Rensselaer Union, Volume 1, Number 5, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 October 1868 — Page 2

««% gtlltMlW 4U«r--

The Only Paper Printed in Jasper County- • ' ■* !■«>—»« - \ 4: JAMKS. KLHTOHH ! Thursday, October 29. 186$.

FOR PRESIDENT. ULYSSES S. GRANT. FOR VICE PRESIDENT. SCHUYLER COLFX.

XLWTORS fim STATE AT LARGE. J,Hon. Thome* H. Nelson, of Vijrn. Ron. Ik-uj. F. Clnyjxxjl, <l l Fayette. «x>vnxnEN*ra. John C. Put tit, of YYul»q*h. .Den. Geo. D. Wagner, of Warren. UISTIiICT KLJ.ITOKS. lot— And. 1,. Itoliiiimm. VHiitlOrliurg. Cwi't.-J. W. Wharton, Sjh-iihos. » 2n<f.—Maj. Wm. T. Jones, Harrison. <'ou’u—Aaron Hoffman, Martin. Sul.—f.'qpf. Jrto. Keliwnrtr, Dearborn t'oD’t, —Maj. 11. H. I.itAon, Jefferson 4tb.—John H'. Fimjnhnr, Franklin. Fon’t.—Jamb H. Jnltan, WnJneT Sth.—H3ol. Stunuel P. Oylcr, Johnson. t(\Hi’t.— Dr. I.cvi Hitter, Hendrick*. K. K. ltuwe, Lawrence. *-t)»n , t.*3r«l. John V. Smith, (ircenc. I«.—lt. W. Ilurrison, Boone. ' M. 1.. Milford, Fountain. Bfh.--J. F. Justice, Cass. (Yrn’i—David V. Mi*d“ker, Howard. s MelieU. Mewiy. fon't \V. H. H. Miller, Allen. JOtji.— Oeu. MtloS. Horeall, KJkbart. ConH—J. K Carpenter, Kosciusko. llUi.-K. & Dwig-rinr, Jasjver.

Next Tuesday.

On next Tuesday the people of the United States will be called on to elect a President and Vice Presiand it behooves every one to bo out and at hh post. Dangers of no ordinary magnitude surroiuul the Njuion, and we rmisVTrot qntettyTay on our oars, content with the victory we won on the 13tli of this month. YVe are assured that the Democracy will spare no pains to overcome that majority. __TUejr determination .way fie Seen in the fact that they have not only ali Uteir other speakers still l»i the Sold, but they have resorted so the desperate expedientof placing ilioir candidate for the Presidency on the stump; something they would not have done if they had determined to give «p the contest, as some of t Iteir-friends would uikkc ns believe. . They : have Tailed to appropriate the .‘Tate offices, and have now- concentrated all their energies on the election of their so that the places at his disposal may be given to the faithful. / No effort wiH be spared by the Democracy to keep up the appear mice of doing nothing in this county, but on the day of the election you will find every Democrat at the polls. We know that Indiana is a Republican State, and that the majority at the Presidential election can be increased to 5,000 oreven 10,000. But this can only turning out next Tuesday and voting lor Grant and Colfax. - 'i, . . Hemember, that with the election of Grant and Colfax we are promised peace, while with the election of Sevjtot'ii and Blair we arc promised war. Every one who loves i>eacc, and hates war and all its horrors, come forth and vote l'or Grant and Cot.KAx. Every one who loves war and bloodsheJ, who desires to see the Government of States trampled in the dust, the bayonet at the throat of every loyal man South, and to hear again the call to arms; ye whose martial hearts now so thirst lor war und carnage—but did no fighting on either side when you had a good cliauce —come forth and vote l'or Skymolr and Blair, and elect them, and then, if they are true to their platform, you will have a chance to be on the tented field before the fourth of March next. But wo kuow that the people ol „thla country want no more war.— There are-wow too many desolate hearthstones here. They do not desire to make more, and will vote on next Tuesday for Grant and Colfax , and that.peace which will make it as iafe for one who wore the blue to irate! in Texas or Georgia as it is for a late rebel to travel over the highways of the North. ■ 1 .* > i* m ■ V elections occur but once in four years. Every man * ran certainly spare from his business the few minutes necessary to deposit lire ballot. 7 ' gtr -3 'll fr. h r.s ■ (::*■V .STTloratio Skvmoi h is “swinging around thfi circle” electioneering for office. - |k fSTLetevery man come out to next Tuesday and east his IHmJc* the best interests of bis ■lk.

