Terre Haute Evening Gazette, Volume 6, Number 262, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 22 April 1876 — Page 3
CKXTJiNXIATi.
The interest felt in the Exhibition is [forcibly indicated by the great crowds |of people visiting the grounds every |day, particularly on Sundays.
The interior of the Main Building [presents a scene of the greatest
aC'1j^"
jity. Rival exhibitors are viewg with leach other in the erection of pretty I structures to
enclose
their respective
[sections. Fifty thousand dollars has been ofIfered for the.exclusive lightto &cil pop I corn on the Centennial grounds.
There will be thirty-two of the gov[erninents of the world represented at I the Centennial, besides our own.
The number of Frenfeh exhibitors (will be about 2,000, and" their goods (will be brought over in four .shipIrnents.
The steamer carrying Waterers great collection of rhododendrons for I the horticultural department of the
Exhibiton, has arrived from England.
At every building on the grounds I are ttventy baskets of peanuts or ginger snaps, and over each basket stoops a gloomy Italian without an organ.
The Emperor of Brazil will stay, like any ordinary being,at the Continental hotel, Philadelphia, during his visit to tho Centennial Exhibition. He will arrive there May 10.
ANew Yorker, anticipating handsome profits from selling newspapers on the grounds during the Exhibition, offers $20,000 for the exclusive privilege of doing so.
Ohio has a Koh-i-noor for the Cen tennial. It is a complete section of a coal vein in a shaft of the Steubenville Coal and Mining Company's works, and is a solid block weighing over two and a half tons.
Among Oregon's wonderful exhibits will be a section of a fir tree with a diameter of seven and a half feet at the height of 130 feet from tho ground, and another section five feet in diameter at the height of 200 feet.
The French have labelled the entrance to their representative office in a gallery of the Main Building "Commission Francaise," but, apparently considering this phrase unintelligible, they mated it with "French Commis-
"Snickerifadrick" is the euphonious polysyllable engraved on the wood of the Swedish booth in the Main Building, and which attracts spectators. Near it is the name, in Swedish, of the builder, and "Snick," etc., means "wood working establishment."
Gen. "Washington bequeathed his family Bible, in three quarto volumes, to Lord Fairfax, who left it to the Herbert family. It has an autograph of G. "W., and copious notes by Bishop Wilson, the editor and giver. It will be exhibited in the Book Department of the Centennial.
The brewers and maltsters of the United States will erect on the Centennial grounds an iron building for the exhibition of beer, malt, hops and everything connected with tho brewing business, including a miniature ice house. The cost of the building will bo §00,000.
Messrs. Iieisenberger & Co., of Now Yflrk city, have obtained from Messrs. John R. Nagle & Co., the privilege of printing the Centennial catalogue in Spanish. This will be done to accommodate tho visitors and exhibitors from South America and other States in which that language is spoken.
The colossal statue of tho "American. Soldier," will be located oh the west side of the terrace surrounding Memorial Hall. On the east side of the terrace will be a marble statue of Washington, cut from a single block. It has been loaned byMahlon Dickerson, tho American banker in Florence, for Exhibition during the Centennial.
At each entrance to the Centennial Exposition Grounds there will be an automatic arrangement to register the daily number of visitors. The managers estimate that at the lowest 50,000 people will visit the Exhibition every day. This would yield $1,500,000. The expenses will be nearly $2,000,0°°.
A London firm will exhibit what it claims to be the largest terra cotta statue ever made. It is a model of the statue of America, one of the fourth© others being of Europe, Asia and Africa —that surmount the Albert Memorial in Hyde Park. The film will
exhibit about,
200 ons of l«rra cot
ta ware, including a varictj oi antique statuettes. Tho American Fish Cultuvist Association intend to make a remarkable exhibition at the Centennial. It will embrace not only live, iced,and stuffed llsh, whales, seals, porpoises, turtles, frogs, alligators, crabs, lobsters,coials, sponges, algce. and other marine cieatures,but prepared llsh and roes,nned, salted, smoked, ph-kled. or corned,and also oils, spermaceti, gelatine, ismglass, glue, leather, shell, and whalebone.
