Daily Wabash Express, Volume 21, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 July 1871 — Page 2
DAILY EXPRESS.
TERBE HAUTE, INDIANA.
Saturday Morning, July 29, 1871.
NEWS AND NOTES.
Jackson County
wants to be geologi
cally surveyed. There is a rumor, but we don't believe it, that FLik is to lecture on what be knows about riots.
As another evidence that Russia is preparing for peace, we note that she is about to put all her staff officers into the field in command of two large armies, to maintain long and thorough mimic attack and defense of St. Petersburg. The topographical information gained in the campaign is to be reduced to accurate maps, and filed for future reference.
The Indianapolis Commercial thinks that the Democratic members of the Ku Klux Investigation Committee have adopted the plan of the Irishman who, when told that two men would swear they saw him steal the ham, replied that he could find fifty men who would swear that they did not see him steal it. So every day or two a batch of
T,
1
A
debate
A Scientific survey of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan establishes the exist ence of an unlimited supply of iron ore in a region where none was heretofore known to exist. excellent percentage, and it outcrops in ridges ranging from one hundred to three hundred feet above the surface of the average level of the surrounding country The outlet of the newly discovered iron supply is now Green Bay, though pro jected railroads, soor. to be completed, will make it Mackinac. The mineral resources of the country, so far as known,
The Indianapolis Journal thinks the great heart of the American nation must have swelled with gratitude, well nigh to bursting, upon reading of the movement in New York among the Bibbonmen
poses of protecting our free institution* from the insidious approaches of monarchy and despotism. The patriotic gen tlemen who resolved to thus organize are the same who recently "organized" themselves to break the heads of the Orange
•v.
io.l i_ -f.u a j~.
The great and good Horace shows the odd way which California politicians have of dealing with practical questions. One great lack in that region is unskilled labor. Farmers, it is stated in the San Francisco papers, are offering $1 50 per day with board, and cannot get men enough for their work. Three farmers from one locality went to the city labor markets for hands—needing thirty-two— and got only ten. So the Democratic and Republican Conventions meet and resolve that cheap Chinese labor is an unmitigated nuisance and they will have none of it. It would serve them just right if the Government should take them at their word and prohibit further immigration.
Death and Burial of Sir John Moore. BY JAMBS PARTON. The most insignificant person who has access to a newspaper constantly imparts something of his own personality to the public. If it is only his duty to select a column of paragraphs, he is influenced in the selection by the peculiar character of his own mind, and he will unconsciously give prominence to his favorite men facts measures and ideas.
When I think of this, I feel how im portant it is that the rank and file of the press, the paragraph makers, the reporters, and all who have to do with reading exchanges and making selections, should be men of genuine intelligence and true
evidence is put out with much ado, of lovers of their country. some nice conversative who has not seen Why is every school-boy in the United
anybody Ku Eluxed, and therefore«.don
Tn States familiar with the name of Sir
1
j0hn Moore? It is not because he was an
believe there are any Ku Klux. All such eminent soldier and died bravely on the evidence as this don't amount to the pa- I battle-field. Hundreds of generals since per it is written on.
he
in Parliament on cheap la- country, and yet their names have passed bor, a report of which is reprinted in the I out of popular remembrance. Why then New York Tribune, discloses an appalling
.... V, that one day in 181/, a little poem about condition of things among the English him
poor. We hear of children employed, 10f the author, was published in the Tele* half naked, in the brick-yards carrying vgraph, a weekly journal published the lumps of wet clay, weighing forty or fifty I small town of Newry, in the North of pounds, on their heads. And these infants—for such some of them seem almost to be—earn wages on which their unnatural parents live at ease. This abuse was taken up by that noted philanthropist, Earl Shaftesbury, and, sec onded by the press, his zealous labors have brought the question of remedy before the country. It seems time that some effort were made to secure these unfortunate children from their dreadful condition
Happily, many of the most valuable works of art, for the possession of which Paris was famous, hare escaped injury. One of the most remarkable of these cases of preservation is that of the celebrated Milo statue of Venus, formerly a prominent attraction in the Louvre. Be-
the Prussian bomb shells, and out of
beginning of the bloody career of
Bonaparte have given their lives for their
ma
1
fenembered? 1 he reason, is,
without the congent 0rknowledge
Ireland. It began: I ''Not a drum was heard, not a funoral note. As his corpse to the ramparts we harried
Not a soldier discharged his farewell shot O'er the grave where our hero was buried." The poem ended with a stanza which millions of people know by heart: "Slowly and sadly we laid him down.
