Terre-Haute Weekly Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 May 1869 — Page 4

THESMM

PXKK COUNTT JAIL i« withbut an occur pant,- y~~~ I

GEN. TBRBELL hue ton. MI

to Washing' 4

Vtnitpt will ba in Indianapolis^n the first of June.

NOTRF^

COMMMCMBHX -exercises at Dame will take place Juno 23d.

CiTT PBIBOKMS, in Evansville, regularly worked on the streets. .,...

THK recent race between a horse and a velocipede, at Indianapolis, resulted inj "cleaning out" thepede., 1

NEXT

wil) be observed AS Decoration L&YJ'LS parts of tb© State-

SOMB smart Democrat ought to be sent to Indiana to teach the HooaierDemo CRATS the bolting trick.—Cm.Gazette. ft

WABASH COLLKGK has had 188 stu-j dents in attendance during the year end-J ing May 1st. "J 'J. -.JR.: V"'31—-—''•

THE Central A^SOQWTIOB} OT TTNIVFIT•alista will hold

their

annual session in In-I

dianapolis next month.

RECENTLY a Tipton hog climbed teen footladder, and established hinjself IN A

corn. T..O,

*SXM8 A. COU..T, A well-known citijta

O1?"Indianapolis/ IN* of the bar, died of consupaplw AT RESideuce in that city on the 80th inst.

IT IS stated tbat Olaude -DeBruierformerly local on about to 1)'uy AN in\erest ,in ^NE, of the Rockport paper**nd assume, the

CHAIR"

———

THE Coroner's Jury in the case Martha Smith, 'INDIANAPOLIS, have.Signed. a\erd!ct exhon$ratipg HER JjusbanA FROM «11 charges .OF crime in connection with

her d«iath.A mi -«i

refreshment.

Two PROMINENT citizens of Indianapo lis, who quarreled twenty years ago, and have not exchanged a word since, have been reconciled through tho influence of the great revival.

for stove wooci.,. T.»..

A SON of Satan, named Robert Lemas ters., of Decatur county, has B^EN arrested and held to bail in the sum ,.of $500, for an attempt to outrage the person of young girl about fifteen years of age, named Annie Petors. *!.•

GBMKBAL JAMBS O. VEATCH, of Spen cor county, has received the appointment of Adjutant General vice, W. H. H. Ter re 11 resigned. General Veatch,.WILL make an effioiont officer, and his appointment will give universal satisfaction, W*•»»

WHILE the steamer Clara Scott was lying at MT. Yernorn, on Wednesday night, discharging freight, Henry Axton a young man from New Harmony, who was a passengor on the boat,fell from the gang plank into the riTer, between the steamer and tho wharf boat and was drowned.

A MAN living north of town

one of the now

have,nqt

———

MIBS.IiizzxK LACKY, a eighteen, residing in Martin .xamnty, RE-R cently walked forty-five" milei IN' tWelVe hours, incluHlng seVeral'stopsT^RES^D.

———

J. KIBKWOOD was arrested*at Decatur near Fort Wayne, on Thursday and tak en to Pennsylvania, where he is to be tried for the murder of A. Knowl«S, one month

TOM BoTDT of Hoore,e Hill, JBA3_BEEN SENT"TO the ponitentiaf^-^rom—Kipley county, for a term OF four years, for com mitting an outrage on the person of A tlo,girl OBOIV^fourteen years of age.

was ysing

patont

cutting boxes a few

DAYS since, and cut his -finger into five pieces at one motion. Ho put tho pieces into his pocket and brought them to the doctor and wanted them "put together nnd stuck on again." He remarked that he didn't mind tho cutting much, but "it sounded so bad when the cutting knives worn grating through the bones, I hated to hear \t."—Mchmo7ul Radical.

MR. JOHN ROIIREK, an old

c'nauge.

citizen of

Bartholomew county, for a few years past living with his

south of Hartavillo, on Tuesday nigjit last week, got up from his bed, and jumped out of the window, causing, his death the following night When taken up and asked why he did it, lie replied that he was "tired of living.1'' The old gentleman had been a.rospected member of the United Brethren church FOR" the last twenty years, and was_eighty-flvC years old when he died. He leaves large number of children" and grandchildren,—^:

FROM "esiU" published* M^THO^NATY anapolis papers, we make .the, following extract:

There will be a W oman'sSuffrage Convention held in this city on the 8th and 9th of June.,.

JYLFE .O(,L J^TAU,COP».

I^^^65^64J5BMALI1H* 'diysago, bylftnglng her«elf.XIFLER husband WAS SUBJECT to fits, AFCD it supposed that this, fact so weighed upon heir mind as to induce her to commit the deed. :"5.

ON nread'TTY'' RITEH' two young ladies, naqaed Anna McGowan and Huldah Daw«on','attempted to commit suicide at the RESIA^NCE of Mrs. Dawson, on Floyd streeiTbetow Tenth, in this city, by taking laudanum.* The thing was iurand

failure.

