Daily Wabash Express, Volume 19, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 November 1869 — Page 2
TTF.RBE IIAXJTE, XJiTP.
Tuesday Morning, November 2, 1869.
THE voters of New York will accept or reject the Amended Constitution at the election which occurs to-day.
ELECTIONS
will occur to-day in New
York and a number of other States, as shown by a table elsewhere published.
TIIE gallant editor of the Cincinnati Times finds it difficut to believe that Mrs. GKANT had anything to do with the late gold speculations. It is Incredible that a woman who is afraid to pass through a lane in which there is a solitary cow would venture into a street literally thronged with bulls and bears.
THE
TIIE
3
CITY
.1
State Elections.
The fall State election! will take place a-5 follows Alabama Nov. 21 Michigan Nov. 2 Florida 2 Minnesota 2 Illinois 2 I Missouri 2 South Carolina 22 Nevada 2 Kansas 2 New Jersey Maryland .2 I New York
S..
,T2
2
Massachusetts 2 Wisconsin 2
COUNCIL," at its regular
meeting, this evening, will probably act upon the Danville Kail road appropriation. Most of the members are ready to vote in the affirmative, believing that in so doing they will meet the wishes of a large majority of their constituents, and will best promote the interests of the city. That they are correct in this belief, there is no doubt, and we trus't the appropriation will, be made without further del'av.
ACCORDING to a dispatch which we printed yesterday, the public debt statement will show a reduction in the debt of $7,633,882 75 for the moth of October— making a total decrease since
GRANT'S
in
_auguration of $62,332,070 65. We hope our dispatches this morning, will fully confirm this prediction. It is not a pleasant duty to harrow up the souls of our Democratic friends, but we cannot consult their feelings so far as to suppress the results of honesty and economy in General GRANT'S administration.
A
fresh howl
will bring temporary relief to the Democratic heart. '.? #.
Express says the Danville Railroad
is a gigantic project—uniting the Gulf and the Lakes.—Journat. The EXPRESS says nothing of that sort. It does say, however, that the Danville road, when completed, will be one link in a great thoroughfare from the Lakes to the Gulf. The Chicago & Danville road, and the Evansville,Henderson ANasliville roads will be completed next year. They, with the Evansville & Craw fords ville road and the Terre Ilaute & Danville road will form almost an air line from Chicago to Nashville, connecting, at the latter point, with the entire system of Southern railroads. We don't expect the Journal to comprehend this simple statement of facts, but the people generally will.
THE city charter does not make it obligatory upon the Common Council to make an appropriation on a proper petition. The question is left with the sound discretion of the members.—Journal.
Yes, that is precisely where "the question is left," and it is in the exercise of that "sound discretion" that a majority of "the members" propose to grant the prayer of the petitioners. "Sound discretion" is a most excellent thing, and we rely upon it to give to this city a grand impulse in the line of prosperity.
It is but a few weeks since the Journal indignantly denied that it was opposed to 'the Danville Eailroad appropriation.— When accused of such opposition it fairly foamed with rage and broke out all over with a fearful eruption. What has wrought so strange a change?
TIIE statement that has been industriously circulated by the opponents of the Danv ille R. R., that "the road will be constructed whether Terre Haute helped it or not," is false and mischievous. If this city will not help build the road to Danville there will be no such road built. Tile Chicago and Nashville route will then go by way of Danville and Paris, forming a junction with the E. & C. Railryad at Vincennes, and leaving Terre Haute very "far out in the cold." Most of the counties through which the Danville, Paris and Vincennes line will pass, if constructed, have already voted liberal appropriations to it. If the T. II. & D. road is built, that enterprize will probably be abandoned, but if Terre Haute will not help the T. II. & D. road,the other companies interested in the great through line will make terms with the Danville, Paris & Vincennes Company. These are the facts in the case as any man can ascertain if lie will take the trouble to inquire into the matter.
THE extravagant curiosity of the Prince of Wales to visit TRAUTMAN, the wholesale Paris murderer, appears to have stricken the French populace with something akin to consternation. His request was very properly denied, and the august suppliant was compelled to return home with his morbid desire ungratified. The New York Tribune remarks that this passion for "interviewing" distinguished criminals is not altogether new in the history of the royal family of England, although, wo believe, it has slumbered for many generations. We can recall no other instance later than "James the First, who not only prepared the examination of Guv
FAWKES,
As
but according to tradi
tion, repeatedly visited that explosive malefiictor in the dungeon of Little Ease, and was, moreover, accustomed to regale himself of an afternoon by going down to the torture-cells of the Tower and luxuriating in the agonies of those who suffered by the rack. Scenes like these, of course, can never recur, but the revived spectacle of an intimate communication between murderers and monarchs would be one not calculated to add to the enlightenment of the nineteenth centurv.
HERETOFORE ANNOUNCED,
sr few
the Hon.