From the field of his fame fresh and gory We carved not a lino, and we raised not a stone,
Bat we left him alone in his glory." The author of these lines was Charles
fore the siege it was placed in the cellars gjr John Moore, both hit own name and of the Prefecture of Police in a triple! that of the General would have been case. There it was out of the reach of|j°»g "go forgotten by the great pub
1
is JJmuch waste in life—waste
of health, energy, hope and diligence Perhaps, of all foolish and confident peo' pie, the man who amasses wealth by self« denial, griping assiduity and remorseless exaction, plays the worst game and wastes his vitality to the least purpose. Such a man may die possessed of large estates— what then? He can carry nothing with him. His weeping widow will, in due time, transfer her fortune and her person to another, or waste his painfully-gath ered means in the attempt to supply hia place by anew adorer. His children will not appreciate the value of a possession they have had no hand in acquiring, and] will, perhaps, recklessly spend that which years were wasted in hoarding. He has wasted a life in gathering together gold. One scheme after another, well digested and ably executed, procured him his goodly riches, only to furnish the means of waste to others."
Wolfe, a graduate of the Universityof borne and the Aides-de Camp, and de Dublin, a member of a family that, ositedin Colonel Graham's Quarters claimed kindred with the conquerer of Quebec. When he wrote this poem he was a clergyman of the Church of England, settled near Belfast, in the North of Ireland. A few years after in 1823 —he died of oonsmption, agaed thirtyone. This little poem which had an immediate popularity, led to the publication of a small volume of his Remains which, however, added nothing to his reputation. But for these verses upon
This is the more remarkable, from the
sight of the Vandals of the Commune, at I that every stanza in the poem exwhose hands it probably would have I cept two is incorrect as a statement of met with the Bame fate as did everything I ,®'r John Moore was not buried ., ., "darkly, at dead of night," but at eight beautiful that met their gaze. From its
0 cl0ck J/n the morni
hiding place the statue was recontlj re- I grave were not turned with the soldiers' stored to its place of honor in the Lou- "bayonets," but the grave was regularly vre, where it will once more be a source of delight and instruction to all students of art and lovers of the beautiful. "There
foe sods of his
aad deliberately dug with the proper implements. The prayers said over the grave were not "few" nor "short," for the whole burial service was read by a chap* lain. Nor was the service interrupted by the "random gun," when "half our heavy task was done for the British held the spot for thirty hours after the funeral Moreover, the body could just as well have been conveyed to England, only it had been the General's repeated and earnest request, that if he was killed in battle, he should be buried where he fell. But with all these errors of statement, there is a music and a pathos in Wolfe's simple lines which keep them current and popular to the present hour.
Among the young officers who served in the British army during the American Revolution, and remained in America until the evacuation of New York, in 1783, was Lieutenant John Moore, son of Dr. John Moore, a noted author of the last century, wlio accompanied the young Duke of Hamilton as medical compaa ion, when he made the tour of Europe. From regard to the father, the Duke of Hamilton procured a commission in the army for the son, when the son was only fifteen years of age. He was but twentytwo, indeed, when General Washington tuMohed down the $owery in 1783, while the last of the British forooa were going on board the fleet in the harbor, getting under way for England. In the course of the next twenty years, partly by good service, but chiefly by purchase, hemadebis to the rank of Colonel.
way to tbe rank ot Uolonel. He was a
The ore is said to be of 7 meritorious officer he wa. intel
1
ligent and full or resources as he was brave and resolute. While still a young man, he was employed to suppress a rebellion in Ireland, and we find him recording in his diary the uncommon opin ion, at that day, that Ireland could be best pacified by treating the people with justice and humanity.
He won distinction in the expedition, commanded by the Duke of York, which was sent out to deliver the Dutch from Napoleon. In one of the battles,
are almost beyond computation, and yet (General Moore was wounded, first in the they are insignificant in value to those next in the thigh, and again in the ,IT I face: but even then, had to be forced yet to be unearthed. The West especially,
from the
which the Pacific railroads are rapidly him further developing, seems to be one vast region, li lied with all the metals that conduce U)
field-coniuct which secured
promotion and important
employment. In 1808, he was appointed to the chief I
,i,„ ...i,!, ,,, command of an army destined to operate headpiece the most comical piece of hu the wealth and importance of the coun-
in Spain
try. The Salt Lake Tribune gives some Before beginning his advance from Por- never think of it without laughing, interesting particulars of a silver mine tugal, he received from the Spanish gov- though the worms ate it some forty years recently discovered, which is turning out I
ernment
of_o» p«d«v, worth feiuSd &TS
one hundred and thirty-five dollars per set foot upon Spanish soil. He discoverton over and above all expenses, the I however, as Wellington afterward net profits being thirteen thousand five
th^
hundred dollars for everv twentv-four °?f°
I
to organize Irish regiments for the pur- him with an army three times his
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of the collar bone, leaving the arm hanging by the flesh. The violence of the stroke threw him off his horse on his back"
Captain Hardinge dismounted, and taking hold of the General's hand told him that the regiment in question was advancing upon hearing which the wounded General smiled. He was soon removed behind the shelter of a wall, and while an officer was gone for a surgeon, Coptin Hardinge tried to stop the flow of blood with his sash, but could not, from the size of the wound. While they were taking him to the rear in a blanket, his sword became entangled, and Captain Hardinge was proceeding to unbuckle it. The General said, in his usual tone and manner "It is as well as it is I had rather it should go out of the field with me."