.ii au.,T n : j , . ,»k.ix ~ - r T The First Tueodajof Horember, 1808. On the first Tuesday of November, 1804, the glorious Union party of ■■ .i ;■... Du oTTmToYiT President of the United State*. On. that day the hope and cotivoge wliich had been given the armed rebels tn the field, by the Chicago platform, left them, and from that time they never gained a victory. Ami when in April they finallylaid down their arms before the victorious hosts in blue, they one and all declared that tho “lost cause” was lost indeed. They even supposed It whs so dead that nothing could put the breath of life into it again. But all were deceived. At New York on the 4th day of July, 1888, in the great Democratic Convention, the filthy, rotten, polluting body of the lost catDo was again brought to light aud its votaries declared it was more alive than evor. On the first Tuesday of next November we. are called on to again strangle this matiy-lived monster; aud we will do it so effectually that even Wadi; Hampton, Butcher Forrest, Toombs* Hill, Vai.hmuuiiaji, Skymoi r, Blau:, and all its lesser votaries shall not only declare that it is dead, but they shall be glad to bury tho remains out of sight, so deep that no succeeding Democratic Convention can resurrect it.

Jesse D. Bright on the Situation.

Ex-Senator Jkk.sk D. Bright was in Itcnsnelncr one day the first of the week negotiating some private business. We understand ho was very free in expressing his opinions ro-sjK-cting-thc Presidential candidates and their prospects. He said that, he was confident he could set down the electoral vote of the different States as they would be cast, upon a sheet of paper ami seal it tip in an envelope, so be opened after the result was announced, and that those figures would not vary from the official eount.-fft r wasac a n <1 id a to upon the Kentucky Democratic electoral ticket and it would not do for him to say anything, but when Grant was elected he hoped financial matters would be easier. Sxvmolr was a “lying hypocrite” and was very fool* ish tor making a public exhibition of himself. Blair never was a Democrat, nothing but a mere political adventurer, without discretion and without principle. The Democratic party of Indiana was very badly managed. There were no men of ability at its head. Myith the proper “leaders, -X«# ins wotpd havo gone Democratic. The Democratic electoral ticket of Kentucky would bo carried by 50,000 majority. *

Has Reaction set in, or are they Coming North ?

Wc are told that Jesse D. Bright, formerly United States Senator from Indiana, and now a candidate upon the Democratic electoral ticket in Kentucky, said in this place one day the first of the week thSf Kentucky would give 50,000 Democratic majority at the Presidential election. Now, as our Democratic friends claim to have elected their State ticket in that State last August by 90,000 majority, two questions present themselves, which it would be welT for Republicans to consider. The first is, has the “tidal wave’’ of reaction set In so strongly that 40,000 Democrats of Kentucky will vote for Git ant next Tuesday ? The other is, does the Democratic party intend to colonize 40,000 men from Kentucky into Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, to influence the Elections in thcßC States? J2F“Thc time for talk is passed. Argument will avail hut little in the few days which now precede the election day. Discussion will make tyit few changes between now and next Tuesday. Six months is time enough for Americans to think'upon any question to arrive at ft decision. * The time for work has come. Let the prominent mcuof each township or school district come together and divide the work to be performed, assigning to each Ins special duty. Let every man know what he has to do, and then let him sec that is done. Find-how malty have wort pressing them and lend a helping hand so they may get out to the p#lls. See that some arrangements are made to bring out the sick. r _—__ The Rensselaer (Telegraph and /Yew-have been consolidated and the Union taken as the name of the now paper. A good thing; for tbe one paper will liVc where tho two might die. Maj. James and .Col. Healey are the editors and proprietors under the new regime.—-hen-ton Tribune. A sight mistake in the rank, friend Lucas, we are no “Maj.,” our millitary rank was Private, prmolod by Vet for meritorious re-enlistment in eji .'i.

Why the Democracy are Rejected.

