Terre-Haute Weekly Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 31 May 1871 — Page 2
A
WEEKLY EXPRESS
teebe haute,
The
A
:4.
May 31
dncsday Morning,
Puis Semite adjourned
unlay.
sine die
Judgb
hiers
Sentinel
White
on Sut
Hanna
is an eminent Dayton
clmtc disciple. '.
announces the $nd of tho Cqm-
'njunists' insurrection.
Has
Mr.
ooiuikes
taken St.
chute? Who can tell? oa7'
Loganspokt
Clem's
1
,-r,
haa a new Building Loan
and Savings Association with a capital of $100,000'
1
Did
}. j: _• 4
•i
Muss. KliKlt, N1 BLACK, lIoLMAN and DjoI'auw are foremost among the new ull'jtirttS. ,'
the editor of the
Journal
Hopart with
lM
decline to
St. Clesi
tills
because lie couldn't
-i'-pass over JoRDAHi" 4a«6V ''i--
ihi'i
\Vuenever
-ifiw
Profound silence in regard to the new departure characterized the last issue of the auroral scintillater...,,
'~~'n
the Lafayette people get
their• Nicolson pavement cleaned, the Mayor proclaims a public holiday.
The Attorney General of State takes the Dayton chute like a little man "That's what's the matter with Hanna!"
quotes from nearly all the
'Democratic papers in the State, articles .showing their approval of "the forward movement."
Tub cdn'tii'maciouK correspondents,
and
Kamsdell,
1
Oxe
were discharged
from arrest at the close of the Senate's session on Saturday.
The
Jouiinal
Alk.
7i
is alarmed with an aw
Jful apprehension that the deadiissues, over which it is keeping watch and ward "'''won't keep" through the heated term
uhnett
and Mrss
Nash
are
performing at the Evansville Opera House. The original of A
lf's
"Preacher
of Hepsidam" formerly occupied a pulpit in that city. j(, ,v
1
Suits are pending before our State Supreme Court involving the rights of cities and towns to charge a higher fee for liquor licenses than that fixed by law for a .State license.
of the duplicate copies of the
Treaty of Washington, duly signed by the President, is on its way lo England to be exchanged for the othercopy, signed by Queen Victoria.
A
private
letter informs ua that
Andy Humphreys gulped down "the Dayton Doctor's nauseating dose" last Friday week, and is now in blissful ecstasy 'with the newly departed.
Geo. W.
Curtis comes out strongly in
favor of the renomination of President Grant. He says
Gkast
.'has the confi
dence of the people, notwithstanding newspaper criticism. 1 1
A Washington
I
special
says there is
authority for stating that Secretary Fish will not be appointed as commissioner to 'Geneva on the part of the United States for the arbitration of the Alabama claims ua has been recently reported.,.
lij view of the new departure, sensible men concede that the Republican party having managed national affairs so well •for tlie last ten years as to merit a special .'indorsement from the Democracy, tins people have no motive for a change. -Ht't
Wii^akd
Young, son of Brioham
Young, haa been suggested to the President by the Utah delegate for a cadetsliip in the Naval Academy. Brigham has so many sons that one would suppose he '.might set up a naval aoademy of hi* own, *". ,s
Here is something good: Judge Dow lino, of New York, has sentenced the prize fighters, Collins and Edwards, to the penitentiary for twelve months each and to pay a fine of $1,000, the sentence to continue another twelve months if the 'fine is not paid.
Tiie executive session of the Senate, just closed, will be memorable in history for the ratification of one of the most important treaties ever agreed upon by two nations. It is hoped that this grand example of peaceful adjustment of inter national difficulties will not be lost upon "^oilier nations.
Lafe Develin refuses to depart. It in a pity that Lafe won't go—Cin.
mcrcial.
The Indianapolis
I
Cum
That is good news for the
Journal.
Lafe is very jovial company and will cheer our neighbor's solemn watch over the "deninition disagreeable moist bodies" of deceased issues.
On Monday, the Citizens' Building and Loan Association, of Union City filed articles of association with the Secretary of State for the transaction of business at Union City, Randolph county. The capital stock is placed at $100,000, divided into 500 shares of $200 each, of which 270 shares, or $55,200 aro subscribed by fifty-two persons, signed as stockholders. The existence of the association is limited to eight years.
-V-!\s
«ller.
truthfully re
mark* that the difference in nations was never better illusttated than by a comparison of the manner the Yersaillists treat the insurgents and the way the North treated the.South at the close of the rebellion. The one was human, the other is brutal. The Communists deserved punishment and their leaders deserved death, but a miscellaneous, indiscriminate slaughter such as they seemed to have indulged in is worthy only of savages. The only consolation is in th# thought that the people killed were of the same kind. ',: li!
Some months ago we reproduced from the Boston Time? the substance of a report made by an Englishman of adulterations of tea, showing that the most barefaced swindling was inflicted on the lovers of that universally used beverage. The stories appeared rather exaggerated in some particulars, but since that time analyses have proved theai in the main correct. The adulterations referred to were generally managed by Europeans, but it now appears that the Asiatics have the knack of their example. An
It is seldom -that on* sees io print so unkind and un v^r&nted^n/ihsiaaatioe. as is containedtu ihfoparagraph, frota| the
3Iail^o0aal
Satprday:
'\.Jm
i,|j
The jExpreS' has tears to shed copiousljr over the Vandalism of the Communists in destroying the Column Vendome—a monument to the infamy of France—bat no word of regret for the massacre Of Archbishop Darboy and fifty priests at the Malas Prifon on Tuesday lifctt."
During the last hours of the Commune its^horrid ^deeds so- multiplied that we ceased to make each fresh horror the subject of special comment,-bnt.gare the awful detail? as lliey came* in our telegraphic columns, and confined editorial remarks to general denunciation. But it never occurred to us-that ihere was any human being capable of suspecting that the massacre of Archbishop
Da
kboy
and
(hose who shared his fate kt, lia&i Prison (supposing the' report,.^rhich, at the present writing, lacks confirmation, to be true,) could be regarded ,byahyAjnerjican citizen—from the highest to the lowest, from the best to the vilest—without the profoundest "regret/' Indeed, wedo not suppose that, outside of a smill portion 'of- the territory of France, there can be fouti'd a human creature who does not execrate that damning deed.. It was not ne'eesaary even loc the
Mail—which
lav
ished praise upon the .Communists and lauded the "admirable acts" that led directly Id that fearful scene in^Mazas Prison—to avow its
There are some deeds so awful, so defiant of all. that is good, compressing1 the infamy and crime of an average century into a few minutes, that will stand in their hideous blackness to shock the sensibilities of humanity forages— there are some deeds we Ray, and this massacre at Mazas Prison is among them, that by the common consent of mankind are held in profound and eternal detestation, and no one feels called upon to mention his "regret" unless his conscience tells him that hi3 approval of the steps that inevitably led to the' awful consummation, as one scene succeeds another in a drama, makes him an object of suspicion.
When the great rebellion in these United States culminated in the assassination of Lincoln, there were few, even among the worst of rebels, who found it necessary to give utterance to that horror and "regret" which made the great heart of humanity weep over the martyr's cold clay. There is as little neces. sity now, when this insurrection in Paris has culminated in a diabolical ntassecre, for those who are not compromised by sympathy with the authors of the terri* ble crime, to avow their abhorence of it.
One word more and we will have done with this unpleasant subject. To show how the Express regarded the venerable Archbishop of Paris, it is only necessary to refer to our issue for the 18th inst., in which the highest tribute of re*pect to that distinguished ecclesiastic—then immured in prison, where he had recently been visited by our model Minister, Mr. Washburn33,—is conspicuously reproduced with editorial approval. Mis kindness of heart, and the forgiving spirit that he manifested towards his persecutors, are there spoken of in terms of warm commendation.
he
New York
Eveniny Post
says the
Ohio Democratic State Convention will probably adopt the Montgomery County*
Resolutions, producing a split in the Democratic party and adds: "If the Democrats of Ohio should adopt a liberal platform, and then show their good faith by nominating a liberal man to represent it, they would strike Mr. Pendleton a hard blow."
