill and the feed is regulated without moving a wheel.
The Drill is Cheaper
Than a^y other, and will be sold on time to responsible parties, but extra inducements are offered cash buyers. We have the best
ONE HORSE DRILL
For sowing Wheat in standing corn to be found anj-where. CANE mills With horizontal Rollers, with vertical Rollers.
CIDERMILL8, Thrce'sizes, three prices. Every Drill, Cane Mill and Cider Mill warranted.
Wo are prepared to fill orders for DRAIN, TILE and PIPE of anpr size and in any quantity, and to furnish estimates of cost of draining land if data are given-.
JONES JONES.
D. LELEWER. I. LELEWBR.
New York Fur Manufactory.
D. LELEWER & BRO.,
Wholesale Dealers and Manufacturers of
Ladies' & Gents's Furs, Gloves, &c.,
No. 56 South Mcrcdinn Street, Schnull's Block)
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
Furs re-modeled into the Latest Style?, at reasonable charges. Particular attention paid to repairing and altering Furs, if sent from a distance. octl4dtojanl
JjAW DEPARTMENT,
Indiana State University,
BLOOMINGTON, IND.
HON. GEORGE A.BEIKNELL.'LL.D.l HON, JOHN U. PETTIT,
Tho Law Term will commence on Monday the 8th day of November, and continue in session four months. Tuition free.
Good boarding can be obtained at four dollars per week. ROBERT C. FOSTER, oct6dltw2t Scc'y. Ind. University
Magnificent Enterprise!
Authorized by Special Act of the Kentucky Legislature.
The Best Scheme Ever Offered to the Public Fully Authorized by Law
SEVEN snlendid Ohio River Bottom Farms, over Eight Hundred Acres of wkich are cleared and under cultivation, and have been renfbd the present year at 912 per acre, money rented,
Good bonds for the have been taken, and will be assigned to those drawing said Farms which will be $1,200 in cash to each 100 •acres.
ALSO
604 City Lots in Henderson Co., Ky., Making 511 Prizes in all. Valued at $314,000.
Capital Prize,... Smallest Prize,.
$150,000,000 80,000
The drawing to take place at Masonic Temple, Louisville, Kentucky, September 1st. lStyj.
Tickets, 5.00 Each.
For pamphlets giving description of property, containing Act of Legislature, and certificates of leading gentlemen of this and other States, apply to either of the following Agents
L. H. LYXK, Farmer's -Bank, Henderson, Kentucky. R. B. ALEXANDKR, Commercial Bank, Louisville, Ky. JOHN" C. LATfUS. President Bank Hopkinsville, Hopkinsville, Ky.
JAMES L. DALLAM, Commercial Bank, Padueah, Kv. B. U. THOMAS, Lexington, Ky.
W. B. TYLER, Owcnsboro. Ky.
How to get Tickets. Remit by drafts, Postoffice money order, registered letter, or (in sums of fifty dollars and upwards) by express, to either of the above Apcnts.
R. H. SIMPSON,
Club Agent. Terre Haute, Iendiana.
dtwtf.
TALLOW, ETC.
ESTABLISHED, 18157 TALLOW, LARD,
GREASE.
"ITIGHEST market price paid. No charges Hm2dc for commission or drayage. Shipping Stencil furnished. Quotations given upon application. Address
PROCTOR & GAMBLE,
a20-d2ta-w3m-wn CINCINNATI
'iili rnifirnf-
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
COI^E®EjJSonfcnf0ICT,,
N. J.
Jf Board and tuition 1208 per year. For A M°"PRA?T ^SS JOHX H. BBAKXLCT,
BOOK ItiEOTH WAHTHB FOB
.Struggles and Triumphs of
P. T. BARNVM,
WitttTEK BT HIMSELF. IS ONE LARGE OCTAVO OLUME—N EARLY 800 PAGKS—PBIXTKD IS ENGLISH AND GKBMAS. 33 Elegant Fall Page Engravings.