Herman Kirn, tho sculptor, who is executing in Austria the statuary for the Catholic Centennial fountain, states that he has the best artists in Borne employed on them. The marble is extremely hard, its durability is not much less
than
as
that of granite,
and every blow of the gavel strikes fire. The statue of Commodore Barry wili be shipped at once, and the other four will follow shortly afterward. That of Moses contains over four hundred cubic foot of marble in one mass.
sound as steel.
1)
.j&T:.
TKAUlTlONS KELATIXG TO IHKDS AK4)
Certain traditions relating to birds and beasts are only explicable on tho supposition that they were once objects of divination or worship. Tho old Germans, we know from Tacitus, used white horses, as the Romans used chickens, for purposes of augury, and divined future events from different intonations of neighings. Hence it probably is that the discovery of a horse-shoo is so universally thought lucky* some of the feelings that once attached to the animal itself still surviving round the iron of its hoof. For horses, like dogs or birds,
were
invari
ably accredited with a greater insight into futurity than man himself and the many superstitions connected with the flight or voice of birds resolve themselves into the fanc3r-, not inconceivable among men surrounded on all sides by unintelligible tongues, that birds were the bearers of messages and warnings to men, which skill and observation might hope to interpret. Why is the robin's life and nest sacred, and why does an injury to either bring about bloody milk, lightning or rain? The Christian legend says that it extracted a thorn from the crown of Christ, or that it daily bears to Hell a drop of water to put out the flames, and accounts in either way for the red dye on its breast. But this is evidently a mediaeval gloss to some heathen belief like the reason for the unluckiness of the magpie, that it would not enter the ark,but sat jabbering outside over the' drowned world or like the idea of the aspen still trembling at the part it played in the crucifixion.
It has been suggestcdtliattherobin, on account of its color, was once sacred to Thor, the god of lightning yet,is it not possible that its red breast singled it out for worship among birds, as its red berries did the rowan from among trees long before its worshipers had arrived at any ideas of abstract divinities? All over the world there is a regard for things red. In the Highlands woihen tie some red thread round the cows' tails before turning them out to grass in spring, and tie red siik round their own lingers to keep off the witches and, just as in Estlionia mothers put some red thread in their babies'cradles, so in China they tie some round their children wrists, and teach, them to regard it as the best known safeguard against CYil spirits. Indeed* one of the chief lessons of comparative folk-lore is a caution against the theory which deduces popular traditions from Aryan or other mythology. We have already alluded to the fact that in parts of China the same feelings prevail about the swallow as in England or Germany. But there are yet other analogies between the East and the West. A crowing hen is an object of universal dislike in England and Brittany, and few families in China will keep a crowing hen.
Tho owl's voice is ominous of death or other calamity in England and Germany, as it was in Greece, (except at Athens but in the Celestial Empire also it presages death, and is regarded as the bird which calls for tho soul. And the crow, also, is in China a bird of ill omen. Is it not,therefore, likely that all popular fancies about birds and animals have begun in the same way, among the same or different races of the globe, and were subsequently adopted, but never originated by mythology?
May it not be that certain birds or animals become prominent in mythology because they had already been prominent in tradition, rather than that they became prominent in tradition because they previously had been prominent in mythology? For instance, instead of tracing a dog's howling as a death omen to an Aryan belief that the dog guided the soul from its earthly tenement to its abode in heaven, may we not suppose that the myth arose from an already existing omen, and that the latter arose, as omens still do, from a coincidence which suggested a connection subsequently sustained by superficial observation?