Explained.
A malicious Democrat explains why the
Journal
army of Democratic organs that went off with St. Clement of Dayton. He says that our neighbor had no suspicion of the intended movement, all along the line, until all the rest had joyfully departed and were out of sight. Being thus slighted, the auroral organ got its vertebra altitudinous and concludrd to stay behind, hugging the corpses awhile longer.
An Expeiisiye Shake.
Eastern papers tell of a passenger on a certain railroad in Maine, who, having given up his ticket, was asked for f' a second time by the conductor, who accompanied his demand by shaking his fist close to the gentleman's head, using at the same time violent and threatening language. Such act the law regards as a technical assault, and the Court instructed the jury that the case was one for ex emplary damages. A verdict for $8,850 was returned, which a higher Court refused to set aside.
Max Mullbr, the German philologist, who has been adopted into the English University system, and is a learned professor at Oxford, made a speech in London, the other day. at the German peace celebration, upon the causes of the German successes. Bismarck, he said, was the representative of German
A
Philadelphia
Women's Suffrage.
Most of our readers, no doubt, have see%a/dpTrn in* pantomime—after some faj&ied snccea*—drop hia hands on his
kfK#d'!#h
mouth wide open, stand,
sfaki^yttjfelanyhter and, as his vanisheft iiemy'gradually reappears, change, to a snicker, to seriousness, and finally to utter dismay. If they have, they have seen no bad illustration of the changes of •public feeling in regard to the claim of wointn to the right of suffrage. Like all
it was.atfirst received with what
men to vote.
didn't depart with the great
Courage
General Moltke, "the real, indefatigable schoolmaster, who can be silent in seven languages, and whose last lecture the world will never forget," was the representee of German Diligence the Em-peror-King, in this German allegory, represented Perseverance and the Ctoth Prince, Conscientiousness.
journal thinks it
high time for Ex-Special Commissioner Wells and his ultra free trade colleagues to turn their attention to Pittsburg. In six years, under a very moderately protective tariff, that industrious city has increased the capacity of her iron mills twentv-tive per cent. Of course the iron interest of England has suffered from this enterprise of Pittsburg. The Revenue Reformers must call the attention of Congress to this matter. If protection to American industry is not withdrawn perverse manufacturing cities and towns will go on increasing their productive capacities year after year, giving employment to thousands of laborers, skilled and unskilled, cutting down our foreign imports, and, iu the end, perhaps, reduce us to the British !cr ..l of exporters of manufactured iron. ..v
The New \ork
Sin
is
'cute at imitation and sometimes can step in advance of his teachers and lessons for now it is announced on excellent authority that more than half a million pounds of willow leaf were made up at Shanghai last season., an.' palmed off as green tea. The willow lnf as prepared cannot fce distinguished .-om green tea bv the eye but to cover the difference in ton policemen it was wi taste, it has-to be mixed with tea before I and if repeated may prov sold. It can be produced at a cost of about four cents a pound, and can be used in the proportion o( twenty to forty per cent- of the whole mixture—so that it is easilv seen what a profit the littlp game"' can be made to represent to the
Tribune
Iribune
can't
says that Bos
ton officers kidnapped Glover, the alleged Boylston Bank robber, anc1 that the precedent is not a good one, although it is one that the corrupt practice of New York Judges compel the police o'' other cities to report to for Glover it says, could not have been taken by regular writ. If he had been brought before aNew York Judge, he must inevitably, with his political influence, have escaped, and the Boston Courts could not have held him in heavy bail to answer for his alleged offenses. "We deprecate"'—the
says—"the illegal act of the Boswithout warrant, great out
rage and injustice but we have to blame ourselves. The practices of Tammany politicians and police have rendered kidnapping of i'. certain class of criminals ncccssary to the enforcement elsewhere of that justice which rsnnot b« fbr*ine 1 here."
nmrwihti
omes
calls' "inextinguishable laughter." The public roared and. screamed at" the enormous joke. It was not .serious enough to be preposterous. It was Dimply funny. It became the standing joke of the theater, the minstrel hall, the Senate and even the pulpit, ifit ever'had ajoke, had itin this impossible project of female vanity. It was credited to every motive but one that admitted either sincerity or sagacity. It. was, at best, the. wildest caprice of a capricious sex. And the joke went on, and the discussion went, on, every word of the latter opening -the way lor a laugh for. -the former. But when the Fifteenth Amendment gave the right of suffrage to the negro, and the Women's Rights advocates asked: "How- much better use, will the negro make of the ballot than your motlifcr or sister would?" the laughter began todwindle to a snioker. And now that the claim has been seriously discussed in legislature", in Congress and in Parliament, even, has made a most formidable display of strength, the "clown" public straightens itself up and looks amazed at its joke developed into a great and urgent question of right.
The Women's Rights claim has ait least passed from the stage of ridicule to the stage of serious discussion. And in that it has substantially achieved the victory. Questions like this have a process of development and growth to pass through as invariable as that which brings frait from seed and the dangerous stage is the first. Men laugh at what, is incongruous, and. all great changes of the existing order of things are incongruous. If the incongruity be essential, in the unfitness of the change, it will be laughed to death. If it be in the incorporation of some long undetected or unappreciated evil in the existing order of things, the laughter may go on, but so will the increasing attention it creates to the
Ifl it?
cause
of the in
congruity. And inevitably the right place for the "joke to come in" will be found. If found in the established order, it will be changed. Thus it comes that, in our judgment, the claim of women to the ii .,.':.t of suffrage is about to "make a break" in the existing arrangements. We believe the unfitness at which the public has so long been laughing lies in the law, and not in the proposition to change the law.
There is no logic with which we are acquainted that will separate woman from man in any of the deductions from "first principles" that confer the right of suffrage upon man. Whence does he get it? From his right as one of "the governed" to give his "consent" to the form and action of his government. How will you separate the woman from the effect ofthe same deduction? If she is one of "the governed," her right is as clear as his, unless her right is absorbed in his. is. If a woman has an existence, or interest or aim apart from a man, he has no right to absorb her relation to the government. This we take to be irrefragable. "But it allows the possibility," you say, "that a wife may be so identified with her husband as to lose her relation to the government in his." We admit it, but it establishes the main point, the
fot »nle^
,»er
«i^ten«
hold office." We admit it.
There are very few public offices that a woman can hold and, at the same time hold relations as wife and mother. But why not let her hold such as she
men will force out twenty. Let the wo men alone,and the amount of officeseeki: they1 wjll dgr-"*won't be felt etea, -by hupgrftrt Democrarfraia Edsejgto} 'St ben. ii'is a misUke. too. to sonioee t' wjjmett are: tin 8t) for •nil- ol arlrsome public offices mat a woman' „ld fill a3 well as a man, and could at least fill them as honestly. There is no objection lobe urged, or has ever been ur^ed, against woman's suffrage. geneea£ly/fhat is not illogical 4r dangerous« to a We believe they ought, tinder propSr "limitations1 to be sett led' after hts main question is settled, to yote and,' moreover, we believe they will -vote. -.'JO, I
'*f"The Journal Rises to Explten.sm Our morning Democratic cotemporary, having been solemnly read pjit of the' party by the Democratic organ of thcr First.~District, and some allusions having been made as to its position with regard to Messrs.
Hendricks
and
Courier
in making the: Vallandigham res
olutions the test of Democracy does not' extend beyond the'local circulation -and influence of that paper. ... How Mr- Hendricks regards the resolutions, or how Mr. Voorhees Ipoks .updH the' 'new departure' are matters of. fact unknown tons, but our'jildgenienf is that both gentlemen will be slow In 'reading out' of the party the thousands of earnest Democrats who will scorn to say in the future that their political action of many years past has been a' cheat, a fraud and a deception."
