Terre-Haute Weekly Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 October 1869 — Page 4
WEEKLY EXPRESS.
I
THE STATE. Tp
SPEXCER COUNTY
has
FLOGGIJH in the Indianapolis public achools is creating much "unpleasantness."
THE* SentinM
Gazette.
ILUDRADS COUNTY
1,200 majority, against a tax in aid of the New Albanv & St. Louis Railroad.
THE
American Hash Factory, at Vir.ennes, has changed hands and is to be run as a "first class hotel."
ITON*.
JAMES
B.
THE
flour and wheat shipments from
Indianapolis to points East, since July 1 to date, aggregate in valuation upwards of $1,500,000.
THE Indianapolis Rolling Mill Company are re-rolling iron for the western di vision of the Indianapolis and St. Louis Ilailwiiy.
DURHAM GRADDU
REV.
BENONI
AFTER all the fuss that has been made
Ex-Governor Ilenry S. Lane, for the State gallery, and, the
DOCTOR
JUST
FIVE
voted to levy
a special tax for railroad purposes.
BROWN,
TIIB
Sentinel
PATNTINO
Commercial
SINCE
ASSISTANT
A LAI-'AYIOTTI:
says, has
succeeded admirably in catching the peculiar expression of thegreat orator. The distinguished subject, who has seen it says "it is fearfully like."
the death of Johnson Brown, of
Jcflcrson county, aged 10S years, the oldest man left living in the State, the Madison
Courier
SKCRETAUY
Sentinel.
It is very indiscreet to mention Tom's intentions and thus forewarn the deer. His reputation as a mighty hunter is so well established and so widely known that his only chance of getting a shot at the animals depends on their ignorance of bis contemplated visit to their haunts. Look out for an exodus of deer from Jasper county.
PAPKH
STI.MI"T.ATEI by that universal motive power, the hope of reward, Pauline Potter, of the County of Knox, ships us, as a sample of her literary wares, seventyeight sheets of foolscap, covered, on both sides of each leaf, with a delicate and elegant chirographv in which the fair Pauline—it is fair to suppose she is fair—tells the tale of "The Mute Lovers." Patiently and perseveringly we have plodded through Pauline Potter's pro.-fiie production, and in reply to her questions, ""Will you publish it?" and ""What will you pay for it?" we are prepared to make answer, thus: We cannot print "The ^ute Lovers" because the story is full of sickly sentimentalism of the most commonplace order. The first question being answered in the negative, a reply to the second is unnecessary. Pauline's manuscript awaits her order.
ARTICLES
OF ASSOCIATION
cinnati and St. Louis Railroad Company have been filed in the Secretary of State's oflice. The company has a capital of four millions of dollars, divided into forty thousand shares of one hundred dollars each. The road is to be built from Greensbitrg through the counties of Decatur, Bartholomew, Brown, Monroe, Greene and Sullivan, to Merom, on the Wabash, where it will connect with a road to Effingham, Illinois, and running thence to St. Louis. The distance from Cincinnati to Merom is about one hundred and ninety miles. The following persons have been clioscn Directors for ihe first year: tj- AVill Cumback and J. B. l'oley, of Decatur countv: B. F. Jones, Randolph Griffith. and William McEwen, of Bartholomew county James B. Mulky and James Snfall, of Monroe county M. II. Shryer and Hughes East, of Greene comity Jas. W. Wolfe and D. Busier, of Sullivan
cotHltv.
SHKRROD of Orange wants to
be Secretary of State.
INDIANAPOLIS isstill agitating the pro-
jeet of building a blast furnace.
THE
thousand bushels of wheat are
converted into flour in Indianapolis every day.
IGROSS
INDIANAPOLIS
says the Indianapolis
Delphi »and Chicago Railroad may be put down as .dead.
*''|nwF. Tnn" of Lafayette, ha*accepted imposition upon the editorial staff of the Cincinnati
MRS. HARDING,
has voted, bv about
A
of Jackson
county, is announced as a Democratic indidate for Secretary of State.
®NTCK
savs Judge Hines is talked
of as a candidate for the Republican nomination for Judge of the Supreme Court.
advertisements on dogs is a
"dogoned" mean way they have of keeping tilings "before the people" in Indianapolis.
DEMOCRATIC candidates for State officers are getting themselves noticed in the papers all over the State. It is a sad \v t8te of pnters' ink.
FROM
is in jail in Evans-
vilie, charged with stealing $7o from a bureau drawer in the house of Andrew •lauch, where lie was boarding.
TIIE snow-storm on Tuesday was very severe in Evansville and did much damage to trees and shrubbery. Five or six inches are said to have fallen.
THE Annual Session of the Grand Division of Sons of Temperance will beheld in Indianapolis on the first Tuesday in November next.
STINSON, an old and
much esteemed citizen of Vanderburg county, died at his residence, near Evansville, on Tuesday last.
all the fuss that has been made
over the opening of the Indianapolis and Vincennes Railroad it is now said that a month's work must be done upon it before it can be opened for through passenger trains. —————
GKJC. JOHN COBURN will deliver the address of welcome, and General Daniel Hutterfield the oration at the next meeting of the Society of the Army of the Cumberland which takes place at In(Ji napolis on the loth and 16th of December. ,,
LAST SATURDAY, Pike county voted by about 500 majority against levying a fax of two per cent, to aid in the construction of the New Albany & St. Louis and the Evansville & Indianapolis Straight Line Railroads.
MR.
A
receipts of the Indianapolis
Academy of Music last month were $7,722.
manufactured $700,000
worth of iron during the year ending Oct. 1st.
SARAH MCCULLOUGII,
a prostitute,
committed suicide by taking laudanum at Indianapolis on Thursday.
THE
C'rawfordsville
Journal
says, "work
on the new railroad west is being pushed forward at an encouraging rate."
a widow residing in
Marion county, last her house, a twostory frame, by fire on Thursday.
CHILD
of Mr. Joseph Moor, of Dela
ware county, died a few days ago. from the effects of a fall from the loft of an unfinished house.
VAN HORN ESQ.
THE
of Indianapolis
has formed a law partnership with Judge Hughes and will remove to Bloomington.
portraits of ex-Governors Whit-
comb and Dunning, painted by J. Forbes, of Chicago, have been received at the Executive office.
AN
Indianpolis papersays that during the last year the Junction Railroad has earned $50,000 above its running expenses and interest on bonded debt.
intelligent farmers of Posey
county the Evansville
Journal
JAMES SHEA
THE
learns that
the crop of good sound corn in that county this year will be equal to that of last year, and will perhaps exceed it.
shot off a part of Hen
Johnson's car, at Indianapolis, on Thursday night. The shooting was done without any apparent provocation. Shea fled as soon as he fired, but was soon after arrested and lodged in jail.
Commercial
says the value of man
ufacturers in Indianapolis during the past year, according to the books of the Assessor of Internal Revenue, is $2,033,703. Small manufacturers do not report, or the amount would be much larger.
SOMEBODY
"sold" the New Albany
Commeic:al
with a report that Andy
Johnson had been elected United States Senator by a majority of fourteen votes, whereupon the
Commercial
THE
COX lias completed the painting of
pitched into
Tennessee giving "the meanest of all the rebel States" a fearful raking from stein to stem.
MRS. CATHARINE WARNER,St.
CORRESPONDENT
son
says, is probably, Mr. Ben
jamin Sea If, a resident of Milesburg, Elkhart county, who was born May 10th, 17(54.""
and one
OF
STATE, Tom
Trusler, is going to Jasper county next week, for his annual deer hunt.—Ind.
