Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 2, Number 9, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 August 1871 — Page 7
[From the Home Jonrnal.j DAYBREAK. BY IIB8TKR A. BENEDICT.
Daybreak in folding the fair, faint »ky Quiet is compassing *e* and shore Only a delicate, dolorous nigh
Burn where my Baintliest sails no more. Here, last rammer, at dunk and dawn, I kissed her asleep, and I kissed her awake, And lightly my low laugh leaped to the lawn-
Clasping ht close for my sweet love's sake.
Ah me! for weariness walks the way My feet must follow to find their re*t And a cry Is crushed in my heart to-day
Forsomethlng missing from off my breast.
Whence is it taken? What calmful clime ,Thj1lls to the wooing, wonderful tone, se sweet* were woven with every rhyme soul sent Mailing from zone to zone. .4 it he days departed? If I could reach helpless iiauds where the high harps b* my feet were Arm on the evergreen
IX-ilfll
Would the long-lost comfort come back to me?
iye—for a daybreak wait* for the dark Of my sorrowful sotil, mmrvhere,1 know. Where, soaring and singing, us never tha lark, 1 shall U: glad for the gloom below.
THE STIiA TEGIC OA T.
One. of Uncle Tim's Dig Yarns. In introducing Undo Tim Smith, allow me to say that no man in WeHtern Oxford, Maine, wag better known in his day. He was an honest, poor, larrl-working man, and hisonly failing —if failing it could bo called—wan the telling of big storiea. Iain sure, how over, that in one respect his memory had BWOINF! HO warped that he religiously believed his wonderful relations to be true. Ho was the first man to put a spade Into the soil of the first and only farm I ever owned, and thereafter lie lid mueh work for me. "Talking about cats," said Uncle Tim, "puis me in mind of a cat I once owned. Let mo tell you about her. 8he was a Malfee—one I got of Charles Baker—and what that cat didn't know wasn't worth knowin'. Hero's one tiling sho did:
In tho Spring of MO I moved into tho little old house down on the crooked river. Wo put our provisions down cellar, and tho first night we made up our beds on the lloor. But wo didn't sleep. No sooner had it come dark than we heard a toarin'and a squeakin' in the cellar that was awl'ul. I lit a candle and went down. Jerusalem! Talk about rats! I never saw such a sight In all my born days. Every inch of the cellar bottom was covered with 'them. They run up onto me, and they run over me. I jumped back into the room and called the cat. She came down and looked. I guess sho sot there about ton minutes, lookin'at them rats, and I was waitin' tosee what she would do. Ily'ni-by sho shook her head, and turned'about and went upstairs. Sho didn't euro to tackle 'em.
That night, I toll ye, there wasn't much sleep. In tho uiornin' I called forthocit, and couldn't find her. Sho'd gone. I guessed the rats had frightenod her, and, to toll the plain truth, 1 didn't much wonder. Says Betsy Ann to me, savs sho,'Tim, if "that old cat don't como back, wo,11 have to leave this piaco. The rats'll oat us up.' Says I: 'Just you let tho old cat be.' I didn't believe sho'd loft us for good and all. "Just as Helsy Ann was puttin' the children to bod, we heard a scratchin' ami a waulin at the outside door. went and opened It, and there stood our old on tho doorstep, and behind her ft whole army of cats, all paraded as guiivr vo over miw soldiors! I let ir old cat in. aifd-Cho others followed jr. She went right to tho cellar door and scratched there. 1 began to understand. Old Mai for had been out after help. I opened the way to the cellar, and she inarched down, and tho other c.tts tramped after her in regular order—and as they went past mo I counted fifty six of em (ie-whittakor! if thoro wasn't a row /and a rumpus In that 'ero "collar that night then I'm mistake! Tho next mornin' the old eat came up and caught hold of my trowsers' log, an I pulled mo toward tho door. went down and $avv the sight. Talk about yor Hunker lilll,ami yer Hoston massacres! Mer/•y I novor saw such a sight bo fore nor since. Hotsoy Ann and' me, with mv boy Sammy, was all day hard at work as we could bo, elearin* the dead rats out of that 'ere cellar It's a fact— overv word of it."