As to "how Mr.
endricks
1
right of wo
Does the objector admit
that? If we get that settled, we can leave the other point for future discussion. The right of the people to limit the exercise of suffrage is undoubted. It must be limited on account of defective intelligence, as in boys and idiots on account of inadequate interest in the government, as in aliens on account of infamous character, as in convicts. It may be limited by considerations of residence, in its local exercise. It may be limited several directions. But what is there in sex to constitute a limitation?" A woman is weaker than a man." So is one man weaker than another. Strength does not concern the question. "Women were intended for domestic duties." There arc thousands of men, servants and the like, who are as much concerned in domestic duties a3 women. Domestic duty does not concern the question. "Women have not the requisite intelligence." How many women are there in Terre Haute who have less sense and know less than any of five hundred regular Democratic voters? "It will contaminate women to admit them to the polls." It don't contaminate a man. He is none the worse of it. Why should she be? "A woman ought not to mix up in the strife and dirt and fuss of politics." You needn't make politics "dirty." But if you must, why should a woman be excluded more than the quiet, decent men who never mix up with the "dirt" wvi. "fuss?" If you can let those men vc'", why not the women? There are fifty thousand men in Indiana who never came within a thousand miles of political difficulties or injurious influences of any kind. They keep away and let others do the dirty work. Why can't the women? "But," said Senator adley, of Putnam and Hendricks, last winter in our Legislature, "the right to vote involves the right to hold office, and that right will impel women to seek office, and women
can?
Harmonious.
A
child-bearing woman would make a bad figure, an immodest figure, waddling about the State Auditor's office, attracting sly hints and winko from vile loafers, and she would neither look better, nor be better, on the Bench, or anywhere else in public duty. JBut does anybody supple a woman don'l know (hat? or that knowing it, she would so far forget her native modesty and duty as to insist in putting herself where she would violate them every hour of the day? We guess not. Women are no more likely to be turned into mad office-seeker.' by the right of suffrage, than men are -to be turned into great students by the right to learn what they please. This cry of "the unfitnes of women for office," as an objection to women's suffrage, is rilf 1.e nsense and half mistake. It is noewswo to suppose that women will go "rampaging" after office merely because tltey have aright to. There are three hundred thousand voters in this Staie. How many of them, with all a man's fitness for office, bother themselves about getting it? One in fifty, possibly. Now reduce this proposition by|ihe indisposition which the nature of their sex creates to crowd into public uproar, filth and strife, and how many women office-seekers out of three hundred thousand voters will you have? One in ten thousand, possibly. If women are ever voters* it will be safe to bet the Opera House sgaiiisl a-l««t year's walnut hull, that ft* trsry onc^h* comes out 6®« t»f her e*n will, tRp,
We congratulate the morning Demctr cratic scintillater that in keeping its vigils over tlie dead, it will not be col.polled to part company with its ancient ally, Jeff Davis. He, too. refuses to depart. If we might be permitted to borrow an expression from the most popular poet of our day, we would say, "he turns up his snoot" at Vallandigham's chute and exclaims, "Is thy servant a dog? Would you have him eat dirt like a hog?"
J.
D. was at the Planters' I£ot?1, in Augusta, Georgia, on last Fridar \Vsuing, where he was lionized
ad libit m.
hours an
But that's
regards
the resolutions," we happen to be better informed than our neighbor,.!' and' we have no hesitancy in declaring that he claims.to be the grandfather of the new departing. His friends declare that St.Clem's
prescription is
Hendricks'
New Orleans speech boiled down.-sw .j Of Mr. Vooriiees attitude,—whether he has departed with St.
Clem,
mains, with the
Or re
Journai,
hugging the
odoriferous corpses of. issues defunct and. putrescent,—this deponent can't speak. And we take it much unkindly of our Congressman that he keeps us thus in the dark respecting his status. We entreat thee, oh Daniel,'
"Speak ami lot the worst bo known, Speaking may relieve yon," But our main purpose in noticing the morning luminary's article, is to put. on record for future use its honest and explicit definition of the new departure. Nothing could be more admirable than the candor with which it declares that those who accept the amendments'as a settlement of. the issues growing out of the war, do so by the humiliating confession "that their political action of many years past lias, been a cheat, a fraud and a deception."
Amosi,^
other marks of respect there was, oi course, a serenade. The press reporter assures us that:
In response to repeated calls and cheers, Davis made his appearance on the balcony, where he was introduced by Henry Hillard. Davis said that he recognized the peculiar claims Georgia had, upon him and of himself upon Georgia, for in the ancient city of Augusta his father had identified himself with the revolutionary struggle for liberty. If the late struggle for the principles of constitutional liberty had been a crime, it was his misfortune, for which he had fully suffered. Aw*re of the eagerness with which every word he might utter was watched for- and misrepresented, he would be silent, not from apprehensions as to the reso' to him individually, but as his ntu ance3 were made to affect the interests r-i* the Southern people. He did not conceiv that the principles of the lost cause were dead, or that truth should remain crushed. He counseled fortitude and patience, believing that the South could afford to be patient under her wrong until a returning sense of justice achieved the rights of every freeman, a period to which he confidently looked. With his feelings he was fearful to trust himsfelf to speak, because he conld not think one thing and ..peak another. He looked forward, however, lo the time when he might, with propriety, speak to his fellow citir'-.an as his heart moved him. and bade tbem farewell, expressing the hope that God would be with them."
Like our estimable cotemporary on lower Main street, this venerable patriot declines to admit that his "political action for many years past has been a cheat, a fraud and a deception." He "does not conceive that the principles of the lost cause are dead," neither does the
he
What we wish to fiotice is an original point—and the only one that the exfunctionary made, and that hadjeference
to convicj
would divide offenders into .two
proffayate Ae1"»p&ies.
fb«t
Yqorhees,
lets its light shine in this way: "The supreme folly of tfii Evansville
we can't belpMttdulfciit^**
suspicion: that he'jinakes thia'iftifM »df" ge&W i$itli?a' ti«« lo ftnrafekiqg a coB* gtnial public posftioti'for hiitfeelf.
Day after day w'eTiave waited gatietatl^ hppinp that the
Journal
he
gj,'
as
That is plain talk, honast and bold enough. It means that "the thousands of earnest Democrats," in these parts, who opposed the war, shrieked against emancipation, howled in favor of repudiation, raved against equality before the law and swore horribly, in impotent at a a in he an is colored race, "will scorn to say," by their acceptance of "the Dayton Doctor's nauseating dose," that during all these long years "their political action has been a cheat, a fraud and a deception." It means.that these "thousands of earnest Democrats" do not accept the amendments, but simply bide their time to restore "the Constitution as it was." It means a revival of questions that have been forever settled—3uch a revival as the public mind will not tolerate. And the party which attempts it is damned already.
Val.
Tombes, D.
Journal.
There is admirable harmony in their views, and they cau hold their watch together without fear of such an unpleasant episode as that which disrupted thesocial relations of their ancient prototypes, Sairey
Gamp and Betsey Prigg.
More Company.
'in addition to the Cincinnati
and
Jeff Davis,
Enquirer
the
Journal
will have
the society of at least one Ohio Democratic organ in its weary watch with the dead. The Ashland
Slates and Union,
one
of the ablest of the rural Democratic papers of the Buckeye State, vigorously re« pndiates the "new departure,"and says:
Now that the war cloud has bjown over, and the Democracy are again righting the old ship of state and restoring harmony, is is proposed that the party shall debase itself by declaring
i:»
pur-
po .i? -o-iuiesce in the fraudulent and prei«3tiad\ constitutional amendments wLk4i wete forced upon the country by intimidation and military dictation against wishes of a large majority of the American people. And this, that the consuming ambition of a few slippery political tricksters may be gratified, and temporary place and power reward their stultification.
That is the talk of a brave "old-fash-ioned Dimecrat." We congratulate the auroral beacon, on Main street,that it has the fellowship of so tenacious a hugger of dead issues.
auroral organ for" those
Democrats who acceptcd office under Andy Johnson
and tried to "unite the
great Democratic party with the puerile and unsuccessful administration of the accidental disposer of tederal favors."