THE
tells an amus
ing incident at the expense of an old and respected citizen and two of the city policemen. These officials discovered, as they supposed, a splendid hive of bees ftlid a large amount of honey in a tree on the premises of the old settler, and to avoid any legal trouble in regard to cutting down the tree, lie red him one-half the booty for (lie privilege. He agreed, and, with tubs and buckets, the party repaired to the woods for the purpose of getting the honey. lTpon cutting the tree down they discovered, to the chagrin of all the anxious present, that it was a huge family of wasps—not a hive of bees—that thev had discovered.
Mit*.
writes to the Madi
Courier
that notwithstanding the
death of Johnson Brouwn, the oldest man in the State, Milton township still claims the oldest man in the county. General John Jackson, a Scotchman, living two miles north of Manville, is
one hundred
years old. The old man's liinbs
became useless many years ago, and he has been confined to his room ever since. His mind is entirely gone.
Lafayette
Dispatch
tells a singular
story of the effects of an equine collision. It appears that a few days since a pair of horsesibelonging to John Gushwa,who live on Wild Cat Creek, were out in a small lot, separated from each other in op|ositc corners of the lot. The boys went for them, with the purpose of putting them in the stable. Both horses started simultaneously to run towards the stable and met each other on the way with such force as to kill them both! One fell dead instantly, and the other fell and died after walking a few steps.
THE
New Albany
Commercial
IIERR,
states
that the singular and fatal disease known as hog cholera is playing sad havoc with the hogs in Floyd, Harrison, Clark and Scott counties. The destruction already wrought by the disease will greatly shorten the hog crop in the counties named, even though its ravages cease immediatclv. Many farmers in Clark and Scott counties have lost from ten to forty head of hogs already, and there appears to be little abatement in the disease. One farmer in Harrison county lost thirty-five head in a single week. If there is a remedy for this singular and expensive disease it should be made public without delay.
wife of Phillip Herr,
Utiea, Clark county, has stepped out with one big rascal, John Neidcrcr by name. She left four children with Philip, and took one with her.
IN TIIK
of the Cin
Clark Circuit Court last Wed
nesday, the case of Mrs. Meriwether for divorce from Col. J. B. Meriwether, came up for trial. The complaint set forth that defendant was an habitual drunkard and was guilty of cruelty to plaintiff, which facts were established and the divorce granted. Mrs. M. was awarded the guardianship and custody of their children.
THERE
is a general impression prevail
ing throughout the civilized world that the Boston Coliseum was blown down in the great scale. This, the
Tribune
asserts,
is a mistake. It was only reduced to its normal and appropriate condition of a ruin. But what Nature could not herself completely do, will now be effected by the hand of man. The Coliseum will be torn down early in November. So the newspapers announce but before ibis dolorous demolition commences Gilmore's Rind" will give three concerts in the edifice. But "Gilmore's Band" has only 100 performers, and how they will be able to make a musical noise adequate to the size of the vast interior, passes our comprehension. The great
GILMORE
himself is in Paris, where he has caused to be manufactured for liis own use some 1 kind of golden wind-instrument at a fabulous CtJSt. -t-' -*-»T
Mr. David Thompson, a well-known grape grower of New York, has called a new and delicious variety of the vine the ITon. Hnrae* Greeley Grape.
AVAtTVIV LEAF.
BT CKORGK COOtE*.
The road winds past the wooded hill The qnict farm-house stands aloof The bees ham round the window rill
The sun (flares on the slanting roof.
Faint etreakg of crimson line the leaves, And tawny uplands faintly glow The cradle lies beside the sheaves:
The unhitched oxen homeward go.
The watch-dog stretchcs by the door, And slpepy noontide has begun The rivep—glas» from shore to shore—
Creeps drowsily in shade and sun.
0 sweetest love, that brought sweet care! Alone, by tangled roots I dream, 't And in the river's quiet sharo:
No lilies haunt the rapid stream!
II.
The bluebird tilts the yellowing spray. And skies are golden fair The crickets are astir all day:
Sweet sounds are in the air: .. And grasshoppers, in rnstling play. Vault rouna me everywhere.
Whore flies the bird? Ah who can tell? The bee ftark-dead will lie And faint will grow the cricket's bell
When winds are wailing by This idlcsongof mine, as well. With autumn leaves will die_,
—Appleton't Journal.
XY DARLI»'©.
My darling is the sweetest maid That overlived on marmalade Or wanted wings to make her Theangel thatshe ought to be l5ut then—unluckily for me, I'm five and forty, and you see,
Sho's only twelve—deuce take herl
Her hair is gold in wavy curls, Her eyes are stars, her teeth are pearls, Her boots arc bronze and lace up.
Her check is bloomy like a plum, Her breath is sweet as majorum But poetry is weak to sum
11 Her figure and her face up.
Alas, the truth I must aver— Mysiephew Hick's in love with her. While prudence says I should prefer
Iler aunt, who's plain and heavy. Oh, would—but why ask fate to grant A boon which I'm aware it can't! Oh, would that she had been her aunt.
Or I had been my ncvy.
Jo cph
county, was so severely burned, last Saturday, by her clothes taking fire that she died in a few hours. Mrs. Warner was sixty-six years old at the time of her death, was a member of the Dunkard Church, had many friends and was much beloved bv all who knew her.
Lafayette CWicrsays "Church,
the "mcjum" after "materializing" for a week or two on boarding house hash, has left his landlady "a weepin and a wailin." He left his entire wardrobe, consisting of a pair of socks, two paper collars, slightly soiled, and a summer duster, as collateral security for his reappearance in the flesh. He is expected back every minute."
RHEUMATISM
prevented General John
Coburn, of Indianapolis, from attending the National Capital Convention, but did not prevent him from inflicting a long letter on that body. A friend, who is not a Good Templar, suggests that longwinded speakers and writers of tedious episfles should intersperc their productions with drinking places, a sort of wayside inns, where the tired listener or reader may "pull up for a nipper."
GUSHING MEN.
The Saturday Review says 'fhe picture of a gushing creature, all heart and no brains, all impulse and no ballast, is familiar to us and we know her, either by repute or personal acquaintance, as well as we know our alphabet.
But we are not so familiar with the idea of the gushing man and yet gushing men exist, if not in such numbers as their sisters, still in duite sufficient force to constitute a distinct type. The gushing man is the furthest posseble removed from the ordinarp manly idial, as women create it out of their own imaginations.
Women like to picture men as inexorbly just, yet tender calm, grave, restrained, yet full of passion well mastered greathearts, with an eye cast mercy wards if you will, yet unapproachable by all the world Goethe^, with one weak corner left for Bcttinawkere love may queen it over wisdoombut in all save love strong as Titans, pwerful as gods and unchangeable as fate.
They forgive anything in a man who is manly according to their own pattern and ideas" Even harshness amounting to brutality is condoned if the hero has a jaw of sufficient squareness, and mighty passions just within the limits of control, as witness Jane Eyre's "Rochester," and his long line of unpleasant followers always supposing, that is, that he loves for, like the Russian wife who wept for want of her customary thrashing, taking immmunity from the stick to mean indifference, they would rather have brutality with love than no love at all.
But a gushing man, as judged by men among men as a being so foreign to their ideal, that very few understand him when they do see him. And they do not call him gushing. He is frank, enthusiastic, unworldly, aspiring perhaps he is labeled with that word of power, "high-souled but lie is not gushing, save when spoken of by men who despise him. For men have an intense contempt for him.