.1 LOVER'S LEAP.
Joseph Whittakor, who WHS quartered in the garrison of Haverhill, in its early sett lenient, had become smitten with thecharinsof one Mary W .residing there. l«ong had be wished to Jeelare his passion to her, but hud not he courage.
At length Joseph nerved his shrinkng courage, and with a palpitating nrt, ami in broken accents, made a tociaration of his love, and closed the .tarangutt by ottering his heart and hand.
Marv heark his story attentively, and then tfatly refused to have anything to do with him. What a hard-hearted jjreature! Joseph was somewhat stag»t so prompt a denial, but determined not to sutl'er her to escape so easily. lie pleaded his cause most manfully but it was all in vain—she remained stubborn and hard-hearted as at first.
Asa last resource, he told her that if she would not accept his offer, he would •go and jump Into the weil." This was truly a desperate resolution but it had no "eH'ecl on the cruel heart of tho tnaiden—she sli'l persisted iu her refusal.
Joseph then arose—front a kneeling posture—and easting along and lingering look at the unfeeling girl, left the :arrison. He went to the well and
gar locking into "thedeenand dark abyss," weighed the matter oelbre he took the final leap. It was a stern resolvt—he thought of it earnestly—he wavered, and at last determined not to throw «*f »y his lire for such a hard-hearted ffatnre,
Wtiili- "casting himself alsut" tose« .tow he itiuld escape tY' this sad dilemma, and still preserve sotue appearance of having done the deed, anew Mea ippily Hashed across his cranium. ..A large It kg was lying near, which ho rc«olved should be the Joseph to jump into the well, instead of himself. Soon as this (»mmendablodetermination was formed, he seiner I a log, plunged it into tho "water deep," and immediately concealed himself behind the curb.
Hut where was Mary «il this wUilef She ii.td been listening attentively at the u.H.r, half *orry that she had denied him so long, and hanliy believing that he would commit so rash an Hut when she hearvl the plunge of u»u wooden Josetrit, her heart completely relented, and oh! how fervently she then wislied that sho had not mtuMKl ihlsnir! She hastily ran to the well, j»nd jidlng over th® curb with an aumni«Hl heart, exclaimed: "Oh! Jos«eph, Joseph! if yon .ire in tho land nf the it vim
his heart leaped for gladness at this intelligence immediately leaving the place of his concealment, he rushed into her arms, exclaiming: "Oh! Maryl I will take you at your word!"
The long embrace, the mutual reconciliation, the many tears of joy, and long years of happiness that followed, we will not attempt to describe.
MR. BOTT& EDUCATED ALLIOATOR. The fact concerning Mr. Botts, of North Carolina, we obtain lrom a prosaic exchange, bnt we propose to tell the story in our own plaintive language. Mr. Botts had a little alligator, which erstwhile jerked its shining tail upon the shimmer.ng sands of Florida. Mr. Botts caught it when it was yet in its earliest infancy he took it to his home and gave it a corner by his hearthstone he nurtured it with affectionate tenderness, and cherished it as one of his own children. He brought it up in the way it should go, and it went that way. He taught it some pretty tricks, in which it acquired singular proficiency and then, when it had arrived at riper years and was about eighteen feet long, Mr. Botts and his educated crocodile started out to roam o'er the wide, wide world as a kind of condensed menagerie. One day Mr. Botts pitched his tent beneath a tree in his native State, and made the welkin ring with the wild, unearthly music of his hand-urgan. When the performance began, Mr. Botts called the attention of the audience to the gigantic size of this noble denizen of the bayous. Here we have one of a race of reptiles of such untamable ferocity that none was ever known to yield to the subduing influence of human kindness. But it remained for him—it remained lor Botts, of North Carolina, to prove to a world which held its breath in painful suspense, that the immortal mjnd of man exercised a wonderful in fluence over the whole of the brute creation. (*aze into that fiery and ter rible eye, said Mr. Botts, as he lifted a sleepy lid, and you perceive at once that the savage glare of the pristine oiulition of the reptile has given place to mild and beaming suavity of civilization. Examine that noble tail with its glistening scales, and you observe that the undulating vibrations which once indicated the ferocious rage of the state of nature have died away into the peaceful repose