Daily Wabash Express, Volume 20, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 31 January 1871 — Page 2
cf
The
•qood Yua
DAILY EXPRESS.
Tuesday Morningj January tiff 181»
If
the
Journal must psrjjf^n poking
fun aj. Messrs. Mack andBfwfrTXM about the postage stamp and whisky business, we shall leave those gentlemen to settle the matter with their own party organ.
has carried the joke far enough.
St. Louis Democrat, in a recent
issue, calls attention to the unusual facilities afforded in Missouri for the building up of manufactures, and urges the encouragement of immigration, especially the immigration of skilled labor. ''A vwrld
of dead skill. Only the union of the two yin give life to both, and make Missouri the imperial Slate she should be, and one of the first duties-^f her legislators is to hasten that jubilant SOI
In reply, the Philadelphia Ftess says: "This is excellent political econttfny, but what surprises lis is to read it in a paper hopelessly given over to the pernicious fallacies of free trade, whose cardinal principle affirms it to be the duty 'of our legislators' in" Congress to repeal all protection, and thereby stifle the manufactories we already have, as well as so decrease wagSJ*^af1|lffid^1IS#ll8'aftfeafaif of Europe will no longer find it their interest to come to us. The Democrat "seems to be tearing down with one hand while it builds up witb the other."
Qdit
your grumbling, and present as
strong a case to the Department,, if you can, that great errors were committed in
with anWfflft4 Sriumfcration.'-^neti Sentinel, We can't "quit grumbling," because we haven't commenced it but it seems a little queer that the census should have been so incorrectly taken at Indianapolis right undpn
S&tea
Marshal for tlie "District or Indian#!— And again, how are we ever to know when the work is done, if it is to be ripped up and done over to satisfy grumblers? And finally, where is the legal authority for retaking the census of any place? We confess our inability to find it. If a second enumeration can be had, why not a third, or a fourth, and so on'ad infinitum.
This plain talk is as just as it is severe. We quote the Chicago Republican of the 28th: nmM Oil
Congress seems at last about to realize the fact that the National Institute for the encouragemeut,of Loafing, situated on the Hudson river, and popularly known as West Point, may be dispensed with and the country sui&if' no serene The recent "troubles" there, which have arisen mainly from the refusal of a colored boy to submit to insult and wrong at the hands of the other cadets, have attracted of the entire concern. The ordinary pro duct of West Point to the nation is an an nual crop of graduates in the art of living without honest work. For this it is hardly worth while to be compelled to draw half a million dfdollkts frcM the national treasury every year. Abolish West Point, and let military education be acquired, as other special educations are at le private expense of those who are ambitious
As
ed to devote much of its time to instruct ing Congress, we hope it will not overlook the National Nuisance on the Hudson. The people are sick of the tfhole thing and want it "wiped out." Let our General Assembly make its voice heard at Washington in favor of abolishing the Military Academy. There need be no fear that the army will lack officers. Promotion^^pm |he ranks will induce the enlistment of a better class of men than now throng recruiting stations, and the army itself is the best of military^sch^la.
