Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 January 1870 — Page 2

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THE

U ^abiUKed r»«fy v«ek'day •'dock, at Um ofBee, *ortfcw«t mmd Circle ctmcte. Price, two «orta Steered by carriers ia nr pert of

PfEWfl.j f’

Frk» fcr

a<. •»< (>' it »M. bat fcw The bwtory lid Its note, end the indvide’jrend beneficUUy. feers irwei a %yn<-nyni

for sloth and feebleness, when tt was started

deHart jm warnum, tw j it was aa nearly a synonym for enterprise and

ability. It was unquestionably the ablest of,its party till the great Xew Vork. f dailies introduced a new era of newspaper work, and until the death of Joseph Gales, its political articles might challenge a comparison with any in any country, for force, fulness of knowledge, and court eousnes? of tone to con-

m , _________ I ir ll■I temporaries. It was a shade too dignified to TH fl li VJtlNUHO I HEWS, I ^ ^wy popular, but it exerted a strong influ-

iwentr-ire carta tor three ■earlii, or fortr-dve cdKTpif' aoa'th. f ' — - ail eemaa^eatlem, whether oa bortaert or for paMkattoa, mart bt adiwed to the Maneger. f JOffSI If. HOLUHAT.

CWaod. ?

Towssmsr*

eydil^ wtea^ He

TrEHDAl

tY n, 1870.

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it isaotlwytmd the liaaha nf tirobabititr,that before the vernal e*|ninox we shall have become owners In fee of two or three of the Waft India island*. The Senate has in the hands of it* Committee on Foreign Relations, A treaty for the annexation of Ht. Domingo, negotiated with Baez, and the treaty for the purchase of St. Thomas ir beginning to gather force from considerations of good faith that it could not have obtained from any consideration of it* importance to us. Bt. Domingo it a good property, or can be made so by a Government strong enough to repress revolutions, add though we can do rery well without it, Ad»* done very well for n< arly a hundred years without it, yet it afford, an excellent Bargl station, and ample opportunities to study the phenomena of earthquakes. The faculty trisitiveness is strong in the American re, and the mere pride of ownership may the treaty through the Senate, even it we got nothing by the property but the name of having it. As to the St. Thomas purchase, it begins to look now as if Mr. Seward had committed us so deeply that we can not hack out without discredit, and giving offense to a friendly power. Denmark did not want to sell, wa* not on the hunt of a customer at all, and probably would never have thought of ‘■dickering” If Mr. Seward had not suggested H. She was coaxed into the thing, and not very easily coaxed either, Denmark is rather an extensive holder of colonies, and* no doubt has Some pride in it. But Mr. Seward s cash was Stronger than their pride, .tnd she agreed to sc^l. .> if she bad been tearing as to buy. her rase would be different, but she had not. She meant to accommodate us, and it is not exactly tb« fair thing to repudiate a bargain that she made on our account more than her own. This;is the shape the case takes now, und we -[ fancy that the Senate will ratify the bargain. Ht. Thomas is a valuable island, but given to | internal disturbance and flatulence in a perilous degree. If there Is any truth in the theory of the earth's central heat, that island is the plactf to ascertain it, and for hurricane, its advantages are unequalled. In a scienti6c point of vi«w we could not get a bit of land that wouljd do so much service, and though, with 'i Ht. Domingo in our hands, we arc not likely to halve much other use for it, still, like Mrs. Toodlcs’s match boxes, It may be well enough

to have it handy.

Prbachkr* are not greatly better than other men, and pfobhbly nothing better should be expect*} of them than ether*- yet more is expected, and disappointed confidence gives double deplb to tbc impression which their follies WiilTe. They 8 'lihgerbus but dastardly weapon against religion itself, and weaken that sort of faith that pins itself to the leading and opinions of others. Such faith is not worth much, but as long, as it suffice! to keep men decorous, if not pure, it is better than nothing. Vice, as Burke says, sometime? ”loa?i half evil, in losing all its grossne**,” ^ a regard for appearances is not altogether a bad thing to cultivate. When, therefore, a man from whom is expected an example of good, of respect for law, for decency, and the behests of religion, scouts them all, and defiantly proclaims himself a villain, as it seems the Rev. Mr. Cook, of New York, has done, deserts his wife, abandons his children, and ruins a young girl, who probably is incapable of estimating the act she has committed, and certainly incapable of appreciating its effect upon others, he does just about all the mischief that is attainable by average depravity. A murder would have been a less matter, for the victim of an assassin is not defiled by ike act that destroys his life, while in this case the worst of what is wholly evil is that the victim is befouled as well as injured. Of course the “Satanic press’ will teem with flings at preachers, and ribaldry that will not spare even religion itaelf, but a just man will separate the act from the profession, anti see, in the attention it attracts, a strong proof that such sins are at least as unusual in the ministry as they are abominable.