of educated intelligence. Cast your eye upon those enormous jaws lined with deadly and awful teeth, and you at onco recognize tho fact that the gnashing fury of barbarism has forever ceised bane ith the influence of kindly treatment from superior intelligence. How true it is, said Mr. Botts, that "A little word in kindness spoken" will demonstrate a capacity for affection in even tho lowest and meanest natures! And then Botts would open tho jaws of his alligator and slam them threo or four times, just to show the audience how tho old thing worked. And then, to prove more conclusively how ho had conquered tho ravenous nature of tho animal, Botts said he would insert his head in its mouth. He did so. He crawled half way down to the stomach, and lay there with his head out of sight, kicking his heels around in the air, to prove to tho audieneo that ho felt peaceful and contented. All uf a siuldon there was a crash of ivory, a sort of a screech, a smack of gigantic lips, and tho reader must imagino tho rest. &
ORGANS AND OR OA NlS.\f. The World, discussing the New Departure and its adjuncts with the Vieo'resident of tho late so-called Southern Confederacy, with remarkable candor, says:
The World claims to bo an organ of Democratic public opinion. It has a wide intercourse with Northern Democratic Statosmon, and aims to express tho average sense of the wisest and most sagacious members of tho party. Its chief claim to consideration (apart from its mori^ as a nowspaper) rests unon its representative character. Its editor never signs its editorials (as Mr. Stephens always does), bceauso he trusts that he.is too truly andjsino rely a a Democrat, to think tho opinions of any one citizen and voter of much public consequence."
Wo believo there is no other country than wherln the above avowal could be made without conscious self-degrada-tion and a goneral. indignant protest and yet here aro thousands, it not a majority, who will regard it as a matter of course—a little too frankly stated, perhaps, but substantially the rule whereby all party journals aro and must be governed. We believe this, because we have repeatedly boon warnod—"You aro going counter to public opinion"—that is, Republican opinion" —as though we need only bo assured of this to induce us to wear ship and scud before tho wind forthwith.
It is qnl'o possible that the opinions of any one citizen "are not of much public consequence yet we hold tho editor of a public journal bound to hare opinions on great public questions and to set them forth, upon occasion, candidly and truthfully. His readers expect this—are cheated when he gives thent "the average sensee of the wisest and "most sagacious members of tho party," as his own convictions. If no chooses to set forth that average sense" for what it is, very welj but let him nover confound or confuse this with his own adverse view. A good many thousands have, at one time or another, stopped The Trihune because, on some question of the hour, it did notexpress their "average se'ise" (or lack thereof:) yet it has always felt bound to set forth its editor's convictions, even where he knew or supposed them unacceptable to the larger number of his readers. When called to choose between displeasing and misleading them, he has always felt bound, as the dictate of simple duly, to nrefer the footer.
Outside of this coun ry, we know not where a journal of the "representative character" claimed by The World any where exist*. It ought not to exist here, because it deceives and misleads. Good, worthy cit Icons, who read but one journal, and that of the "unrepresentative" kind, hear all about the frauds, corruptions and robberies of the adverse party, but nothing of the rnsealiliospcrpetrated by politicians of tlieir own school.and really believe that, if their iarty was in power everywhere, peculation and official rapacity would cease. They mistake a disease of the timea for a peculiar depravity of the
Sbat
1 will have you. heard the w"imb\ and
Joseph saw am
arty which they have WCD trained to rust and detect. Until they shall be enlightened, reform la well nigh impossible ,—S. Y. TrtbiUHs,
Tint New England Medical Gazette says: "An old lady followed up aa Kplsoojvii Bishop, as he traveled through his diocese, and was confirmed several times before she waa detected, she wished tha ordinance repealed, becwusr she had 'understood it was good for the rheumatism.'"
NArotiMM said to be a devout admirer of negro mlmrtivisy.
City Business Directory.
PLOWS.
PHILIP
NE WH ART,manufacturer of Ter-re-Haute Steel Plows, 1st St. near Main.