A Shadow from Past Darkness. The foreign dispatches, published by the morning papers of Thursday, stated that the ambassadors of Austria and Germanf^actkig under the uastriictigus of theirgovermil11 aVe askfed of Cardinal Antonelli what guaranty the Pope desired from Italy, as to his position, which would remove his distrust of that power. The Pope replied that he wanted no guanu#$ ^Ti^oMlflftfiftreetituiaon of his dominion from the Neopolitan line to the Po, and "he would have nothing else." It would be hard to find anywhere in history a more pitiable exhibition of the power of bigotry to destroy i«ll recognition of truth and all perception of justice. It is Hildebrand a thousand years belated. It is the imperiousness that held all rulers an&qrtgple lUSffppointed of subjects of Papal authority, speaking in the days of popular rights and enlightened opinion. It is as ludicrously misplaced as would be a lecture to the Indianapolis Academy of Sciences by Francis Turrettine to prove that the earth was fixed and the sun revolved round it: or a discussion in Masonic Hall by the doctors of Salamanca, who came so near defeating the enterprise of Columbus, of the absurdity of the notion that the earth was round and not flat.— In these days nobody rules by divine right. Temporal authority comes from the people, not frofn Heaven. Charles the First of England and Louis the Sixteenth of France were taught this lesson by a£tf *&fij>l«i§a nt process, affecting the continuity of the spinal column, which prevented them from ever learning anything else. The Pope has not learned it either from their fate or the far more obvious teaching of national movements all around him for the last twentv-five
so long suffered the infliction of his existence. They appear to him to be as absolutely his pronerty as his paternal patch of artichoke^-« &mg%liaf aii34h# people a set of thieves who have had the audacity to steal themselves from his possession. He won't compromise an inch of line of authority There is nothing to be regarded but him and his power. The people, their rights and interests and will are clear beside the point. He is "the be all and end all," and the people an impertinence, an irrelevancy, an accidental element in his divine authority, which he considers of no more moment than the dog fennel on a town lot is to the man who sues to recover it. Wkat Jbas the^og fennel to do with, the, titled What are the wishes of the people to his Holiness? Nothing. There has not been a day in the last twenty years that he would not have been hoisted off his Jbrone into Gaeta or Malta, if a vote of the jeould.hav# doneit. There has nOtTOeiraifay in' allihat trice, that his authority has not needed the support of a foreign army. His miserablegovernment was w&SfSttUftlg* offense and objurgation of every intelligent man from Isoletta to Montalto. Savage eyes always followed the acarlet trimmed coaches of the Cardinals,
from St. John Lateran to the Porta del Popolo. If the curses they got couldhave been made ponderable, the horses could Vs easily have hauled the column of Trajan as the maledictions of a five minutes' drive on the east bank of th^ .Tiber.
For twenty years Pius was l£ingr'6f the Pontificial States .by the power of Napoleon and not by the grace ot God. And the moment the last company of red-legged Frenchmen wheeled out of the Via Oregorio on jheirrway to be cut to pieces at Gravelotte, (he Pope had no more power in Gome than he had in Mecca. The French leMawtewat utterly help|edrtovereign that ever burthened a peef)lefand the last train load could still see the Coliseum, like a monstrous bowl with a broken rim, over the Aventine hill, when he received Information enough that his power and respect were on the same train. Everybody laughs at the pretensions of the royal Btrumpet Isabella to the throne of Spain. "What better claim has Pius to the throne of Rome? Both are tumbled off by the will of the people, and that is th# final authority, the court of last resort, when the claims of rulers are on trial. Nobody that we ever heard of objected to the Pope personally. He is certainly an amiable and kindly disposed old gentleman, of noble descent, fair scholarship, moderate brains and no mischievous ambition. But .Antonelli, the Ahithophel of his government, is as heartless „and conscienceless a scoundrel as ever was hung or escaped hanging. And there can never be any security that, under Papal authority, an Antonelli will not hold the real power of the sovereign That is one reason, and enough, why the people of the Papal States have been so anxious to get rid of a government with which they had .nothing to do but to suffer its oppressions. It is gone now by the best, and only sufficient, declaration hsF expulsion that can be made, the will of the people. The amazing fatuity that demands its return, a3 if the people were not in the case at all, would find congenial assumption and bigotry even as late as Alexander.the Sixth, of fragrant memory, the father of C«sar and Lucretia Borgia, who undertook to divide the world between Spain- and Portugal by a line west of the Canary Islands. But it is as far out of place now as one of Tetzel's speeches, in auctioneering indulgences, would be in the First Presbyterian Church. The. American Catholics who have been resolving and protesting against the usurpation of the Kings of Italy, carefully forget that the Romans voted that they wanted the King instead of the Pope, and all protest/! against it are as liberal, manly and just asT would be their protests against an Irish government created by a vote of the Ifish people. The Soman has the same rights that an Irishman has, and knows it quite as well, and the Irishman who would resubject him to the Pope could consistently vote back the Catholic exclusion laws, the test, the prohibition of Catholic schools, and all the senseless cruelties of the era preceding the Emancipation act. The expulsion of the Pope from his temporal throne is one of the best things that has happened this century, and the only thing that can possibly be nearly as good is the determination that shall keep him expelled. —Indianapolis Saturday Evening Mirror.
