Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 16 November 1882 — Page 4

§he gazette.

W C. BALL & CO

I Entered at the Postofflee at Tcrre Haute Intl., a* tccond-clastmail mailer.]

VTES OF SUBSCRIPTION:

flatly, 15 cents per week: 65 cents per month $.80 per year Woekly, |1.60 a year

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1882-

MAYBK the comet did it.

IT is authoritively Jtated that Secretary Folger will serve out his present term.

Two years ago the question was, "Who saved Indiana?" This year it will be, "Who lost her?"

IN the Pennsylvania Legislature the Democrats will have a majority of eleven on the joint ballot.

FOR the first time since the Fremont campaign, a majority of the Congressmen elect in Wisconsin are Democrats.

THE stump orator can now retire again to congenial shades and indulge in remedies hoarseness and bronchial affections.

Democrats get more exuberant joy out of a vietory than any other class living.—[Express.

You bet.

EVKUY state that has a cabinet officer gave the most decided evidence at the elect on oi us distrust of the present adjninibtrution.

IN the case uf Audy Grimes the GAZETTE moves thai it be made unanimous— or rattier the GAZETTE seconds a motion to that effect made by some where near twenty-live hundred vuters of the majorty.

Trtii great red spot which has been visible ou the surface ol the planet Jupiter for si-veral years is reported to be growing fainter, and the early disappearance this remarkable object seems imminent.

CONKLING is trying to create the impression that he waa opposed to Folger and that the reason of his overwhelming defeat was due to that tact. Conk is a brother of tnat disreputable female the initials of whose n*me are Charlotte Ann.

THE GAZKTTE IS fattening its election rooster fur a thanksgiving turkey. The official" returus of Cleveland's vote which they possibly may get through in counk ing iutuiitj, Ail, add the last pound ot flehli to lie already heavy bird.

Joins l. IN i. ut-ui a emphatically that pi o,» -s»« signing his present position 01 Fir^l Assistant in the Treasury De'iaitm. nt. Itesignaiiou is not one of Xho vir uca tor which Indiana Republi. can p. liinnaus are pur ieularly noted.

IK New .jersey the Democrats circulated »h u-o Robeson's district a photograpii oi nis magnificent house in Washington, nit tue inscription, "this is the house KH .t JHCH Roach built." Roach did tin. id i- uouse and Robeson was boaten.

Til'- ihirti' ill of this month has been set sBin by the President ot the United states as da» of tha.iks^iviug. Then will t.ie t^ ol" tau neld, ihe fowls of the an vui tisties ot me sea wish that uo BUI si bad beeu bought of in thiB COUlilrt

Fx h't'AKY Iii.AINII. is reported to liavt prt.soiinl uit-ni at Bosuin one la. *k: "I w^ii ii distinctly luidi nil am in»i a andidate lor "the l'n sue or any other polnical •olDce, s'tM n- uim^ea.i nduce me to be-come-ui..' O f'idil»'

TUK .i pr nuuciat oi geographical tines if fieu diffrtni from what would ei*v w.« r* be ex pet: H1 from the «jell uk congress ol Fr nch geojgtaph CHl i- cieiits ha* adopted the piinC'i tat geographical names—with tew except ons—should be pronounced in tin lucul way.

W M. E. EISOUSH, Uiv AOU oi tits faiher, •will conU:»i. iho election lor Congress--tnau in ihe Indianapolis, tstiiru be was Ix-ateu by Peelle, the pres ni incumbent, by a baud majority. Douglass Jerrold's advice 11 h-youog niau wtio consulted liim conr. r.'ung mitriuiony 13 applicable hre. was: "Don't."

UNTIL. v«ry recently London had no press club. In Berlin, Vienna, Paris, Rome, Madrid, Edinburgh, Liverpool, .Birmingham and Manchester flourishing union- of journalises exist. Ou -lie continent these clubs are maintained quite as much to protect the interests of the craft to turuish pretexts for convivial display^ •»—a————wf

CBGISG from their rejoicing since hi?j defeat, the U. S. Navy io|a man was opposed to besou. The capture, chaining and caging of the Devil himself could sot be more acceptable to honest folk than this relegation to private life of the last of Grant's ld scoundrelly chums co iti Htion oi &>*ot'iation witn

whom was the cause of the defeat of scores cf Republican Congressional candidates last Tuesday.