When the surgeons arrived, he said to them "You can be of no service to me go to the soldiers, to whom you may be useful."
As he was carried along slowly in his blanket, he often made the soldiers who were carrying him bait, and torn him round, so that he could see the action, and listen to the firing and his countenance expressed pleasure as the sound grew fainter. When he had reached his quarters, he said to an old companion in arms:
Anderson, you know that I always wished to die in this way," Several times he asked, "Are the French beaten?"
When he was told that thev had been beaten back at every point he said: "I hope the people of England will be satisfied. I hope my country will do me justice. Anderson, you will see my friends as soon as you can. Tell them everything. Say to my mother—"
These were his last words. At the thought of his mother he was deeply moved, and before he could recover his speech, he breathed his last.
The circumstances of his burial, as related by an eye-witness, Mr. James Moore were the following. As soon as. he was dead, the officers of hisataff were obliged at Once to consider what disposition should be made of the remains when Colonel Anderson, his oldest and nearest friend, pat an end to the discussion, by making known to the staff that it was the General's desire to be buried where he Tell. It was then determined that the body should be buried the next morning, on the rampart of the citadel of Corunna. "At twelve o'clock at night," says this historian, "the remains of Sir John Moore were accordingly carried to the citadel by Colonel Graham, Major Col
posited in Colonel Grahams quarters. A grave was dug by a party of the Ninth Regiment, the Aides-de-Camp attending by turns. No coffin could be procured, and the body was never undressed, but .wrapped up by the officers of his Btaff in a military oloak and blanket. Toward eight o'clock in' the morning some firing was heard. It was then resolved to finish the interment, lest a serious, attact should be made, on which the: officers would be ordered away, and not suffered to pay the last duties to their (General. The officers of his family bore the -body to the grave the funeral Bervice was read by the chaplain and the corpse was cov ered with earth."
For thirty hoiirs longer, as above remarked, the British held the place during which the army was embarked on board the fleet, which conveyed it beyond the reach of Napoleon, only to incur a tempest still more violent, which sent many of the vessels tp the bottom of the ocean.—K. Y. Ledgers
Another Story About Bees—How a Cool-Headed Man Escaped Death. Prom the Boston Traveler.]
A story is going the rounds of the news* papers to the effect that a swarm of bees lately lit upon a boy, in Missouri, and that the father of the boy got him off with but one sting (given by a bee that the child hit to keep it out of his mouth), by telling him to stand perfectly still, and then removing his hat, which was covered with bees, and placing it on a bush, to which the other bees immediately swarmed. This is pronounced "gammon" by some ignoramuses, but to every person who knows anything about bees it will be the most probabls thing in the world. Bees are not offensive creatures, and a million of them might settle upon the naked person of the Kentucky giant, and he not be stung even once, were he to keep perfectly quiet but were he to move, or endeavor to rfemove them, the bees would immediately assume the offensive-defensive mode of making war—that is, they would defend themselves by offending him— and probably sting him to death in a few minutes. Many, many years ago, we lived hard by Squire S., in the town of Blank. Blank State who kept a dozen hives of bees—we hadn got learned «aough then to have apiaries—all of which stood on long shelves under a monstrous plane-tree that was in the yard in front of the Squire's house and we never think Plato and thyme, and Hymettus and the drowsy hum of bees without being reminded of those dear hopey-makers the long, long ago—for the window which we sat at school looked right out upon the hives, and there was always a delicious murmur going^ on among them that was as sweet as the memorem murmur of the neighboring woods. Well, ope day in summer the old Squire was stand* ing before his hives, bare-headed and bald-headed, like Elisha the Prophet— but with bees, not boys (or bears,) near him—and with nothing on him but his shirt aud shoes and trousers, when the inhabitants of one of the hives suddenly swarmed and lit upon the venerable man's pate, which they covered in layers two or three inches deep, making his
^et Napoleon Buonaparte, manity we ever gazed upon, so that we
positive assurance that sixty or since, creeping in and creeping out as »"M"1* iKnn..n^ their manner is, and as they will with yours, sir, clever as you think it is—and with yours, madame, handsome as it is
ernment a positive assurance that sixty or
Spanish armies existed only in
W.lr
°®Ce ?nd
twenty iour found himself within three marches of
hours, or nearly five millions per annum, the French army, with a few brigades of The inspirited 1" otirth of July orator has I British infantry, and not a corporal's some reason to express the belief thatj guard of Spanish soldiers. In these cir"this is a great country."