ence with the men who influenced the opinions of th£ country, and thus achieved both and a reputation far beyond what belonged to its circulation. £ talesmen read iti, and not unfrequently wrote for it. If it could have been maintained in the position given it by its founders, its demise for any pecuniary difficulty would be justly deplored, but it degenerated first to a wrong-beaded pro-slavery organ, then to a half-hearted supporter of the Government during the war, and then to nothing. In the very extremity of worthlessness

it died.

The New Albany Commercial pays the following doubtful compliment: ‘'The Terre Haute Weekly Gazette looks greatly improved typographically, and is greatly improved in its contents, since the shooting of both its proprietors and editors by that Terre Haute policeman. 1 ’

1 believe if I And vou she

CoULSoiiih and deads* afTthe world The folded orta would open a* thy breath. And (has its exile in the aiaks of death. Idle would ease gladly back along my veins.

I heiieve if I mem dead,

©a upon my lifeless heart should i Wf whSt the JttrtV CThd might W, It would find sadden palm beneath the touch Of him itever kired in life so much. Aad throb again, wurm, tender, true to thee.

«,97a«2;j ag«; tte

were $l,fC,43fl j to male tekefaera rs

males, $28.

An urchin of six op seven year* wAt into a barber shop in Racine. Wis_. dud ordered the barber toeot hie hair a? close nv stacsss’ would

I believe if on my grave. Hidden in woody depths

or by ti»e wave.

Your eye* should drop some warm tear* of regret. From every salt weed of your loving grief Some Crir. sweet bJoseoia- would leap up fn letf. To prove death could not make m r love forget.

I believe if I should fade

^ ^Into those realms wbere.Hghi is made. I'would come forth upon the hills of night’

I would eome forth upon the bills of nighb

I believe my toitfa in thee. strong as my life, *o nohJyr>]aced to be, It wi»jM a* soon expert to see tne sun Fall like a dead kinz from his bight sublime,: His glory stricken from the th rone of time, [ As the unworthy worship thou hast won! I believe one who has not loved Hath half the pleasure of this life unproved;’ Like one wko hath :h«- grape within his grasp, Drops it with all its crimson juice unpressed. And all its luscious sweetness quite nngnemed. Out from his careless and unheeding clasp. I believe love, pure and true, ' Is to the sonl a sweet immortt! dew That gems life's petale.in its hours of dusk; - The waiting angels see and recognize The rich crown jewel, lave of . Paradise, When life fails from us like a withered husk.

“8C11APS.**

Mdroe. Grini. . The immediate canfte of Mdme. GrUi's death arose from her refusal to have a poultice applied to a carbuncle on her face. It was at her suggestion, and with *the consent of her medical adviser, repressed, and thus poisoned the blood and affected the brain. At her death a second carbuncle had formed near the eyeJ These particulars we learn from a private correspondent in Berlin. The house of Grisi in the Champ Elysees is valued at £40,000, and the villa salviati, near Florence, belonging to Mario, contains various costly jewels and cadeaux Belonging to the deceased vocalist. Mdme. Grisi’s remains have been deposited in the family vault at Pere Lacbaiae. The bodv was enclosed in three coffins, viz: of crystal, oak, and lead; the outer one was enriched with costly bronze and other ornaments, valued at 15,000 franca. Her operatic career extended over a period of twenty seven years in London, and she sang nine 'hundred and twenty-five nights. Of these, she appeared in “Lucrexla Borgia” one hundred times, .“II Puritani ’ ninetv-two; ,“Les Huguenots” and “Don Giovanni T eighty-four each, and in •Norma” seventy-nine wines. The remaining four hundred anil eighth-six nights were divided between thirty-two other operas. The prirna donna's performances were distributed among thirteen composers, thus: Donizetta, two hundred and eighteen nights; Rossini, one hundred and ninety-seven; Betlinil one hundred and ninety-five; Mozart, one hundred and eight; Meyerbeer.'one hundred and five; Verdi, thirty; Mercadante, fourteen; Costa, twelve; Guecoo, twenty-one; Cimarnsa, nineteen; Balfe, four; Mantaua, two; Ricci, one only. THE GIRL REMARKABLE.

