Daily Wabash Express, Volume 20, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 9 March 1871 — Page 2
r-IE DMrEXfRESS,
PB .l-iSHRH «V 'P.T aORSIKG (BXCKPT SBSDATS) AT COR. SIXTH OHIO 8T8., OPP. FOSTOFILCLxawa.
*lAT3*sVnrti(,sday Morning, March 1871«
.£ QOVJBKHOK ALCORK
ft A WASHINGTON
DECISION
GRANT
haying declined
ihe office of Senator, Mr.
BEVELS
SPECIAL
A
and
it six
md*
states thai
the namber oC candidates for member^ ships of the Commission created by an act of the last Congress to examine and report upon the claims of loyal citizens ot the South fot Itwses sustained during the Rebellion, is rapidly increasing The iaduc$nien&to their asfjiratiogs' are •& W&ry'!crf$S,()O0 «!jria|r^ ri£d
:ligfjt
of,the Supreme Court of
thie United States, Judge
MIXLEB
fleeted bis successor. For, if as large ae spaoeiu^B&&%are" canmaintain whole family ofthe.saifte n%me, why qot as small anpaqe as. the Senate take care of two?" v. j.
THE
New Orleans
.i
Times
IT
publishes an
"epitaph whidh-th#' lfldianapolis\/o«inftZ borrws for the purjwseof inscribing very '%vetfMf toMwrPSe^Bth 49&£r*L
Aesembl of the State of Indiana: WM -SuI ©fi&T The LegitUtiiee JLt terribly of
1871.
.'ar b«#, Baaotteain, imeaitar,
7f
taoU#bvwm Conceived in Crime, -5 ,,1 It lived a lifcof.Bspine,
rji.
And festering corruption Dying AnM theaeaiii and Contem^tbf allhbnorable men. It leaves a Corsair's name to other times, limited with one ^jftuo and a thousand crimes.
is the purpose of Secretary.,
WELL
COLFAX.
GENERAL SOHENCK I3
ia
ia a
.SJ
riot to go
England after all. So soon as the Joint High Commission has completed labors heis to be appointed Chief At torney ot the Northern Pacific Bai)rbad at a salary of twenty-five thousand do! larsper annum.—lnd.
Journal
There is a strong odor of ra$ the name of any corporation thaj WAnts to pay' ah 'attorney the enormous salary -K~f.
mr tynifmn)wi.ji
The-money thus
of $25,00^. yety. xn^. money used comes from^ih'e productive industry ^e^u^tjey, apd^that salary represents tt^tSOTtfiu(TOs toilctf twenly-five or thirty ,in,en, the average savings of several hun Of drecF prndeat, industrious men. The
Northern Pacific £ailroad Company evi dently needs watching.
tUiiOQ well^'riformiJ^circles that (h$ PQnps^lvfinia Central Company now controls lour thousand miles of rail way line, has built a line of European
Rteamcrs from Philadelphia, and but'for .some intermeddling 3 they ?w§ill8il have cro^^d, JCentucky and established connecliohs wtK ifenoivllle and 'Chattanooga fcjolbnB ti$b time. ^1^ another year ft is believed that the Pennsylvania Central will control the Union Pacific, and add 2,000. miles more to their jurisdiction It is suspected that it will also get control of the Southern Pacific. Twenty years ago the company started with 300: miles from Philadelphia to Pittsburg. They are now negotiating for the Camden a ad Amboy, the greatest road into New York city. The U. S.
Economist
a poke the
natural
ia* af i-
thinks that
in a few •years thissingle company will have a capital of $1,000,000,000. The man or the city that would be great in his or its day and generation better hitch on to the Pennsylvania Central-
Pr8"fanation Extraordinary. "Home bed d!" was the elqgant ex clamation that greeted our ears last evening as we were meditatingly strolling on our Way to our own humble cottage.— The speaker was a young man of prepossessing appearance, well dressed and evidently well connected, for his address bet'
gentleman. But nature
is sometimes sadly marred by education, and such, we thought as we passed on our way, had been the case with this youth.— "Home bed d!". What a text for a sermon! What a comment to fall from the lips of a cultivated man! He who can thus lightly speak of that social institution without which all order would become chaos—the institution which makes a heaven, so to speak, upon earth—must be wanting in those elements of character which constitute true manhood, whatever may be his pretensions to personal attractions. We can imagine no deeper depravity than that which fails to recogfiize the sanctity of the home circle, and he who profanes it by word and deed -f must indeed be lost to all tl\pse finer sensibilities of humanity, the cultivation of which renders society tolerable.. Let us never speak lightly of that which, inter- .•- peted, means mother, father, sister, brother, wife and children, one or all. If we .must profane, let the subject, at least, be one in which we do not live and move v'jtad have our being—not that which em'^bodies all that is best and noblest in our .daily walk of life. Take heed, yotung "inan, to the words of your mouth. A .aaanleite like this is without excuse.—
Provident* Herald. .* -i.
