Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 1, Number 3, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 16 July 1870 — Page 7
Is.'
ECTIONS FROM O WEN MEREDITH'S POEM OF UCILE. yet any man once show the world that he feels raid of it's bark, and 'twill fly at his heels* him fearlessly face it, 'twill leave hint alone ut 'twill fawn at his feet if he flings it a bone.
thought that most thrills our existence is one /lilch, before we can form it in language, is gone-
We are our own fates.'Our own deeds our dooin.sinen. Man's life was made not for men creeds, jssrsffeJf 1 ut men's aetiom*.
1
There is a purpose in pain,
therwise it were devilish. I Crust In my soul at the great master hand which sweeps o'er the whole this (Jeep harp of life, if at moments it stretch shrill tension some one wailing nerve, means to fetch response the truest, most stringent, and smart, ,s pathos the purest, from out the wrun heart,* lose faculties, placid it may be, If lets •arply stung, «harply. smitten, had fail'd to express ^st the one note the great final harmony needs. nd what r»est proves there's life in a heart? —that it bleeds! rant a cause to remove, grant an end to attain, •tant both to he Just, and what mercy in
I pain! the sin with the sorrow! See morning begin iin must burn itself out if not fuell'd by sin. [•re is hope in yon bright hiil-tops, and love in yon light. hate and dc*]»ondeney die with the night!
re
No stream from its source
Jows seaward, how lonely soever it's course, 'ut what some land is gladden'd. No star
1
ever rose
!nd
set, without influence somewhere. "Who knows "hat earth needs from earth's lowest ereature? No life •m be pure? in It's purpose and strong in it's strife id nil lift- not be purer and stronger thereby. he spirit of Just men made perfect on liigl he army of martys who stand by the throne nd gaze into the face that makes glorious their own, nows this, Purely, at last. Honest-love, honest sorrow. ,"V most work for tlie day, hone«t hope for the morrow,
these worth nothing more than^thehaiid 1 hey make weary, Jf heart they bave sadden'd, the If re iTiey leave dreary? lush the sevenfold heavens to the voice of the spirit Icho: He that o'ercometh shall all things
Inherit.
,N A DVHXTrJiK WJTII A BUR(1/jA R. went io t'ovent Garden Theatre one iglit last season. We were let out at yelve, and I set oil" to my lodgings. I locked: there \yaji, no answer. I "locked again a window was thrown an'I my landlady's head appoar-
Who are you she screamed.
1
Let's in," please it's vie!" alive red. "Then, Mr. Me, If. wu don't come oino afore (en, you may stay out till tyniin'. I never wait lip for my lodgs—my door is closed at ten and len tlie window closed with a bang.
No go thinks I. "I have nonionv. I'll go to a railway station, and iltin the waiting-room till morning .lich resolution 1 proceeded to carry 'it l»y walking briskly for the Bank. 1 turned into Moorgato street, and
Tas
just thinking whot lier I should go tiie London, Brighton, and South -Oast, or the London Bridge station. 1 opped to think. There was a confecioner's shop }ust in front of mot Oh, lat it were open! 1 had threepence ft. ,1 list at (his moment a tftll, broadlionldered man came up to me, and iowed me from top to t-oe. I looked at im. was dressed in dark clothes pea-jaeket and a clap-trap cloth hat, ,1th a peak lying level on the forehead. ave me a feeling of awe. The thought breed itself upon me that he was a gar•pter. lie spoke lirst.
You're Mr. Sam?" and he laid his rer on his nose. You've guessed it," said I, thinking" best to agree with him, although my line was Tom. "Then come along!" and away y*o n(.
Did Butler give ye e'er a pistol? asked.
4
No," said 1, beginning to tremble, le said he wanted them himself." Must like him. lie told me I'd find Hi standing in Moorgato street bourn twelve and one, opposite the contloner's, with votir right hand in your •ket.