A woman who has no ballast, and whose self-restraint goes to the winds on every occasion, is accepted for what she is worth and but little disappointment and less annoyance is felt for what she is wanting. Indeed, men in general expect so little from women that their follies count as of course, and only what might be looked for. TJiey are like marriage, or the English climate, or a lottery ticket, or a dark horse heavily backed, and have to be taken for better or worse as they may turn out, with the violent probability that the chances are on the side of the worse.
But the gushing man is inexcusable. He is a nuisance or a laughing-stock, and as either is resented. In his club, at the mess-table, in the city, at home, wherever he may be, and whatever he may be about, he is always a plunging headlong into difficulties, and dragging his friends with him, always quarlling for a straw, putting himself grossly^ in the wrong, and vehemently apologizing afterward, hitting wild at one moment and down on his knees the next, and absurd in the one attitude as he is abject in the other. He falls in love at first sight, and makes a fool of himself on unknown ground while with men lie is ready_ to swear eternal friendship or undying enmity betore he has had time to know anything whatever about the object of his regard or his dislike. In consequence he is being perpetually associated with shaky names and brought into questionable positions.
He is full of confidence in himself on every occasion, and is given to makingthe most positive assertions on thing he knows nothing about, which afterward Jitf is obliged to retract and to own himself mistaken but he is just as full of selfabasement when like vaulting ambition, he has overleaped himself and fallen into mistakes and failures unaware*. He makes rash bets about things of which he has the best information, so he says, and will not be staved oft'by those who know what folly he is committing, but insists on writting himself after Dogberry at the cost of just so much,
He backs the worst player at billiards on the strength of a chance hazard, and bets on the losing hand at whist he goes into wild speculatians in the city where he is certain to land a pot of money according to his own account, and whence he comes with empty pockets, as you foretold and warned. He takes up with all manner of doubtful schemes and yet more doubtful promoters, but he will not be advised.
Is he not gushing? and does not the quality of gushingness include an Arcaian belief in the virtues of all the world? The gushing man is the very pabulum of sharks and sharkers and it is he whose impressibility and gullible good nature supply wind for the sails for half the rotten schemes afloat.
Full of faith in his fellows, and of belief of a brilliant future to be had by good luck and not by hart! work, he cannot bring himself to doubt cither men or I measures unless, indeed his gushingness takes the form of suspicion, and then he goes aboutAdelivering himself accusations, not one of which he can substantiate by the weakest bulwark of fact, and doubting the soundness of investments as safe as the three per cents.
In manner the gushing man is familiar and caressing. He may be patronizing or playful, according to the bent of his own nature. If the first, he will call his superiors, my dear boy, and pat them on the back encouragingly if the second, he will put his arm school-bov fashion round the neck of any man of note who has the misfortune of his intimacy, and call him old fellow, or governor, or
meus,
as he is inclined.
rex
With women his iamiliarity is excessively offensive, and he gives them pet names or calls by their Cnristian names from one end of the room to the other, and pats and paws them in all fraternal affect ionateness, after about the same length of acquaintanceship as would bring other men from the bowing stage to that of shaking hands. His manners throughout are enough to compromise the toughest reputation and one of the worst misfortunes that can befall a woman, whose circumstances lay her specially open to slander and misrepresentation is to include among her friends a gushjng man of energetic tendencies, on the lookout to do her a good turn if he can, and anxious to let people see on what familiar terms he stands with her. He means nothing in the least degree improper when he puts his arm round her waist, calls her my dear and darling in a loud voice for all the world to hear, or^ when he seats himself at the table to write her private messages before folks, which he makes believe to be of great importance, and which are none at all he is only familiar and gushing, and he would be the first to crv out against the evil imagination of tlie world, which saw harm in what he does with such innocent intent.
The gushing man has one small defect —he|is not safe nor secret. From no bftd
motive, just from the blind propulsion of his gushingness, he cannot keep a secret, and he is sure to let oat, sooner or later, all he knowB. He holds back nothing of his own or his friend's—not even when his honor is engaged in the trust,—being essentially loose-lipped, and with his emotional life always bubbling up through the thin crest of conventional reserve. Not that he means to be dishonorable— he is only gushing and unrestrained. Hencc every friend he has knows all alwmt him.' His latest lover learns the roll-call of all his previous loves and there is no a man in his club, with whom he is on speaking terms, who does not know as much.
Women who trust themselves (o gushing men, simply trust themselves to broken'reeds and they might as well look for a sieve that will hold water as to expect a man of the sieve nature to keep their secret, whatever it may cost them and him to dirulge it.
As a theorist the gushing man Ls forever advocating untenable opinions, and taking up with extreme doctrines which he announces confidently, and out of which he can be argued by the first opponent'he encounters, The facility with which he can be bowled over on any ground—he calls it being converted—Ls in fact one of the most strking characteristics and a gushing man rushes from the school of one professor to that of another, his zeal unabated, no matter how many his reconversions. He is always finding the truth, which he never retains ahd the loudest and most active in damning a cast-off doctrine is the gushing man who has once followed it.
As a leader, he is irresistible to both boys and women. His enthusiastic, unreflecting, unballasted character finds a readv response in the youthful and feminine nature, and he is the idol of a small knot of ardent worshipers, who believe in him as the logical and well-balanced man is never believed in. He takes them captive by a community of imagination, of impulsiveness, of exaggeration and is followed just in proportion to his unfitness to lead.
This is the kind of a man who writes sentimental novels with a good deal of love, laced with a vague form of pantheism for a week evangelical religion to suit all tastes or he is great in a certain kind of indefinite poetry which no one has yet been found to understand, save perhaps a special "soul sister," which is the subdued version among us of the Transatlantic spirited wife.
He adores the feminine virtues, which he places far beyond all the masculine ones, and expatiates on the beauty of the female character, which he thinks is to be the rule of the future. Perhaps, though, he goes off into panegyrics on the Vicking and the Berserkers, or plunges boldly into the mists of the Arthurian era and gushes in obsolete English about chivalry and the round table, Sir Lancelot and the Holy Graal, to the bewilderment of his entranced audience, to whom he does not supply a glossary. In religion he is generally a mystic and always in extremes.
He can never be pinned down to logic, to facts, to reason and to his mind the golden mean is the sin for which the Laodician Church was cursed. Feeling, and emotion, and imagination do all the work of the world according to him and when he is asked to reason and to demonstrate, he answers with the lofty air of one secure of the better way that he loves, and that love sees further and more clearly than reason.
If the strong-minded woman is a mistake among women, so is the gushing mah among men. Fluid, unstable, without curb to govern or reign to guide, he brings into the masculine world all the mental frailties of the feminine, and adds to them the force of his own character nd nature as a man. Whatever he may may be, he is a disaster, and at all times associated with failure. He is the revolutionary leader who gets up abortive risings—the schemer whose plans run into sand—the poet whose books are -only read by school girls or lie on the publisher's shelves uncut, as his gushingness bubbles over into twaddle, or exliales itself in the smoke of obscurity—the fanatic whose faith is more madness than philosophy—the man of society who is the butt of his male companions and terror of his female acquaintances—the father of a family which he does his best to ruin by neglect or by eccentricity of training—and the husband of a woman who either worships him in blind belief, or who laughs at him in secret, as heart or head predominates in her character. In any ease, he is the man who never finds fitting tinie or place, and who dies as he has lived, with everything about him incomplete.
CLIPPINGS.
The author most popular with the la-dies—Hug-o. A good pair—a young lady with a Grecian bend and a young lady who parts her hair in the middle.