Really thi« war in the Democratic household
'it
bet sad pereonal'
teii
that VALLANDiGHiAM would weaken the faith of any^Republican if we letium talk to.our readers, and we could not .think of supprcssiqg, nnder any ..circumstances, matter of .such great and'gen eral intererfir It seems to us...that it is hardlythe fair thing for a .Democratic org^n to prejudice its readers against a, .platform that will, in all probability, be adopted, substantially, by the Democratic National Convention, and at the same time keep them in- ignorance of what it contains by dfe* dining to print a word of it.
lo
auroral organ expects the sober,
second thought of the newly departed to wean them from Val's"naus.eating
dose"
and restore them, to full fellowship with' the J. Davis
wing of the party. Between
the two platforms, promulgated by
landigham
Val
and Divis, there isno mi d-i
die ground. The "lost cause" either "still lives," as Jeff
says, or is "dead,"
says. By declining the latter
horn of the^ dilemma, the morning orgaA commits itself to the former.
A
dvices
the Supreme Court has taken a recess for two weeks without having decided tha fee bill as waa generally expected. Thir will cause a great deal of trouble, as the Commissioners of the various countiea, meet on Mondaynext, while nearly every Treasurer is awaiting the verdict before making a settlement $ritb'! the State Auditor. -ii A jt
illigan,
the great unhung, gets five
dollars damages from General, Hovift and others! It is supposed that be will have the costs to pay, but that point is not fully determined. Let the other martyrs who shared with him the hospitalities oif the Ohio Penitentiary, now., come on-with their suits.
orace reeley
indicates a willing
ness to be ravished with .the highest office io the gift of the people of these United States.
Horacf
dvices
Mr.
would bea,Presi
dent who, would command universal respect and confidence. Any good Republican would be glad to vole for him..
D.,
(t
—»»«j*
A
from Washington represent
Colfax's
illness to be paralysis of
the nerves of-the heart, and his attack a very .aferious one, but his condition is constantly improving.
mm
he
he
IJSXS
Methodist church owes it*"?6 her*
self to ,. it a speedy and effective quietus on the Book Concern scandal. It has ,. .' 0» Misa inlived too long. -.n ,-1 j.! awl
Mayor of Jeffersonville and anoth
er man have voted Warden
Bhcxer
out
of the State Prison South, but he doesn't take that departure worth a cent.
Scandal In Delawar e, Ohio/1 Special dispatch to the Cincinnati Gazette. Delaware,
May
26.—"The
Rev.
J.
To this the auroral beacon makes this stinging reply. "Nonsense, Whittlesey. Don't let the prospect of Democratic Federal patronage blunt your ordinary common sense. Turn over the
Courier
w-.
Democrats and others wha are'horn fied at the Ku Klux bill recently passed by Congress",_are respectfully invited to read and reflect on the following, it is the nineteenth paragraph of "Details of the Proposed System" for. a standing army, by the late
Joel
B.
olal
the lew' matters of
and lukpMfc—rffr- krw/wn to as, bat our of the warTwrttfu nascent is that both waced for iU ostoasi-. frattoam will be bleparpoM to maia- -slow ia 'rradiac out'
rights wio
swsr
'meat,
In
tM*1%^ **itd femprove-Wartll?}' all/iW-^liyi&aliy/' '-,-1' d-'1' -1 Ifow. we^'ioofdnV :'Mgu«ty£!ic!ca*' 't&afc pufre: fattfbt Of' %v» pass ft*1
trill
worn
the tear, and
:W"i"'
don't believe ihe'wants to bfc a public hangman, but~h1s tastes and habits mirabfy fit him ti.execule the law that he proposes upon the class, of criannkta th&t arie not'sent io ine gallc^sl'* jc'
if
j':* !5
ov^r
would at least fei'
its readers see Yhle' celebrated new depart' lire resolution^ but! tliat remarkable Organ lias'nevgr punished a iine of them.' They appeared, in full, in the
ufri& aiiibority,
Express
on the marking'of. last iriday week?a few hours alter .the. adjournment pf the Dayioa^Convention, We had
Nilssfln's Cliapter orAeiitdents
9
The audience, pn.lfce occasion of Nilsson late apjiearahce' i« flrMtorio in Hart ford, Ct., seemed struck with, her manner, which indicated: that all was not going exactly rijght with her. Hj»r smiles were charming as evei', put' her behavior: 'indicated dfesatisfiictibh and nervousness.' Nor was her siaging quite perfect. We have an explanation ot the. case:
When Mademoiselle Nilsson left New York for Hkrtford, a number of wicked sprites must have attended her with a fixed purpose of rousing the. temper of the charming cantatrice. First and foremost she had a sharp skirmish of words with her king and slave, the omnipotent manager, in which—mt'raMfe
Strakosch came off best. This occurred directly after leaving the metropolis, and necessitated a persistent pout up to Bridgeport, where'accideht No. 2 tobk'fpla&>. The train was slow, afld the joUrney tiresome. What time might it be? Mademoiselle dtiew out her beauty of a watch, a tiny miracle
vt
mi
3
from Indianapolis state that
the jeweler's art, richly
ornamented With turquoise and diamonds. It wu the gift of the Bmperor. Before she could ascertain the position of the hands, the chain gave aj, the prefcibus trftie fell'to the floor.1 Quick as thought "Mademoiselle stopped, but .before her lily handscould ..reach it that, borrible train'suddenly started sgainj and, oN ye gods! the divine foot was thrown upon1 the dear wetch, and the (bestial heel crushed it utterly, With the pi*c« in. her pocket, Nilsson's pout became a frown.
Thus she reached .Hartford, and had, as ber supper sent up fo her room, in the AIIyn'Bouse. It did not'please her. j—
usual,
ent up It did
to
j,(
The chicken was not done- to Jier mind. What woman couW have relished a,chick1-' en, after the troubles of the manager and the watch? Another'fowl was ordered with no better success Now the wonderful singer requested that the -cook might come to her,, room jwith a. chicken and /'things," and broil it before^ the grate, Under her own imperial direction. But the cook was as great in her kitchen as Mademoiselle on the Btage, and getting: her back-up sky-high, would not. entertain the idea for a,moment "besides, the .rules of the ho?el did not allow it. Mademoiselle's frown became a knitting of the brows, with clenched hand?t eta
But now there seemed to be a break in the storm.' A modest knock—and at the door appeared a servant bearing a magnificent, basket of flowers—camelias, vior. lets, roses, azafe'as, and everything fragrant—with Gov. Jewell's compliments.' Smiles Ahone on the ethereal countenance the flowers were seised-, and the tpUetat once began, Down came the golden hair, and the maid^ immediately commenced to adorn Mademoiselle's head, and dress her hair with the blossoms. But lol another knock. "Beg pardon, the basket of floorers is for'Miss Cary." the knitted brows returneid with an additional.shade of thunder, andlhe little hands grew very nervous*
But this was not. all. When she swept through the dressing-room on to the stage, her train of white satin dragged, over a spot tf burnt cork left by the minstrels, and bore off the dusky honors of theplace. Her knitted brow became qn angry flush and with throbbing veins, ana a fierce desire to bite, she foilnd herself at the mercy of a poor orchestra:, and posted behind the incomprehensible back of the leader. Considering all that had gone before, we opine that it was with feelings not quite angelic, and "a soul not quite attuned to heavenly melodies, that sue sang, "I know .that my Redeemer liveth."—
B.
was publicly whipped on
the Btree', this forenoon, by the husband of a lady whose character it was charged he had wantonly and maliciously slandered. The general opinion declares that he received only his just dues."
We don't know the reverend recipient of the above-named public chastisement, but if he was guiltv of the offense c'urgu, he got just, what he deserved i'he ---UenaPu who administered the whipel a good example—mnch bet-
L,»r.
it
he had resorted to pistol or
logger practice, or a suit for damages. Money satlsfadin such a case, while killing Miar too violent a vsaiedy. A good ind thrashing, given in public, is a sensible compromise. -ji.v -J- 1 4'Littl«
Children, Love One Another."