I'm in for it!" thinks I. "but 1 must through with it. Hut whatever will come to at all at all lie led me through a labyrinth of reets, walking rather fast, till we lerged upon the City Road. Then he ule straight for the'Angel, and from •once took a cab for Fleet street! "What ijeet lie had in doingthis 1 cannot say. V' did not olfer to explain in fact, not word passed between us till we got out the top of Ludgate 11 111. l«Yotu llu*iu*o wo wont into i\ iKtok .met, and cut of that to another, no utter which, and suddenly stopping j)jiosite a shop, he exclaimed—
There's our crib!" Is it says I. hereupon he produced .".•'^inciont sea. ket a rule. The shop was evidentlyi,„„ tailor's, as it hud bars standing ou* ke the rungs of a.Jacob's ladder, fnr bf
nch side of"the door, to exhibit st •»on. Mv friend stepped on the fl^^ .esc, which was three feet ^V^tho
my
eight of large glass tjuil^ht^^ ^,,Ijshotl ,tn
oor then, slopping
ll'n\n
neasured the breadth of
corner .«t a distance. i,„ir between Twenty minutes and a half soing ami eoming," ex('b**11,1 Vion. "And
:"^n!^%\nting
o,„os up the wrmr t^ht I oonf a beyond -oes down this street next .mrj.•
uor he
me
seemed to soe
ike the job), deterred me. I daroa nu explain that he had made a felt sure that he must lia\i mi.
for some ally of his own. •m through with it, think. Save nio outside to watch, and I 11 then!" So I wont on. lie crossed the street again ment the ioliconian was l»ast intcrf ing with us and, pr
thereto,1!^'holding'Uagainst the ahutW
while he set out- "threo and a half by two" thereon. This done, he cut it within two inches of the measurement all round and then producing a treacle pot from his pocket, he smothered one side of the cloth with treacle, and, desiring me to hold it, ho mounted the shop-door, so to speak, again and I gave him the cloth, which lie iminediatelv clapped on to the skylight, the treacle making it adhere firmly to the glass. Then, looking at his watch, ho cjied,—
By Gosh! he'll be here this minute!" and away we walked. A glance behind us, as we turned the next corner. Not yet in sight! We stopped and waited but the policeman came not. Myfrienci muttered an oath, adding, "I'll go Come along but keep your weather-eye open And off we went.
Perhaps he is watching us I suggested. But the idea was discarded as not in the nature of a policeman "like that one we saw."
We arrived at the shop. lie mounted again, and drove a string through a hole in the cloth. Then he ran a diamond round the edge of the glass. A gentle pat, and it gave wav. Now I saw the use of the cloth and string.. He could hold the glass by the string and he slowly let it down into the shop, and, producing '1 long-shaped pad, he laid it along the bottom of the fanlight to cover the glass edge, and threw one leg into the opening, and got astride of it!
Follow me," he muttered, and ducked his head under the door-head. But before he couldtlraw in the other leg, I mounted the ladder, and seizing it, gave him a pull that keptliiin from going in, at the same* time yelling, Police! Thieves! Murder! Police!" at the top of my voice. And, lo and behold! the policeman appeared at the corner at that moment. A horriblo oath from within, a pistol-bullet whistling past my head, and I ran for death and life. I did not stop till I found myself in Broad street.
In the next day's papers I saw the account of the capture df a burglar by one policeman, who had watched two burglars from the corner, and saw one enter the house, and the other leap up the wall like a cat, grab at a disappearing leg, and yell "Police!" jind run.
The one that was caught got seven years'penal servitude and "The police are searching vigilantly, though as yet uncuccessfully, for the other, who, it appears, is a desperate character They never caught him.
KEEP THE BODY ERECT. An erect bodily .attitude is of vastly more importance to health than people generally imagine. 'Crooked bodily positions, maintained for any length of time, are always injurious, whether in the sitting, standing, or lying posture, whether sleeping or walking. To sit with the body leaning forward on the stomach, or to one side, with the heels elevated on a level with the head, is not only in bad taste, but exceedingly detrimental to health. It. cramps the stomach, presses the vital organs, interrupts the free motions of the chest, and enfeebles the functions of the abdominal and thoracic organs, and, in fact, unbalances the whole muscular system. Many children become slightly humpbacked, or severely round-shouldered, by sleeping with the head raised on a high pillow. When any person lindsit easier to sit or stand, or walk or sleep in a crooked position than a straight one, such person may bo sure his muscular system is badly derange^ and the more careful he is to preserve a straight or upright position, and get back to nature again, tlio better.