It Embraces FOBTTYKARS BEOOLLECTIOBS of husBujy Life, as-a Merchant, Manager, Banker, Lecturer, and Showman, and «veg accounts of his Imprisonment, his failure, his Succesrfnl European Tours, and important Historical and Personal .Rettiilii«ccnce», replete #Hh htt&of AhdCdflteS ana Entertaining Narrative.
It contains his celebrated Lecture on the ART OP MONEY GETTING, with rules for Success in Business, for which he was offered $5,000. We
offer extra inducements to Agents and pay freight to the West. Send for 32 page circular, with Specimen Engraving and terms to Agents.
J. .X. BURR «FC CO., Publishers, Hartford, Conn
HOW TO MAKE THE
FARM PAT.
Raiser, double all tneir b_ Agents wanted. Address ZEIGLER, MfeCURDY'&CO. Cincinnati, Ohio Chicago, 111., or St. Louis. Mo.
5,000
BOOK AGENTS WASTED fo» Harding's New Illuminated
and Illustrated Editions of the
Life of Christ, and Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress.
The works are now ready for delivery. Address for Catalogue of the best selling Subscription books published.
W. W. HARDING, Philadelphia, Publisher Harding** HttdriMJtolly Bibles.
mail on receipt of price. MASURY & WHITON, N. Y.
JUST NOW!
The Publishers of the Large Double Weekly
NEW YORK OBSERVER,
The oldest and
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
Beit Family Newtpaper,
SIDNEY E.M0RSEi JRi. CO.. 8TParkRbW. IT e# York
HI
By J. W. MASTJEY. CI., 220 p., $1.50Free by mail on receipt of price. MASURY & WHITON, N.
OW SHALL WE
WATERS'
NEW SCALE PIANOS.
With Iron Frame, Overstrung Brass and Agraffe Bridge. 4IEL0DE0XS AM) CABINET ORGANS. The best manufactured. Warranted for6 years Pianos, Melodeon and Organs—Prices greatly rcducea for Cash.
New 7-6ctave Pianos $375
and upward. New Cabinet Organs 845 and upward. Second-hand instruments $40 and upward. Monthly instalments received.— "IB'™dmACETATEBS. ldren's upport-
S
Under-Clothes er—Is the most ticle of the kind eVer offered to the public made rettily, fits nicely, gives (ase and comfort and is just what every Miss wants. Mothers interested in the comfort and health of their daughters should examine its merits. For sale by
SAMUEL WEISZ, Terre Haute, Ind.
Manufactured by D. B. SAUNDERS & CO., 96 Sumner St., Boston, Mass. THE BEST TYl'E CABINETS, PBESSES AND
PRINTERS' MATERIALS, Made and furnished by
VANDERBURGH, WELLS & Co.. New,York
Good Second-Hand Cylinders for Sate.
OIL YOUR HARNESS!
FRANK MILLER'S prepared HARNESS OIL BLACKING in now style cans, neat and convenient.
Preserve Your Leather!
KEEP TOUK FEET DRY Frank Miller's Lea tlier Preservative and Water Proof OH Black* lug, thirty years in market. Sold by retail and jobbing houses everywhere. FRANK MILLER &C0., 18 and20Cedar St.,New York.
Aromatic Vegetable Soap!
COLGATE &G
For the DeUcate Skin of Ladies and Children. SOLD BY ALL DRVOOISTS. QQAflAA Year
guaranteed to AgentiAd-
$OOVV dress J. A. HEARN, 5 P. 0. Avenue, Baltimore) Md.
Great Atlantic and Pacific
TEA COMPANY, NO. 8 CHURCH STREET,
P. O. BOx 5606. NEW YORK CITY. An organization^ capitalists for the purpose of importing Teas and distributing them to Merchants throughout the country at Importer's prices. Established 1869.
TYLER
Send for Price
Lift. THE CHURCHMAN, THE BEST and l.lRfilST Weekly Newspaier, with the Aiwm1ft.Hnn in tKfl Vi Protestant Episcopal Church. Sent FREE for one month for examination and till Jan. 1, 1870, to new subscribers Jor that year. 83 a
H. MALLOY & CO.
year, in advance. M.
