Daily Wabash Express, Volume 20, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 February 1871 — Page 2

"DAILY EXPRESS.

TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.

,Tnesday Morning, February 7,1871.

The Ohio Legislature will not, it is thought, pass the social evil bill recommended by the Cincinnati Board of Health.

Hon. Andrew Davidson, ex-Judge of the Supreme Court, died at his residence in Greensburg on Saturday at an ad van ced age, and was buried yesterday.

William Puett, who has been confined in Marion county jail for sometime past, on a charge of embezzlement, will be tried before the United States Court, at Evansville, this week.

It is announced that Indianapolis has -been designated one of the Government weather signal stations, and the gentleman who will be in charge, Sergeant G.

Wappenhaus, U. S. Signal Corps,- has arrived. Indications are that reports will begin to b^made on or about the ^10th instant. ~~v

A

Cincinnati

•1 :-'»n

editoe is inclined to

think the quiet Quaker community of Richmond will he apt some of these days, to remark vary demurely to the people who. keep their town iH a turmoil by disorderly conduct, that it is about time such demonstrations should cease. And if ever the Quakers should happen to drop such a hint there would be little reason to doubt the prompt enforcement of its design. The disciples of the War. Penn school have sometimes displayed a wonderful aptitude for the practice-of peace doctrines. ......

Senator Morton is unhappy unless he keeps himself before the country.— Xnd. Sentinel-*

If that be true, "we cannot sufficiently admire the generosity 'of the

Sentinel

in

devoting a large portion of its Rpace to ..making the Senator happy by keeping him "before the country." For the felicity indicated by the

Sentinel's

Sentinel,

and other or­

gans of the same stripe, screech out 'heir notes of alarm whenever the Senator shows his hand in the legislation of Congress or the politics of Indiana. And so dreadful has this chronic horror grown, that the dreaded old War Governor cannot pay a quiet visit to his home and friends, but the

Sentinel

rooster screams

and screeches until there is not a biped in the Democratic poultry yard but' feels the pressure of impending woe.

By making him the chief object of alarm, and his positions the main points of attack, the Democratic press pays Senator Morton the very highest compliment. Republicans cannot fail to respect a leader who is an object of the profoutidest dread to the Democracy,

MURDER.

SA

Citizen of Richmond Silled.

From Mr. J. A. Perkins, general agent for the Pan Handle Route, we learn that a bloody affray occurred in the neighboring town of Richmond, on Saturday night, •^hereby a citizen of that place met his "death. A man named Culer, who is a distiller from the Country between Auro ra and Metamora, and another named

Augur, of Richmond were in a saloon ^engaged in a game of" some kind, just what is not* known, A dispute arose, •which was terminated by Culer drawing a revolver and shooting Augu three time*,' twice in the body and once through the arm. Culer was at once se cured and lodged in jail. Augur was conveyed to his residence for treatment, but nothing could be of any benefit to him, and after great pain and anguish for three hours, he breathed jiis last.— „Jnd. Journal. .T, .iT" ia-

A String of Pearls. V*

Sydney Smitirs table taik abounded in •'wise hints and suggestions. Wit arid wisdom flowed together, and the pity is that more of his sayings have not been preserved. Here area few pearls we have culled from his writings: "Unpleasant feelings in" the body produce corresponding sensations in the mind, and a great scene .of ..wretchedness is sketched ouf by a morsel of indigestible and misguided food of such consequence to happiness- is it to study the body." "Life is to be fortified by many friend ships. To love and to be lsved is the greatest happiness of existence." _' Let every man be occupied, 'and occupied in the highest employment of which his nature is capable, and die with the consciousness that he has done his best." "I am for frank explanations with friends, in case of affronts. They sometimes save a perishing friendship, and even place it on a firmer basis than at first but secret discontent must end badly." "A nice person make3 no difficulties, is never misplaced, is never foolishly affronted, and is void of affectations." "Hardness is a want of minute attention to the feelings of others. It does not proceed from malignity, or a. carelessness of inflicting pain, but from a want of delicate perception of those littte things by which pleasure is conferred or pain excited." "Remember that every person, however, low, has rights and feelings. In all contentions, let peace be rather your object than triumph. Value triumph only as the means of peace." "Never give way to melancholy resist it steadily, for the habit will encroach. I once gave a lady two and twenty recipes against melancholy: one was a bright fire another to rememh'er all the pleasant things said to her another to keep a box of sugar-plums on the chimney-piece, j)jid a kettle simmering on the hob."

always

'Music Given Away!

We have received the

Folio,

and, an il-,

lustrated Magazine of Music, Art and Literature. Edited by Dexter Smith, the well-known Song Writer, author of

"Rinq

the Bdl Softly," "I\it Me in JUy Litite Bed!"

and hundreds of other popular

ballads, sung wherever the English language i$ spoken. The

Polio

is said to

have a larger circulation than that of all the other musical journals combined, ancl claims to be" the cheapest Magazine in the world. It furnishes, during the year, seventy-two page of beautiful New Musicj twelve splendid Portraits, and three hundred and sixty columns of original Stories, Sketches, Poems, Fashions, Jokes, News, etc.,

Jor only me dollar!

Folio,

The pub­

lishers offer to send a specimen copv of the

containing over one dollar's

worth of new and popular Music,—vocal and instrumental,—toany one desi Fins'it free! Sr.n^ 'or it.

Address

c, Smitii& Perry, Boston.

MAN-MONKEY-ISM

Latest Developments of Darwinism —1(8 Fundamentals Incisively Criticised—Its Aiiti-Cliristianlty Cansticnlly Condemned.

Mr. Charles Robert Pai win, the eminent naturalist, and author of "The Origin of Species," has just published in England his last and greatest work, "The Descent of Man," which the Appletons have in press, and will issue in a few davs. The work, we understand, has created a profound sensation in England, where the first edition sold in a day, and will undoubtedly, when it appeal's, be received here with equal interest.

