Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 2, Number 49, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 June 1872 — Page 4
PR #11 lifei
•I
BS®fi
PEJBBL HOUSE CORNER.
"OWING"
To the backwardneaa of the se&ton' Importers, Jobbers and Manufacturers P( uty Good*, have tbe laat ten dan been closing oat tbeir Immense stock* at fearful sacrifice*.
Warren,
:oz',
1 I I
Hoberg
And C#mp«iy,
Through their resident partner hare xp"d® heavy porchaMs and offer tbe same to loelr patrons at a small ad v*t ce over c*L.
Great Bargains
In fre»h attractive Goods In every Department oI their mammorh establishment!
A Particular Attention is Asked To a large line of
Ladies1 Readf Made Suits,
In Beertracker, VictoriaLawn,tta(TandIan Coloied Linen, (inwr.Clath and Omnbrlq Hultn at 3,00, «8,36, «&»,*?,50, 910, C13 and 915,00 each.
To a handsosee Ho# of Black Llama, Pnfther and Dam4*ee Lace Point* and JackeU at 8,10,12,15,20 to CO cents cach.
To children*' Braided Piqne Salts, Misses H*eniacker and White Victoria LAwn Salts, Linen HI oases'for Itoys, Summer Shawls, Hlack Thibet 8hawl* all at popular prices.
To a new line of Tourist and Alpine haadle Parasols, Silk and Scotch Glimham bun Umbrellas, 80, «, 60,75, »1,00 and $1,25.
To a new line of 811k Stripe Grenadines, Plaid Japanese Poplins, new Suitings In Seersucker. Linen and Wash Poplins—also new arrival* of Stripe and Cheek Japanese Silks at 40,80,00 and 75 cents per yard.
To oat large line of Bnmmer Hosiery, for gentlemen. Ladies and Children In Balbrigan, Llxle Thread, and best EnglUh and German makes, also to oar celebrated "l'erlnot" Kid Gloves In one and two buttons of which we have at all times a complete stock. •x'
Now open an elegant line of Summer White Goods in Plain, Stripe and Check Victoria I^iwnsand Nainsooks, Stripe and Figured Piques, Organdies. Swisses, Jnckoiietn, ftl"o all the new novelties in Runilngs nnd Frllltngs, Hamburg Edgings and Insertions, ileal and Imitation Lao^ Black Gnlpure Laces, etc., etc.
Gools for men and boys wear In Cottonndes, Llnej«, Ducks, Summer Casslmercs. Jeans, et^eto.
New Qmmll«B, Percale*, Tolly Varden Chintz*, Summer Silks, with a magulfloent stock of fwh Black Gro Grnin Silks, 11,00. 91,25, »l/%ei,6, (U.U0, and 98,00 per yard and upwards.
We receive dally large lots of House-keep-ing Linens and Cottons, new Prints, Domestic Cotton Goods, etc., etc., which will be sold much under early seasons prices at
Warren, Hoberg**& Co., Popular Dry Goods House,
OPERA HOUSE CORXEH.
For Sale.
SfSI
I.10H SALE—1,000CORDS ASIL WALNUT I O.ik fiHil Hickory wood. Will «ell cheap. For particular*. address CLAUDE M4TTHKWS. Clinton, Ind. ma-i-lt
T-iOil SALE—FINE SADDLE GELDING, Itcnutimi bay, good «lr.e and easy rider. Tho hor*o WW bred In Kentucky, and Is of tho bmt breed of Middle horses lu that Hinto. CLAUDS MATTHEWS, Clinton, Indiana. tnftl tt
For Rent.
l.-iOIi HFjif-TWOGOODJIOOMS8UITA-hlo for nfflro purposes, adjoining my office, 167 Main street. L. H. BAUTHOLO MKV. n-tf
Wanted.-
Wnot
ANTED—BY A YOl'NU MAN,A FUKulNhed fooin with an American family. more than twenty inlnutes walk r.otn 1 hej^ostolllco. Address Bo* 32.
