Terre-Haute Weekly Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 February 1869 — Page 2
m*
WEEKLY EXPRESS
Wednesday Morning Feb. 11 tb, 1869.
The Normal School aildingIn an Reticle on the State Horaai School the Ev&nsvillo Journal says:
The great mistake was in erecting such &n expereive buiWiog. OoecoiUng.^V. OOO would have Vnewrttf airHo prcwnt wants of a State Normal School. But we suppose ihe State will now be compelled to make a heavy appropriation to com* plete the edifice.
There is room for an honest difference of opinion as to whether the erection of ("such an expensive building" wis ft "great mistake" or a display of sound economy and wise forethought., we think it was.the latter, butsball not quhrrel with our Evansvillo cotemporary for holding a different opinion. Tho Scboo
TrusteeB of the City of Evansviile, one rf whom is an editor of the Journal, h»v0 recently erected two magnificent structures for school houses in thai city, fating from $35,000. to $50,000, oftcb, and at a time when the Mayor of the city was obliged to negotiate loans "at twenty-two hnir ner cent, interest." If Eva&s-
and a half per cent, interest ville can afford suob an expenditure lor 'school purposes, surely this great State with her magnificent school fu,nd of eight million dollars, with her imperative and constantly increasing need of trained teachers, can afford to erect one respectable building for the utilisation of our vast amount of home 'talent in tbe profession of the teacher. And especially can the State afford to do this when the liberality of Torre Haute has already given $75,000 for this object. "But," tbe Journal mournfully coueludes, "we suppose the Stato will now be compelled to make a heavy appropriation to oomplete the edifice." "Compolled?" Yes, that is Just the word,—
States, like individuals, if passably hon est, are "compelled" by a common seose of honor and "a decent regard for the opinions of mankind," to fulfill their pledges. The Stata is pledged to this city to complete the Normal School Building, and unless tbe Legislature Bhall decide to repudiate its faitb, it will feel "compelled" to make the necessary appropriation. v.- -ns isv^.y
Jj9t it be borne in mind that if any "mistake" was made in deciding upon tbe cost of the odifije, that "mistake" was made by the Slate and not by Terre Haute. The city did not undertake to diatate or direct what plan should be adopted. The State had a choice of sovcr&l plans, varying very much In cost and, wisely, as we think, decided on tbe best and consequently most expensive one. When completed the State will own one public building that will not, like the rest of its efforts in that line, be pointed out as an architectural monstrosity and abomination. It will not have to be torn down in a few years to abate a nuisance, but will stand for centuries as a splendid illustration of the good sense and fine taste not only of the mind that conceived the plan, but of the men who preferred and adopted it. "When Evans ville architects and builders make their customary tours to this city in quest of suggestions and models, tbey will gaze upon it with delight, and feel devoutly thankful that the State was "compelled1 to finish so "great" a "mistake." And the young men and women of Evansviile, graduates of her excellent system of public schools, as they pursue the study of the theory and practice of teaching, in this building, will find their wstbetic sense daily developing in tha contemplation of its fair proportions. They, tco, will be thankful that thoy are not "cabined, cribbsd, confined" in four square homely walls, and will gratefully remjm. ber the "great mistake."
teachers and Other •'Imports". In an article relative to the State Normal School, replying to some atricturea in the Evansvillo Journal, a few days ego, we said: "If we are not mistaken, Evansviile now imports large propQrtion of her teachers from the Eastern States, because this State has no institution' for the proper education of teachors."
To this assertion the Jonrnal takes,exception, and assorts that: Evansviile does not "now import large proportion of her teachers from the Eastern States." The majority of tho present corps aro graduates of our own excellent High School or former pupils of our city schools, and but a few of them came to this city from the Eastern States.
With tho exceptions of this city and Indianapolis, there is probably no city in the State which has better public schools than Evansviile, and we are glad to know that not|only Evansviile, but the State at large is becoming "year by year less dependent upon tho East for teachers."— The Journal seems to have tortured our language into reflection upon "Yankee" teachers. We intended just the reverse. This city, the State, indeed the entire West, owes a debt of gratitude that should be lasting, to the thousands of "Yankees' who have served, and are still serving, with unwearied patience.anil rare fidelity, as public scnool teachers. Here is tbe language in the use of which it was our misfortune to give offense: "We are under sufficient bondage to the East already in tb matter of imports. Let us try to raise our own teacher since we have an abundant supply of the best material, and have no other earthly use for it." j,
Well, are we not under sufficient bondage to the East in the matter of imports Take almost any man you meet, and examine his clothing, for instance, from hat to boots, and you will bo almost sure to find that evtry article—or the goods from which it was made—came from the East. The morchants of Evansvillo buy cotton from Southern dealers or producers. They ship it a thousand miles to a market. It p»s*es through twenty different hands, leaving a largo prcflt in each, and finally finds its way back to Evansansville in the shapo of prints on sheetings. So, in a thousand other ways we are under bondage to tho Eist a needless, senseless bondage—and Eastern
manufacturers grow rich and purse proud| and look to the people of the West and Southwest ns tbo men whose business it is to grow cotton, hogs, wheat and corn for thorn to spoculats in.
But, in the matter of teachers, jjj0 upon East, but such" dependent* Is a seriom injury to ourselves, because it keops out of business our own young mon and wom,£n—particularly the latter-who need the employment and who, if properly'educated, must, in the °f thinpe, be better adapted to tbo bueinMS of teaching young Hoosiers than any teachers, however excellent, who are S acnWW to this and wbo know nothing of the peculiar! ties of Western life and Western people. "Whatever excuse there may be for having cur.boota made in Bridge water, our hats in fedham, our casnmerps in Connect!cuWsur watchei in Wftltham, our sbjrti in Providence. «i5- the ^ouannde of "no. tions" which fill our Jiouses mfde almost entirely in New England, while we k-ep on raiding hogs and grain to enrich those manufacturers, and effort that looks to the establuhme^t of similar lines of business here whatever excuse there m*y be for all there is no apology for being without an abundant #upp1y of good, bome-produced teachers for,.our children, And jet we cannot have,tha -best class of teachers from amcr.iT ibepradaate^ofourpubhc sohdols. Experience bw bown that teachers, as well n» lafeyere, doctors and clergymen, require special training for their profession. -That training they can only obtain if* a formal School.