To the Leader $ of the Democratic Party: i Your rejection bxAhfl~Pflapl* QUipßaJLtc and decided.- —Why? You cnoouraged the Booth to initiate secesaion, Tkoir ptDn'duhcpd eoereibn equally revolutionary with soccssion. You assailed the first call for troops ns unconstitutional. You refused to vote men or money to,carry ©u the war. You bade the Southern States depart in peace. You doolured that if slavery must be destroyed to savo tho Union, then the Union must perish. You declared your preference fbFlbe rebel constitution as against your own. v When it became nppareqffi that to proclaim universal liberty would weaken the enemy and reward tho true patriots you opposed it. You stoutly contended that tho rebellion would novel-bo suppressed nnd triumplmntly quotod evory re'Vmib6 to us ns demonstrating it. You urged the abandonment of the war and the resort to negotiation for the best attainable terms. In our gloomiest days, and when no political campaign was ponding, you sought to ioflamo tho passions of the people against tho only government wo over had or could have. And you assailed President Lin. coin as a despot- ~ - --—■ You denounced tho Government as revolutionary. The boys in Blue you termed hirelings. You were opposed to allowing soldiers to Vote. You opposed filling up our armies by a draft. 1 ' -•■■■- : ' • You incited rlolifagainst tho laws of the land You urged the South to rejoct the most magnanimous terms over offered to conquered rebels. You passed laws imposing on freemen tiro most galling and unjust discrimination, in the hulls of justice, on tho fields of labor, and in the resorts of trnde. You would not allow a man equal justice before the law because servile blood flowed in his veins. You would not permit a man who had once been a slave or a slave’s child to control his own labor. You would not allow h man to dispose of his own property to his neighbor or. fair terms because of difference in their color. You would sell tho labor of tho eolorbd'ftifrn vpon the auction block as punishment for not working when you gave him no cmploymcivt, You fired tho rebel heart anew against the loyal. Yon confer with the highest and most brutal rebel Generals. You falsely assail the hero to whose energy, bravery and skill we owe the cxistonce of our country, as a “brutal butcher, miserable drunkard, mUcogenatlonist, ’contaminated liar, drunkard and dirty scoundrel.” —-

"The man most warmly wolcomcd by you in convention—Napoloon “J>utcher 1 ’ Forrest—violated a flag of truce and shot down his begging victims in cold blood. The pavements of New Orleans are yet stained with tho blood_ _of tho thousands of black and white victims of your hellish malignity. You have rejected every principle the Democratic party cherisbod in its early day. And you propose to trample in the dust by revolutionary moans, the laws of Congress. You trampled on the ballot box in ISfiO and for five years after; and threaten to do it again. It was bogun by you. You conducted it. You prolonged it. Thousands of homes in our land were desolated by you. Hundreds of thousands of graves were dug by you. Affliction and death followed in your train. Debt and taxation are the fruit of your treason. You boast that your triumph would be tho triumph of the “lost cause.” You avow a policy of repudiating tho debt. You propose an irredeemable paper currency. Y'ou propose to refuse to pay interest on the public debt. Y'ou propose to tax every species of the poor man’s property. ■ You turn out inspectors of elections. You forgo naturalization papers. By violence you seek to pervert the people’s voice. Tuo fact that a Republican meeting i§ to.be held, in many States of tho Union, is deemed by you of sufficient reason for shooting the attendants. Southern Repnblican editors aro none too good for castigation at yonr merciless hands. An excited people are murdered in their fear. Fort Pillow, Orleans, Camilla, are your victories. Y'ou court or crush colored men just as they accept or decline yonr political alliance. Reconstruction has been delayed by you. Y'ou would bavo no reorganization that did not place the old lash' in yonr bands and enable masters to wreak their vengenco on the late slaves. The future you wonld give ns is one ‘of terrof. Civil war and oppressive taxation are all you offer us. The past warns us of you. The grave bolds up its hands against you. ? The future implores to be saved from you. Tbe people heed the supplifcation and hence you are rejected. —Ktv

Foreign Items.