WANTBlV-PUnCHASF.R—FROMITEN
to fifty dollars a day, (sure) clear of all cxpon**I ha* IHH'II
WANTK1WA
nnd can be made trav-
cling with PanoramIc Views which now oflcr for unle or e-xt'hnnge. Addrew, F. STBVERSON, Postottlce Box U7fl, Terrell auto, Ind. may 25.
WA
N E N E S I N E wishes to correspond with a lady of lnUMllicence, and accustomed to gpod socle* ty, about the H«O of 35, of good personal ap|icnriiiici, who would like a home ha.* small, healthy,'southern city, pleasantly locntetl. None need apply that cannot tnake home ples»ant and agreeable. All correspondence strictly oonfJaenyat. Ad* dress, Box ll|l. Fornaudlna. Flofrlda. apST.
riw BOABDK«j9.-NICE
room%well ftirnished.', __ J. XV. \IATTOCK, l'oplnr. helween 6th atnl "tli strvets.
Ml ^.LOSt.
OST—SHACKLET—A^ TB E EAKLY I
Grov%on Thur»day afternoon, a gold ftraOP.et. *1P ftnder will J»e llbeimltv rewarded ojlJeavliig It at tjpott, Oren A Cos t'«irrh»ge Snop. 1-1.
Found.
1 L^OUND^fll AT
MACIUNK
Mi
ENERGETIC MEN CAN
JT secure permanent aim profitable emrip toy ment bv calling at the
HO*K SKWIN«
ofhoe, on Ohlo strvH. betwrea
6th and ttth streets. SIDNEY 8PEW. Msu» npnR. a«sr.
N
OTIC'K.
CtTY TB*A«d*Kk« TKHHK-LFAFTIS. May S«. iWa. I
Tlie delinquent list for the year liTl Is now In my h«ml* for collection and I am cominanuetl to pitntrd at ftnee to collect all tax-
thereon chorMd. Tbowo wl»o sre dellnouent will consnlt their own Interests, and mve atldltlonal «p*n», by calltngat my office and settling up Immediately, as col""JiuVPynSTK''^
Jane l-»^,.r City Tnsswrer.
TEXC1L8.
STENCILS.
Stencil Plate# for everybody. Brass letter* axd Fljtur«a,all slaes. stoncH Brushes, si
I »IM«.
Stencil Faflftt, all colon. .Burning Brands. JSisel Lottsw and Fifrores..
I and German Stiver Checks. l$i nop
1llinT
H^^r««sea,
Kibtton Stamps. _•
Society Seals *pd Ktublems, Brass, Copper and Qern.an SU w. »«—, Cbsina. .1 Goods. promptly Low Pries
°NIJ^TO FO6TE,
M» Mmtm Mr**, Ttm-Bmrnd.
jnai94m-M
rticeil South ctfi Mrccfc
P. ESXFjALL, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
TBRHt-HAUTB. JtrtfE I,Hi87i
SECOND EDITION.
TWO
KDrriofta .•»
Of this Paper are pabliahcd. The FIRST EDITION, 9*» Friday Evening, has a large circulation among farmers and others living ontslde of the cl?y« The 8ECOXD EDITION, on Saturday Evening, goes into the hands of nearly every reading person in the etty. Every Week's Issne is, In flscS#
TWO NBWSPAPBBS,
In which all AdvertlsBnents appear for ONECHARGE. ,,, „...
Contents of Inside Pages.'
—_
Tbe following are the contents of the Inside pages, tbs 2d, 3d, 8tb, and 7th. of (today* Satnrdajr Evening Mall We think fhey wfll be fottnd rich in variety and'Interest. amooirD PAOM. IN JUNE—Poetry. LONELINESS OF FARMING LIFE IN
AMERICA.
PfOUSfiTECULATlONS. I '*.*• HOW BOYS ARE REFORMED IN THE NETHERLA NDS. STYLES IN OLDEN TIMES. POPULAR SUPERSTITION. THE STRENGTH OF THE LA^V
a
A HINT FOR A DRAM ATI8T. NINE WIVES TOO MANY. CHIPS AND
SPLINTERS: 'HK I
A Pithy Sermon to Young Men—A True Wife—Presently—Extempore Preaching —Be Sensible-Another Sleeping Beau% ty, Ac., Ac.