Wllll,R the inspector on a train bound east from Kansas City, was testihg the car wheels at Jefferson City, Missouri, ho discovered a boy under one of the cars, who had concealed himself there all the way from Kansas City, lie had formed a sort of net of rope, in which lie lay suspended like a spider in his web, between the axle of ono of tlie trucks, and the lloor of the car. The bov was routed out of his place, and quite a crowd gathered about him on the platform. He was disposed to be saucy, and stated he had rode this way thousands of miles. As the train *ras moving otf slowly from Jefferson City the boy got in his old plaeu again unilcr the car while it was in motion. The conductor was notified, and stopped the train. The boy was hauled from his lurking place, and taking up a stone was in the act of hurling it at the conductor, when the latter knocked him down.
TliK Journal ofiChcmistry asserts that of sixteen poputyr hair tonics, washes, and restoratives recently examined, only one was fro£ from lead. They owe their action to tlis substance, and consequently are Aighly dangerous to the health of persons using them. Enamels for the sl?'i aro composed of either carbonate o^li'ue, oxide of zinc, or carbonate ofl*d suspended in water. Tho first two, classes of enamels are JUS harmless^8
Hny
pla8tere,
'lLr and
,luM\ultoml
the fanlig'it was smiare. hi/ulV
n.
me, by way of giving me^1
'"'•JUmv awl li"f l.v I*"
i" ».* E.ct« InoVwnni1",
other white dirt when
ovo.r"ie
and
skin to close the pores
pr,*ont
aiul/u-'r
healthy action. On the
other '""d, the enamels composed of carby"1.10
of'lead
are highly dangerous,
us
i-s very certain to produco
^jjJtrons results to those who patronjjchom.
allowed by all geologists that in us of Suez is the bed of an Hut how it becamo dry
has not vet been decided some observers are of opinion that its present condition is the result of an elevation of the land, while others maintain that the true cause has been a subsidence
(,ssav on-
'thfnaquestion,
-,Usl
rs there is no evidence of elevation oyand, and thinks that tho sea which covered the isthmus, has been K^ually dried up.
the blessing it is to have a friend to
x\»m
one can speak fearlessly on
nny
\bjeet: with whom one's deepest aswey
Jls
one's most foolish thoughts
001110
|"!»t him. Tl.™
vt simply and safely. Oh the eoniroy
tho
inexpressible'com fort of
ne\lh5Vf,A'. V'V. person having 11-nrtlH \vv01Kh thoughts nor measure itmt a4\iourinR,htin
n11
Ir- !^rXarc'ohaft
khiMIcw
out.
and
ike andXh,lt
grain togeth-
a
L-eoiung.
faithful, hand will
ke°P
whftt
is worth
^}wthewith
n0
.TTVw^mmS.l''lr'''?,,VKvi«o.'^n^tXN^rApM,tlr,,n,,
*h0
Muloch.
A MAN O« V*
S iS W I N I .i.rUi iW«t into trouble. I
niuht get into trouble. running for it but the rvnwkn.) aiiion made at that nionien it that it would a short run if I^ sorted him
hoart of
llie nAst
away.-.Vm
,ivire but couldv the purchase of a lars.' W"*
h-V
,cn
THE CUV. JOBIL
P? ^ln?
do1-
Next morning, T\ his mind to split tliver, making up od off to the stable, Vrenee.he postson he met was the the first jcr-
Master up, Joo? No master lie deaduiired. he left'word for yon toW Joe, "but •—re mare." "JOHN," Plo"s nephew, who was paving rrt thc city. "John weini
his
LV 11
I •MAIL.
imtwre 1 You o«n'l turn my »«u '0
IsBSil®!
*t •.} -r i-/ t/ -:i ii til til5 a Li f. A
Wi BE TRUSTY AND TRUE, When Lord Wellington was commander of an army in India a certain rich man offered him five hundred thousand dollars for some secret information on a very important question. Wellington looked thoughtfully a few moments, as if he was weighing the temptation. But he was not. He was only considering the licst way to answer his tempter. At length ho said, "It apjiears that you can keep a secret, sir?"