Broadly expressed, Darwinism is the attempt to account for the present and

past

diversities of life op dur globe by means of continuous development without the intervention of special creative fiats at the origin of each distinct species. It is well known that in the hands of breeders usefal peculiarities in animals are perpetuated by pairing those which show such peculiarities. Our present improved breeds of loilfc-horned and short-horned cattle, race-horses, merino sheep, and the countless varieties of pig* eons, all developed from a single stock— the rock pigeon—demonstrate that these, peculiarities may not only be perpetuated, but increased largely, if nofr indefinitely. This process is known'as

It requires'only a glance to sefe thit Darwin's views-' are at direct variance with Christianity, at lea$t' as commpnty jflt understood- They ignore altogether the spiritual part of man, and regard him Shot and simply as an animal. They ignore also the existence, or at least the active-existf ence, 6f the Creator, who, although sMe may .at the remote beginning have created the germifrom which everything has been developed, is yet represented as having abdicated.Ui^r functions, and turn ed over the universe, -tq£ the beneficent control of Nature, by whose incessant agency, through the principle of natl^ral selection, everything is accomplished.^.

selection*

and is used by man exclusively for his own benefit. Mr. Darwin extends this proceedure to nature, with an important change in its object. Man can only se« lect visible characteristics nature, on the contrary, is continually scrutinizing the whole being, and is continually stamping with approval those variations which are useful to the organism. This principle works altogether by means of life and death—the latter being the penalty of a failure to meet successfully the circumstances in which a being is placed.be those circumstantes physical or vital, enemies or foroes—in a word,, "the conditions of existence."

An illustration given by Pr6f. Huxley will serve to fix this in the jnind: "In the woods of Florida there are many pigs,, and, very Ctirlpiisty, they afe all blackl Prof. Wyirian, many years agb^ asl^ed some of the people why they had .no white pigs, and was informed there was a root in the woods (called paint root) of which the

white

remark,

Senator Morton is vastly indebted to the Democratic press, which has learned by experience to stand, or shake, in mortal dread of him. As a motherly hen or paternal rooster, watchful over a tender brood, squawks at the sight of the hawk's shadow, so the

pigs eat, their hoofe

cracked, and they died, while.it did not1 hurt the

black

pigs at all." This weeding

out on the one side, and preservation on the other, is what is meant by

selection.

natural.

In the introduction to his new Work, "The Descent of MSnj" Mr. Darwin quotes,.with evident satisfaction, the remark made by the eminent naturalist. Carl Voget, jh his address as President of the National Institute of Geneva, iff' 1869, that "nobody in Europe at least now ventured to maintain the doctrine of the independent creation of species"—a statement rather broader, we fancy# than the facts Will warrant, though it is no doubt tr.ue that a large number of naturalists have accepted- the -theory of Darwinism, and admit that species are the modified descendants of other species. Mr. Darwin himself, however, says that those who accept his theory are moistly the younger race arid "of the older and honored chiefs in natural science, many unfortunately are still opposed to evolution in every form." He mentions as among the eminent naturalists who have adopted his vieWs Wallace, Huxley, Lyell and Lubbock in England, and in Germ1ai ny, Buckner, Rollo,JtndHackel. An Italian philosopher, Jpr. Francesco, also maintains the same views in work published in 1869, under the significant title of "Man, made in the Image of God, .was also made in the Ima&e of the Ape."'

Mr. Darwin, like the rest of his atheifl tical school, evidently rejects with con tempt the idea of a spiritual God who creates and sustains the universe. He would probably say there is no proof., of .his existence. And yet he coolly assumes the existence of a:supreme antf beneficent pdwer which he calls Nature, and assigns to it the active and intelligent control tff the universe. What proof, has he of the existence of this mysterious, and incom preherisible powejr His. "Nature" is as supernatural and ,as incessantly active as the God whom he rejects, but whose pow ers and attributes he ascribes to her.I^is theory would be relieved of miich ofclts odiousness if his shallow and -'vulgar theologicaT prejudiees ha3 not' prompUd him to substitute this fttfrely fanciful "Nature" for the true .and living God whose providence by. all sound theologi ans is justly regarded as performing the functions and exceteising the beneficent and selective pt^ye^ iraich" Mr. Ij^rWin: needlessly ascribes to his imaginary-"Na-ture."

Apart, however, from his theological heresies, we think Mr. Darwjn is mistaken in supposing that his theories have become settled principles, of natural sci ence. They are in vogue just now, it is true, and are attracting universal atten tion, and commanding a good deal of enthusiastic assent. But so did the kindred theories of his grandfather, Dr Erasmus Darwin, which are now utterly neglected and forgotten. And so also did the transmutation theories of Lamarck, of whom Mr. Darwin is only a follower, and whose crude and inaccurate conclusions were greatly admired until they were exploded by the authority ofQiivier.