The girls claim that they were

induced to commit the act from disappointrtent in love.—Neio Albany Comvner--I-"-" 'T

,LAST Friday'someboys who were playIJNG on the arm of- the canal, near the GALLON I^.. Pupor Mill, Indianapolis, ditT

COHERED

^ATUBDAY, instead of, Sunday,!

the water,

tjbe body of a

man

in

^AAPUTTTNEQ was procured and the body T&kon ctht and moved to the undertakers, •WHERE H'

COFFBOTH, the virtuous, proposes,JP move TOJIEW- ALBANY.^A.J2A8.ISIPR operations towards A seat in Congress.

soriiBehnet, a cooper, who had not lived with'his Wife for a year

had frequently threatened to commit suicide. His body had evidently boon in IHAWATER THREE or*fiur days".' &• T..-J

JIIS BBI-ATIOK to eoveral rccent attacks upon the management of the JbffersonyiJle Penitentiary, the Indianapolis

iRiecentl

ERN

"m wi h'iavo

read several ac­

counts in the JLouis.ville and one or two of our State ifSpere, reflecting somewhat severely on TLJE management of THE Soutb-

Prison. Knowing Col. Sbuler, the presont every effiojpht .Warden, intimately, WE have been unwilling to give the slightest credence' to these reports and

cqnSidered it necessary to notice

THHRTI'through tho columns O€ tne Journal. 'An old and reliable,reaident of Jeffersonvlfte,' who is in a'condition to know fully "TS^.O'tbft. managemient.of the" Prrsonj' tp-

U?TLHAT the .'charges",against,,,,ithe

Warden are not only uojust butthat they are put lhrward by malicious persons for tnei-e and sfiiteful .PURPOSES^ The peneral management and discipline of the Prison'have, heen very much improved by,.Col.

fort to

'Fire.,C:

^LIFOLANAEOLJA/IMAY !22.~'I?Be Ameri can foundry, owned by D. C.' Hill & Co. New Albany, Indiana, WAS partially destroyed by fire this afternoon. JTHE heavy machinery WAB riot much damaged. In euranc^'op.building and machinery $9,000, which,JYJLL fully cover t,he

JPROCLAMATLOQ BYTL)^ President ^^^SMOTOIF, M»Y 2i.—By the Prcsi dent of the U. S. of America, W 1' -'A. PKOCTAMATION. ™,

WHEREASI^HFR aCt o? Gongress. approved iJan.,25th', constituted on, and after that day eight hours A day's work -for ALL -laborers," workmen and mecha'nics, !en)ploved by.or on behalf of the govern INTENTDMBQ FT°D fepealod all.^acts lana parW of'acts in consistent thereto.

Now.^hSrefore, Ii,TT/:'KT' Grant, Presi dent of' the UFLITEDISFATEJI, do hereby di Tect that fronx*nd: after" this date no re duction sb&IR'be^made'LN the wages paid by the Governmen,Vby the day, to euch laborers, workmen and,mechanics, on «c count of such redfl6tibn "of' the hours of labor.70'' V, IN testimony whereof, I have hereto set my hand and caused the seal of the

Uniied States tebo affixed!, PONE at the City of Washington J.he 19th day of May, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-nine,

1

A HARBISON COUNT? youth administer ed a sound thrashing to his aged parent few days since, because the old man ob ieoted to his cutting up a scythe handle

Senter nnd

of Chicago, has promised to be here and address tho Convention. We also expect Lucy

ted speakers from abroad, and we have A number of our own citizens from different parts of the State who will speak*and work not only for tho success of the GenventioD, but of the cause.- A •.*, OTM -ail LO -L JJT!# 3

THE railroad

bill, the Agricultural

sr. WB are not quito sure that the tbreo bills mentioned are "the tbre« inost important acts of the session,' but we are sure that John Stein was one of the mo3t able, and useful members of tho Legislature,and hope, for the credit of the Slate, that

his services in that capacity are not AT' SACUcs »-L-. I

JL. UFA&X& JVJUUUICL.

of the independence, of TBO United States the93d,.1 •'[SIGNED]^ U. S. GRANT.

BY the President HAMIXiT6N FISN, Secretary of Stale,

Tennessee Republican Convontion. NIATTTXITB, May 21.—The Eepubhcan •STATE Convention met at half-past,ten thiCihornin^.' So SOOP as the doors were Opened there was a ruah for seats, and, a race between Gate, Chairman of the ES* ^CUTIYE jCommittee, AN^D Pearne, for the chaiiv The'jatter got possession and callED'JITHE.^onventfon to order. Cata did LIK^?ISD.!:' Somo ONE'moved to adjourn sine die.

Poarne and Cate put the motion simultianeouBly. and declared it carried. Pearne vacated the chair, when it was immediately taken "By R. B. Butler, a supporter of' Stokes, who called the con Vention to ordor again.

Attempts were made to organize, whereupon the-aoisy and tumultuous scenes -ef yesterday were re-enacted. All.business was prevented by boisterous cheering, first by onejpafty, and then the other. A number o'F^eecheswere made during intervals* of quiet, but they were of a criminating and recriminating character and made the broach between the two section! wider.

Finally, about tWo o'clock P. M., worried out,another motion to adjourn sine die was Carried, and the delegates retired Without-having effected an organization:

Thnspiit WAS on.the.e!ection of TEMPORE ary chairman. The report^ of S^NT^R'S. intended withdrawal, inoniioned yestorday,was without foundatjonT.-lie is in tho hands of his friends, whohavo called a. convention tonight LO jnoruinate him.

The friends"^ of Stokes have also oallod a convention to night. It' lis' probable that there will be two Republican tickets.

The opposition,it is reasonably certain, will have ro ticket, the policy of that party being neutrality.

parties of their supporters. Senior said thoday would come when tharebels should bo enfranchised, but it WAS, a long way off. Stokes declared in favor of giving rebels who remained at. home and behaved themselves, the right of suffrage.

Senator Sprague. is announced for a speech here Monday.