—l’rinte Adi-lbert, of Bavaria, i« about to pur«hqgfr4hfr-chnuteag oP Hopenbcrglbr th# Queen of Spain. —A woalthj lady near Paris lately committed suicido because her face was disfigured by a boil ,on her nose. , ■ —An Italian loan for £9,-104,702 has been issued, based on the tobacco monopoly of the Government, which passes into the hands of a private company for fifteen years. ’fi AiT '■ ))■■■■■ ,* 'j'lt'' 11 . " ' ■- —The British Kingdom had 3,933.924 ncrcß of wheat and 1,549,197 acres of potatoes in cultivation this year. —Tho Prince of Wales refuses to bo mado a Frco Mason nntil the theory and objects of the organization shall bave been revealed to him, —Baslo, in Switzerland, has a newspaper 200 years old. —Thje Princess Metternich spends 820,000 a year in bonnets. —Queen Victoria has ordered tho erection of a statue of Prince Albort, ns a young man, in front of a Scottish castle. are so plentiful in Austrnlia that mutton is sold for a cent a pound by travelling butchers. ---Prince Albert, of England, is a candidate for tho throno of Spain. —« f Pfaw~Kivrg~riT Nnim Ta nn natron. omer, and oditsan almanac. . - —Brandy is manufactured in Sweden out of the common reindeer moss that grows on rocks and sterile soil. —Somebody stole one of King Kufus’ toe joints when that monarch’s sarcophagus was opened recently. —About throo inchos of snow fell at Toronto, Canada, on tho 21st. Frnnce has this year produced T,SS4tU9 gallons of wine. —Many of the Liberal candidates for Pai Lament in England ure young aristocrats of Tory connections. General Serrano thinks tt monarchy best suited to tho 6tato of Spain. —A banker’s clerk at Antwerp has absconded with 90,000 francs—The British forces are ne w armed with Snider breec-b-loudcrs. —A Berlin engineer claims to have invented a land torpedo which will blow up u wholc battalion. —lt is reported that Ferdinand has accepted a proposal to come forward ns a candidate for tho Spanish throne. - - —Tho Central provisional Junta of Spain dissolved on the 21sl. —Tho Prince nnd Princess Gergenti arrived at Brighton, England; on the 22d. —The late Queen of Spain is expected jn England. —Peshawcr, India, was visited by fln earthquake on the 20th, of August: —The infant son of tho King of the Greeks has received tho titlo of the Duke of Sparta. —Prinoe Napoleon has written a letter to Gen. Prim udvocating the claims of Duke Aosta to tho Spanish throne. —The Spaniards want Alfred of England to ascend the vacant throne of Isabella. —Mr. Laird, tho builder of the pirate Alabama, was a guest at the banquet in honor of Reverdy Jomsbn, our Minister to land. • . —The Spanish crown has not yet been disposed of. The Duke of Montpensier fears that it will be offered to him, and has written a letter to Napoleon declining to accept it. —Admirable Farragut will soon start for America. —The Portuguese Queen is suffering from an incurable brain disease. —Jaurez’s daughter haß jus.t been married. ' —About 1,000 women will vote at the coming gcnfcral election in England. —Louise Mnhlback's daughter was hissed at her first appearance upon the stage at Berlin, recently which made her cry, and jthen she 1 was cheered. *. • ■ ■ . ~ • ■ | —A meteor fell over the stern of a ship at Crowdy Head, Australia, on the night of the 19lh inst., and burst, killing the steersman. The -Swedish Polar Expedition has returned home after penetrating tb tho eighty-second degree of latithde. London, October 25th, Midnight —Great Britain, France and Italy I bave recognized the Revolutionary If * _ 7 7 a■* a* w

Austria has given Lissa, a Dalmatian island, in Jho Adriatic. IQ. England, .. ~~ t 1 ranoo can raise 80,000 soldiery -ift-Adgitra; • “ ~ ■“ ! John C. Breckinridge is making agricultural speeches in Canada.