The St. Swithia fallacy, which arose within historical memory and still holds its ground in an age of scientific observation illustrates how one striking colnowlejies may grow into a belief, which no «m«unt of later evidence can weaken or destroy. Just so. if it h«ppt«*4 Hi at a dog howled shortly before some calamity occurred to our Aryan forefathers, thousands and thousands of years ago, long before .they 14id attained to any thoughts of soul or heaven, we can well imagine that the dog, which already betokened death, should, when they came to frame the myth, be •conceived as the guide which was waiting for the soul to take it to heaven, and that the belief thus perpetuated by the myth might survive to the latest ages. It, at all events, militates against the exclusively Aryan nature of'the belief,and exemplifies the extraordinary coincidence of ideas among different people, that the Esquimaux lay a dogs head by the grave of a child, for "the soul of a dog can find its way everywhere, and will show the ignorant babe the way to the land of souls !"—C'ornhill Magazine.
THE BED OF THIS OCEAN.
When the transalantic cable was laid, not only were the depths of tho sea taken, but specimens of the ocean's bed w? J*Ser«nt places, which were found to be unconsolidated chalk —that is, eighty-five per cent, was shells, or chalk material, and the chalk beds now worked were formed just as similar beds are forming today in the depths of the North Atlantic. These chalk beds were formed by the skeletons of microscopic animals as minute as the finest dust.
TUSUZEWOVI.VA AND MOXXiCXEGHO
The people of Herzegovina and the people of Montenegro are absolutely the same people. There is no difference between them, except that the accidents of their history have given freedom to one branch of the nation and denied it to another. Between the free and the enslaved parts of the nation there still are the very closest ties. Montenegrins and Herzegovinese have fought side by side in every struggle. At this moment, as Montenego is the natural shelter of the homeless refugee, so the people of the enslaved districts still look to the Montenegrins as their natural brethren and to the Prince of Montenegro as the:? natural chief. Montenegro is, both in its past history and its present bcaringva truer representative of the old days of Slavonic independence than the larger principality of Servia. Again when a Montenegrin looks down from his hills upon the Bocche beneath them, it must be very like a feeling of imprisonment when he thinks that not an inch of his own land readies down to the edge of those waters. He must feel cut oil from his natural communication with the rest of the world he must feel debarred from a means of improvement and enrichment Which nature seems to have placed actually in his grasp.
There w«s a short time when Montenegro had a seaboard. Toward the end of the war,when we did not disdain either Russians or Montenegrins as allies against the common enemy,Cattaro was actually for a little while a Montenegrin possession, and the Vladika ruled on the coast as well as on the Mountains. Cattaro is the least Italian, the most Slavonic, of the cities of the Dalmatian coast. It is the natural haven of the little principality above it. There is said to be at this moment a movement for tho annexation of Bosnia to Austria. Bosnia,with its large Mohammedan minority .would probably fare better as a member of the f:reat" cosmopolitan monarchy than if it were joined to either of the Orthodox principalities. In such a case, while Herzegovina would welcome annexation to Montenegro as the crown of its hopes, Austria might surely give up Cattaro to be the Trieste or Fiune of the enlarged State. On the other hand, a serious question presents itself whether an enlarged Montenegro would remain Montenegro, whether the problem of civilizing a small independent tribe without destroying its distinctive character could be so successfully carried on with a territory so greatly enlarged, above all, if it possessed a maritime city, however small.
A Prin who possessed Cattaro would hardly go on reigning at Cettigne a Prince who possessed all Herzegovina might rule as well and justly as a Prince of Montenegro only but he could hardly continue to be the same personal shepherd of his people which he can be in his present narrower range. Here is a hard question, one -where there ,are certainly weightx. arguments on both sides. I do not take upon myself to decide between them.—JTrtcmillan's Magazine.
EXTREME SliXSITIVttNKSS Ol? '.CHE JSL1XD.
John Stanley, tho musician, lost his sight, when only two years of age. He had so correct an ear, that lie never forgot the voice of a person he had once heard speak.