he,
^yps'ances he did whatever was pos
.i. ... I siblei' fpr the support ofthe Spanish On the 2oth of August the editors of I throne. the Ninth Congressional District will ®ut Napoleon himself came to the as« meet at Muncie, for the purpose of organizing a District Editorial Association.
sistance of his marshals in the Peninsu la and when, with his usual rapidity of movement, he had seized'the capital, he stood the inspection of the Gerat Frederadvanced by forced marches, at the head of sixty thousand men, toward Sir John Moore with his army of twenty-three thousand. Against Soult and his division Moore could have made a successful campaign but in the midst of a movement against Soult, Sir John Moore was in- ,, formed that Napoleon was approaching I
to
selves to burn negro orphan asylums, and won the battle of Corunna, in which he to hang unoffending people to lamp posts, fell. The Chicago Times is not overly^ pleased And now for his death and burial. with this last proposition of theirs, and The manner in which he was wounded suggests a consideration of the query put is thus described by Captain Hardinge, by John Bandolph to the ^blackleg who a member of his staff: proposed to lay a wager with the eccen- "I was pointing out to the General the trie Virginian on a horse-race, "Smith, situation of the battalion, and our horses here, will hold the stakes," said the were touching at the moment, when a •harper. "Very well,'' a*id-Randolph, cannon shot from the enemy's battery "but who will hold Smith?" carried away his left shoulder and part •'wr-y'iv
We suppose the bees mistook the Squire's face for a gigantic full-blown rose of anew pattern which required to be looked into immediately, for it was of a most beautiful new rum color, which thfe 8quire heightened with twelve daily applications of internal paint, a proper (or rather a common) practice enough in those ante* (and anti«) temperance times, when rum was rum, and punch was perfect. The 'Squire was thoroughly up to the dodges of the apes, and so he stood still, and stiff as an iron ramrod that had
ick. Just then Mrs. S came to the door of the house, and, seeing her hus« band in such a plight, gave the usual feminine speech in such cases made and provided, and then said to him, "Keep where you are while I go and get the broom, to brush 'em off." "I'm dead if I do!" thought the 'Squire. He then managed to grope his way to a large tub
1
number, and he had no choice but to re- that he had just previously filled with treat to the sea-coast and reembark. water from a neighboring brook for rins jNapoleon, Wellington, Seult and Napier ing purposes, and which stood on a high •m? i8
masterly ability bench. Into this water he dipped his
with which this retreat was conducted, head slowly till-it was entirely immersed
and the spirited manner in which occa- and held it there, holding his breath at
men on the luh of July, if they dared to sionally the General turned and beat the same time, till every bee was made parade in honor of the Battle of the back his pursuers. It was when he had sufficiently stingless to have satisfied Mr Boyne. In 1865 they "organized" them- reached the seaside that he fought and
Mr
Eugene Wrayburn himself. The water swarmed with bees, and the old gentleman swarmed into the house with the only white face he had worn for almost half a century, and which he never repeated until he lay in his coffin. If, reader, you ever should be swarmed upon, do as the Squire did, and prove the excellence of the water cure. If you coald contrive to have the water iced, so mach the better for you—and so much the worse for the bees.
THE SINGER
BT JOH* O. WHITTIKK.
Years since (but name* to me before). Two siitert sought at eve my door Two song birds wandering from their nest, A gray old farm-house in the West.
Timid and young, the elder had Even then a smile too sweetly sad The crown of pain that all most wear Too early pressed her midnight hair.
Yet ere the summer eve grew long. Her modest lips were sweet with song A memory haunted all her words Of clover-fields and singing birds.
/.Oi
lier dark dilating eves expressed The broad horizons of the West Her speech dropped prairie flowers the gold Of harvest wheat about her rolled.*" ••r.'t Fore-doemed to song she seemed to me I queried not with destiny: I knew the trial and the need. Yet, all the more, said, God-speed ,j
What could I other than I did? 'i9! Could I a singing bird forbid Deny the wind-stirred leaf? Rebuke The music ofthe forost brook? ^5
She went with morning from my door, .: But left me richer than before '15 Thenceforth I knew her voioe of oheer. The welcome of her partial ear.
Years passed: through all the land her name A pleasant household word became All felt behind the singer stood A sweet and gracious womanhood.
