Terre Haute Daily Union, Volume 1, Number 239, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 16 October 1857 — Page 2

*. B. UR6, AHMIBU KAt

,, TEEBE HAUTE. .. .' .. .,», „. ,,- TKIDAT HORNING. OCT 1C, *5T

unpopular

down

Atiterican.hs

Pottttdsae.

M*

Thone who prnctie* politics fend*, nro nlirsys o*tl» lookovt to see which wny U»a popular breeaes blow, for /MrtWy be npon the

tide. They are always ready

to twist nndsomr, and torn nbont as Ofton a* the wind, to keep on the blind tide of the "dear people.Vv' The most ritHcoloas and instance of this, that has occurred for a long time, is famished by some of the Republican editors In this State and III! nois. Alarmed at the rapid march of their party towards

negro equaltiy,

and knowing that in these States the people cannot be made to stand any each doctrine, they are trying to swear ont of it by claiming that they are

par excellence,

the

party—that

they are

firttP*

ihe free ^States,

so

that^feis laborjmight he bronght into competition with that of the white man} and the white man's be brought

toll*. if they have Uwi hoi est in what they have been ssyinjf they desire to we every slave the United States set free

at once,

so that

8,000,000 of negro laborers might fix the value of labor at the

pauper

stand-

arJ, to which the laboring'wAito man would becotnpelled to come or find no employment. Or if they have not been'sincere, they area set of nnmitigated hypoeriten. They mast take one or the other ,of these horns of the dilemma. And whichsoever one they may chance to hang and dangle upon, they will be the langh ing stock of all sensible and thinking people. ''The

while

deed I Then let the

proof that the

rot

American

party me in favor qf slavery.

Torn

to the Express and see how flatly and broaSIy he made the charge. We denied, At once, that the editor of the ?uette Was a member of the American pirtj, hot it made no difference with Hudson—he stuck to the falsehood, because it answered his purpose We no# have, «nd hftve had,.for some time, the authority of the editor 6f the Gaiette .himself for saying that

he it

aat a ikembertf ike America* party

Will Hudson agree now that he asserted whst was not true If he does not, we thai) look a little

further

in­

to the thing of searing such matters into^ people's foreheads. Does he recoHect

Parker PiUsfairy—thc "Bepub-

lica*^Wi'm

:1*ke

^y^f^c^le who^Rtula^aM houses. should not throw stone#."

Cbv*, of Ohio, has been for

years an open and avowed

abolitwmet

—in favor of abolishing slavery in the Statee~—oppoeedtotfcefag&ve skve law—in flavor of aboluhing the slave trade heftr sen the States, and alavery in the District ot Columbia—in fcvot' of 'bonder ground railroads»,,'f by which th^ Wgrrieil are? Stolen away from their irt#fteR».a«d

,Q

they* eauoot be obtained again-^-in

of n»grode voiin^ sitting on Jn* ries, f*6ple, and even more than nil ihw. If he ,is elected fievwiNl of Ohio, it has been by the vote* of those who endorse ill these opinkm*.WAndif thai event has ocenmd, the whole Republican party wDl ml up a shout at the victory A*y have obtained. And Hudson will join In it! Httk thai.,0

J8T*?. Hudson thinks that if Cookerlf shoold bnrst, it «4trould he worse for this community than the b«r»t»«g »of the |X«ww nt Wka

Tbe Lord have mercy on ns if Ar Ihonid hnrst too. i.*

OP TBI

to*.—Halherbe's serup gr*mtnati||f minutiie beea^e, in effect, a veritajble religion to hfa| in--•om«Keh ibal^on his deaU^b»A» nay# ki the laat ajtony—he gave vent to his irritation at thesolfeisms of which bU nurse was guilty, iai* as we are assured, scolded her right smartly, in spite of the remonstrances of his confessor. The poor confessor was oulj •nobbed for his pains. "8ir** protested the Hying, "I will defend to my very last gnsp the purity of the French language." And when the good father tried to work npon his patient by describing the Uy».of the life to come, but in a somewhat prosy and unpicturesque manner—and thereupon asked if Itfalherbe did not feel a' great yeanong after the speedy fruition pf all this happiness—the answer was: "Say nothing more about it, or your wretched style will disgust me with the place altogether.