An instance is given in which he recollected the voice of a person he had not heard for twenty years, who then accosted him in an assumed voice. If twenty people were seated at table together, he would address them all in regular order, without their situations being previously known to him. Biding on horseback was one of his favorite exercises, though it would seem a very dangerous one for the blind, and towards the close of his life, when he lived in Epping Forest, England, and wished to give his friends an airing, he would take them the pleasatest road, and point out the most agreeable prospects. Ho played at whist with great readiness and" judgment. Each card was marked at tire corner with the point of a needle, but these marks were so delicately line as scarcely to be
1
deemed by any per
son not previously apprised of them. His hand was generally the lirst arranged^and it v. as net uncommon for him to complain of the party ttiat they were tedious in sorting the cards. He could tell the precise time by a watch. He knew the number of persons in a room when he entered it would direct his voice to each person in particular —even to strangers after they had once spoken and would miss any one who was absent, and could tell who that one was.
REMARKABLE PRECOCITY.
The late Bishop Thirlwall, of England,is said by a writterin Lippincott's Magazine to have been &n example of precocity almost without a parallel. "At three-years old he read English so well that he was taught Latin, and at four he read Greek with an ease and fluency that astonished all who heard him." A volume containing specimens of his works, produced before ho was eleven years of age, was collected and published by his father.
DR.
T.
DAMM,
of Stockholm, is pre
paring for the Exhibition a Dictionary of a Universal Language, of which he is the inventor. By this language the author claims that, persons of different nationality ean readily understand each other, and a composition written in it can be reproduced without error in all other languages.^,
BARTHOLOMEW county, Ind., contains four villages named respectiv«lyCrackaway, Possumglory, ICooncreek and Hardscrabble.
Ef© MISTAKE
can be made in buyirg u. T.
Babbitt's Best Soap.
--Because lie only makes
OJfE QUALITY.
A Card to tho Suffering
The writer will cheerfully send, iree of charge, to all vho desire it, a simple mean for the cure of Nervous Debility, Premature Decay, Seminal Weakness, and all forms of Nervous Affections. He hopes every sufferer will try this remedy, as it will cost him nothing) ana may prove an inestimable boon. Parties wishing it will please address,
X.
DB. CHAS. P. MARSHALL, 64 Niagara Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
P. S.—Persons suffering with Incipient Consumption, Catarrh, Bronchitis., or any throat- or lung affection, will find tjhis a sure cu re.
0'
WH1T.K STAIfc loiverpnol imd Xew York Ma'l gtenmrin.
Rates as Lnw as hr any other Line. The nt earners of this
A. MGEBGBEX,
120 Randolph Bt.reet. Chicago
Or to X. ftiBDSIlt. Terre Haute. To Hv on the Fat of (lie I.aisd Without Woric is I,be Aim of Traveling Agents.
We don't employ them, but pell to tne user at, factory prices. Bend for our free price list which will give you the price Freight paid by us to your nearest ralnoud station, io be paid for alter you have tested and found satisfactory, to that the purchaser absolutely ruusno rlsx whatever The* ts the way the best Scales in the world are sold by JONES ot Binshamton. N.
AGENTS WAIN TED, Throughout the States upoa our
Indriiiition Exliifoitk 11 Album. This is a complete seriesof tbe oulv correct and authorized pictures of the Buildinss, representing them as they will actually be wh complete. Send for des« criptive circular to the New York Lithographing and ^ngravins Co., 16 te lii Park Place, New York.
gsagss FT
IK YOU ARE
G-OIN&
TO
Tm'KAM
a on—
to
Send your name, and your Friends and ana Neighbors' names and address on a postal card, or by letter, and receive by return mail a Beautiful Pamphlet. 11 ln?trat ing and aescribiug the GREAT SOUTH WtfiST, her cities, towns, rivers, railroads schools, minerals, stock, manufactories larintf, land?, etc. Fuli information, wish large county »pd sectional tnaps, nevrspa pers, illustration, rales of fare and freight and other Yiiluable Information interest lng to every icsm, woman and child mailed free of charge. Addrtsp,
JAS. I. BStOATX,
Texas an Kansas Kmlgration Afeeut.