THIRD PAGE. __
THE HOUSEHOLD. ARNOLD'S TREASON, f.**' BHLTM JPAUJC, ORIGIN OF MISERY—Poetry. SURLY TIM'S TROUBLE—A Lancajdilre
Story.
ANECDOTE OF BEN WADE. '8 8PANI8H BRUTALITY. 8EVENTH PAGE. WOMEN IN THE CHURCH. 'WEARING ON THE BRAIN. ft I A GOOD POSITION TO IMPROVE.
A man may easily be so situated that any change would improve his position. But he may also be'so placed, by some lacky concurrence of circumstances, that a good position may be improved Into a commanding one. And it is an irrefragible proof of sagacity to appreciate such a position, and of power to mske the most of it. Nino men out ol ten who who tail of the promise of their eaflier years, fail because they don't see, or cannot use a fortunate event or a favorable situation. The tide which taken at the flood leads on "to fortune" rolls to their feet, and they see nothing in it but a "ground swell" or the disturbance ol a passing storm. The opportunity is lost,the flood recedes, and they are left standing idly on the sand, wondering with belated wisdom, at the blindness that prevented them from being St tliat moment borne on the topmost wave to a fortune they can never hope for such another chatico to reach. Our fellow townsman, Hon. Daniel W. Voorbees, seems to us to stand with this flood of the tide of fortune surging aronnd him and almost roady to bear him off his feet upon it whether he will or not. We do not care to discuss now the question ot the division of the Republican party, or tho fitness of the Cincinnatinominations for Democratic support. Setting this nsiile, Mr. Voorlioes appears as the chgmpion of 4he old lfeith of his party, of the preservation of its integrity and tho retention of its' honors, such as thoy are. He has spokon first and most forcibly "against its dissolution, and the feeling which has borne it fof forty years unbroken, long viotorious, dreaded even in defeat, rallies to him as a soldier to his flag. He represents the convictions, tho prejudices and the efforts of his party, as no other man, and no other exponent, has done ior a quarter of a century. He has stood fiist in his "bid time" opinions, and the changes ef parties havo brought them about him in such a way as to make him the pivot of his own. Few men havo been able by years of labor, and tbe most daring efforts of the best abilities, to achieve prominence at once so considerable and so creditable. Hs is|p1aee£ where the jood that ••lsnds'to foJluSe" is wjtbin a step of him. He holds one of those rare positions wtotolMiood ft* It may be can bo easily made better. There is nothing that bis party taade so successful soon test upoh in ISJOWith mi broken rsnksand unimpared principles,that Is not as fully in issue to-dayas it was then. He has all the strength of that year's record to strengthen him, besides what may be derived from the natnrsl antipathy of his party to be a life tons sad implacable enemy. Will he nss It nan he use it? Will he make his position, as the temporary centre of the old party hopes attd allegiance*, a stronger one, by spreading his rallying c*ll as far as ho can reach by voice and pen and abundant helpf If he will, we see nothing to prevent him from standing permanently foremost in tbe unohanging, unlearning ranks of the old time" Democracy. No man ever held a position so easy to improve Into almost dictatorial power, and all the urgencies surrounding it seem to impel him to make the best ot it. He must resist them strongly to prevent (bent Horn doing tor him pretty much all U»at another nan would have to do for himself. He most hold back hard to keep from being made a more prominent man than he ever was before.