A Mimdozuury's Damehtor the Quean of the Philadelphia Forty Thieve*. The Philadelphia Age says thatEmnm West Dantield is Queen of a gang in that city known as the “Forty Thieves." She is a young woman. Her age is twenty-one years, and she is neither pretty nor exceedingly plain ia ap-j pearunee. ~Bbe states that she is tne daughter of a local preacher living in Germantown, who was once a missionary to India. For more than two years she has been one of the moving spiritiofthe “Forty Thieves.’’ A

ighinst ill the

Ristori is in Paris. Dubuque owes $440,000. Tom Thumb is at Yokohama, Japan. Female Rings—Ladies sewing circles. Peoria is eleven thousand dollars ahead. Editors are called deadheads because they get bored for nothing. j- j The total number of deaths in St. Louis during 1869 was 5,884. Stewart has sold this season twenty $2,000 shawls and one for $5,800. Emigrants can novt go from New York to San Francisco for $40. Ohio courts divorced 1,000 couples laist Jear ‘.<* « A Minnesota pisciculturist is going to breed trout in California. Chicago has a Microscopical Society, the il»ition fee to which is $80. The Plymouth Church people have added $5,000 to Mr. Beecher's salary. The Rothschilds have recently purchased enormous quantities of United States bonds. Velvet boots, the color of the dress, ati worn with elaborate costumes. The King of Sweden is going to deliver lectures. M I , }• In theyearending October 31,24,601 persons died in New York and 8,667 in Brooklyn. Mrs. W ales is troubled to find a name for her last baby. Mount Altna would be a good one. A young man in Princeton has four grandmother’s living. Desmoines built two hundred and fifty new houses last year. San Francisco highwaymen lasso their viictims. The Methodists have forty-nine colleges au< collegiate institutions.

do it. He was asked if bis mother ordered It that way. “No,” said he, “but school cam J tnences next week, and we’ve got a schoolmam that pulls hair, and Fra bound to fix her this term, you bet-’ Bayard Taylor, in his lecture at Chilioothe, ' Ohio, last week, said he had travelled fifty j thousand miles in Europe and ka«f never had an accident or missed a connection. While in America it so happened he had traveled two weeks, and in that short time had seven accidents and never made a single connec-

tion.

The fallowing petition, signed by thirtyseven boys, has been presented to the Common Council of Grand Rapids, Michigan: “The undersigned, boy* of to-day, but the voters of a few ..years hence, respectfully request your honorable body to enforce the ordinance requiring our fathers to keep their sidewalks free from snow.. If we may not slide upon the sidewalks, to* would like to have them kept so we can walk upon them. --The elementary schools in Prussia, long praised by visitors, are suffering from the endeavors of the government to make them the medium of teaching dogmatic theology rather than ordinary secular knowledge. Two-thirds of the teaching consists of hymns and texts. The same is true of the seminaries in which the teachers are trained, and the principle of excluding everything not according with the state creed is carried out so far that the young pupils are strictly forbidden to read Goethe, Schiller, or any of the German classics. Profesior Quimby, of Dartmouth college, relates the following rich '‘experience;’’ Upon a certain time he was explaining to a Vermont farmer some of the wonderful combinations of numbers. Tjte mAh; listened with a great deal of interest and attention, and the professor was led to gond ude that he had made a, deep impression, when the former skid, “Yes, that is wondetfiil, ftuly, lint 'there is another thing that Is more wonderftfl |dtfre than that, and I can’t understand it, yet you must do it every time, or it won t come out right; that is, that you must carry one for every ten!*’ The professor attempted no further elucidation of the mysteries of mathematics.

mm

liOts

to All.

RICH AND POOR ALIKE.

I lean parts in seek nthef.

Ce^rT^U 1 ^ "* ^T 1 p * r| * tu * Ily * Alwiyi be Kept in Order. j / . b .f . ... 4 ^

WFamiks may remove from the city with the sure assurance that the resting places of theft dead

will never be neglected.

dec7-sm

QUEENSWARE.

G. f. Atismn & co.. HEW' MOM, No. 32 Sontli Meridian Street, % ! IJfDfANAPOI.ia. : ; Wholesale and Retail China, Class & Qneensware, STOVES, TINWARE, CUTLERY fAN D HOUSE-FURNISHING GOODS. doc? Sm i , i>#- ftrfel.a.iteS!„v?s ■?