BROTHER MOODT has appeared

nojw

role.

ijoVJourtiat. FI'TU I'i

Col­

lege bill, and the bill authorizing Savings Banks to BE organized—the three^m'ost important acts of the sossion were intro ducod by Senator Stein.-LoFcyetis Ctur-

===== BRIGHAM YOUNG breaks ground for the little branch road that is to run southerly, from the Pacific Railway to Salt Lake City as bravely as if it were not sealing the fate of his peculiar community.— There have not been wanting hot heads who sought to have the Government set- tle the Mormon problem by war, but the authorities have wisely seen that passenger cars were better than battles. When the flood of railway travel across the con- tinent is once fairly poured into the Salt Lake basin, whatever dangers the isolated Mormon comunity may have threat-

ened are at an end.

that

FIE4

The Kaot Matrimoniil I« TIED BY THE^F. F. VS. From the Baltimore Commercial.]

This morning, in despite of the falling rain, THE F^IE^' Meeting Bouse, at the northeast CORMT of Eutaw 'and _Monu. ment streets, was filled dbwn stairs and up, by a large and fashionable congregation, who .had gathered together to witness the marriage of Mr. Nathaniel Cren-shaw,-bf.Bichmocd, and Miss Lizzie Joliffa, of this city, I The groom and bride took the front seat facing the body of the Church with the tbolher and uncle of the brido to bar left. The attendants occupied seats immediately in front facing the happy couple.

The bride was dressed iu white satin with long.train,' trimmed handsomely.— She Wore a'wnite bonnet with orange flowers, and a white opera cloak trimmed with white satin. Her dress was rich and elegant, and 'she ,W»S indeed a fair and b&utiful bride to look upon. The groom was attired in a fashionable suit of black with white dravat' and glover There were Ave bridesmaids and groomsmen

F,or some .time the happy couple, evidentiy'in3{RT eraed ^jth.th'E Importance of the occasion,Yaat in/deep silence and without motfon,' tb? bride with ber eyes cast down to the ground. Amid the breathless silence that prevailed, they stood up, and Mr. Crenshaw, taking his affianced by lha hand, said in a firm voice, words to about tho.following, effect: "I take thee, Elizabeth Joliffe, to be my wife, and I promisjB'.by Divine assistance to be to thee A loving and faithful husband until death do ur part.4' To which she replied: "I take thee/NathanielPrenahaw, TO be my huaband, and I promise by Divine assistance tobe a loving and faithful wife until death do us part.1'

Mr. Francis 1'. King then read.adeclaration to tbe purport that tho parties had declared Their in tedtToh before the religious society,andhad the consent of their surviving parent?, and their marriage was 'allowed at said.meeting, and that they had appeared in a public meeting and there made the declaration to be husband and

WIFK This declaration was then signed by the groom and bride, a table with pen and ink being placed before them. Mr. King'thejr read further that the declaration had been signed by both, she taking, after the inarrisge custom, her husband's

name,

Sbuler, AND HE sparing no ef­

make his administration of its AT

fairs 'ft AILL-snd complete success.

that the ramrod with draw the bullet. While the rest of the party were expressing their admiration, a crafty old Mara- bout, who had some suspicion of the true nature of the trick, said: "The stranger is doubtless a strong magician; will he

"Now fire," he said. The Arab did so,

suffer me to fire at him with my own pistol?' "Yes," said Houdin, unhesitatingly, "but first I must make invocation to those who assist me."

The next day he met the same party, and offered a saucerful of bullets to the inspection of the Marabout. Satisfied that they were lead—as indeed they were —the Arab handed his pistols to Houdin who loaded them, using the Arab's ram- rod. His own friends were in terror, and even his wife, well as she knew his skill, was in perplexity when she saw him hand back to the Arab one of the loaded pistols.

and Houdin was seen with the bullet be-

the other pistol, "you cannot use your

Olive

.Stokes spoke InsL night to

in a

At the last meeting of the

Young Men's Christian Association, the question of applying a moral character test to applicants for membership was discussed. "Brother Morton said ho did not believe in contaminating the society by introducing thieves and blacklegs among its members. But the saintly Moody deolar«d, "This is a financial question, and wo want all tho^money we can get." At the same time' the Association considered the propriety of admitting ladies to membership, and the vote standing eight to eight said Moody decided the question in the negative. Considering the latitude he is wilTfnglb allow FOR MED no real lady! will at all regret tho decision.—Cfoca.

tween his teeth. "Bah!" he said, seizing

own weapons. See here. You have been

unable to draw blood from flesh, and I will draw blood from yonder wall." He aimed at the wall, fired, and immediately a stain of blood was seen. The Marabout went up to the wall, and when he had dipped his finger in the blood which was trickling down, his awe and amazement were so great that his features assumed a ghastly hue. Yet the trick was simple enough, two prepared bullets having been skillfully substituted by Houdin for

the leaden bullets he took up from the saucer. But the experiment was quite new, and Houdin tells us that he trem- bled, and could scarcely control his terror, he saw the Marabout drawing the trigger of the pistol. =====

Olive Logan Arter tlie,Managers.

Logan gives her o'pfhion of the

theatrical profession and Of managers in a noto to tbe

Can

has any idea of scandaling ft profession which she defended "before an.^audience of three thousand of the most puritani al people to be found in New England," and charges that when girls now go to a theater to apply for a situation they havo to answer a series of questions, of which the following is the substance' 1. Is'your hair dyed yellow9 2. Aro your logs, arms and bosoms symmetrically formed, and are you wif ling to expose them? 3.