xmmmnzcrmr**^
Hughes, the well known aatbsr om Brown st Rugby" and "at Oxleading Liberal member of Parliament, and a steadfast Mend our governnl tnf ruifrg has commit striking a blbW at^-ftld toms, and arraigning at onco the listencty and the morality of a practice that pervades every rank of from the "Junk" dealer ot Seven to the Duke who is virtual sovereign ^country. Need w%say that wsalltuli to racing* lr« wettfust, fcre do fcay If and say at the same time thatEngliah racing is wide open door to one of the most pernicious vioqs ip all the achievements of *®tonslv deprseity.'* Every1 body bets. The nobleman bets, the black leg bets, the regular "turfman" bets, the street thief bets, tbe clergymen, the lawyer, the doctor, tbe merchant, the broker, the manufacturer, all bet alike. Some make it a business, and their "books" are looked to as carefully as an honest man's ledger. Ifcttersoll's reoord everything, and the fluctuation of the od^»," tke "hedging" of one side, the "boldness" of tbe other, the confidence in one horse, the fear of another, the employment of jockey's, the changes of jockies, the strength of the "field," slid the effect of "training," are all noted and much of It regularly published* to1 assist the piouywork of betting. And all this Is the effect of the universal interest felt in racing. If ss wide a feeling could be excited in a contest between faro players, or poker "bluffers," it is quite certain t,hat as wide a praotlce of betting ob tboss games of mysterious morality snd uncertain advantage, would be established, and the whole land would ring with the uproar of "fulls" and "flushes" snd "pairs" with "aces st the head" as if it were one vast gambling bell from Epsom Downs to Chester, as it now rings with the "odds" and tbe "field" and the '•favorite." And what worse the country would be for the change, it would puzzle both the economist and the moralist to say. The difference between the evil of a betfon a horse and a bet on a card is not easily ijKsoernibl^ except to the eye of fashion, and the money counts lor about as Qinch in one case as tbe other. Bat racing and racebetting is one of John Bull's pet vices, and he would rather surrender four virtues at any time. His "Derby day" is the "day for which all other days were made," if we may judge by the outpouring it takes to Epsom, and the months of eager discussion and speculation that precede it. It is a day of general and mischievous license, of swindling, thieving and cheating, and those who are neither promoters nor victims of these, arn gamblers ef more or less respectability and pertinacity. Even the ladies gamble in light articles of personal decoration or service, and very often in cash. It is a vast moral stench, to which no other nation of Europe offers a comparison. Racing beyond the channel is infrequent and not popular, and scientific betting is little understood. The gambling there is downright, struightforward ganbling, with no cloak of equivocation and no palliation of popular indulgence. Only England gambles universally, everywhere, in all classes, upon racing. Tom Hughes has struck a blow at the practice, at along distance, but still within reach. He moved, on Tuesday last, against the adjournment of Parliament tor the Derby day. It was not mueh, in appearance, but it was a good deal In its cpnsequences. If Parliament thus threw discredit on tho Derby, the courts and government offices must follow, and the holiday of general gambling would bo cast in the shade of official indifference or disfavor, and such a shade as that is sure to deepen in England, until it would bo as dark as night and as chilling. It would damage the "Derby," and spoil the saturnalia of that May day indulgence. So Parliament voted the motion down by three to one. John Bull has no notion of being reformed even by the indirect influence of Parliamentary censure and official discountenance. The "Derby," in all probability, will outlast the plucky Liberal, and convey its vices in full blow into the next generation and tho next century. More's the pity. :s' v-
society Dials
IM
SOXR Republican paper scolds Anna Dickinson for speaking against Grant and in favor qf the Liberal movement. It is a waste equally of comment and censure to scold the tbrVld and irrepressible Anna, gbe
will
talk and if
she can't talk aense she wilt talk spit It Is a very serious question whether she, and such as she, have not dene the cause of Woman Suffrage more harm than good. A speech that rattles in a mim1! face llko a blast of sharp sleet worries him, but it don't upset him. There Is no force In it, nothing but arrogance. And Anna's speeches on sny other than her proper topic, and too many upon that, are of this teasing kind. She has no notion, as Mrs. Livermore has, of the strength of gentleness, and the power of pleasant words.
TUB general frailly of the liuman family Is shown in tbe fsct that even ministers cannot come together without quarreling. The Methodist General Conference, now In session in Xew Tork is no exception to the rule. It wonld be fiur better for Christianity if there were no meetings of these clerical gentlemen for religious business. The moment the rersfsods get together in numbers they commence to quarrel #8 and say naughty things, rbe only safety seems to be to keep tbem apart sad Is their pnlfrits.