LOT M. MORRILL, of Augusta, one of the oldest and best of the Republican leaders of New England, goes back to the Senate bv appointment of Gov. CHAMBERLAIN, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of WM.
PITT FESSENDKN.
In this
selection Gov. CHAMBERLAIN has chosen the best material at his command, and we doubt if he could have found better had he been permitted to choose from the country at large,instead of being restricted to the Pine Tree State. Mr.
MORRILL'S
record as a public man is without spot or blemish, a history of long and faithful service guided by honorable motives and made effective by ability of a very high order. And in these days of rampant corruption it is something to know that Mr. FESSENPEN'S
successor* is as pure-minded,
stiaight-forward and sincere a man as was the lamented statesman whose place he is called to fill. We hope the Legislature of Maine will continue Mr.
MORRILL
in
the Senate, for the country cannot afford to dispense with his services in the position which he is best qualified to fill, and in which no other citizen of his State, not even excepting Mr. BLAINE, would be so acceptable or so useful.
THE JUBILEE BEATEN.
THE HAN O THE MOON ECLIPSED.
A Lady of the West End Sees a Dazzling Light in the' HeaTensr-She Calls Her Friends and They all Perceive a Han of Great Beauty. Flanked by Angelic Infants, and Two Women Kneeling—A Motto Seen
Through Smoked Glass—A Strange and Startling Tale.
From the Boston Times.] On Friday morning last, at about four o'clock, a ljidy resident of the West End of the city, having occasion to ascend the roof of her dwelling, beheld a brilliant reflection of alight of many colors, like the rainbow, on the white linen hanging on her lines, and, raising her darkened eyes in bewilderment to the sky, was obliged to cover them with her hands on account of the dazzling effulgence and splendor which met her view and transfixed, as with a dart, her very soul.
Quivering with astonishment and fear, she hastened down stairs and alarmed the inmates of the house, who, eager to behold what she had failed to portray in words, were astounded at seeing in the firmament the blazing form of a man as resplendent as the sun in its meridian glory. Round about him the forms of gorgeously attired infants of angelic beauty hovered, and beneath them were seen the profiles of two women in a kneeling posture.
One man, a Mr. Wiggin, also a resident of the West End, and a very trustworthy gentleman, possessing more esprit present than the others, burnt a piece of glass through which were perceivable these words: "Come, now is the accepted time come now/" These were in very large green letters, which he says he plainly saw. There were other words, but our informant could not decipher them. "In the last days there shall be signs in the heavens. Surely, the end must be approaching when justice shall no longer be tempered with mercy, but with the wrath of the GREATJUDGE of all judges— "Who shall not fail nor be discouraged.^
Till he hath set judgment in the earth. We have made inquiries concerning the parties alluded to above, and find that they are not Spiritualists or Second Adventists, and are not given to nightmare. They are worthy Methodists. Hadjonly one person seen the sight it might not be considered remarkable, but several saw the forms distinctly, and the sight made an impression on their minds. We leave it for the meteorologists to determine what the phenomenon was.
Gleanings.
-Butter-
AField likely to go to grass field. Can Butterfield be classed as a government security?
The-artist of the hour is the man who drew the Colistum. I A lady writes to the Rochester Union to have Congress forbid second marriages.
Georgia, expects forty millions from its cotton crop. A St. Louis reporter speaks of "an admirably arranged suicide."
Of eleven newspapers published in New Hampshire in 1810, five are still alive. The Crown Prince of Prussia has invented a vinegar machine. Pshaw! Nothing but an old-made affair.
The bonnets of the period are regarded as "trifles light as air" by every one but the husbands who pay for them.
Considering ex-President Johnson's plebeian proclivities, he must have been pleased to be defeated by a Cooper.|
A Memphis jury acquitted a traveler who killed a liackman for overcharging him.
The ecclesiastical authorities of Bruges have forbidden their church musicians to perform at theaters.
The judicial election of California results in the choice of eleven Democrats to three Republicans.
The pools sold on the reccnt four days' races at Jerome park, amounted to over 150,000.
Toledo has shipped nearly sixteen million bushels of grain since January I. So much talk of removing the capital has put real estate down 20 per cent, in Washington. lne iioston limes estimates tnat tne Labor Reform party will poll 19,000 votes in Massachusetts.
Some one at Santa Fe has sent in one dollar to the conscienc fund, saying: "I couldn't rest till I did it."
Large seizures of fraudulently imported English books from Canada have been made at Burlington, Vt.
A gentleman was lately blackballed in an English club because his wife was in the habit oJ[ dropping her h's.
A Memphis paper calculates that there are at least 10,000 infants in the South who have been named after Stonewall Jackson.
Butterfield probably prefers a military trial because lie thinks the charges against him were "militious," and not at all civil.