KEDAI.IA,
Mo.
*rxsr,
stitute ior Uie commoll privy: are bet-
cer than water closete: oair be used in any room—sSpteu did for invalids. Send.for cirular, WATCH & BKEEZS,. .veente.60 State St Chlcairo
TUB iS"EMYOFIiIS®AM'
Tki Foe -of Pais*
Til
MAN ANSI* ilF.AST
Is the Gr&nd Old
MUSTANG
Which has stood the tf st of 40 years. There is no sore it will not heal, no lameness it will not cute, no ache, no pain that afflicts the iiumau body, or domestic animal, thai does not yield t,o its maeic touch,
A-bottle
costing i'5?, 60c. or
$1.00, has olten saved ihe life ot a human oeii.g, and restored to life and usefulness many a valuable horse.
mm HER
iilaek and Colored tilros Grains.
^^.EiirvirG-1876.
Tlrse silks, luiuiafactririd in the most approved manner, are uammtcil not to end or change color in trearing am! surpass in weight, finish anJ (inability any that be obtained at corresponding pricce.
FOR SALE BY ALL THE LEADING RETAILERS.
"Olieney'i Aiu»-ti.-an Silks combine the most oeautifully in costumes with all the 40ttw,0l fabricks now in ^vogue,. and we heartily reconime nd them lor their beauty and dm ability tot^ie attention of our refld0f»"—fSciibner'.s ifonthl,y.
The1, Great Southwest.
To all persons desiring HOMES in the great and prosperous West, the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad Company gives a cordial invitation to visit its lands in CENTRAL AND SOUTHWEST MISSOURI, which possess all the requirements of a good climate, good soil, good water, and good health, with long and coolsammers, and short and ipild winters. 1,200,#00 Acres of Prairie and Timber Lands are offered for sale at low price and on long tinier-terms, in fact, made to suit purchasers, who are furnished with Free Tvc,nsjortation from St. Louis to the ands, at the Company's office iu St. Louis.
For particulars in pamphlets with maps, address A. L. Deane^ Land Commissioner, Atlantic fc Pacific Railroad Co., 25 South Fourth street, St. Louis, Mo. fl)HWWBJ ond M-rpliinc bnliit alisotuMy' nni 1 fl HH tpccdiiy r!re(].l'aiule«s: nonublirJtr. luB 111 IWfl HrndMMpp l'or particular*.
SjrJ* A
Br. Carl.
ls'
WMlUnjten8t.,C3iIc««o,lil
H. W.
ROUTE
3 XBAINN DAIL1, Leave Danville as follows
3.AQ
A 1YT Train reaches Beck Is-
«vO laudandDavenportat noon, one train in advance of any other line. This train also connects via Burlington and Kocit Island for all points In' IOWA NEBS
ASK A and CSlJFORNIA.
Tuis train makes direct connection via Bloomingto^i for El Pat-o, Mecdota, Dubuone and all points in Northern Illinois and Iowa.
This taain has PARLOR C»SS, with State Booms and lif-clining Chairs to Peor ia and BOCK. ISLAN 1, and PULLMAN SLEEPEBS, Galesburg and Rock Island to Omoa, counecting dire-t with hrough SieeperhOmaha to San Fra^cisco.v.