'.'.apjJJWISWt ."F** /UJJ44»l, **rWT-
mparts?
paper, ipngt^ saoMHI' length describing "Robinson
that
Crusoe's Island," snd the loesliUe* of might be snppoasAl# ms of that Inl irse nan Bern and the psrsgrspfc i- ly embodied very eW^ almost universal error, in miking It the in which De Foe's fancy found mt habitation." Alexander Selkirk, whose of adventures un4oubteJlv suggested
»scene 'local
Crusoe, of York, msrlner, who lived eight snd tijfnty years all alone in an uninhabited laland on the coast of America, near the mouth of the great river Oroonoque, having been cast on "shore by shipwreck, in which ell men "perished but himself. With an account of how hewasatlast strangely "delivered by pirates. Wrtttsn by. "himself^" Following tbe oonversaconversation with "Friday" about his former visits to ths' island, and alluding to a constant euirent spoken of by the sAvage, hs said "I afterwards understood this -was occssioned by the "great draught and reflex ot the mighty river Oroonoque, in the month of which I thought afterwarda our "island lay." Again, he says: "I reckoned myself, by observation, to be in latitude nine degrees twentytwo minutes north of the line." Juan Fernandez is in latitude 88 degrees south, and in the Pacific ocean, the Orinoco empties into the Atlantic nearly in Crusoe's supposed l#titttde. How popular apprehension ever greats blunder about the aoene best of stories, whin the wojh so precise snd oosaplete in its statement of a location In another ocean and on the othefcside of t}ie equator, is queer, to say this least of H. Confusion of the Romance with the part of Selkirk'a-lito* tory did lessness
with the pan of seiKirm s-ms* 1 urine of it, no doubt, and^areij[id the.rest.
THE
long duration of the Tichborne,
trial has attracted some attention in England to the length to which soits are sometimes protracted, spd the Morning Ptist recalls the faot that the longest on rocbrd in England is thst between the heirs bt Sir Thomas Talbot. Viseodnt Liale, and tbe heirs of Lord Berkeley.. The title to oertain and the
James I., and then only by compromise. It tod lssted 120 years.—[Exchange. yfo rsmemberto haveseensomethree years ago, In the London Week!/
Times—iv/relation
They bavd nl*» servants in San Domingo. Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, who is trying housekeeping at Samana, with her husband, writos this to the Commonwealth
Wo have engaged a
woman for the kitchen at five dollars a month. Very cheap,you will say. AhJ that depends. Another woman, wit# higher wagesj trawls throagh witfr little washing, snd negleeta tho rooms. An Afirlosn nondescript, sup* posed to have beens priuoe in his own country,- flies sbout, ills ths lamps, and sweeps little, snd is the most idle snd most honest one of the cotnpsny." Tbe brsskfbst coffee has to be elosely watched, as the servants are fond ot it, and have an idea that thinned down coffee is good enough for tbe household, if left to themselves. She sighs for a couple ot the much-abuscd Celts, and promises to go bac^t to Boston with tbe determination to love and cherish tbem.
T. BCCHAJJAX READ wrote bis "drifting" under these circumstances Itetnrnlng home late at night from a supper, low-splrlted and weary, he sat with his aching head pressed against tbe cool window pane, outside of which scold Match rain was dashing. Happily for us, his mind went drifting back to other days, snd ho composed those exquisite lines, so fuU of vivid pictures and soft melody, ending thus: •No more, DO more
The worldly
••bore
Upbraid* me with lis load uproar* Wit*
... ith dreamtal eyas My spirit lies Under ths walls ot ParadtseT
Cu ATTAKOOOA stirred ths Irs of Olive recently. She was required to for delivering her lecture fJO city $15 State tax, 15 county tax, and foes to sheriff snd clerk total *46. people growled bees use Olive lee- to ths second night i« walking- sr, lustesd of full dress. of
Logan
ta*.