The Evansville
Courier,a
a
few"days ago,
took occasion to, apply the epithets "old fogy" and "sorehead" to ourjdain street morning cotemporary, thus: "The Radidjil newspapers all regard the Vallandigham platform as being a very wrong movement by the Democracy. In this opinion they have the concurrence of the old fogies and soreheads ofthe latter party."
rtSK} on 03? (S3 iiasob ?i -Medical Miser. An anecdote is told of Velpeau, the eminent French surgeon,,who was a miserly, disagreeable man, and died a few years ago. fie bad successfully performed, on a little child five'years old, almost perilous operation. The. mother came .to him and said: ., ''Monsieur, my son i4 saved, and I really, know not how 'o express "my gratitude. Allow me, ho*'«•*?, to present you with this pocket-book, embroidered by my own hands." "Oh, Madame," replied Velpean, sharply, "my art is not merely a question of feeling. My life has its requirements, like yours. Dress, even, which" is a luxury for you, is necessary for me. Allow me, therefore, to refuse yoU' charming little present, in exchange for a more substantial remuneration." "But, Monsieur, what remuneration do yon desire? Fix the fete yorirself." "Five thousand francs, Madame.,,
The lady very quietly opened the pocketbook which contained ten thousand francs in notes, counted out five, and, after politely handing them over to Velpeau, retired. Imagine his feelings
I
files and see how
valiantly you have fought some of the 'new departure' doctrines up i- a fortnight since. .Were you mere? jurying on a game of political decef
Ik**
that
V, (fi ei,.f Attenton, Deiiwera^
Poihsett,
of War under
Secretary
M. Vas Bdreh,
'"system" was a "feature" in the
evnkinatione Ito poverfal to ri*
tuppressed by the ordinary eourte qf judicial
proeetdtngi,
or by the powere vested in the
marshals, it shall b$ lawful for the President ofthe United States to call forth the militia of such States,
other State or Stales,
or of
«ay
as may be necessary lo
suppress such combinations, and to cause the laws to be duly executed and the use of the militia so to be called forth may be continued, if necessary, until the expiration of thirty days after the commence ment of the then session of Congress provided, that whenever it may be necessary, in the judgment of the President, to send the military force thus called forth, he shall forthwith by proclamation command such insurgents to disperse and retire peaceably to their respective abodes within a limited time and provided also that the militia which the President 4s thus authorised to call forth, be of the active, or of the active and sedentary forces, when such force or forces of the State
or of the neighboring States
in bis opinion,
shall be,
n.fficient
and when not,
then such portions tM h* may deem n*ces-ary."
we-were a member of any legislative body, we should read with a feeling of envvofHerr Heinrich von Treitschke, in the German Parliament, who is as deaf as a post, ah adder, or a stone. The beauty of it is that he can make speeches but he is not obliged to listen to them. He has a friend with a fearfully long name the Herr Wehrtnjafenning—^who takes down the other gentleman's sfweches, after reading which Yoa Treitschke opens. Thus he has all the honor and pleasnreahd fame without the bore, and the evidence is that he is an exceedingly tough customer to meet in debate. We hope that no member of our own Senate will be induced by this account to cause himself to be deafened by a surgical operation. Perhaps, when the ears are so long, it might be necessary to take off the whole head to insure perfect deafness.
BBI DO EPORf. -s
,i,„^ 1*4 ,. ridgeport,
Ct.,
Nobody Safe Even in the Presence of Host Intimate, Friends.
to
imelmdinjf t\* (fairpolitical actio* of
three tear, pa« tHi
a
X'V: *x 'l
fratti
d%
-nan
ktrsb 9ftf lo amis*
una nf
9 3
MAm*? »ill 'tU tomitnf/' hwwrt iit« -"???•'foiSfftyfrtri -Hi'
Under tKeiKeal~of "»ound adtioe/' the 'Cincinnati Cbeiama^ lteS the -following:7-' A' States' riftfctirHaft was aSk«d'*rhat!l& iadvisedtafba'dtpMjabotittli*
!ifhbth«{r
Werdr or -Impendeot Insttr© Ivstant -.
.rrwao^i'Io DeS^k* h-.-rsaatsftb'
si
"ttW bide* karti
on the saihe matter An ,ofd Deitibtirat oa» belnk, 11 as tohrsjudgmeiitaboot Vaf iate.pM-formaade answered: trouble of this an -departure is, that there is ntally no departnre in it, (or yJia^.ghi^stU)tthe^
Pajub,l*ay^.-^Fighting
utfiiifluired^f •TisMigham's
Ud!
at:Belle?ille
MeinllmooUui«and-Pere La Chaise was desperate. Ifo quarter was giv,en,to women or children. The military
Km
been
estaUishcidi hi the diy. E^dcfttiSns are in Champs De Jdarvf Pard' ux ud 3otelde yille.:from 0100. ihsu'rgents'ire shot ar'a time, oie is pehUlttM fo leave Paris with-
Am'ttbg the' hostages
shot'by lSsurgeel*-'#^^ Abbes f5iiia and :DsgurBey,Jerait father Olivanv.' Ganbert, Bargy^Abbe atia 25 gens d'armes^ JPtiB last bud' of inSurgeh^'wa^ crushed at' tlife'Cemefery
JNaticnal umds is projceed-
ing. A multitude of people have beesi arrested. The population of Paris enthusiastic over their deliverance." ftearly every member of-the Commune was shot exeOuted^it once,after their!dapture^( The WesUrn andOijleana railroad-. lines were ppeni^-to-day, for ggodaand traffic*' The exit
of
all persons from Tarts Is
bidden.
!TWvisitJns
ot
dutul—
fot^
are Scaree, atidma^
jretn.quiti'empty Ji r, fli:-." biis.iii^MtMUBAiai ,Msd oils
i|
.' VesBAHiiaa, May 30.—The inhabitants of Be)le.ville haye openly announced that they will n^ake reprisals, and a secret sys*'1'hours tem
anion' and' assassination is apprehended. -. -Tith irt oifl ^HBTKOtBOilU. 'I
There*a're constant discoveriesStores of petroleum in Paris. «iif sukkeNdeIied.: «yuub
The iiisurgenta. in Fort-Yincennes have surrendered uncondkionally .to .the ^Versailles troops. T'. ,-i T- id 3«:V!X T" KMttlW* i-I«9
OBLEAK.S IKWS.
Gaulion^ announces that tiie Orleans Princes shall be allowed to live in France. .,"ORDKHS.
Thiers has ordered the disarmament of faris jin the dissolution of National Guards in the Department of Berne. cbSGRATUI-ATIOid.
tii
Vo'le
ARBE8T8. fen
vJi4mtl0f,y,sur8ent8
May iSOv^Uhe official
journal of the Republic announce^ thit the arsenal and museum of the Louvre are safe. Also manufactory des gobelines1 «id CMiservatoire.
1
"fa'""
hicago,
iI
f* 1SD1ANAFOLI8.
*te THE millioak case. Ikdiakapolis.
which
1840
campaign: 19. That whece'.nir the laws of the United States shall be opposed, or the execution thereof obstructed, in any State, 4»y
May 29.—This morn*
ing the argument' in the Milligan case was continued by General Harrison for the defense, who occupied all the forenoon. Mr. Hendricks closed the argument in a speech of three hoars. Judge Drummoad then charged the jory. r'j
May 2$. Fire
broke out here yesterday in the lumber yard of Bardslee & Wil.*on, and proved more disastrous than any that has taken place here for twenty years. The tracks ofthe New York & Sew Haven Railroad p«q« through the yard, and it is supposed a spark frvin a locomotive ignited the immense pi'ez of lumber. Among the buildings burc-id were German hotels, the inmates 'ped without injury, F. Bertram's pork packing establishment containing 1,000 barrels of pork and buns, the store of McNeil.
t&Jsg-
C-u.,
&
jstrt
dealers, and the liquor store
of
Dunham. The docks and railroad tracks were very mnch damaged, and the debris which had fallen across the tracks rendered the passage of trains impossible. Loss about $150,000, insurance about 175,OWi
ni
officially reports having lost 40 officers and'600 men during the engagements in which his troops have participated since the Versaillists entered Paris. the journals of summary execu-i tions •-.. 1 teas* attempts1"01''' weW made' yesterday' t'd'9 assassinate of so a =!r/nmo-j"gii-Mr.:
cessation
sodies
Ot
xi*-i'
of murdeted priests are to lie in' "State fbi a week. KILXED. lo
With tKe exception of Pyaff ariil Groussett all Commune chiefs have been killed or.taken prisoners.^* [saxitiic*Di.r.