Tbk followiug i3 a copy of the notification which was presented to General Gbaht, and which will serve as the cer tifieate of election as President of tbe United States. It is in the handwriting of Mr. O. StMPBOK, of Illinois, one of the clerks in the office of the Secretary of the Senate, and is written on a sheet of parchment nine and one half by thir teen inches. In the left hand corner at the bottom is the seel of the Senate stamped in the parchment. The same gentleman wrote the notification, of AbbahajI Lincoln and of Anpbew JoHNSon, and a!i«J ib* summon8 which was served on the latter he Was im peached: "Bo it known, that''the Senate and
Bouse of Representatives of the United States of America beiog wsembled at the Capitol, in tbe City of Washington, on the second Wednesday, being the 10th day of February, in the year of our Lord eighteen hundred and sixty-nine, the underwritten President of tbe Senate did, in the presence of tbe said Senate and House of Representatives, open all the certificates and count all the votes of the electors for a President and Vice-Presi-dent, by which it appears that Ulysses S. Grant was duly elected, agreeably to the Constitution, President of tbe United Slates for four years, commencing on the 4th of March 1869.
In witness whereof I have herountO set my hand and' affixed tho seal of the Senate, tbis loth day of February, 1869,
B. F. Wade.
Jhd at? g-'President of the Senate." -la-
Death of General George D. Wagner.
[From the rndltnspflll' JTourna'.] General George D. Wagner, of Warren county, died at the Bates House In this city on Saturday night at 11 o'clock, after an illness of four or five dsy6. The immediate cause of his death was an overdose of a prescription left by his physician to alleviate his nervoue suffering This calamity deprives Indiana of one of her most prominent citizens,- and most honored soldiers, whose rise, though recent, wns supported by abilities so decided, and a force and energy of character so conspicuous, as to promise him almost any position to which he might aspire. In his manners he Was pleasant, in his temperj kindly, In feelings genial and companionable. He was a ready and forcible speaker, and few men made more decided impression upon the Senate even by casual and unpremeditated speeche?, during his service in it than he. For some years he .was a member of the State Board of Agriculture, and wai President of it','before his appearance as a public than'.
In 1858 ho wis elected to tho Senate from the Senatorial District Of Warren, Bentou, ar White, and served with conspicuous steal and credit during the regular session of 1859 and 1861, and nt .the extra session of 1861 called to make preparations for the war. He was Chairman of the Finance Committee on Federal Relations and on the Committee on Mili.ury Affairs, during the BessioDg of 1861. He -was an eirnost suppoitsr of the war from'the beginning, and when he felt that his arm'was reeded as well as his voice, he volunteered, .and was appointed Colonel of tbe 15th Regiment, May 22, 1861. He orgatlied that regiment, and none was mote conspicuous for courage and gallantry. He w»g. made Brigadier General November 29,1862, and was honorably discharged August 24,18#5 having served through tho wholo war, from tho first month of it progress to tbo last moment that his services were needed. His military rec .rd will maintain his name in honor ,fts long as tie State's participation in the war is remembered. He served with signal cTrod.it in the campaign in Western Ylrg nia, under Gen. Joseph J.Reynolds, of tbis State, and in November of that year was transferred with his command to the Army of the Ohio under Gen jell, participating in all the campaigns conducted by that officer. Subiequontly, whan the Army of the Ohio was reorganized as the Army of tho Cumberland, under General Rosecrans, General Wagner was transferred to that army, took a prominent part in tbe battle of Stone River, and in most of the movements of Rosecrans' army, his brigade being tho first to enter Cbattanooga upon tho fall of that place in August, 1863. General Wagner continu ed to serve undor Major General Thomas until the fall of Atlanta, and the defeat of Hood, at Franklin and Nashville, which closed operations in that quarter. He greatly distinguished himself at the batllo of Franklin, November 30, 1864. He leaves two children, but his wife died during tho war.
The Ladies or the White House Washington Corr,'8pendenc« Chlosgo Republican.] Mrs. Johnson, a oonfirmed invalid, has never appeared in society in Washington Her very existence is a myth to almost everv one. She .was last seen at a party given to her grandschildren. She was seated in one of the republican court chairs, a dainty affair of satin and ebony. She did not rise when the children or older guests wero presented to her. She simply said: "My dears, I am an invalid/' and ber sad, pale face and sunken eyes fully proved the expression. Mrs. Johnson looks older than her husband, and her ige does exceed his by a few swings of'tbe scythe of tinSe. She was never beautiful, but an observer would gsy, contemplating her—"it noble woman —God's first, best gift to mac." Perhaps it is well to call tQ.mind at this time that it was this woman who taught tho President to read after she became bis wife and that in t'n« earlier'years she wasbis coun selor, assi-tant and -guide. None but a wiso nr.d good mother could havo reared uch daughters as Mrs. Patterson and Mr?. Stover. When Mrs. Senator Patterson found herself tho "first lady in the land," she made this remark, which has been tho key-note of the femynine department of the White House from that
eventful day to the present time: "We are plain people, from the mountains of Tennessee, called here for a short tine by .* national calamity Jfeshpst, too WW". -tUjiot beexpected dfUf."* When Anna «. threw herself prostrate on the Surru one of the ante rooms of the floor o. W White Hou.~X »ba «|W: "Te^,^, Mra. Patterifo.. my /mm
brought up wall.
VELOCIPEDAL
b**
she has my have no more rig1. W»oT servants of the Wh. nlled their slimy the "pardon brokers" ti. tile mansion lengths evervwhere about oerUin entbev never of saj chanted pathway, and the face *«ajs lobbyist set in thjis direction a..
rtox t*s w*-
And smashed his retocipede I
Bsmember tbe fata Lord Lovell has met, tet this be yonr warning andcreed Stay at home with jour wife for the rest..of yoer life, .... -,t ri ,.
And beware the reloc'pede.'
Tbk Washington correspondent Of the Indianapolis Sfntirttl says that applications have been.. made for the body of Booth and he thinks it wiH be delivered up shortly, as the authorities at the arsenal are anxious that all of the bodies, shall be moved from the warehouse where they are interred. It is understood toe remains of Booth will be taken in charge by an undertaker of Baltimore, and conveyed to that city. They.will probably be interred in Green Mount cemetery, near the grave of his father, the famous tragedian, Josi'JS BauTOS Booth. mmmmg^gm^ggggrn .9)7813 r-Mukoitous. _T t-i ziis&S&i -V
Theodore Hook once dined With Mi Haohet. "Abl my,dear fellow/' said hf host, deprecatingly, "I am sorry to say that you will not net to-day such a drnjner as our friend Tom Moore gave us. "Certainly not," replied, Hook, "irom a hatchet one can except nothing but chop."'
A widow, occupying a large .houflAj in a fashionable quarter of London, sent for a wealthy solicitor to make her will, by which the disposed of between fifty and sixty thousand pounds. He proposer soon after, was accepted, and found hipaf self the happy husband of a pen^iles^ adventuress.