Jfea-
MERCHAflf OfiMSWMNC. MP*
JOHBBABin*'- -S-'!"SCESES
will be
one of 'the candidates for the place, his own term having expired. The election cornea off on the 14th inst.
deliv
ering tbjp opinion, determines :4hat the
coimti^of Berkeley and Jefferaon iyere qf jfr. Madison'a is movedtoindignatjo^wlien talking pf the past and contrasting it -with the present. This iold man has his own account to give of
"egtiifflrmmrd'vrest finally settles A-3Mig pending question.
sentea from the views of the majority of 'the Court.r'°'i3S iff ,&•*
»»«•—-Uiajrii'
THE
Philadelphia
Press
thinks it was
only f'& natural .mistake" for the retiring '.SAULSBTTRY, on last Saturday, to suppose that he was atiUta Senator in Congress, ^otwithst^hding his brother
ELI
had been
BOUT-
to refund $500,000,000 of six per cent, tonds at four per cent, by allowing themjtgjrun thirty years $500,000,000 bearing interest at .four and a half per cent., runiiing fifteen years, and $500,r 000,000 at five per cent., running ten years. It is generally thought that ithe plan will be carried ^out. If so, the savings in the first class will be ten millions a year in the second five millions, and in the third two and a half, making a reduotion of seventeen and a half millions ayear in the^acjua^expenses of the Governments ran
Pr is reported that, in last Thursday's caucus of the Democratic members of the House, anew departure for the Presidential campaign of 1872 was resolved upon Time will show. Meanwhile/as the case stands, the only authoritative utterance on that point is the speech of 'Senator FR^NK BLAIR, ef Missouri, in which he avowed the revolutionary doctrines of his celebrated letter before he was nominated by the Democratic Convention for Vice President ia 1SCS—a letter which helped him to hasten and emphasize the election of
Colored
Belated
the enemy during thejnvasion to which I hav$,had occasion more than once to allude." Uncle Paul is a irfost interesting acquaintance. Uncle Paul was born a slave, in the Madi^pn family,«nd raisedju tpef. vHef^^alway", fftei^^iaiw farg* enoagh to wait at the iaUe/tt Mr. Madsson's left hand, and poured out the tea and coffee for the guests. He was Mr., Madisott's confidential messenger, •ad darri^S th^ notes folded lengthwise to an inch or two in width, and then by a twist apd turn in the center made to form'hall a" rectdngle^-for envelopes were not then—to the Cabinet officers when special meetings were called. "I CQuldv.r«ad^ waiting" says .Uncle Paul, "befoffc could write a' word." When th^ (Jabinet assetubled the boy had the daring to. remain in the rpom often dar« ing the meeting ahd unnoticed, or if noticed supfKHea to be too young for his presence it) be objectionable, he listened special meeting whjt.cn look place jU6t berorfe the battle of Blaclensburg lie particularly speaks, and gives the name, from mem!ory,.jof «v«ry Cabinet minister present. "I heerd," he says, "Mr. Madison say to General Armstrong, the Secretary of'
War, 'you must give arms to those men living down by the arsenal,' and, General Armstrong said, 'It shall be done, sir but" Is?
AND I TELL YOU WHAT I SAW," Continues Uncle Paul, on "the 23d of August, the day before the battle, I saw an old woman come through the hall of the White House, and she wore a black dress and a black silk handkerchief over her head and spectacles, and I ran after her, boy like, you know, and pulled at her skirts, and she shook me off, and said, 'Get away you little scamp and that old woman was Cockburn, the Admiral of the British.fieetl I knew it was and he went through all the departments and saw all he wanted to see. The next morning I saw standing by Mrs. Madison at breakfast, and all the Secretaries were there, and some more, and Mrs. Madison said to General Armstrong, 'General, do you think the British will come to-day?' And he said: "By no meens, Madam,' but he knew it all the time."
Thejwhole party who rode away after breakfast were expected back the same day to dinner at 3 o'clock, and Paul, who prided himself on his ability to act as butler, had the preparing of *the dinner table. At 12 o'clock, he says, he put his wines in the coolers and at the table, and the cook put the "stew-pans" on the stove, and then Paul amused himself with a game of marbles out of doors. Pretty soon he saw a black cloud in the direction of Bladensbutg, and heard cannon firing^ and presently people began to run past, then a messenger came to Mrs. Madison, warning her to hurry from the city, for General Armstrong had ordered a rejtreat! Panl Beipok himself within and saw Mrs. Madison come down stairs with a reticule in her hand? and fill it with silver, "but she never looked at nothing else,", says jUncle Paul, alluding to the story of her cutting General Washington's picture from the frame and carrying it with her, "she just went off in a hurry." Left behind, the boy enjoyed the sport of seeing the.people.run through the streets, Never was there anything like it. "Dere. was old bonnets, old hats, old dresses, old carls and feather beds Jashed on behind," By and by Paul, who had once in the meantime refused to leave, concluded to go with another boy and went, savinghbthing "forgetting even my two violins down in the cellar*" he says dolefully. He reached the ferry at Georgetown just as Mr. Madison was about to cross it, going to Virginia, but was unseenlay him, and so. went his own way. After' some adventures he reached about dusk, a farmhouse where a Methodist minister lived, and found many there before him. For there was a crowd everywhere, "henhouses" and chicken coops were full of people.'' The minister gathered all assembled on his premises all about him in prayer, and while they were prayirig an awful noise was heard and everybody, rushed out of the honse, "and we saw/' says Paul, "the public buildings all on fire in the city, and when I saw the White House burning I just cried out, 'Dere goes my poor fiddles.' I was only a boy^ou see." ,t
MRS. MADISON.