Certainly," replied the man, feeling sure that ho had gained his noint. So can I," rejoined Wellington. "Good morning sir," and the man went away with a chopfallcn air.
Thus, you see, Wellington wns proof against corruption. He rejected a bribe of half a mtfiion tlolla'"••'J.^Wasn't tliat'noble? Yes. Very goou. Stick a pin in this fact and make this resolution.
I will be true and trusty too. I will never betray my trust. Millions of money shall never buy me to do wronp."
Make this resolution and keep it, my children, and vou will always respect yourselves and lie respected by others. Vou will never cheat nor steal. You will never be rftbliera of banks nor betrayers of trust. You will be trustvand true.
VXTHKRK are five American convicts in "V*an penitentiaries.
TERRE-HAXJTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL. JULY 16. 1870.
NAPOLEON'S ESTIMATE OF JESUS CHRIST. Nappleon, when at St. Helena, asked Count Montholon, "Can you tell me who Jesus Christ was The quostion was declined, and Napoleon procoeded "Well, then, I will telly you. Alex ander, Caesar, Charlemagne and my^ self, have founded groat empires but upon what did these creations of our genius depend? Upon force Jesus alone founded His empire on jov® to this very day millions would die for him. I think I understand something of human nature, and I tell you all these were men, and I a man none else Js like Hirn Jesus Christ was more than man I have in spired multitudes with such an en thusiastie devotion that they would have died for me, but to do this it was necessary that I should be visibly present, with the electric influence of my looks, of my words, of my voice. When I saw men and spoke to them, I lighted up the flame of self-devotion in their hearts: Christ has alone succeeded in so raising the mind of man towards the Unseen, that it becomes insensible to barriers of time and space. Across a chasm of eighteen hundred years, Jesus Christ makes a demand which is beyond all others difficult to satisfy He asks for that which a philosopher may often seek in .vain at the hands of his friends, or a father of his children, or a bride of her spouse, or a man of his brother. H8 asks for the human heart He will have it entirely to Himself. He demands it unconditionally and forth' with His demand is granted. Wonder ful! In defiance of time and space, the soul of man, with all its powers and faculties becomes an annexation to the Empire of Christ. All who sincerely believe in him, experience that re markable, supernatural love toward him. This phenomenon is unaccountable—it is altogether beyond the scope of man's creative powers. Time, the great destroyer, is powerless to ex naust'its strength, nor put a limit to its range. This is it which strikes me most I have often thought of it. This it is which proves to me quite convinc ingly the Divinity of Jesus Christ.
THE BEAUTIFUL
It is wise to inculcate a love for,sweet and satisfying things—to make this part of our religion. There is an lnilu ence in the myriad-shaped and gorge ously-tinted gems of physical na'ture that addresses itself with peculiar fascination to the soul which can enter into communion with them. Paintings and statues are admirable teachers of refined sentiment. Music, true and pure, carries the spirit upon its beautiful wings to the highest realms of meditation and memory. There is a literature which embodies grand thoughts, that have been gathered up by the contemplation of the ages, and makes them the property of him who reads. All these are to "be cherished and prompted not solely for the present enjoyment and satisfaction they give, but the more because they tend in the direction of future happiness.
I like to meet a man or woman who is able to read, to think, to love poetry to enjoy ideal or representative art to cherish divine music, to linger over the spots where Nature has placed her most witching treasure—not only because these characteristics make those who possess them more useful in so ciety, more productive, more agreeable to come in contact with: but also on account of my belief that such agencies ire the educators of tlio soul, developers of the life, and they necessarily lead to contemplation of and reverence for God, and, by a natural connection, to acknowledgment of individual duty and endeavor to discharge it.
I advocate taste in dress, innocent uloj nment of the person or the home, indulgence in the harmless luxuries which make up the finer side of social life, because they are bulwarks against vulgarity, because they keep the soul in love with beauty—and the beautiful always approximates God. I expect to find more of divine grace in alife which has been all opened by such sympathies, than in one that is coarse, tide, and uncaring with reference to them—just as I believe there will be more bright sunshine oil a broad meadow than in a shut-up vault.
