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Centralia Sentinel
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Centralia Sentinel

   Centralia Sentinel (Newspaper) - November 10, 1864, Centralia, Illinois                               PUBLISHED BT MARIOS ILL. 32Ioelc- Xf not will Ten cents per for papers by tbo city r 0 RATES OF MO. 3 MO. C MO. 12 One I i I Two I Four 1 16.00 I I i i I I one a 25 cent will be charged for No- io Local columo 15 cents a of the friends of G AS la r Dry Hats and Boots and A daily at SCOTT to ratify ths of low which adopted for the accommodation their tbo don't fail to call and eee at in Worth St. 1 floor West ol tlie Post acd 1 door East ol Thorp's family grocery BETZ and Dealers in They have and keep on hand a larga of BRY QUEENS 3ootg and and Hardware also buy and and take in exchange fot or all kinds of FHO VISION ASD have a pair of FOR WEIGHING F. S ZICK June At Oak NOW ON HAND A FULL moot of Drugs Vat Window School Books Which will bo sold es loir as the times May S. VAX S M. Dealers in WINKS AVD First South purchase for cash in the Eastern and of our goods we direct from the We ENABLED TO SELL Tu E 16 Than any TDK HIGHEST MARKET PRICE Allowed for COUNTRY In exchange for Call and fee Before purchasing Wa arc- Agents for kindi of Among which aro The Automaton Corn The Kentucky EMPIRE AKD BUCKEYE Tht celebrated and power THRESHING Of tuo well known at avd 0., Sugar Cane Mills The best CIDER MILLS AND Horse Straw call an and gel are prepared to receive and fill any of Machinery not mentioned KOHL ITS AND ITS Volume MARION NOVEMBER 10, 1864. J. completed of liis old Stand And Laving told out lus old kaa opened out New His assortment consists of staple and fancy DRY Caps. The public is solicited to call und examine my new stock ail am to if not er than any other 9, 25-tf STEW DRUG AS OPENED A DRUG STOEE on FIRST H to Kohl Warner's new brick where ho de- signs keeping the Drug Also BOOKS AND PAINTS ard WALL PAPER and WINDOW a well selected of and articles for the ing HAVING RENTED a store for the on LOCUST three south of First opposite I would inform tiie citizens of 1 shall open a FIRST CLASS TAILOR I have just returned from Chicago a and complete stock of VESTING Lite which I would solicit the public to call and octO 6mo. JOHN C. NOTICE is hereby the between E. P. Thorp and f. M. and known a- Thorp in the Retail GrocTy in ilie city of county of M of is dis- E. P. Thorp F. 5bare m of iMll CONTINUE TIIE BUSINESS AT Ilis four doors of the and is to the f tlic Firm i i settling up the of the U r 7 OX SUBSCRIBERS would I their old and customers that tile of H. 111 the MEAT nre now to famish all kinds of Fresl it tbe OLD in Ji store 23, IE S B. S. and WISHES to inform the citizens of tralia aid of other the people liu ft. shop for the rep tir of and and intends to do Uia work in uia Mr. Beers ing sen a to a competent and also having worked n number of in one of the of the he feelo from his Ions practice and to repair the fnost watches in the most manner and W A R. R A 3ST T S give satisfaction iml keep good Ho would be to lune a call from bis old friends and all who to try At Dr. Marshall's nest door to Carter's Boot and Shee Locust Street 2G.3mon FINE CLOCKS AXO Opposite Ihe Station and repairing promptly done Aljo agent for tho ON Chestnut 111., On tho nde of the would give notice that their Hill is now in Cne ning and that they keep on band a of FLOUR AND of a cither At or Retail Orders for vill be filled ard the delivered at the of people residing in the A. PHYSICIAN AND his professional services to JL the citizens of Walnut enmity and in the of Having been IM the profession fur he feels of giving entire tc all nho Cm ONE having tuis to loan a terra of four on ieran of n who full is free from debt ard all by calling on or the The 15 to bo used in improving the property THE CARP BEFORE TIIE for some deep dell Where brieL and Hue Biay To dowa in pet of ia a grot of I'd a homa by With not a sound to mar lift's i I'd the caution by the Shannon have a How fair thit rocky isle That wide to KUD it 1 a shirer I moiTi with a Romantic with the one you lovo To watch the cocis upon the I mem tho the 'Twere at mystic To wander forth where few And come upon a tipsy I mean a gipsy In that retirement lone I Pursue some rustic And make myself a boiling I mean a toiling sweet with your fond wife ta sit Outside your door at daylights While she's hard at your I meaa hard knitting at j our hose ATLANTIC GREAT Within a few and with little EAST SIDE GRADED BY CLARK As I am rery frequently asked by people of the East hon the school and other questions of like I have concluded to make jour paper a medium of answering all such and at the same time ether objects that seem to me to be We bave now four who have the charge of The Primary Koom is under the control of Miss It contains 77 who are in the Primer and Eirst Reader Some of them are not provided with It is as absurd a teacher to teach without books as to require i to and furnish hor neither cloth nor All the should bf provided with a slate and to print their lessons and for other purposes The expense would be but while the advantages to both scholar and teacher would be All in the First should also hat e the Progressive Table to leain the rudiments of an event of prime j Tte Primary is in charge of importance to our country's This I They are in the is the opening from New York to SC Louis Tbird fourth They are of a continuous line under the title of the