\ Miscellaneous New*. —A jriot occurred at Now Orleans on tkey24lb inst. in which ton per*orj* wero killod. Cause, politics. Nobody to blame. " • >rr ' , —Col. Curpcntor and Copt. Graham, with n detachmont of the Tenth Cavalry, had an engagement with sov<?n hundred Cheyennes and Arrnpahoos at JVuffalo Station, sixty miles west of Hays City, Kansas, on tfao 22d, killing nine and wounding thirty. Our loss was three wounded, „ ■ ,m: r ' *» —An accident occurred on the Hudson River Kaiirond, on the 23d, by which one porson wns killed and forty moro or less severely Injured. The accident was caused by a broken rail, which precipitated three passenger and two sleeping cars from the track. —Ex-Confedpralo Major General J. B. Magruder and an ex-Lieuten-ant Higgins, once of tho Confederate navy, got drunk and obscene in -New VorkV oh Locked up until sober and then-jut under bonds - ttr b eba vo~th e mae 1v es for sir months. —Lieut, B. W. Livermore, of the Second tJ. S. Artillery, was killed at Sitka, Alaska Ter., June 2-llh, by tho accidental discharge of a Henry rifle. Ex-Confederate Brad Iy Johnson is the most successful lawyer in Virginia. His income is 825,000 a year. —Mrs, Richard Tobie, of. Massachusetts, is one hundred years and fivo months uid. She lived with Mr. Tobie soveuty-two years, whon lie died. . —Fayette county. Ky./hns a calf with two perfectly formed feet on one leg. —Gen. Cassius Fairchild, United States Marshal of Wisconsin, died on the 24tb, —Tho regiment of Kansas voluntcers called for hv Gen. Sherman to fight the Indians is nearly full. —Groat destitution is reported in Salem Valley among tho inhabitants who have been raided on by the Indians. —Judge Ivelley has returned from East Tennessee where ho has been stumping for Grant and Colfax, and nrj the Republicans Jure confident of carrying the State by 40,000 majority. —, —— —The Republicans have carried the State elections in West Virginia by nearly 4,000 majority. They have a unanimous Congressional .delegation and nhnnt/thirty ity in the State Legniiaturo which secures a United States Senator. —Four thieves were lynched at Laramie, Wyoming Territory, on the 18th. —All vegetation wa6 killed by frost at, Richmond, Va., od tko24tb. Ice formed on pools of water. , —The Memphis Avalanche has nominated Andrew Johnson for Governor of Tennessee. Illinois has abolished capital punishment. Gen. Leo has started a Bible-class in bis Collego. John Allen, the ‘‘wickedest man,’' is an independent candidate for ifi© New York. Legislature. Valandigham {alks of joining church.— ‘ The vilest sinnciy &c.” Tho new Rental College, in Boston, is open to women. Tho tobacco crop of tho world is estimated at 432,400 tons. Throe robbers stepped into the ticket office of -the Northwestern Racket Company, at Wabasha, Minnesota, lust Saturday night,clapped a plaster over the ticket agent’s month, tied him, and robbed the safe of ovor ?2,000. The Union Pacific Railway is now completed 885 miles west of Omaha and within 150 miles of Salt Lake City. ♦ . . * '.v J Eight boyß wero polsoncd at Suncook, New Hampshire, last Saturday, by eating Indian turnips, which they bad mistaken for artichokes. Israel Adams, an engineer upon a mail train, discovered a child on the Railroad track near Van Wert, Ohio, too late to stop the train, and run forward upon the cowcatcher just in time to catch the little fel- ] low and lift it unharmed from tho I tfr.ck. i