A COMEDY OF
BLUNDERS^'*
A Happy Exchange of Brides, and Bobbery No
•om The first time I found out I was in love
fwjth
my pw^itiEdie, was the morning 'fixed for my wedding with another young lady. The discovery came "rather awkwardly for there was my bride, Miss EuphemiajGarlick, getting ready for the ceremony and there, at her father's house, was.the wedding breakfast all pre* pared.
The discovery happened in this wise. I had been vexy nervous over ihe opera tion of dressing. In the first place, I had never been married before. Secondly, did not profoundly care for my bride. She was my senior by some, seven years, and tall and bony for her age. She could not be described as youthful, or as graceful, or as sportive. There was little of the lamb nature about her—except, her associations with the Mint. For Miss Euphemia was rich, and I was poor and overwhelmed with debts wherefore I had pressed my suit #ith the heiress, and found both herself and her father, an infatuated.} old noodle, with an amateur taste for chemistry, propitiated by the sacrifice.
On the mornitig of my wedding:! had, out of sh&r nervousness, rumpled most of my clean shirts, and ruined most of my cleancollars, in agitated attempts to dress myiielf. As a crowning piece of illluck I burst the neck button hole of my last shirts There was no time to send out for a new one the marriage hour was close: at hand. I bethought myself of cousin Edie, then arraying herself in the house—cousin Edie,' with whom I had {grown up, and who I regarded as a gentle sister. Edie would of course repair the slit button hole. .Accordingly Edie came with work-box and needle and thread and I knelt before her as she sat and Edid'efingers were bus^r about my throat and a curious speculative discovery came upon me that Edie was young and pretty, and plump, and gentle, and in all respects dissimilar to Miss Euphemia Garlick. "Have you ever done this sort of thing before?"
Edie confessed she had—for her father. began to put silly questions to Edie— about lovers and so forth. I was privileged to do so, as a cousin. She answered me laughingly, Jbut repudiated all solt charges. Then I ventured to kiss Edie —also as a cousin. And then, as Edie ran out of the room to get a pair of scissors, I began to think she was really very plump, and had a velvety skin, and was as guileless in the world's ways as a chubby cherub by Rubens.
In this mood I lighted on the work-box she had left, and began to turn over its contents. White bits of cotton, spotless as Edie's conscience! Black bits of cot ton, epmbre as my future! Thimble, hollow and empty as my head when I overlooked Edie as a possible wife! But then Edie was as poor as myself, whereas Miss Garlick—I?alio! whas was this?
I came upon a letter in that work-box an open letter, commencing, "Star of my hopelep destiny!" A letter in a man's hand writing, and full of bad spelling! And his shameless document went on to peak of love passages in the past of assignation* "under the conscious stars," as the writer phrased it of kisses given and exchanged. The innocent-seeming cousin of mine was not so guileless as she appeared. She had been guilty of philandering, and that with a fellow—as I saw by the signature—known to my bride's family. For this Augustus Maunders, whose jVfiting it .was, 1 knew as a mooning booby in the "army—a romantic milksop with colorless hair, so intimate with the Garlicks as even to be invited to the wedding.
L,was horribly indignant at Edie's duplicityi and at her chosing such a lover loriier clandestine flirtations. When she came back with the scissors, I taxed her roundly with her fault, and showed her the letter. She started and seemed inclined to deny the charge, but ultimately tooksilence. I set off for church in very bad humor, convinced that I had a rather perilous interest in Edie, and resolved to accommodate my conscience by "taking it out of Mr. Maunders, even if, by forcing him to declare his intentions, I precipitated his marriage with my too pretty cousin."
The party had not arrived at church, but Garlick's house was within a stone's throw of it. In my vexation I would not wait. I made for the house and met them in the lobhy, the carriages at the door.
There was the perfidious Augustus Maun* ders amoag them. I greeted not-my stately bride I stalked up to Lieutenant Maunders. "Sir!" I thundered, "I know all."
The* lieutenant gazed at me feebly Miss Garlick clasped her hands her father, an habitual aotard, simply blinked his eyes, as he did under all circumstances which passed his comprehension, and as most worldly circumstances did pass h& comprehension, always excepting the combination of metals and gasses,'! paid little attention to him.