My dear,"inquired a young wife of her husband,' WlflS return from business "have you seen tbe beautiful set Of waif nut furniture which the Smiths bav bought?"'- Ahem I no, my love, but have seen the bill, and it quite satisfi 819." W-
A negro clergyman addressed bU cpngregation thus: "B'loved. bredren and siyters, you dono how to tell de Aaep'sf frtrtr de goats. Bery wetll I shall ask1 "few which ob dero hab de wool, and Whlel ob dem hab he hair?.'.' vaeOsJcD "Nature has written "honest mail, On' his face," said a man to Jerrold, speaking of a person in whom Jerrold's faith wisj not altogether blind, "Humph!" Jerrold replied, "then the pen must have been a very bad one."
A country sculptor in England was or' dered to engrave upon stone "4- virtjiogsj woman Is a crown to ber husband," but being pinched for room, it was contracted: "A virtuous woman Is 6s. to her htisband."
Dumas Was conversing with a young, and altoost unknow story writer, who said: "We are certainly the two great romancists of the age." "Aheml" replied Dumas, "what von say is half true, at least:" ..
A gentleman, on taking a volume to be bound, was asked ff.he wpuld have it bound in Russia. "Oh. no," he replied, "Russia is. too far off. I will ha^e it1 ..don^ here,',
Youfig iaaf:"""Obl I aih so glad you like birds which kind do you admire most?" Old Squab "Well, I think tbe goose, with plenty of stuffing, is about! as good as any." "Nothing like a magistrate for re-fin-ing a mau," as tho incorrigible old topbr said when he laid down his five shillings, for the tenth time. rl® b«la I ..,^s.. rtf' -MIS CELL ANEO
Yejocipedes rent in Boston for a penny a minute. The Missouri Legislature proposes to license bawdy and gambling homes.
Tho New York EwningPott favorithe sale of the canals of.that 3U,te The Buffalo police-are charged with subsidizing the~houses of prostitution in that city.
A Boston boy is engineering a movement to secure the ballot to'all boys between eighteen and twenty-one years of agfcjfv nd'f
Detroit has pledged $200,000 to aid in building a railroad from that city .to liogansport, via Adrian and Marenci. ,.
The bou«e in which the Santuoky Legislature was held In Frankfort, 1793, Ii still standing, and is known as tbe 'Old Love House."
London has a dollcioiii 'bit of i'clt7dalAn heir to the peerage Is a forger to the extent of £20,000
The Louisville Superintendent'of Police has been sued fot $20,000 damages /or false imprisonment* if.:-a ^iis
It is Sported that the Lawrence rtfan} Stat* Journal, the Lawrence Republican, and the Ottawa Home Jovrtial are to be consolidated, and a large daily paper to be the result.
A man in Oakland county, Michigan, advertises for a national spelling school— a sort of orthographical tournament—at which competition shall -be open to the world, and a prize awacdftUor the great* est proficiency in the art.'
Tbe distinction of being called a "cotr ton broker" in Memphis is not very great, as It is applied to impeennious individuals who practice the breaking into bales of cotton and who get ^their h$$ds broken in consequence.
extended.
tis airecuon »•-, ,m
Lord LoveU h* stood b-T the «»rdin g»t*.
On his famous Telocipsde.
On that horrid telocipade
W 1th bli shining JA And whi«pT«d farewell to t«dj_B«U, Who wiihad for his LordtUip good-spe«a
When will you be back, I*rd Novell »&« But he g»vo to her question no h»«™ Placed hlB feet in hiss irrups, and galloped awaj
Then Ladj Bell cried iu.frantiq alarm, What a monettf ray I-ora i», indeed, Io ride thus away from bis lorlng young wife,
Lord Loval returned, broken-hearted and sore, Broken-armed, and, alas I broken-WeM For he struck on a post, nearly gaT»„np.the gho»t
A lumberman in a Michigan lumber camp quietly left his bed the other night climbed to the top of a pile of logs and so successfully imitated an owl that another lumberman took his gun and shooting, killed him instantly, jt
Feb. 23 the Executive Board of thd Illinois Agricultural Society will meet at Springfield to decide upon the location of the State Fair for 1869 and 1870.— Springfield, Bloemington, Decatur, Jacksonville and Belleville all want it. "Poor Carlotta" has been, says a Brus-
S letter, in a calm state for two month? the keeps ber bed much of the time, assigning as a reason, that as. the pictorea which adorn the walls want t$ run airay, eh&is obliged to watch S-hptg,,
THE STATE.
burglMs infest
SpiarnxAiisM excites New Albany.
a Trsde Be
NEW Aababt street railway is to ba
OtivaLo&iKwiinecture in Richmond
-x» fi
venm
beta
-4 jn New Albany.
———
/'licitstill, in Morgan onucAyf:
5*?TOH»». has been "gobblt S
XHI Ohio Biyer Railroad proJecV is to. b^'itgfea^I agath in the spring. &
TtfTOrosby Opto* House Dramatic Company are playing at LaFayette
jiro more EvMSTiUe lawyer. ha*a.h»d
atght2,
Paiia* PaiLLiW singa ia B^ansyjlle] Thursday night. ot 'v'.'.iv. o. fj-VT
Gotxsmob AHO Mas. BAXXR 8RTe reC?aU»n last evening^335fl -ol esasli
is costs a won^n j^ttpr another womag in jBvansvllle-
Fobt Wati^ te the scene a snoring match
lJ^|^'®^j^-pttwo^^Ta
aliway
conductors. odibaa Titan
A. talkin.o in^tch, in which ten wq-
on the tapis. ^}aSf ifl10jaele
^•K.'noJ v?ind, fis thearticle whicli
the taFay^e j^egislatpr,ef) jl .ssai^tih
Thkes is —, settle the
it'in
... 'rta\d!uJJ. S'i'.r ui-'l.! Fayette to mastership hy ,la"oW
TSS United Br'eth [dn ^ChoTch of Abf
irfnfeton refosii
RET/B. F.^PoB^lt* Bas accepted an ihvltation
to-addres"ithe
Odd Fellows of
Fort Waytie jn the 26th.p®
DkaR, delicious, dulcet Ann Hottle, With her cjiarming pld-ma|^enly sipii plicity, appears agajn in. tbe piem Jrial.
'^hx floor of the_ Indianapoifs ^inii contaias ien Jhotjsand ^•et.of lumber, ^ij 'in two-inch strips, in, which there is not
.nail
Thb oldest Odd Mlow in the State is William Jones, of ^ew Albany. He has( been a member thirty-eight, yeats—tyen-, ty-.eight in this S^ate^, „a'
———
Wm. Johnson, Evansviile, 'tried ^toj "shuffle off" 4a, vio.the"strjchnin#ro|i^, last Satuiil«r*S*i*E^e«»"
u#e a
pump kept hip on., tbis side qf ^that bo.urno" &C- --.p iiii^l v-,^T —-.-'-"T"" 7-!.**-*,
Mathbw R. Hvjt.1, the great Democratic orator, has goeO Ph Riohmond Tkltgram a»j* thai he recently made his ,debut aa.tho '"J&haaBM^/aaj." in Nick of the Woods.'' ...