The
Wheel of Progrete,"
a humorous
paper, has commenced revolving around the Boston "hub." A young lady was seen to go into a pawnbroker's shop the other day to pledge her troth. N. B.—She was engaged to the assistant.
A young woman went to a temperance lecture in Brooklyn, the other evening, and eloped with her escort at the close, which is considered an awful warning against temperance.
It is proposed in England to erect_ a monument to Father Adam, on the site of his former residence in the Garden of Eden. Of course the proper material to be used in its construction is Adam-ant.
We are informed that Mrs. Stowe's next attempt will be on Brigham Young. She has evidence that he has not been faithful to the numerous Mrs. Young, and is only waiting for him to die to expose liinv before the world. Of course she wouldn't go for a man while he was alive.
Gen. G. McClellan was made a happy father nearly four years ago, but with his well-known indecision never made up his mind to have the fact published till a few days ago, and Mrs. Mc. has been of late considerably surprised upon receiving the congratulations of numerous friends. "The woman who dared" seems to be Miss Shirley Dare, who sticks practically to her
nom de plume.
What she dared to
do was to throw a bomb-shell into the woman suffrage camp the other day, in the shape ot an essay claiming that the sex might do something toward preparing themselves for the ballot before they claimed it with so much noise.
The picturesque way the ladies now have of wearing their shawls is very notable, says a New York letter writer.— What was once commonly a very ugLv garment, has, by an adroit change in the mode of wearing it, become as striking in effect as the costumes of the Orientals. And he might have added that at no period of our history have the ladies dressed altogether with so much good taste, and picturesque effect, as of late.
The New York
Evening Telegram
is in
formed by the engravers of that city that they are more ousv in getting up wedding cards now than ever before.— The lawyers there will of course go to work and get a supply of blank applications for divorce. Matches made at Saratoga, Long Branch, Newport and other places of fashion and folly seldom last long. Men who want to marry for good never go to such places in search of wives.
THE CUBA.
She is taken Possession of by the Government.
Her Commander Surrender* His Stcord and in a Prisoner.
WILMINGTON, N: C., October
The affair, in some of its aspects, is regarded here as an outrage, especially the turning loose, in our city, of over a hundred sailors and marines, entirely bfeyond the restraint or control^ of our Pity officers. In anticipation of trouble large policc force has been put on duly to-night.
A BRAVE FISH'." "IRL.
feep
Girl in Michigan J"'
From the Evening Wiconsin.] "i- I While our steamer Norman lay wooding up at Port Oneida, on the Michigan shore, there came aboard a pleasant, barefooted German Girl, with a pail of berries. She wore a cheap calico dress, minus the hoops, with a little gingham shaker, nearly hiding her face. She was rather undersize, with a supple figure, and an air of modest assurance that denoted a girl of
enuine stamp, but that told the boys to out of her way. All the men about the ooats and dock seemed to know her. The steward bought her berries at her own price. The clerk at the office touched his hat to her as if in the presence of a duchess. "That's the smartest girl in Michigan," said the engineer, as she passed out the gangway. The girl gave no need to admiring^lances and compliments that followed her, but straightway sought her little fish cabin, where she was men3ing nets by the shore.
On inquiry of the' old dockman we learned that our little barefoot maiden, though only seventeen, was the oldest of a family of an even dozen, living in a little double log cabin, on the high bank above the shore. Her father came here from Buffalo some dozen years ago, went to clearing timber, selling wood to steamboats aod raising stuff on his land. Lanie, the oldest girl, was the "little captain" from the start, and showed pluck beyond her years. In winter she would get on her boots and be out among the wood choppers, before she could hardly waddle through the snow. In summer she would wander off a berrying, or be down among the nets or fishing boats. It was her greatest delight to get on the water, to rock and toss upon the waves. At ten she was a trim little sailor herself, and would coast off for miles alone. At twelve she would allow no boy to pass her with sail or oar.
For thef.last three years "Lanie" has been master of a handsome fishing craft and a set of "gill nets." She puts tlifiu out early in April, and continues them till late in' the fall. She is out every mornihg at daylight, and again in the evening, except in the roughest weather. She takes a younger sister along to help set and draw the nets. She often brings in a couple of hundred fine lake trout and white fish at a haul. She dresses them, fries out the oil, packs and sends them away to market. Her August and September catch amounted to over $300. Besides her fishing receipts she has taken in over §170 thi» season for berries, picked at the odd hours by herself and sister. All her money goes to her father. Month after mohth he packs it awtty in old sacks and stockings uhderhis bed higlit after night he guards it with sabre and pistol. In all, she is said to have earned him over three thousand dollars.
Of course the old man is proud of his girl, and tells of her exploits with the liveliest twinkle of satisfaction. Danger and hardship seem unknown toiler. She will go out in any blow, and come in with full sails. Her white masts and blue pennon is known by people far along the coast. Boats salute her in passing boys swing their hats in proud rcognition. Without knowing it, Lanie Borfein is a heroine.
LIST OF LETTERS
ItK.TIAiXIX IN TIIK POST Ol'I IfK. on Saturday, Oct 23l, 186#.
LADIES' I.IST.
Abbott JlisSjWrispic Hcctmnn Miss A AhlersMrsflM Hill Sliss Bcttic Baldwin Lujy A Jones Harriet Barnes Miss Susan Keys Mrs E Bra mer Mrs Sarah Kent Nitncy Bennett Mrs PermcliaKennetly Mrs Hester Bell MisiSmccsy Kelly Mattie Brown Mrs S Kooglen Miss Ella Broadly Eliza Leake Misss Susan Bsumswick Hester Lynes Mrs Lizzie Burtle Mrs Benj Miller Mrs E W Crampton Eliza A Moore Miss Martha Chamberlain Mrs MCMoss Miss Celia Cfcllum Mrs A MeArthur Mrs A Carter Mrs S E 2 McFce Miss A Coleman Miss Mattie Mclvinsy Miss Lizzio Denning Mrs MarparetXee 1 ey Mrs S W Dolson Mrs Henrietta Parker Mrs Maey Durham Mrs Jane Parker Mrs MA ji EwartMiss Clara Pcarcc Miss Emuia Edwards Emma Pillow Miss Bridget France Mrs W Phillips Mrs Mary Failing Miss Martha Pontzc Mrs Forster Mrs A A Records Miss Laura Fogarty Margaret Roop Miss Laura Gates Miss Ella Russell Mrs Ben Guning Mrs Susan Silvers Mrs Aunt II Green Mrs E Smith Miss Phebe Gwin Miss E2 Smith Mrs Milrgiiret Grocer Miss Meneta Snodgrass Mrs Jennie Goodwin Mrs Belle Soulcs Mrs Jano Harvey Mrs Sarah Sclby Miss Hammond Miss CivillaTullcy Miss Mary Hamman Mrs AdalincVenard Miss Rebecca Hcdrick Miss E Wcntworth Mrs 11 Henry Mrs Mary Wilcox Miss Mary Herrington Miss A Wintermute Mrs A E Hod rick Miss Mary Woodall Mrs Anna Herrington Miss Lucy
GKNTI.KMEN's LIST.