SWKKT OIL

volute man's

"for the tekite man

They must put a very low

estimate npon the intelligence of their readers to^suppose that they have for gottou all that they have been saying heretofore about the ''curse of slavery "the poor slave," "the galling yoke ofbondsge," "the panting fogitive," and all that sort of thing, to encour age the negro to Jrnn away from his master and come to

FRO*

BEKCH NUTS.-—A

correspondent of the State Jofcrhef says the farmers in the Southern part of Germany gather the nuts of the beech and press from them a veiy fine sweet oil, that answers the purpoees of Olive oil. Be vugg&sts thit oar far* mers make an experiment with Our abundant crop of beech nuts this year* He thinks our farmers could gather a crop from the nuts in our fbrests, from which an abundant supply of sallad oil could be obtained, snperiorto the adulterated articles we import and pay extravagant prices for. The hickory, black*walnut and many other nuts and seeds, would answer the purposes The beech nut, if expressed. cold, would yield a most delicious oil, and would be much more valuable than f^ign converted into mast fed pdrki.y'

The new arrangements lor

the transmission of the Eastern mail through Cincinnati and by the of way Ohio and Mississippi railroad is about to be completed. The Post Master General last week appointed six mail agents, with salaries of 91000 each to attend to it. It will shorten the time in the receipt of all the Ea&tern mails at this point, and others to the west of Vfneertnefr, nearly two dayfi£-:

Ev. Jour.

man first," in-*

negroet alone,

and quit your eternal braying about slaveify4 and'lct the "country have time to attend to the

while man's interest*.

Thj» EfXpnsis, son|e tin ig^

published an extract from the

Mattoon

QaM & ftfvof of ihtrodooing slavery ipto IliinoU^~and accompanied^it with the declaration that the editor was an

Mr. H. H. Childs,- rescued

from! the Central America, a member of Dr. D. Smith's church, related the story of the disaster and stated that while ho was floating on his plauk that awful night, he heard distinctly recited by another person the Lord's Pr*yer. •••--.iiy--

IIANDSOMI PnBSEirr.—The President of the United States, it is said, has presented Captain Johnson, of the Norwegian bark Ellen, who saved 49 of the passengers and crew of the ill-fated Ceutral America, with a magnificent gold pocket chronometer.

TRCST COXPAXT

AITO

A

CFCIR*r'nr«k

tr

A

SCTCIDE.—

Win. C. Williams, of Manchester, N. H., who lost #10,000 by the Ohio Life and Trust Company, hung himself io a barn on the night of Oct. t., Otn. ...... ..fcatdv#'*

lr ,1

TUB Cirr or GATBTY

AKD

JASHIOK.

—It is said of Paris that one of^every three thousand pMe^s commit »uicide that two thirds of the population etuti6t aflbrd tin expetrt^isf a burial^ that in ev^ttry three births one is illegitimate that 80,000 persons, besides those assisted by regular charities, arise every morning without knowing how they will get a dinner, and that 17,000 habitual drunkards of the most brutal character disgrace the

WOMAX Tntow,

mo*

ILU

THX

Cmuwit

SKQOHD Sipmr WIKOOW

-ID

New York, on Friday night, Mrs. Towhstto, who had been laboring nnder deliriym tremens, supposed she saw her husband's ghost, and seiaed her two children aad dashing them out of a seceod Mrtry wiudow upon the pavement of the yArd, jumped wst after them.Shewasfr.und rolling in tkrou^L a puddle of dirty ter^ one ehiM heiflh her and the other in ths

They vscn earned

up stairs, where one-of-the ehillw laid^ The mothor «nd th« |KMr^yuig child were takrn to the aion house.