Tbk Stntind has a fragrant item about a Richmond-young geqtleman, who being dressed for a party, fell into a sewer the other night, and only got out atter. a good deal ojt trouble. He went hptQe.
Jobkph Smith was convicted on Sat urday in Allen County' pViminal Court, for high-way robbery, and sontepced for two years. About ono month since his brother was sentenced for five years on the same charge.
The Clem trial, second edition, still drags its almost interminable length along, exciting no particular interest and throwing no light on the great myster^ which enshrouds the untimely taking off of litr. and Mrs. Young.
Tbiu is a neat little mutual admiration "ring" in ono of the Indianapolis churches, the members of which are constantly "surprising" each other with presents of watches, chains, cano^julver ser, vi el A
Two limbs, or twigs, of the law^ got in to a fight in Court at .Evansviile the other day, and mauled each other fiercely, but, as t^ey confined their blows to the upper parts there was no danger of cerebral in-
Jury.
A child in Ohio, lately deceased, lived twalve year* without a spinal column.— &nhang$-
And a great majority of the Democracy of Indiana lived through a {our years' war and bavejince survived in the same sad situation, "without a spinal column." lip'iM i"1 —-i—1—'+-**-
As^exchange reports that a Richmond gentleman was awakened the other night to find a bouncing baby on bis doorstep, with a note requesting hira to "fea aw»ar" to the child. He is doing as well Mb.«„*!:!»'"«• '1'"
.-la St-i j:' 'WjJ' Tps tax-payers' petit ien, which was presented to ,a ^fiegisJative conajpittee yesterday,, is oyer thirty feet In, length, and contains abojit five thousand names. The first two hundred names represent more than ten millions of dollan.^^^, ,,, ,,
OtrsflrK in Isdianapt-li' (hipped to New York laet weak four. In: adrcd nd' seventy-six barrels, or 33,380 Josea of! ..
Th* Bepublicans of Indianapolis tpenproliimi«jnry stegitowa^ eect| cceas«pto Col. Boife'W ^[i^.astef
Thb funeral obsequios of the late Oen. Wagner, at Indianapolis, yesterday.
wer
yory aolennnnid iispusiifT~TBe remains were transferred to(hi»
Hiii |'a
an invitation to be present and addresathe*citii^sr^of Illiiili^pii^aKyieieelebration, ^f W thak xity. VI* -r-n, rn 1
Waltku Evans entered Jiouse of "Dr. SrffrMwsrf lQdianapoir*, day oight, and stole thereftom^^a^ifcble gold wttteh. The thWo wis/ after
Wards arrelle^ bad the covered. ill rwm
Or the convicts in the 3ta^.J&4jiohi South, 134 tire matriec^t^dV' iingW, ^7 widolreri, fvrt|o^§^^^^orced.4-
140, read and write 235, read only 40, np education'124. Nearly all the convicts
take up' ihe-^tclfts^at^Qiose' two inll ihaMiitoiatoppagiS 'at eftfae^^i
me ri
Siwojir co'uity '•llj probably offer tiob 006 for the iixia'tlod of the AgricuU ii 'r-.iteioaaoo" Ados ed buio.w tural. College.
CoMMIntinq on the movement in J.h Legisfat^rO t6 V'ec^ a ^pnumeF'^jj^r thk grave, of Qo?ei^ct,^)^»vi^o Evansl ville Journal
Hok. D. D. i*aATT, tha tS&nalcr -elect! from Indiana, in a-private. Jetter alludes, to the ewors whiohthav^ Ment.inlo?B^ny. ijdtHnldi' cfencerhinl his^'ttTOlJiaoer age and size, Several papers stated that, is, ft&fy jrears old ahd" weighs, 450
———
Less than twenty years ago a German, with flfty dollars and a blind horse, startad an iron foundry in Evansviile. Today he is worth more than $200,000, and la, he always has been, one of the most benevolent men in the State, isn.-a sj.u :jn»»
A OENTLEMiN who recently traveled over the Louisville, New Albany & Chicago railroad, iiecrarifes-tha*t It f* tbe safest road in the country, aa the superintendent keeps a little boy to go ahead of the train to drive off the cows and sheep. ioiai *u
oying good |§aWi and to led to their fate. t&i iiA
1(
ClTlZKirs of Brqoklvn and Centertori. id Morgan county, refuse to pay their subscriptions to^he Jn^ianapolis and Vin-
"If sil,the .graves deceased Governjpplied with monupentSi $£cg§eU«c c»arter a marthe Lj^Tpture^ ale yard.
f*
W. W. Johnson, a cbmpositor in th,ia office, joa £Peidiy list, wt -n"takes,'. making 8,5M.'.'ems," of:w£ich 7,000 were from manuscrfpi.' All'was read carefully by copyj'tfrtd: '^ut-. AjSIBieiL5 errors we're discot^d^ ^aajU^e of aj frivial. cJwracJjMw,*rtJsaelifem we find cleaner proOr—jsianJiiKe Journal. vm cs Iio3I
lpouhds.|
Mr. Pratt says tlWt he was horn in Paler mo, Wsddo oi»un|y, Maine, 3n 1813,' and that his father, a physician, moved thence to the Statetof -New Tork in 1815. The-new Senator is six feat four inches high, and weighe3 370 pounds.
ance for their sins in the JefFersonville penitentiary, are afflicted with small vermin, Last-Friday while onQ.o^hem, was bui'nihg thtf bigs^ut
sMV1$1"com
municated the fire-to"his bedding, burn. ng'J up in a few momop^ The alarm of mo was crlid, and': some eicitoment prevailed for a time, but nogrertdamage wa^'Sone." Tf is tiioughPuie prisoners had made.DDr the guard and make theif eeoape^ the' cry of flre^ being th«r ^gpal to con^saence the
movement. ——— THE' reservoir of the canal company in this county, covers some l,800 acres of ground. On Tuesday night last the embankment near Port Gibson was cut, and when, discovered in the morning the water was running out rapidly. Some of the citizens of Port Gibson went to work to stop the leak, but the farmers and others living in the vicinity of the reservoir hearing of it, some one hundred and fifty in number came armed with axes, spades, shovels and picks, and proceeded to widen the breach in the embankment. They say that they have suffered enough from the effects of the reservoir, and that it shall no longer stand. The water is flowing out very .rapidly, and we are informed that the roaring it makes can be heard three miles distant.—<Princeton Democrat'>.