Uncle Paul continued to live with Mr. and Mrs. Madison'after they returned to rivate life, and after the death of Mr. ladison, remained with his widow for many years while she was living in the house still known as Madison House on the northeast corner of Lafayette Square. In this house Mrs Madison continued her reign, for never while she lived did society forsake her. It was customary until her death, on New Year's day for all the grandees, after calling upon the President to call next upon Mrs. Madison. In her parlor political enemies met as on neutral ground. Of her grace much is said much, also of her conversational powers, of her dignity and, in spite of the last, of her wonderful ability to put-every one around her at ease. "Never," Uncle Paul declares, "was a more racefuller lady in any drawing-room, ^e always had our Wednesday ev receptions at the old Madison Hons we had them in style." Of Mrs. Madison's high white turbans much is said also, for they were much. It is'supposed she spent $1,000 a year in turbans. She wore one to her latest day, long after wearing turbans had ceased to fashion. These turbans were made of the finest material, and trimmed to her various dresses. Her old servant speaks of one of her dresses of purple velvet with a long train,.trimmed with wide gol^ lace, with which she woi£ turban also ornamented with, gold lace, and a pair of gold shoes. WiUi a white
tsmm
Waslii
Biuntitt
A Washington correspondent of the New York Post
gives the following:
The history of the White House is too generally known to need much commept .Here. In 1796 and 1797 it wilfe reached only to the level of the ground, and when Mrv Adams, whose term of afficewas &tH nearly completed removed here in 1800, the honse Wasnot ready for him to beenpy it, and he took lodgings at a public house in Georgetown. Beforehe retired from the Presidency, however, he and his wife removed tQ the Executive Mansion and lived*th^Ee in ffrfat^jflcomfort. It was raucfiiiytire*} bilk not entirely destroyed by the ?Bhph in 1814, and though rejaairad»aqi£0 of. its. apartments were not entirely completed until Gener-, al Jackson's time,-wiien the Eastrdom was first used.: Nevertheless the early Presidents lived in style, and. knew how to entertain so sumptuously that ^V'.bld
pangled
satin dress she wore a tutban with silver, and silver shoef. he sent jegularlj. to l^uris^for her
:^|Rr\tea%ailHp
and
ice men^wed |i3 feaCards w|ri tli« great
ounae oCt imflflle-aged ladiesi at that i^feriou^ia^WT^rtmt which Mrs. Mg&ipbn was one,^te«t regularly every da^at the house of some one of the circle to play loo or "whist. .. PORTRAIT OF WASHINGTON.
Before closing" the recital of Uncle Paul's reminiscences it ^»uld be/WeU toadd hb account of the resbuefof.uenfau. jon's portrait, whose prraerva•iry geBefaHy^'KeSi
it out of its frame. !^ow aoes it look
donKiciaffty'WOtdj a®|, talked*boa
wordjap^talked
lory,
I Went and found
French doorl^laper wlio nse lie Wfiitlr House.
OS in the Wnitir House. Wheh he me coming he ran to me, ahd thrtW Mflq arn^T around me,: and says, Oh!i mon
who took .the W a ii 6 lore aW^y'wfihBti the BtiHrfh'was jie says,"'i'didj I tobt h?m: 86Wi.!s'
sole did', and erne of tKe® othfer ^servMHi helped,) And they cairied that picture MJ ,one be tWo'inqTf, ana Some silVfer,-'1 in a cart, and hid' fhein in* tHe woodi"t#l ihe trouble was ovef, and then ,BroU|h them bade to' thlb hous^
•which Is nip dbuj^orriecly'a^ Unefe Pitt' ii^ considered reliable by thWe whp^havi knbwnJiim longest and best^-Speaks ior the patriotism and.hdhi^fy bf thteemployed in the "V^hiteHousej itt a tit
'.hoiirai'
Th« lfe '~ta fjwr
^Qnly, let woman be sure the is preci-
his polite ihdliiar'fy^ttentio^,- let her feel that her cares and love are needed, appreciated and returned let her opinio^ be gSked, her a£{$k)val sOUght, sMQ' heijudgment, respected Hi matters of. whfch she is cognizant in short, let her onWlbe' loved, honored and cherished in fulffiltaent of the marriage vow? and she will be to her husband, her ^JcSiildren and society, a well spring of happiness. Shte .^ill bear pain and tbil and anxiety for her husband's love to her is a tower and fortress. Shielded and sheltered therein, adversity will have lost Its-sting. She may suffer, but'sympathy will dull thje edge of sorrpw. .'