Don't attempt to deny it, Mr. Maunders," I added sternly "I have discovered one of your notes in a work-box."
To my amazement, Miss Garlick gave a shriek, and fell into a hall chair, apparently lifeless. No sooner did her idiotic parent behold the spectacle, than he, too, littered a prolonged howl, and fell on the mat.
"Oh, my pa! my pa!" cried Euphemia, reviving suddenly. "He cannot bear excitement it flies to his head! Help! help! save him from extinction!"'
Bushing to the old man's head (I had a demoniacal desire to sit on it, as they do to horses), I called for water. A servant brought a tumblerful. Meanwhile, I had found in his waistcoat pocket a phial of colorless liquid. "A topic or stimulant," I thought and hurriedly emptying it into the glass of wat£r, poured the whole down his throat. It had an awesome effect. The'old man nearly started £0 his feet, struggled, kick* ed out, spluttered^ foamed, and fell.back stiff and insensible. "What have done?" I gasped,' "You have poisoned the old man, sir," he remarked quietly. "The label says 'Prussic acid.'"
A cloudy horror seemed to close upon me. .Everybody set up a shrieking. Miss Garlick went «ut of one fit of hysterics into another. A vision of. Cousin Edie among the flitting phantoms around me a vision of Maunders supporting my bride, and—as it seefned to my disordered fancy—kissing hef and I remember nothing more till I found myself in the hands of the police charged with murder. I had made up my mind to go to execution, confessing nothing. On the whole, I preferred hanging to the chances of marrying Euphemia Garlick, now that I had found out how dear and how faithless was Edie- Many men would have married out of spite, under such circumstances, but to me it seemed I should spite myself most in doing.
I was glad at the prospect of being hanged but it turned out that old Garlick was not dead, The Prussic acid had been his own preparation ic was insufferably, nasty, causing him intense pain, but was not a bit genuine. He recovered, and himself procured my release on condition that the marriage should at once proceed. I groaned in spirit, for the alternative was worse than death.
Again the happy Fates stepped in. Miss Euphemia, whose nerves had been terribly shaken, confessed all. It' was to her that compromising letter had been written it was she who nad philandered with the booby Maunders it was her work-box which had contained the dam aging document. She had made over her work-box as a present to Edie on the eve of her wedding—made it over as it stood, forgetting the one article it held. Edie had not exploded its contents but when she saw the letter in my hands she anticipated tragic results if I should guess the truth, and held her peace. She even suffered herself to be wrongly ac cused for my sake and my bride's. Poor Edie!
I undeceived her. I showed her that my heart was unbroken by Euphemia's duplicity. I transferred my bride to Maunders, and got her father to consent And then I spoke seriously to Edie, and from our talk have reason to believe that the day when Miss Euphemia Garlick becomes Mrs. Maunders, Edie and I may swell the parish register. -X.'ri
Jl
ADVICE TO OLD MEN. I b-03-P -,i ^ai m-'i/L by a boy.
%\f.
I cannot pick up a newspaper without "Advice to Boys" storing me in the face, Oid men write it, I s'pose. Nobody. else is capable of giving any .advice to boys, of course not! They know all about us, they do, 'cause they've been there-. Advice is a good thing to have, no doubt, and no family should be without it, but a feller don't want to be crammed with it all the time to the exclusion of other diet.
Now, old men need advice occasionally, but in looking through the newspapers don't see as they get it. So. I thought would just write a little Advice to Old Men, myself, if I am not presuming too much, (as Aunt Chloe says), and I presume I am.
In the first place, you old chaps ought to get over telling how much smarter boys were when you were young than boys are now. You believe it yourselves, of course, 'cause you've told it so many times, but we boys oan't see it. We have a notion that boys are boys pretty much (except some that are girls), the world over, and one generation dt them don't lay over another generation to any alarm ing extent.
Only let you tell it and you could out? jump, out-run, out-wrestle, and out anything else the rising generation of to-day when you "was a boy." Grandfather, who has got the gout and half a dozen different kinds of rheumatism, is always saying that. I heard him singing the other day, "I would I were a boy again." I would he were. If I couldn't beat him running,- and Hop him on his back, sideholt, I don't want a cent.