Hartford, Ct.
WATER WHEELS.-Over 3,000 in operation. Address tho m'Frs, SULLIVAN MA CHINK COI, CLARBMONT, N. H., for reduced price list.
ATTENTION! ATTENTION! EVERY MAN WIIO HAS A HOUSE TO KENT. Beady-Made Colors. Known as "Railroad" Colors. Guaranteed to be more economical, more durable and more convenient than any Paint ever before offered,
A book entitled "Plain Talk with practical Painters," with samples, sent free by mail on application. EASURY & WHITON,
Globe White Lead and Color works, 111 Fulton St., New York. Beware of imitation. Established 1835.
AWesell
1 rofs
TLANTIC SEWING MACHINE COMPANY.— our Machine, with Table and Treadle complete, (a new machine,)
for 818, which
will stitch, hem, fell, tuck, cord, braid, quilt and embroider, as perfectly as any $150 machine, Warranted for 5 years. Every third stitch can be cut and will not rip, Liberal inducements offered to general and local agents, Also,
a perfect Hand Machine,
Agents are making
AGENTS
A
as above forf
Feller, tucker and corder attached to eith
850
to
8100
per day. Sal,
Machine (with full instructions)sent to any dress C. 0. D. Address ATLANTIC SEWING MACHINE CO., No. 57 Buffalo St. Rochester, New York E.G.MARSHALL,
President
WANTED—$75 to $200 per month to sell the original and improved
Sense Family Sewing Machine.
Common
All complete
for $lo. It will hem, fell, stitch, bind, braid and embroider in a most superior manner, making the celebrated "Lock Stitch." CAUTION. Do not buy Machines under the same name as ours from any one except those having certificate of Agency, signed by us, as they are worthless cast-iron Machines. For circulars and terms, address or apply to C. BOWERS
Sc
CO.,436 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Agents Read This
We will pay Ag-ents a salary of $30 per week and expenses, or allow a large commission, to sell our new and wonderful invention. Ad dress Si. WAGNER & CO., Marshall, Mich. fljl 1
How I made it in six months. Se-
tpil'xv/
cre
A
and sample mailed free. A.
J. Fullam, N. Y. rpHS JUGICCOMB will change any colored
hair or beard to a permanent Black or Brown. One Comb sent by mail for one dollar. For sale by Merchants Druggists generally. Address Magic Comb Co., Spring-field, Mass.
ASK your Doctor ot Druggist for SWEKT JUIJrnrE—it equals (bitter) Quinine. M'fd by STBARXS. FARR A CO., Chemists, New York.
DON'T SHAKE. THE SUREST AGUE REMEDY KNOWN. Johnson's vegetable Candy Agne Core. Safe., permanent and effectual. So pleasant everybody will eat it. Contains no poison. Sold: everywhere. Made and sold by HOWELL fc JOHNSON, Bedford, Ind. Sent, postpaid, on receipt of price.
LOCK HAVKX.PA
MKS9RS LIPPENCOTT BAKRWKLL, Pittsburgh, Pa Gents:—We have been using your make of Gang Saws in our Mill, and fina them, in point of quality, superior to any we have ever used. Yours, kc. SHAW, BLAXCHARD Co.
Lippencott & Bakewell's Patent Ground, Patent Temper,
(STAMPED.)
CIRCULAR SAWS. JAMKSTOWS, N. Y.
Lippencott & Bakewrtl—We
hare no trouble
with your Saws they don't need to be lined up with paper we put them on the Mandrel ana they go right along.
Temper perfectly uniform and quality unsurpassed. Respectfully, CHAS. J. FOX.
LIPPEXCOTT 4 BAKEWELL.
Manufacturers of Circular. Malay, Mill Gan and Cross-Cat Saws. Chopping Axes, al shapes. Colburn's Patent Covered Scoop.