Mr. Darwin writes with an ait of great candor and ingenuousness. But the critical reader will soon perceive that M. Flourens, the Perpetual Secretary of the French Academy of Sciences, long ago pointed out, that he cites only authors who confirm his opinions that he glides over difficulties, and dwells strongly on facts which no one denies, but which prove little or nothing that he continually takes for granted what he cannot prove and that, in «hort, his whole argument is little better than a string of assumptions. The array of factju^hich he has culled and manipulatecnRth so much care to prove his theory of development, prove no such thing. -Any intelligent Swedenborgian, for Mstance, would readily furnish for their explanation a theory much more plausible than that of Mr. Darwin, and at the same time in strict accordance with Christian doctrine. He has not been able to find, in the whole range, of natural science, one single proof of the development of one species from another. Neither natural history nor geology «f-' fords the slightest trace of a kangaroo, producing a'monkey, or of a monkey developing into a man. Even his principle of natural selection, on which his. .whole elaborate structure depends, is obviofifely fanciful and arbitrary irhen Carried to, the extent which he gives itt

But notwithstanding thetfedeftfeta, Mr. Darwin's new book is a mo«tr'important and valuable contribution to knowledge. The questions he jataes and :the views he maintains cannot he shirked by either science or religion. They must be met and answered,- accepted or exploded. They are the vital questions! of the age, and we do not object to their discussion: We do not accept Mr. Darwin's theories, and do not see that he has ifiade any real, progress toward establishing them by' substantial and" Indisputable proofs. But he is clearly entitled to a' patient and fair hearing, aa a man of great ability.

vast and varied research, and unexceptionable courtesy of manner.—JV. 1'. Sun. f*-"

Municipal Encouragement of Maimfafstjarcs. Agricfiltarenever.makes^wns. It scatters ratber than collects. Commerce will make towns,iut its shifting* will unmiike them. Venice and Genoa and Pisa became enormously wealthy by taking both ends of the traffic of Europe with Asia which passed through their hands. When Vasco de Gama found a read to the East/ that passedjfar away from the Mediterranean and the Adriatic, coaimerce ioiiowed him, and the Italian cities followed Tyre and Sidon and Carthage, ,apd7 all the colonies and, glories of the Phojni cians. A flourishing city of torday^ dependent on an indispensable railroad will fade fast' jvben the ^dispensable railroad is superceded by another in another direction. Madison is a sac^ illustration. Manufactures alone.: will inevitably make an inland city vtealthy

'hey alone can defy the shiftings changes of commerce^ and speculation. Like Canada thistles, tjiey are,^ nja^.d' to, uproot when once planted, ana are 'stlre1 to spread further the longer thfy live. They don't merely distribute, but they produce wealth. They don't gather money together by accidental tojicur-, rences of business they m$ke it. And transportation must come after it. To say that a city, or nation should, by all means which inflict n? cdUnterbalanising, loss upon othe( -interests,' enoourlt^.1biian-„ ufactuceS, is, merely to say that they should take,-tlip purest road to wealtji. For years to come, until the interest pn the national .debt ia greatly reduced, we mast have a national tariff to prbyid&tjie! gold for that ^interest, and that"11tariff ought, as far as. may be, to encourage iiur most valuable manufactures. This is the work of|t!he nation,aiid more thah this may never be judicious.: But with a citjr the case is widely different. It, may enctour^ age.ip pany ways which,' to the. nati^ii would be either liapcwriblg Pt- incbnsmutionat, No, ^ree t^cje' or pr6tfectipn tfilputes he^d embarrass' a Comtrion Councir, wever. they may distract Congress. The inicipal body chn't matte a tariff on

maqufactures of a rival city, bat -it lean do what comes to the satire thing,-. jean exeippt its owq frdm taxation^ and a1 hill to allow'this obvious mbde of1 encouragem?nt was. debated y6sterd£y ,lti' (the House( prudently amended arid sent 'back to the Committed on Manufactures. (How it got to that Committee on.its first' reading,' and was amibiidgd before iits second readirtg a1? actually was done, is one ,of the mysteries of Speaker Mack's ruling, which will probably remain an unsolved conandi-iiin" to the* end of time.) It allows a cily council, upon the application of a manuftyturer, now or he'reafter a' resident,^"'wfio' has invested ^0,000 oi/oyer,' and deposited with the authorities a kjm of mon'^ sufficient to defrajf the\expeils# of cial election, to bfHer sfjch ati election to determine whether hik capital may be exempted Mm city taxes, and' if thij citizens so decide the city council shall exempt any portion or ali'of ihW'capital, for any period' und6r tin 'yifarS',' in'th'efty discretion. It strikes us -that if this were amend$0"SQ,as to igake an -election determine the policy ofan exemption, and leave the council to apply it on each case, instead of requiring a separate election upon every application', it ,would sqrve the citizensra good dealr of.trouble, the applicant a. good deal of expense-, But ..any well, g,uarde4 treasure ^tli^Lt shall allow civieg to e|iM^urajge the vestment of. c^pital^ .arid, th^' collejctior^ ol a popqlation.of, so obviousjy w||e s»ind .benefipiaXwai^.Tf.e can see 'riOj objection tc^ if,^ But thp cifhts ,fx|^ing esfa^likhiments m^s| not be imperil led.

tiIt

would not be _ex^

actly fair to exempt $100,000-capital inja new WAfihip® shop 'tatwUpfl^r make an old pi^e,pay tjax,. ^5?^, wou, be,encouraging, (enterprise ln.^. fashion that would ^opa lfay^a'cit^^thput ^ny huA the IapighpRiStartcidf ,,Eapli,nm

nQn$

wptlld kill ajl ^ffore it, 'a.sffU p/eye? one would kill that. Exemp^iqnOaj^e mad^t that. jSjjall prejudice. fl.obo^,',.*ap4 yet: offer ,Ta strong ,^ndi}cement to the Capitalist who js hesitating ^j^en a pi^y in Indiani},.and a city near^n,,tjhe jVlism fiippl^ Wphope tjie pi)l Wiil^e carefu 1 ly examined and perfected, as far as can ,be done withoi^t the directly of e^perien^e, an pa