Atlantic and Gieat 60 in tho First Lessons in Geography and and in Spelling The ern The line ie twelve hundred i Intermediate Geography and miles and pursues the Arithmetic should be commenced in this route By the New York and Erie Road Here let me say that the scholars New York to the station of manca by a separate road of the of the school havo not been advanced in to keep progress with their and Great to advancement in too much Ohio over the j has been paid to but ilton and Dayton to been This and bv the Ohio Mississippi 57 to St. The Gist The Grammar School is under the train the whole of iliss She has the forty-four understand Intellectual and tbo regular express hains of the line Writing the class he required to equally as good the mediate Geography and the to reduce the class in the Rudiments of Written to forty hours has been ly effected by ihe energy and talents of and the Primary Grammar department has now 55 The High School is at present taught James Pean by the There are at by but cf resi organized 13 Two dens has raised twenty million two two two lars tor the project in the money markets 1 two one one of and the and one Reading It will be soon bonds of the Company obtaining ready then that we have in the High School upon tho of his personal most of the facilities of ordinary high for uprightness and cial ability Mr. Thomas W. engineer and capitalist of laigo discretion and has managed of the here at securing the hearty co-operation and good will of all the roads now made continuous bringing tho enterprise to a ful with a skill possible only to a i commercial The of these gentlemen is Financial Director and the 1-itlor, Vice-President and Mana- ger of the At any other than their success would have been ly talked of as a great national Evan let us not forget the spirited whose hopeful in the midst of blood and have bean sowing seeds of commercial prosperity to ify with their perfected harvest the day of oar National triumph nnd This work is the first instalment of the greatest popular enterprise in tha lect Schools and need Willing and Spelling but want of time has not permitted me to We need more time in several of our es for but until we bave a sep recitation we must all as necessary as they A tation room with little be arranged on the upper and be sent into it from any of the rooms and in that way the teachers could bo ro- of the pressure of extra too great a and the wants of the school met. Tho should hava at least two hours each day visit tue other and to attend to general ion tho whoie If I could now there are many things I conid that need to be attended The great need of the school is prompt and regular and good ID a school so nre these arc necessary than in a initial fulfilment of a promise which j Five poorly America has made to herself and all other j and disciplined schools in one which shall bo completely fulfilled only when an iron highway stretches across her entire from the Atlantic to the Pacific Old who resides not far from known as one who er pays a debt if it can be lie has plenty of is rollicking old and gets drunk of Borne friends take care of Not long fell into the hands of a man who had his for a would soon become a perfect bedlam without Order must be obtained anything can be For this purpose we bave closed the building 01- when teachers are in to take charge of and protect it. It may in some seem to bo at severe but the appearance of tho building shows that some such rule The tion of the building and the inculcation of idea that tbo is not a sum of and as it was s. last chance i are tho sole dived into the old Judges and took Tardiness and absence were at the be- out the and put the noto the money had tbo bane of the During When the Judge awoke to consciousness second in my nearly as was his he took out his wallet to of the abundance was lost by ab- count how money he was did I spend all my money and irregular Of the quite frequently sd his note 1 Bnd it tho 'e disposing of his must have bean j on account tbo delay of come in nod were interrupted in the morning and recess for half an hour by ars coming to such an extent that but little be must bo done to check so great an we concluded to lock our doors at nine and half past and at allowing five minutes for ference of and three minutes scholars to in asd take their If scholars are absent or tardy not admitted until they present a ten excuse from their parents or have been reproved for such tardiness or ah Sometimes parents feel as if it Was too rigid a as if it was needless trouble to write an excuse when they choose to detain a pupil a few moments or keep out half They ber tbat it is not only their child that 5s but the whole If their child for one ba absent or tardy so can on all and the school is thus disorganized The few moments trouble to them saves tha teacher hours of trouble and and tie toil of instructing poor fr I by personal in nine cases out of tardiness and ab- were and in most parents were ignorant of Such be- ing the it seems to that to re- quire written excuses is tho only proper and I presume all tho citizens of COD wish to hare a Graded School They never cin without strict and an earnest ef fort on their part to sustain such is no why there should not be a in to any in the and no circum- stance add more to the of your city than the ability of your citi Kens hare a Graded Shall then tho schools of be thorough and to instruct the RnJ them to Older and to proper is a question you must help teachers to Since writing the above