THfc Sew^jilHmy Commercial says: "4nd still 1190,009 more is wanted, lor this (Normal School) building." Only $100,000 is th« sums reqpir^d to complete the structure In accordance with tbo plan adoptpd^by Uia iMgisiature. OKffcper plans were offered, but the legislature, preferred the most expensive one. Would the Comt/tercial have the Stite "go back" on own plight^ Jaii_ either do that or" complete'lhe tmilcling. The Commercial is worried because, as it says, the Terre Haute High School "is to be removed to the Normal School Build ing." Wxeli, Terre Hauta has invested $75,0u0 in that edifice, an amount suffi cient to erect three or four very good high school buildings. he jealous of the most liberal community in the State,
———
Qeorqe Qabdinq, of the Indianapolis Mirror, wis terriblf alarmed at a tre-mendous-rapping on his parlor door the other night. He thought th$ strange «ouod, at the solemn hour when graveyards yawn^ Ac., potteoded some dire domestic catastrophe. He summoned oourage, at length, to catechiae the iotrudgr.," Who, comes there ho shouted. No answer, ^iit more ferocious rapping, seeming "nearer, clearer, deadlier than before."4^- foe entire catatogoe of n6dttirnal horrors glanced through bis frepiled mind. Yoico and strength MWd him,' and be fe!1 The npke of his fall awoke a servant, who rushed in, closely followed by Grimalkin, the thumping of whose tail upon the*door had been the cause vt tha dreadful fright -Harding veyed to bed, and a cataplasm of mustard sped, applied to his vfeet, pigstty •*.¥ stored him to bis normal condition. He is still per-secut^ withjA^eal of ridicule from h'ls cruel friohds wipi ^pd fvj?d of a mwsement in t^e brief^put taofttpj ftle lof George's bi« -Geor^' story ia a very felin' -way, with here and ttljere a pause for manual illuatratioii, Iwhich aim opt plttngfs his auditors ittR»
•y '-r.'iidfljwfviy
IT TOU WXHT 4 BiApriruL GOUTLWX ios, A Faib Skin, jf you desire to have All irritating diitreisinc ttiUBtioiifi '-i1 .i."1. caffeMfc^wfthontr iin, go to anydrutrgist and ask fjr Pal. raer Ii^tion.—Coluinius, (Ind.) Demo.
jj^d/wh^ihatiheiiribn
ughtwr "irtfnrweTljthat they have no appetite that they feel languidjthat their head aches that they are growing thin and feeble, and that they have no UfA or «®^rgy.lofli._CtKCX&ey are low-spirited, And perfectly incapacitated to participate i* doro^iem? or, uai shall I give them? Our answer lat -j&em. tiff Pi.A3Hi?rio»- Br^T«M daerately threQ times a day. and our
OlA Sx^it they irHl recover? dwlw.
Maohoiia WatiSl—Superior to the ,b»t.iifi{wr^fl»rm^a Oolo^m^^ul sold Wnaif'the price. 10-dwlw
COSTAR tf HEM EOIIS
"Remevci allJIIotchei and ftecklee.'
.ABE
"Cottar's Bat. Bsack, «e, BxtcMlMtors, diMstar'^ Bu« Kxtenslaasors. "Coster's (Oaly fare) lBSMt reir«r.
All tlrn'ggists ln Tcaac Hadte fell themv'-,: -i«tJAddr»e«:i ^ea mGobtah," 10 Crosby St., N. Or, Johh F.Hmr, (Suooescor to) PBMAg BAM«a-».-CO... 21 Park Bow, N. T.
SMd tn TEBQB.IXAUTK, by BlBRi^t€K ABEBBY, WkaUsale and Betail Agents. Jan-ilwly-n to BH.
ao pen
PhBlon's Paphlaia lotion
ftr BMUtltyinc tke JWUI antt COMPIKXIOII Bemves all BBVPTIOin, FBECKIU. PIMPLK*, MUTD HLOTOrtES. TA*. etc,, anr readers
MUTD hlotohes, TAK. etc,, antf readers THE 8KIK son, F1AB and BL0VMIN6. For LADIES In the 1T0B8BBT ItU lnvalHakl For GiKKILBMBN after 8BATUTO It baa ao eqaa "PHAPIAS WT10V is the only reliable r» eirftr Diseases and kUasiahes of theSSlN.
PflALOM'S "PAPBIAS MAP" tor Ue TOILET. MIHUSBI aad BATH, wiu net chap tfee BUN. Prlee, iifi 0cBU:per Cake.. /.a-
-T' TMB DEMATO," !«|»B «B BATO."
PbIjlom *S01MIBWiOBK, Mid by all Utng, gis»..„ _L«d,«l^ator», 1i-m jut ti4s4 nnrt i'B 'te .MO) •'iU: -m&».a llfiltsrsa- 'a
SPECIAL NOTICES.
SCUUKCK'S fPMONIC SIBVP,^ Seaweed Tonic aid Mandrake Pllla will care Consumption, Liver Complaint and Dyspepsia, if taken aocordtag to' the directions. They are all threa to. be taken at the sitee time. They cleanse tha stcmidi. reUx the liver, and »ut it to work t^ien the appetite becomes good the rood digeete and nakee good blood the patient begins to gro« in flesh this, diseased matter ripsna in the innts ind the patient outgrows the disease and gets well. This to the only way to core Oon-j sumption.
To these thrae medicines ^r. J. H. Schenck, Philadelphia, owes hls aariValled success in the treatment of Palmonary 0on*amptkm. The Pulmonic '8J?ap~itpenVtE6 inorbld matter ln~{lle lung4 natore throws It off by an efiy etpectoationi for when the phlegm or matter is ripe a slight qovgh Will throw It off, and the patient has rest, ard the longs begin to heal.
=====
h+j tCESi
BRAXOBETH'S PILLS vs. ISO. ^"^l^Wt'nj jray givef'Ese, locauaePfbe pere room fcnt ths caio does ifbt by (etnionint wakcesku
Baa^X)BET®8 PILLSrelieTeWe ciffiUij and give esse mcro snrr!y and almost as quick as blcediog bui Bianlreth'a PlI's never hurt, and the good thejr do 1« permanent, becaaseth-y takeonl-7 klJUiia body and a beltui ylthpi Partition »iffifhe'so pi.Is will bo "found
A UNIVERSAL C0BATIVE PttlNOiriiE. Let the wise examine Its claims to thilr cotfi* tence. Mrs. Hocker, of Barnstable, Mass., was cared bj them of Ft. Titui's Daccf, cf J5 jo.srs' standing. .Abnjn
Dr. Brandreth's office, Urandreth House, N»w York. Sold by all Druggists. U7ilwln»
ClilSTADOIiO has THKOIVX Th* Great Vuicptan Clamisii into ths Shado. B« has acccin,p'.i.liiU via Ittj Lt.v e«ta)td
Tala. Xlii
HAIR DYE CHANGES Iu ft moment KcA, tony or Wbltelialr, to a black or lirowa,
That Naturd CftD&ot
Cristadoro's
Latent .Newi^ork
1 1 A I E S 1
Look Out! Look Out! O I
the OoppIeffioB."^
"tJUH ft Bpsy Qlow to the Oheeka,".