§ew idwUjftnfotJJ. Sheriff’s Sale. EY virtue of a decree and Order of S*U‘ 1» l*»* direeted from the office of 1 lie C’lcrkof the Jusner County Common Pleas Court, I will on Nnlurday, November, 81, IMS. I >et ween tlic bourn of ten oVlock A. M., tiuu four o’clock P. M., of sdd day >. ft t the Court House door in Rensselaer, Jasper County, Indiana, offer for sale to tlic highest and best bidder the Pen ts and profits, for a term not exceeding seven years, oft lie following real estate in Jasper County, to wit; Thirty five acres off tlieNortli ona of the West half of the South West iiuarteu. Section twenty nine, Town, thirty, Nortli of Range six, W est. - Aiid on failure to realize the full amount of the judgment with interest and costs, 1 will at five same time and place, and in the same manner, offer for sale the fee simpleof saidreal estate, or so much thereof as may lie sufficient to discharge said judgment) Interest ami costs. ’ Taken as the property of George B. Work, at the suit and Foreclosure of Solomon Keniricli et al. Said sale will be made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. CHARLES I’LATT, Sheriff; October, 29, 18(18. Jasper County. Dwiggins & Thomjwon, Prffs Attvs. l->3t Sheriff’s Sale. BY virtue of a Decree aid Order of Sale to ine directed from the Clerk of the Jasper Common Pleas Court, T will on Saturday, November, 21, 1808, between the hours prescribed by law, at the door of the Court House 1n Rensselaer, Jasper County, •Indiana, ex ]mihc at public auction, the rents and profits for liienu not exceeding seven . years, of the-foHowing desciibed lent estate, situate in saicLiiounty of Jasper ,- ~fo-wit: ..... l.—>——— rrThe North West quarter of the South East quarter, Section eleven, Town, twenty seven, North of Range seven, West.' And on failufe to realize the full Timotmt of.the judgment, with Interest ami costs, I will at the same time and place, and in the same manner, otter for sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said judgment, interest and costs. Taken as the property of Samuel M. (iarrett, Rebecca J. Garrett anil Wm. M, Johnson, at the suit of Alfred Thompson and Simon I’. Thompson. Said sale to be made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws, stibjucl tbTPiTcm'pTloii. CHARLES PLATT, Sheriff, Oct. 21), 18(58. Jasper County. Dwiggins & Tliompson Plff’s Atty’s. l-5-3t Notice of Survey. ]Vrt)TtCE is hereby given that T will, iv on Friday, November (5,1(568, proeced to make a legal survey of the following described lands, to-wit: Sections 10, 30 and 31, Township 30, Range •>, west. And Sections 25 and 36, Township 30, Range 6, west. Ordered bv Granville Moody. JOHN MILLER, Oft. 22, 1868.--l-4-t3. Surveyor J. C, Notice of survey. NOTICE is hereby given that I will, on Monday, November 10, 18(58, proceed to make a legal survey of the following described land, to-wit Section 20, Township 28, Range 5, west. Ordered by A. CL W. Farmer. Oct. 22, 1868. JOHN MILLER, 1-4,-t3. Surveyor J. C. Administrator’s Notice. NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned Ims been appointed Administrator of tho estate of Mary Eebnlbefrv, deceased; THOMAS J. SPITLEU, Get. 22,1868. Adm’r. Administrator’s Sale. [V OTICE is hereby given tliat the uii'i(a-signtal.aH Admntiaiiiilui.:st “Mre esra late deceased, by virtue of an order from the Common Pleas Court of Jasper County, Indiana, will on Saturday, November 28, 1868, at the Court House door in Rensselaer, offer for sale to the highest bidder, for not less than two-thirds its appraised value, tlie following real estate situate in said county of Jasper, and belonging to said decedent’s estate, to-.wit: Part NE \ of NE l, Sec. 9, Town, 29, Ranges, west, —20 acres. NE 1 of SW J, Section 33, Town. 30, Range 5, west, —40 acres. El of SW J, Section 21, Town. 30, Range 5, west, —80 acres. And if not then sold, I will offer the same at private sale. ~ Terms- -One-third of the purchase money cash in hand; balance in two equal payments, at nine and eighteen month?,- purchaser giving interest bearing note, waiving valuation and appraisement laws, secured by mortgage on premises sold, JOSEPH W. SIBBETT, H.&S. Administrator. Oet. 22, 1868. 1-4,-t3.

AN EXTRAORDINARY PREMIUM OFFEB, (t 3,7 FOR 91,50. Messrs. Daughaday & Beckeb, the enterprising publishers of “OUR SCHOOLDAY VISITOR,” Philadelphia, TJave~Jusf" published a large original, finely executed steel plate Engraving, from the hand of the celebrated Snrtain, winch is destined to become one of the most popular pictures of the day. It has cost months of skilled labor, and more than ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS in cash. B£ft»Tfeey offer this magnificent engraving, (which cannot he procured otherwise for less than $2.50), and a copy of QUft SCHOOLDAY VISITOR, one of the oldest, handsomest and cheapest Young Folks monthly Magazines published in this Country, the price of which, alone, is $1.25 a year, both for 91. 50 j \yiicre clubs- are formed, a still greater reduction.— Please send TEN cents. at once for sample of the Magazine, and circular giving a complete description of this elegant engraving, and full list of premiums for clubs. A Are chance. Agents wanted everywhere. Address, ° DAUGHADAY a BECKER, PuUuhtrt, 414 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. *tfr. r --- -