TERRIBLE DEVASTATION AMD LOSS OP
I
VJ^l
I
MaV 20—The Germans^?-
Chicago to-day held a greatpeace jubilee. The procession was about en miles long, and was three hours,passing agiven point. Among the most rtbticeable features were companies of Prussian Uhlans, blfee and red hussarsj infantry and grenadier^, Hermann Thuswelda and a 'band of ancient Teuton warriors. The Emperor Barbarossa with knights, hersrds pages Ac., Gutlembergs HonsSochs, SoetK von Balichngeny: Franc Yon Sichangen, Ulrich Von HuUen, Frederick William, the great elector, with ancient. Br^ndwburg cavalry 'and grenadiers, Frederick the Great and'Suitfe, Handel and Hayden.
Beethoven and the muses, four tableaux from Der Freischultz, Aumbalsh, a tableaux representing Der Wacht am Rhein, a brig in full rig, Andes, Hofer and Tyrole^e, Koemer. Blucher, ubleaux, What is thie Cieriiian Fatherland? Father John Umis, Boisen WJlllam, the Crown Prince, Bismarck and Von Moltke in a carriage drawn by six while hones and surrounded by a cavalcade of nofed Princes and Generals, Goethe and 8cb'iller, a tableaux of 8diiller, Bdl Sareiie and Rhine nymphr Gambrinus. The characters were all clad in. appropriate costumes, many being of a most generons character. Trades Were represented at work, newspapers were printed, -bread baked and sausage manufactured. There, were over twenty bands in the procession, and'the hordes could only be numbered by thousands. The city wu profusely decorated, especially the German portion, and the streets were crowdud, nearly our whole papulation, and thousands of visitors. witnessing (he grand festivity.
I
AX.
BODIES SOT RECOVERED.
Halifax, N. S.,
May
30.—All
efforts
to recover the bodies of Captain Walhewson and Dr. McKeln have failed. PERSONAL. -s-tU'S.'
Sir W. E. Logan arrived here Saturday" evening. BOTTLES WASHED ASHORE.
The writing found in bottles washed ashore at Sbedioe, containing reports of tbe City of Boston, ha-t been pronounced genuine. The handwriting has been recognised.
SECOSD DISPATCH.
Pixtston,
May
27.—The
West Pitt-
aton shaft is owned by the.Lehu^ Valley Railroad, and ia worked by
Bom
of New York, There ia
Ikri
of7
& Oo.,
thk'mAh*v^laieaX'
imd No
particulars have yet been obtained, but it' WMMmpaliliMavfttariNvaMvaatas* he,
sMhe abbot th* s^kfl .is one of
grSit dfetress and afl^nlih. Two fire engines^ ft-om Scranton. tnd one frop Wilkesbnrre are.on tbe ground. It.is thought that no water will be thrown in the shaft froth' the topi but it is said the sbaft will be filled with water within 24 hoors, so that if they are not sufibcated the pow. fellows must drown.: There is apparently no escape for them. From
'60
to 40 men and_boys'are in the mine. v.
Later.—The
lire, engines are playing
over the ruins, which .are so hot that no one can approach them' before morning. A
dog has? just been sent down the shaft the mine, and was brought up alive, which fact encourages the belief that the 33 men may yet be saved.
Pmsfroir, ift&y 28—2:30 r, s£—All the men in the mines, thirty-eight in (number, have been broughtiup, eighteen dead. At half past twelve last night they succeeded in effecting an entrance to the bottom of the pit, and brought them to the surface. At 12:45 they sent tip word that the men had barricaded themselves in, and sent up a cage for men and tools. Tnis morning the excitement at the shaft is 'greater than' ever. Up to 8 o'clock 24 trieri had been' brought to' the top, of which numher six were dead: -All. were insensible when brought out. One or two have so far recuperated ,as to be able to give an account of themselves. Morgan, the first discovered, is still alive, though hy'recovery is Mill doubtful. Exploring parties 'artf compelled to proceed with the utmost eaution, and are frequently brought out in, an asphyxiated condition, Irqm foul.gasses. At 10 a. m. 30 mefi had been brought out, 10 of whom were dead, and at 12 o'clock not more than one Or two.remained in the mine. Every one .qf the.men brought up for the past two was found to be stone dead. Excitement almost indescribable. Thousands'of people crowded around the mouth of the pit, arid in their eagerness to see and hear, with difficulty were kept outside jof ..it he rope which was stretched around,the shaft.
jpf:
Pere La Chafee.' Three thbasawd^pri^ oners arrived:here yesterday.. JDtsarma ment of Ute
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS
Chicago^ Rock Island and Pacific Railroad Company.
1
McMnlion has issued a congratulatory am at on to a an PARIS. -Mil
006,660 Acres
CHOICE IOWA LANDS, This Companyls ndiw offering for sale about Six hundred thousand acres of th&Snsst agricnltural lands In the West. The' Company •ells only to actnal settlers, and the prices axe exceedingly reasonable, ranging from •S to 115 per' aore—fhi aVetage being about J8. The creater part of thesei tjinds are ai tuatra along the line of its railroad betweon the eities of Des Moii&s. andtConnoil Bluffs, and are in the most accessible and fertile region In the State.* ... Sales made for cash-o^ on credit long enough to enable any industrions man to pay for tne landoutof its oro)g
tssi
Paris is tranquil,-and trade'already shows signs of reyiving.
pvf ,vna
li
FETED. .—--T! -If o'-
Soldiers have been feted by theinbabi* tants. -rfj
*4
bsiifixs-ica lossra. tc sdi {The losses previous to. May 22d, when Versailles troops entered Paris, are {estimated at 12,(300 killed and wound^dj and 26,000 prisoners,' And since May 22d at 10,000 killed and wounded and 20,000 prisoners.
bddi'lattp
PBISOJIEBS.
Prisoners have all ,b^en sent-.to Ver« sailles.^i..^ .,.. OKNEBAL J.A .CEItlA
And a few,followers, fled to the castle of Yincennes, but upon the commencement of the Erection of siege works by Yersaillists he at opce surrendered. 1 AH SO N E N ebsaiLles,:
These lands are, held under a title direct frotn the General Government, and are not mortgased or.encuniijcted in. any way. 1 ull warranty dedds given to purchasers.
For maps, pamphlets, or any other information respecting tnenn Address EBKNEZER COOK, Land Commissioner, Davenport. Iowa'.
EXPLORING TICKETS are sold at the Company's ticket offices at Chicago, and all othez principal stations on its line, and if the purchaser buys, land the amount paid for the ticket is applied on the purchase money.
AGENTS WlANTED-Brockett'aIIistory
ofthe
Franco-German War.
Its Origin', Causes,^Battles and Besults IM-* ograptuDs of its Leaders, Finacial.Social and Military Condition of both countries, wcaporis nsed,' Needle-grin, Chassc pot and Mitrailfour, with Maps, Illustrations, Plans of Battles and Portraits of lieading Men and Women. Publistiod in Englislf and"German. Largo Octavo. Price. J2. Jugt ready, .and the: BEST. 8eo si%e, Contents Author, and price. H. iSATT A,- CO., Publishers. 176 West Fourth Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. f^HKAP ADTEBTISIKCI.—We will insort an advertisement in Eight Han* drtd American NewMpeni for »ix.Dollars per line per week. One line one week Will cost Six Dollars, Two linos will cost Twelve, Dollars, and Ten lines, will cost-Si xty Dollars:' Sohd for a Printed List. Address
QUO1.