A Hu» Heawee w* A yswg •4W.S. WUUhm, wataneittd eX Wfceelbw,en Teseday h«t,fer p#bbh»fte»alL— Bin* MiUli while sitting at&e krwUast table, and nit an bsMr er ISMS after Ms riage wHha rwpcctableieelaswisliag jeewn ladjn and snm snths pais* ef surtiacoatMs vridbc kw. bk«M*Kikk«^if(aMtlfaMMr fstji^ss yeaseef age,hs

CaflMitte pifcst -snsssd' Sar«a «s I la Hew Ori—as mSttsrtfilgW by a nnsrtKi ef

fumm,

wlie

aa se^M ssSsaMslnst ef Us, aai town stabs uienhiak

WkwSi

teBaakm We ham already urged upon our hankers ««il caf iU lists tin importance and nrgencv of a oonioerted and spirited effort in aid ef thejprompt and gMMtrnl movement of Western Prodnoe to'the seaboard hnt the Modi is so imminent, aad the danger that at tention will be distracted by the thon sand incidents of a monetary pressnre is se obvious, thai we, malce no apolo gy for recurring to the subject.

Wo sn suffering at thla moment not so mock from a deieiency of enrreney as from an excess of debt. The West owes the Kast the Interior owes the seaboard the seaboard is In debt to Knropo. Up to thi» point, the West has been unable to pay, fur the want of the wherewithal. Bank notM do not really liquidate the debt of country to country or eeetion to section tbey are but bounters employed to facilitate the process. As between two individuals, a debt may be paid with.notes or with gold but Indiana pays no inconsiderable balance New York or to Birmingham, with either of these, but with grain. At length, altera season of dearth and vacuity, the West has fifty millions of bushels of wheat ready for market, or so that it may be threshed and got readjKat a week's nbtice. The growers owe their local merchants those merchants owe our jobber*, who, in turn, owe the importers, who owe the mannfactnrers and bankers of Europe. Lei this Wheat be sent rapidly ^forward to the seaboard, and in part to Europe, and a wholesome process of general liquidation will inevitably result, affording relief to all solvent parties. Business will revive, our eanals and Irsilronds^ will realise ,.in5r«^ed transportation our ships will have freiglpts^and there will be everywhere diffused,^ and felt a joyful confidence that the worst in really over.

But all this cannot be property effected trithott mon«y, and that money is not now obtainable at the West. Some two weeks#gOr on tbe heels of the firtt^Vailui^s^and' iu the mfdst of thfrouvere contraction itvthis.cH^^}ne Canadtahs slipp& -oVer to Chfci^d, and bought^a million dollars' #orth of grain fur about three qiiartera of a million. Tli^r have Jn Canada, a habit of buying Illinois spring wheat for home use, and selling their own winter wheat to Europe or this city for some twenty-five to thirty-three per cent, more, saving handsomely by the trarlet! Having courage and taioney just when they were snort on this side of the Lakes, they used these quaM ities to good account, as was right.

But we cannot afford many repetitions of thia

coup.

Grain is now

twenty per cent, higher in Chicago then it was when that neat operation was yet- wheat can be bought, in Chicago, shipped to Liverpool and I sold al a net profit. In our judgment. it is as low as it need or should be and arrangements should be at once consummated for the purchase with cash in hand of every bushel that living prices will bring to a railroad.-*— We have some two months of canal navigation yet before us, and during those two months grain and flour should come forward li^Uh unexampled rapidity. But, to secure this, it is essential that the proper buyers should be supplied with funds or unexceptionable credit.