I wouldn't go so far as to say, "Parents, obey your children," but I would suggest to fathers, that they give us boys a hearing occasionally, on matters in which we are the most interested. Don't make us go and slide down hill when we want to skate, and don't try to make preachers of us when we much prefer to run a sawmill. This is figurative, but I guess you know what I mean.
After giving us boys sage advice about our conduct, and how to behave, you old men ought to be careful how you get relating your boyish scrapes to each other and laughing over them before we are out of earshot. The other day grandfather read me a long lecture about the right of property, temperance and Sab-bath-breaking. That night an old crony of his'n came to visit him, and they had a glass of punch together. They thought I was asleep on the sofa, and the way they run on about the fun they had when they were boys together I They told all about robbing Captain Lyman's melon patch, and it turned out it was a Sunday hight, too! When I went to bed they were taking their third glass of punch, and I don't know how many they had after that. I know grandfather's rheumatism was a great deal worse the next day, and he complained about his liver. Old men ought to be careful about taking too much punch.
I have noticed old men hate to give up that they can't stand as much as they used to, or as younger men can. They get mad if a feller like me hints that they can't. But what's the use of fooling yourselves? We've all got to play out some day, and when a man feels he is loeing*his grip, why not come down (racefully and acknowledge the corn?
Now, in the above remarks, I don't mean any disrespect. I like old men in their place, but don't want quite so much of their advice. Give the boys a chance. —Oin. Times. -t-.
Were children accustomed from in* fancy to hear nothing but correct conversation, there would be but little need of their learning arbitrary rules of grammar—they naturally speak and write cor* rectlv.
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prepared to fnnfish all classes with Constant employment at home, the whole of the ttme or for the apm moments. Basinets new,' light, and profitable- Persons of either sex easily earn fromlMjetou$5 per evening, and a proportional snm by devoting their whole time to the business- Boys and girls earn nearly as much as men. That all who see this notice may send their address, and test the business, we make the unparalleled offer To 8q#h «s are not well sansfled, we will senB It to sw fist /the trouble of writing. Fall particulars, a valuable sample, which will do to eommence work on. and a copy of
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pages 48 oolumns. Edited
THE JAPANESE HAIR STAI5 Colors the whiskers and hair a beautiful B) ack
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Land Oommii Mo.
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A CARD
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TICK'S
FLORAL GUIDE
r.i 91
FOB 1871.
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Sent free to all my-customers of 1870, as rapidly as possible, without application. Sent to all others who order them for Ten Cents, which is not half the cost. Address
JA9IES TICK, Boehester, Jf. Y.
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BY THE rrl
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by jadeM
pages 48 oolumns. JSbbitt and J. S. LAI Specimens free. R. W Pubs-,. Cincinnati, Ohio.
SO f-.
Isaac
—It.
5-1 K-
TUELL, RIFLE? &:'DEMHKrS
•Jf'j
.EMrFOR-ITJad:.
sttriawos
TO CLEAR WAY FOR
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Stock-takin provokisdaii House. THE UNCONDITIONAL SP.B&WfoMl
fh 1
Ky
-w
v., and from 2 ja«20
no? 48
,i fit ai .-.n'-f .4m m!,
"J lor ,.• nt
.......
We %ill carry over no Winter Stock. We have made all the profit we contemplate on Heavy Goods, anc now comes the clearance. It hai
I I) -IX'-Utr": "rii' v'l Bl-I?" .jJ'.h usiufi'j- 1.-'}!•' -i I '».! Lr Si 'V jl'j, •a
(j,} -uu -r. 'jjx inn' r'.n ii
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TUELt, RIPLEY: & DEML1NG},
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1 IS J* nrJ* :v9:. j.i
During the next four week* we .expect to (five tihe High-Priced Stores some pretl heavy blows. Qentlemen! we can RETAIL GOODS CHEAPER THAN YOI PAN BUY THEM! 1 /.lift.