Her life was earnest work, not play Her tired feet climbed1 a weary way And even through her'lightest strain We heard an undertone of pain.
Unseen by her her fair fame grew. The good she did she'rarely knew Unguessedof her in life the love oVF That rained its tears her grave above
For all that patriot bosom stirs
Our converse, from her suffering be'd iTo healthful themes oflife she led The out-door world of bad and bloom And light and sweetness filled her room. 71!*}
1
Yet evermore an underbought Of loss to come within us wrought, 4nd all the while we ftlf the strain Of the strong will that conquered pain.
God giveth quietness at last I The common way that all have passed She went, with mortal yearnings fond, To fuller life and love beyond.
Fold the rapt soul .in your embrace My dear ones! Uive the singer place 1 it To you, to her—I know not where— .' ,i I lift the silence of a prayer.
3
For only thus our own we find: I The gone before, the left behind, All mortal voices die betWeen The unheard reaches the unseen .'toil:
Again the blackbirds ting the streams Wake laughing, from their winter dreams, Aiui tremble in the April showers _1 •_ *.1 A
The tassels of th« maple flowers.
But not fnrTinr-htin nrri»'g rn«iwfirt'" The sweet surprises of the wood: -TT"And bird and flewers are lost to her Who was their best interpreter I s.
What to shut eyts has God revealed?, What hear the ears that'death has sealed? What undreamed beauty passing'show Requites the loss of all we khowT -.-ii. 0 silent land, to which wo move, Enough if there alone be love And mortal need can ne'er outgrow-• What it is.waitingte bestow 1 .j 11
0 white soul! from that far off shore
MaplewoodgreatMass..—of
:,
Float i6tne sweet Song the waters o'er,^ Oar faith eonflrini Our fears dispel
Cheap Farms! Free Travel}
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad Company.
.600,000 Acres
CHOICE IOWA LANDS.
These lands are held under a title direct from the General Government, and are noi mortgaged or encumbered in any way. lull warranty deeds given to purchasers., .. for maps, pamphlets, or any other information respecti... .Andreas EBENEZBB COOK, Land Commissioner, Davenport. IOwai
EXPLORING TICKETS are sold at 'the Company's ticket offices at Chicago, and all other principal Stations on its line, and if the purchaser buys land the amount Mid for the tioket is applied oil
I»K. OLIASi S IE FOR TH« Btar.
PATNLKS8 CURE FOE TRB
OPIUM
Enables the patient to discontinue tbe use of Opium in any form at ionce, without pain or inconvenience, and without any interrurr. tion of ordinary business.' It rebuilds tne broken constitution and restores Ws'iiervous energies. Iifia the only Paiblesa Cni'e tbr the
Opian flaMi ever Mscbveied.
TKEBIAEI:
DR. SAMUEL B. COLUIffl, IMiska.
SCHIEDAM AROMATIC Pure, Healthful and Invigorating S E I N I
Operates directly on tho Kidneys, and is better than duchu. It is extensively prescribed by physicians. For sale everywhere.
AGENTS TAKE NOTICE! _7E?^eMon^ur|jSgSp!^naC^T^a55C
^an^
people jikethem More Tm^Igents Wante New Britain, Conn*
Agents! Bead This!
WE Will, PAY AGENTS A SAL AST OF MO PEK WEEK and ExpeaMO, or allow a large commission to sell and wonderful inventions. AddresrM. NER A CO., Marshall, Mich.
-#U:
DRY GOODS.
TsT. 'j-
J.
it fftr# ii 1 aiii 1.9
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a
When last I saw her, fall of feace, P*: She waited for. her grlat release And that old friend so sage and bland
1
Oar later Franklin, held her hand.
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1
Had moved that woman's heart'of Kert," And men who toiled in storm and sun Found her their meet companion.
This Company is now offering for sale about ponflisinn of fin aiicf.ion TODTT1 HOW six hundred thousand acres ofthe finest agii- I
cultural lands in t' sells only to actual are exceedingly #5 to $15 per acre, S8. The greater part of these landivie situated along,the line of its railroad between (he cities ofBes Moines and CouncilBldffa, and I -••.. are in the moat accessible and fertile/ region W, *J: uLr. in the State.
S reasonable. fanrgiqkTfrom I ^w,.
Sales made for cash or on oredit long enough to enable any industrions man to pay for tne land out of its crops.
wlm
'-IWOlft
or
the purchase money.
.r.p
IIA BIT.
DR. COLLIN'S ANTIDOTE,
a* ,/i. 4^
')r-
Ji.si -j.-iJ sn
j.
THEIR LAST DOSE.