PIANOS.

FOR HOLIDAYS. '7' V" the vr:

HAINES

NEWSPAPERS AND MEN.

ri

NEWSPAPER

elegance of style and finish. Every article used In the construction of the Haines Plano is of the beat quality, and in the best condition. Tba prices being reasonable they can not fail to suit any who may

desire to pure has*.-

M. A. STOWE1A, Agent for Indianapolis, ia now receiving an assortment for this market. Also, ('bickering A Sons and Cottage Pianos, the tort and haipest. Good second-hand Pianos at low figures,

instruments to rent. Pianos tuned ‘

Instruments to rent. Pianos tuned.

deea-8m-wed,fii,mon.

BOOK BINDERY.

the entreaties of hef p&reuis, AgStust all the Michigan has ooc hundred aad forty-five

wfe Congregationalcbnrchea. &

ever the gang held its rendezvous, there she would go, and remain for weeks at a.time, doing the cooking for the vagabonds, who compose it. In a hollow made by the intersection of the Junction railway embankment with that of the Norristown railway, the members generally assembled. Old rails and boards wire leanded against one of thesteep embankments, and thus formed a rude shelter under which the gang slept. A pile of old railroad ties, near by, was used to cover up the booty that was secured in the city, by robberies of every description. The stump of a tree was burned out, and made quite a stove, by which the “Queen’’ cooked the food for the thieves. This girl has l em often an inmate of the sta-tion-house. She is cunning in her speech, relative to the operations of the gang. She traces her first step downward, to the influence of a near relative. * ^

▲m Owl Story.

[From the New York Eveaiag Post]

On the Oxmead road, about two and a half miles from Burlington. N. J. t bordering upon

~ ‘ ~ who was

the orig-

worn bid sycamore tree tCMSfethe road of stately growth, hollow at the tap. the yeare 1807 this old sycamore has been the home and nest of an owl family, having withstood the rude assaults of mischievous boys and more wicked men, who have at various time* endeavored to dislodge them, assaulting their habitation, and even attempting to burn them out, but these harmless birds have always found a firm protector in the proprietor of Oxmead farm, until it is finally conceded that the tree belongs by right of possession to this owl family, and of late they are unmolested.

Mr. Sampson, the financial editor of the London Times, has not recovered from the attack of rebel sympathies that made him denounce our bonds when they were first issued, and subscribe liberally to the rebel cotton loan. Although our securities hare advanced twenty per cent, in London, and although we have paid off. in two years, more of our debt than England has done in fifty years, and although we have such resources as England never had, even when thejfwere unexhausted, with power* of recuperation and growth bevond the appreciation of Europe, yet this Venal libeller sneers at our credit at erery opportunity, and i ndulges in complacent comparisons between consols at 92 and five-twen-ties at 86, with a rate of interest on the latter nearly double that of the former. This is merely spite, and like most ebullitions of that feeling does little more than expose the folly that indulge* it. Many Influences combine to iSj—ss nnr shocks abroad, and the worst* the talk of, repudipiion, and the possibility which capital never loses sight of, that some time the feeling which at least tolerates the notion of paying our debts with an act of Congress, may gain the ascendency. When it does, and the talk which i* now but grumbling becomes authoritative and pervades Congressional debates, we may look for our bonds to foU lower than they were when gold was $80k At present, a writer in the London New* show* that, allowing for exchange, fivetwenrissare higher than consol*. They are aetonDy highor on the coalmen^ aad adding exchange they are higher than console hM

ever been at home oy jkbrend.

S’. Tan National latelligsnceris dead again; •This rime we suppose Is this lo«A It was i^TVrare awhn'in tbe water, unexpected nor —isisml Yet oaF cannot ^ » nd hSSLs « though JEsjait to tho “Limbo ’ of Idct enterprises 1 touched a fish.

The chaste Leo Hudson is personating Lady

Godiva in Springfield, Mass.

There are one thousand, two -hundred and' fifty convict? in the Joliet penitentiary. Eleven London theaters fife used for preach-

ing on Sunday evenings.