Ayer's visions of a Congressional seat from Massachusetts seem to have melted in air. Brooks will run, why not?— Brooks always run.
An irreverent fellow wants to know if Pere Hyacinthe's alliance to the spirit of the nineteenth century has any reference to the Whisky Ring.
San Francisco is making an labortive attempt to rival Chicago in the matter of divorces, but had not got but one a day at last accounts.
A manufacturer in the north of France is making pocket handkerchiefs on which is printed a pictorial representation of the murder of the Kinck family at Pantin.
The gunner of a New York yacht demands $10,000 for an arm that -\Vas blown off firing a salute. Another asks $1,200 for a hand. The tariff seems rather unequal.
It is believed by the most disinterested observers of cotton movements in New Orleans that the receipts of the staple at that port will fcxeeed those of last year by at least half a million bales.
And now the French nation grumbles at Napoleon's "vacillation," just as if it hadn't been proven that vassalation was the only thing that could keep France in order.
Miss Mary Hovey has been offered the chair of horticulture in the Kansas Agricultural College. Haughty culture is commonly imparted in young ladies' seminaries here.
Mr. Hiram Powers protests that "rebels and copperheads" have no power to hire him, but pockets their money nevertheless. Is there no statue-tory l*\v for such a case?
The Ecumenical Council does not find much favor in Spain. Prim says if it goes against him he will disregard its decision. Shades ofTorquemada and Ximenes, what think ye of that?
A chemist of Stockholm, named Stenburg, has invented a process for producing alcohol from Iceland moss, which is what John B. Gough would call a "mass abominable procedure.'*
The Northern Pacific Railroad Company keeps newspaper correspondents off their line, lest their glaring accounts should attract emigrants to the best sections of land, before the company is ready to locate its own Government grant.
Previous to the introduction of vaccination the annual death rate from smallpox was 3,000 to the million, which has been gradually reduced in Europe, in proportion to its being made compulsory and last year the rate was only 202 to the million.
A woman, in Alexandria, Va., who swallowed laudanum to kill herself, was so bent on having her own way that it was deemed necessary to knock out some of her front teeth in order to use a stomachpump. She is recovering.
A Confederate soldier, who served in the 14th Alabama regiment, fought all' through the war, and surrendered at Appomattox, enlisted in the 2d United States regiment at Huntsvillc, Alabama, a few days ago.
West. Virginia Election.
In West Virginia the Republicans are divided on the question of enfranchising rebels. The returns thus far received indicate Democratic gains. AJS in Tennessee, the majority of the Republican jKirty appear to have adhered to the old policy of disfranchising the disloyal. These restrictions will soon be swept away in every State.
liMss
DURING the time of the freshet on the Wabash, where the flat country on both sides of the river was inundated by the rising water, it became necessary for those in the way to escape to the mountains—the mounds that were' probably made by the Indians for that purpose.— A
party of fugitives on their way to a place of safety, overtook a man in a covered wagon, with a span of horses, standing still in the road, the water nearly up to the hubs, of his wheels, and fast rising. He was sitting with a small book in one hand and a whip in the other reading aloud, and then laying on the whip. They stopped a moment to listen, attracted by the man's enrious conduct,. and were surprised to hear him read: "The wicked shall be turned into hell!—(cut) giving a frightful emphasis to the word.
Whosd believeth not shall be dammed!" —(cnt) "How can ye escape the damnation of hell?"—(cut)—and many more of the same character, yelling the emphasized words at the top of his lungs. Wondering at his conduct, the fugitives asked what he meant. "Why," said he, "I am a Methodist minister, and restrained from swearing but these horses were bought in a region where they were accustomed to hear such language, end I am endeavoring to come as near as possible, conscientiously, in order to induce them to move, but I'm—" Here he consulted his book, leaving his hearers to imagine what he sought to give emphasis to hopelessness of making them stir a peg.
MRS. STANTON'S Revolution makes her very dizzy sometimes. Hear what astounding assertions she flung off while revolving, recently: "Men and women are not only both animals, but they belong to the same species. Dress them alike, and you cannot tell the difference. They are subject to the same natural conditions and wants, and there is a corresponding likeness in their moral and intellectual powers and necessities."
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 cleance it, Morse's Indian Root Pills. Use the Morse's Pills in all cases of Billiousness, Liver Complaints, Female Irregularities, Headache, Indigestion &c. Sold by all dealers. dwlm
HOOP SKIRTS.
Look to Your Advantage
AND
Buy your Skirts at the Factory,
"WOEiY
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.
Because
You can buy Skirts ono-third cheaper at. the factory than anywhere olse.
Tlnr»«lllCA Y°u get abetter article of Skirts UtliclUOC at the Factory, than at any other place.
nen at the factory, they will guar-
liCtjtUist antee the quality of their manufacture, and repair all Skirts bought there, free of charge.