The tared salt,
CSSS^jS^Sn snub the Un
Bttffc, snd s*s right In doing mi tbsUdmlplstrstionandths &&st*has invited thenalo do Times asys that lbs action of the Bsiists In isgasd IFfto the supplementary tresty "jastiA
ICnglawd In tbe eyes of slltbe world,
Bnt ws think thst in no other country but this oonld Secretary of mske demands so boldly, then
®anageat
Is
Juan Fernandes, but Cruaoe'a laland distinctly and repeatedly declared the body of the romance itself, even in the title page of the original edition, to have been thousands miles from ths location popularly nlgaed it. We quote from the title the first sditkm, copy of which hoppen to have wen once, and the page of which we transcribed "for tui It will be found sifO la (he ns^ Ani lean Cyclopedia, ana in Keltic's so Uon of. De Foe's works: "The life surprising adventures of Robinson
in
and
of
ot
title
so humbly* and slill kee(r at the head of the Cabinet. of the treaty the Statea has been put In a reiy unerivla ble position in "the eyes of the world.'
A wnrnrn in the Americsn Bsptist Is of ths opinion that in a few years Baptist ministers will be found bfflclsting in their pulpits by reading not only their aermonS| but reading prayera lrom Baptist prayer book.
tf
and
Stats Woman's Suffrage Asao-
ciation holds its snnusl oonvsntton at Dublin, Wsyno oounty, Indian^, Wednesday snd Thnrsdsy, ths 5th a 0th of June. Good speakers are t^ present. 23
The City and Vicinity,
•SMwrlMiMi The HAttmi ms MAIL IS delivered to city subscribers at TWKHTT CKXIS a month, payable at the end of eveiy fosr weeks, or at «wo Muua a ytiein advance. The
MAIL will be tarnish
ed by pest, or at this ofllce, at the following rates: One Year.Six MonthsJM Three Months, 50 Cents tossHsMy in s«
VS ttafl SsihseHbers.—Waleh the date on^ur direction label. It indicstee the time when your subscription expires, st which time the paper will, invariably, be discontinued without further notification.
1
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. ..... Brags, Ac—T. H. Barr. Dry Woods—Warren, Hoberg A Co. "—Central Book Btore. oodi ttn« Opera Hot— Wines—Jacob Fisher. The "New" Wheeler A Wilson Sewing Machine.
Books—Central Book Store. Dry Goods-W. & Ryoe A Co. Anootineement—B,8. Tsm iHonse—Martlnettl-
is of this Itself (s
Tsnnant Ltl-Rav
,vel Co.
Wall Paper—B. Bnekell. Silver ware—T. H. Riddle. Fruit Jars—J. Cook A Son. Notice—John Paddock, Olty Treasurer. Millinery—8. L. 8traus. Cfothfng-W. H. Bannister. Change of Time—St. L. V. T. H. A1. R. R. Lost-nBracelet. Wasted—Famished Room. Water Coolers Ac—8. R. Henderson A Co. Haitiware-Shryer A BrOs. -v Fruit Jars—H. 8. Riehardson A Co.
PLBICTY of suausements in prospsot.
ANOT?HHR death from small-pox -this •k. ,•
Xtn»sruEi3 to-night at tbe Opett House. mk,.:, TSEK
whooping-cough prevails!a this
cttyRUMOR
spreads strange tales of a
Main street tiger's ravages.
THESE
Edward
included till the reign of
is a good cttel of talk of mak-
ingataew ward in tbe east part of town. —j-
PROSPKRTTY
of the Daily Thuu-
derer—the announcement of the dismissal of & chancery case, on account of the completeconsunrption1noostsof the estate in litigation, which was begun a little after the rebellion of 1745 artd,ave believe, grew in some way, out of toe invasion of the Highlanders or the disturbitaoes Allowing it, It had beep protracted about one hundred and twenty-fiyayears. The iswyers kn*ir nothing -sbont it* The court knew nothing ibotttit, #xcept that it stood on the docket, transferred 'fronl year to year beyond*, all living memory, with no entry ofaictfcmln regard to it, and stfuck it oft The paper spokeof it ta a singular illustration of tbe sluggish practice of tho old conrts. -w.