The State debt of Michigan was reduced

one hundred land seventy thousand dollars lafet p , op , e try ^ kl}ep ; wfty their doors,

month. . I r r J

mile* from Burlington. N. J., bordering the farm of George D- Parrish, Epo., wl 'to the manner born,’’ grandson of the

ey are i

dusk of evening it i* tne habit of this owl to pay a nightly visit to it* benefactor, where, Iterching itself in one of the tree* about the souse, I have often heard it, it gives forth its notes of thanksgiving as if in praise of him who has been its protector. Sometimes it takes a turn, coining across the road to my place, perches itself in one ol my trees, giving

us a cheerful salutation,

v There may be a moral drawn from this marked instinct of* bird in its seeming recognition of the kindness af its benefactor that I leave your renders to apply. The curious feet is, that for sixty-one years this family of owls have been known to inhabit that old sycamore tree. It is a study

for the ornithologist.

One of the most exquisite wonders of the sen is called the opelet, and is about as large as the German aster, leaking, Indeed, very much like one. Imagine a very large double aster, with ever so many long petals of a light green, glossy as satin, and each one tipped with rose color. Throe lovely petals do not lie quietly in their places, like those of the aster in tout garden, bat wave about in the wmter, while the opeiet generally dings to rock. How innocent and kwely it looks on its rockv bed! Who weald suspect that it wonld eat anything grosser than dew or sunlight? But those kenutifnl waving arms, as von call them, have another use besides looking pretty. They have to provide food for * lorge^ open month which is bidder deep down among them—so well hidden that ewe can scarcely find k. Well to they perform their Maty, for the instant a foolish little fishlet

The nail mills of Wheeling made eight hundred thousand kegs of nails last year. The question of “Methodist Union” will henceforward be warmly agitated by the leaders of that denomination. j A feather for the Revolution—Solomon's wisdom is attributed to the fact that he had

sixteen hnndred wives.

Dickens says his confidence is all bestowed upon people with a big P. This excludes Thompson, who uses a small p. ' i The population connected with the Protestaut churches of the world now exceeds one It is hundred millions. ■ 1 r [‘ ;

Since

A California paper is down on a »man because be backed out of a fight after getting both ears chawed’off. M i r, -i • The Methodist newspaper says that the advance of protestantism in Mexico is marvel-

ous.

The firemen in Norwich, Connecticut, turned out early on Monday morning to put out tbe aurora borealis. * '

touches one of the rosy rip* be isWretcfewNk’

Colonel S. I. M. Major, a Kentucky editor, has been re-elected Mayor of Frankfort. Some of the French journals complain that Eugenie is the cause of their persecution. Ogden Junction is tbe name of a new semiweekly paper published at Ogden, Utah. There is talk again of starting a “first class” Democratic newspaper in Washington The San Francisco Bulletin was printed Friday on an eight cylander lightning press, the first on the Pacific coast. Tbe Janesville (Wis.) Gazette commences the new year in a new dress, and wears an im-

proved appearance.

The Christian Instructor,'of Philadelphia, _ _ _ ^ ■- and the United Presbyterian, of Pittsburg, BOOK B1 ]Nf ir *** have been consolidated, and will hereafter be

published at Pittsburg.

Louisville journals announce that George D. Prentice has nearly n covered from his late illness, and will soon resume his editorial

duties.

Wisconsin has a weekly paper called the Lean Wolf which can pot have a large circulation, since it is precisely the thing which

DALLY SENTINEL

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. -.iltSif ->• • i a »!'•'*' ... «*

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THE ONLY EVENING PAPER

•Jo the 031y which publishes the

JH

Dispatches of tie taeeiaM Pres,

' V 9y ■' MU * And has the power u> recelv*

I.

SPECIAL

■ 'S * ", DISPATCHES.

ITS MARKET REPORTS

jStf&ssJSfSfrXrg .tssjssjr Business men can depend upon them, tor they are revised dally by * competent and careful reporter. The quotations from

A v ... L

nd Commercial Onten are extensive, and vHImbrace everything which will belof interest and > aloe to the business public.

NEW SENTINEL BUILDING.

Oorner of

.Meridian

and Circle Street*,

THE LOCAL NEWS

A Connecticut Yankee has invented a top that runs forty minutes and weighs over a pound. j, . . * ' f : An Ohio paper says: “We have heard of a housewife in this town so exclusively neat that she scrubbed her kitchen floor until she fell through into the cellar. A young gentleman of Charles City, Iowa, sent seventy-five rents for a method of writing without pen or ink. He received, in large type, on a card. “Write with a pencil.” A Canadian merchant, who died recently, bequeathed a large sum of mouey to hi* clerks, to some as high as $5,600 in cash, and an interest in tbe business. Oafe of the “wealthy Americans,” who recently marri<fl an aristocratic young lady at Milan, turns out to be a roving journeyman Rev. George Pearce is the oldest nusmonsy in India. He has been laboring there, under tote appointment of the English Baptist Society, for forty-three jears.^ James 0. Andrew, of .South Carolina, tl the oldest Methodist Bishop in the country. He was admitted into Conference inlflH, and was made bishop twenty yearn alter. _ it "4 ■ • - . iJLfo»S ’ The Unitarian* bare tnj