Anderson Jos Jones Jamie Ashton Sesse 2. Jones John Armstrong Kcnncrcr Lafayette Bailey MM Kcltcr Jesse Baker Geo Kcss E Baker ktuibla W 0 Berry N Kimble Win Brennan Bercau Henry Lads _M Breymcyer Lacy AVm Briswell Mr Lee Jas 0 Bollinger Phillip Sr Lewis Albert Bowery Adam Devinger S ,• Boyd John Martin Browne Meeks Wm Brown E Mayes Wm Bunting Jas Mayer John Burk Alex Morgan Henry Bundy S McCollaJohn Byers McGarvey Snml Burk Cm MclMicrson Andrew Burns McKenna Bernard Clary A W McKanzie A Carr \V McCunn W Campbell Green: XullMr Colvcrt Isaac Newell Geo Campbell A Xottkcmper Fred Carey A \V ehols \V Clark II P«rker Andrew., Clark JT Phipps Clark I rtc'c Darnall Phillips Jas Davis Price Jas Dewey Ezra lomil Geo Dcvorc S W Potts Jas Lciong N Random Jr Dorsoy W RatiR.-III S Dunbar W Bred f1 Duchane Chas lii-irsen in Eastin Kcetl II Ellis Dal Ridgcley John Frake Abram Rogers A II Fenchcr S Runygan Field Jas 2 Stanley N 1' Finkbeiner Bill Shaw Jns Finlev Jacob Swarts Foster S Shaw W Flouton Shaw Foster EC S-'hwargman A S Fox Sehnell Geo Floyd W Sherburne Woodwin Thos Sheets John Godfrey Geo Schencer BP Hamlin Henry Smith Hiram Hamilton DrJ Smith Hall Isaac Silvcrons Harry Hall AM Sehoff\Vm Henderson 0 E Soward Harrald Harry Stone Allen Hectman E Snyder Chas Hawkins W II Twaddle G'hauncy Harris Tester Moses Harding W Tidtman Chas llaynes Saml Vermillion Harry Hick Luther Watson Richard Hollingsworth W Waldon John Hutcins E W 2 Wallace 11 HuttonJ N Wright Elisha 2 Hustcr Fred Williams S Hustcd E Williams Wm Hustod David Woodall Wm 2 Jarvis I) 2 Wood JR Jacobs Wood Jackson Fleming Wycth Jas S Jarred MB AVycth E Jones E
L. A,
XAXR OK
BCBSKTT, P. M.
TAXES
FOR
1SG9.
Notice is hereby given that the Tax Duplicate for the year 18B is now in my bands, and that I am now ready to receive the taxes thereon charged. The following Table Miows the rntc of Taxation on each $10J Taxable Property?
TOWN-
sHirs.
19.—The
Cuba was libelled to-day, and the|United Slates Marshal boarded her and demanded the surrender of the ship into his hands. Commander Higgins declined to surrender the ship except to an officer of the United States navy, and under a direct order from President Grant. After some delay, Lieutenant Commander Pierson, of the United States gunboat Frolic, boarded the Cuba and demanded the surrender of the vessel, showing an order direct from the President for the Cuha to be t'irned over to him. Commodore Higgins then surrendered his sword and vessel to Lieutenant-Commander Pierson, and himself a prisoner of war to the navy of the United States. The Cuban flag was then hauled down by the United States authorities and the entire crew sent ashore.
•:JoC
.£
5 5 oi s:
55 55
Terrc Haute Harrison— Honey Creek Praineton Prairie CreekLinton Pierson— Riley Lost Creek Nevins Otter CrockFayette— Sugar Creek
jlollO'lG .115 10,16 10 16 1016 1016 10 16 1016 1016 10 16 10 16 10 lt» 10 16 1016
50 25 5 50 20 5 50 10 .5 50 2(fl5 50 25 25 50 20 10 50 15 10 50 10 10 50 15 50 25 5 50 05 10 50 15 10 50 15 15
33 2 60 31 2 10 21 2 10 56 2 10 51 2 10 31 2 10 26 2 10 21 2 10 11 2 10 31 2 10 11 2 10 26 2 10 31 2 10
DOG TAX—For every Male SI.00. for every Female $2.00, and for every additional Male or Female 52,00.
NOTICE.
Examine your receipt before leaving the office and see that it covers all your property. People are taxed for what they own on the firstlday of January of each year.
Tales are due on and after the loth day of October, and if not paid before the third Monday in April following, ten per cent, penalty is added after which the Treasurer or his Deputy is required to call upon every delinquent tax-payer in his county and demand the delinquent tales, and if necessary to peine and sell property to make the same with constable's fees.
Delinquent lands arc advertised on or about the first Monday in January and sold on the first Monday in February of each year.
The Treasurer is responsible for Ihe taxes that he could have collected therefore taxpayers ought to remember that their taxes must be paid every year.
M. C. RANKIN,
Treasurer Vigo County.
flltfur-wjw,
Brand if the Jobnien Type Foundry.
FRANKLIN
STEREOTYPE&ELECTROTYPE
FOUNDRY,
168
Vine Street, bet. 4th & $tht
I N I N N A I
Allison,Smith &J ohnson
Manufacturers of, and Dealers in
BOOK AND NEWS TYPE,
ANP
^PRINTING MATERIALS,
Of every description.
STEREOTYPING & ELECTROTYPINO
In all their various branches.
WOOD ENGIAVING,AND PATTUN
e'octl4dlniw.1m
LETTUS rot
FOONOKM.
WOOLEN MILLS.
VIGO WOOLEN MILLS.
Pine Scarlet Flannels, Pine White Flannels, Pine Twilled, Pine Plaid Flannels." All "kinds Jeans, Heavy Double warp Jeans, Heavy Fulled Cloth, Double & Twist Casimeres, Plain Casimeres, Tweeds,Stocking Yarns,&c., All made at the Vico Woolen'Mills and sold cheap COLORS WARRANTED. Shoddy goM In the make up of these goods. Customers •will do well to examine our goods before buying
S. S. KENNEDY & CO.
KBPfullCONSTATLY
on hand
a supply of Ladies, Missos, and Children's Custom Work,
WAHBANTED,
••D :H I
•0
I
0
•cC
0
SO
:-rC i'Szi
Manufacturers of Men's Cnlf, Wp and Stoga Boots,
Warranted.
oct9dw3in.
Wc sell goods as cheap
as any one in the city.
COMMERCIAL COLLEGE.
TIC
it it
33 I
Corner of Fifth nn'.l Main streets.
TBH11E HAUTE, INDIANA.
Affords facilities equal to any Business College in the West for
Practical Instruction in IloohiCccpi it f/, Pen in a it th ip, and Arithmetic.
And all other departments of Accountantship. Studonts can enter at any time. Eao'n stu dent receives private instructions. College Journal, with full information as to the course of instructions, qualifications for entering, necessary expenses, Ac., will be forwarded to any address on application to the Principals. auirSxlwoin UAltVIN A' OWEN.
UNDERTAKERS.
I
UNDERTAKER,
Is prepared to cxccutc all orders in his line with neatness and dispatch, corner of Third and Cherry streets, Terrc Haute, Ind. jan20-5-(l wtf
UNDERTAKER.
M. W. O'COZKULL,
Having purchased back from E. WT. Chadwick, (iruber & Co., the Undertaker's Establishment, and bavins had seven years experience in the business, is now prepared to furnish Metalic Burial Cases, Cases, Caskets, and AVo'"!- Coffins, of all styles and sizes, from i'e.-t and largest stock of burial material 'he State, at No. 2 North Third street, Ter Haute, Indiana. dwtf Terrc Haute, May 2!t.
FARLEY & ROACH,
ii ufactii rer* of
SADDLES and HARNESS And Deiderx in ..
Collar?, Whips Curry Combs. Brushes,
kt.
Xo. 1 ?. Main St..
Opposite O'Boylc's Leather Store,
Terrc Haute, Ind.
A Rents for UNCLE SAM'S llARUWAKE OIL. jy.K'^wly.