A book of over 100 wf FITZ-HOG0 LU~.«v.j,. iiwiw letter of G. A, expositg th*e intrigUM^I HARPER'S MAGAZINE and LUDLOW.^and a full description of the Antidote, sent free to any address. Address,
ofA
^itz-hu°gh i?D?UjO^?
if.)!'![
0mo
They have a
ifc r'f l'bs.i r-v"
1
.il
xi
tq.
our new WAGK
,ooo MM)
at their H*tnes, or Travel part or I all of the time. Will send a sample, me to commence work with. M. M. TILTON Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania.
REMOVAL.
REMOVED.
UNf£
¥.f
jlJ
it :s
W A 1 S
HAS REMOVED his office to Beach's Bloek, earner ef Main and Sixth streets, twe doori north of the Postoffice. Residence. North South Third street, between Poplarand Swan. aprll-dSii
8.
ih
r:z-
'T{ 9.*J to
dm.i cf ,.fja
1
s-ur--] iii i! Wim if ildl •l' I.fSf
some cases below, dost.
Slit
1
With the old voice we loved so weltl
I®! 111
Institute for Younj La- fi,o nrinf
fiOLliEGIATE and Cemneielal institate, New.Haven, Coin. Preparatory to College, Busine:s, Scientific Schools. U. S. Military 'and Naval Academies.' Fall session, thirty-sixth year beg:nsSept.13, catalogues, sc., address, the Principal.
18 A AO ALL
NEW YORK STORE,
Just reoeivod at th« NEW YOBK ONE-PRICK DRY GOODS STORE, the following '••ry cheap goods: 60 Linen and Lawn Suits. n\ 36 Handsome Lade Points. 160 pieces White Marseilles. 100 dosen Cheap Hosiery
TOE I PEMINC.
SWffc'
RIPLEY & BEJIKG
WILL INAUGURATE THEIB EXTRAORDINARY SALES OH
MONDAY, JULY lOtfi,
I to elofee 'out Siimiifer Goods
IS Counter will contain our Frou Frou Grenadines, Striped Grenadines, Alsace Plaids, Check Lenos,
Figured Alpacas, Piques, &c. French and Scoteh Ginghams, Linen and ]?rench Lawns, Yo Semite Stripes, Iron Grenadines, Summer Silks, Gaepe Maretz. Silk Challi, and all our "Summer Suitings" will be offered in patterns at, and in
3*iurHfilol8 will be cHeaper than they knowii to be in Tew*e Haute. ®4ne Fisnn I—Ladies, now is the time to buy. !-—If you do not need them this season it will pay you to biiy them or next.
Childreii's !—We have a line of very
fine Hose for Children and Misses—most too good for
:is left of a piecej i^ill be closed out cheap. ^}1 —Some low priced and'some Very fine and costly will be includad in the sale.
I a a W
Lama, Light- Brocade and Grenadine Shawls are to be sold at corresponding low rates.
Hi :v/ Or.'m baoilMl lUji-'fj illO A
NEW ADVERTlSENfEllltl I :,isWe do not intend to pack up a yard of Summer Groods W a a S a a a to
dies, Pittsfield, long and widelr OUnng tne Winter. known for beauty location and Sȣl S* superiority of instrnotion. SPEAR, Principal,
Bev. C. V. .y.f: i:
.h'nita/. !o
I .m
i!As
For
HOW GHBAP:
cheap as we think they would sell at auction, without regard to cost. Only one price will be named. •'These Goods are the best we have in the store, but $ey must'make room for Fall Stock, and all ''Summer Fabrics" not sold within 30 days will be sold at ,r
for cash in hand, to the highest bidder. Ladies who desire to select their goods and avoid the nfusion of an auction room, now have a better oppor than was ever offered in the city.
au
iuulu,
iiuvv
TUELL EIPLEY & DEMING,
Obr. Mrid and Fifth Sts,
^TEMICE-HA VTE, INDIAWAt
CLOTH INC
YOU CAN SAVE MONET
I N O I N
AND
0«nt's Furnishing Goods,
AT
TKeii* DIA9I01VD "D" is the Best Fitting Dress Skirt In tte'lavfceli mi:
GOODS. DRY GOODS.
SALES!
feu?
fc'.ui'. S-. iSff'.H 'is* Killi'i*r~' .'/11 llf»« 1
were ever
.i
A. 1
tlV S'uil
•X
lilt
tih loiv
& CO.'S
Ml'
STORE.
th^ we^kno^a I Ooods are all Marked in Plain Figures at the I CANCER CUBED I.OWKST PRICES.
T:
Full Line of GAUZE UNDERSHIRTS fur Men and Boys.
9!:-v it w-. !im\ .-!i -ij O -rTtii-
Their Merchant Tailoring Department is Stocked with all styles of
SCOTCH, ENGLISH,! .FRENCH AXD DOMESTIC
CLOTHS, €OATI^e» A
Middle Room, Opera House Building. Uvt\ I ici
Mi
RTAKER8.