"The Bestln the World."
"COSTAB'S"' 1
EAUtl FIER,
'P»aiPf') V*siwutrt. bimk-ssktau
otmai
iuisssns
gli^oBiie,"ff,6b^iitts»fjr82,iO. 1000 Bottles sold is one day ia M. T, Uity. -jnt m: iaii &fc«iftn^ia tebbe davtb sen itP ,edJ tijiicp'k 0} ,«i» 'f.f ,f 6
msiAF:sf
Standard preparations
WHY
1
To do this, the SeawAd Tonio and Mandrake Pills must be fresly nsed to eleanse the stomach and liver, so that the Pulmonic Syrup and the food will make good blood.
Liver Compialnt Is one of the most prominent caust-s of Consumption. SobenckVSeaweed Tonic Is a gentle stimulant and alterative, and the alkali in th« Seaweed, wbloh ttin preparation i« mado of, assiala the a-oaaoh to throw oat thegaatilo jnice to dlsseive ike food with the Palmoii Syrup, and It iamade into good blood without fetmemation or souring in the stomach.
The great reasou why physicians do not cure Oonsump'ion is, they try to ao to much th give medicine to stop the coughs, to st the chills,to st night sweat*,-hectlo ver, and by so duing tbey arrange tb* wbole d.geetive powers, tooklugnp toe secretions, and 6VeninaIly the patuni •inks aud die*. lr. rchinck, in his treatment, dbce not try to stopa cangh, night sweats, chills or fever. liemove the oausf, and tbey will all stop of their own a coord. Ko one can be cared of ConitmptioD, Liver Complaint, byapepsla, 0»tarh, Oankei, Oloeratetf'lhro*t, nnies the liver and stomach ate make health).
If a ptrion la* Oontnoptlon, of coure» the lungs in bobis way,[are diseased, ei-.her tabeicl^s, abscesses, bronchial Irri ation, pleura adhesion, er the .u&gl area mus of inflammation and fast aeosylng. In snch cases, what must be done?— Lt Is nutonljrthe lnnf that are wasting.. batU isibewhele body. 'lha stomach aud liver have lost their power to make blood ont of food. Mow, tne only chance 1* take Dr. Schenck's three medicine*, which w.ll bring ap a tone to the stomach, the patient will begin io want food, it I will digest essrily and make good bldod then the patient begics to gain in flesh, and as soon as the body begin* to grew, tbe inegs commence heal up, and the patient gets ll-suy and well. This is tUo only way I cure Consumption.
When theio is no lung disease, an I onlf Liver Complaint and Dyspepsia, Sch'nek's Seaweed Tonic and Mandrake Pills are sufficient, withon. [the Pulmonic Syrnp- Take tbe Unndrake I'll! freely in all bilious complaints, a9 tbey are per factly harmless. iir. schenck, who has enjoyed uninterrupted health tor many year* past, and new weighs 226 pounds, was wasted aw»y to a mere skeleton, in .the very last stage of Pulmonary Consumption, his physicians having pronounce his case hope, Mess, and ebandoned nim to his fate. He was coredjty the aftzesald medicines, and sleco bis r. oovery, many thoasandiaiailariy aiBictedhave nsed Dr. S:heuck's preparation* with th- same remarkable anccsst. Vixl direction* accompany eSchjsmakmg It not absolntel) necessary to personallf *eeDr. 8ckeea, nnlesa patieats wish tnair lnndk eoratntned) «nd for this purpose he is pto-
fee.lenaily at his principal ofilce, Phliadel every Saturyay, where aU letters for advice nraet 39 addreisod.
Prioeof thePnlmonic Syrup and Sosweed Tonic, •ach tl,S0 per battle, or 7,60 a half docen. Mandrake *-llis 25 cent* per box.
For sale by all Druggists. JalTdwly
llair Preservativ
Mar* tho partuulari in which the iup*riorit of hit prepiralion consists F.rst, icpreventt the hair rom fail n^ cut aetond, it btimuUtei the vegetstlve paw«r of the rrots th.rd, prevents the formation cf i.urf auu daiicn.il fanrth, it imparts a wavy call tJ strulght hi.r fifth, it prnviuts (rayntss ilxil), it conltrii silky lustre to etiry tress stYenlh. it rends the htir so flexible that It liei sjio thly ia au] rtijuired direclan eighth, it revirej ihu torj
j^r-rmrzsm Suil by Drugsista, %ri«i appil-*l t.y all Han UreHBr». ilnuufoctory Nc. lis Maid«- uu.-.—(
rjHE HEALIN& POOL! An Essay on he Crimeof Solitudp, and tha Diseases aod Abuse which crate iiupcdim'n tf to MABHlaOE, with i-uro meai.9 cf Beh-f.—) Sent in sealed lett envo'opes, fr' »f Add(e iS, J, SlOilil^K ftt" AteoclallSo,'Ptiilftloipbia, I'a
MYSTEEY. sendina us thrlr address with 25 cents enclostd, will r-ctlre by mall the nime at cartede visits cf
Ja2Tw3m NOKE N.V.
YOU DIE
WILL
OONKLIN'SPASTILES cu'es Consump
tion, Bron'hitU, Boarien*ss, Asthma, OoukIs, Colds. Catarrh, Croutt?8ortXhr-at, Dteaaneable Breath, lightness of the Ol-e^t, Uifficu ty or Breathinz, sc. Pub'io Speakers aod Singes «lll nnd them unnyilled far ci.nriug the vuive Price 25 cents par box. For t:y .nil
W A A
WATCHES.
To Bpien il
The greatest {.art of th j-w-laisof thaUnitad States keep Waliham Watcbts, aai oordlailf rfocmmenl them to theft da^tomeffi, rotwlto standing the fact h^t leas profit is made on tbeie wotchcs thai on anr othiri generallr sold by the Trade* TLereason of this is, that tbe repntation of the Walttia'itt' Watcfe r&ftd!rs(it ti% *Biiy sale, and the result is, that, although the dealer does not make as much mone« on each ''ndWfduat watch a*he may cn the tale of other watches, he Is still tho gainer through larger and livelier sales. There nr* some, however, amoc* the Trad', who do not give the Walthsm Watrh that hearty snpport whfch itdes'.rve*. Tbis portion of the Trade f^ncy there is moro money to he made by dealing in watches about which the publio' are ignorant, nn1 in which there Is lass competition, and are eoctent to make an 03ca lional sale of such watches at a Urge profit. It is this class of dealer* who, wh -n atked sbout Waltham Watch s, use tLat k.ni of langnsge which leads the customer finally to boy Ji«t inch a watch as is tho most profitable fjr tho dealer to sell.