Herz & Arnold's Skirt Factory,
THE LARGEST IN THE STATE,
is at
NO. 89 MAIN STREET,
Between 3d and 4th.
HOTELS.
Jacob Blitz. George Butz. MTIOML HOUSE. Cor. Sixth and Main Streets,
Terre Haute. Indiana.
Jacob Buts, & Son, Props.
This Houso has been thoroughly refurnished. my2 *dly.
TERRE HAUTE HOUSE. Comer JUain and Seventh Sts. Terre Haute. Indiana.
Hotel has recently been refittpd. nnd put io si-c'ass ordc. oU'ering accommodations uEfci \pessed in ibe Stale.
T. C. BCNTIN.
CLARK HOUSE, Cor. First & Ohio Sts.,
Terre Haute, Indiana.
IV. H. GRIFFITH, Prop.
Oflico of Marshall, Montezuma and Palestine Hack Lines. Free Buss to and from all trains. nov28dtf
CARRIAGES.
J. M. WILDY, LEWIS THOMAS, WILLIAM POTHS. WILDY, THOMAS & CO., Carriage Manufacturer^,
Corner 2d and Walnut Sts, Terre Haute, Ind. Repairing done promptly and at Low Rates je2dtf
BAKERY.
UNION STEAM BAKERY, CAXDY MI3UR.4CI0?.Y, AND O S O E
FRANK HEINIG & BR HER,
Manufacture- s'of all kinds of
CRACKERS,
BREAD AND CAKES,
PRETZELS,
And dealers in
GROCERIES,
On Lafayotte st. between Canal and Depot.
Terre Haute, Indiana.
KOrdeisle.'t at Juiius Miessen's, No.16 north 4th si-oet, will
:e
I S I E S S E N
AMKBICAX AND PARISIAN
CONFECTIONER a) BAKER,
SO. 16 NORTH FOURTH STREET,
Bet. Main and Cherry Sts.,
Terre Haute, Ind. Keeps consinnib- on hund a fWwh snooly of Cakes, Candies, Ice Cream, Bread and Crackers.
OinamentJ'l Cakes, Pyramids Ice Cream, Water Ices, Charloiie-rnssa, Jelly, Blance Mange. Roman Puncli Bisquit Glace, Tromture ae Pam. Fancy Ice Cream. Pastry, Tongue, Chicken Salad. &c., will be made to order.
Private Parties furnished with Oysters, Meats IceCream, Jellies, «fcc., on short notice. mayl9dtf
BOOKS.
SCHOOL BOOKS,
AT
A. II. DOOLEY'S,
No, 100 Slain Street, v,
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
FKXALEand
COI.II2GE,j3»rcfen/oirn, N. J.
Board tuition §208 per year. For Catalogue* address Rev. JOHN fl.
5,000
P. O. BOx 5506. An organ of importin tl
AGENTS
TION.
MFSSRS.
uromDtiy amended to.
Having pat in fjTE^M we are enabled to meet all orders in our line promoily and with satisTaoiion, aud will sell at the Ion est rates. jaaOdtf
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
HAMLET,
A.M.,Pres't. BOOK AtiESTS WASTED FOB Struggles and'Triumphe of
P. T. BABMJM, WP.ITTKN BY HIMSKLF. I LARGE OCTAVO
VOLUME—NEARLY800NPONE
AGES—PRINTED
IX
ENGLISH
AND
GERMAN.
33 Elegant Full Page Engravings. It Errbraces
FORTY
YEARSRECOLLECTIONS of
his Busy Life, as a Merchant, Manager, Banker, Lecturer, and..8howman. and .gives accounts of his Imprisonment, his failure, nis Successful European Tours, and important Historical and Personal Reminiscences, re-
Sfarrative.humor,Anecdotes
lete with and Entertaining It contains his celebrated Lecture on the ART
OP
MONEY GKTrso.with rules for Successin Business, for which ne was/jffered 85,000. We offer extra inducements to Agents and pay freight to the West. Send for 32 page circular, with Specimen Engraving and terms to Agents^
BURR &
CO.,
Publishers, Hartford, Conn
HOW TO MAKE THE
J,FARM PAY.
English and German. Every Farmer, Stock Raiser, Gardener and Fruit Cultunst may double all their Profits. Sales immense.— Agents wanted. Address ZEIGLER.McCURDY & CO. Cincinnati, Ohio Chicago, 111., or St. Louis, Mo.
BOOK AGENTS WANTED for 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
°f Harding's Pictorial Family Bibles. IKT8 OUT HOUSE PAIMTISe. J. W. MASUBY. CI., 48 p.,40c. mail on receiptof gnce. &WHITQy>NjY.
By
Free by
JUST NOW!
The Publishers of the Large Double Weekly NEW YORK OBSERVER, The oldest and Best Family Neiospaper, are offering it to new subscribers on very favorable terms. Sample copies with circulars, sentfree to any address. S3.50_per annum.
