Daily Wabash Express, Volume 20, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 June 1870 — Page 2
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NOTES AMD CLIPPINGS. I— York Herald says thai a
Th« Hew
"Akerniau contributes pluc£( «im b«ng| brains into the Cabinet. The Savannah
Republican
WILI. the
in favor of the land-grabbers eha^ be endorsed by the Congressional Convention to-morrow yrE a»i*i4iirindofie the
Ah organization called the TJnio? League, and having for its object the annexation of Canada to the United States, it is said ha» just bees started in the Dcf minion. Branches are to be established in every town to agitate the subject. The "manifest destiny" of our county evidently near at hand. A
It is habd to think of a more dispiriting announcement this hot weather that the one made by the Boston IWrawy*^ that "the countrywill shortly be startled with a'gigantic musical scheme, which will cause all other gatherings of a similafr nature which have preceded it to palp their, ineffectual fires.1'
Tau Prince of Wales, in a recent speecj at a dinner given in aid of the liondol Children's Hospital, said: "There is onj fact, gentlemen, to which I wish to dra^ your attention—viz-, that one third of the
adult
The Boston Traveller says that Senator Wilson has taken a decided stand against the importation of servile labor, either to take the place of the emancipated meh of the South or the working-men tjf the North. He says he. is opposed to casting a drag-net over the whole world and gathering up the degraded portion of mankind to lower the price of labor and degrade the working-men of the Unitejd States.
TheConstitutional amendment a*riking out the word "white" from the Constitution of Connecticut, after a full debate in the House, passed—yeaa 119, nays 89—by a party vote. It now goes to the next Legislature for a two thirds vote, and if adopted, goes before the people ior ratification or rejection. The capitalremoval question and the one changing the present basis of representation are now "going the rounds" of Connecticut's peculiar probational legislation. j.u i.j ... V't iilxTuavE preparations have been perfected fur the reception of the Presi dent uu bis.arrival in'Hartfoul, Saturday
July 2. He will give a reception at tbje Allyn House at 5 v. M., and at Oo| Jewell's residence in the evening. HJe will also be the guest of Gov. Jewell over the Sabbath, and will leave for Woodstock on the early morning train, Monday, the 4th. Gov. Jewell is now in New Havem conferring with Gov. English in reference to the reception in Connecticut.
21met
The
population of this country nevejr
(arrives#!n^atmity.''
f'!'
Journal
Jue 2D, 187fti rrr
11 ir
I |»i»
iv
zation
(Democratic)
.peaks of Hon. Amos T. Akeriaan's thorough, unqualified, dyed in the wool Radicalism.
Journal
insist that its article*
So tl^erj iaj^l^tljB
oil the Iriahman in Wales, after al^Q The papers are printing astory that "a man who was the valedictorian at Harvard about ten years since, now rings tlif bell to start the horse cars in an Indianj town." 'Which shows that in this blesa country a man may rise to eminence aw distinction, no matter under what unfavorable auspices he starts in life.
Butleb, who aspired to the position of leader of the House, vacated by Thad. Stevens, is generally acknowledged, to 1* a failure. The
Herald
says that, "incom
petent to control himself, he is, with all his great «a(Mbilities,reduced in Congress to the grade of an irresponsible bttshwhacker, whose only safety, as at Bermuda Hundred, is under the wing of Ged. •s ^rank .jf x-} ry A
v-!
.te flj i»
Goldwih Smith insists that the hits at him iu Disraeli's "Lothair'' axe sting less, and yet they make hiui wince dread fully. In this connection the Boston 't
recalls a story that was told of
4 foolish fellow who failed to get enlisted tor the war, but nevertheless determined to go a warfaring on his own charges.