A house with loveinuS—and by love I mean love expressed in words, and looks, and'deeds, for I have not one spark of faith in love that never crops out—is to a house without love as a person to a machine, one is life, the otheAs mechanism—the unloved woman may .have bread just as light, a house just as tidy asJhe other, but the latter naa a spring ofoeauty about her, a joyousness, a penetrating brightness, to which the former is an entire stranger.
The deep happiness of her heart shines out in her face. She gleams over. She is airy and graceful, and welcoming and warm with her presence she is full, pt devices and plots, and sweet surprises'for her husband and family, she mi* never done with the-romance and poetry of life. She herself is a lyric poem, sitting herself to all pure and gracious melodies. Humble household duties and way3 have for her a golden significance. The prize makes her calling high and the end sanctifies the means. "Lpy? Heaven, and Heaven is love." :g 'l Garibaldi.
Garibaldi may «ot be a successful Gen eral—and his campaign in France was disappointment to many—but he is un doubtedly a most noble-hearted man and the idol of the Republicans of Eur Ope. Elected to the French" General Assembly, lie resigned when he .that Republicanism was overthrown. A cior respondent says of him: 4 "As Garibaldi left the House, th&Na tional'Guards presented armB to him M. Thiers, quite in a rage,-wetft upi to the officer in command, and said "Wb do you do that?" /'Because," said the ^Officer, without a moment's hesitation,"he is General Garibaldi he is a deputy he has come to fight' for France, and lie is the only General who has taken a P/ua sian flag." M. Thiers made np reply, and I should think he mast beiorjry Chat he asked the question. As. he got into his carriage,- accompanied ty General Bordone and his twoaid£3*de-camp, Gari baldi had qftite aujjvation. He rose, ahd I saw standing jipright Uiat legendary figure, with which pictures have made all the world familiar. He: had a gray cloak over his red shirt and, wore a loose brown felt hat, of the kind called a wideawake. He said si few Words onty^ Co the effect that he had come to France to" fight for the Bepublic, that he should have been happy to serve Republican Fraiice in any way but that his midsidn over, and that he should start tl for his home in Caprera."
it***
1
A few days afterwards when'the panic was over and all were returning to the capital, Paul met Mrs Madison in her car riage on the road, "and when she saw me," he says, "she just leaned half her body out the carriage window and caught me in her arms, she was so glad to see me and know I was safe. Well, I went back witli her, then and when I went to the White House, what do you suppose I saw? It's the truth and no one, living or dead, can deny it: I saw written everywhere on the walls in big letters, 'General Arm strong sold the capital for one million dollars." Yes, I saw it,' and plenty more saw it too."
'A'i
Aii
Interview ^Played.*,
The man who tucked up his boat tjHs to be kicked after taking a dram-which he had no money to pay for,
nsied tp'be
considered the coolest man put but a Reporter of the Cincinnati Enquirer
leads
the score now. Relating a late interview in the Covington Post Office with, the father of the President who told him lie might go, he adds:
At this point a sallow-looking individ ual, whose lean, iank, lorn-like look: was like that of an office seeking Uriah Heep had crawled in during the interview, walked up to the old man and said to him: "Dan't you see you're telling just' what that reporter wants to know? This whole thing will be in the
Enquirer
in the
morning. Then turning on ns with ah eye which had about as much speculation in it as a sleepy dog's, he proceeded to say: ''Dont you see that he don't wish to talk with you, and has already asked you to leave this office and now," with this he stepped so near that we smelt a mixed odor of bad whisky and decayed teeth, "if you don't leave I'll make you."
Our reporter then waited long enough to have this exquisite process performed.
THE
Brooklyn
Eagle
charges the phi-
losephers and literate of Boston with an unanimous propensity to gush. The biographer of Theodore Parker—Wyse, by name—relates, with exceeding gravity, a story which may account for the prevalence of this propensity. Once upon a time, many years ago, it appean that, by some accident or other, a box of the books of German transcendental is ts arrived at Boston, and, perhaps through some mysterious act of predestination, was burst open. The modern Athenians, b&oming apprised of the fact, seised upon the sacred contents of the, outlandish casket and straightway began to speak in phrases before unknown of sutgective'and objective, of unities and dualities, esoterics and esoterics, of the me and the not me, and Of their feelings in general, in phra* the] seplqgy so uncouth and wxtravagant, that aome ^uninefected Yankee was constrained to define Boston transcendental* ism bf
the simile of a jackass-standing
on his hind legs and looking upward into fog. Since then, Boston has Mbmed to lave bee6 ia^a^tea wiih a, commission to talk nonsense, of which it has taken the fullest advantage.—Chicago
E!«EJ*
re
time-keepers.