DR.
WHITTIER, 617 St. Charles St., St. Louis, Mo., of Union-wide reputation, treats all venereal, diseases also, seminal emissions, impotency, tc., the result of selfabuse. Send 2 stamps for sealed pamphlet, 50pp. No matter who failed, state case. Consultation free.
WORDS
OF WISDOM for Young Men on
the Rnling Passion in Youth Early Manhood, with Self-help for the erring and unfortunate. Sent in sealed letter envelopes, free of charge. Address HOW
ARD ASSOCIA
TION, Box P, Phila., Pa.
WANTED,- -E VER YWHERE, Good for our new Work, 'HOME BOOK OP WONDEBS
Also, for the -'Cottage Bible," Containing Notes, Indexes. Maps, Engravings, Dictionary, iVc., Best terms given. Over 300,000 copies sold in the United States and Canadas, and Agents reporting from 10 to 50 names per week. For circulars and terms addre.«s A. BRATNARD. Hartford, Conn.
DRY COCDS.
2
if&
Wf J'
WEand
ABB receiving daily oar Fall Stock offer great bargains in
A
—-r -A-
Dress Goods, Broehe Shawls, Heavy Winter Shawls, ^Single Shawls,
Breakfast Shawls
1
Dres*. Flannels, Shirting Flannels, Canton, 'r^
AndaPlain Flannels of all Kinds.
We will not be undersold on
Bleached & Brown Muslins
I Prints, Cheeks,
are
offering it to"new subscribers on very favorable terms. Sample conies with circulars, sent free to any address. $3.50 per annum.
PAINT OUR HOUSES.'
Stripes, "Ticks,
and Denims.
We have a fine stock ot a
BROADCLOTHS,
Cassimeres, Tweeds,
Which we will sell at very lowest prices.
CORNELIUS & ilAGGERTY
GOT, Main and Third Sts.
TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA
DRY GOODS.
LOOK!!
Best Bargains Yet Offered
AT-
DRY GOODS
HEADQUARTERS,
CORNER OF FOURTH AND MAIN,
20,000 Yards
Printed DeLaine
19c per yard have been selling at 25c.
10,000 Yards
Plain Lustres,
At 20c per Tarda, regular pqice everywhere 25c per yard.
A new Lot of
HandsomePrints
At 6H, 8, 10 and 12%r.
3,000 Yards
Canton Flannels,
At 16%c Sold last Winter at 20c.
5 O Do%» all
LINNEN TOWELS,
At ISOe per Docea.
50 pieces Brown and Half Bleached
TABLE LINENS.
Terj fkeap.
A Big Lot of
Miners' Flannels,
At 32%*°. Formerly sold at 40c.
A Full Stock .of
Fall and Winter Goods,
AT PRICES BELOW COMPETITION.
Warren, Hoberg & Co.,
(Successor* to Edsall Co.)
Steam JOB
SESIBES ADDING
PROGRAMMES,
Jeans,
PRINTING.
THE
__ DAILY AND WEEKLY
iia :-a 1 'y.t.
Terre Haute Express
Printings Establishment,
£tr
(DORNEfl
SIXTH AND OHIO STREETS.
Opposite the Post Office.
HAVING PURCHASED THE EXTENSIVE
Printing Establishment
OF ALLEN & ANDREWS,
And Consolidated it with the EXPRESS,
LARGELY IN NEW MATERIAL,
RAID BILLS,
WE ARE
TO EXECUTE WITH DISPATCH
BLANKS, BRIEFS,
BILL HEADS,
IN ALL ITS BRANCHES, IN THE
HIGHEST STYLE OF THE ART,
RAILROAD CARDS, INSURANCE CARDS, BUSINESS CARDS, ADDRESS SARDS' INVITATION CARDS, SHIPPING CARDS.
Of any gifc, and in any color or combination, and in a stylo
NOT TO 3333 SURPASSED,
EITHER EAST OR WEST.