Bfli-IUXWEkL lib CO., "Advertising Agents, So.. 4' Par^ Row, Nevy york.
Austin's-^Agiio Drops, PURELY YE8ETABLEj
Warrantod to CUIUiLAtJUE or Money Re-' Xunded... iftosCplO Drops. Only 50c, per Bottle
AUSTIN'S' Aclftf
Droi'S
a
is
LIPE. ..
SiNGAPOKE,
May 25.—Volcanic erup
tions' and earthquakes have shaken the Islands of Rba. The country was terribly devastated and four hundred livse lort-
I 'xsit
l.fjr "J IWIAMAPOMS.^,
.^4 -'THE MILLIGAN CASfi.-"
ndianapolis,
May 80.—The jury in
the Milligan-Hovey case returned their verdict at 11 o'clock this morning, after being out 17 hours. The verdict gives Milligan five dollars daiinages. The question of costs will be determined by the Judge hereafter, as the suit was brought in the Slate Court. Hid the case been commenced in the 'United States District Court the costs would fall on the plaintiff. It is probable that ,a motion will be made for a new trial. fciw V.
T-.'** I 711
ft
!K#{J
In&i
-V
PEACE JUBILEE.
ba«
are prepared from
Highly Concentrated Vegetable -Extracts, hence are perfectly safe and reliable. They art a sure care for Angus and- all Billions Diseases., For.aal* everywhere. .AUSTIN SYKES', Proprietors, Plymoutb.'Richland Co. OU*. .' ».
ASTHMJir
rOPHAM'8
ASTHMA SPECIFIC1?,'
learrniittd,
to relieve the worst'1 cn'se in
ten minutes.. Trial package sent. FlUK to. any address on receipt or a three cent stamp. AddressT.iPOPHAM A OU,, CUariton, Iowa.
FRAGRANT SAPOIIENE
Cleans Kid Oloves and all kinds of Cloths and Clothing removes Paint. Oreese, Tar,
.h
Ac.,instantly,
W. VAJJfWAJMEE, 5f. successfully treats" all cldsses of Ch^onifc arid Acute Diatpm. Send stamp ioc circufair containing larticular" and. testimonials. Addresi Dox •W,IN# 1M'
a:
CARD,
ffi
iA Clprgymap-, whiles residing in .Sooth America-a4 a missionary,' discovered a safe and dmjpJe remedy fpr 'tno-enro of Nervous Weakness, Early petay, Diseases of tLe Urinary andSeiBinal Orgsns. bud the vhMe train of .disorders brought on by baneful and ritions httmts. Great numbersTrare bee- cured by. thif/noble remedy Prompted by a desire to benefit the afflicted and unfortunate I will send 4ho- recipe for preparing and
City.
FAMILY GROCERIES.
fJAN d&ILLEli,
WTioIe'saie and Retail Dealer nj. Ci rocoriei,!Provi8ioni1!N'ail» Pee Ploti 5'fg(h, Salt. Shingles,
Av.j ftC'j
Wnttr FnrtksilKsgUfltrMti,TuR Haste. Connocted With "ihe above is a first-ctass W«*on Tard and Boar-ling Honsp.thepro
Ey,Mr..Miller,wliofcnaranteestoall
rietorship of which has again been resnm :-i who mar patronize him, good accommodations at rea«onftbl»ehnrtes.'
Board by the Mes.l, Day. Wet* or Month, mildwtf DAI^ MILLER, Proprietor.
""PIANOS. —t rt-
THE RfcST, AKD CllEAPEST
'"PIAITOS,
7/ u-
Organs and Melodeons
t.,'.n.JL KISSNEH'S ,t
Palace of Music,
No. 48 OHIO STREET, »•.
1
ndthe State Snn
—e»»^ion.—The railroads
This supeiTB^^iBiBB^delegates pay—Peifftctly^ Har^8^\5(^J^#o the State Sunneons. Si? disa'ppuSihmfe^g^, to be held at Tinte or UnpJeMantOi^^^jh
t0 16 are lhe
A. Batchelor's Hair Dyepr ATELY a splendid Bhwk or Does not Stain tho Skin, but letana pol is J11 notion Clean, Soft and Beautiful. The. and perfect Dye. Sold by all Dgille Eailroad. Factory 16 Bond street, jf wYorkj^ idk^^hicago
Jan25-dd-wly-s*» •r-nrrate—— ^ailin Haven't fried them,
VictimTof debyity, who is responsible for yonrfeeblenjess? Kot yourself, yon will say,... "fbr yWVe ione, all you could to cure it. v.
That's a mtstabe on your part. You haven't tried Hostetter's Bitters. Gloomy dyspeptic, with an nneasy stomach and a world-weary face, of coursfl you don't think yourself responsible for your own torments. But yon are. It is easy to see from your oondition that you haven't trieiL. Hostetter's Bitters. a|''
Bilious sufferer, it is not your fault, yrfl|,: think, that your sypmtnms gTOW worse daj^v by d^y. Blue pi}l doesn't do you any good^ Veiyiikely. Bnt you can be brought rount for all that.
Why haven'tyou tried Hostitter's Bitters] Friend, on whom fever anl agne alternaU ly blows hot and cold, and whose braij seems to bo bunting with tho effects of soi powerful drug, do'you assume tho rcsponsl bility? Oino! You've takon piles of anininf and all tho regulation medicines.1 TVlij[ could" you do ruoro? One thing moio—1| vory thing that would have exempted ftom all the pangs that now rack you.
Yon have never tried Ilostetter's Bitters. Nervous invalid, what have you to salL Yon plead that you hare taken ail tho nervinos of the pharmacopicia. If the have done you no good, it is not your fault. 1 on aro not responsible. Wrong, all wrong. You havo, in reality, nobody to blarao but
0Wlfy haven't yon tried Hostetter's Bitters? For all tho above namod complaints, the Bittors arc absolute specifics.
consuWTIONT
Its Cure and Its Preventive.
BY J, H. SCHENCK, M.D.
Manyaliuiuun bolHK has vf«cd a.ray for wlioso dentil nooOtcrrea»in than cno neglect ot known :nxl iudlaputnbly inven means of cnri. Those near nrW tlRr to family .mil friends aro ^let'pinp the clroiwiHi*!*- *luiaber into which# hail they cutmly adopted »Il. JtJfjEPH JI. SCIIEXCK'S SIMPLE
TREATMENT,
and avaitoff thomselves nf Ills Trondcrfully efflca..clmia medicine*, they would not have fallen. Dr. ?chcnck haa til lil.i own owe proved that wherever aufHek-nt, vitiilily remains, tlmt vit.ilitv, bv his niodU-Inos uud his directloni for Uicir use, is quickened Into henlthtol vlgur.
In this stntemnnt there la notliing presnmiv tiions. To tlio faith of tho Invalid Is mado no reurasentaUon that. Is not a thousand tlinos s"lslanttatod tiy living and visible works, 'llio Ss»t, tliwo' of the cure by l)r. Scbonek's nicillclne.-* is us simple Ji5 it is unfuilltK. Its philosophy rcqiurcs no argument. ltiasoif-aisurliiK, soli-con-
The&a-weed Tonic and JIandrake nitlsare tho first two weaixnts with which the citadel of tho malady Is assailed. Two thirds of the eases of consumption (iriijinato in dyspepsia and a functionally disordered liver. With this condition the branchial tahes sympathlro with tho stomach.' Tllct respond to tho morblflo action of the liver, llero ihen ?»mes tho culniliiatin^ result, and tho setting In, with alt Ita distressiajjfSjBipWms Of .1 •. CONSUMPTION.