,you sing brassy songs, and

dairce the Can-Can, and wink at men, and give utterance to disgusting half words which mean whole actions?

4. Are you acquainted

with any rich

men who will throw you flowers, and send you presents, aud keep afloat- dubious rumors about your chastity 5. Are you willing to appear to night, and every night amid tbe

lights and before the gaze of thousands ot men, in this pair of satin breeches ten inches long, without a vestige of drapery on your person?

It' you can answer these questions af, firmatively, we will give you a situation, It' not, lhsre:s the door.

======

Louis NAPOLEON

has

always had a

creatideal to say about "Liberty" and '•Ideas'—words which he practically translates into 'Imperialism" and "Faith in tho Napoleonic

t.ake a littio

trying to suppress

by governmental force

the ebullition which his frequent words have excited and his course belied. If he would gain a hint toward wisdom, let him

look at his neighbor Prancis

Joseph—A man ia every way his opposite —born to a throne taught wisdom by adversity andjnow stranger than ever in his divine right to rule because he recognizes the people's rights to a free existence.

Mr. BMlwdlMMNNiaMMiaMM-'

3b the Editor of the Cincvmai^iStrmieU: I notietfyoor brief article on

word.5

/A^D .signing ,,h#r new name of

Crenshaw. Dr. TTAMOS Qarey Thprpas then deliver 'ED

^For Gddliuess

is profitable

to all things,

having possession of this world and the World to"'come.*' The address had direct reference to the ceremoriy which had just taken place.— -Tho:beautiea,of religious life were forci bry portrayed. After this address a yen erable lady prayed for the happiness of -the young couplo. This prayer was followed by another from an elderly member of .the society. The bridal party thenil^FT the churohjta THE, center aisle, the groo*m and bride

Hrst, followed in

until

suc­

cession by their attendants. They entered their carriages in front of the church and proceeded at once to the residence of the bride's mother, at the northeast corner of Franklin and St. Paul streets, where they' received their friends from 12 o'clock until 2. Numbers of their

friends called upon them to wish them joy and happiness. =====

Conjurors' Pistol-Trick. THE sad fate of Dr. Epstein, the Paris conjurer, who was, wounded by a splinter of a ramrod discharged from his own conjuring pistol, illustrates (says the London Orchestra), what Robert Houdin has insisted upon in his book—that magicians possess no ordinary bravery to stand before the muzzle of a pistol, knowing how slight a mischance may bring them face to face with death. Houdin himself used to play with danger with an entirely needless assurance. He relates how once he had performed some startling fire arm tricks before a party of Arabians, making use, of course, of the ordinary form of conjuring-pistol, which is so contrived

vance in Q6VUT: Ue natural effect of the policy of Mfc.Bootwell and the Eastern capitaliiU toi«ubordinate everything to an advancain the price of bonds. Thii waf the tiar"po8e pf the "Public Credit bill th»l^he purpose of the "Sinking Fond project."— They aeem to care nothiog for the price of our current, if alone the bonds rise in nominal TaW& Thia is well enough for the bondholders, but isyery injjarious to the'people. While the Tnoney'of the laborer shrinks in purchasable power, the security of, the bondholders rises, measared even by, gold. The true policy is precisely the.?werse—^We have nothf ing to do with" the bonds ~except to pay the interest. We are not .booid to strengthen them by plasters, nor pak»a demand for them by buying a miUion a

What does need the care of th^Srierietary of the Treasury is

That is depreciating because there

is

less

asefor it. Gold contracts are superseding currency contracts daily. If Mr. Boutwell will psy a portion of the debt now due, instead of the debt not due, he~will do something to promote common, honesty, which is daQy aisraritded

by |he con­

tinued and continuous depredation of the currency. If he wants to prevelt "the advance of gold," or rather the deprecia-i tion or the currency, let him fcbW'btf surplus and sell his milliohs-of gold a "week for currency, and hold it. Theh the time will soon come wheh a dollat'of o'ur paper money will be a dollar in fBCt,*and not a lying promise to pay a dollar.^ 'V'

SBSSSSSB5SB

WB presume that the Directors, of tjie Atlantic Telegraph Company Will .And the new reduction'bf tolls profitable, jdst as the previous reductions-have been.— The minimum charge for a message of ten words or less is now $16 85 under the revised tariff, which""goes into enact pp^ihe 1st iol June, it will be $10., The aver^g« per word on long messages will b.e,redU' ced from $1 68 to..$l, and the charge^on press messages will be only 50 cents p|r

=====

.1

..ASBASBBABABAAII TOL TVA W.. PIAIN Talk. The Bishops of the Methodist Episcopal Church/South, are. quite right in rer fusing to come back into fellowship with tbe IS orthern branch of the same church. They assert that fratefnal Fela?iotfs™mus1 be restored before, if at all, such a proposition can be entertained. True, slavery, the root of the schism, has passed away, but every branch of the Church ^t the South stands charged with its criminality. Its cloak covered'the master while he robbed, murdered and violated. While the shrieks of tbe oppressed cri^L-tp heaven, these sons of the devil, gkrb«yi|i priestly robes, shouted their hallelujahs and amens, as if to.divert Dfyine atten^ tion, by their abominable hypocrisies. SueK men are utterly unfit to fellowship witE the good and true men who compose. the Methodist Church at tbe orth. Bishops Simpson and Janes deserved-ta be 'snhiP bed for making brotherly overtures. Slavery wiped out does not absolve thee?, responsible for it from their guilt, especially when they tried tbeir utmost to prevent its abolition. The churches which christened slavery a divine institution, are no more fit for holy communion than tbe cruciflers of Jesus.— Chicago Journal. ....