He got an old, riisty piece of iron and took it to a grindstone with a view of sharpening it for a sword. A neighbor came along as he was thus engaged, learned his object, and observed that he :t. never would get his implement in a cod dition to cut- "Well, if it don't cut it may braise," was the reply. {Disraeli do$s §i not sting Smith hfe only braisfesi hik feelings.t (isit#
The "penny postage" ot England, sio often alluded to on this side of the water has led many to confound the "penuy" of that country with the "cent" of this The two coins differ in value in the proportion of nearly two to one. Taking into account the size of England, as compared with the United States, and the average distances that letters are carried f,the two countries, it will be found that 'postage with us is as cheap as, if not cheaper than, in England. While it ,„would be difficult to apply to a continent ail the niceties of regulation applicable to an island of the size of a single State, densely packed with population, yet our system of registered letters and money orders, the benefits of which are rapidly extending, seems to our people nearly everything desirable, if not quite as perfect as the English plan.
devotes a portion of its
space to an address delivered by a colored Democrat onll.'4fcBl»'4li ance with he doesn't wanti^anir njjro votesJ
The Chi
NUteflck«lr
Mass., is attracting the attention of laboring men throughout the country. The wonderful improvement of machinery, as applied to the shoe trade, together with this "cheap labqr," is becoming a senoos question With ihfe "Orfepimi." If ktteftstful in North Adams, it means, sneers
moVemS« are'' Ifkewlpe to bf discussed, and will not down at the bid? dingqf*pi|alfet*. \^Vhat «ril| be ^he effeet of cheap labor and Pagan ideas and practices introduced generally through wit the country, is a problem^f difiSa^f Solution, but is one that must be met. .. The Philadelphia
Pret*
and the amelioration of the coiidit lion of mankind. Just now they are turn* ing their attention to thet care ^nd re? format ion'of offenders "agaSnjit iht lawsl Through the earnest advocacy of a few? Je|dit^ ieformeis of the ^S»ti,|ijf |^eg^i lattire passed, diiring the sfea9ioh just cl6s? ed, a biU to|»*ovide iepatatelpisorfs for woqien and
for
Journals
at
tack upon the practice of keeping hlt|»T hog-pens within city -limit* Let the (wine migrate.- *h* '.
the ^la^i&cation and ^bet
teV ctiscipline o^ men. Tiie bill, which is broad enough in, its ti^ope io 'cover' the whole field of prison reform^ treats alj persons as capable of'reformation, and proceedihg'upon this theory will estab-j lish such discipline as will' secure thei highest n^efulne*9 while in |JAsbb'/&tid them for upright And self-supporting lived after their discharge.
Whatever woNimcmcAfi fruits th^ last Spanish revolution may produce un^ der the manipulatien of that ambitious and wily intriguer, Prim, it is certaiq that a genuine love of liberty animate4 many of the Spaniards, and that they have, ilk the -Cortes', reptesAtatives whd lack neither the courage nor the ability to present the views of the friends of freej dom. Foremost among these champiom stands Senor Castellar, who has proved hin»e)fpuor*tQi ofa ltigh:4i-det/i»d ai| uncompromising enemy to despotism[ His latesj eifort^in^be^alf o^ freedom anc right has been an apj^al in favor of tlui immediate liber^ion of e\jery sla
his argument lie quotedi the Emancipa tion Proclamation of Abraham Lincoln which drew forth approving applause at testing that true freedom ha* many devoted and brave friends ih Spairi, anci that the struggle for liberfy, which ^egai with the dethronement of Isabella, is no so near its end as Prim would have the worJd b^iaye^
,i
U.V
The St. Louis Democrat nominates Gratz Brown for Governor of Missotirij Mr. Brown Ls one of tlie ablest juen in that' State1-indeed, tie takes high rani: among the leading statesmen of -the na tion. In the great s'trug^eT^lreedoni in Kailfctf, Sir: BrOwti,* thiSi4l^managing editor of the
Missouri Democrat,
I A
"A Pneumatic Tube Four Hundred Miles Long." Under -this heading we recently put lished in our columns a statement purporting to come froin a correaiwndent ii the BOstdn ^Vutecfipt'relative to'a pnfeilmatic tube, said to extend from Glasgo^r to Lbddon/-^thfe cfpferitibnW tvhich was witnessed by the correspondent. a
I inquired if I might see a messa^ sent. "O, yes come round' lireie." Hje slipped a number of messages into tl*je pasteboard scroll, popped it into the tub aud mlvde signal. put my ear to tli |ube, and heard a slight rumbling noi.4 for seventeen seconds, when a bell raui beside me, indicating that the scroll hac arrived at the General Pa-it office, four hqpdred miles otfltjlti aim off took, |nV breath away tu think of it.