ianaand Mexico, Alo., Kansss oitv, Atchison, St. Joseph, Denver and all points west «f the lftissouri liver via Hannibal with M, tv, t'c T. By., for Moberly, Ft Scott and1 Pardons, and via Bloomingion for El Paso, Men'toto, Dubuque and point-* in Northern Illinois and Iowa. Thromrh Sleeper and Coach Bloom'ngton and Q,u'tncy to Kan
but
I
ns
tjIcp
OJ:enfglit.out.TEJI
the
Laue
route jcjornneuded by Ijcui. Maury. fl.S. N., goiusr south of ihe Banks on .the pssto Queen slow ii ay the yetr round. PassHueer nceommodatious for ail closes unsurpaeeed. Applvto
HUUKS In ad
vance of any other liri**. This train makes direct connection via Galasbur^r, Burlington, or Ottumwa for Dert M'oine-", Marshalltowu, Cedar Rapids and all points in Iowa and lie Northwest,
I'UI-IiMAX fiLEEl'EK to Gslesbur, anil Burlington and COAt:H to Galesburg. This train »lso mates direct connection via Galesbunt to Quincy, Kansas City, Atchison, St. Josepu, Leaven wo th and all intermediate pointr. aid via Hannibal for Sedalia, Fore Scott, Parsons and all points in Tef as. rilMMAS SLEEPER to Gnlebure and Hannibal to Houston, and THROUGH COACH to Galesburg.
HABDW1BXS. Terre Haute, March 3!, 1S76 I have thisday sold my general slock of hardware to Messrs Wolf & Lyon, and 1 coroially recommend them to my former friends and hope they will extend to them the same liberal patronage they have to me.
JASIES M, LYONS,
Having phrchased of Mr. James Lyons his general steck cf hardware at 180 Main st: and shall add such goods in this line as ttie wants of this community demane, and shall endeavor to ueep fully supplied at all limeB with a complete stock and hope by strict attention tc business and by selling at the lowest prices to meet the patronage of the public.
SAMUEt, G, LYON: JOHN N W'OLF-
Terre Haute, March 21 187o.
W^MLJF «& L¥OJT, successors to
James M. Lyons,
Dealers in every description of Hardware, Iron, Pteel, Nails, Glas.g, Sash, Doors, Casing and Coffin' Trimings. Wire, Paints, Oilr, Varnish, Broom Handles. &«.
Sign of tho Broadax and Plain and Circular Saw. 130 Alain s-reet, Terrs Haute, Jnd.
THE OLD
Eagle Iron Works,
TEIli&E MAZITW AN A E E S
Steam Engines, Coal Shafts, Flour and Saw Mill Machinery, Bank Cars, Road Scrapers,
Building Fronts, Cans Mills,
Various Patterns of Fencing, School Furniture, &c., and having the LARGEST AM^OKTMENT "F PATTERNS IN THE BT-\TJ3. can pive Its customers the advantage of repaus without cost of patterns
J. A. PARK EI? & CO., Projt'sr
1876. WMEEE NO W1 To MICHIGAN, one oi the foremost flourishing and healthy States
1
WHAT IF033L
om MILLION ACK
of fise JFnrmliis land ior sale by the GciANI) IIA.PIDS & INDIANA R. Strong Soils. Ready Mflrte^s. Bnre Crop1. Good Schools. Kailroful runs through theeriter of grand. Settlements aii alont:
All kinds of Prodnctfl raised. Flent--' oi water, timber and hnild u« materials-. Price from Si to S10 per acre oue-fourtl. down, balance on lime. ttSTSend for illnsirated pamphlet, inJi ot facta and flaures, and bo convin«od.
Address W, A. HOWARD, OmEi'r, Grand Rapids, MichigTr, R.P. L. PIERCE. Sec'y Lund Uep't.
.i3SN.BABC0CK
May be guilty or nbt guil'y, and Prosecutor L-j cr may be
Forgirg FALEHOODtJ
ugainsthim, but neither proposi'iou is of so muoh inierest to the putlic a.s the £Sasy IOKUK Of
Burnett & "Watson,
where horse shoes are being constantly shaped, and other worfc done. Cherry St. bot ween Third and Fourth. a day at home. Axeuts wanted
OutliD aud terms free. TRUifi & CO.
Augusta, Maine.
The Wabash Hotel,
Corner First and Ohio stsi, Has been purchased byttaeold and wellknown citizen,
B. MAYERS, WHO HAS J""'
Completely Renovated It,
And after adding a
WAGON YARD, Wll -unitag* First Class Hotel.