Long Branch is now styled the summer green-room. L'A U\ Blackberries are plentiful in the Mobile market,at ten centsa quart..-,

Nearly 4,000 persons, starved to death in the great city ofXondonlast year. V_ ftVJ

The number of lunatics in France is said to be equal to the number' of soldiers, -v Watermelons, brought from South Carolina, are in the New York market,

New Jersey is already smartfn^tTndeF' a mosquito raid. Railway travel in Eagland has increased 44 per cent. IX II '*'01 '•!DZ-CJI'

The San Erancieco LA^OR Exchange has furnished employment for 16,500 person^during the past YEAR.*^*^^^^

Of the religious periodicals of tha United States, sixty are Baptist and. fifty-four Methodist. 4 M.

At Lynchburg, Va.. the other day, a span of horses were sold by weight, bringing tw,enty-two and a half cents a. pound.

It is a penitentiary offense in New York to fail to pay a hotel

tion.

The Philadelphia Press urges tbe streetrailway companies of that city, to furnish music in the park six days: A week at tbeir own expense, and says the invest^ ment would pay. *OS« NI.H-V.XVM.?« U»,

An Iowa paper zealous LJF

In England and Wales there are about 3,000,000 women between the years O£ twenty and forty, and of this number 1,248,000 are unmarried. The question is, what will become of them? Y.IS RJ A

•u:if

Food for cattle in tho 'ribrthern"pirt'OF Vermont is scarce. One farmer has lost six of his cows of starvation. Hay is $30 per ton, and the roads are so bad that

A Honolulu letterof April 22 says that tbe feeling in favor of annexation to tbe United States is increasing rapidly. The last census

that, ^AT TIMMFOL $geUtfi DN^ITTOBARG. the ETTN^R^IM*MNMN a bonded warehouse cavad in, with hundreds

sttt tMe

REEEH^case, andtnilwVeral

la shipwrecks«nd^AD

M»J«per

TOCHEFTFRIT^B IAHOIIEJMISS &ate

THE sequel of the Water-street, reviyal of last Pall is told ,by its manager,- Mr. Oliver Dyer, who asserts that, the,jentire aspect of the street has bee^x^A^gecl, dance house?, dog, pits and rupxshbps have been closed on'profitless, Kit Burn:weeps over his bad luck and John Allen., has been expelled from .tbe haunts.. Among other results which Mr. Dyer attributee to the good work and earnest prayers of the revivalists are the death* "since ttie prayer meeting was inaugurated" of poor Ourley, Pogerty, Brooklyn Johnny, Soger Brown, Missis Bride.and ScotchJklason." This is'a credit ,* hich we .presume the ministers who engaged in t,hat .work will hardly claim, and we cannot see that the credit belongs precisely to then?.— N: Y. Times.

whisky barrels split apart and pouring^

NPHEWTHE g^aTcVowd SMSXEFR"S the scene attestpt«L to indulge ln^itbe ('free drinks ', |O ^BERSOJY provided. AU were intensely interested in the, efforts making FOR (he rescde BR THREE meh'tVriea under the rains,

that kind would BE LIKELY^

manity ITHOROHGHLY checked the ordinary

Co

shoir.—

Amid'thi^iriiwinglsriti^andseir-In-dulgencies of civillzatioev ^t eertaiely is encouraging to notioe.jthe frequently FEcurring. examples of ^sol£.resU»int,44N tithes OF perH or great'TnUreetl' lileo the

sobriety TJBY large-cossp«ai«€of :meni-?-The FFORLD.JJI^.altogether ^O^LG down

bill:

=====

Lisc.ov i,a^p|K|9,remaining unclaimed ill,,Oflttco,, V. :T ... ^FLAJRAIOJATE, May,22,18«^.

JTNDERWA «LB Murpl,y

Safer WIS* «tl« 2

S8SSSDSB"'' HASSFFIASE"""

Till.Mrj

MrflUn JIIJIA LFFIIIMMN FIMH

Fliher Mil*Henrietta BogeriUrsMO Harmon HN Hulha Sp»agler HUIA Millta

HIAGMITAMRV*' SILI AUWATTMUS ALICO -. Howell Miss A Shirley Mr Ann OBMMTMMNAIRATIEUA'''' Blfcmmons MIN A E Iule Miie Sarah ,, SELTOR*UZ* JeWill Ml»»* Bachel Smith ri Sarah JOTCE,ML«* #ennie I Qmitli MiM

N

«SOALES S*RAH O, .. .. •I

W

Taylor Mies Moll KoTotiieMre Apnte.R THOMAS

Mrs Lollle

Mfchau ML« MalUatOl R: W»ld*A F-a&nM M^reton Mand ,, W»llace Mre J«n»ie McKlngfeMreB A'

£T*Wlk*r'Mlss

JULLI A

HcBrid«MnJIn(H BWINJIINGHAM Mi«« CelU Meagher HN JOHN

Wbitmor* Mls«Ida

MINORMMNIOI QiWileoaOlara Morrison Mr» A Williams Bebecca Mulllne Mlee lii zie

I' LIBT.1'

•AKEN »N: 10 :.cKilbodra« Id Andrews Wm LaveDder ». -fifejiander '8 JJ «Q°FL LEGPTT

'BUIJD lowelO BALDWIN Hal

has

*ELIW I* ...„,MiUer,Jo«eph

B«I*SIITERCHA'A'T'!IUBGI Pitrle Soeeph' T___ VTAAF VFLVM sir

O^K J,A IA:A7 Bostalt Sibley U-,JKUT SUABIE'I^ Carter John .-•-»» Oiaig SaTld 0^ t7.

fiolton Beiaer Jacob Dyer Mich AT 1

..ATD-B

JN.