N

'Aitoknet

—*ii.i

PiKfi Was' met:in. Viebsbar^,

Mis^., a few rweiiis ^o,"by the feditor 'Jtf theJaCkson

Pilot,

kriS'the:lattef'tells'h&w

•he Was struck, thus rt' ^HisloWg !andrl«x'uriant hair-rfgray with the f^Osis of'indfl^ winters—hu^g down''in taas&fes wliicfe al&ost: d6Ve¥ed bis* broad' and stalwart shoulders., IBs. eyes Wert ^Ole»? ftrfd piercing. TOe eleiiierit o£ipoetryj' which is so strongly recogniz&bte' -iri hits p'character, shone very^)lainly, notwithstand-, ing he.jvas,poking a,pipe.of enprpjonsj construction, and whose strength ^andj yileness would, destroy the eyesi^b^ of*pr.-j dinar-y men.. He -wore. an 61^'sTouch-sliai,' andhis,plpthe8 were s^yi t^ulj. he ''h^lj that lordly air about him wfyich'h^ee^yi clothing and.carejess habits', could noti dis^uisfe a Tfeonine asptect^-ther veryj face and front-of Jove ^as,we. rem^fnber Jove)." v.-ti si..

i,

1

*-•-•. ajj.uf esgtBila

No^ that the'lHibois' H6us«:ofBeji-i resefit-ativfea Is as regqlaied' the tariff/andj ftee-frade question to ite-own satisrfactiorij we expect-it'will next turn fits attention! to the Darwinian theory, Huxley's 'Pro-! toplrfsib, baptismal regeneration} the| Ru.^ian-Turkish controversy,1 and othirj great topics and questions on which tbe| w6rld is waiting, with holden breathy for, the Solons at Springfield to giveian expression.—Chicago

Journal,.

"M

The best tiling we hfe'at'd liitely 'minister ifekip# "a feHO#' whose lMtfls Wouldn't down

1

Gallipdis Bulletin. I

:—*.,«,«

THE Director^ of the Louisville Daily Ledger, the proposed,.peW Democratio paper, have elected t'aul R: Shipm'^, formerly of the LouisviJle

Journal

editc/r*

in-chief, and Colonel M. W. CJosky, formerly of the Memphis

Avalanche,

SHEBLjE&.flObl),,

w.."

SACKS fornished ehuipers free of charge.' Corre^onaence WitnoolgtoW^fssoliffltod InformMidnin retfara to-thi to«rkoMJl»4fcrfnlly furnisltBd at til times.

Particular attention paidr^o hondline farm' r's clips sent direct. tojirzwly

egm* ?i*?.

STATE OF INDIANA. Vigo Couxty. NbtM is hereby given that Robert Jj Den

N E W A E IS E E W S

$5 who en?a«c in our now .btisiiietis raake frora S5 to ©10 prtP «lay in tfcoir own localities, Full particulare ana-instraciuins sentfroo mail. Thosrt neodbf potma'neiit.' Drofltablo work, should address at onea, Q^iORGB STINSON-&CQ^Poxtland, Maine. mHE VEWTOKIi DAT-BOliK—TIIE JL CHAMPION OP WHTXE SUPREMACY AGAINST THE WORI.D-A FIRST-CLASS EIGHT-PAGE DEMOCRATIC WEEKLY, established in 1850. $2 per year 81 for six months- Subscribo for it.

mM!i®

For uneeimen cop-

P4 aa^rtty -BOOK, New York Citj.u

H.S.8. tlTCH'S Family i'liysJcinn -by- B*aiL free. Xoauhcs hpwto euro au disbaies oT the person. skin, hawJEtesiiflqmpbsrifta', Writo.^Tl-trBroad- •. ot ..t

Business 'fiwall.

•P-4 Best andnfetrial 8-pagc Newspaper. -fiO cts.peryeai. So ad gUmp for. copy. ENXSTAS,

Btfsttftfi Mastf.

BRpGS & BRO'S

iLLUSTRAfp Miti CATALOGUE

AND SU»ittJE»fFLQVVE&iN(i J^tLBS, .i fr'OTf 1871. f^UPlwWadyfbr waiiing by tho ^niddle of

^oehoetet 'Dtmocritt and- tihrotdcli,

DiscQup.ts.,jiRd rrcmiums, are unsurpassod. PToase 'send*'orders for CaifSldg^ic^1 Without tioiay: h..:-:

OUR COIiOREB CHR03I0 FOlt^SI^

pwy ana popura: eeloi?. 'WA'dfesign to: make at tne^ best- Plate-of Flowers «ycr issued. Size ]9x. 24 inches. The retail-.value would be at least Trfo Dollars

,'o:shall,

u) t\

f'dB s-A.j-,^3 jyi (S 'i I!Y Tn^ 'i-

anmbal and St.i Joseph

-o

R. Ii: COMPANY.

Abont: i£»5.000 Acres of tl«e Finest Farming a«tl Grwung J-andl in tlie XImU,ed'hiatus, or. salo at low pricos and, ton very'easy terms tntte o'riablirig an' wdustrious'iAitjl! With small capital to pay for 'enr-nnd fepv.it -.:.:r

Bat to be at a great' Kailrted'faciliities

are great and constantly iaoreasing thoolimate is splendid, anij goo^,craps aro almost a certainty \yhilo tho flimerous thriving td'wn's and citieS .springing up on fcvery hand a^t6st Wjrond d6ubtth'at the blight'of slavery hai been eff«(ctua,lly dis^ipjated. and that Easternjnen and E&storn capital are doin^ their per'fbct work!

Oiir' iiands, Coriipeiltion. Send foe ijall descriptive Circulars and Secitional lyisjps?, enclosing 30.cents,-and stating what paperTou sitw this in/to ^1

EDWARD WILDER,.

,4 iSian-d Gommissioncr, Hannibal, Mo

''i'ECE NKW REI6FIJME. •:at .'•Jibf jTfl? r., emedy foy Coughs, Colds 'aOiinn

•eh. .,T-

you Wftiitii4ifManerit.j :pro£tablo, wont,, 4d-

Seiid lOc l"ar '••ffl'F. BUIKBS1.NHUiSEMBSi D»yte»,P

.Agent^t'-^ead- xiiis. kfEirtilf PST AOEST8 A-SJtLAlR* OF .$30 *i:i)er'iTOcft aii'd expenses', or allow alargo SSoMn^drLTr^b^ASte mrghallT^Mh4.