Money in It •who are good mifIters in every county in the United States, to seiif
The Onlj Complete Safety Lamp made. Good men can make V.-J $5».oe A WEEK.,|':
Sacure territory at once, by writing to Metalic Safety Lamp Company, 122 La*f Street, Chicago
HHE.\ YOU GO
South, Southeast or Soutkweaf, -AND-
South & North Alabama. RAILROADS Have all modern improvements— Thofa*. sentials requisite for Speed, Safety and Cosnfovi,
Steel Kalis laid on Siouc Iron UrldgeB! jpallman Palace Cars!
Equipped with
XIILEB PLATFOEM and CCFJOJEB —AND— WESTIKGHOUSE AItt BRAKE! Attentive and I'olite OfDclxlR
Good Kiitlcgiioaseji!
Two Daily Express Trains leave LQUI8* VILLE ou the arrival ot tiains fiou Itttfiaaapolis, Loafs, Chicago and lbe principal Cities iii tfiti ,r,
N0ETH, -EAST &ad
PiiUttisn Paiiiee iJ^rs Chasigtv A ra rnn bet iiSe ft at? IV«nv" Orleans •. Via JJonigorcerv.
ILosiSsvtJJ!e
Xy.
IjoniAViilf? asi«5 ?sty Oriels• Vlar.!:"!.\r.
FJorSdUs.
Jl.tuia.
Louisville auil Rock Via Memphis. For iul'oinialion atont. F'.jcnrsion Ticitefcs and Emigrant, R8tfB to Floriuu, or rates to Arkansas and Texas, Acdress, G\ P. Atmore, Gen. us and T'k'fc
Ar
Iior.iSTille.lt.y.
•RiMRsaBnsnKBiRsnBafccssinrzsrsKniMai
W A A
FAST IIAIfij
13/o
rr
jk
Now controls and onerates (lie iilowin£ .Lilies: TOIiEnn fo ST.'I.OIUS, TOM'DO t-'» UASNIllAL, to* TOELDOtoGEOKVK, -4S9 TOI£nOto PtOftlA, JW) lOlitDO to BIOOM'OTOST, 3!!1
OI-ECTI GIN UT7IO W l'E?OTfi AT
St. Loass,
Kftokuli,, Peoria[& IJhiGiiiingtfi?,
To and from allpointnin
Ulhuiis, Missnri, mss, Kansas, Tex^a, 1^braeka, C'olonido, nfl OaUfnil.
And forming the LecdJnsr Thorocpntare betwefn tne Missouri ari.i MisKltisljipi Vallej-.s and
SEW BOSTON,
And o'.her rc.jnls in 'f-w ICngSaM', nabilug pa-^sengers ho (ravel by li.e
"'WABAM FAT to reach the principal cities In !!ia JSast and wc-Kt: W A N O I A A N E O O
i.'iiVE."!.
So chnnge of cars he.'wsm Cl^vehiiid .md St. Joseph and A t»*is Vor (n1 and between To'elo K- nr«»
City (7C0 roiii-s),
AH Fxprese Trains of this Li? esro .'itiiy it an a S Airs. Westingbour-e Air Brake a-. j?il ?es'Platform and r, reudero a idiciiJent almostr.nplisl
CJnequale'J iu Speed and Safelj! Unrivaled in its Equipment, Additional Express Traius Kew & Superb Pullman Sleeper*!