BLACKSMITH^ , , ATyTNUKm - e J.itli ‘ 4 I M/(R y WAGON SHOP 1 - 1 , 1 ' 1 1 ' ‘: • i&BT '* \v. NORMAN WARNUJEt - WOULD respectfully announce to tlie eitiaens of Jasper and mr. rounding connties, that he U still carrying on thejbusineas of Blacksmithing aniLWugonniaklng in all their brmmitre, at ills old stand on Front street, Hwpwelaer, Ind. He is now prepared to put up the best of Wagons, •ug&Ve*, Plows, out of the best material. He will furnish you with a WHEEL.-BARRO'Vif. at very low figures, If yon want to do your own hauling. He also keeps on hand, or will make to order, .one us the beet sinoijs or DOUBLE Shovel Plows ' to be had anywhere, and at as moderate prices. Repairing of all kinds, done In good style, and on short notice. BLACKSSHTHINCJ i WARNER is prepared to do all kinds of blacksmithing, on short notice. If you want a horse shod, it will lie done on scientific principles at his shop. All kinds of repairing In Iron or steel done in a durable manner He keeps none but the best wosk.men anil uses nothing but the best o material, and can warrant all he sella, Give Norm, a call at the old stand and examine his stock and learn hia prices. Terms cash. May 8, 1868. , 1-21. f “DON’T BE FOOLISH.” BENI) TWENTY-FIVE CENTS, AND RECEIVE by return mall a aarnplq lot of th« celebrated "NORWAY OATS," Which produces inu bushels to the acre. Alio for 85 cents, a sample lot of the renowned “CALIFORNIA WHEAT." Which has been so highly spoken of by the Agricultural papers. Tho a bore seeds hart A. been well received end recommended by. the N. Y. Farmer’s Club. Both sent free of postage on receipt of 60cts. Address L. CARL, Box 3391, New York P. 0. 14. LIMEr THE undersigned has for sale, ids Blacksmith Shop In Reuftww laer,« superior article of FRESH BURNED LIME, which Lie offers for sale in large or small quantities, at prices to suit purchasers. Send in your orders early. NORMAN WARNER. Apr! 17. 1868. LUMBER! LUMBER! Tlie undersigned takes pleasure In informing the citizens of Jasper County that he is carrying on a Saw Mill, about seven miles North East of Rensselaer, in Barkley Township, and la prepared to furnish lumber on short notice, and at reasonable terms. Ha keeps on ltands imnSSSfe, FLOORING. FENCING and all kinds of lumber needed for building a house, or ham, and will furnish Fencing at aglow rates as can be afforded. Persons in want of lumber will do well to give me a call. • r JOHN GRATNER. Sept. 11, 1868. l-38-3m.

JJ"NION PRINTING OFFICE. We are prepared to do all kinds of Plain and Fancy Job Printing with neatneaa and dispatch; and ataa reasonable rates aa the time* will permit. Every inscription of job work from a full sheet poster down to a visiting or wedding card, done in the beat style of the art, and at prices aa low aa the loweat. All orders for , Billheads, Cards, Checks, Drafts, ■ better Heads, Envelopes, Blanks, Labels, Handbills, Pro grammas, Ball, Bhow, and • Election Tickets, will be promptly attended to at reasonable, rates Call at the “Press” office opposite the * Gonrt Horae. NEW BOOT & SHOE SHOP. m* KtINZ, PBOPBIETVB. BOOTS AND SHOES MADE TO ORDER, In Latest Style*. . ALL WORK WARRANTED. Particular attention given to MneWork. REPAIRING DONE WITH DISPATCH, Price reenonable. 3-35. AUSTIN HOTEL John M. Austin. Having leased the house lately occupied by C.W. Henkle, and fitted it up in good style as a Hotel, would respectfully inform the TRAVELLING PUBLIC, that lie is prepared to accommodate all who may call on nim. GOOD STABLER kept in connection with the house, where the stock of travelers tfil} (if properly attended to by "good and cartful hostlers. , ~ Attention Farmers! THE undersigned WUI pay the HIGHEST PRICE, IN CABH, for Hides, Batter, Eggs, Fowls, and all kinds of country produce. the place, and call at Liberal Corner. PATRICK BARTON. April**. 1566. WfiJt