SIDNEY E. MORSE, JR., & CO., 37 Park Row. New York.
OW SHALL WE PAINT OUK HOUSES."
By J. W.
MASCRY. CI.,
220 p., 81.50.-
Free by mail WIl'lTON, N. Y. WATERS'
NEW SCALE PIANOS.
With Iron Frame, Overstrung Brass and Agraffe Bridge. MELODEONS AND CABINET OBGANS. The best manufactured. Warranted for6 years. Pianos, Mclodeon and Organs—Prices greatly reduced for Cash. New 7-octave Pianos $375 and upward. New Cabinet Organs $45 and upward. Second-hand instruments $40 and upward. Monthly instalments received. Warerooms, 481 Broadwa^N-Y.^^
A.
nOLOMON'S Children's
./^^^^^^^•OUnder-Clothes Supportcr—Is the most perfect artide of the kind ever oflered to the public made prettily, fits nicely, gives case and comfort and is 1 I a jf wants. Mothers interest-
M, ed in the comfort and W health of their daughters \N*JFu\y4g^B should examine its merits.
FOSAMUSL
WEISZ,
Terre Hante, Ind.
Manufactured by D. B. SAUNDERS &C0 96 Sumner St., Boston, Mass
THE BEST TYPE CABINETS, ^BESSES AND PRINTERS' MATERIALS,
Made and furnished by
VANDERBURGH, WELLS & Co., New York, good Second-Hand Cylinders for Sale.
OIL YOUR HARNESS! FRANK MILLER'S prepared HARNESS OIL BLACKING, in new stylo cans, neat and convenient.
Preserve Your Leather!
KEEP TOOK FEET
DRY
Aromatic Vegetable Soap!
OOLGATiv & CC£§
NEW TORE CITY.
An organization of capitalists for the purpose Teas and distributing them to Merchants throughout the country at Importer's prices. Established 1869. Send for Price List.
Established 1869.
THE CHURCHMAN, THE BEST and T.ARPJST Weekly. Newspaper, with the J"1""1®1 circulation in the Protestant Episcopal Church. Sent^FREE for one month for examination, and till Jan. 1, 1870, to new subscribers Jor that year. $3 a year, in advance. M. H. MALLOY & CO.
TYLERCo.,
price list. ATTENTION! ATTENTION! EVERY MAN WHO HAS A HOUSE TO BENT.
Ready-Made Colors. Known as "Railroad" Colors. Guaranteed to be more economical, more durable and more convenient than any Paint over before offered,
A book entitled "Plain Talk with practical Painters,"'with samples, sent free by mail on application. EASUllY & WHITON,
Globe White Load and Color works, 111 Fulton St., New York. Beware of imitation. Established 1835.
AWe
Proprietor.
LIPPKKCOTT &
DRY COC 3S.
FALL STOCK.
DRESS GOODS!!
'\k of the
VERY LATEST STYLES.
SILIEC S,
IRISH# FRENCH POPLINS,
BoiiBA-zixisrES,
4SS IMpsir
BARETZ,
.sr.itcf
Empress Cloth,
sip fs$»
VI J-MS j/t ,!iS
SATIN DE CHINE STRIPES
r*TO5* s$
As Diagonal8,,$
}£W®'
CALICOS, FLANNELS Sitii 'A1 •.M-\ -sated* -n tr IS S-gfrnrsI
SHEETINGS & SHIRTINGS,
it*
Hartford, Ct.
WATER WHEELS.—Over 3,000 in operation. Address m'frs, SULLIVAN MACHINE CLAREMONTthe
N. H., for reduced
TLANTIC SEWING MACHINE COMPANY.—
sell 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 lor 5 years. Every third stitch can be cut and will nol rip, Liberal inducements offered to general and local agents. Also, a perfect Hand Machine, as above for $10. Fellpr, tucker and corder attached to either $3. Agents are making $50 to £100 per day. Sample Machine (with full instructions)sent to any address 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 Common Sense Family Smcing Machine. All complete for $15. It will hem-, fell, stitch, bind, braid and embroider in a most superior manner, making: the cclebnitccl "Lock Stitch."
CAU"
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 ca^f-iron Machines. For circulars and tfrros, address or apply to C. BOWERS & CO.,436 Sp'.uce Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Agents Read This
We will pay Agents a salary of $30 per week and expenses, or allow a large commission, to sell our new and vonaerful invention. Address M. WAGNKK & CO., Marshall, Mich. dj-i "I Af How I made it in six moiu'.is. Se-tpXJ-TrV/
cre
and sample mailed free. A.
J. Fullam,N. Y.
TIIE
MAGIC COMB will ciiange any colored hair or beard to a permpneDl B'.ack or Brown. One Comb sen., by mail for one dollar. For sale by Merchants & Druggists generally. Address Mnyic Comb Co.,Sprin 8eld. Mass.