LABELS, IN EVERY POSSIBLE VARIETY, FROM
PLAIN BLACK INK TO THE FINEST PRINTED COLORED INKS OR BRONZE.
Blanks of all Descriptions
GOTTEN UP PBOMPTLY AT THE VERY LOWEST PBICES.
NOW PREPARED
LETTER HEADS,
CIKCULAHS, ^ABSTRACTS, DEEDS,
CABSS,
DECORATIVE PRINTING
XOTE HEADS,
LABELS,
n^nsrrrxisro-
Of .every klu1, done ,'with
GREATEST DISPATCH AND IN THE
Very Best Manner.
COMMERCIAL AND MERCANTILE
JOB "WORK,
Equal to any Printinrj^Ilouse
IN THEJVEST.
lilSS
li
gtTXOHOX.S3'
AGUE -TONIC!
A sure remedy for'
AGUE
Will satis: the follow
and Fever,
And for all Bilious Diseases.
Colomng of Testimonials might hero b« produced, but feeling assured tbat
FAIR TRIAL file noct incratalons »nly offer
isw ft iwlngl
TBSBK HACTS. IXD., September 24, l$(fel* This is to certify that myself and wife hare had the Dumb Chills and Feyer for four or five years, and we tried all the prominent physicians, patent medicines and Bitters, when we tried Nichols* Ague Tonic." and in ojjit WKKK mysrtk and wife were cured. E. OHM,
Boot and Shoe Dealer. 115 Main St.
TKRKSHAUTK, Isn., October 1st, 1868. This vorforlwo cines for Agu— "Nichols' Ague Tonic," and have not had
Druggists and Chemists, Terre Haote, Ind. gepl5dlmwtim
SPECTACLES.
EASE ANI COMPORT.
THE BLESSING OF PERFECT SIGHT. There is nothing so Yaluable as PERFECT SIGHT, and PERFECT SIGHT can only be obtained by using PERFECT
SPECTACLES. The difficulty of Procuring which is WELL KNOWS.
Messrs. LAZARUS & MORRIS, Occulists and Opticians,
HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT,
Manufacturers of the celebrated
Perfected Spectacles!
Have, after years of Experience, Experiment, and the erection of costly machinery, been enabled to produce that GRAND DESIDERATUM,
Perfect Spectacles
Which have been sold with unlimited satisfiaction to the wearers in Massachusetts, New York,
New Jersey, Rhode Island, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Michi
lgan, Hampshire,
Illinois, New
Vermont, Maine. and the British Provinces, during the past nine years.
These Celebrated Perfected Spectacles never tire tho eye. and last many years without change.
S. R. FREEMAN,
lerigari
and Swiss s, Solid Silancy Goods,
Dealer in all kinds of Ame Watches, Fine Jewelry, Dia: ver and Plated ware, Clocks kc., kc., kc..
ks, Fai
No. 161 Main Street, National Hotel building. Sole Agent for Terre Hauto, Ind
DYERS.
J^YEING, SCOURING,
HE3srov-A.Ti3sra-,
In ail its Branches, at
H. F. Reiner's Dye House,
Main St., bet. Oth and 7th. sepl7d2m
HOOP SKIRTS.
Look to Your Advantage
AND
Buy your Skirts at the Factory,
WHY?
Because
You can always find a better •variety of Hoop Skirts there than anywhere else.
Because
You always get fresh and clean Skirts at the Factory.
TlAPflliaa Y°u
can
Because
buy Skirts one-third
IlCUlUOt/ cheaper at the factory than anywhere else.
You seta better article of Skirts
X9t/v(li(AoC at the Factory, than at any other place.
at the factory, they will guarantee the quality of their manufacture, and repair all Skirt? bought there, free of charge.
Uerz & Arnold's Skirt Factory,
THE LAR0B8T IS THE STATE,
is at
NO. 89 MAIN STREET,
Between 3d and 4th.
DENTISTS.