one 01 two occurred to me. I omitted to give tho of my room There are 40, making a sum total of 235 scholars in The whole number enrolled before tho close of the vrill probably be about 250. All who desired to attend at nli during the term should commenced the We have been hindered and interrupted a great deal by pupils who have come in after classes had already started All who intend to come will confer a groat vor on teachers and scholars and benefit themselves by starting Some parents feel that writing excuses is too great a It would be easier for the teachers to let all go and conic when they and have a good lime but we would not be doing our duty by so If we are willing to take so much trouble for the benefit of school and not parents be willing to one fiftieth as much It is no advantage to us to have it is to benefit ihe scholars by breaking up tardiness and truancy that wo re quire and for that Write the excuses yourselves and not trust it to the for that will lead to falsehood acd I find also some scholars in classes they should not be and have sent them back into other If I had been ed with tha scholars zl the I might bare avoided brut I had to wait until I had tested the scholars bo- fore I could decide what classes they should be in. It trill cause parents a little ex- but as the books they got at first will be needed after a it will not be All this in re- gard to classes could bo saved by the Directors establishing a regular study for each room and promoting ars only on a thorough us is done in all well graded I hope all parents will be and reasonable and not find fault until they know the entire circum- Visit the and in no case implicitly the word of a dissatisfied or encourage them in a of fault The teacher had and knows the circum- stances and advancement of lha better than the the In fats London an bjr one Dr. of a journey recently made to in giving Borne very about that f r distant and little known Tho great marvels of mous of of which Dr. tion are frequently termed and there is good deal tbat is strange and about but the most curious appears to me tho fact that they have long re- mained entirely hidden from travelers and is papers of a writer during his sojourn in in the year 1570, the of the king happened to discover in the depths of a forest remains of an immense city adorned of fantastic and bearing inscriptions which no- body could This city he calls or more Nakhon Indian is the name of those ruins which only a few years ago were having forgotten for more iban two There no reason to at the obscurity they were ied if HC reflect on the state of geo- knowledge regarding of which country one might say that ing wag known at and scarcely tho name of that great lake which now itself so fruitful an object The history of the country is silent on these and the natives at- cribe their building to tho These places boar the of tbo dy colours and the rich gilding which were once used to the the poly- deities with a multiplicity of hands and but they are now ed ot their nnd stand in abandoned and forsaken On the highest of the tower at the structure is enthroned fourfold figure of aed whon tho great his train of colonnades of this cherished as their hereditary abode by a long line of then the temples of idolatrous and the old classical of was changed into that of thenceforth became a convent to the The inscriptions are as unintelligible by the but more from laziness and tear of mental as the though of a more antiquated art generally similar enough to the the in most differ from those now in Oao or tho other event re- corded in these inscriptions may perhaps still a clue facts ted ilk these as nothing of tha il is to bo hoped for from the history of which with the Cambodian kings removing to their new of or and thence to They had loft the tile plains exposed to the inroads of tho who just then began forth from their native and re- into tho inaccessible swamps round tbe shores of lha great The given by a Chinese TV ho traveled through Cambodia in tho 1295, is too interesting to be omitted notwithstanding the ruinous state of the buildings at the present its details can be verified every particular 'The each Tha chief one had two tho others only Beyond the gates there was a gieat Fiom tho ditch were causeways of with tho great On each side of the bridge were ues of stone representing their These were very statues in bad a very menacing The fivo gates all pillars of tbo bridges were and adorned with figures of Each serpent had nine Each of the statues had a serpent Jn to ward off those Over the gates were large busts of of Each bust had five faces looking towards the The one in the centre had a gold On each side of tbe gate were figures of an elephant r on Tbo groundwork or all manly character is veracity That virtue lies at tain of every thing How it is to to hoar parents have faith in my child so long he the He may have but I know that he will not I built on They aie It is a lawful and ground to build So long as the truth remains is something to THE is more sunshiny smiles than in tha Those who say to tbe we should not choose for our friends or The good the tender and the pleasant disposition Jove sunshine word spoken pleasantly is a large spot of sunshine oti the have not i's A smile is like tho oat of the sun. behind a cloud to him who thought he had no friend in tho The tear of how ly it shines along tbe path of A thousand gems a miliy T the tban JEWS PA PER I  

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