WOB CASB^NZ
A big lot ofthe very bestSPRAGUE PRINTS ever brought toTerre Haute, for 10c. All other 8toree charge 12}c for the same goods. lot of Cheaper Prints, 5c, 6c, and 7c. Btg lot of Fast-colored Print*, 8c and 9c.
MuThe Prints we sell for 8c and 9c, the country stores charge 12}c for. Those we sell for 5c, 6c, and 7c, the country stores charge 9c and 10c for. «i4la 500 pieces BEST AMERICAN DeLAtNES, for 12Jc. jttTAll other stores in Terre Haute charge 20c for these DeLames, and country stores ch&r£6 25c Also a big lot of yard-wide UNBLEACHED MUSLIN, fine and heavy, 9c a yard. gQUAll other stores in Terre Haute charge 12Jc, and country stores charge 14c and 15c for the same quality of Muslins. 300 piece* of GOOD MUSLINS for 6c and 7c per yard,
MtBuThe same as sold in other stores tor 9c and 10c,
Shawls, Furs,
Also, a large stock of
Goods,
Dress
rf Ad cheap in proportion
BEST QUALITY
rets, Cloths and Casslmeres, Carpets,
Silks, Iiaces,
noes, and
A
Trimmings, Herri-
impress
Good yard*wide CARPETS, from 30c up.
BRUSSELS CARPETS ONLY $1 25
Good Double Woolen Shawls, $3 50 and $5. All-wool French Merinoes, down ti tit 50c. All-wool French Express Clolhs, down to 50c. irn: f/j'i ti good sex ofpurs for
A hotter set of Furs for $3 00. Genuine Mink Set*, down to $8 00. Fine Mink $ as chwp in proportion. Genuine Black -strachan SetA, down to $6 00.
splendid If ur Hood for
$1 25,
worth
Jet and Fancy Jewelry, Hamdkerchiefe,.Fancy Bows and Scarfs. Lace Collars, Glares, Knit Shawls, Ac., in great variety. $
(^C^^ Best Daytoi Caurpet Warp, 30c. Best Majraville Cfcrpet Warp, 29c AmericanA Grain Ban. 32c. Genw* Undershirte and Drawer*. 50c each.•• Balmoral Skirts, 70c up. BlankeU, $1 40 a pair. Gold mixed Waterproof, 90c^ Ladiea' Fur-tipped Hoods, fl 00. -.i'.' ,,.
Cnstomera can come from a distance without any fwof our ad^iaemasfta being overdrawn. We always prefer to hare our customen brag our adtMiaMnta witn them, that they may see that we sell Mactly aa we adrertise. ... j' "j.,
FOSTER BROTHERS'
GREAT Is EW YORK CITY STORE
North Side of Main St., Middle Opera House Block,
TERRE HA UTE, INDIAN A.
V'--
fi
3 a-.?.-
j, ft 'jTftjta 6sii!OJ mm*} JU
SPRING STOCK.
•. 'nif .?te ,il, .boni'sauif "ovati wratt
OLEl-A-lsr SWEEP!
v: -1 '.
DARK CALICO, DRESS GOODS, FLEECED HOSE,' '. GLOVES, FLANNELS* &c., &c»,
vju.j.its".
"1«
We are forcing sales to make
.. ClJ'i fli'i tn
Whatever others may ad vertise, a comparison will show ours to be the lowest in the market.
Having on
irm «jr i!
Olfl:
to jlfs?
hflJ
IttiJil ft
.« hi.
has commenced.
"J*. .1 tr: iyob' '•.) i"
f.
b:ic. nts.bliil ban jl-srji
Carrier Main and Fifh streets,h
v.! iu4 s- i, »ph Siis
v.'j 'nr.u miro & 9ftr
Aji-.Jc'i—.0 .atJ,
A €ESSATiOIT QF HOSTILITIES!
11*11
"h -t'Jnr '-lii tfl'Ki!
iMj Ji fU
:.q
Cloths.
tfrfiV 0
I l!f
$2
iiAJ
ijilJ
IT .A-t
CLOTHING.
REMOVAL.
-5^
0
S.Frank Has Removed
HIS
CLOTHING
hand
." I
Hfc i''A( ja6-dw3iD
sfblfc* if yyt I
every State, are present on ertrrWiportttat battle-field,areearlyadvisedof every notable Cabinet decision,
observe
ours.