Gleanings. 3.:.' TY

has been passed sinco

thp

July conven*

A statute of Massachusetts forbids the second marriage of any person from whom divorce was obtained on ground of adultery.

A $190,000 diam ond-has been fotind at' tbe Cape of Good Hope —The native who pickod it up sold it for 500 sheep, 10 oxen and a horse.

A century plant ia now in flower FRI'D nursery at Rochester, N. T. The buds broke and Qrst showed itself on'the 25th of April, and is how over four feet high, and growing from three to four inches A dfcy*

tion is rapidly decreasing and the foreign element even more rapidly increasing. SB-

A San Francisco paper says that the fare from that city (775 miles) to the end of the Central route, is greater than from the end of the Central via Omaha and Chicago, to New York, 2,326 miles. The

Central charges ten cents per mile in gold, of $77 80 to Salt Lake.

1

A I $ awitlter ?N. eiqca wtnandlnhn .NAIF-

Jo'HBB'an JoUn

,,,","11 "A WinindJobn

K«L% WM 'IV TVWTE KeaneOW Kelly take Kflleher.Martia LTE£FC:WG2

0 Winceoried Cbristy WUson E ono,.Wooil

Catarrh, Throat Diseases, chilis, Asthata mid CoHtuttpii tion treaUdby a JVkw Meth•t od thai is emintsUty

A valutbf* Journml GITRIHF tymptomtof

full

INFORMATION

of

1

Woods Tank

King O .'16^ ,'VYQWobd»Hogh 'X. A. BUBNBTT, P. M.

W. MAND, 56 Main W. corner of Old Court, House,

IHO hfghfet cub price'for

G(

all kinds of

Prtiuce, such ae B^GS, Butte'r, PonltTy, dressed, Bags, Feethor*, Applee,. Potatoes, ions, Dried Frnit and-8moked Me»t. WILL alio bay Seeds of all kinda—timothy, Clover. Flax,

With a Urge-stack

:of

hand,

Groceries always

OUR^OTTO

oil

If, to sell at a small profit and

nick sales. Call snd see for yourselves. 3ffly

k. GIFFORD, V. S. Treats all

Tro»t» all I -B

Diseases of Horses and Cattle.

Hospital and OFFLDE, corner1 of 5th and Kagle Sts .1 ,V" 6ct9wly TEBBB HATtTK, INDIANA,

omli.V. JuL'-,eji*n»«b ifo VT JF&J IRON WORKS, -rtir

COBNEB FLBST AND WALNOT ST«EKT»,"li"i' TKBRK HAUTE, IND.,

WM. J, BALL & CO., Proprietors,

(Srcoassoas ifd" Josian' GBOVIB.) MANCFACTITBBBS

Portable Stationary^Engines I

rLOCBINQ AND SAW MILL MAVHtKBBT,

A

E S!

deVotedT fo'

the cause of temperance, recemmenda the keeping of a small-pox patient in each lock-up, as a means of preventing drunkenness.

E

WaUAI

CASE CULTIVATOK. I •'»«. »««th, Philadelphia.

This Biding Plow was introdacod asia this

section^ lest seastn, and and has givon each per­

fect And.eatlre satisfaction that we do not heel-

tsto to rcommond it highly and ask the attention

of farmers to its mf«its.

It ii fnilrelj- dliferiut'in its operation froin the

Backoye, Hawkeye, Farmers or any ,-caitiTator

wehavo ovor seen, -and wtK ^ot be thrown In the

fence corner, as miny otherB have been. It is

easy to operate, so easy that a bry years'old

can do as good work, and twlee ai m'Oc& of it

can not be carried to the farms except in small bundles. •QIri 'IF! HTA3-

makin tho ordinary way. 'It is a go.'d thtog

and ii 'w A SRa'kT£D AB BB PBjESEHTKD.

TBE BLESSING €0BIT PLANTER"!

ftansthc Labsr ef Oae Baal

9ro»S tte torn With Pertfct Resnlarlty! },-: 'J.I'''? I F, Is A Oiie-Homo Planter

COSTS ONLT #10.S0.|

Clrcalars spBtaining cuts and fnU.dwcriptloni "of the above, sent on application.

TW0-H0BSE COIN PLANTERS! CORN DRILLS., JOMS &

JONES,

Farm Implements,

East Side Publlo [Square,

.TQ?«r .iaii TCBBC BAUTB, IBD. JIW'.I'.'J-T.

RTH»«.W^^M^L,^POFURN»»HJD|«

thoto who writo'fpr

repentterri-

IRA*.

Dr

wtth-fortitudeaikd

HALS

Will MI'IM.!

SLO^MLAAAV^LS.

MlM Mkrj

0

^SERINS MSI 3

BZADY XUWTMTB J9«BARA Miu LACIM}* Btlloa HADTRN'M T?HlUips KRA M»rth» -£«LKAA^HMV«UIA a 4K«CEIKVLLJ Brookbankl MLU MkggiePool MIAI MARJ (MRMT HIA^K MrS L««ii0er SASSS8SSF»»4SS!LN5FFIY

•a-

W O

9

'a W.