Kefening to this statement, the
tific American
But. in the first place, there is no pneij ^between UbMgowa&d ioii don. Second, if there were one, it would be iphpo^ibll, »ny ktatown meanfe, tw cause air to pass through it at anythinj like the velocity above stated. Foi hundred miles in. Seventeen eecortia his the rate of over eighty-four, thousand miles an hoitr. This is'a htrndreff anji forty, times faster than, a cannon ^al which flies six hundred miles per hour.
jo .1 Mileage.
A Washington letter writer xehiarki the "shrinkiug of distances which arie traveled by members of Congress. It 185i theT mileage of Senators amountet to $75,911 lu lste^was jiix intoe Send tors, it was but $29,312 40. lathe Hop* the mileage in 1859, iu round number! was $363,000 in 1865, $159,Odb. Thie mileage' has b4en tedhcefi orie-hilf bqt this isi lfcss than that. .The distances hare "shrunk." Thus Mr. Johnson, ^f Arkansas, used to charge 4,000 miles from Washington to Little Rock: Mr. Rice makes it a full thousand less. Mr. Grover, of Missouri, made his distance 3,500 miles, while Mr. Drake nufir reports 1,500. Mr. Gwinj'of California, used to receive about. f6,00u for mileage] Mr. Cole D. Bcight ^i0fihe^^\Sy,but
$1,146 his fellow-townsman, Newto^ Pratt, makes the distance 1,200 miles shorter, and obtaius only $339 for both ways. David l\irpie reported a distance of '2,03ti miles frpni JSortheru Indiana but Mr. Coliax finds ^00 miles leas, ^fterson Davis used to take $lj600 lot a reputed distance of 4,000 miles his successor, Mr. ReveU, lives 150 miles further away, reports a thousand miles, and receives a thousand dollars less,-—N. Y. Pofi.
DICKENS IfflOmPA. J^rtf
ins
tt
remarks that
nearly: all the great reforms which have swept oyer the country' had their origin in Massachusetts Itf people are alya^s found in the front rank of- every new movement for the advancement of fcivili-
News
Stk:
tjite
the weight of that influential journal the Free {State side, and noUiwipt^tanding the formidable obstacles of liis position in the metropolis of slave Missouri, during that long, bitter struggle thie centrG of slavery propagandism, he made one of the most memorable and hferbic contests foir freedom'tliat signalized that remarkable period of the nation's history. In 18G! he pnt himself in opposition to his party in that State by advocating the enfran chisement of rebels. This put him under a cloud politically, and hc^ retired from the Senatorial congest, allowing Sli •. Drake to take "his place in the United States Senate. The Kadicftl party iof Mis souri are How aliout to step forward tb Mr. Brown's advancetl position, and tlie indications j^e fair, Uiat, he wUl. become their leadef onoe more. His advent into political life again will be an era in
very
Sf itii
says:
We are sorry to be obliged to take^thje breath out of this story, which seeSis tb be very popular, aud everybody wishes ft were true.
the
igamted .That
event toqP place in the evening of the 9th of June, and the Scotia left Liverpool at noon of the 11th, but meanwhile the pens of the journalist* had been busy in recording the lending facts of his life—
the great public which was Mr.