MEAT at Sidney, Australia, is one shilling a pound. Australian meat, frozen and earned 5,000 miles, is sold in London at sixpence a pound. Prime cuts in IIobsrt are ninepence a pound, and samq cuts of Australian meat are sold in SmithHeld for sixpence. Australian paper object to this, much as American papers object to the same fact here, all due to the working of the natural law, which makes prices least, not at the point nearest production, but the point nearest competition.

OF the 100 Republicans, Readjusted, and Republican Greenbackers in the present House, only sixty-two have been reelected. Of the 133 Democrats, eighty one have been reelected. In other words, ninety-eight Republicans and only fiftytwo Democrats have been left at home. The next House will contain 143 old members and 183 new members. Of the 198 Democratic members, only seventy come from the state which formed the Southern Confederacy. If one-half of those members were Republicans, the Democrats would still have a majority of the next House. There are in the present House twenty-two Republicans and Readjusters from the South, and there will be in the next House, according to the present estimate, only eighly, so that the much heralded Southern movement, notwithstanding the fact that Hubbell's committee put many thousands of dollars into the Southern districts, did not amount to much.

TIIE GAZETTE heartily congratulates itself and the good people of Vigo county generally on the end of the politics for a season. It has tried and it thinks successfully to get through the canvass without violating any of the proprieties ot life, but a political canvass is not cal c.ulated to furnish the atmosphere and the missiles used do make a congenial soil in which the amenities of life flourish beet. It has the satisfaction of feeling that it has supported a ticket which represents the better elements of the Democratic party, dominant now in this County and for all time to come it is fervently to be hoped. It has repelled accusations against candidates on its ticket whom it would trust in all the private relations of life in which it is quite as particular as in the public onesmen who enjoy its confidence and respect and abuse of whom has stirred the fountainp of indignation. Our civilization is something of a failure if our methods of managing canvasses is not reformed.

One of the humors of the campaign has been, the froth and fuss and fury with whhh a weekly Republican paper has snarled and snapped and barked and bitten at the heels ot the Democratic Candidates, as if in demonstration that rabies was an affection not orginating with the lower animals as has been supposed, and all this without arresting any attention or securing the recognition of a kick. Fortunately the people have risen above the point of being annoyed by this sort of thiugand scandalous accusations against men of good reputations must, to carry any weight, he backed by a person of at least as good reputation, on 'tho supposition that the charges are true, as the accused)

CERTAIN PERSONS of delicate sensiblities affect a fear at the growing importance in this country of conventions, wh'cli they imagine rob the people of sjme of their rights. For this tear there does not appear to be any good reason. The term convention is applied th to bodies especially assembled by legislative authority, and to voluntary assemblies of delegates having same change of legislation or policy in view. It in also applied to bodies assembled as tbe representatives of parties, to make nominat:ons to office or settle principles of action. The great conventions held once in four years, though they have no legal or constitutional sanction, nominate the President and Vice President, and by their platforms determine the policy of the country for the next Presidential term. The constitutional conventions held—by those terms designating all such bodies, legitimate or illegitimate, as have framed constitutions or parts of constitutions, either for the United States or for States members of the Union, are generally refered to as being ot the revolutionary period, extend, ing from 1776 down to the establishment of he deral Constitution in 17S9, and as belonging, secondly, to the post revolutionary period—that is, such as have been held since the 4th of March, 17S9. So hat this popular insitution is not a produ of the republic. The custom of holding conventions (one of the most important and most characteristic of the political institutions of the United States) ante-dates the union of the states. The. fir^t convention, after the revolution, met a' Philadelphia in May, 1787, and organized by the choice of Washington as it* Pn sident. On the 17th of September following anew constitution was agreed upon, and submitted to a convention ot delegates in each state for ratification The rebult of this was that the Government was organized and put in operation under the Constitution in March, 1789. The constitution for the states have all been ratified by similar means. The

convention when in session does| not exercise the ordinary legislative powers, and out of this has crown a disputed question whether, when not required by an existing constitutioq to submit the result of its deliberations to the people for their action, the convention is so possessed for the time being of the sovereign power of the state, that it may without such submission put its amendments in force. Thus in May, 1775, the Provincial Convention of Massachusetts, applied to the Congress at Philadelphia for explicit advice respecting the proper exercise of the power it might exercise. This form of Government continued there until the establishment of her Constitution in 1780The real occasion of most of the misconceptions prevalent as to the true character of the powers and good of conventions is due to the error of not conceding that the constitutional convention is an adaptation to constitutional uses of an institntion originally revolutionary, that is, whose methods and principles of action, as well as whose purposes, were alien and hostile to established laws and constitutions. It was a convention by which the power of England was overthrown. The constitutional convention is not above the law, though it is the source of power in the end. Of revolutionary origin, conventions have come to be constitutional and as such are at once the resource of the people and the bulwark of the Government.