The providing of these by our bankers, binder proper regulation?, will not erabarraes them. A weekly, re ceipt pf five million bushels of wheat or its equivalent in ftonr, would relieve our banks from their only serious dantref—-that of a resumption of specie shipments. Twd milUofcs^ worth of groin or float shipped fdU i| Enrope would obviate all »eo«s»itjr for exporting specie. It would go for to fHl the nwkward gnp which naturally intervonos between the shipment of cotton erope. At' thfcadasoto, the cottop pf iasl /year h«s jonof /fffw^rd* while th« bf this year ia not ready W follow It, and will not he for two or three mouths. Nor ean'the corn crop of 18&t he reaiised, no mattw wliat te&riy^r. Btitv&iwhwC only awaits proper flbducements to move on .and thWM Inducements •hculd be prompUy and adequately •applied. ... ..

IrYe trust thes» suggestions will noi pass onr bankert and capitalikU Un heeded. Important iwuee seem to us to hang on the promptitude and vigor wherewith the needed action is taken. There is a growing skepticism to tho.*tUky of Banke ^f issne willykfclottly tothologfenof and there is an excellent opening for &yfa»ttwi.r'

am

e^ following is a the r41ad^ «0dit

'WM

standing oftlio VUginia Bonk* #e take from theYrrginiaPre**, oftb StkisaUit: .• TtoGtmOMom of

The £W1owJigtnhl*w«heli»v%i*elude* altth^ hankrf* and are aeeordia^ io tk nformation in

qgwppsasapicn^

m*n'

1

V'V

Ot& ftuas mw» 8wins -Fsr-

Bank ofYirwinia, Charlottsville Parmm* bank,

imk

nf Viigink

^li^^WMs' hank, Paras viDa Fanners* bonk of Yiygmkh hask Virginia, Prodarieksh*^ fnns1 bauk.Exthangahnak.hauh: of Yireinin. Xf»chhwg Exd«angn hank of Virginia, Farmers* bank, bank of Yir-

gipta, Rjrlht^ieSNbkngimank,

—•Fairmont bank, Fairmont bank of Seottaville, Scottsville bank of Rockbridge, Lexington Merchants' bank, Lynchburg.

OU BANKS eosruueo.—Exsfcsng* bank of Virginia, Farmers' bank of Virginia, Alexandria Wk Of the VatteyvCharlestown hank of Valley, Chriktiaasburg, hank of the Valley, Leeftburg bank of Valley, Mooifield Morehants* and Mc^haalcs' hank, Morgan town North-western bank ol Virginia, Parfcersbturg MerehanU'nnd Mechanics', Point Plbaaant bank of Valley, Romney hank of Valley, StSMtnioli North-wi»terab*ek 'Wellsburg Merchantsr and Mechanics', North-western Wnlc, Wheeling bank of Valley, Fanners' battk Winchester.

IvoKnwrairr BASKS SCSMESTDSD,— Bank of the Old Dominion, Alexandria bank of Monticello, CharloUsville, bank of Commerce, Fredericks* buig bank of HoiTardsfille, Howardsville bank of Rockingham. Harrisonburg bank of Berkely, Martinsburg Central bank,* Staonton bank of Wheeling, and" Manufaeturefs* and Farmers' bank, Wheeling bank of Wincheeter, Winchester.

OLO BISKS

HOT HBARI

Tbe Kauawha bank, at Maiden, in Kanawha connty, was paying at la6t accounts.

The Trans.Alleghsny bank has gone out of circulation and probably should be dismissed from the list altogether.

Aona.—AsIhc hot^scawuif ditappearin^' v^y p^mcmj^ouhl jMpare iheir the. obaage, aodllaera no remedy so a'ppliMbta as "McLean's Streagtbenfinf Cordial aad Blood Purifier.** It wtUparify the blood tborooghiy and at the aaaie time strengthen aod iafigur.te^c whole organisation. The immspse quautf^s ot lt thai eoU daily, ia proof eaoHh^Hi iatborouphly remoris^ allimpure matterfron the bloed* W*«f to all, tr^it"! It isdetictoaa to take. See theitveitlw meittia another eolaan^

OetlMw.