DOST SHAKE.
THE SUREST AGUE REMEDY KNOWN. Johnson's Vegetable Cundy Agne Core. Safe,
Eoay
crmaTjeTl andeffeclaa'.. So p!ensant eveiyvsill eat it. Contains no uoison. Said ever^wtiore. Made "i^d sold by HOWELL & JOHNSON, Bedford, lad. Senc, postpaid, on rece iiof price.
LOCKHAYEK,PA.
.KKWELL,Pittsburgh,
Pa* Gents:—Wc have been using yoar make of Gang Saws in our MiU, and find them, in point of sualitv, saperiorto a or have ever used. Yours, .fee. SHAW,we
BLXNCHARD & Co.
Lippencott
&
Bakewell's
Patent Ground, Patent Temper,
(STAMPED.)
CIRCULAR SAWS. jAM^STCmc, N. tT. Lippencott Bal-etcdl—We have no tronble with your Saws thoy don need to be lined up with paper «we put them on the M&Ddrcl and em°pergperfectly uniform and quality un-
SUr^fspectfully,
CHAS._J.F0X.
LIPPENCOTT & BAKEWELL.
Manufacturers of Circular, Mulay, Mill Gang and Cross-Cut Saws. Chopping Axes, all shapes. Colburn's Patent Covered Scoop. T\R. WH1TTIER, 617 St. Charles St.. St.
Louis, Mo., of Union-wide reputation, treal? all venereal diseases also, seminal omissions, impotency, &c-« the result of seli»busc. Send 2 stamps for soaled pamphlet, iOpp. No matter who failed, state ease, saltation free.
Con-
ORDS OF WISDOM for Young Men on the Ruling Passion in \outli «fr Early Manhood, with Self-helo for tho erring and unfo-tunato. Seat in soaled letter envelopes, free of charge. Address HOWARD ASSOCIATION, BoxP, Phila., Pa.
WANTED,- -E VER YWHERE,
Good for our now Work,
"HOME BOOK OP WONDERS Also, for the ''Cottage Bible," Containing Nolcs, Indexes, M#ijs, Engravings, Dictionary. Ac .,kc. Besl terms .given. Over 000,000 citpics sold in tlio United Suites and Canadas, and Agents reporting from 10 to 60 names per week. For circulars and terms address A. BKAINARD. Hartford, Conn.
,i-„ ru Irutit.kfy
Ladles Cndinfear,
r.*.v
-ty- fv-h't -VHft4fcs X'J? If": iCOLLARS & CUFFS, (Now Styles.) spa?
.GLOVES
(Of overy kind.)
'if! vi* itj ». J.
Frank Miller's Lea
ther Preservative and W ilbOl 1 ivvf Oil Blacking, thirty years in market. Sold by retail and jobbing houses everywhere. FRANK MILL ER &CQ..18and20CedarSt.,NewYork.
$
For the Delicate Skin of Ladies and Children. SOLD BY ALL PRUOCtlSTS.
A Year guaranteed to Agents. Address J. A. HEARN, 5 P. O. Aven-
ue, Baltimore, Md.
Great Atlantic and Pacific
TEA COMPANY, NO. 8 CHURCH STREET,
fiA n-.
•jiiKr-i
Ji -iW-v'-i'
Hew York Store,
73
Main Street,
Terre Haute, Indiana,
IS NOW IN FULL BLAST!
OUR STOCK IS COMPLETE in every Department, and we can show our patrons an immense variety of all kinds of
DRESS GOODS,
Domestics, %XT Cloths, Cassimcres,
Shawls, Flannels, Blankets,
&c., &c. A
ALL BOUGHT FOR CASH AT THE
LOWEST PRICES!
And which will be1
Sold Cheap!
We Have but One Price! Any child can be sent to the NJW York Stive and will buy AS CHEAP as the best judge of Dry Goods! Thus
Justice is Done to All!
Remember the Si£Ti:
STORE
CHEAP DRY
And
mum
try
the
New
York Store!
You will be &onveiled that the placf for
c», In Dry Goods, is tho
••ijM
-j
New York Store,
ima til if
ndi
iiftt
i.-Ur'Tj
sr'"-in
pRo^RAM^
our
In fact, everything calculated to keei stock as it is, tho most complete in the 6
GIVE US A CALL.
Tuell, Ripley & Doming,
'Main
St. Cor* 5th,
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
DRY GOODS.
At Z'lOi, th" f'
itate.
it j»
JIN
1
iU JJ *t S 4
THE^nv'^W
co
73 Main Street, i4
Terre Haute, Indiana* Wittenberg,
—i
tidJ m"
Ruschhaupt & Go,
PRINTINC.