RETAIL GROCERIES.
WESTprice
A ALLEN, dealers in Groceries and Provisions, Stone A Glassware. Highest cash paid for countiy produce, 75 Main street, between 8th and Oth.
Rceries,
W. RIPPETOE, general dealer in Gro-
a
al Block, 16o Main street.
JAMES
DAVIS, general dealer in Groceries, Provisions and Produce, National Block, 157 Main street.
CI.
RIPLEY, Groceries and Provisions, Stone and Wood Ware, 219 Main street.
AH.
DOOLEY, Dealer in Books, Papers A Chromos, Opera House Building.
BG.
COX A CO., dealers in Books, Paper, Envelopes, Ink, Ac., 159 Main street.
BOOTS AXD SHOES.
NaANDREWS,HlMaln
to buy Boots and Shoes. Goods made to order and repairing done.
ENGLES
JAMES
M. LYONS, dealer in Hardware,
Iron, Nails, Mill and Broom goods, 20 styles Cross Cut Saws, 130 AJain street.
PHOTOGRAPHS.
CEPPERT,
Photoi
No.
street, between
86 Main
and 4th.
HUSHER'S
New Gallery, corner Cth and
Main streets. Call and see his fine rooms anil specimens.
)VA TCIIES A JE WEIR Y.
JR.
FREEMAN, American and Foreign Watches, Jewelry, Sc., Opera House.
GEORGE
ARNOLD, Watch Maker, 151
Main street, keeps all grades of American Watches.
MISCELLANEO US.
JU.
PATRICK A CO., dealers in Yankee Notions, Produce and Groceries, No 81 Main street.
BR L'GS.
(XULIOK
~i A BERRY, general dealers in Drugs, Paints, Glass, Oils, Toilet Articles Brushes, Dyes, Ac., Cor. 4th and Main street.
SADDLERY.
|)HILIP KADEL, manufacturer of HadJt dies and Harness Lowest prices in city.
YO,
All work warranted. 196 Main st. near 7th.
DICKHOUT, Manufacturerand Dealer in Trunks Valises and Travelling Bags ItHt Main St., near 7th.
11JRED
A. ROSS, wholesale dealer in Haddlery Hardware. Collars, Saddles, Harness Leat her and Skirting, 5 south 5th street.
"IJETER MILLER, mauufacturerer and JL dealer In Saddles, Harness, Trunks and Valises. Atcent for Miller's Harness Oil, old I'ostofllce building, smith 4tl) street.
MILLINERY.
RS. M. H. ABBOTT, full stock of Spring Goods, I 4th street, bet. Main A Ohio.
MAN UFA CTUIiERS
WILDY
A POTHS, Carriage Manufacturers and Repairers, cor. 2d and Walnut streets.
IGO WOOLEN MILLS, established long enough to make the best goods from the best selected Wool, and sold for the least money—or wool.
CLIFF
A HON, manufacturers of Locomotive, Stationery, Marine. Tubular and Cylinder Boilers, Iron Tanks, Sheet Iron Vfork, Door Steps, Ac., cor. Canal A Main st.
SCOTT,
mERRE-HAUTE COMMERCIAL COIilege, Mook-keeplug. Penmanship Mid Arithmetic, Cor. 5th and Main streets. 21. R. GARVIN, Principal.
HA 7S A ND CA PS.
Yhand,Store.
ATES, "THE HATTER," New York Hat Latest novelties constantly on No. 115 Main street.
LI QUO US.
BOWSER
MUSI a
TERRE-HAUTE
AGENCY
1:1
OREN A CO,, Carriage Manufacturers, northwest cor. 1st and Main streets.
Established 1R54.
WABASfl
VIG(
W. RUMSEY, Attorney at Law. office south side Ohio street, bet. 3d and 4th.
AI.LEN,
D.
S. S. KENNKDY
A Co.,
Proprietors, corner Oth and Main streets.
WOOLEN MILLS, G. F. Ellis,
Proprietor, wholesale and retail manufacturers of Woolen Goods, N. W. corner 1st and Walnut streets.