We of
|Md|n, for
own critic of the great sketches Materials'
every man Is novelist^ jM|t. ofthehwnlii for a 'lifture biemphy that may that may tnke its place ny the ride of Boswelrs Johnson and Lockhfcrty Scott.
rtt
si» unuim -M—
A correspondent writes to the
Dadtf
with the initials "J. M. M0" giving the circumstances niider which the last letter from the pen of Dickens came tofcei Written, and a copy Of the letter itself/ which bears date the day .'before bis death. "J.
M. M." had wrttten to the novelist, suggesting that a passage in the tenth chapter of "Edwin Drood" .wad likely |o! wound the religious sensiblilities of many of his admirers. Thin passage is not cited in the
News,
but it is undoubtedly tU.e
following, in reference to Mr. Crisparkle: "Into this herbacious penitentiary situ-! a ted on an upper staircase landinj^fa low and narrow whitewashed cell, bunches of dried leaves hang from rasty hooks in the ceiling, and were spread o6t upon shelves, in company with portentous bottles—would the Reverend Sei
mus submissively he led,' like 'the hig. popular lamb who has so long and unre sistingly been led to the slaughter, and there would he, unlike that lamb, bore! nobody but himself
Mr! Dkk&s'd letter with- fefcfrdnfce to this passage is follows: i. it ."Gad's Hux Placjsvi vi Hiohajc, bh Bocheskb, Kent,, "Weewesdat, the 8th June, 187*0 "Dea*
It would be quite incon-
ceivable t6 mfe-^-but for your letter that any reasonable reader could attach a scriptural reference to a passage in a book of mine, reproducing a much-abused social of figure of speech, impressed into all sorts of service and on all sorts of inappropriate occasions, without the faint-, est connection of it with its original! source. I am truly shocked to fijid tl^at any reader can make the mistake. I ha^e always strives in my writings to expn veneration for the life and lessonq of oir SaVior because I feel it and because rewrote that history for my children-*---every one of whom knew it from having it repeated to them, long before they coiild read, and almost as soon as they could speak. But I have never made proclamation of this from the hotibe-tops
THE LAST BOOK UNFINISHED. I Concerning his recent, novel, and of his! habits of composition, as well as hi* invention of nameSj a writfer in the
says: /. 'The Mystery of Edwin Drood,' we ire told, gave its author more trouble thfin any of his former works. He complained of this, perhaps with" a sail presage of the truth. he tbfoOght, told tod much of the story in the qarly nuuiber.H and his thoughts did not flow so freely a of yore. It will remain incomplete fort ever, and the fourth part of the story al ready given to the public, and another part in manuscript, are all that will be kno#n of the last set of original char acters this author has introduced to tin world. "When Mr. Dickerts complained of hi: work giving him trouble we may be sure that the cause prompting the remark was not slight, for no writer set before himself more labariously the task of giving thf: public his
best. A great artist who
once pointed his portrait while he was ii the act of Writing'one of the^nost popular qf his stories that he related was Astonished at the trouble Dickens seemed to take over his work, at the number of forms in which he would write down a thought before he hit out the one which seemed to hie fastidious fancy the best, and at theeompatf ative smallness of the amount of manu|« script each day's sitting seemed to havp produced. Thi the ofij
ose, too, who have seeh of his work^
many of which he had bound and kept at his residence at Gad's Hill, describe them as full of interlineations and alterations while it is well known' that the quaint surnames of his characters, concerning which essay have been written, were the result of much painstaking. "Dickens, witti a genius which might havejustified his trusting implicitly and solely, placed his chief reliance on his own hard labor. It is said that when he saw a strange or odd name on a shop board, or in walking through a village or country town, he entered it in his pocketsbook and addfed it to his reserve list. Then, runs the story, when he wanted a striking surname for anew character, he had but io take the first half of one real name, and to add it to the second half of another, to produce the exact effect upon the eye and ear of the reader he desired."