03, a

KatunbachMraAnn Soulee Mrs Cl*ra KMTMMNVTAALE 1W '{SchboaoTer MJIE TTA Leach

ci dr? jr jd

-fck st eS OjS

9.

tt

0

?s a

4%'Am*

J*

li .rs

a

The Best ia the Cheapest

—IH-

PB. W. F. DECKKBMALFS

HLOOD 0ONDIT1ON

for

I DIno Maatertcm Ar.~ A .V,

agas?*.«.

SSS&"1 «*8«w JIOROIW HCNRY |FIW *ED»ri»THOSP Bfira LTF'FTJOTTQ. Mills SB

O# OT JA&AI MILIAR JA

Hones. Hogs and

TBE

HOST

Tot

|Z9S,aA

.Quick A

D9 Bobbadeaax Joltkn" Bandolph ETI)LIP

A

-:FTIli Jicat&rtey6

Boot

TA1 -J 1-

Baton _„R,CT,5»IH,MMPNY- ,„P Sli?rJJamee W 'J 5!HOH'AOLLDG-IR

WM SbeeU JOBC

TonkboaeerBen] .. -J-, Stewart MATTBEWR Flovera DA^FD Sllva'JIBN-' AGR®II«"« B»SAB55AS.^.' Oriffln Stoskton

tfaje Saml Bavrle

ltisa

FranceEB SauodejeOP Farmers 2 SteyensWillis Fliher

ir,l JF.SS XMHYLTAUU«.

HARR^B Hitbotn'JobsRVS FIFLKWITTTFMTIAEE TJ2SX Mattley JV E$ .JSIOTWAB S«.,, ~JS IOQ STICKS Moses -. J^ALDM fiSrVell'Sylreater" I HAATERF^ED UU tat Dennis

,AC«I AC. J...... ANIUPSFJI'KBL Aeape-

•WLU' ^RETONT Ooll rata ti^e health aad etiMuU la b9ne*tt*r Ken down by serai* ana exhauttag la-. bor. and byexcltlDf bealtky aeer*. icq t. tion (Tem tbe Kldaeriaod Xilrer, there%r~ellBli»tlnc tkenrem valil -RA SLIJ« and ojber po!»(»o«S hi»-.

oionfrom tbe syiTIB* ^VM .' 3 T? {IE

Pinner

of the

OI.AKINS/ PXHmT ,00.,--ftr-Sole Maanhetanrs, Pa»OTO»,7iir.

For

Bale

by ISA OBOTBB, Jr.,

Terre Baote, lad.

S 5 5 S

G.® S3 *«!R

CORI-SHIUUB AHD CilTI MUia AH COUKBT UI1UUT, traia AAD Brsuss Gutlags, *«M DFC*.

Having ah extensive Xetablishmert, well stook. edandfn foil Operation, w« sn pjepnred to da all kinds of work in ear line, in the .best styls^ and at short notice. ORDERS SOLICITED jaatSdSBWly «'K I •.-•SV '--DJ IY

H4BBIAGE GVIDE.

BEINGienale,

Private Instmetor for married persens. or those abont to be married, both male and in everything ooncernleg the physiology and relations of oar sexaal systsa I and the prolnotlon and prerenttan of oSCBfinj inclndlhgali the new dfseoverlee never before

S[.

a

iren In the Ingllsh language, by WM. TOI7WO, D. This is really a valnabla and intereatinj work. It is written in plain langnage' for the general reader, and is illustrated with nnmerqas Engravings. All yfang married people," er theeO oontemplatlag maniage, and having the toaet Impediment to married life, shonld read this Book. It diKlrses secrets that every on* Should be acquainted with still It is book that kUt be locked up aid not lla abont the hOSise. It' will be sent to any address on receipt of fifty

.. Cents. Address Dr. WM. TODNG, Ho. il6 Spruce

W AFfLIOTBD AMD D*FORTI7NATB. —Ho matter what may be yonr disease, before yon lace yours el under the care of any one of the ottnousQCAOKS -native and foreign—who advertise in tnisor any other paper, get a oopy of inng's Book, and read it oarefaily. It will mesys of saving you many a dollal, yonr I heoltf, "and probably yonr life.

Dn Ysang can be consulted on any of the die raws described In his pubilbctiens, at hie OMce, Ho. 416, SprUoe street, above' Tonrth, Phlladelphia. JeMwly

Agents Wanted—$10 a Day.

... TWO in un rom & LLOYD'S

PATH! REVOLVING

Of Asseriea ND Karepe,Aiaeriealad thevnttMl Rlatss

successful.

€«LTTC.

efficaoiov8 szitM&f stXs DOGOVSBMDI

the chra of Indllfeetloo, Low of AfWtKe, Distempe,.Hidf-Bound,8uifelt, Hwwt fluema, or tiDQf TeT*r,

HM

and by ite peoaliar ALTiBAnTe rttte* spot the akin, eoonchangeaa coarteaa^rc—coat of hair Into a sriiootti ahd {Is ed glawr ./JNEIISQ

FRETEAITTE FOR B«CFMCNU It to not olalaed by the aaae8w*fP#L)*a* these Fovderi wiU cure hog cholera lji its last atagw, bot thejr do

elaia that tWy WILL

It, and even effect a ear* when given fa tJw to •TBIM^THADUEME. A great nany ewtileatts in test jjeswelsMf the manutscturere, atteet the •Bcleaey of theee

Pawtail

Th*y :aM declMIr MWSV

others wanatactaeed, from the, bet. that .they I poeeeeS vfrties whtetr etlrere do ait in 'lakNCkf I all the new phaaee of dieeaeea ,of^hone%,jms landoattle. I Xhey are the production of a llfa-long aad seeI eeeefnl experience in the retariaary praetiee the author. Dr. W. F. DeetartiaB. tMngi I of the Hnncary Veterinary OoUeg^rJSerMrreC ifx yeari In tba Britlahanay as VEWTNART[W geoa'bf Drafooae, and alio' la tin was iMf|n I in tbe United Statee aray thren^iaat- tttiWw I canWar, subecdnantlylocatlng Ui Souihsc^Inr I diana, wnere he achieved a great repatatiaa as a praetitloner. aDd for' hie ««3lelnee.