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Hsaa run iron Dim ut

miKSM «»W UM MMiribeei lt«Mir la Met 1 Cr^TiwiMJrtiKVl^o eoaaty, liidVt«HXoaalMVt tifi «M laik aMaaaad

VOeitefiaarti* orbtaads pewalVaMa, Nff po-d

o«. ie^57

flooWtO

,.„ama

,W ir,^'frvr ^^'?T\

frt-

mers' bank, bank of VirgWa, Peforsburg bank of Virginia, forum out Fanhera^ bank, bank of V|^gini4 Ex» change hank, Eychmond. if

IG 4PJ,-.

ExmtiLT

WM

num.—Ex­

change bank, Abingdon Farmers' bank, Blacksbnrg bank of Virginia, Charleston Exchange bank, CJarksville North-western bank, Jeffersonville Farmers' bank, Lewisbnrg Exchange bank, Salem bank of Virginia, Union Farmers' bank, Wytheville Exchange bank, Weston.

Isbarsxncftt BAXKS

nA bl"

We think it time the specie-paying banks should take some measures to place their currency beyond the reach of the beakers., .Their notes are dishonored just as much as those of the .-pe-ded t.Dk.,

FOR THE

TIMKS.—The

following, from the New York Evening Post, (not by Goldsmith,) will do to laugh over, hnt is not so very pleasant, we opine, in business .'

Whc mprchanu fondljr trust to paper, And find too late that bunks betray, What art .can hclp.tbeu thro' the scnpe.or

Suggest the means'wherewith to pay The enty way to stop each croaker, si And pair the banks to whom thejrtrust. To bring repentance to the brnkt r,

And wring hin boaom, is—to "bust."

MARRIED:

OB the )3*JI inst., in Mayaville, Ky., by the Rev. John A. McClung, Mr. W*. H. Sctroon of thia city, to Miss Mur jANe Sraass, of the former place.

In Nipperta Bro Now Brick Building

ON MAIN STREET,

Batween 4th and, Wt

din'

I a

A

its

Fine French Merino's at

75c and 91,00, worth 1,25, and 1,50

I

It isjoy enough foi one to be happy by himself, but when this happiness eaii be doubled, it is certainly more to 4m coveted. We hope William has been the fortunate man in this respect, and we also hope that be and his better half may ner«r hare cause to regret the onion they have formed. HereV Juck to you an a os

TUW

tort Dot-

tilfc—JIBltoirift.

A*—-*

rir.r.K

ACAlHEXY.

PK0rBS80RtaaejMogI*

KOTT at Ui« Baa tin HOBM.

ftralif els—• la PaihiouMl Dutfw, aad WtU Maaom at (to, Vatloaal Hall, aa a raiieMat aaatS«r •#^«|tla oMaln

Bsiiaf.iriattne .v I:

a t*a« ^TKi

3

,, ^h.wibitixs.c^.

aoiar fetwiaaniu.

OaB far

Mm

NOW BEfNO MADE BT

to kte

«T aatrwf mXUHmi.

hlk

OST»« i. w. snuTM. AS» rORK. 04MMD anfM Ml te|« iwtf

SUPER' mi

}.sT

VALE N a A3.

*3 !*«.

SOT BEARD

rnoii.—Farmers' bank. Fin castle Trans-Alleghany ^bank, Jc^Gersonville bank of Ihe. Old Dominion, jPearisburg.

At 92,00 worth 2,50.