TK
-.vi /i -. ,f
DAILY AND WEEKLY
V.': '0".S .-U KM *.
a E
Printing Establishment,
CORNER SIXTH AND OHIO STREETS.
Opposite the Post Offlce.
ill "Ws 4
fetei: hUt
~w'llo ""TM-mtO "...'' 'i '*Lu hd: A* ,* rffet HAVING PUBCHASBD THE EXTENSIVE
iriu .j
jiivrmips. hstoti
•SsT
S««««
~""J
bi.yn
Star Job Printing Establishliiit
'j$w
mis:[--nr.?
OF ALLEN & ANDREWS
1
ii
riiwr
in
And Consolidated it
K! Jt'il i'
BfiSIDES ADDING LARGELY IN NEW MATERIAL, WE ARE NOW PRV'PAfifn TO EXECUTE WITH 1ISPATCH ii :ti*
1
-U HAND BILL^ nf
*1^ B^AHTKS,
BRIEFS,
!T-
1
ALL ITS BRANCHES, IN THE
lui? -on (JO 'j'-T
HIGHEST STYLE OF THE ART,
RAILROAD CARDS, INSURANCE CARDS, BUSINESS CARDS, ADDRESS [CARDS INVITATION CARDS, SHIPPING CARDS,
Of any sizo, and in any^color or combination, and in a style
N O O E S A S S E
EITHER EAST OR WEST.
LABELS, IN EVERY POSSIBLE VARIETY, FROM
PLAIN BLACK INK TO TIIE FINEST PRINTED COLORED INKS OR BRONZE.
Blanks of all Descriptions
GOTTEN UP PROMPTLY AT THE VERY LOWEST PRICES.
Of every kind, «lwnc (with
3.1
anr
fitftrrissJ II. ijJVi '~r kHK
A
I S
Equal to
1
i.
1^3
bm
^rW)A
witli^the
--Xk+teiij-jJjSaSKl#'1
itp) ynw r«^a Ac vFlu'rii iK'JWfi'i' r'jUt WtrM
:'f4
uc
BILL HEADS,
Vt/. 1*1/
C^CULAES, ABSTRACTS, DEEDS,
AI-
0-A.ltlDS, :i1 --4 riU
DECORATIVE PRINTING
-sr..' u«
11
1
I
GREATEST DISPATCH AND IN THE
Very Best Manner.
Ut jif-
C0MMERCIAL5AND MERCANTILE
,OTU:
fi| frPiZfifr'thit-)
'Mir',
iv^it -«lr ij? 't ton *tr I tl
&J- jpfi. ft
-WORK,
1
1
any JPrintingtfxJiouse^ life i/'Mf fi1"
JJ
*4Jt jtusx.
IN THE WEST.:
fen*
.. V. 4 itki 0&Wm iisiftVgizj®
:SSR#P,:
mj
timfi}'*
=-H'V
CLOTHING.
W.H. BANNISTER,
JLt No. TO Main Street,
Is now receiving hia
Fall Stock!
Consisting in part of
Hea
LAINIDX:ed
and Fancy
CASSIMERES!
BUSINESS SUITS,
Fine Black Cloths and Doeskins
A Beautiful line of Colored
Cloths and Beavers,
"SB
mli -asi"sshtut/u
-iMixed Coatings,
Cheviots, &c«, &c
Oontloinon wishing Clothing made to order in tho latest stylo ana most reliable manner, at reasonable prices, are requested to call and examine his stock before purchasing. sepSd w2m
SIMPSON'S COLUMN.
I
-p'TJ'FUS II. SIMPSON, 5
Attorney sit
I
LETTER HEADS, r* 9^
'•'"NOTE HEADS,
i^fi -ivj f'ir' n" 1^-*
LABELS,
NOTARY PUBLIC,
FIRE AND LIFE
nS
4
Insurance Agent,
1
"WA-HSTTED-
FARMS AND HOUSES in TO SELL AND RENT.
Continental Life Ins. Co.
Authorized by Special
•fiv
y.!
TTTb
Act
of the Ken tucky Legisla-
ture.
The Best Scheme Ever Offered to the Public .. Fully Authorised by Law
SEVEN splendid Ohio Rivor Bottom Farms, over Eight Hundred Acres of wkich are cleared and under cultivation, and have been rented the present year-ai $12 per acre, money rentod,
Good bonds for the have been taken, and will be assigned to those drawing said Farms: which will bo $1,200 in cash to each 100 acres.
ALSO
504 City Lots in Henderson Co., Ky., Making 611 Prizes in. all. Valued at $314,000. Capital Prize, $150,000,000 Smallest Prize, 80,000
The drawing to take place at Masonic Tomplo. Louisville, Kentucky, September 1st, 1869.
Tickets, 5,00 Each.