Works, Heath A linger, manufacturers of Cars, Car Wheels, Castings and Machinery, corner Canal and Main street.
COMM ER CIA COLLEGE.
A JOHNSTON, wholesale deal
ers in all kinds of Liquors and Tobacco, Dowllng Hall, flth street.
PAPER.
LOCKE A SON,dealers In Paper Bags, our Sacks, Wrapping Paper and all kinds Paper Stock, 10 south 2nd street.
Flour Sacks, Wrap Paper and
A TTORNEYS.
1 .\VIRF A DAVIS, I ATTORNEY'S AT LAW. Cor. 3rd A Main, over McKeen's Bank.
MACK A WILLIAMS, Attorneys
Ohio street, between 8d and 4th.
ENAS SMITH, Attorney at Law, office Ohio street, between 3d and 4th.
JOhio
H. BLAKE, Attorney at Law, office street, between 3d and 4th.
GW.
KLEI8ER, Attorney at Law, office north side Ohio sfot-!, let. -Til and 4th.
SEEDS.
A. FOOTE. Dealer in Garden, Field and »J Flower Seeds. No. 65 Main street.
MACHINES.
rpiriliowE
SEWING MACHINE,
a
1 Cheney, Agent, 63 Main street, north
QUEENS WARE.
RtCHARlfrHJN A Co.. Jobber* A Hetail dealer* In Glam and Qoeenswnre. Exclusive Agents t.-.r Lupton's salver Barnwand Family F*v.rite Burning Fluid, 78 Main strve:.
DRESS it A KING.
MARYplain
CAPP8, Dress and Shirt maker and scwwr.Oor.7tli and Swan Sts. 37-4U
CLOTHING.
H. BANNISTER, Mvn-h.-u.t T-Uior, No. 7® Mnia street.
HWINTEL.
Tciw"
Main str
ranted.
Tailor. No. All work war-
•t. W»*ta:
REAL ESf.i r£
GRIMES
A ROYSE, Real Estate sod Inranee Agents Hit street, near Main.
MUSICAL INSTITUTE,
over the Postofflce. Music taught In all its branches. Pupils may enter at any time. 45.
FOR STEIN WAY PIANOS at
T. H. Musical Institute over the Postofflce. 45.
LKISSNER,
dealer in Pianos, Melodeons,
Organs, Ac., Palace of Music, 48 Ohio street.
COAL.
IGELOW will furnish at lowest marketprio thraclte, Pittsburg, Brazil, Block, Lost Creek
BIGELOW
Provisions and Produce, Nation
Coal and Mining Company,
will furnish at lowest market prices An-
and Sugar Creek coals. Leave qrders at office under Prairie City Bank, 6th street.
CIGARS.
A
BOOKS.
O. HOUGH, dealer in Cigars and Tobacco, two doors east of McKeen A Minshall's Bank. Jobber in North Star Fine Cut Chewing Tobacco. 33.
CHARLES
RL.
street, is the place
A TUTT, Manufacturers A Deal
ers in all styles of Boots and Shoes, 107 Main street, opposite Opera House.
HARD WARE.
AUSTIN,Hardware
SHRYER A CO., wholesale and
retail Sasli, Doors, Paints, Iron, Nails, Ol hin Glass, 172 Main street.
WEI DEL, Cigar Manufacturer,
and dealer in Tobacco, Snuff, Pipes, Ac., io. 11 South 4th street. 45.
STO VES.
BALL, Dealer in Stoves, Tin and Copper Ware, 128 Main street.
CReapers,
C. SMITH A CO., dealers in Stoves, Agricultural Implements, and manufactures Tin Ware, 50 and 52 Main street.
STinware,
R. HENDERSON, dealer in Stoves and 13 south 4th street, between Main and Ohio, and 111 Main street.
W
Mantles, and Grates, and manufactures Tin, Sheet Iron A Copper Ware, 150 Main st.
PROFESSIONAL.
LH.
BARTHOLOMEW, Dentist. 157 Main street. Residence cor. 5th and Swan.
WT W. JOHNSTON, M. D., Office over YV Prairie City Bank opposite National House, 6th street. Residence North side Chestnut, between 4tli and 5th.