KLEGANT

Parisian DeLains/

50 pei^cent. less lhan tbelir original cost

HANDSOME

INDIA VALENTIA,

Bleached She«tlng^J Unusually Cheap. 500 LADIES' CLOTH CLOAKS,

From 91 to 20

L0XG PLAID SHAWLS, At 25 per cent, less than original cost. CXOXG BliOCHE SHAWLS

For|ll^ and 16, worth 20 nnd 25*^ Square Broche Shawln, Kle^nnt «iellsSfcswl*,,f

marklt, and

$

1

GOING 1

ooi^am

^3 'M GOING IU ^jAt unpretedented low pricesl

Super Chenille Vatentia Robes,

for #25,00, worth $40,00* \\jf Six mj»f« of thoaa handsome Pnria De tshm Irtei He t^olente, for $12 and #16, cheap

CLOTHS ANB CASSLMJSftES, any color and quatitjr, from $lio $10

tMTrnm.-co'AtfMO**,

all kinds.,

Ddm^gtic Goods

in moj quality, and

Sold CHEAP! CHEAP! OflJEAPlli B06IKRT, ~m

.a

%h

S E N I

..a ,-4 iv( .???-f' Ofibwd

UM

Lu.

1

10c, worth 30.

',-rd8Ws:!

y-msT

'W'T

Austria, Pltdds and Strips, /..u 4*..m. For 40 irorih 80.v

I

1000 YARDS OF ifi! 5 -"'"4

Manchester Delaiae,

K&m-,* rif'''if-

For 20c, worth 25c anywhere else.

3000 yds 12 l-2c Oingham,

1000 yards'

Woofen" Plaids,

-in

For 85 and 50c, worth 50 and 75c.

5000 yards

Blmeltea Mtulini,

KOAtMdf a cent above cost

^6 4,10 4,124,

TO

mr*t

stui naxom-

aad LACES,

PolK, Valutfsia*. Maltese sal Thread Laces and Edginga,

'-1* TAKEif

xr*mL

5

.j.? .Mala Si ,be*wee» Itkaod U. JOSEPH A- ZOLEZZl^

•--t

ofP. A

9.

Siumuv,

wmI Bctsil

E. *90*

Vte Orleans. *.

OetottrM,

nxAt^Pi

wi

I2TF

Strengthening Ootdiftl

AND BLOOD I'UIllFlUR

rPBS|trMtMt(Hi«)

la VM4. Tkl»

CM-

I dial to diiUlled from a B«rrr kim ®«ly to •yaaU m4 tally wMk iwi

aait raluabl* m«di«laal r«4«. borb* and bark* knows to

UM

mIM of man, fU: blood roeU I

rxV*t|d Aarri lark, yteljow dock, dan B.«)dWeo prodafiaf.' rallon of

aaraapaiftla. ntdarlowo^whli'MMn, Um aioat inhlllMo rmaod}- tor lh« rettoration haalth ow known. tr

IS HATIHUI*

ns

own

KKMBDY, a

C«l«t Ihlaaeo by aatarat liwa »lw» It* koalltf

IBSMIKOI

kit coorslr through ,r*

ttjrro|«ollk«kMT,|MiUV)t| ad^arcvtoraUay the rlrralatlon nf the Ulnod. It MvlnftiM any billtottt matUr lh« tiouiaeb, aad *tr*«gth«M tfc« whot* oiiultaiioa.

McLoaa^a Strenfthanlnc Coodtal will HfketaaUy car* UiM eOmpWitt, OtaMfdi, Jaaodlrc, Mmiw «r AWmiw

ZMititf, Dictmr* *f

JCidM|r«, aad

ti«

mil iittttt ariting frtm

*H*»ri*r9d Ht*r »r St*mmk.

Dyapoipata. Heartbara. Inward PIK Acldiu or Kleaaoaa efUw Ktomtch. Palla*— of Wont to the Hud, Dall Pain or Swimming ta th« Ilaad,i4 Palpitation of the Heari. PaUoan or Weigh I latf Uxs Kloaark SoarBmctatlona, Chakluf or KAeatlaff Paellng whan Ijrlac dowa. Drya«M or Vallow no** or Ik* Kklu aad Kjtm, Mghi tiwuti, laward Ferera. Pain la the Small of th« Back, Chart or Sida.