Wheul Wlrit
yotf-1, 'kiW lifei4IWiV# itfoi
c«ime'«filv^r
aowepe the peopl superiority over all others.
#ith fftri
iaV' poiht with, a ''.'g*nittisinlni 1rik
Wpr
a it
imetleat
!Thw1
bbitue
the
by Railway CoDduetors, KaSxpregsmen. the most, exacting
of watch-woarera, has thoroughly demonstrated the strength, .steadiness, durability and accuracy of the Waltham Watch. To satisfy
-ifiy efller ^raioK" iMrety :a5^or,6l) i^iit.%oi^ ft»r tbair waMM«i thaa '(••iiarTi '1 S'iif JlV' -isfr -o
TSefce fli^-#MM*»iin^iBenver^.iaanm-
iosei :s8»j6objM
ttc]i-ma|jgf
of nearly every invention in wateh-i
originating iathis»ou)»i*jrj#ran Europe,
na^y
jntxfeirjth^ia^^
jwhiehse^ere
works, and long ase on the part of the tomwmstkiirtB'fmWtoiPr H^durlpg li.Ai .ifrrtv (ilTho ia^nttpa, ^wUw,pt^
Am
«aad«nd Mi adiw ^e.we
tsbofits qaaU*jiiow
cleMlini...
by flw CMttt«ySarB AmklfiA* VfATCH Co.. AMKi^TOT Co.. Wall
AitKETCii* WlTflH .Co.,' Mass. 'U-' .,^RPLFROHTSAAGT A CP., W*^|UMASS.
AMEBIAN, WAJCH,
hain,Mats.' .f
For saW by all leading jewelers.: No watch•aTetaQed lty th»ioaiany. ,, .. ..An illustratid.Jto'ory of watch-^akinr, containing much rhiormatlon to wateb-wear-en sent to ans*llddrt88 on application.
90 pages '"6nt by mail free. Teaches how to cure all diseases of the person: skin, hair^eyes^,complexion«
gfegt AssortmentPric
Write to 714 Broaa-
BLW«iNWN(iLt.) 600 Acres. ,13 GrienhOusds.
iJi 19th Yoar,
SELL TREES.
SC\V?
including Waters', at
fOR'
CASH,
T-
Lar-
lont—all sties. Best-Stock
ItocklXoW'
ces Would you know^What, When and
Ki^^5ur"iSsS3Kfi^
Finest,.Best Collection—Sorts and aualitjy. Send l^ cents for New^ Illustrated, Descriptive Catalogue—90 pages*. Send s.tamp, eadh, for Catalogues of Seeds, with plain directions —9-1 pages Bedding arid Oarden PlantS^32 pages, and Wholesale Price List—24' pagfs. Address P. K. PHCENLX, Bloomington, Ills.
F°C^filK|s™N^ftSEfRIES, iJayton.iO.
'A'GreatO«er.^"&^
Will dispose of One Hundred Pft*«s, Msio.DBOHB, and
0R61*S
Address 1 AGO. P.BOKUJ. & CO dJi'-Ai Xei. 40 Br«W Tarb. ffi9A THE "VBG KTABLB ICWfl lOftO PULMONARYJBALSAM.'' lOif The old standard remedy for boughs, Colds, .Consumption. "Nothing belter. vDTLBR BROS. &CO., Boston.
EMPLOYMENT for ALL.
&QA SAURT PEiiC *HEK. and ez©QV'penifcS, paid Agetits, to sell our incw aild ossfnit-dtsaar-eries^ Address Rl Co., Marshall, Mioh.
if si
turl
IXTBEMELT LOW PBICRS,
nuiitNO tats HOUrSi o^wtll take a
part eadh and balance in monthly, or quar^v terly infitalljuent^
4.
who engage in,,our new business mak&from 95 to 910 par dkjrin their own localities. Full parti«hilnrs and instmctions sent freely inaiU ^Ibose in need of pecmanqpt, profitable work, should address atwohce, GEORGB STINGOS & 0., PoWand]mWe.
FOIt 9,4 PKlt Lli^, We witl-iiisert-ttn'adrertiscmeltt !t--n
ailiioa ft In'Elghtj -two Eirst-da^s ,-9
ISBUNANEWSPAPEl^
Including Nine Dailies.-
We refer to the publisher ®f this paper,,tp whom our x4sp((nai bility is well known. LIST SErfT FRlbE.
1 RlSWiEfcf $
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TO TUB WORKING CLASS.—We are now prepared to furnisli all classoa with constant employment athomei the whole of the time or for the^ spare moments. Busiaess light, and profitable- Persons of either easily earn from 50c to95 per evening, and a pro|)orttoual sum 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: Tosuohas ere not Well satisfied, we will send SI to pay for the trouble of writiflr. Full particulars, a valuable sample, which will do to commence work on, and a copy of 2he People's Liurary Gwkjan«on—one
largest and best family newspapers ever published—all sent free by mail. Reader. you dress.