UNDERTAKER Is.Weprred- to ezeMte alt'eMers in lilrlia* wifli nee^aeii dispMeh, ebraar of Third and Cherry street^, Terre If ante, Ind.
PIANQ TilNIMC.
Vlliiun ZOBEC. PIANO TUNER.}
jryiDERS left at B. G, COX'S Book Store Vr will receive pro«jt attehtioa. b15
.. v-
'"K™"*3, and TEftHBrGS
r-':
,sUs
CHOITUSCLASS.
TEItRE-IIAUTEi
CHOBim CLASS. hiv-itr fenst.?
TERRE HAUTE CHORUS CLASS A meets every Tfeeeday and Friday nigkt, from S to 10 e'clocki at the Terre Haute
Iistitsto
,73 MAIN STREET,
60 pos New Summer Dress Goods 46 doz. Doable Shirt Fronts. 80 Shetland Shawls, "f, 26 pos Black Alpaca.
The above Goods will be sold at extremely low prices, and we invite the attention of buyers to hisffcdt.
n.'i 'f#
-,1f
it
:u hv-rq vi WJ- I
'-."ia if Ue
nwi 91 ii bo -.7'
Have all en Mced
the market—which we will sell at a bargain. (Persons Goods, we have purchased in large quantities and will give our c-Htomar.-s the ad-
whobuy fine goods Will please take notice.) i" I yaJd of^on Fabric has been marked up. although the good, have adWH rwr UlTW lVfmtititig I By the piece, or what vanced 25 p£r cent, in New York. Parlies desiring to purchase should not delay
money before they examine this invention I and hear Mr. Boswell's terms, at 'least. •vOrders taken and machines furnished I promptly at the Terre Haute News Depot, (sixth street, opposite the Postofflce, by
P. CRAFTS, where a machine oan be seen operation at any time. •^Corresponding Office,»No. 16 South Pennsylvania street, Indianapolis, Indiana*
1
OOFING.'
Rook River Paper Co's Buildint Roofing. Slate,
Felt and Cement Roofing,
DK. SAMUEL KIRKMAN
I ^FFERS his services, to the afflicted, and
proposes to cure the following diseases, vis: Scrofula, Sore Eyes and Fever Sores. He also makes the
Cure of Cancer a Specialty And will ioill warrant a curs i* from mas to eight weeks. Terms made known on application to the Doctor, at Rockville, Parke County. Indiana. jyo-w6m
PROFESSIONAL.
RS. WATERS MUfiM -J
DftY GOODS.
ffea^Court Hyi}se Square.
rV
REDUCTIONS!
if. i* U»' jU." ill
Warren,Hoberg& Co.
SPRING AND SUMMER DRY GOODS!
Orcatiy Reduced Priocs...
7mi ,•.
J- Jv
«.
WHITE GOODS, THIN DRESS GOODS,
OPERA
-ivrf
FRUIT DRYER.
BOSWELL'« .i\C\
Standard Fruit ilDryer, Mai J. BOOM HEATEB, CLOTHES DBYKB.
I Aau JDS-OUT HEATEB Combine!?,
The Greatest Household Invention of tbe 'j Age for Economy,-Convenience -,, and Useralness.
It is a neat piece of furniture, a general purpose machine is the most simple of construction, cheapest, most durable, ornamental and ready sale of anything before the people, and oan be manufactured from a sample a chine, in afry vil'age, by ordinary workmen..
MADE SUITS, PARASOLS, SUN UMBRELLAS, •1 V'rir': -,L {»J« ,U
sir.
LADIES', HISSES' and CHILDREN'S HOSIERY ik •sT,43r:. •.
9V.IT
doing so a moment. We shall pffer Extra Bargains for the xt Sixty Days. ic 7K..I wis I -hi
YOU
We do not atte fa pt a Bcriptidnofthis vjhv
ion, as
We Show by tualdemonstration more than would be credited on pa
per. It will'go Into every family, and 'is the best investment we ever made, is the expression ot all who are ®8lnK them.— Thus, Boswell makes no selections for reference. All who are taking an interest in Bosinvention, any .that men
omplaln of being nn»H»4omaka
jyls-ati
ROOFING.
CLIFT & WILLIAMS, XJI'i 'i| Agents and Dealers in I John'sPatent Asbestos Roofing
/a
Chicago Elastic Stone Roofing
PAPERS, used in the place of Plastering on the inside, and for Sneathing under the siding on the outside.
Roofs applied in city and oountry and warranted. Call on us at the Prairie Citj Planing Mills, corner of 9th and Mulberry •trwits. majMdtl
PROFESSIONAL.