LONELINESS OF THE OCEAN. One who has novertravelled upoutho ocean expects to find it somewhat thickly populated. He thinks of the vast travel vmd traffic that goes over the waters, and he is ready to imagine that the great deep is alive with this hurrying to and fro of nations, lie reads of lands whose commerce whitens every sea, and ho is ready to think that the ocean itself is as full of sails as tho harbor of some mighty metropolis. But he finds his mistake. As he leaves the land tho ships begin to disappear as he goes on his way they soon all vanish, and there is nothing about him but tho blue sea and the bended sky. Sometimes he may meet or overtake a solitary ship through the day, but then, again, tliere will be many days when not a single sail will cross tlio ocean. There are spaces measured by thousands of miles, over which no ship has ever passed. Tho idea of a nation's commerce whitening every sea is the wildest fancy. If all the ships that ever have been built were brought together in a single fleet, they would fill but a hand's breadth of theoeean. The space, therefore, that man and his works occupy on the sea, is so small in its extent that the hold on it bv his poXVer is slight and superficial, ^ioth together are as nothing. The ocean covers three fourths of the surface of the globe, and by far the greater portion of this vast expanse is, and ever has been, entirely free from his presence and visitation.
A MAN SKLMNQ FOR MONEY HM SHARK IN FUTURE LIFE.—Before tho court in tho province of Pesth, Hungary, a suit was pending, in which an aged Jew was to make a statement under oath. Ho was ready to take tho oath, when another Jewaroso and protested against it: "This man dare not take an oath." "Why not?" askfd the judge. "There exists Hebrew prayer which contains tho sentence, that every Jew hag a share in the life to come/ It is now about twenty years ago, whilst I was present, when this man who is about TO take an oath sold his 'share in tlio life to come,' guaranteed to him in tho prayer, to another Jew, a Mr. Y.—, who paid him a certain amount of money for it. As he, therefore, ean not count any longer on a future existence, he has nothing to fear or hope for in tho life to come it must be certainly indifferent to him whether to swear to a truth or a falsehood."
The matter was examined into, and as the strange-transaction was found to have taken place in reality, and the party who sold his "share in the life to come" was declared incapable of taking an oath.—Jetoish Times.
TIME IS rapidly approaching when railroad trains will fly wfth lightning speed from one end of our continent to the other, without even stopping to "take a drink" by the way. A novel method of supplying locomotives with water, which has been in use for some time in England, is about to be introduced into our country. The Hudson River Railroad Company have already made successful experiments. At Montrose Station, near Peeksill, there was constructed in the centre of the track a trough, 1200 feet in length, fifteen inches in depth, and eighteen inches wide. This was lined with sheetiron, heavily painted. Thp trough is perfectly straight, will hold 16,000 gallons of water, and is fed by a couple of springs. A locomotive was also fitted up with an ingeniously constructed pipe, connecting with the tender, and having a nozzle which can be instantaneously dropped into the waterwhile the train is running thirty miles an hour. When the first experiment was made the water rushed with a roar into the tender, filling it to the complete satisfaction of all concerned
A GOOD INVENTION.—A Baltimorean has invented a peculiar adjustable horseshoe, which is made to be taken off at night or when the horse is not being used, and put on as readily when wanted as a pair of boots. The corks of the shoe are also adjustable, and new ones can be fitted when one set is worn out.
CEMETERY STATISTICS.—A cemetery in Pennsylvania contains seven graves in one lot, in which repose the remains of a man and his six wives. When the first wife died, the third was three years old, and the fifth an infant of twelve months while the last wife was not born until the year following the death of the first.
There are moments of life that we never forget, Which brighten and brighten as time steals away They give anew charm to the happiest lot,
And they shine on the gloo.i of the lonliest day. Percival.
Long, long be my lieartwitli such memories tilled! Like the rose in which roses have once been distillelrl You may bieak, you may ruin Hie vase, if you will, .it the seen! of the roses will hang round it still.