For thelnformatlon of persons at out to buy watch, and who may b» noiiTorably Bffac.'ed by the representations cf lh'os uhrrieo"d7j^'Vo'on'r watcher, wc eall attention to the following sug gestions:
Since tho mannfactureof jvatthaj Initiated at Wa'tham, he Company havV Wad ab nt 400,060 watche*. In every town' village of the country soma earer' of a Walthsm Watch may be foucd, Let the party about bay aak^r. this owner of an American \V^t|l|,t^^
HAS WATCff 6IVEI
SP!C,AL WQTiCg*
.«
,^re are .not afrsiH to advlse thoM Twlskicg to buy a Wttto togulJe themselvei by the answer. .Being sitisfled as tb tbe qustlty of the w*tcH/the b'ujfrh»*tpw.gnlj '.(^ijtfriil^ hltnsi)T ^ai:t^ Wal' ham Watches are THS OiJSAtlSI as^iii the bset, .On.'h *t.?ad w* h»ye.a ff» wprda.jW
9
BckeackVMankrake Pill* aet upon the liver, removing all obstructions, relax the ducts ef the gall Madder, the bile starts (reply and tle^llver Is soon relieved iithe stools will shew what tha Plltioan do notWng'has ever been Invested e*. cept cajome) (a deadly poison which Is very dangerous to upb unless with great care) that will uulock the gall bladder and start tbe secretlors ef tbe iiver like Schenck's Mandrake Pills.
ay: sk".''It Is a weU-knowo fafit in ma&ufactnting, tha* tbe greater the number of articles n^anufaotneaidt by one establishment, the smaller vlUbiVllK cost of each ludlvidnal urtio'e JT-oepln^tlis in view, onr policy hks always t*sn to 8U1 our product! at tbe lowest pa Itlo pricavlA' ord«r to *ecur* large salt*, and the* enable u*lo.manof«. Sore watches at a mininram cijst7 .- BEIj^KVE IN SHALL PBOFirS B.tfSINXSS, This policy we have ucceasfally carried oat, and the result la,ttkat tc^ay wemanatae* Xure.twl$9 ax many .watches as all tho Other ft atoilss In tbe Dmtrd Stit-s pat togsther. VP® era, tbeiefltre, sflanl to Mil (ktsper than tliey ten. and ttotanlly 40 a«i] Twesily-flve per cciit. header tiiau they do, quality for ^millty.
We woald (Uf '.h«r zvmark that la incresslrg our productions, vre'h»V» ccmtautly linprtiTed 1 laCAtjlT AlS'O IT? We bavo h»d |U»xubi(al ot nen-ty all ln^fcUoDS inlended to improve timf elects, and har6 addjted .11 thpsr, nnd those only, whtcK Tiave prdv.'/'to Ve really valuable. Wehive retaineliu bUT employment every hoad of ever (.'epartm*nt Ire hive eyer fiad,1 yhose strvlc were of. any imdortanoa to thi Cotnimny, t^d oar reseitt ooips ui and master mochanfes ra'mot bj equalejl In this or any other cooatry. In a di:ion., to this wa make, gold and ctlTdr oaiet, aot till lit 'tint'cswi »o»V meats, but-for tbose cf other faciei lag the only ectabilthmejtt thft turos out watcbee compLato in every reepec^
As tb ie Waiihts re fo sa's Ly the Trade generally throughout the Ut/Itad'Statf. a&d-at^ rotail'proilt aiade mo»t re«sunabie .b/ coiiptOH (ten, the Company inv^» sl. ly,d^tjuf"d*t* (retail character. 4 ii BOBBINS A APPLEfOX, Ocn'l A«ientl. 182 WKOAOWAT, SI. V.
1
CSIUJBEA'S IITE8 SATED FOB 50 CEMi.
cflbren dio annnallyof Cronp.
Noflbolherfl^' ymi would ipend 60 cents, and alnw bavoS bottle of Dr. Tobias' Venetian LljUrnt 'a Mjhoose. you nred ney fear iojlog yonr Utile ono whon attacked with this complaint. It ii uow 21 yosss since I put np my LinimoDt, and never heard of a child djiog ol Crmjp ^nimfnt irsn-«eed bat haa ato-B
OT
1j ever Ajyoiy^(ftioDS w.th every bottle. *SslT.t)j.Ui(i..Dxusgi»ts. Depot, 10 Tark l'iaco, Hew Tort. il7dwm
The Seeds of SicluicM.
Batoa SlaacbuQfieu tells a etciy of a post boy'a horn, wbcU Lad a Btmb«r of wickeJ toues owu in.to it ono frosty night, bot mido lo ro* 8pcn«e. wboa was fcucg bofore a ho: are, tbo lunes Wrbich bad htm frozeii Is* out, tw ibj amasamubt of all pio*eat.~ Jest go tho Luman syatea?, sabjeotod to injurious iutiueuces durlog the Winter, tcmeUaiftfl lok«Q of tbe affect tbey hato product upou lt, until be moist atsotpbere cf Spring develop* thsirfiuita. SJary t'prirg dis«asb« ate tbe re-o aultof Wloter impraddLCef, a&l creai au*. tapeoisl car §bou!d b» taken cf the system tu th% cold teasoD, so that lt may bo a bo nod and Vtfr* oious conditLou wh^n the maU.-iom fo^ ot M^rch a&d A^rll meko \hzlr appearance. To tbia tnJ, fctreegtben the stomach and tbegecwr»J orgftnisatlun at tbH season with UOSTKTT£R* BIXTKUS. Take tt.ii pleasant \ogo:abl« anil do.o ia advance it the npriBiu^of the mejhctii jaista aLd Taioia, which ]rcdo:e chilUaud 'e ver, andoiher & i\»mal!c 9ra*eR. Bemezub. .' that llii a prtven »Y# yn*dicine.—&a powj ful tw proltot ns to Mtore. The ntomach is apt to
Yttrtciiednt this time of the yeac. It is a period
*eafcen d:gfcsilre or&aod and dlsoralc^Ai Ivor, ruo effect ol the BittKbe to inngorata be one &tid ie^n)ate tbe ottur. Thete is ao rMwtsa?\#W(a!K:WWocts'.sWfa tw rpaiation of (hit nature so thoroughly aiubi-iuue, so hibcinc. and apjontissly tree frc» uJuj eiciaj* CrfifeBi?awbAM^Ilebrated Tegeiatiie cjttiiair dwlw
r,o of compound sxtbaot bdouc.riie rompjnt-nt parts are B0CHC, Lo*0 I UUBUBJ, JUNIt EB BKKBIS8.