GOOD COOKING.

We desire to address a Jew words to the wives of tiie sub-mbtrs of the WEEKLY GAZETTE and, for that matter, lo the husbands, too. The people living in or near the small towns ot this county should act upon what we say, aud the people living in or near the larger places such as Prairieton, Pimento and Riley, should do so promptly.

There has lately come to Terre Haute a Mrs. Emma P. Ewing. She is the Superintendent of the Chicago Training School of Cookery She has delivered several lectures on cookery and has started two classes, to each of which she gave a course of four lecturers on bread making and ano'her course On other branches, such as soup making, sauces, salads, meat and vegetable cookiog and other things. Her greatest success has been in teaching her pupils how to make bread. She flist gives a lree lecture aad this is fblloweJ by four lessons, tho price of the whole four being 1. She teaches those who attend how to make tho very best bread of all kinds and varieties. There io uo mistake about this. She does do it and the GAZETTE affirms that there never was as good bread made in Terre Haute as has been made since she came here, by herself and those she has taught. She teaches how to do this easily and shows that it is just as easy to make good^ light, wholesome, and nutritious bread as to make any kiod. Iler classes here in Terro Haute have been large. She gives the last of this weak to Rockville, and after that to Marshall. When she comes back, and starts more classes here there isjevery reason to believe she will have more than a thousand pupils.

We have published in the WEEKLY GAZETTE reports of her lectures and her lessons so that you whom we are specialy addressing now know what she has been doing. The managers of the GAZETTE have urged it upon her to consent to teach classes in the small towns of Vigo county if interest sufficient was telt in the matter to get up such classes.

We have taken this matter in our o^ hands, for the GAZETTE'S circulation in the county being so large, and it being the one means at hand ot reaching all the people, it has seemed to be a duty we owed to our readers iu return for their many kindnesses to us. If a class of forty in any place in the county is formed who will take tickets at a dollar a piece for a course of tour lectures, the GAZETTE will see that Mrs. Ewing goes there and devotes a week to the work.

We know that no lady and* no "ladyV husband can invest ten times or fifty times the money to so great advantage as in learning how to make the veiy best bread and in doing it easily. If sny lady interested in the matter or her husband will call at the GAZETTE office we will give them all the information needed and place them in communication with Mrs. Ewing.

It ought to be a very easy matter to get up a class of over a hundred at Prairieton, Hartford or Lockport. If a half dozen ladies ill get together aul then take a day or a part of a uay in going about among their friends in the town or in the neighborhood they ought to have no rt oi trouble in gelling a suBleient number to a^ree to take the course. Their husbands and their sons ought to biteh up the best team and drive them about in a work which has for its object the feeding them on the very best things at a co&t no greater and often much ices than muoti worse things.

These lectures and lessons will be given in the evening or at any time most convenient to the class, ilie school bouse or chureh ought to be given for the purpose by the trustee or trustees. The Baptist chapel is used here. Mrs. Ewing takes about with her a small stove and there is no dirt made, ior one of her great points is the cleanliness of all her operations.

We hope all our rtadere will take thig

,~THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE. .•

matter in hand for we are sure among the many good fights the GAZETTE has made for the people of this county .it has never advocated anything of so much real importance as this. Mrs. Ewing's lectures are bright and sparkling and the whole business can be made a matter of great interest during the whole winter

but the neighborhood about every school house ought to organize for the same purpose and we will try and have Mrs. Ewing stay and give a course of less ns in them all if it takes all winter. "We hope to hear promptly from our readers. Let us have a grand rally all over the county by the mothers, wives and daughters in favor ol the very best cookery, which lies at the very foundation of good health. This is a rallying cry which ought to be responded to by every person.

THE family of Jasper Ray, a farmer west of the eity, has been increased lately by the birth of a daughter.

PE&SOHAL

Gov. Hendricks's health continues to improve. Col. W. Thompson left yesterday for New York.' •/.