THE BUCKEYE
si##!®
IS THE BEST,
GRAIN DRILL.
iSRp
kf
1st. They will sow Wheat, Rye. Oats, Bailey, Buckwheat, Hemp, Millet, Clover and Timothy Seed Broom Corn, Osage and Apple Seed. id. Never hunches the Grain. They will distribute the grain and grass seed more evenly, and regularly, than any other Drill. 3d. Tliey will never break the grain. 4th. They, sow grass seed, broad-cast, behind the Drill. iitli. Have high wheels and wide tire. fith. I/mger Iloes and Wider Steel Points, th. Have a better Surveyor or land measure. 8th. More easily changed from single to double rank. 9th. Grain and Grass Seed shut off when Hoes are raised. 10th. The Gum tubes are pivoted to the feed cups or hopper bottom, and dispense with tunc, board. 11th. Because the Gum Tillies need not be removed when the Drill is changed from Single to Double Rank, or the reverse. 12th. Because the Drill is properly balanced, and bears lightly on the horses' necks. 13th. They have an attachment for sowing broad-cast when desired. 14th. Have an attachment for drilling part of the grain, and sowing the balance broadcast, ljetween the rows at the same time. 15th. They will clog less in trashy ground. 16th. Have the best Guano Attachment. 17th. Have the best Broad-cast Plaster Sower. lXth. More mbstnntially made. 19th. More neatly painted, striped and varnished. 20th. Is made of the best material. 21st, There is a greater demand for tliem than any other Dnil. 22d. More of them sold than all others in the west combined. 23d. Thev take more premiums than any other Drill. 211 h. Because they are the best Drill in tlie world.
For sale by
T.
E. LAWES,
2-Sm.
COR. THIRD A CHERRY STS.
Hudson
•Moore.
THERE is no miracle worker like love, It will give an awkward woman tact maKe an impudent man modest anc. for the humblest pair on earth it creates, once in a life time, a glory which is a shadow of the heavenly world.
A COMMUNICATION from Yiennastates that, since the publication in Austria of the laws on religious Jib^rty, a movement has arisen in the population* of that city, which is, to say the least of it a strange one. In the course of less than two years about six hundred gnd eighty persons of both sexes have ab jured Christianity for the Jewish faith, ind, what is curious, these perversions are on the increase.
THE returns of the New York Cus torn House the past year for the impor tations of foreign human hair are much less than usual. We are sorry to say this is not because women are becoming more sensible, but is largely due to the immense amount of Indian jute which is sold instead of hair. The jute is marvelously cheap but it is not unfrequently imperfectly cleaned, and will cause terrible diseases of the skin.
REASONS WHY
& east
HAVING SOLD OUT THEIlt
OLD STOCK OF GOODS
And refitted their Store aro now constantly »-», .. in receiptor /,
QUEETOWARE,
ELEGANT STYLES AND QUALITY.
Gold Band and White China of new shapes very cheap.
11
GLASSWARE
In endless variety.
Japaned Toilette Setts new and Elegant Styles at very low prices.
A splendid line of Castors. Brit tan la and pltuilsned Tin Ware. "IFL
An excellent line of Ivory knives all sizes.
Carvers in new shapes very low.
Silver Plated Knives, Forks and Spoons, all kinds.
A very large stock of Knives and Forks, all prices.
Full stock of Wood and Willow Ware.
Fancy Goods Waiters, all sizes. -,tt
Fruit Jars always on hand and everything in our line. ,,, Before purchasing elsewhere call and examine oar Mammoth Stock of Goods.
HUDSON & EAST,
r. 139 MAIN STREET, l-tf. Opposite Huhnan & Cox.
SAY E S
JONES & JONES
HAVE TUB
FARMERS'FRIEND
GRAIN DRILL
(Kuhn, the Celebrated Drill Inventor's last and best.) A FORCE FEED DRILL, OPERATED BY
SPUR GEARING.
2No Loose Cog Wheels About It!
Impossible to Choke it—The Feed Changed in One Second—Will Sow any kind of Grain or Seed, whether Clean or Foul!
The grain is distributed by means of small double spiral feed wheels working in cups under tha hopper these wheels carry the grain upwards to a discharge opening in the cup and force it out, and with it force out straws and other obstructions. 11 is utterly impossible to choke it, and as evidence of this fact the wheat we have in our sample machine is half chaff, and by turning the wheel it is carried throug]i as well as clean wheat.