*1.000 REWARD
For any case of the following diseases, which the Medical Faculty have pronounced incurable, that I»R. RICHAU'StiOLPEX REMEDIES WILL
NOT CURE.
DR. RICHAU'S GOLDEN BALSAM NO. 1, will cure Svphilis in its primary and secondary stapes, such as old lecrs. Ulcerated Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Skin Eruptions and Soreness of the Scaly, eradicating disease and incrcury thoroughly.
DR. RICHAU S GOLDEN BALSAM No. 2. will cure the third stapes of Syphilitic and mercurcal Rheumatism, etc. And I defy those who suffer from such diseases to obtain a radical cure without the aid of this medicine, which does not prevent the patients from catinp and drinkinp what they like.— Price of either No. 1 or 2, live Dollars per bottle, or two bottles. Nine Dollars.
DR. RICHAU'S GOLDEN ANTIDOTE.— A safe and radical cure for Gonorrhea, Gravel, and all Urinary Derangements, accompanied with full directions. Warranted to cure. Price S3 per bottle.
DR. RICHAU'S GOLDEN ELIXIR IVAM0UR. A radical cure for General Debility in old or younp. imparting energy to those who have led a life of sensuality. Price, fa per bottle, or two bottles 89.
On receipt of price, by mail or Express, those remedies will be shipped to any placc. Prompt attention paid to all correspondents. Xonc irenoine without the name of DR, RICHAU'S GOLDEN REMEDIES. D. B. RICHARDS, sole -proprietor, blown in Glass of bottles. Address,
DR. D. B. RICHARDS.
No. 228 Yaric street, New York.
Office hours from 9 A. M. to 9
v. x.
Circulars
sent. Correspondents answered. in»yl2dltavr-wly
W DE PA KT N T.
Indiana Slate University,
BLOOMINGTON,
im
Hov. GNORGK A.BEIKNELL.LL.L). I ,, I HON, JOHN U. PETTIT.
1 ro,,,
The Law Term will commence on Monday the 8th day of November, and continue in Session four months. Tuition free.
Good boarding enn be ohtainednt four dollarsporweeki )i ROBERT C. FOSTER. Oct0dltw2t Sec'y. Ind. University^
CLOTHING.
f.H. BANNISTER,
At No. yo Main Street,
Is iow receiving his
Fall Stock!
Consisting lit part of
Heavy, Plain,
Mixed and
$ Fancy
CASSIMERES!'
roa
BUSINESS-SUITS*
line Black Cloths and Doeskins
I A Beautiful line of Colored
Cloths and Beavers,
j. Mixed Coatings,
I Cheviots, Ac., &c
Gentlemen wishing Clothing made to order
:n
the latest style and most reliable manner, at reasonable prices, are requested ta call and examine his stock before purchasing. sep9dw2m
SIMPSON'S COLUMN.
JJUFU8 II SIMPSON,
Attorney at Law,
JYO TAR UBLIC,
COMMISSIONER of DEEDS fur WESTERN STATES
I E A N I E
Insurance Agent,
Tjrre
Haute, lml.
OFFICE—111 Scott's Building, up stairs,opposite the Nciv Court House. NOTICE—Collections made in and out of Court, at reasonable commission.
ESPECIAL ATTENTION given to settlements of Estates and Guardians in the Pro bate Court, .... .......
•WANTED.
FARMS AND HOUSES TO SELL AND RENT.
Continental Life Ins, Co.
OF NEW YORE.
CAPITAL, paid in $ 100,000,00 ASSETTS 2,10 ,178,4n POLICIES Issued for 1S6B O.OOi
It. If.
Mail ldwtf
.vx
rr
mcicutl
The Jicxt Scheme J''ccr Ojjered lo the I'ublic Fully Authorized by Imv:
SEVEN splendid Ohio River Bottom Farms, over Eight Hundred Acres of wkich are cleared and under cultivation, and have been rented the present year at §12 per acre, money rented,
Good bonds for the have been taken, and will be assipned to those drawing said Farms which will be SI.2(H). in cash to each 100 acres. "v
ALSO
504 City Lots in Henderson Co., Kj., Making 511 Prizes in all. Valued at $314,000.
('auital Prize $150,000,000 Smallest l'ri/.e, 80,000 The drawing to take place at Masonic Temple, Louisville, Kentucky. September 1st, ISiSi.
Tickets, (O Each.
For pamphlet* givinpdescription of property, containing Act of Legislature, and certificates of leading gentlemen of this and other States, apply to either, of the following Agents:
I,. H. l.YXK, Farmer's Bank, Henderson,
It. II. AIiKXAXNKlt, Commercial Bank, Louisville, Ky. JOIIX LATIIAJI. President Bank Hopkinsyillc. Hopkinsvillc. Ky.
JAMES l„ DALLAM, Commercial Bank, 1 aducah, Ky. !!. J. THOMAS. Lexington. Ky.
AY. It. TYLKK. Owcnsboro. Ky.
How to get Tickets. Remit by drafts, Postofficc money order, registered letter, or (in sums of fifty dollars and upwards) by express, to cither of the above Agents.
Club Affcnt, Torre lluutc, Icndiana
7Uwtf.
7HCLPS ICO SOLT ACCNT3 C£ftTLANDt 8T_ N.r
THE NOVELTY
IS TIIE OSF.Y WRINGER THAT HAS
Patent Flange ('og-Wheels
ON BOTH ENDS OF THER0LLS.
The cogs on one end of a roll are set relatively between those on the other end of the sanlt roll, virtually forming a
DOUHI^H GKATt.
find thereby nearly doubling the purchase.— (The importance of setting gears in this position is not sencrally understood.)
Notwithstanding the rolls cau separate freely at cither end, the Cog-wheels cannot be thrown out of pear on both end* of the nnpcr nt the pame time, unless tho pressure IH taken off.
The Novelty i* fastened to ft tub or box by a
Patent Curved Clnmp,yvhich
intr on the tub the
be marked in plain
DOOTOIi
R. 11. SIMPSON,
ha.«an equal bear-
tchofe length of the \cr%no^f.
Other Wringers are merely fastened to a £tave at cach end, and are thus liable to wrench the staves from their proper position and ruin the tub.
The Coff-whceK Thumb-screws, Ac., are nicely pralvanixcd. BUY tho
"NOVELTY prat ICIWT take it on
trial with ANY or ALL others, and keep the
Er'ru.chcrc.
N', R. PHELPS & CO.,
(Jeneral Agents, 17 CoHlattdtSt., New \ork. sep30dwlm
10 Acres Enough!
That number of acres lying in the Northwest corner of Sicncer's sub-division will be sold.
TKRMS:—One
half purchase mones down,
balance in six annual payments. This lot is one of the most desirable outlying lots about the eitv, fronting, as it docs, on 7th street, and being the highest point on Fort Harrison Prair-
ic. o|
#50,000
WORTH or
DRY GOODS TO BE SOLD
IK ASPICSriKD TIMS,
Beginning Saturday Morning, Oct.9th.
From delays beyond our control we shall not move till
about the 1st of November, and in consequence of the detention have made a NEW PROGRAMME TO TAKE IMMEDIATE EFFECT, and will OFFER THE ENTIRE STOCK OF Dili7 GOODS, DRESS GOODS, SILKS, NOTIONS, WHITE GOODS, DOMESTIC
GOODS, &c., WITHOUT RESERVE,at our PRESENT LOCATION, UNTIL READY FOR REM0VAL,at ANY NECESSARY SACRIFICE that will INSURE O A
"The STORE WILL
BE
MARK DOWN PRICES AND OPEN SATURDAY
MORNING. t,
To make an ATTRACTIVE INDUCEMENT IN PRICES worthy everybody's attention, we shall devote great care to marking down the Stock, and all goods will
Tied. Figure jVJtarkrf
At prices everybody can see. The GOODS are CHEAP. So large a Stock of Goods has never been thrown upon the market before, and as we have 110 time to lose, shall
MARK TRICES TO INSURE A SPEEDY SALE.