\\T M. STEPHENSON, M. D., Office \f Opera House Building, up stairs.
RICHARDSON, Dentist, Ohio street, Between 3rd and 4th.
SD.SHIELDS,
DR.
Dentist, Office 119 Main St.,
over Sage's Confectionery.
J. fu STONE, Office Ohio street, be 3rd and 4tli. Res. Cor. 1314
&
Ohio Sts.
DRY GOODS.
rpHE GREAT HEADQUARTERS, Warren, .1 Hoberg A Co., dealers in Dry Goods and Notions, Cor. 4th and Main streets.
Established, in 1843.
LRYCE,
Wholesale dealer in Dry
Goods, Notions, Cotton Yam, Batts and grain bags, 94 Main street.
1.
-lHE NEW YORK STORE, 73 Main street near Court House square, Dry Goods Carpets, Wall Paper, Shades, Ac.
WlTTEXBURQ, RUSCIIAUPT, A Co.
TUELL,
RJPLEY A DEMING, dealers in
Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, Notions, Ac., Cor. 5th and Main streets.
CONFECTIONERIES.
WH.
SAGE, Confectioner, Wholesale A Retail Bakery A Confectionery Toys Candies AFire Works, 115 Main street.
"117" A. SHEAP, Wholesale A Retail dealer in Candies, Fruits, Children's Car riages, Toys, Ac., (itli street, opp. Postofflce.
WHOLESALE GROCERIES.
SYFEKS,
TRADER A CO., Wholesale Gro
cers, 190 Main street, Terre-Haute, ludi-
fJJiNI URE.
ll.stj stptas PurlerAChamber Suits,83 Main st.
TERRE-HAUTE
5-2ni*
FURNITURE CO. manu-
turers of all kinds of Furniture, wholesale and retail. S. K. Allen, Agent, Fourth street, opposite old Postofflce.
NION STEAM BAKERY.
FRANK HEINIG & BRO.
Manufacturers of all kinds of
Crackers, Cakes, Bread
A N
DEALERS IN
Foreign & Domestic Fruits,
FANCY A STAPLE GROCERIES,
LAFAYETTE STREET,
(Between the two Railroads,7 2T-tf. Terre-Haute, Ind.
D.
LAMOREUX,
TERRE-HA UTE
Marble & Granite Works,
Monuments and Tomb-Stones
In every variety, wjnstantly on hand and made to order.
SIXTH ST., opposite Doxvling Hall,
(By Town Clock,)
1,U. TERRE-HAUTE, INDIANA.
TSAAC BALI/,
UNDERTAKER,
And Embalmer of the Dead,
IS prepared to execute all orders in bis line with neatness and dispatch, corner of Third and Cherry streets, Terre-Haute. 50-tf
PROFESSIONAL.
DR. HARLAND,
NORTH STREET,
Between Elm and Ixxrcwt Streets Owr Iseibing'* Shot Store. OonsnttoMon free Cram 9 o'clock A. M., to ^o'clock P. M. 16-1
C'
LARK HOUSE,
-JJNION CHRISTIAN
gEAVER'S PATENT
y.
Or. Pint and Ohio Street*,
THE TERRE-HAUTE OMNIBUS ANL HACK LINK will attend to call* for tralm leaving both the Eaateni and Northern Depot* ateo oonvw pewetigeta to any part o: the city. Atlonle Knows PMIOI Hoc**, or at ttoe ly attended to.
en left at the Terre-Ham* National Hotwe, Bun til HooMWlUbeproinjji*-
O. H. C.
r, ,*
Great Headquarters for Dry Goods
i-v- or TERRE-HAUTE.
k*,K
WARREN, HOBERG & CO.,
Solicit the patronage of CLOSE CASH buyers of Dry Goods in Terre-Haute and adjacent towns, believing that with the great advantage of a resident buyer in New York, a large and attractive stock in every department, at the Lowest Possible Prices, they can make it to the interest of ^ill to deal with them.
We shall during the coming season offer specittf inducements in every department.