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person willing to act as agent wiu reeeiye a sample of the work/ree. As ne capital is re^ quired, desirous of genteel employment should send for tfie book, enclosing 10 ctS. tot postage, to T. W. BVANS A CO.. 41 South 8th St.,
Philadelphia. TOIB (|ITACK»-A Tictim of early ia* discretion, causing nervous debility, pre* .nature decay, &e., having tried in vain every advertised remedy, nas a Simple means ef self-cure, iniek he will sead free to his feN .ow-sufferera. Addrese J» H. TDXILB, 78 Nassau |U, New York. ftBBAT HEBICAI, BOOK mmfi W FBESCH SECMKTSfQr Ladies ii£d Gents. See*-freetAr 2 stamps. Dr. Bona-
5[i
Rept&tican.:
LOCAL NOTICES. BICHAltMOX usur, v,3f.
ri fan Mwortmeatj also BlaiJBhed Oanrf .,M. •LTork Jew Btilb.
Waatsutta.
1-rmJalrr"
TUKLL.
am iirT
pockets of tee of their
The.sup^or 6HSnii6^ioa1rtJd e*eat extent «Sei eonniany'^oifcr at^TaltfaaTm ,/onifcloa
W9S
'lUnvub Jt
iai^A sr.'
t--
A
Various*tides made owi: [."Mass." stfent 8t. Walt-
i.'i
C6,, AdattiS'Bt. Walt*
f-
WALTHIMwttTOi Ce„ Waltham,Ma8s.aj P. 8. BAETurrfiiW,rt.I Wm.
ELLSEY.Waltham. Mass. loirt'WiTCH Co:, 'Boston,Mass.
io
i*tm
mwmA
hfto .in/'
•iU
::i
in o-i b&&r
SewTork.
UBiClJE JOSH'S
TRtTNZ PULL OP
A Portfolio of flrst-class Wit and Humor, containing the Richest Comical Stories, Cruel Sells, Side-Splitting Jokes, Humorous Poetry. Quaint Parodies, Burlesque Sermons,. New Conundrums and Mirth-Provoking Speeches ever published. Interspersed with Curious Puzzles, Amusing Card Tricks, Feats of Parlor-Magic, and nearly 200 Funny Engravings. Illustrated Cover. Price 15 cents. Sent by mail, postage paid, to any part of the United States, on receiptef price. DICK Jk FITZGERALD .Publishers, 18 Ann-st.. N. T.
»R.8.S.FlTCU'SFamilyPhyalcInn
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PRINTS.
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-moa" -ah hae lo itoiiaajs -tfo-tl n.'.rrivii)
"\fe "have just opehed anew and &autifat 4&cft ^f 'CaKoos, induing E is in a id S a
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0 fl-rf?-1 mf-
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ed in every'county*
.siai bas* ^j
of six first-class makers,
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CHEAPLV A8 WB DO,,
PHOPIT, and
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sraH'Bi b*barr9*»«*» r' .» -li". 3fffsil' tl Jwl 'irii JIO gj 1 f»|H IfA IWI'iotIMI *mh lu
BLEACHED MUSLINS.
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fcenyfrMftion
^jjecuKai cqnstrdtitf^n, td jW^ent 8mw»I« to'lie trainWjM brtakafee ol ta#iH«prinf*, to IWglnal! theAiMDMft Wa^h ^ft-
.: W«riare isreocipt :d l*nadal«, soft finished, Hill, Hadley, Wamsetta, and New JFORFE J|^U^RSJIN«|» WELTM^IB# PF THE^EA^R^IEDS ^4MFHL||CHED|JOPDS. ija
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il»I dtfi'd T!£3«
»di ei'trii odi
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jlasf- v' jiiui.". oJ ft-jf »t We'lAVe a! prices the market at
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18 hi
is ii ha & it vi UtSfcafi1 M^itftianS 'ani^ 0lher^ tibfc- i*4&4 tftttaOSI^d ami teoira 19^, 1M« iuid 11-4 width alM heaVy and finiie linen sht^ting. .tttomio ijj/fT 3 9iv io -3 fj UA %311J±jO'W ki io -n -id io mi alt 1 wu^i/ eiv.'V iH* il*•«»•' -j &. v'-jr t'l k'/.t «1 0j,t 1/ r, A nice stock of q-3 anu G-^goods.^,
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IWJBB1S8 APPl-ETOir.
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Akentsfor infcrican Watch Co., 182 BrosdWiiy,
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We are closing out the remnant of our Winter stock at prices that make the goods very desirable.
TUELL, RIPLEI' DEffllp
Corner Main, and JFifh streets. 1
DRY GOODS.