Of the "Mystery of Edwin Drood" and the hope of its Completion, the, fact is given that it was the habit of Me. Dickens to,write out his stories from the en fully developing the plot and Writiug ii to it, so that wnile not more than oh
•.Sfmciaior
that as a humors,
ist he was the greatest England ever priduced—"Shakspeare himself certainly not excepted"—»-may be.i set down to this momentary feeling.—N.
Y.
isSS4fe&x®is
SHimeni, wnoBe_waru-
robe is as scanty as that of Adam before the fall, or any colored brother who mams the forest or fields of Congo or Dahomey at this day, from the monarch
certainly be insane. When first seen in mm
mm white man, near Magnolia, seated upon a faUen nee, eating pine cones. O* Mng approached he faisyd to eat, wrfif: oin self of aUfoora, apd, b^an, serftcning up the earth, lijtf a tefritr the scent of a rat or other vern^ip,' until ne' mahaged to get out of sight. When next seen it was eight! miles below, near tup raproad station at C^a^wa. jEjrerjr effort to get hjip to talk ia a*jr oo% even of his own color, failed,' and «n being ajiproacn,: ed he fled away rapidly until he was seen no more. He manifests no savage or brutal qualities,'"but -seeiils t«1 entertain an absolute dread of intercourse with htrmati beings. He appeared to about twenty-five yearn -of age, Well built and healthy. His Brig ernailsJiaVe grown toaa enormous length,^esediblingthe claws of some wild feline animal.•. It. as, believed that he, was originally a, ^unajv^, jtnd that he has for years lived, in ^he woods and swamps,, aud is not jayrarey ,of t!he emancipation tot hi§ £a£e. '^orme parties also believe that he is identical with the wild man described in
Weekli/ ka h»iin%
wie,
will pay for cents a moil Address 1 W York.
,iill
t'Nfy
—fr llt "rill
It
half the work has probably been written out by hi»iuiuiitableliand, the "mysteryf" was doubtless unraveled at the very bef ginning.'"
It is natural that the comments of the press on the genius of .Dickens, penned at the first burst of grateful sorrow at his death,, should be extravagant, and the verdict of the
1
"Kissing dm l*y Favor.'' i,i j! This old saying Was nicely illustrate^ one morning on the steamboat wharf at
planfe" Were about being hauled in, flije gallant C6knel (Who was always a prirnfc favorite of the, ladies) was in the act (jf in his valise, when his aUenUif) Wl» arrested bv'the arrival of a bnxotjj la9S, a first-rate specimen'of rural beai)t\j who accosted him with "Colonel Favor dear Colonel, I want tosend a message bi you
to
Boston." No galvanic shock ever operated upon a "subject" with greatsforce than the exclamation "dear-ColoneP' upon the susceptible expressman. 'fNVhat can I do tior'you, tiny -deary exclaims the gallant Colonel.
ijxmmernm Eiutttm. u»iN r." .j An item is going the rouds, statin) that "200^000 glasses beer were sol in Cincinnati during the late S?engecfest." Weare of opinion that the estimate is rather low. One house sold on ,ah average, each day of the festival, 150 kegs. As each kes contains 100 glasses, this would give 15,000 glasses per day ak the amount sold at this house alone. If Cincinnati iitieadv a* eavious papers in rival towias are continually asserting, let us by all mean* have the credit of taking gracefully to our bier.—Cm. Time?.
Harjper't
been Seen 'uehr- teks
bu^g a8year or more
(X. Pi hay-
June 22,' rf '»*t%
Hi mA
NEW ADYEftTI8EM ENTS.
Exteipiise,been
ijiMsm, tact,
Liberality, and
ike Beit Tat4it/h
J.u rf
f)7!