IHtlAi iWBBMm'!'

as!

&&?.":•!' -VXB* A&ALIULIAII> (it 3I.I.9 'VJN.'JO"J ED! VD 3&&W —1©— sji.taq §»i "IRIVLOO OIIILEMCI FCNA EII'I-1 Z' A

s--=••«" s»

sir

.XOB!. .A.*YSAM T«xfl ISAIC

•WAJBIVO ORATUHIAO ni II* ttiW. laUidW

TAB

SR¥€KfcC«

I .0! ntans-uui sr. .-ioevaoa S",* JL LISSOQ^UI 'I -TO 81T&T

Omw, ScratcBei,

.. ip Lame- and othar affMiaM of tb* 1st. Skin. Sub-Acnu lamlaitts orSfl'j.j. Founder Bhyatl—, 1imti"

Parties wishiag goode will tad

!RSNAIEWE EI?w RRJTLSX. tier- vwatomt*'-

ofAasrlca.

Colored—in 4000 Oottntlea.

HK SB great'Maps, now Jnst completed, ehow plac* of importance, all Balliroade to date .and the latest alterations, la the Tartans Karopeen States. These Maps are needad ia every School and family in the land—they occupy the space of one Map. and by means of the Boretsef, either side can bs thrown iront, and aay part brodght level to the eye. Oodaty Bights and largo disooaata given to goad Agents. !, 'i

Apply for Circulars, Terass, and send money Sample Maps, to J. T. LLOTD iii^ldwlm. 33 Oort.ands Street, H. T.

IOWA

1. K. HABSB

KBAL KUTATE AGSWOY. TASKS, WILD 1AHM, And 01 ty Property of every deeeripUos, fcr Sale.

Anecperioaoe of flftosa yean enable na to insore satisfeetloa ia svery department ofknainsat re atinc to a general Baal Xstata Agency.

HAHBEBT ft HAB8H,

04 WAUnrt RBBBT,

a«Wwi* Pes Mclaesilewa

:LH

,I ,T# N^VSKI. THT. •'1 Vjnuoo-Btdj ^aissavflfiy oti si buiV-1 vcTi'* ip iocxf '1

C^^'LTK'SIAIUL*

LVji Ojbrrei ,97«l»9jiifD"tH imin 'i» tmmiii I a a 9 W oW .sffK'd ij 6*jjiq Brfj tiJlVW y»*P I

901 jxUzoax 329FL -.(!IHW QtuU*pmU% 1ST-'

p.

.1 i.r.. Vi..^n i'„ 1 «!11

uiin ir)!?1! lu'isv x«f aftlJ ftt iwsaiq asm ft}} list laJ

LANCASTER

W1M

MAPS

FTM* GOEDFE IM WR'#«LJPI'MRT'' A^« DMPZ OHW •I QMIFUHY MR IJN—FC .7

JPE&FTTEAI

I

-.-fie JCJSFI" WIN TOD f:\ovcs !3.:hi{ •i

MM

SPRING 0PEIWG

SPRING STtLB^^

OnmmdMU*

.ta iai usv.?« JsiU odj JstU

.J .'J boJo&^IQFI ®rf FFIW ^R,'£A GLRIJ UI Mo'/f

———

Sfa.

-.OVBFLE lsibmd oao LIJIW BSJAIJEUILT b£ •^O!Q ,0-J|IIOISTL) -SIS"?' :I .•gtiiv6TA!,:y ,s)e«n .*i B.IA JOIAIH UTIJ lo .sqoio TOOL .JSASSAI^

3PRIN6 GOODS

|P i. IT-JIT 3IIJ VEB IOEMWONTF.IIJPO

yinapp'-tma I.II—.AANOLT^T

SPRING GOODS

•jit-ill Javil&Goo brin eJe.oof oi faaqaro*}? sdl in )uo

oirj &iu0 .'IA-JXE II Jtpio ttiit 1» N==*" AI

WJI .~.A .i\l «IIA.&AS8 .ID ,001 aqm -xf sawt-ajtar ad) builm ta ef tjtvr dvhivr-t til d««t v« 9-* et.-? sfJj ni V|St 1

WUIO,

&fta AT» FTRIW 0J»M G«}N GAJTONSEI "JFIW I«4I3 dSidtaiiR WSPP#** liorfeeoor .«!€, SNRJJAPLED OSCOD MOV: ,f-

fciogoJ BToSk

gawnoi ui jv.y)h sr

IF S W^.... TEA FDT

nl HATJ^E: AJ

fa -.jintaq _AI— maM'WOS .A .%

wJtluatiO JAAF piis ct t*od &,ltw

i.

!iLa'i

SIMAJtf*00.,?£ eii SWI .AJILDW ISTTFOTTI SOT IICAS sd ISA® ^ORIIAUL UIJJ LICE BE* 0®* FED* AQ

3

•JJ I!K D'I' .JIJSAP S.aea *\*b WSL A KI