Mont OP rBIPARATlON.a a by a I Cubtbs extracted by dlfplaceinent by liquor oh. tained from apntalnUg m* ittlo sugar, a
P&afmscopoe nor is it a Syrnp—and, therefore, •an be u«eil in cases whero lev.^r, or iuflammatiou rzists. Iu this, yon hare ihe knowledge ot th. nirrfdienta and me mode of preparation.
ranoa ofcli'es htre been reported (o rje
and miry rtate if it was $10 per bottle they wcu'd u- te withene it Besides wbicb, it is a fertiiu curefi Cuts, Barns, Qetdache, TooiL •ihj, Sere Threat, Swellings, Slumps, Colic,
of
spirit, and.
more palatable than any nuW In use. The aotl?-, 11 uiMitUsasy by tkiCJ ode extracted. by Druggints genorally, in if a farlt color. It is a plant tnat emits its Iraprance: the mtlon of a ttame du'itrojs tbis .Its a-tive prlno'pb),SIHH»# a'dfirt-'aud gintinona •hcootioa. lline Is the colorof ingredients. Tha 3uchu in my proi aration predominates tha
UO-p'ng that yon will faror it with a trial, ami
Sr*at±,
AOI^ioh
A Clergyman, wblle r*»Kiiig in a.4i nl|Vwr?,dWe^nw^ydjimjjto^ edy for'the cure of Nervous ^kne^FaZ^fiDo cay, Dlseaies of tho Uri gau, si (ithe -*hel3 trlin oa bx.bape'ul and yleipu* hiblts have been eu red by thie noble ri ed by a desire to benefit' tkaaffild naW, I will send the receipt nsiagthl* medlsinc, in sealed. one Who need*' it, JV»s cf Chatgh 4-{dress f^Bvra
^^^AD'lJ«^SortOity.
H. T, BELMBOT D,
Cliemi-teud DrugsiBtof 10 Years' Kxperience in Philadelphia, aud now losated at his I'rcg £?™hom Pitirr[From the Largest Manufacturing Cht mist in th»»
World.]
'•pim ^ih^lrpBr. T.J tf^hnb»ld.\ be occupied the Drug Store opposito my letldenoe. and, tfas, the bu^lnes. where oilera hau »ot been eqmlly so before him. I have been latorably ImpresewwjiblnlajdWtactor and ecterpriso.
WILLIAM WEIQBTMAN,
Irmof Powers 4 SVeightman, Manufacturing Chemi ts, Ninth and Bre^n Streets, Philadelphia. HELBBr-LD's Ftuio Esteact Bonirt, for wcakaesi arising from lnill«cretlou Tni exhausted powers of ttature which are accomMnled h, iu many alaiminj symptoms, among wnjoh srlfl ha found, Iiiditposition to ttxertlon, Lost of Mtmo. ry, Wakefulness, Horror of D'sease, ol forebodings of Evil in last. Universal iMBaifade, l'rostration, and inability to enter Into the«njoyment! or society.
Tho nitUution, gnco affected wi& Organic weak^eis, requires tbe atd of JtiMielne to itren^th.-u anil invigorate the system, which UELiiiliOLD'ri EXTRACT BUOHU invariably does. If no treatment Is submitted to Consumption or Insanity ensues.
Hklboolb's Flcid Eitbaot Bccno, In affec?ton» peculiar to Femeles, is uneq*:l« by any jther ^reparation, ai iu Onloros'B. or netention, Painfulnc s, or Supprcsaion of Uustomaij Kraouitioi.s. Ulcerated or d.hlrros Stato of ihh Uterus, jnd all complaints incident to the soxitrhethcr lining fiom habits dissipation, ltn|radenco in, or thedecllna or change of life.
Belxsolb'S FLCIU ExTEicr BconnVNO IB ?aoYzo BjSS Wsa will radically extnuiuate from the systom diseases arising fiomlkblsol .lissipalion, at littU expense, little or nofchange •in diet, no lnoonvenieiice or exposure ccfpletely superseding those unpieaeaut and da»oroiiii remedies, Oopavla and lllercury, in all ttfjedij.
All 1
Ve tic
uicitionr, I 1 AdJresi II. T. HELMBOLD, Drug and Cheml
DgrnTed wr&ppar, with fAC*alm.le of my Cb«il ial W^rehouite, and signod db624deo!*w«ov2m -—fie T. HKLMBOLI'
3toot8 la-iaiW si xco isfJo THB
HATIOlFiS^ffi0ST
Uay ltal, ONfiMlIi/toS UOLLi
got! K!ttAKrKB*D,«y TaK STATE. D^uus B. UAxoax. 'I'rtaa'L cantLL, s.c /J Beceives Deposlte aadaAow*roUBPKB C£N1 INTEliEST on all iHtnj' SlWn'ieK hJiySJt td Orieek' at^ tUjtirt-" S^EOf ATj '"tifi POSl T8r for SL Months, or more, mjiy ba'liAfiit-jii 'Ura ^r cent ritftsf i*Xt of frMiiiioif ^llabsis I jJel amoiig oref 8W^3h»Tefc)i8ers, eornprl»!iig piaii w'pll^h ai^d flnan^iaij irporifuto, ^So'iiWttfhSHy'tr&ble to de-1 jfc«titore for all obligation of the Company to ioulle tbo amoont of«-UMtr capital stock. As ie NATIONALTRUST CO. recelTes deposits ia
SionT 4n1lW!Tl*0l®,WnflWJUHwiagante.--ist en all oult salanou, parties tbronghont
with spooltii advaatage^ of seennty, couvenUnoe 4nd profit. fekdw^m
•WW*?*SSRafW?
Ft SB ELI!lTH^PI.VreB WUtR. TliK GOBUAM MANUFACTUBfNO CO., OF PROVIDENCE, &. I., ItaviiM theIarg»as mami0!0ry of Solid Silver Ware in tha world, wltb he most Improve
ttQ3« binner Services, Tea Services, and every article Specially adapttdilbr OolUayaa«BH4al Qilts.
They offe/ajj^, thejlr JW?^^y»^va^-
fhey have fntroinced new patterns or rare ele. |aiic«. The Soli 1
£§il?r
siiri6'ar»Bt*e1
all ia
UN. Li0 nttMinLD'a Fitrio Kximaot Btronc lUeases of these orgaofl, whetner i-xlsl m»io^rTeffin, new wKitoterenwoftgil ,ul no matter or how long standing. It f4 aut in taste aLd odor, "immedia
ting.
In
,ind mere stremhening than any of the as of a or I on Thoee.saifcrinf :£rom brohenrdown fr constitutions, prbfcuie th* fttrfedy'at onee.*
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