.nvilf.i
lirw 'id JlJ-ib:
Newspaper ri i* uv 11 jiwJ
j-tr
A Book Of 125 closely printed pages, latel issued* contains a list, of tlfehest America Advertising Mediintis, giving the namis, cir{ culation, and fulltoartibulars concoming'ui* leadinglDaily ai^l Weekly Political «qd papr ily Newspapers, together with those .paving large cireolatiolng, published iti the rntetat of Religion, Agriculture, Literature,^&^i 'Aci,
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The PiUahkirg (Pa.)
Saws! Axe»! Saws!
WKIiCH A ORIFFITHN,
Bmtea, Hast., or Detroit, Mich,
YES!
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Beat
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'ft. fHWinON 4 CO..
.3,
ur i:ll*plai'ED
a
,"f want to send a sweet kiss to Jenny D— how shall I do it?" replied tbje Uws. j'Do it?" says the ardent expresamaii, "why, kissing always goes by favor!" and turning his cheek to the blooming damsel he received a perfect bottneer. A \vag on board, observing the proceeding, quiel
tote'
—Esikys
Young Men, free, in seaUd envelop^ flow «d 4?hil4de
•thi reader to fa^diniit# either ien\ or wy Mi mal, at will. Mesmvisw, Spiritualig»i,»nd hundreds ol other c«rio«» eipermwBte. It can be obtained by sending address, with postage. toT.W. f5YA«e*^., »«t4l «om^ Eight Street, Philadelphia.
COAL.
Coal anC^oofl,
!).C.SfUHAUNffinF|. ofStunkard Jc. Barrick, for the' spe Coal and Wood, would retttectfully annoufce# to tha public that they will- keep consuwtly on id and
hand and for sale at lowest rajses,' all kind I at 1 and
iteg.'i
of Coal at wholesale and retail, also Wood for the fall and winter trade.
Office at No. 26 BwUtih UeuHe, ferre Baato,
Ind. ., share of the public patrona«a is*reepectfallr
•olicited
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for
over Twenty Years frat^y inssd upom Kioto's Rnral New-Yorker, Arid ks a'testiltit iJ'noW, ire-iemiteiitiy jth« Larg^styBest and Cheapest IttusMU/TCD BoKAX, |Lf?EEA»V A!U W«»KLY tb« World. Tens of thousands ,ql wide-awake People, all dvftr the CVmtiilenr, 'tttke'aiid admire the Ruhal for its superior
Ability, Value,
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ia thc rtiobt Eftdantly Printikl,'"ANp Utitted. Widely Citeidattd\,and Heartily Wploottied Paper, as a Mhyte, whkk.new. find* [WOil among the People? *B-Vol XXII .ftily Try it I Only 93. per jllr&Q per volume of,3S numbers,.«r |3.per Year. Less to clubs.
Hsubtcribe
n'dlipv adtlVess
T. MOORC 41 Park RoWv KeW ferk. -4-i
t? i- .e-i 1 ti,
g.f'gatoiT aui'l' li*o Hi "r^r*r**vH¥l pi4Wth*:»e*r 'York W KKKLY
50 Cts.
,_ t»OLliARSUN frvni now to January 1st 1871. ONE DOLLAR
I A' do. do. 50
Ifli-lffOTJATLY SUN. Publishers, New 1J
fS
mtil .•s&stsrau'.i
«tlif II- ifl'llilOTi)
iuui BHtR jUil^TS WASiTEB (|9UU\f ior. Newt lUuutinated and Iliustratediiditions.of the
BUNYAN'N PllitjltlM.S HAKU1NU ,lt 10Ul AJU A MIL V^If* L^8 The works,are n^w readj dress, for Catalogue of tli ion books puMisneu,
The works are n^w ready.for delivery, Ad tlie best selling SabScription books jpubtishe'd, W. ,\V. UARDl^O,Philadelphia Publisher
PATENTS.