(Jar
A
df^EitA HOUSE
n-.'ii
oD
axi, Cryilg
1
TO
Coraer Main and Fourth Streets,
'•I* uj
f*
(The Boom lately ocCnpIedbj Warren, Hobsry Sc Co.)
-'-I
j.- ga -o
t/'itVl •.ligl lit- 't'
a large stock of
WINTER (iUUU".
intend^to close out my entire stock of
X'hC.Vf-
-dvh
bua'rt r.-riH'-iTt.
n*-: AH Jwi vsui .oT iu: rjo,' }i
.iolirt)
•Oa
.131
the
'T-rnntTr-T^f
MENS AND BOYS' CLOTHING!
IV- Sii'. a^
Before Removing, and in order to accomplish this, shall offer Gooas, for the next SIXTY DAYS,
Cheaper than they were Ever Sold
IN THIS MARKET.
Great Bargains in Undershirts and Drawers,
HEADQUARTERS FOR
-so"
Weekly
the proceedings of
Con«r«8r.ofLe,Ul.tttres.andofConvenUon« and report to us
by
telegraph all that
I s^ IwK thdse
1253uJL If
lavish
have
reports
he
TaiacKB
.,il
A
fr "i
Alpacas, Tel
seems
of general ieterest We have paid for one day's momentous advices from Europe
K1. fir more
by Ca-
than, our entire reeeipts for the
adtices reached our
ontlay. unsleeping vim-
Wis io^e^'s! T«yiB?BruNa
We aim to make.T«
from
of
essays
farmer's
olete our over-crowded cities, where thous-
*N«T
a
ture. Mechanics and Manufactures,
Sent diffusion
oo
$2
to their attention. We ask our
U:
RecfrUectiom Library, #3 60. Half Political Beonomy.
:o Ji
TaaavfaiiM*. Terms Cash in Advance«r
wlwAdtf
STORE
propose to close them out
-tin „.„vw -I.
WI,THOUTltE«ABl
'm 1'" i--j
To make room for an
i"i I Jir* A -i.*.
Extensive Stock of Spring Goods
8 CLOTHING.
IIV THE
ttJi -q
NO. 03 iS/LAXlsr STREET.
$ at
X/U(3£lbitl
ffdcit'J-f.
iuti f!
Mi.: ft l/I
ztiaert
18»1. DAILY, SEMI-WEEKLY AND WEEKLY. 1871.
tribi-se.
The
Pawr of
tk«
Peple-
hb bhOhi
aim* to bo pre-eminently a
J^pa^r.
It«
oonesporide^ twveno
-if-mrM.i
1
fc!
TO COST!
concluded in a single issue, or at most in two or three. We intend that
instructive
world.
sh?!!
'°ToAiriculture
b^u^h a
and the subservient arU, we
devotci. and shall pernstently devote. more means and space than any of
our
rivals.
W«ilt TaiBtrincsnch
To
has been, is, and must
O
xr
the Cattle, Horse. Pro
duce. and General Markets, are so full and Meurate. our
in elncidabonofthe
ealliiiff
»na
our
Farmers' Oluband kindred gatherings are so tatefesting. that the poorest farmer
Is published every
of'"^methfngtoIto/'to cov™r'p?airiesSEMI-WkMKLY"TRIBUNE gives 2nd nlains^ith coloniesabsorbed in Agricul- the course of a year, hbik ob foob
and con
stantly orojecting into the hlank, void wilderness the homes and the works of civili ed dnatr'y ^dUcnminat^V^uUes on imported "u^rentTnteii'igenee and permanent Jitway
Aflgential to
ttao rftpid, bo-
of Productton in all.its
nhases and departments, and so to the instruction of our people in all the sainftil arts nfffaaffl «a nvM our coQDtryoion to adhere to and uphold tSat policy in undonbUng faith that the
true
interest, not of a class or a
Thb
W
bbkly
to Clubs for less than
its value in dwellings for
1
waste
.frien^every
where to aid us in so commending"-
5
$4
for
SKMI-WKEKiiY,
&
'-t
I
S. FRANK,
C«rner Main andPourth.,
.4 A ja I i\
a Store
4 li }*. IfiSt"
i.