Jk. W

1 'VI.

if,a .J "H IV.A

^-i .11

-41.M

and

ex-Confederate Conirressihen. associate editor. 'v .n

r,a

ti -")»1 leaj

A LEIPSIC publisher lias recently^si&td "The Purveyors of Hell," &c.} being art historical decxviptlon of the secreStpblic^' system and the secret societ^os cdf all times and nations: 1 jj-»

Bi

,i

Philadelphia is the greai OMESTIC WOOL MARK®

1

Notions, F^ncy Goods, CIXSA.IIS, (ijvii tfftatvi .n/. TTl,8RYy mV.I :o 0 TOYS, 1, ra •U .i statxo^!J:B.Y.,I' ikfCH,'.. .li fit' I- »SIEIiY, Cottftri Yarn, Baits,

•'!lj A^D WIND.^V' PAPERS, TMriii^Si ©hildran's Carriages,,&o ^,103 (Opposito tho Optra Ilo|iso.J [r.fjj r^tffrd1 their building for tbp

o*ttlitmva

!.

II a porti dent, hit his personal estate being iaiufficiehtf dbbts anAt|git

ceden to be

»i4 petition will of tbo yigo Cpm-(

Witness hand this 53d day'off: JjTnunW/ 1871. llAKTINHOLLINGER. Clerk. SCOTT 4r DOT, Attorneys. jan25-w3w

tjoii^'^cocfO?r3fc Bhi^kins'.-BluMrii, Matchwt MarWes, Fancy ,^WtP3nBrus^9S, •1:0s Slain stroet, Tel-re Ha?Uo,,Ind. fcb2-dwly •,

E A

VrOTlOBJ-^Notici is horeky giron ihat thoIN undersigned has beeu^Dpainted

o'-\' ?rr

•.I w, 1...

(W»aaa

PAT-

A

25ttt Dor

cfembcr_j187u. It wUl^bQ-prinjUid on fcmoat eflogant new iintod .papcrJ ana illusjrtited iWitliTlfearl^ f-1

FIVE Ilt Ji'DItliD 0EKM5Ati ENBBlTr OA, 'An'4'' ftroni8hely!' e'ieciitod^ Colored 'Platda*Specimens for all of wJiich./ wece*.grown by, ouraelyfeatbp past-?easqi:froni qur qwn stoek of Seeds. In t"ho originality, execution and extent of the engravings it is unliko and eminontly "SApetior to .aiiyl otbor C^talo^uo or "vswsgi&v&wM* and aS soon as puoG^hod wiU'-b'e sent Free toall lyho ArdorediiSeeds from.ua-by mail the last season, jCo others, .iv .charge of. 16? cents per copy will be made, which is not the' valuo of the Ctflorca Plates. We asttiftj our friends that tire induoements wbioffer to purchasers ofSeeds®as to quality ,^nd exteat of Stock.

Jbnaflittio-j

1 if iK: -j

1

•h'-,

TO

CLEAR

FLEECED HOSE,

(JLOVES,^^ i'ftJJ i.i)Y FLANNELS,

minutes.

withe tit inj ury.lo tHe skirf. 8mi "by mail for $1,25. .0: UPUAJtt'S ASTHMA CUBE eiiSTJSfiit^t violjiHit ystAs IhjfSce^Tniic io#s arid bffoottna/ asscedyj Price S2 by

Ju

1...: 'i

EMPLOYMENT for 'SA®A«'a«! PEKi WEiiK 'Itftd expenses, pold^Aeonts .-td Soll our new and use£al diseovories. Addross R. S\VEEt & p.o.,^l^fsha)t|jil»Q)h.

wp&mt{wM.sT^wE.i.:^ i^leMarriedfLadiir PrivateGonwaniw .cbn-

tains th.o (Usir,ed »jn£ormatu)n. Sent free toi two stamps.' A duress life. H. WKTZEB, Hanover Pyh'

L'1

,r

A! Y0%P

i^ACKf

,-^Aictiin:

?dW-strfiere'rs-

^in cohsequei(5er '6f

the sleet of the pavement), and Whom-thd minister thonght intoxicated, where he expected lo go to"WlfS^hje died. .The reply was given, "If I cant get along bet-j ter than I do now, I shant go anpvhere.M

1.,naif)' 31

:whole

time to tho business. Boys and girls oafn riic&rly os muph as ipen.. That all •who. Efe© (his HtjfuaTmay sond rt'heir h.ddreSs', and itest fh'e b^M(^8,)wrmako the jinn'arallejgd of' fer: To such ns are not well satisfied,- w,o .will send €1 to pay for.- tUe troublo of •writing. Fuil particulars, a Valuable samplo, which i«o work on-, and a cot^ of

X"''"

dfkrly in-

Hiscteticm, oausfttgneirvotis'dftbnitiy', preuiatutfO d«Ba.y. io.'^liaving triedln vain evei^y aflydttisett re!mo(ty,,.has a simplo means ef

elf-eure, which he \yiir send freo to,his fol-''A-SdViss NassiSu st', Newldrtei

J. H- 'TOTIIiB, 78

N-OTIWISV

«3k

i?bIW#y)i :/I O.:

ff

Shaw}$, Fursi DreSj

Jit

7/

I 'lol fig clieap in proportion. Silicic BEST QUALITY BRUSSELS

9t\t

JfchUine 'irttde, havft now. Jin

lories of KurOpe and Ahjfi'nca', a fttll hno 'of ail oibtls hfitidlbd bjf"tMtn. 4tid-rftl't»rlaes •that daservothe wttcnizo-niofiall olosie bajy^rs.

littqi:

A FUi/L LINE inrnO

-aoU-' snt in .'! "{. tTj STAPLE AND GOODS, n' ThdiASa -Siittlwe Ibiifch^'SV i-fiaw

overdrawn hem, that Hssi nj

GOODS.