Inventors whoiwish to takeiohtLetten Patont are advised to counsel with MUN.N tU.. editors of the
I KOIWCiflilK#
udi lu.
lis! ^4
Having recently gone into the show basinew now and aide-epliting e^lertainments.
aaiusM iM wioi»*•
isiji-
liB ,. Oi-l •»d' i«l :l£ f' "fli T' iT-ff f-Sf tM
Hb ca^etei-iw Showman fcai b^eW gl
thfere
iSaimti/ic Atmriaan,
Sver
who hav«
rosecuted claims before the Patent Office foi Twenty Tears: Their American and £uropean Patent. Aganny is the meat extensive in the *orJd^. Charges less thau.anj other reliable tigencV- A pataphlet cofitaiti-i ing full i^tTn^Uonst^inventors i^senyrmi3. "TTJTJf
MercHtfnt ha.Vbeen'i ftiiHiife: We are gltW to see H»»tihi»i trwe jpaSm been discovefed, inU'tllitj iiftAfftH/Bfe taUnt waano.Vbim,ip btash anaeen- urn W. 8.' KItX4LOVig & eo. thc Show' business and POSTER. BROTHERS that of Dry Gtoods'ahd Carpets, aSid'thin tath1 be in their, ^ement—for the people are afraid of these aristocratic stores, vtfth' their plate glass windows and tneir silver plated show tots, and ttieii* black Walnut fixtures, ana their 'perfumed two-thoaaand dollar clerks.' They knor ihese fbinf^ ttione^ knd thai the moMf mtNt come UUliar tICrA.1. 1 IICJ Miun IIIWC lUIUga vwt wwuv IMIW ".— ottt elf their'podrets ih'the j^iape of1 big pront*, and'this Is Why 'we baveao it
I i,
f'.yjtme ieMt
uf i! -iti iilii'i4* I. ""iS
tlie h-jtota unti.jtfi il* 4 jitw ii f# iU a iliiiiw
an
HJlll)
'mi Jf im hitf nf' I.... vi.. Ihil y.iJfi-iiti of bsKrt^f iii'iloiii «:ik1 ritUi -iM
I --ir L.i.
FOSTKR DROTHKRS
3*
1 ii: ,i. *i\*: «tH.»iri/'ri-f i'ltH-ii- iif Are cr^wcletT a'p' fiVli 'afs htfef!' tteW crowds bftodble, flecking
1
to'' tbeii1
""L,".FRESH, .'AKRIVifS
J£$toirard
,(Finis,:»d handftqme.MiisJipai«r S^n'ts, other»charge 12^4 •»•, WJ
AllSilk large Sun Umbrella$1 an^$1,25.-
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Leader,
in jts issue of
May 2®.TSwjfsaj»/ 'ItM if O. f.Rofell A Cd., miiih iSsiies thi# i#Kr»sting|a/id valuable book, is the largest and best Advertis^ ing Agency in the United States, and we cas cheerfully recommend it to the attention of those who desire to advertise their business scleiaitiaeaUjr aad ur^BiiMtgeall*, if stick a MPaii tjfet Is|sp frjlcuA amMint^prputfliciladOr me least "fMII rl i! (ESTABLISHED 1839.) WELCH & GRIFFITHS
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SAWS with Solid Teeth, or with Patent Adjjustable Points, superior to all Inserted Teeth Saws. «arPriee» Sedn«ed.-«l ®'Send for Price List and Circulars."»a
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It is currently reported ukitlMBl Bife* haa made We ara gratified^ liawaver,
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FROM NEW ItOEf:
iCkwinon iyiuslins. O aud^ 7 venta» sanie jothers sell at 8 and ^cepU, .^^.Pfin^,' 4, a»4i, j.4jIaiuh|aa 3prilig !PeI#a',,.^fi 14 .centa, worth, l-
Elegant Br«qa4e AlfiacfW ^.cen^ othe* Good line.of paffis-roUr price 20 cent*.