J"The Zionsville News is the name of a small weekly paper just established at Zionsville by H. J. Grieves. We trust that a large ending may come from this small beginning. Editors do not seem to be popular in Maysville, Kentucky. One of them ran for Clerk and received two votes, and another for Mayor and received forty—tbe lowest cast Tor' any

candidate.

Alphonso Ross, of Boston and the Advertiser, has been connected with the editorial force of that paper for twenty years—a longer term than any other editor, or any of the pro-. prktore. . - . Poor Edward A. Pollard knows no peace. Mrs. Pollard, who is keeping a hotel in New York, gives notice through the papers that she has no personal dr business relations with

him.

Young Swain, son of the late proprietor of the Philadelphia Public Ledger, with the $4,000,000 left to him, will start a daily morning penny paper in Philadelphia. He is propared to expend $500,000 in establishing bis pa^er. “ / 4 The Board of Directors of the Chicago Be. publican Company have determined on a change in tbe editorial and business management of that Fstabliahment, Mr. I. N. Higgins is no longer the editor. L. W. PoweH, Esq., who has for some time been publisher of the paper, has been entrusted with the management of the entire concern.

%

IKDIAHAPOLIS, HP.

In connection with oar huge

JOB PRINTING OFFICE BOOK BINDERIES i ' ; ’ i ' : ' ■: . ■ • • In the Western country, and are prepared to do all | Imj.- |««j? 4- m ^ W B L AIV K TV O It K With promptness, and In a manner that we

rant will i

pres*.

THEJNEWS is eminently 1

-A. Popular Paper.

B«ing interefttiBf alike to the bueiaeee mao, to thejoyed by parpnU and children. No one ekoal4 bewithout it. The Editor ia aUy mmUted in the preparation of tha Paper, and accomplished correepondente of acknowledged ability, have been eecurttin. tbe leading Cities.,

itt A vff *' flufj*

I give entire —tiefcetion.

i -;

' ■ „. ,' T '

Cheapest Paper in 'fee WesU

Ttan.ROAi> officehs Are requested to examine our BLANK BOOKS, as ^feej^oatiafled we are maim torturing the beet

i. i

Being farniahed by carrien for ' it.’ V i: , : 'L

The Auburn New York Advertiser pnblisb-

'itLljt ,- -i-'drir; reet

.7

TEN CENTS PEK WEEK,

I DRY GOODS MERCHANTS whom the account is given, it is prepared to

give earire credit to it:

’Same weeks ago a prominent citizen of Auburn was in the dty of Chicago transacting business connected with his manufacture in this place. One evening, after an active day’s work, feeling somewhat fatigued, be retired to his room at the hotel a little earlier than usual and made Ids customary arrangements for the

TL Out ulOyitfr falOQL taut* Iwu *u"

Aad other business mei ' '%■ i s r %‘^L jh* A:hLARGE . BLANK

fee artt*.

J

-s i -

»requested to give of Popero, whic

WhicbMM Warrant to be <

Chapels, all the

l Fifty years agfr thby outnumbered Evangelical Churches lu that ci^.

Tbe model of Mtb ’Lincoln statue, to be

arose in the

:that the

true to

tioh fora journey home. Aa he the dsust, M met a hoy with u telegraph jmtehra his baa Asms ontiing him to his Mde

BINDING FSB FtmUSHBBS i.- h wl .•»} i i t . vb-ri V‘<SSS T ' .jy , ii: .1 :»-4* <* * v.<

Dmm oa tb* soem flivombfo terms.

■J -suT ^foj.ui'L 'Aifofy.frfofoi Aifjfo t i4 ,-<i -‘.djwrttj v M«i.>-iitiia> vt ■ b-Wi

TKCE PSTEWS

;_.j; Oflbtofoths public a - 1: ,4 ' ‘ Valuable Advertising Medium

w ft

c-vli. A.WX) sax xrs. ,

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?«' Ms >v*l *ur.- i*

hfodn etfrrence of tbe

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