MEDICAL.
"LADIES,
If vou require a reiiable remedy, "so the best! Dr. Harvey's Female Pills
IlaVc no equal. They are safe and sure in ordinary cases. Pines, OSK BOLLAK PKR BOTTI.K.
DR. HARVEY'S OOf.DES PILLS.
four deprccs stronper than they are or a as —PriceFitcVoltarxintended
ino !4n
District Affcnt,
Magnificent Enterprise!
Authorized bt/ Special Act of the Ken tucky Leyislature.
cr Jfox.
Private circulars sent free. Encloso stamp. If 5"ou cannot procure the Pills, enclose the moncv and address IiliHAN Sc CO., 64 Cedar Street. New York, and on receipt they will be sent well sealed by return mail.
pB-HALfc's
a
N As
Catnrj-fi, Throat Diseases, Urotiehitis. Asthma ami Ct»sumption treated by 'e,t -Ifct f» oft that is eminently successful.
-•, vVuab'e Joumrv^givme syrr,atoms o' cf.sejs* »nd !ul! informs on o1 thu NEW F. HOD furnish»d to THOU WFRO W'TO I--r
Ii-.
HALE
Will visit Terrc Haute the first Thursday in each month, and may be consulted at ItheTerre Ilaute House. At all other times, at his permanent Office. Miller's Block, Indianapolis. 25dwtf
Bryan's Life Invigorator, OR LIFE REJUVENATING ELIXIR, For all Derangements of the Urinary Organs lis gives
Life, Health and Strength to all who use it and follow my directions, it never fails to remove Nervous Debility, Impotcncy or want of Power, and all weakness arising from Excesses or Indiscretion, Resulting in loss of memory, unpleasant dreams, weak nerves, headache, nervous trembling, general lassitude, dimness of vision, flushing of the skin, which, if neglected will surely lead to Insanity or Consumption. When the system is once affected, it will not rocovcr without held. It must he invigorated and strengthened, to enable the sufferer to fulfill tho duties of life.
This medicine has been tested for manyyears, and it is warranted a certain CURK, no matter how bad theldose may be. Hundreds of certificates can be shown. Price one Dollar per bottle, or six bottles for five Dollars for five dollars.
SOLD BV ALL DRUGGISTS. If you cannot procure it send a statement of your case, and enclose the money to BRYAN & CO., Cedar street. New York, and it will be sent you. On receipt of Five Dollars, a bottle nearly equal to seven small will be sent to any express office in the United States-, charges paid. Private circulars, scii on application, enclose stamp. dcclOcodwly
WXLBER,OfficoTcon-
sulfation and Reception Rooms. 616 Washington Avcnuo, St. Louis, Mo., treats with the greatest success all Diseases of Woman, Lonchoroea. or Whites Falling, inflamation or Ulceration of the Womb, Ovaritis, Pruritis, Amenorrhcca, Menorrhagia, Dysmenorrhea, and Sterility, or Barrenness also, every disease connected with Puberty, Menstruation or Pregnancy. Since tho Doctor confines himself exclusively to the treatment of these complaints, and treats a very large number of cases, it follows that his knowledge of them must be far more extensive and accurate than that of physicians in general practice. Send stamp for Medical Pamphlet of thirty-six pages. No matter who have failed, read whathesays. Patients in every Western State. Cures guarrantced.— Consultation by letter or atoffice free. Rooms for patients requiring daily attention. A lady assistant. Hour 9
A. M.
day excepted.
ERR0R8 0 YO Uf S7 Young Men, the experience of years lins demonstrated the fact that reliance may be placed in the efficacy of
DR. BELL'S SPECIFIC, For the speedy and permanent curc of seminal Weakness, the result of Youthful Indiscretion, which ncglcctcd, ruins the happiness. and unfits tho sufferer for business, social society, or marriage. Thc.v can lie used without detection or interference with business pursuits.
Price one dollar per box. or four boxes lor three dollars. If you cannot procure these pills enclose the money to
BRVAN
& Co.,
64
Cedar Street, New York, and they will be sent by return mail, well scaled. Private circulars to gentlemen sent free on application. Enclose stamp. duclOdeedwly.
DR. WHITTIER,
A REGULAR GRADUATE Ul" MEDICINE, as Diploma at oflicc will show, bus been longer engaged in the treatment of Venereral tScyua.l and IVivaee Diseases than any nthcr Physician in St. Louis.
Svphillis, Gonorrhea, Gleet. Stricture, Orchitis. Ilernis and ltiinturc, all I'ninary disciiscs, Pvphilitic or Mercurial Affcctions of the Throat, Skin or Hones, arc treated with unparalleled succcss.
Spermatorrhea, Sexual Debility and Inipotency, as the result of self-abuse in youth, sexual excess in mature years or other uses, and which produce some of the following effects. as Nocturnal Emissions, ltlotches. Debilitv. Dizziness, 1,'iinnrs of sight. Confusion of Ideas. Dvil Forbudings, Aversion to Societv of Females, Loss of Memory and foxonl I'owcr.and rendering .Marriage improper, are permanently cured.
The Doctor's opportunities in hospital and private practice arc unsurpassed in St. Louis or or any other city. Back files of St. Louis •papers prove that he has been located there longer by years than any other so advertis: ing. The establishment, library, lnbratory and appointments, aro unrivalled in. the West, unrivalled anywhere. Ag^, with experience can be relied upon, and the Doctor can refer to many phy«icians throughout the country. In past succcss and present position he stands without a competitor. TIIE WRITINGS OF A PHYSICIAN WHOSE
REPUTATION IS UNION-WIDE, ARE WORTH READING. Doctor Whitticr publishes a Medical Pnuiphet relating to A cnereal Diseases anil the disastrous and varied consequences of selfabuse, that will be sent to any address inn sealed envelope for two stamps. It contains full symptom lists that will enable those affected to determine the nature of their complaint and give a written statement of their case that will answer almost as well for the purpose of treatment as a personal interview: but where it is convenient the Doctor should be consulted personally. Those having friends that may require advice, can supply them with this valuable work by sending their address, with stamp. Thus you can assist tho unfortunates without their knowing their benefactor. Certainly nosubject is of more importance than purity of blood and perfect manhood.
It is self-evident that a physician who confines himself exclusively to the study of a certain class of diseasesand treats thousands of cases every year, must acquire greater skill in that specialty than only jccneral practice. Many physicians, recognizing this fact, introduce patients to the Doctor after reading his Medical Pamphlet. Communications confidential. A friendly talk will cost you nothing. Oflicc central, yet retired. No. 517 St. Charles street, St. Louis, Mo. Hours, 9 ii., to 7 p. ii., Sundays excepted.
TALLOW, ETC.
ESTAULISHED, 1807
TALLOW,
LA Ki,
Hm'idc
IKIIKST
IlOsFORD &B0UD1N0T, Cor 4th and Main «t*i
,.pcl4d1
UEA8E.
IiUrkct pricc paid. Xo charges for commission or drayagc. Ship
ping Stencil, furnished. Quotations given upon applictifym. Address
PROCTOR (.'AMULE,
a3i-d2ta-w3irf.wn CINCINNATI
^vi^nAY
TAT
W. S. RY€E & 0.
ASTROLOCY.