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Inline qualities of Dpeaa^Goods we.lfave anew stpek, juft w.fff.TFV*. nf convnon gpodfl inbigh priced! sLjres. .. .BlwK.Sjlks /tpiu $1 to $4 p%r y^rdA generally sold at fr6m $1.90 to (JBeaiittfnl.line Qf.^cales.^t. 25 cents, 6|#iter» charge 40 centa fi- w* ,lEleganllineif fWsAtowU 4?*^ Prices.-'• «uut n«y^i itjoonlJ i^ols «»r»4Q, W85.cj ^]W» f&i
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CALL AND SEE FOR YOURSELVES,
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hit i»itMtodi tTti-.f
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SiOOQi Yprds.yyring Delaines, At 121-j Cents.
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Positively only One^ Week Longer!
-torn irttiwxi'j ij.mti MM TlJf. itdviahM to info: the oitisena of Terr® Hute and aMnqma vMua, to inform tne oitisena of Terr® Hute a loinity that he haa opened thia morning a splendid line of
1 i'. I, ll I ,- I !.'l! II i. -il ... -if -I i,f Which wiU be sold with the balance of the Stock to the
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Ticking, that will hold Feathers, .iod* ytb ?1U At aO Centa per Yard.' "tU itiijri Jiiti CUi Ckjiihiii! It.JP 3)t *-,Ji tlst^.rfl vtb iitln,j-r b, ^11 '*"4 til ineil .»,i •:4liV/'«.i*.*i f. /. BOO^Atl Litieti T&wels^ ^u. iii# vlJgid ^v(V At lOCeQts a piece. &%t M? f»- !**tl to Hi'iil*- *UiA .^,rl ihl
We propo«B to carry these rates into our
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FSIITT$ ~A Np,' tlLEAOBEfi ^^15 BROWN (tiffin lr?U4«| but SIlINS,
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....... t'l Mil.« iiU ci:
•tutu At Auction, every day this week,,-^i yd»ndw an !«».•« (.1 ti-4" .«rf* ^.i *IIU- f. -rs:s -.1- ff
4
REGARDLESS OF COST!
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-. OFFERED TO THE TRADE-
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1 11 il iid pvi W •lill 'it 111 a i.int)a -i
Ii rf-ir -fM 1 I ii'-to of:Gopds eye*' oflerel to the |)iiblic at) .'ii till). «r
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Trade Sale every Morning at 10 A. Jt' Merchants Will saTe Fifty per cent, on Goods by attending this $ale. ', SaIe free for all at 2j and 8 P. M, a
ember thi$ is the week of slaughter ol
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MAm STi^DEMilsra iLOCK,
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9o«vvrf ,kd„ Tent Haut«, Indianaf ii udt lw
Mr. €. P. TROY, Auctioneer.
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21-2 eeiits for Prints if^¥]^giiib!
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Io tKttitrmfj" Wl T-tbai (uriiirfi.-ij wu'iifi. }1 Jajiiili.'.:,. A
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Wa offer
ter JMIi io inq ,:
SHfl tli
3rQQ0 Yards good Bleached Muslin, •il u, ,l- At.ipCQntS^ .liilgv bs»br^ao^9«e »l:.lil» n»wiW t. ,, ii. engirt vif. S,000 Yards Lawn, *U «... »a.t
At 11 Cents per Tard."
"nk
tilt ai. Ait Hatiftiiil) tdinii ....i-. i. ..f, HfttdMiie Lace Collirs*i'25 eeiits. Lace Hiatterehiefe, BMl Beauties, at 25 cents eat Plain Haadkercbiefs at 60 eentsj per dozen. Yell Berne it 30 «entS per'yart^. Ladies Extra Hose at lO ceiits per (MM97W 1 1 H. J»
_LLace Points, Rotinds and Jackets, Bezantine, a uev and elegant dress goods, Brocade Grenadines, Pure auks and Japanese Cloths at more attractive prices than were ever offered in Terre Hante
1 »HTi»a
Remember the Name and Place:
TuellvRipley & Deming'
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NOTION DEPARTMENTS
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Corner Main and Fifth 9tr»et$A