OF-

I

t{ 'VA v-fj toils ct it i'A '/i-If hi:R

SHAWLS,

However, fur­

bish it tb-ou&fc'otflars at75 ccnts per copy, and ifferiitas-wPretiyim fOPoni.ordjers for Seeds. :$^ltegW Rochester, N. TV

CLOAKINGS,

BLANKETS,

W

Must go.

"1 .Si

T"

-if.

1

HEAVY MUSLINS,

DARK C4.LICO,U

DRESS GOODS,' I

&c.,

'im*. •f

an

0

IR UK08^S£e0.wBostomi.

YTPHA^fS 9KPit,lT03!Yi Re moves 'gupcrfliiijus hair' rn fivl

fan*

fc .-U

.ft

0^'iii.

iOW.

kjAIif/:

GolorS ithe whisTicrs and hjiirja bcauti/ul k, ack or BP-cno-: It.consistg of

'Ot'alibn..

only ohe prep-

7-5.cents by mail-. Address S. Xft

PHAM. No. 7il Jiyne strjeet, Philadelphia.) Bn.YOirotfltvrs.iselit free. .S#ld bf all Draggists J.

To4iiE WO^klJTu CLASS.—Wb' arc now prepared tdr furmsi' allJ ela3Se3 with okMistiuit eraploym«ntTa*hatne, the wholo of'thei t|mo or for thet spare moments. Business new, light, and profitable- .Person's' Of either -sex easily fearn.from 8(ie to 85 feer ovehi-ngvandii •^Foportioual'sgaimi by devoting.: their

'•lliuULi ir? uru-yvv Ui. HMi iidif ut

ifiiw'i V.U

1 nfv 1 |l•

kN.

11

Y^rNTERta DRY GOODS

AT

-.4

1——

rv,orJ

'./I

im

TUELL, RIPLEf.&.DEMING'S

,. iO £i

1 1A

:J,.l

I «*i A i:

We are fording salea to m^

T!i,

I

"'1

1 offi' Hfv,'

-*-r

''ii it. ifUilOit l'

•''1

It

*d.

3ir- ... ,1

I iirt-liY? 1 it '1* *±.:\

*We

will carry over no Winter Stock. We have made all the profit we contemplate on Heavy Goods, and hbw cdmes the clearance. It has commended/ a in

\idoruern'Maiti':ahd Fiftiytreetis.

1'

!4»P,

'j ti

j/fii

if

1

rO nl

1

-vji

Good'Double Woolen Shawls, ?3 50 and $5, 50c. All-wool French' Empress Clotlis, down tb. 50c.

A. GOOD SET

A better adtf of Furs for $3 00.

as cheap in proportion •I.' rii.n

si:

1

-fi i!

'.l

fjl

6oals' Cotton, oc. feest AmericanA Grain Bags. Balmoral Skirts, 70c up Ladies' Fur-tipped Hoods. $1' 00. ,' CuSto'tpers can come front a distance without anj/far

ovotii

tlf

Jos,

tho

•Vigo Court pt- Common Pleai Admlttianttor '•ktbonirnwoFtho ejtatebPAflchrs* K«rifman, feowaeod -jui

.•

All persons to^d esU|q mos^, settle with tlie undersiferfea Tohn W. Jieyer^ Krm'et kflmrdistiff.'lltfvln#^^Tjeen-rtsiijoVocl by JaMcWrtT JJOsiiS f. WlWilAMS I

Adm'r

de bonis non

of Kaufman Estate.

Terrc Hants, January 31,1871. fcbi-d2w

30

ii!3 i,

1 S .l£

"}o

if xli

id

TIIE WAY FOR SPRING STOCK.

la /1

nohru. -71 .d'i 'j

1 8«{j un j. »fR» t'rf.ir'/'t-r,f *4 4 \p

!ns

ft

io?

tw.

A

THEY SEEK A CESSATiON QF HOSTILITIES! jt .^i frxa fis '5^'iou /tjf »»,* }—.b' '.rioif iJ-f 4'L iftu ,^'i'jiT SKtiJoui n. if'iiHcoo s/JJ

-Q!~3nimh i*uiji 1:1 us?, orfi

T-"

bii(J F'n?'!*1 ax'

7" ju»d riih idifiopsi

il'tv :d.-ui! V- tf.&.fio". 1?t 'ii xftLin Irn. its -1,1^ fi :i

r! hjI,

Id

.')

ker

.M "J

U9I1I

ioiificrnf i:

fa.

*f fob

1:0,1I

-H" Mit

itijiinii-

.dyLAamm YO

A.xLVi

.it

ru.<p></p>Extensive

'Jf

'!(«fi"i

II t. Jlh (j l-f'

•yj'

-Jtli

1

.O

Of'j

'O Jl

i'Of

Whatever others may advertise, a comparison will show Qurs to be the lowest in the market.

ttipar&:$tyt!i.

S'iti

ilV.

&c.

HU' j-ffvi '1 jini/j f»i! h-rt'i L^ri

"if 'flis dflj

SH7it

4 I

.tiiq. van

DRY GOODS.

-tin

I 10

:9DX1

.STMAIrJtf/iii

vm -8.«i

I'

Jiir

fl

Off iiiii •sif i-.'

:t.'. "MS)

FOB" Q,TJABTEB! qw tim. iA ft&V* \b' hL lis iir"i 6 rut v! 9 A id 0 sri)

lit

iusiu'.!

.Vii-u

|i.