CLAIRVOYANCE AND
ASTROLOGY.
I.OOIC OUT.
GOOD NEWS FOR ALL.
SI,000TO ANVPERSON WHO WILL EQUAL .MADAME RAPHAEL IN THE PROFESSION.
Til
DelSMlcodwly
E NEVE rTka I LI N .«• 1)
AMfi RAPHAEL is the best. She sueceeds when all others have failed. All who are in trouble—all who have been unfortunate—all whose fond hopes hnvc been disappointed, crushed and blasted by false
fcd
iromiscs and deceit—all who have been nusand trifled with—all fly to hor for advice fy and satisfaction. All who are in doubt of the affections of those they love, consult hor to relieve and satisfy their minds? /.«• Ill Love Affairs She Never Fails.
She lias the secret of winding the affections of the opposite
sex.
She shows you the like-
ne?« of your future wife or husband, or absent friend. She guides the single to a happv marriage, and makes the married hapyy. Her aid and advice has been solicited in innumerable instances, and the result has always been the means of securing «$• A Speedy and Happy Marriage. She is, therefore, a sure dependence. It is well known to the public at large that sno was the first and she is the only person in this country who can show the likeness in reahtv and who can give entire satisfaction on ail the concerns of life, which can be tested ana proved by thousands, both married and single, who daily and eagerly visit her. ,i
To all in business her advice is invaluable. She can foretell, with the greatest certainty, the result of all commercial and businej-s transactions.
Lottery numbers given without extra
ClMADAME
RAPHAEL is a bona fide Astrol- ,!£
ogist that every one can depend upon. She ^. is the greatest Clarivoyant of the nineteenth century. It is that well-known fact that makes illicit pretenders copy her advertisements and try to imitate her.
Madame Raphael is the seventh daughter of the seventh daughter she was born with a natural gift sh« can foretell your rery r, thoughts. She also cures drunkenness, and discovers lost or hidden treasures.
All interviews strictly private and confidential. As a female Physician her remedies never fail to curc all female irregularities, and so produce the monthly flow, without danger or exposure. They can not injure, but, on the contrary, they improve the health.
Therefore, come one, comc all, to
Ill Richmond, bet. Central Avenue and John t'IMISXATI, OHIO. TERMS.—Ladies, SI Gentlemen, $1.50.
N. B.—Those at a distance may communicate with perfect satisfaction by enclosing one dollar and stamp. All communications strictly private and confidential.
Address Lock Box531, Cincinnati, Ohio. aug23wly
PHILOSOPHYLKCTTRES,
of
MARRIAGE.
ANEW foi'RHK OF as delivered at tlio New York Museum of Anatomy, embracing subjects: IIow to Live and What to Live for, 1 outh. Maturity and Old Age Manhood Generally Reviewed. The cause of Indigestion Flatulancc and Nervous Diseases accounted for: Marriage Philosophically Considered, &c. Pocket volumes containing theso
marlGdly
Dr. Burton's Tobacco Antidote, Vr^RRAjrreD TO nKVOTR ALL DRSIfllC TOR TOBACCO. A •nVrwjrrfpetoWerimf mid is n!*o An exceUenJrftp* peJjer.
Ixfmrific*
and
tnrichea
tho blood, invigoraf
possesses great nourishing and strengthening )le# tho stomach to digest tho heartiest foodpinakefl
«jwi er, slwp nfrcshing, and establishes robust health./Smoktrt
and cK^tcra for iixty ytart cured,
tm*.
to 7 i\ si., Sun
l'rico FlfMRenu per
J\l free. An
Interesting trentlsoon lift Injurtow
effects ofAtobacco, T.*i li lists or testimonial reference*. UE., KXXWSES. AgentA wanted. AddreJl Da. T. R. ABBOTT,JcrjlyCity, N. J.
STXT^zoistx^jLB.
FROXTB* tJVs. TBCASCRV,
dona
Secretary's
nnd supply oliho A.NTIKOTE.
TIT
tcork
I using Dr. BRrton Antidote, and
Office.—PLEAMhat
fhe
one
rereiied
SCWLT. O. T. EDG*B.
FBOM NEW HAA-UIIR* STATK^PRISOR.—Gentlemen of Influence hero harftio: been ct/cd of the appetite for tobacco by nsing DrABurton's Autldote, we desire A rapply for the prisoners oZ this limitation.
Josmra MAT\Wai^ia or N. H. Stats Prison. A HAXKIR'S TEsnMoW^Dr. Barton's Antidote for Tobacco
hfU acmmpHsheq/folt claimed for it.
WITLETT )I«J, )^\at. U'k, New Albany, Ind.
PRO*
THE
CniEr or
THE
IET RAILROAD
AiLEonAxr
YAL-
COXTJAY, PI^BURCH, Pa.—I have used
the Antidote with OUX succelL Ii is curing all mj friends. H. BLACUTOXK. A CLERGNTAXJFF
TESTIMONY. \F.TR Bo*
OF ANTI
DOTE cured my Ipother and myself.Xtx NEVER FAILS. Iter.
jy\V.
BOOKMAKER, KOKY'S Station, Pa.
FROA THE JPOLICK HSADQUARTERS.ViTNir, MASS.—/
havegainedmirtu-fiM pound* of fUtk iilWrea
month by
all detirL
for tobacco
removed^ W*. IV WAIT, JM. Paoi^Tiai SOUTHERN Hon JOOHMAL,WALTIHORE,ditoirtforMlremoved
*D.—Sne bo* of Burton's Antidote the ^cd from me. I take pleasure In reenn Wnding it oar readers, T. Y. SLATK:c,\iUitor. 1
[Trademark Copyrighted,]
The genuine has Dr. Abbott's name and address on each box- Direct all orders to Dr. T. R. ABISOTT, Jersey City, N. J. octl9dw3in
MILITARY CLAIMS.
DAVID S. DANALDSON,
Military Attorney. Notary anil
t9..
Claim
O N I I O
Agent,
Kegnlarly A ul liori/.cd and Licensed.
Office—Farriiif/ton Mock.
E. Corner Public Square. Up Sta|r.«, Fir*t Door. TEH HE HAUTE,
Pension Claims Prosecuted. Arrears of Pay Procured, Itomity Money Procured.
Refer to Merchants,'Hankers and Citi7.ens Renenilly. and to any one of the thousand who'Cclaims have been obtained bv inc. jn'Jdwtf -D. S. DAN Al.Dt-'ON..
A IN E A E S
Commission Me re* limit,
And Wholesale and Retail Dealer in all kind* of (»rain. Warehouse on North FirM St. at nanal Basin,Terre Haute, Indiana.
B.S-Strict attention paid to receiving and fnrwardiiiK goods. jclSowtf.
LEATHER, HIDES, &G.
L. A, BLKNKTT. JOHN K. MKACHAM.
A. BURNETT & CO.,,
Manufacturer* and Dealer* in
Leather, Hide#, Oils, Shoe Findings, AXI
ITRRIEItS' TOOLN.
Jios. lii 146 Main St., Terre liaiile, lod
CASH for Hides, Furs, .Sheep Peltei Skins. Tallow, and Leather in the Rou«h' ient.i'v-=«r
Consignment* always rcecho ironi| attention. mayodwtf ,.
FEVER AND AC!
DAUSIGER'S VEGEl h. at the late: -1 that flag.
Fever Powders
F.ffcctuallv cure all cases within twenty four'ljg I hours. 0"fficc, No. 77 Liberty street. New "flr
or
oct2Swd2m