ANOTHER TURN OF THE r-
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Fainter and Fainter a^th^ attempts made to
if fihi fttflTil' it I'ab'L^i1 ii q.. 4tJl fs.fesraft ojj r'rdbliww 9f
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A W«BI» T»
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We unienstand that certain merchanta in this city, and a very large number of country merctant8, are complaining bitterly at what they Term our monopoly of the Drv Goods trade. QentlemebJ we came. to Terre Haute to break ap Monopolies— not to form them! Our rbkd to staceess not! a royal road, "there is no secret about it. Any ofae who wishes to do so, may^Wk in'it.
DMVN'YOCB OLD STOCK ABOUT ONT5-HALP—*QET
the Sabbath-likestillness
MOKE NEW GOODS! fioods
Extra quality of Waterproof
NOTICE.—Any
Good double' Shawls
Je£uft
hare'Shawls.......
Hill
aail.y Hop. Ac. TO^rpSltHmTi 94,1H Bleached and Brown-flheetlaas. TUELL, KIP LEY Jt B8MING,
Fifth and Main streets
5.000 yards Atlantic Mills Muslin..Country stores charge 10c, and Terre Haute stores 9c for same goods 4,000 yard of yard-wide EXTRA HEAVY Unbleached Muslin, down to
All other stores charge 12$cfor them. Good heavy ALL JjlNEN TOWELS down to..v.i./I..
A Superb
of the
glove-fittingPRENCH
Drete Goods 25c, worth 40c fteagh Merinoa—.. 50c
These goods are all Wool.
FUBS closing out at give away prices rather than carry them over. Ptlniftffll'dkirta......... .... .*.».....75c| StampedJSkirts 90o Plata Shirting Flannels .20B
Pfles of other goods equally cheap. We are now engagedT in baying an entirely new stock of goods for the opening of
bling tts to offer a great many new goods at learfully low rates.
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We have'received some!desirable styles of the beat quality of ^domestic Ging ante and hare a fine line French and Scotch gootW irnw.m,*Uv Htw
BARNSLEt DAMASKS.
We have an nnnsually attractive stock .of tJiese celebrate^.laye lingps,, Jwo yards wide and of ekqo&ite designs. T*8 ft ft! »r tV ir/- x,. rt.
brrKt
f1 *i'
&
•ca 3 530f"
and Greater Grows the Pressures-Finer and Finer we are Grinding
THE BIG PB0F1T SYSTEM!
in, dowi
'This is'one of the Very best Mnslins made, other stores charge 15c and 16c Very large lot of BEST AMEHICAN D« LAINES down to 12jc] Ceuntrv stores charge for the same goods 25c, Terre Haute stores 22c. Big Ibt of the bfetSPEAGUE PRINTS down to-... *,10c
h.a.
Country stores actually charge 15c for the same goods,
HENCEFORTH WE CONTROL THE CORSET TRADE
OF TEBBE HAUTE.
WOVEN CORSET, all sites, down to. .'.. ..50
Country stores charge $1 50 for same goods, and Terre Haute fancy stores charge £iJJxlU JMJL/ U. ISHEH, 75cand $1 00.
a
The celebrated Hip Gore Corset, extra quality, reduced to 45c This Corset Is being Bold in fancy good stores at 75c and $1. We have recently been enlarging our ^Notion- Department, and in the future we propose to make it as difficult for high priced notion stores to overcharge the people as We have already made it for high priced Dry Goods stores. Best quality of English Brussels Carpet ......$1 25 Good yard wide Carpets at. -28c Dayton and Maysville Carpet Warp_ 29c Two BustieVGrqn Bags 28c
pur MAMMOTBraTABLISHMENT at Evansville, and a portion of then goods, I #hich «re are baying at fabulously low prices are being received here, which is ena-1 jqHH STjOMAJT
""FOSTER fSlAT IS EW YORK CITY STOR$
|irortli Side of Main m., Middle Opera Honse Bloek,
•~»TEBRWHA
UTE,IftMAI?Jt,
no
via
Pre stoc
91
ftfe. liri^ of fine a^ ^^vy'^)ro^i|5gbois"aV t^e lo^re
paratory of Spri:
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March 1st, 1871/
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YOU HAVE ORLY TO MAKK
RID OP IT—BMR
and .in- eelling them, BE CONTENT WITH A LIVING
NKW UOOD4'A8
of your stores will soon be broken op by
the same eager throng •f cuatomers that you so constantly meet at our establishment. Far better do this* than seek tl bolster up a business "growing smaller by degi«es snd/beautifuUy leas," by slander and abuse of us—for in thia your costomers arc finding yon out You make a great mistake when you think they are so simplemiiided a^ not to know lor instance, that an Atlantic Mills Muslin ia the same in1 yourftore that it is in ours. You are selling it at TEN cents a yard, aiid we are filing it at SIX cents'but this neither makes yours nor ours any better or any, worse.. It the sameMuslin still. That is all, gentlemen now drive ahead Exactly yotTplease. Your abuse only advertises us and injures yourselves, so we can BUqd it, if you can.