The Mandrake Pills are composed of onqof Nature's noblest nlfts-the Podophlilum Peltatum, They possess all the blood-searching, nlterntivJ proiwitica of caloiuol, but, unlike calomel, thuy
y-.r «'JLEAVE NO STING EEIIlND." Tho work of enro Is now.beginnlng. The vlilated and niucous deposits la tho bowels and in tho alimentary csmal are ejected. The liver, llko a clock, ls vror.nd up. It arouses from Its t.irpl.1ity. Tho etomaeli acts responsively, mid tho putlcnt begins to feol that ho is gcttins, at lui-t,
A 8UPPI1V OF OOOD IILOOD. Tho Sea-weed Tonic, In conjunction with Urn Pills, permeates and assimilates with the
Thesccond thinp is, tho patients must stay In ft warm room until they get well It is almost impossible to prevent taking cold when too lung* are diseased, but it must bo prcrcntcd or a euro can not bo effected. Fresh air and riding, out, especially in thW section of tho country, fn tho tall and winter season, nro all wrong. u-Pnysi-* /lans who roeommend that Jotirso lose tnoir pii* tients, if their lungs aro badly diseased: and yet, because they are in tho houso they must not sit down quiet they must walk about tho room as much and as fast as tho strength will besr, to get up a good circulation of blood. Tno patients must keep in good spirits—bo determined to get welt. This has a great deal to do with the appetite, and Is tho great point to gain.
To despair or cure after Such evldeneo of Its passlblllty In the worst cases, and moral certainty In all others, Is sinful. Dr. Schcnek's personal statement to tho Faculty of his owu euro was In these modest Words:
Many years ago 1 wax in tho last stages of consumption conflned to my lied, and at ono tlmo my physicians thought that 1 conld not live a week then, llko a drowning man.catcliing at straws, I heard ot and obtained tho preparations which 1 now offer to tho public, mid they niado a perfect euro of me. It seemed to mo that at the matter In my lung*, and
could feel thera lienetrato my wholo system. They soon riiwicd the matter In my lung*, anil 1 would spit «i more than a pint of ottpnsive yellow matter cviry morning for 11 long time. "Assoon us tl. it began to suhslde„my cough, fever, pains, tmd night sweats nit begnti tcrleavo me, and#my apiietito became so creut thnt it was with difficulty that 1 eoultl keep from euting too much. 1' soon gained my strength, and havo grown in flesh ever since. "I was weighed shortly after my recovery," added the Doctor, "then looking llko a mcro skeleton my weight was only ninety-seven pounds my present weight is two hundred ana twcnty frve (225) pounds, and for years I llavo enjoyed uninterrupted health."
Dr. Schenck has -discontinued his professional visits to New-York and IJoston. lie or his sun. Dr. 3, H. Schenck. Jr.. still emtlnne to see patients at their office. No. 15 North Sixth Street, Philadelphia,every Pnturtlayfrom9A.Jr.to3 p.m. Those who wish a tliurougli examination with ttte Hcsplrometer wilt bo charge*! ?#. The llcs-
fiirometer
without the least injury to the
finest fabric. Sold by Druggists and i'anoy Goods Dealers. FRAGRANT BAPOLFENE CO-,33 Barclay St., Kew York, 40 La Salle St., Chicago.
Agents! Bead This! WE VIU PAT AGENTS A SALARY OF fit PEK WEEK and Expensm, or allow a large- commission to sell onr new and wonderfnl inventions. Address M. WAGNER 400., Marshall, Mich. A-fAA DAT FOR ALL with Stencil
Tools Address A. K, Ub*ham,
Springfield, Vt.
A MOUTH. 110RSE and Carriage famished. Expenses paid. 11 Shaw.
Alfred,, Me.
WAliTED.
Experienced CanvdtKtt, vwtle and
femaU,
J. Weaver 4 Co., Superior St-,
Cleveland, 0
vu'
Shrewd bnt qniet men can make a fortune liy revealing the secret of the business to'no one Address X. HAKEI.LO, 688 Broadway, New York.
declares the exact condition ef tho
lings, and patiants can readily Icnrn whether tbey aro ourabUor not. The directions for taking tho medicines aro adapted to the intelligence even of a child. Follow these direction?, and kind Nature will lo tho rest, excepting that I11 sonio cases the Mondruko Pills nro to bo taken in Increased doses tho three medicines need no other accompanimcnts than tlie ample instructions that accompany them: First ereato appetite. Of returning health, hunger Is tho most welcomo symptom. When It crnnes. as It will come, let the despairing at once bo of good cheer. ood blood atonce follows, the cough loosens, tho night sweat is abated. In a short tlmo both of tbvso morb.-J a
Dr. Schenck's medicines arc constantly kept .n tens Of thousands of families. As a laxative or purgative, the Mandrake Pills area standard preparation while the Pulmonic Svrup, as a euro of cough" and colds, may ho regarded as a prophylactei t: against con.-umption in any of Its forms.
Price of the Pulmonic Svrnp and Sca-weed Tonic, $14)0a bottle, or $7.50 a hulf dozen. Man. drake Pills, 25 cents a box. For sale by all drag, gilts and dealers.
K. MACGREADY & CO
N.E. or. toIi:n I.ia Viilunt
CIS ft MS ATI. O.
Wbolesa'e A^tntF.
NOTIONS.
WHOLESALE NOTIONS. /yT
it A. & A. WITTIG.
No- 148 Main
-i*"
(Opp. the old ConrtHonse.).,
1, TEKKB 1IAITTE, ISI.
N. B. All kinds oi 10tlftinL't t'tit.itc
Jobber Commission Mcrclinut
In Notions, Fancy (Joorlx,
CI OAKS, KS6MSH, (.'Kit'IAS AMI AMKltHA.N
XJ J- «"*. fi
J'
1
food.
GUyllflcatlou is now progressing without Its previous tortures. Digestion becomes pa ntess.anil the cure is seen to be at hand. 1 hero Is no ui" -rii flatulence, no exacerbation of the stomach. An "Utow comes tho greatest Blood Pnrlflcr ever yet given by an indulgont father to suffering nian. Sclienck's Pulmonic Syrup comes In to perform its functions and to liusten and complete too cure. It enters at onco upon Its work. Nuturo c-in not bo oheated. It collects and ripens tho impaired and diseased portions «f tho lungs. In tho form of gatherings, it preptw's them for expectoration, and lo! I11 ft Very sl .rt time tho malady 13 vanquished, tho rotten throne that It occuplcd is renovated and itiaUo now, und tho patient, in all the dignity of regained rigor, steps forth to enjoy the manhood or womanhood that was
GIVEN UP AS LOST.
a
•v
Sell It raei
of' i*
that 1 ith nfarfl
jrnis ien
Uteljl
jeroanl offence]
1{e*
l'
Perfnmcrjr, So*5«. Cotlor larn, I'sltinr. rtr.
New stock and prices low. Orders prom I'tly attended to. Superior inducements Cash Vuyers, Pedlers,Hucksters and Au'-'.-nnv rs.
148 Main Street.,
Between Fifth and fiixlli Strep'1 In the fc'tere formerly occupicd nv Cox A Son «p!'.)-ilivly
__ MEDICAL.
THE BRIDAL CHAMHEB.
ESSAYS FOR YOUNG MEN
1
t-t —ON
Great Social Evils K'nd Abuses. Which interfere with MARK! A"". with 'utmeans ot relief f«r the Erring .rid br.lorta nate. diseased aid debilitated, cent sealed letter envelopes, fri-of/-barge.
Addrecs, HOWARD SANH^AHY AID AS. SOC1ATION. Xo. 2 SotUh inth St.. PHILADELPHIA, Pa. mylo-dwJm
UNDERTAKERS.
W. COX NELL
f&i C7NDEBT4KEH.
Having pur£h*i-.-4 iMt-C from E. W. Chadwiak, (iruber. Co., *^3 Ljidertaker's Establishment, a-. 1 haring had seven years experience in tiie buxlKtsa, is now prepared te furnish Metalic Burial Cases, Cases. Caskets, and Wooden Coffins, all styles and sixes, from the best and argest stock ol burial material in the State, at Bo. 2 I»orth Third treet, Terre Hute. Indiana.
Terre Haute. May
I S A A A
UNDERTAKER
Is prepired to exccnio all orders in his lin6 with neatness and dispatch, corner ofTbird Ann
Cherry streets, Terre Haute, Iadr iais2o-5-cwf.
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