Mrs. Capt. Wheeler is expected here soon to £pend the winter. Hon. D. W. Voorhees re-turned from the East yesterday evening.

Dr. Laughead will attend medical lectures in Cincinnati this winter. E. O. Whiteman left yesterday lor Kansas to be gone several wei ks.

Col W. H. Fairbanks, wife and son Grant, of Joplin, Mo., are in the city vistiiug

Billy. Baugh has a rooster a year old which never crowed till the day after election.

Henry Ramme, formerly of this place, now on the metropolitan police force at Detroit, is iu town.

Glick, the Democratic Governor of Kansas, was formerly a resident of Bartholomew couDty.

Miss Hart well will return from St. Catherines, Canada, to-day, and will be the guest oi Mrs. Sleight.

Mrs. Huntington Smith, of St. Jxiuis, will be in the city next week, the guest of Mr. and Mis. John S. Beach.

Miss Nora AthonB, one of Seeleyville'a pretty school marmes spent Sunday with her father at the N atonal House.

Mrs. Mitchell returned this afternoon from Fredricks City, Md., where she was called by the death of a siister.

John D. Adams, of Kansas City, is in tbe city visiting hi3 nnmerous friends. He will remain until the last of the week.

Mrs. W. C. Allen, of north Fourlh street, left this rninsr for Danville, 111., lo visit her daughter, Mrs Sherwood D. Myi rs.

Miss Kaufman, of south Niuth street, a sister of P. J. Kaufmsn, is dangerously sick with typhoid lever and is not expected to live.

J. F. Ferguson, of Pierson township, returned home the first of the week from a two wetks' tour through Iowa, on lime lo help carry old Pierson for the Demos racy.

Henry Ramme, ex-chief of police of thisciiy.now a member of the Detroit Me ropolitian police force, is in the city for a week's visit among his friends and relatives.

Captain Edward Bryant took the Diana on a short excursion to-day, bis gue*is being Mr. and Mrs. Belduig and Miss Scudder, of Washington, Indiana, who are visiting him at his home.

Mr. aad Mrs. Andrew Pinnell, of Charleston, 111, have been in ihe city visitiDgfiiendc. Mr Pinnell'sson,James, has bought out P. P. Alischler's butcher shop.

Jndre Jno. T. Sco:t ha* been appo ed administrator of the es'ate ol theMary 31. Jewett, wl.icu is probab solvent and of the estate of Helen -v. wtiien is probably tolvcnt. harmou Miller returned, to Wa^h'ugtin to day, havidg riturned home lVpoi that Ciiy'a lew weeks .since t» a.d tn* Republicans defeat the Democrais, but they didn't "dclen" worth a cent Mr. M. will move his family to the capitoi soon.

I hocftas J. Wood, Congressman elect from the Ninth district, and John E. Lamb, both got their education in the Teire Haute Hi^-h Sehool—two congress men at an election is not bad our High School. What city can beat it?

L. H. Brewster, who left for Denver, Col., two months ago expecting to make that his future home, returned to Terre Haute yesterday and though pleasad with Denver, is inclined to believe that there is no place like the Prairie Citv.

Mrs. Bledsoe, wife of Newton Bledsoe, formerly county commissioner ot tbe Third district and now road superintendent in Prairie Creek township, has t«en quite ill for several weeks with congestion but is now in a fair way to recovery

that'. Jasper Ray. of Eldridge township, Edgar county, 111., has a turkey hen which has been distinguishing herself] lately by turning, in and laying eggs—a thing turkey hens have not been the habit of doing. In tact an instance of the kind is not known by Mr. Kay or his friends. Has anybody else?

1

IN the ninth Missouri Congressional district, including a part of the city ot St. Louis, Dr. J. H. McLean, the great pill peddler and, as if be couldn't kill enough people that way, the inventor of a number of different kinds of cannons, ran on the Republican ticket against James O. Broadhead. Broadhead, it will be remembered, was the law partner of Col. Slayback who was killed by Editor Cockerill of the Post-Dispatch, that trouble growing out of the bitter fight made on Broadhead by the P-D. The fight was a bitterly contested one and, though the district is natarally a thoroughly Democratic one, so vigorous was the fight made on Broadhead by the Post-Dispatch that he was beaten by a small majority. There is a vacancy in •he district occasioned the death of Thomas Allen, the great railroad king who was filling the place and so there was a short term as well as the regular term to be filled. Both men ran for both places. For the short time McLean has a majority of twenty-one and for the long term of over one hundred. It is stated that Broadhead will contest the election and bag alseady taken the initiatory stepe to that, end.