•For pamphlets giving description of property, containing Act of Lc?islaturc, and oeiuf icates of loading gentlemen of this and otiier States, apply to either of the following Agonts
L. H. IiTJiE, Farmer's Bank, Henderson, Kentucky. li. B. ALEXANDER,
Louisville, Ky. JOHN C.
li.
1
Commercial Bank,
LATHAM,
President Bank Hopkins-
ville, Hopkinsvillo, JAJIES L. ducah, Ky.
ille, Hopkinsvillo, Ky.
JAJIES
l. DALLAS,
Commercial Bank, Pa
0. THOMAS, Lexington. Ky. TV. B. Tl'LEB, Owensboro, 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 Agents.
R. H. SUHPS0N,
Club Agent, Terro Haute, Iendiana.
7diwtf.
HELPS
AGENTS
W.ANDT
THE KTOVELT1T
'p IS THP. OSI.Y WRING ICR THAT HAS
Patent Flange Cog-Wheels
ON BOTH ENDS OF THE ROLLS.
The cogs on one end of a roll are set relatively between those on tho other end of the same roll, virtually forming a
DOUBLE GEAR,
and thereby nearly doubling the purchase.— (The importance of setting gears in this position is not generally understood.)
Notwithstanding the rolls cau separate freely at either end, the Cog-wheels cannot be thrown out of gear on botn ends of the Wringer at the same time, unless the pressure is token off.
The Novelty is fastened to a tub or box by a Patent Curved Clamp, which has an equal bearon the tub the whole length of the vring»r er Wringers are merely fastened to a stave at each end, and are thus liable to wrench the staves from their proper position and ruin the tub.
The Cog-wheels, Thumb-sore.ws, Ac., aro nicely galvanized. Buy the "NOVELTY," or at loast tske it on trial with
ANY
or
ALL
others, and keep the
JIKST. Sold Etermchere. N. B. PHELPS 4 CO..
General Agents, 17 CortlandtSt.,New York. sep?0dwlm
INSURANCE.
QITY FIRE INSURANCE CO.
Of nABTFOBD, COKJiECTlCCT,
IISrCOHI*OIlA.T3Er, 1847. CAPITAL, $2r,0,000 Assctts, $512,000
T. WEBSTER, President. GEO. W. LESTER, Secretary.
mgf B. H. 8IMP805, Agemt.'
--vW i*
1-
V„.
$ikWi
'kfi
ARB receiving daily our Fall Stoct
VlL^ -andoffer greatbai*wn» in
Dress Goods,
Broche Shawls, Heavy Winter Shawls, Single Shawls,
And^Plain Flannels'ofall Kinds,
I '1*^1
I
Terre Haute, Ind.
OFFICE—In Scott's Building, up stairs, op posite tho Now Court House. NOTICE—Collections made in and- out of Court, at reasonable commission.
ESPECIAL ATTENTION given to settlements of Estates and Guardians in the Probate Court.
OP NEW YORK. :f
CAPITAL, paid in 9 100,000,00 ASSETTS 2,167,1/8.4? POLICIES issued for 1869 6,004
B. II. SIMPSON, District Agent.
Marlldwtf
Magnfent Enterprise!
1
•nU-
Best Bargains Yet Offered!
AT-
DRY GOODS
HEADQUARTERS,
t'ORSER OF rOlTKTH AND MAIS,
20,000 Yards
Printed DeLaine
19c per yard hare been selling at 25c.1
10,000 Yards
Plain Lustres,
At 20c per Yards, regular pqice everywhere 2Jc per yara.
A new Lot of
Handsome Prints
At S, 10 and 12£r.
3,000 Yards
Canton Flannels,
At 18%c Sold last Winter at 20c.
50 Itoz. all
LINN EN TOWELS,
,v.. At loOc per Dozen.
50 pieces Brown and Half Bleached
TABLE LINENS.
Very Cheap.
A Big Lot of
Miners' Flannels,
At 8£%c. Formecly sold at We.
JA
Pull Stock of
ti
3
Breakfast Shawls* Dress Flannels, Shirting Flannels,
Canton,
h,-'
IT-
...
8S •. We trill not be undersold on*
I
Bleachcl Musi ins
Prints,
Checks,
a
stripes,
i-C 'V t?~rTA. Ticks, S and Denims, "tsi- ft
Ha*
£,. (Jt»
't '"s«i
We have a fine stock ot
BROADCLOTHS,
i'J:* VM^'.
Cassimeres, Tweeds,
Jean8,^&>
Which wc will soil at very lowest prices.
CORNELIUS & HAGGERTY,
&
Cor. Main and Third Sts.,
t,- it' I'- W"
'V f.
TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.
DRY GOODS.
A,'l
LOOK!!
'i'Si
Fall and Winter Goods,
AT PRICES BKLOW t'OMPKTITION.
r",#
Warren, Hoberg & Co.,.
(Sueceaaore to Edsall Co.