& ELDER,
Homeopathic Physicians rid/:.—» ilmi.I *9 Si
SURGEONS.
Office—Cherry Street, bet. Sixth mnd Seventh jy!3-dtf
WINES.
Kit .•
U'V. i'
Bmm%
OVEjR TBE POSTOFFICE. Jo ivNit Members admitted at any time. CBABVEfl„ novl-d6
a
vi
JACOB FISHER
Has just received another choice lot ef
RHINE, FRENCH AND CALIFORNIA WINES* Which he will sell by the bottle gallon at reasonable priees. Try a bottle* If -yon want tor* article.
'^ARTIES will be famished pr rn^by ^VSl-wtf^ ^"^in.*Sf &!!&£ the gallon or in dosens.
Mlk.
i! IT., 5T.: S.
73 Mail! Street,
NEAR COURr HOUSE SQUAKK.
ONE PRICE ONLY.^
W A S N O E O '.it ii 5 tr.'n ..k o-l 1
Wittenberg:, Rasehhaapt ft Cs.
Mmmewe ?Li
CXjOSirtTG-" OXJO? SALE
Of their Entire Stock of^
'Cv JH-i
/j
Having antici^d the riVe in cdtwft thi oM
WARREN, HOBERG '& CO.,
HOUSE.
fif
,:v
it
if'l
ft
it -.J- aV.T iSi Vr .ISW
•?.«w «s, Sbl
DINES, SHAWLS, LACE POINTS, WHITE u, LAWN and COLORED LINEN READY-
GREN-X-
Wni.t
•411'. ffv.
BOOKS.
Tbe Book Trade
REVIVING 1:
in.m:
O. BAHTLETT & CO.,
101 Main Street,
•r. (it rk-d
will find the following Books for sale cheap: Little Women, parts first and second, by L.
Alcott.
Little Men, by the same. Pink and White Tyranny, by H. B. Stowe. Uncle Tom's Cabin, Lady Byron Vindicated, The Chimney Corner, ." Little Foxes, Almost a Priest, Beulan, Vashti, and St. Elms, by Augusta J. Evans.
Sanctum Sanctorum, by Theodore Tilton. Among My Books, by Lowell. Our Poetical FaTorites. by A. C. Kendrich. Women and Theatres, by Olive Logan. Rural Hours, by Cooper. Common Sense in the Household, by Marion Harland.
Ten. Oreat Religions. Yesterday, To-Day and Forever, Mill Bank, by Holmes. The Destroyer of the Second Republic, The Empty Heart, He That Oyercomeih, Illustrative Gatherings, Bitter Sweet, Kathrina, and Titcomb's Letters, by Holland.
Miriam, Ten Times One, Christianity the Religion of Nature, The Vioarof Wakefield, Hedged In, The Hollands, The Excellent Wo min. Tne Schonberg Cotta Family,The Victory of the Vanquished. The Qates Wide Open, Blindpits, Benedicite, Words and Their Uses, Ecce Homo, Letters from tho East, by Bryant.
Puck, The Life of Charles Diokens, Writings of Charles Dickens, and numerous other rood Books, which you are invited to call at 01 Main Street and examine.
If you want reading matter for a little money, you will find itatO. BARTLKTT ic CO'S, as they want to close out their miscellaneous stock immediately. 2Vdlw
WOOD STOVE. 1
Early Breakfast
WOODSl{i
v.
1il£
COOK1JFG
iS -j
STOVE '*T
j\ ''I -it 10,860 Sold in 1870.
OYER30,000 IN ACTUAL U8E
THE LARGEST OVEN of any Stove in the United states. Palent Indestructible Double Fire Bottom.
USES LESS FUEL than Stoves with ovens one-third smaller. HOT AIR CHAMBER in front of even.
EVERY STOVE GUARANTEED to plve perfect satisfaction, and its baking qualities equal to those of the old-fashioned, brick oven.
Manufactured from a No, 1 Charcoal Iroe by "v.K lia-BEDWAY & BURTON,
Jinelunatl, Ohio.
For sale by all reliable Stove Dealers like
R. L. BALL,
je20-43m iTtrre HenU, lad,
E N O A I N
YOUR
BEDS CLEANED! PERSONS
who prefer clean, light and heal-
thy feather beds to those In tneir naturally foul and unhealthy condition, oan have them by leaving their bed or order at the Renovating Establishment on .the corner of First and Ohio streets. All kinds of Mattresses Renovaed Feather Beds will also be made into Mattresses if desired. Work called for and returned the same day, if neces sary, with nearly the same weight and doable the bulk. Only one bed dressed at a time,
J. N. VAN SICKLE