L. H. BARTHOLOMEW, BUBGJCOX AND MKCHA5ICAL
DENTIST,
Successor to Dr. D. M. WELD, No. 157 Main St. National Block, Terre Haute, Ind. mSOdtf
JJR. C. O. LINCOLN,
The Oldest Established Dentist IS TERRE HAUTE, OFFICK—On Sixth Street, between Main and Ohio, one door south of National House.
Having had upwards of eighteen years' exIicricnce in Dentistry, he is confident that he can (rive xntisfaction in all cases. jy20dly
CARRIACES.
J. M. WILOY, LKWI8 THOMAS, WILLIAM POTH8.
^WILDY, THOMAS & CO.,
Carriage Manufacturers,
Corner 2d and Walnut Sts, Terre Haute, Ind. Repairing done promptly and a£ Low Rates je2dtf
b-
DRY COODS.
l.'?
'.},» -at*
1
I
a
chill since, ani freely r^mmend it to all afflicted in that iray. FRANK MYERS, Cashier for H. Hulman.
NICHOLS' AGUE TONIC
Is for sale at ONE DOLLAR PER BOTTLE, by Medicine dealers generally, and at wholesale by the Manufacsurers.
BARR, GULIC & BERRY,
«4
A KAB& BARGAIN.
ni,
KID
GLOVES I
AT
C. Wittig& Co's.
170 MAIS STREET,
DEMING BLOCK.
ru ft 4** sw t*
.it
tS
S 1
.0-,
1000 (One Thousand) Pairs »T KID 6L0VS8,!
v-'-
In all Shades of Color and atfSf«W,-«t tho Low Price of
75c (Seventy-Fiv^ €ents1 a Pair.
These goods' were bought of a house tbat recently failed. They are a good article, fully as good as any that are bought at #1.25 or 11.50 a pair. We invite all to try a pair to prove the truth of our advertisement.-
We also open our line of
FTTIR/S.
All fre»h and well made to give entire satisfaction.
CALI- A.T
WITTia & CO'S,
1170 MAIN STREET,
Denting JBlocli.
dwtf
SIMPSON'S COfc&lMN.
JJUFUS II..SIMPSON,
Attorney at
Continental Life Ins. (Jo.
OF NEW YOBK.
1
We open this week nui-
Law,,
NOTARY PUBLIC,
COMMISSIONER of DEEDS for WESTERN STATES
FIRE AND LIFE
Insurance Agent,
Terre Haute, Ind.
OFFICE—In Scott's Building, up simn,opposite the New Court House. NOTICE—Collections made in aKftoutf i€ Court, at reasonable commission.
ESPECIAL ATTENTION jfiven ttsettlements of Estates and Guardians imttu-Pro-bate Court.
"W-AJJSTTOEID-
FARMS AND HOUSES TO SELL AND SSNTi-
ft
CAPITAL, paid in $ 100,000,00 ASSETTS 2,187,178,40 POLICIES Issued for I860. 0,001
R. If. SIMPSON, District Ageat.
Marlldwtf
CLOTHING.
W.H. BANNISTER,
JAt INo. 70 Main Street,
Is now rccciving his
Fall Stock!
Consisting in part of
Heav
am
Mixed and Fancy
CASSIMERES!
FOR
BUSINESS SUITS,
Fine Black Cloths and Doeskins
A Beautiful line of Colored
Cloths and Beavers,
Mixed Coatings,
Cheviots, «&c., &c.
Gentlemen wishing Clothing made to order •n the latest style and most reliable manner, at reasonable prices, are requested to call and examine his stock before purchasing. gep9d w2m
HITCHING POSTS.
Handsome Iron
HITCHING POSTS
FOR SILE
CHEAP!
AT THE
EAGLE IRON WORKS,
CORNER FIRST AND WALNUT fTREETS, june3d6in
STOVES.
THE
CONTINENTAL! The Cheapest and Best Cook StoveJ-in the Market. Something new. Everybody should see it before buying the old styles. Please cafl and see this Stove.
To be had onll at headquarters. H. L. BALL.
ifS
ft. .1