Saddaa Saahoa^Theat. OopNHloa

ofSplrtU. Frightful Drnnt. O«a|onilenr or *dj Harrono Dlaeaaa, Sore* or Blotcbn on «h« Kkln, aad F«r«r and Ajrne (or rbltla tad Farer.) It will alto eura dlrun ot the Bladdsr aad Womb, aurh aa Seminal Weakn«aa, racor.tlnpxreof Crlno, Straacuarr. Inflammatloa or WtakMH of Uta Womb or Madder. Wtitaea. Ac.

THRKE IS JfO MISTAKK ABOPT IT. This cordial will »«r«r Ml to euro any of tho" above dUeaoto.tr taken a« perdlr^rtlonaon ea«h bottle, In Oermaa.Kncliah and French:

OVKH HALF A MlLUOJf OF BOTTT.BS Have been told during the paM »lx month*, and In no iaotancehaa It htled In giving cntli* catloIhctlon. Who then, will jullbr nrora.weakneoa or ieUillty When

wlllcvre yon.

.nt.it

Strtnfthating Ctrditl

TJTHR t.AUIRS.

Do yon wlah to be hcaUhy and atrong? Then g» at once aad get aome ef M«Lean*i Cordial. It will atrcngthcn aad larlgorate yottr hi* oil to flow through every vein, and the rich may bloom

of

health to mount to yonr chetlt again. Every bottle warranted to give mtlaflirilon. POKcnU.DRKN.

We eay to parenta, tf your children are olckly, pony, or alJIlct^d with complaint* prevalent among children, giro thorn a antall quantity of. Mct.ean'i Cardial, and It will make them healthy. f«tand r.b«»t. llolay not a moment, try It aad yon will lu convinced.

IT

is x»K1,rrioa5fT*

*d

TAKR:

RVBHV COHNTItY MKRCHATT Should not l«nv«« the city until he ha-' pivcurad

1

a anpply of Mrl^anN MrangthAnlng Cordial, It «ellarapldlv,bcranaeit alwayn cnr^n.

A

libaral

ll«coont will be mado to thow who buy to tell again. ACTIO IT—Beware of Druggiats or 1 t»a I rm who may try to palm upon von tnmo B1u*r or Saraaparilla trasih, whtrh thev can bay chcap, by

Having

Ulijutt a* roo*. Avoid auch men. Aik f»r

McLtmn't Strtnetkming

and take

nothing olae. It is tn- nly rtranly that will purity the blood thoroughly, and at the aame Uma •trcngthen the ojntfm.

Ono tabloipoonfhl taken every morning fasting I* a ewrtaln.praventlvr Ibr "holirn, ChHlt and Pcver, Yullow Fever, or any prevalent dUeaae.

Price only $1 per b»ttl«, or »lx botllco for

J. H. MCLKAX,

Pole Pr»pri'lt»r of th« Cordial.

Alw, McLean"* Vclrnulc Oil Mniment. TTT Principal depol on the corner of 1"hlrd and Pll, 51. I^inl*. Alo, 3L.r* Forwlo la Lonlnvllle hy Belt, Talhott A ,. Co., Springer dt Bro.. and Raymond At Pattea.

Mcl.KAT'S VOLCATTc OH. U.MMKNT, The beat l.lnlmcnt In the World for man or head. An»f»ir Performod bv M"cLoan'» Volca»lc Oil 'Llnlaienl.