E7TOM JR*
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wfe irtfWit 'tut ifias? ,iot'| ja6-dw3tt) uti orf
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85cI *«J- i«
$3 50
«..$1 75
D. c. o:
Hoegsgww
WARrINv
V, HOBERG & CO
TOR DRY..(iOQDS,
SiUks, Cloaks, Shawls,
All Wool Oood^ Monrniiig ainoBjdtOt on ti&%
Ifeo't HI
5K£,.
Bonletard' and Balmoral Skirts
At J^alf their value."
1 vr avi"
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•:'St2»-3MXT 4
In^Grey twillea, Bed twiild, Plain Bed, Plain Grey, white all wool and Domets,Cloths, Cassimeres, Water.Flannels, proofs, Jeans, Tweeds, Canton Flannels, Opera Linseys, etc. Ask to s6e that job lot of
117i In.
DRES& TRIMMINGS.
iio
moth Stock.
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rae
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WARKEJN MUliERU & 00., fc-
Itfi 1t' rixfur
i* b-o
OPERA. HOUSE CORNER:.
CLOTHINC
REMOVAC.
9iit I
0'" '{Ki d4
8a Bi-an t-has Removed
4fAi- .9?-
ia L-i.-r
HIS
CLOTHING STORE
r^riiinrtj 9{fj[ oliK ioT *c: A-la-9 ,»1 'la
JCT irpyL ':o vitKyntttj 'jisftsrin-i'.-1— 1*0*—
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I tttt 'ug fti
Will Mgurch. closiiig out sale for
jia.
nzntt
41
»tii j»%
baa
est and handsomest
Plaid Woo^s, Striped Goods, Plain Goodg^ Alpacas, Poplins^ Surges, De-
.^jft**
M'AMJhmMWiJMttfMW FOLD PLAIDS
diiiy ^c, worth 40c. DOUBLE FOLDltiiPPS, 16 2-3c worth 30c. Large stock
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We are offering them at one-quarter their value.
i* rr**sV5. •, Al »xmhl'f art".
-i/.r v* ..14- x. *_ I li'ji •A.J'xKtfy
Remember, this sale includes everything in our mam s'xtii*
vU.r'
We expeet to have a great Bush at this closing sale and those that can should come as early in the day as possible W wUu&s
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From this date our Store, will bs open until 7 o'clock/
ir
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by
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$4
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3TF' -S*L %1UD J5I
Itiw 3f£^11-. ,1
SAtl J.iKOt
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'.i tfra 3
y.tlo
Corner Main tiiid Fourth Streets,
& 5W»jflK-«
V7 C.--Z .• .4
itf •)«-. (The Boout latoly oepupiedby Warron, llo'tcr'js Co.) tii-'
W
"'nfilr, ®.-.
Having on hand a large stock or
1,
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ofxatwrlf
J'ayb 9*
•-id 1
W XNTJflK'GOODS,
nut la
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cldso
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WI|T Hf»UT REOASU TO COST
INSURANCE COMPANY.
Anchor Life Ins. Comp'y,
BROADWAY, XEW YQKK. tr. aitff !fV
VOS1X9 JUttr ^5S,j
-sjj jf KnJf Wlow
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Absolute Security $204 72f for every $100 of Liability. (New York Insurance Report, 1870, p. X.VL)
i»* :n A
-^"Home' Company,
AS
tUOliruS Of TrUS
.-£
THRRE JIA TJTE LOCAL BOARD PBESTON 52", Tf jjiifjf 7, OOOKJBBIiTt Pr#aident 8. J. Yomyo, Med. Examiner D.W. VOOBHEES,
5ttKr
A^MTSSH
SAMmBLSTOHB,
W. *B. HtTITTEB, B. HENDEBSON,
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ill
BUil:.' ,4
Low CMkl^MU
rv
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*3 cut I
lis till IS
Usrw.'fM X-1''t
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To make room for.an •,* ,,
•rn-'i ?.'*H *.• ».!
a t# .. &&&*{*>
S* FRANK, ir.
Corner Math andFourth.
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"Jfli Mi H-fiD! 1lJ'
President w&i t% »t'
.!«»
ias*# mi:*
Sl
under direction of Local
of Trustees.**"'
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B. F. HAVE£4, iaoratjry W. H. BANNIS*TEB, A. C. MATTOX. LOUIS SBEBUBQEB, rt DANIEL MILLBB, CHAS. WITTENBEBQ, t, A. B. FOUTS, J. B. EDMUNDS, $
__ OEOB9E BANKB7, FBED A. BOSS- hw ,, ,ir *. a
All Policies and lMvidends non-Forfeitable. No Restriction on Besidence or tnreL V.-. a* Bntir« Proflts Dlrided amon»PoUcy ifoIders. .(i Thirty Daysrraee. 3«b,rt,, :Airf axi Definite Cash Surrender guaran te an21-deod3m
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