Jerry Cru«e, of frairieton township, raised a pumpkin this a pumpkin this year which

time. We have specially designated pleasured 5 feet 3 inches in circamferthree towns which ought to taka the lead

was ,,is t0

bought it to the GAZETTE office, but it was decayed on the bottom, its great weight mashing it infotiie earth.

David Hilburn died at bis residence in Bu'tle Row Prairie, Prairie Creek Town ship, this, Tuesday morning, of consump tiun. He leaves a child and his wife— the daughter of John Hulton, a prominent citizen of that neighborhood. Deceased waa a good citizen and kind husband and lather, and his death will be keenly felt. The funeral will be on Wednesday.

President W. P. Beauchamp, of the Vigo Agricultural Society, says he did not introduce the resolution condemning the GAZETTE because it did not think the fair last fall was faultlessly managed. The GAZETTK reporter was not present at the meeting but understood a member to say that Mr. Beauchamp offered the resolution of censure, and as he is only one of the board the writer had heard of who had been 'raising a rumpus" about the matter, bad no reason at the time to doubt it.

It should be remembered that the resolution was not adopted.

The continued warm weather our trade

LAMES MPS,

Has been heavier this season than ever before, The rapidity with whicY our coats, dolmans, pelissss, circulars, etc., are go* ing out is evidence that our styles are good and our prices low. I we hive just raseiv?d another full iine of the Celebrated

G. G. SILKS, which for beauty, cheapness and durability have no equal. 9

See our Ladies' Sitch ls and hand bags, bath leather ant plush,

etc.

3

1

Horn stitched handkerchiefs, olain and colored borders, for ladies and gentlemen silk hand* kerchiefs from 25 cents up. Beautiful things in tfos and fichus, Spanish and guipun laces, ornaments, buttons, braids, gimps

BUCKEYE

if8 -, I.

Sixth and ^ain streets

Terre Haute, Ind.

KIDNEY-WORT 18 A SURE CURE

for all dlwaiw of the Kidneys and

—LIVER—

It has apeaUlo action on thiamoat important organ, enabling it to throw off torpidity and feisf tion, gtifnnlmtjTig tho healthy secretion' of the Bile, and by keeping the bowels in frco condition, eflboting Its regular (Uncharge.

Uolorio IfyonoiesuHhrlngflrom •VI CI I CI I IQi malaria, have the ohillc, are bilious, dyspeptic, or oonstipated, Kid-ney-Wort will sorely relieve ts quickly core.

In this aeaaon to olnanno thegyatom, every one shonld take a thorough eoorse of it. (si) SOLD BY DRUQCI3T8. Prlco 81.

KIDNEY-WORT FREE.

8Et.

(|NlMni|miMENT

The Great Healing Remedy^

Old Dr. Pitcher's remedy for Children's Complaints.

ASTORIA

Old Dr. Pitcher's remedy for Children's Complaints.

"EtptdaHy adapUd to ehUdrm." Dr. Alex. Robertson, IOC? 2d Av., N.

•Ftouant, Harmltu and Wonderfully jytMriou*. Dr. A. J. Green, Rojerton, Ind

%Ipn*erto*

a* guperior to any known remedy.

Dr. H. A Archer, 82 Portland AT., Brooklyt

2astorim is not narcotic. Mother*. Nunc and Doctors scree that for SourStomacb Flatulency, Diarrhoea, and Conitipatioi nothing is to prompt as old Dr. Pitcher

CAstoria. By assimilating the food Caitsria gives robust health and nat ml sleep.

(EHTAURjlNiMtN

The Great Healing Remedy.

An Infallible care for RhenmntWm, Sei ttlee. Kenrtlcl*) Woandi, Hurn», Spraini Stiff Joints, Spavin, and Lameness froa uy cense.

P.T.Bnrnnm,

"Among my

always

the groat Showman, gays:-

vast

troupe of Equestrians, Tcatr

•tors, Ilones, Camels, and Elephant*, some si

strained, braised, or wounded. My Su geons and Veterinaries all say, that for casn ities

to men and animals,

efficacious

nothing is

aa Centanr Liniment."

489 fifth Av., New York, May 0th, 1?75.

ftoiMp is Power.

READ.

MOW THYSELF.