Rhnd'for vnnroclvet: Tlioma* Ford, a blnokamlth, living nonr

mt

COM

gva&aa on TenthKlreet. had a h*rrlble ruimlng aoreonhla P* t. He tried .variou* l.lnlinrtiU, Salve*, dec., but could do It

II«

good. He dmpnlr*

evor being able to work nt hi* trade again, b*cnu*o ho could n.il bear

ruv

and by ohaamall b-.tt'o

weight ui hi* f«ot

nf

Mrf.eati'a V. l^anic Oil

Llnlmeat, heUnowpnrfertly enred. Kheamatlem, naralynl*. neuralgia, limine*, opraln*, atlRhe** In th- lolni* or mnoole*. •welling*, *nro throat, earache Or toothncho, wouml*. freah cat*, aorvo, Imrn*. »raM». pallia. Arc., vjeld to the "magic" inSwnre tfthU wonderful Llalmcnt.

For Horoe* anl CatlU it l» an InfklliMn remedy fbr chaftii. irall*. tcratrlies, cracked lieel*, lamenea*. apavla. awcenv. upltnt. flutula, brui*et, •welling*. wou«d«. mill,•stmki'

1.1Ion.

and varleuo

other dlac».«ft« which aiilmali «re liable to from Injurieoor accld*jit«. Every Country Merchant xhoniil oMaln a «np. ply iifMtjLonn'i VolranJo Oil Liniment. It *ell* rapldK. becauae It aTwav* rttrca.

A liberal diacount wlll be made to uirrchaola who buy to aell,again. For aale by J. ll. MeT.KAJf. proprli-l«r, corner o'Third and Pine at*., St. Loiti*, Mo. also for •ale a* above.

J. R. Cunningham and Allen Pence, igentt,*'' .Tirra-Hauta, lnd. 9apt. 3,-daw If

ONCK MORE

RESCtTE.

Wdm!THE

S

With Brocfic add Chf riHlo Bordcrs,at half their value. The most elegant lot of Embroidered sleetes & Collars Single or in setts, ever ofliprcd in this

E-bare an improved Farm of «m huaacrt*. with go*id hoonc and ••ttx'r improremi-ttti* thnt wc win sell for 4^1,400.— The propertr In tWa county, not rxcredinK fire miles from TVire-Hantr, and I# a No. f, little farrh. There haa nercr been

MO

good a

cbaoce for an investment ffcred tht* tear* kef, ntkTTni d«ubtffciT w!te%liJ«r thm over will be afain. Thia property will be offered at this rate for two welM wilr.

WffBARNEY AUSTIN.

Oct 8-d2w No. 4 Mechanics Row.

'"'NKW BOOKS!

MABEL

VAUGHAN. BY

the ««hor of

"TUfl UppHghter." Moss Stdc, By Marian Harland, autiior of 'J Alone** and "The Hidden Path.**

MOKMOMSM. Ita Leadtnwaad Dralgns. By John Hyde Jr 'r®pH*9 Monaott Elder sod resident of Salt tfltjt For aale at

Oct^ W H. rUCKINOHAM'S.

Bruek of tb» stM Ink /i

tre'tn

3

naplondid Tot.

{i

of

MiaaE.

'TkfcSS

Havra, Oct 1st, 18S7.

XTOTlCEIa hereby given, that a meetfnf

i^l ot

fl»« Rtockholden of cafd Brttncli win

be beldat tlie BanUog Hoaie, on tt Brst Moodayof Noreadcf tu-xt, ft wMefc taeetiaf seren Pfreetets

He/eleeted

far

15?

rrrea tm*. m. KEPP

1

,.M

-,tt

(fie then

Hi. C.

CILBERT. Brast.,

'**n(

0 }srw

A ioas,

MTOTMMJT OCAKSIM

nr

S.OOT8 a jSHOBS,

JVan. is Wea§)*nn«l ItisHt

sapt. ii mm ctjtvuntjm, o. iii Atarwciaa. neaor. ALTCHULCFL AR WICOLO Y»

OQtEOTIfl

t*XM,

t*n» I%,en*n «nrtwMo

mm

Call aad

*yk£f

pnxm wcirwH sri ram liaads XOftS.

aoaw waodaaat tmaota ar of •a.1

A

,t

,r

ir.*