•ii

,?3tall-!

are

'i is-

blJ3!'7li

i-. :ltr:

'ntiiifin -(isiqino'.i A- .vjotivtftsl -i2_2 eiv*{ orfi ca37 j-.d scjslq

.ssraia- -a

Slock-taifciBg. is opening Alieir ^yes tqtlie ruinous r'eswlb of tlie war which tbey provoked and brought upon'tjhemBelveg by {heir nrisreprfesentatiotis aml^busG^f oa^ ffonse,. THE ,. DAY OF COMPBOMISE'IS fASSEDl Ciii« y^CQ^ITIO'NAL SUKRUffDER

TOU SALE, cAsH'-txm£ir?"

!71 .'

A" big lot dhW Vfery bfetBPRAQUE PRINTS ever brought toTerrt Hhute,fcr JOe. i07.,. £jj otjjer stores chargfe tZ$c^ for tlie same godds.r-tJ.

of (pheaper Priiits, 5c, 6c, and 7tf. Big lot o£Past-colol-ea Prints, 8c an^ ?Ke ftinta we s^ell for 8c an^ 9c, the country stores chacge 12Jc

T^we sell for 5c, 6c, and 7c, the Wuntr^ stores charge 9c and lOo for. SOO pie^ BEST'AMERI€AKDeI/A1NES for 12Jc. ..') vvr.otlicr stores in TerreJ Haute change 20c lor these.D«L$ines £nd oosuntry: stores charge 25c,

T:'

'Also, '?t! big lot of yard-wide UNBLEACHlED MUSLIN, fine and,heavy,. 9c a yard, B^^All other stores in Terre Hante cTiapte 12.Jc, and country storea charge 14fl anH 15c fer the same cjnality of Mu8lln(». .on aj.j.uh njji 30b p}iies ^fGOO'i) MUSLINS for 6c aid 7c per yard}.. twinfj I iA:1 jpL' fi@,The sam,e as sold in othet stores foi* 9c and 10c. h&Ue-fV A 1 :li* f- -V' .nv jrioi frt«" 9fl I Otr I it.-, j" ^-ol iJ ifu ntu^ui

.1 -I AjsOj.flj^arge stoeK of »r:ii .j('(»-

i» Otfods, Alpftcas, Vel-

Clolihs, ami Cansimeres, Carpets,

^liks, Laees, Trimmings, 'Mtffcrinoes, and Umpre^ tlotlw.

GHKAtIsEW YORKOITlrSTpllE

-"tit

|Nortlii^ide of Main St., Joh to~H inti avi aysi.1 a. it

Oil)

Good yard-wideGA-SPETS. from 30c upr.t »H

1

0

rtifcii

All-Wool Freflcfi- Mcfrinoesj down

1

or IHCrEWS POR0t ."r -ill hi!.. ,(!oi) (5ettuine M^nk Sets, JbWn tq?S"' 00. Fiiie irfint'&J-1' Genuine Black ^.strachon Sfets,'ddWR. t£ $6'0C(i A Splendid J-'ur Hood for $1' 25, wbrth1^.

-1««»

B^t ^Taysvjjie "^ar'pe^ar^^c ^ach. -t frprppf, Vpcjy,

if

nvpfdrartn. We always ifelef to have .our customers bring our advisements with they may fiife tntit we ^ell exactly aa we adveWise.

FOSTER BROTHERS'

oar^adf^eraente bem#

-iSI -i ..ft

r"-'

-/'lOv

i«30IH19Vr.

,,

TERRE nA'tTE,lNDlAHA,

.^a:. M'.-

CLOTHING.

EBMOVAE

i-.irfts]

h,.:

iK

vtojYirst it

''.H

1.

'"'-iV

tor*

'r' in-

/oai»^ \fnc

'.-Ho irAiTS«vm/.ii( Ofl'ifl )l

Frank has Removed

HIS

CLOTHING STORE

'.fi

TO -i—••

Corner Main and Fourth Streets,

W o' TSrlf, il.r t, jfrrf.,'. :..?T

if i'-

|'i.r Jjfrftf. »ir «•...•« (The fiooia lately Qccupiejlby ,Warre!i, !l(»ber^ & ti.)

JS"«

9

»J(Et I -v

Having on hand a large stock of,!!/

1

W O O O

Ait

link

intend to close out my entire stock of mejvs:!ajvi:^is'

iA4t

...

.!-•!* i)P i/l Si? if u: i-H.-i-.i pfj \i.ui "Mir.' .:mi -xuoaV't 'i biiii sn

1

.f0

JHU rt

O 0fi

»'U «uofttjojinfi a-rrVijlwii

•311

rij-jir vnirnonil)-o -JJU.LL .... Bbi

.iMiiBi /.-JJ

»i

,7^.- 3STO.

1

Wr

labadU .1-: f!ii

srl to nb '51:5 09T Yl

»lj

a is 1

701 V)b

no Jr.! ut

'fjKC'icreina-

TIT «•.

,I

GOOD

propose tdclose tliem out 'J.

Tojaiake room for an

ft' -jJ3"

jaff aw3tbu "-",

Stock of Spring Goods.

--.t-.

CLOTHING.

Having Leased a Store

/a \':Zu

IIV THE

OPERA. BtOU&'E BUILDING,

Before Removing, and in order to accomplish this, ^shalloffer GOOQS, for the next SIXTY DAYS,

Cheaper than they were Ever Sold

IN THIS MAR Kr.

"i'fH

as

riot

tfVi-i .-if --U

Great Bargains in Undershirts and Drawers^

JTEA T)Q UARTERY FOK CCO THING?

l±/LJLLfcr

iMtSfiNalH. .iisD .jn^flir- bat

..