THE
THR
smiles on the various
lodges of Odd Fellows in our city 'j, NIOUT thieves prowl about the city "picking up little things. t|
city schools continue only three
weeks—then the welcome vacation.
A WABNINO "red flag" floats from the corner of Ohio and Tfpth streets.
NATURE never had on A more lovely garb in this locality than at the present time, ,•
SARSAPAJRILLA, once so popular, has almost disappeared as a medicine ag0f
I
Republicans are confident that
with Hon. Morton C. Hunter they can oarry this Congressional Districts wing to tbe supposed demoralized condition of the democracy.
A so* of Esq. Pettinger, of Fayette Township, a noble boy ot sixteen years, lost his llfo In Brouillette's Creek,while in tbe set of saving two small boys from drowning.
THB
next meeting of the HorticultuSociety will be held at ths residence of Milton Rogers, northesst of tbe city, at which time tbe regular Spring Exhibition of fruits and flowers be had. A very inUuesting meetis expected.
ral
will lng:
MARRIAGE LICENSES.—The
The Mall has been remW d^Vfn^ ^ths jpsst wssp^, to Jfo 8©*th,.FUtlv stseet, wherstt Is pisassntly snd eon- .. nOy loestedfn^au* of ppeathe second ftio^ and wheris'tb^ fMps snd pstrsaa^f ths paper will tmays tods eotdtal weleeme. ... "I a
CUTP ASOXIISTSjust
Stats
rstraet his By the United
erection ot stadc for the three new boilsts thst they are putting «p at the tell works, Ot Is sstd tohs ths hsndsomest atMk ia this psrttf the conn-
It |1.» -.-.-ri
on
THJI vtee of gambling on railway trains has increased to an alarming ex-*' tent of late. Superintendent Simpson., isdstsrsainsd thstit ^sllbe stopped on the Vandalia line. Officers of other roads would do well te follow his 6*1^| am
THS politics! situstlon has io'prece-''' dent. The Republican party haa been» divided, while the Democracy la lost to in a us as re & htm never, been such a Preaidential eampaign aathat •upon which wearer now entering. Giant la opposed j1" by original and influential Republi-^. sans, w^ile on the,other hand Greeley tt fa snslsUMd by aoeh Dsmoemta aa CoU« it
Dowliflg, Judge Patteraon, Bayless W.' nmrj K. Wilson and Sam. R^ r1* Hamill, It is evident thst neither par-.. ty oan claim an organisation whioh is intact and unanimous.
CALWAGKXK'S
dsy evening Happy Gal Wagner with hia nalnstrel oompany appeara st thei'' Opsrs Houss. The plesssnt veoolletlons of his former visit is sufBcient to^j
A Anl 1 WA AW l\AA^ BO A
draw a full house,' and we expect to seo,. a large and happy assemblsge. The organlsation is under the management of
Mr. J. H. Haverly, and tbe programme introduces Cal Wagner,the acknowledged leader of Ethiopian burlesque, Fos-, telle, the burlesque Prlma*Donna, Ned Fox, well known to our people, arid* the greet California quartette. Seata can .. be secured at ths Central Book Store. ft#
THX
State Association of Congrega
tional Churches and Ministers meets atr1i Fort^Wayne next Thursday, continual,., lng over Snndsy. Ths church in this^ city will be represented by Rev. E. F. Howe, C. C. Oakey, Esq., Deacon Ilarry Rosa, and poasibly several other liiembers. Rev. J. L. Bennett, of Indianapolis, will preach the opening sermon and Mr. Howe will read a paper on "The beat revenue aystem for tho dhurdies." The celebrated colored singers from Fiske University, Nashville, Tennessee, will- be present. This re* msrKable oorps, called "Jubilee Sing"'*' era," have alreadysucoeeded in raising: 125,000 for their university.
DECOBATIOS DAY
il
:i
UR steam ilour mills in this ci|y tata out about"hvb hundred b&frels of flotfr daily.
THE Mail is on salo each week at all news depots Dool^y's, ^Craft's and Post Office Lobby.