"Warren, Hoberg & Co.,
OPEBA HOUSE COMER,
Buy Your Fruit Trees at Headquarters!
THE LARO-EST
Lot of saleable Trees in Indiana—for quality are not excelled anywhere.
COME TO THE XURSERY AND SELECT FOR YOURSELVES.
Varieties warranted true to name—everything offered strictly first-class— FORTY ACRES CLOSELY PLANTED IN TREES, all under excellent, culture—everything kept usually found in first-class establishments.
Descriptive Price Catalogues of Trees and Plants
FREE ON APPLICATION.
Wo commence digging the First of November—Fall is the best time to plant nearly all kind of Trees.
BEWARE OF TltEE PEODLKltN, IRRIINPOXMIILF/ A6KXTN, OR TKAVELlSiU KIRS Ell IKS.
Make up Clubs in vour neighborhood—a big discount made on large orders r.lso, time given on larjje bills. T.t• Call and See w». East of the Blast Fitrnate.
•V'
COLLEGE!
Meroni, Sullivan County, Ind
The Fall Term of this flourishing Institution will commence September 13th, 1971, At 10 o'clock, and will continue twelve w*eks. Classes will be formed in Orlhoj?v*iiY)lt$
RCIMIIIIKV9 Ueoftrrnpliy, Art Htm tlimolle, •r Ornnimnr,
Indies pursue the same courses of study, are subject to the same regulations, enjoy the same privileges, and receive tho same honors as gentlemen.
EXPENSES.
The necessary expense of obtaining an education at Merom does not exceed two hundred dollars a year.
Titillon, per Term.
In (be Academic Department S fl 00 In the Classical Department 8 00 In the Hclentlttc Department 8 00 In each Department, Incidentals 2 00 Instructions on Piano, extra 10 00 Use of Piano. «ne hour each day 2 00
Instructions in Vocal Music, gratis. Ilonrd. Both ladles and gentlemen will find good boarding, with furnished rooms, in private families, for f3-V) per week. Some board themselves for about J2.00 per week.
For circulars, or anv further information, address THOMAS HOLMES, Pres't. Merom, Ind., Aug. 3,1871. 6-tf
Excelsior. Swing!
nil
For Sale at B. 0. COX'S,
IS* MAIN HTKEET,
S-tf Terre-Haute, In lUai.
1
HEINL BROS., Terre-Haute.
HAVE
AIMI IVinfory.
The various branches of Mathematics, the Natural Sciences, Latin, Greek, French. German, all the higher branches of a full and thorough College Course, will be taught a* laid down in the Courses of Study In our Catalogues and Circulars.
Always on hand a large stock and
Variety of Plows,
Suitable for all kinds of soil and for all purpn poses all of my own manufacturing, and all of which I guarantee to give satisfaction. I repair Plows and urn prepared to make all sizes and styles to order all kind
Plow Material For Sale,
including finished, single and double ntaev-
els ready for stocking. It gives me aftr&yt ill at ot
pleasure to have farmers ca plows, even If you do not wish to terms are cash and all
nd look abny by. W
Respectful y,
prices are alike for
81-LR. PHILIP NEWHART.
jyjARCUS SCHCEMEHL,
Real Estate Agent,
And Notary Public.
A Earjre and Mff» l*t of Hotisew and Lot* for ulr hrap.
Conveyancing and AlMtrMtlng Titles Real Estate promptly attended to.
OFFICE—Ohio, bet. aatf *th Hts. 9-3m
"^ILDY A POTHS,
Carriage Manufacturers,
Or. Second and Walnat Streets,
.. TERRE-HA UTK. IND. Repairing done prowptly aad at low rate* 30-U
FARLY
fe
ROACH,
MAJCCFACTIRKKIW *F
Saddles and Harness,
Dealers in CbUars, Whip*, Trunks, dc., NO. MAIN fcTREKT, North side, between
fcrd
and 4th, Terre-
Haute, Indiana. Agent* for Uncle Ham's Uaraem OIL Stbly.
J. SMITH A COS price* for Printing *r from 8 to per cent, lower that* r^ew Printed Price LlstJ. Call in and compare price*.