Elegant P,ilae9 Day Coaches Perfeet Through Car System! Magnificent Traek aud Steel *Saii's,
THE
ATTENTION OH' THE TRA VW^ inc Pnblle is cal ed to the abuv«) advantages sCerded by the
TOLEDO
WABASH & WESTERN RAILWAY
be iSuit a »d ii»r, Mn Having termini at TOTED©, ST. LOUIS. 'HA'KKIBAL
QUINCT, KEOKUK. mTSFJ[£LI, BLOO«!N«TO». AJtfl) PEOEIA, W a a Hay Cars over Its entire Une. AJbo rnu.'ling 'I'lironfrti between Tniedo, Knn':BS Ol'y or Ot. Jo, wHlimit ttiuarc. i'ne important connecting points on^this i.ine, in addition to its terminal .stations are Deflance, Fort Wnyjic,, i'nbaiih fern. Loennsvvrt. JLnfey mi. U.lDTitlc, VnloiMi. I»wa tar, Pehin, NnrliigBcld, Jocfcma* Title andCMpio.
Through TicKets *nd all rete*Karv in:ruination can be obtained at a:I Tic-fcet-Of-fices oi this or its connecting TJnw.
W.
Genera) i't.n ecper and icitt agen
RAIRIE
CITY
PLANING MILLS,
CLIFT WILLIAMS,
t- ". MASr-FACTUBEBB OF
SASB, IXXM8, BLINDl
MOULDING liRAOKETs/
*3TiK K1L1G KLliirKTEEtc.
EW'ELL POSTS, FLOORING, fcSiDK, and ail scndepljons oi
FINISHING LUMBER
-UttO
Wholesale unci .Retail Dcaierein I N E E LTH AND SHINGiES Slate Roofing and
HOOFOFG FEI/T
1
CUSTOM SAWING
FLAMING & "WOOD TURNING DONE TO OBCSR.
CliQ TJE1 6B13S,
ALLWOEK WARRANTED CatMT Ninth aid Mcaherry Htreeta, Bit m&ti
5 5 CENTS
liiS.aui hi iiji i_nw tK
vi-
a A
-T5 v/
'•A
Si'
[v'Store ifs' tie-
I'.'
"?.*
handsome ar-
5 I
idea to find
py's and Chil-
Ind Third to'
lid
priccs all
placo is
ilLD'S,
ig Store.
tjis bench. His •lory is over and he thau ever. ijie lackey and. the"*' s, assumed respec-
Hugo Daenweg mheimer, while importance iu rly represented by ii considering that frs. Mrs Schellen 'the p&rfc cf Rosa he receipts derived ibmeht, while not eti, were gratifyinK tdue consideration Jthe bad liiglit.
1f.
use EcIneH.T fAt COURT. State against Mack isrged wii'i assault I, was calied in tha fo "lCr" rLg. _..fai3jg.fl the State was repr6 elley, lCsq while tha tied by Oarlton and,.
pall io, and Prose^ made the opening y, when the courts
Judge Carlton and ake arguments for [elley will close lor moon.
19 COURT.
irunk and disorderly.*-
nk and disorder!v, lition that he leave f'y. fighting. Discharg-
,'S
E TRAXSPKR3. f-'-V. M. Koberts, 10 Vest, corner of tlio^S of the southeast •son.
i~-
to Sarah E. Smith ,,4, I feet on Third street''
E XiICKNSES. {son to Matilda A..f
I to Klizibeth firy-
4LS OF A' tY MAID.
th S Monil. I vho has been ia the arson, landlord of y. for the greatestli ion tha, a9 laundry against that genbofeerly'si court last" jvery of $150, due for money loaned"
testsfied thatl.
I
3
it, iu July or Aug-r of her $100 whichf pie deposited in the* he loan- was made |y, but Kite sayaf table to collect the it of it. The fifty due her for work y. On Tuesiay her attorney, Jleizer Esq., she »c Anient uirecetd [and chatties oi ^aid t.was placed in the
Qaigley, who proDlair house and'ievts of the dining, jer had been called. 1 2d the constable to ^1 menton the «kta-' cf to hitn the furrooms. The ^5 stood ia the jel and garnisheed came out of the case^wastaken! .by the court and •$' rri vedat aconcl u.
all Vork'lng giri3 rd earned money Tho. money.,
Mr. Carson was a ver»l years' bard *ub.
isorball eltib will ibment^of W. P.
4
to-morrow if arranging