THE
strawberry prop iagturnlng out
finely owing to tho fivorsrajp weathel of the past two or three ^eks. Thr berries sell at thlrty-fii^p and forty cents a gallon.
THE summer arrangement for the running of passenger trains goes into effect to-morrow. The arrival and departure of trains at this point is not materially changed.
of
following
marriage licenses hsve been leased by tbe County Clerk since our last report: Win. R. Statt and Clara & McCormack.
Jno. C. Ashley and Jane William Cox and Lonl«a Phasic. Nlfhotaa Kmlel and Mary & Kadel. William McMonay and Honmes V.
^W*tal Andrew and Jane Khoads*.
4
OXE day this week a merohant in one of the towns west of this city purchased a bill of goods of one of our grocery bouses. Soon after a drummer from an Indianapolis house strnck him and proposed to duplicate the bill of any Terre- Haute bouss snd psy freight this city. Hs backed down, bowevon tbe Illinois man showing the bill goods he had |ust purchaaed.
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eOsspleted
6
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was observed in
this city on Thursday afternoon upon a scale never before approached, and in" a manner complimentary alike to the remembered and remembering. BusU. -, noss waa very generally suspended and our people almost ei masse collected at the Early Grove
Cemetery where the exer-j cl8es were held. A train of eight passenger coaches came down on tho Danville road, and With the folks froui, the country added to our town people, together with the decorated streets andM -y business houses, there was a hollday^^^S* stir in which allpemblunce of mourning^ seemed buried.
The procession was quite Imposing.' Besides the benevolent orders, fire department, etc., there were seventeen so* handsomely decorated wsgdns, carrying over two hundred young misses with baskets of flowers. On two wagons were seated colored children with floral offerings. ....,
The exercises at the grove consisted of music by' two brass bands, consolidated, a well selected choir, prayer by Rev. A, Jewett, and brief, approjrlate and well received addresses by*. Ifajor O. J. Smith, A. F. White and R.' 8. Tepnant. Col. John P. Baird acttd^ ss President. ,i,
Tafc oelebratcd Martlnetti-Ravc-L^
Pantomime Troupe, appear at tbe Op--era House Thursday, Friday, and Saturday evenings, June 6th, 7th and 8tb with a matines Saturday afternoon, The St. Ixmis Democrat says: ti
The Martlnettl-Ravel Troupe of pan- -5. tomimlsts had a full bouse st this the- *'1 ater last evening. They opened with) the familiar pantomime of "Jocko,. or tbe Brazilian Ape," In which Paul Mar-*'" tinettl made a favorable Impression.,
The in/Vtspensible infant phenomen-' J'.' on figured in tbe programme to the unnitod delight of tbe younger portion^ the audience. Mr. Huntley, an adreceived several mirable banjolst, hearty encores, which were folly deserved. The ran of the evening was* reached In "Pat-A-Cake," which brings on the stage the prime features of a. pantomime—Clown, Harlequin, Pantaloon, and Columbine. Ei lauf at
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These exercises closed, theentlroasswnblngo passed over to the cemctery. where the young ladles strowed with' i$ iH flowers tbe gravea of tho fallen heroes who amid the melting smoke of a" 't Corinth, tho parting clouds of aLook«. ..... out Mountain and the deadly carnago or a Southern battle-field turned their faces from home and their eyes toward* Heaven and breathed out their lives with a heroism that Is deserving of tho1"" highest tribute tbe living can bestow, $[ May the memories of their heroic fleeds^ over bo as fresh as to-day, »nd may' each passing season witness this benn-P^^J ij tiful floral tribute so long as tho union II these States shall continue.
wiuuiwiuw -Jvery ono
ugbed. as every one Is expected to do, the adventures of tbe consolencele** Clown snd Pantaloon, and wonderedr. at tbe marvelous escapes ot Harlequin^ As ths Clown, Jullen MsrtinettI wash1 peculiarly happy, and In his depreda-' Hons upon tbe stock of unoffending bakers was sbly sssisted by Alfred
11
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Mar-
tinetti. Paul Martinetti performed as number of acrobatic Peats that astonisha