=,

y«®j£oo^ 'Wsuf Yj-irarT

0 iS 3

cno(j,j.r

iit

rViiXMitifft JL moil A 1 "g mi} U'ii ornic il

STREET.

hit Tin

no)Iia'ii:II

.. ..—— LaL

.-qte-

..

DRY GOODS.

Jitj' -_[• •isidir.o'ff !i ou-L

Hi-v

aioJ'i I

OJ si e":'T .8 hnti ,frbli'n hjvulti,?

.,5?hpeft

s,'t

Ai

JlOfi •bii tut

ton

I'Dj-isfjoa

-. d-'

it

i'Ct

will wH

,WlHekjh» teofsnabla

bttB bit'.-

^ARTPW^U bfc Ttarnisked pnarttir-itf tha»»MoaiPr!tndoena aagjjrd]^

FLAVOR INGE XTR ACT"^ .1 .. •)'. Llfc-uaBA od

\J-1?,"•

WARREN, '•««5.<p></p>'HOBMftt&-5.C0•J.o-ifrjf/\iiI'Jill•JiIWi|,

I A O S E O N E ir.r»,j,r.-mil) crt

i.gai.'tft'j .fflt fO

Offer large inducements to close out their Winter Stock nrqrfV,3 'i x. [, ,at

I'jti'.foffl ailT a .a J«-

u.

-.'!]

ovr

-.5i RfiW odw

vriM.-iT"®

t)'rices as loW as the iow^tr

WA ERENv HOB EllG & CO:f

S^EA.T, "sJiEAD^lf apt BBS

.. ....it,. .!•

h')il

CARPETS ONLY fcl 25

oi?rd"It6u**'"BlocIc,

^INES

51.'^ 7

»rJ

o'J

'Jilj K» fl'i JACOB riiatiw Has just received another choice lot 4f BHINE, FKKNCtt AND CAL1-

-'s ofhlir

ADTtTlW PLAVOHING UrtlJLlN 1 EXTRACTS.

tiig rsK

jan22

BFVVINN6.

'•i i—

Js.t(! -IV fi (i t,:

decl-dtf a.

ue

-hf

at"

FRANK, i-,

Corner Main andPourth.

Hi n-Y

•uit

SV

iW

clothing!

[,#'

lA

•A

iOVilj

iht.ii -rfamim 'ill

f-.h .•

9

JSf

03 t-Ty^7

.'ii

I

-U

1

.i

I So

13

Elf

ids.

PL

•I-aiii

J.

ii'-

ERLANGER

ot vt

iti vi-gtVo-i.?n.-'

.cttoS

.it"

*trn rli oi 3 if aWf

I? -.

.11:

iiit'

tten i!yf ilk

ttUt

nidi WMU 1*630

S'j-rc.v rl) 'it din"u

ix

rr

.. —.io

1 {]c

E A N & S O O S O A S S

-m odJ«4 -c-V'i mMo, -.ut ^r.in 11,

t*.

ryar,,^,.

»ijonrs'J

Or

... ah:

Kow^is the tanilA:tO» a:

h.- inm

-s xli s'

.lOqi! nniii lO 0 rncnl rido-^iit «ii 'tw h^PA. 'ii Kfi/t a'tn:-'m 'ttsivM .Insir) siU rt oin»j -fi cfrfli ij

OfW l&mwoojys AT A'BAB&.lliV

.'j&Qifce Gafyy the best selection

rt-.'t0 IrL

PXTLL LINESi. OP DOMESTIC

wiji! .-L hnn

tiw

1 te-'ffr S W01

yr

"qo

in.

vrfi

rig

Siihd lo

'ifa ts.li ff-.lferTiDiJ. 3*1* "?.ȣ

)W'

sco.7

.S

«JW

©en reduced

Bit f! Sf-ffif-l

1

3

5 lo Pfi...

.y

Itli'w t-di

.wd fj)'

10 Vj

V!-. -1 V.iti ,wH'£ ifinr-t "'.""..ar.-, fill SS'i.fj Jj-I'.-i 1 :-r t\. if (TK

"W,r

•-,'s'T-lj .•IT

8il L.J-.

a}

431

j).

:'2

''-v

ctooDsrsv.jj'vurj.'i

.i.i

hi# li Iti ,Wt1

-f

I

A E

aqi'^4

CARD.

r.V,

4 UtJ J-v «4V

ri

,«r.

FOR DBrrijaoops,

or-

Comer "Room,

Confectionciy & Bakery.

•ins refitted h« Gor.feotioncry nnd Bakeifr formerly kept by M«ctra- Jtliesion & Co., No. 16North Fourth.atrect, and engaged the ssrvices of Mr. MeeSdn,l am nowproparea tj.* to farat»h orders bf any kind for Weddings,

I»BtJvals.-itc.. inodr line. We haV«

llaffa new and -selected, ftoak all kinds of Candies, Nut?. Jfcj., fft,tho lowefet possible priies. We dsk a chare of the public patron

Fro^iiiik htall time*. ». P. King. ifl sr:

•'"ie2M3m"

,J'North-Voarthis.

SEWINC machines.

Clarions News for the People.

NEW EBA IM-THESi^USCLf. CftlSE WOBtB.

THE

ASTONISHING DISCOVERT has just been made by all the high-pJiced Sewintt Machine Companies that tho HOME SHUTTLEMACHISS is fatCsupercediner alk/othfrs. Itma)iM on both sidrt. Is for, 111 l(*hfs»r than any jebielln^ai

alike rnns

nnrketl Wo

guarantee it a. Firsl-elaas Machine in

irerj

respect, and offer IliWO for rfhy Faiiily Machme ttttt-Hrill do a Uqn rtacf of wor*. It^ uw* flrom-tHarnesa Leather t« Mnalia iB ..srrconn-

VAN DUSEN, 137 WestJefferlon stree Louisville. Ky. .•»?. odB.chrSra