,J-
J. ERLANGER
AS A FAMILY NEWSPAPER,
THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE
li
tt
I
-A&
.ti'MJtgyj
•I
CLOTHING,, 9i
is
14 addition
pre-eminent^!
to Reviews, Notices of
New'
Books, Poetry, Ac., we publish Short Storiea rj original or selected, which will generally be
.jj f.
THE TRIBUNE /.
shall keep in the advance in all that concern* the Agricultural, Manufacturing, and otherintereri its ofthe country: and that, for variety and completeness, it shall remain altogether the most valuable,Interesting, and
AoDRiss.all
be a
tealous advocate of Protection to Homo Industry. Regarding habitual idleness as the greatest foe to human progress, the1 ano of human happiness,we seek to win our countrymen in maases from the ensnaring lures of •peculation, of Traffic, »ad of always overcrowded
Professions, to the tranqui paths of
Productive Industry. We would gladly de-
m.
NEWSPAPER published
No newspaper so large aad complete as THE WEELLY TRIBUNE was ever befor» offered at so low a price.
To Mail Subscribers.
a
papw as no farmer can a«brd to do *rirtiout, however widely his politic,
sbi
in the
...
'.f-
weekly
...
One copy, one year,
52
issue*
Five copies
may
..12 .. 9
at one Post
Ten Copies
Twenty Copies
refttUr reports of the
will
ffnd
therein a mine of suggestion and counsel^.of which he cannot remain ignorant without positive and serious loss.
T- Quinn:
OSce.l^'.
fl 50
each. ,!
1 2 5
Fifty Copies And One Extra copy to each tlub. J»
ToNAitasoFScBSCBrBKBsall at one
Ten Capies
SWj
Post Office
K\
$1 60
Twenty Copies
The New.York
each.
1 3 5
Fifty Copi«' 1 10 And one
i.
tra Copy to each Club
Persons eni:.. to an extra copy can. if 1 preferred, have her of the following books,
Sloroee
ostage prepaid. Political Economy,
by
Qreely -arCulture for Profit, by
The Elements of Agriculture, by
Geo. E. Waring.
Seml-WeekljrTrlbaae
TUESDAY and
I matter bo
hsd
SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUTE.
FRIDAY.
of the
Best and Latest Popular Until. By living authors. Nowhere else ean so much
at so choap
a rato as in
One Copy,one year—104 numbers
sec
tion, but of each section and every useful class, is thereby subserved and promoted. We «all
Two Copies
Five Copies,.j~i" or o*»f. for each
paper and,
copy o£*ooollections
Gv&y.
THE
TERMS OF THE SEMI-WEEKLY TBIBWE.
W 00
I na
copy W
An extra coor will be sent for every club of tfln sent forat one time: or,if preferred, a
of a Busy Lite. By Mr.
i/i .. t,
daily tribune.
Mail Subscribers 110 per annum.
*0
3br'Subscribers rnskiny to preserve Mr. Greeley't fiwy, "What Iffcow OF armihg,"
and who pay the full pru.c, i.
or
for
S
kmi-Wbekly,
voe will tend subscribing.
BOOKS FOR SALE AT THE TRIBUNE OFFICE.
The .Tribune Atmaaao for 1871. Price 10 cents Tribune A1 manac Reprint,^
18S8tol868. 2 vols.
«, $10
$2 /or
for
he
W
or
the book, post-paid, if request
eekly kibune,
bt made at f.V lime ofo
Half Bound.
•avLiire. By Horace Creely. Morocco, $4. Half Calf. jfefiv HAriM Grdely.g.^50-^
Ewbaok' Pear Cul Elements Draining _._ Sent ftee on receipt of price.
910.
Various styles of binding. Morocco Antique, 97-
Edition. Cloth,
fnmiikiV,nr^TtUnc.r^w ys Procure a draft on New York or if po«™bli wforVneitherof thele can bo procured, send the
SI.
Cloth, fl 50.
Address
-f
Cloth. *2 50.
Large octavo. Cloth, to.
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in a aaal*
k',
HI IIINIIIi, ItW fOtt.