THE untold miseries that result from indiscretion In early life tony alleviated and cured. Those who doubt thin assertion should purchase tbe new medical work published by the Pen body Mrl r»l Institute. Boston, enMUCd THE IsC'lhNCE OF LIKE OR, 8ELF-PRESKKVATION. Exhnusted Vliality, Nervous aixl Physical Debility, Premalaie Deolioe In MHD, or Vitality Impaired by the Errors of Youth Or too close application to bUMlneaf, may te restored and munhood renamed.. 258ih edition, revised and enlarged, juit published. ItlsRBtandaid medical work, the best In tbe English language, written by a hytdciau of great experience, to whom wa- awarded a gold HUI jewelled mednl by the National Medical Association ItcontHltiH bountiful ami very expensive ene'avitigp.

800

FREE.

Kew Discovery For Piles.

Anew remedy for this dreaded disease been discovered by Dr. Doming. A single Application will convince the most skeptical of its most won erful healing powers. By calling on Buntin & Arm strong, dru^gifeto.you can obtain sample bos tree of charge, which will satisfy yoa

New Sorghum you can buy the best new Sorghum molasses for 50 cents per gallon of J. R. Chambers.

pngen, more ttinn 125 valu­

able preacr'piIons for all oims cf diBeased, acute and chronic, the result of many yearn of extensive and successful practice, either one of wblch is wortn teri times the irice the uook. B^uud In beautiful KVeneh cloth, embosKed, full gil. Price only |1.26: by mail, postpaid, on receipt of price, illustrated sample six oents. Bend now. THB SCIKNCK OF X.IFB OB, 8KLF-PRESER­

VATION.

is beyond all comparison the moKt extraordinary work on Physiology ever published. There is nothing whatever that the married or single oan eltuer require or wixh to mow but what is fully explained— [London Lancet. TH It SCIKNC1E OF LIFE OS, 8KLF-PKH8KK-

VATION,

1h a marvel of art and beauty, warranted to !e a betier medical book In every fpive that can be obtal ed elsewhere for !oiu»l« tlie prlo or the money will be funded in every lnniniice.—(Anttior. v. —Y( »U NO and M1UDLE AO EI) MEN can nave mucb time,suflerlu. an'* expense by reading the Science of Life, or conferring w'th the Author, who may qe consul!' don all dUeaseii requiring skill and experience., Add rem

Peabcdy Medical Instituteor VV. H. PAHKEH. M. D.

4 Bulrtnch Street^Box.nn, Mnw*.

ISTIF you are not a »ub-t ib already this py of the WKKKIA GAZKTTE IB uiet&ute<i you with tin I pe that you will lo»k it over. It c« »»•«ni nt* each week a comj let-- review of all (he trnnsacti'infi ot the seven days jutst pttel. The GAZETTE in a mt-mber of the Au-ociated Pres-, :tn advantage enjoyed but one other weekly h- re, and prints »IJ the dispa'clx*, la-hide lull local report?, and mifu'ellantou* matter. It enes a telegraphic market report, the Ii-'tiannpoliH live stock marktt and the Ti ree Haute irk«:l, and tiny can ail be rtii«i on aa correct

It confalns ni»re reading mniter lhau any I cm llau compelit'-r. ifyou like tb raot wt quest that you caiJ and g've a t"al

CU^lOUitii rermaneiiuy Cure* la mors of the Scalp and Skin Cutleu^a rrmedlex are for KHIS* by alt drugging. Price of Cuticura, a im:'lleinal jelly, mnnI boxe*,50c large box?-, i. i:ntlcura Kesolveiit, the new blood ,r fl^r, ft perl'itle. ic raMedirinnl Toilet Hoapi 25e. Outicura M». •jlnaltihavin

t-o.i

In bars for burbem id large consciners, Me, Principal rlenot. WEKKH A POrTER, Boston. Mass. *9~All mailed free on receipt of price.

000,000acre on tbe lino of tho WISC0181M OKITRAL R.

ooo,

II A

Addren,

LHL Full partlcuiai

CHAHUSL COIBY.^J^ Land CommlsB'ner^® MILWAUKEE,WIS. TM wpgopygnf.'^

luwnship Trustees

Will please take notice that I wii! liavi row on hand the largest and ck, of school house stoves ever brought Terre Haute, which I intend t' sell lower in price than anybody. Call at 303 Mail street and see for vounelf.

R. L. BALL.