It will sow any kind of grain, and in any quantity desired. In other force feed drills to change the feed you remove one cog wheel and put in another and the cog wheels are loose and liable to be lost. In the
FARMERS' FRIEND DRILL!
the wheels are all fastened to the drill, and the feed is changed by simply moving a small lever— it is done In one second.
Send for Circular showing how the Farmers' Friend came out ahead in 1809, to
Jones '& Jones,
l-tf.
TERRE-HAUTE, INI).
rpERRE-HAUTE
Commercial College
B00K KEEPING,
PENMANSHIP & ARITHMETIC,
CORNER 5th A MAIN STREETS,
Terre-Haute, Ind.,
R. GARVIN, Principal.
3TIIE TERRE-HAUTE 's^'
COMMERCIAL COLLEGE
Gives instruction in all the branches pertaining to a
Thorough Business Education.
A Scholarship in the Terre-IIaute Commercial College is good for life, giving the student the privilege of reviewing at pleasure free of charge.
Remember this is the oldest and most, reliable institution of the kind in Indiana.
The Fall Term of the Terre-Haute
COMMERCIAL COLLEGE
Commences on the Monday in September.
EXTRACTS FROM THE PRESS:
This institution affords facilities equal to any in the West for practical instruction in Book Keeping, l'cnmunxllip and Arithme tic.—Express.
This Institution possesses a reputation second to none in the country.—Brazil Miner.
Mr. Garvin is ono of the best Commercial Educators in the country, and we take pleasure in recommending him to our readers. Journal.
Mr. Garvin's course of Business training is thorough in all its forms and methods, not surpassed by any other similar Instituticwi in the country.—fiulllvan Union.
We have examined Garvin's Penmanship and candidly admit that we have never seen it excelled.—Robinson (YnxtU\Uion.
Garvin and Owen conducts one of the lest and most successfull business Colleges In the State.—Gazette.
The College rooms will be open during vacation for the benefit of those who mav wish to finish their course lefore leaving. l-tf.
AT STORE.
HATS, CAPS, FURS,
AND
STRAW GOODS.
The largest Stock In the city, to be replenished as fast as the new style* come out, and sold at the lowest poqrflble prices at
SYKES' HAT STORE,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL,
113 MAI S MTKKKT,
i-ti. Tcrre-Hanfe, ind
"X
'HE GREAT
HEADQUARTERS
FOR
DRY GOODS!
IS THE PLACE TO BUY
GOOD, HONEST,
AND" t"6
CHEAP GOODS.
BE SURE AND
Examine our Stock and Prices
.a.. 4
A
Hefore you Iftiy.
ONE PRICE TO ALL.
WARREN. HOBERG & CO.,
Successors to Edsall & Co.,
l-tf. Cor. 4th and Mnftt Streets.'#
ET THE BEST.
rtpzziojr 3000
WEBSTER'S
UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY.
TEN THOUSAND Words and. Meanings not in other Dictionaries. jooo^Kngravings. 1840 Pages Royal Quarto.
Glad
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add my toStimay in its favor. [Pres't Walker of Harvard.|
Jjlvcryto
scholar knows its value. [W. H. ProKcott,^he Historian.
riilie most complete Dictionary of the Ianguagc. [Dr. Dick, of Scotland. rilhc best guide of students of our language. 1 [.John G. Whittier.l
He
will transmit his name to posterity. [Chancellor Kcnt^l
etymological part surpasses anything by laborers. [George Bancroft.!
Bear}earlier
11 relation to Language Principia does to Philosophy. [Elihu Burritf.]
others in «leflning scientific terms
S.lxcelsall
!i [President Hitchcock.
far as.I know, best delining Dictionary. [Horace Mann.| rIlake it altogether, the surpassing work. _L [Smart, the English Ortho.'plst.|
A necessity to every intelligent family, student, teacher and professional man. What, Library is complete without the best English Dictionary? Webster's National Pictorial Dictionary. 1010 Pages Octavo. 000 Engravings.
The work is really a gem of a Dictionary, just the thing for the million.—Ameriean Educational Monthly.
Published by G. & C. MERRIAM, Springfield, Mass. I. .:••**:•• Sold by all Booksellers.
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