Daily Wabash Express, Volume 20, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 March 1871 — Page 2

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DAILY EXPRESS.

TERBBHAUTE, INDIAUA

Friday Morning, March 24,1871.

IFEWS AHD NOTlNGS.

,-% ^v- The Temperance ticket at Indianapolis is falling to pieces. ,ir

/for

On

pjk at'

s,,

an W&*

r«„

-, ,. ii| Cameeoji supported Forney for the Oollectorship of the Port of Philadelphia. The W«bash & Erie Canal was opened J*

transportation from Coal Creek, forty

_' ^-mile« south of Lafayette, to Toledo, yesterday.'

Governor Calmer' vetoes only half the bills passed by the Illinois Legislature. In a good season for vetoing it is ^thought he might do still better.

The San Francisco

Chronicle

Commercial Advertiser,

ed statement: Illinois. Ohio Missouri Indiana./ Kentucky Wisconsin Iowa Tennessee Kansas and Nebraska Minnesota Detroit Pittsburg Atlanta West Virginia

•!W

objects to

"the latest fashion in that city of shooting l" the nose off the face of a tcfcacconist who demands pay for his cigars. The

Legislature in behalf

Chronicle

is too fastidious. California is in ecstacies oves the ^champion voter of the Pacific States,1 who, attended by his seventeen sons, 'v walked to the polls, where the family threw in eighteen ballots for State aria' county officers.' v.

A PETiTiosr "Representing almost two hundred and fifty millions of dollars,

Ak exchange suggests that while ine Internal Revenue is rapidly rednced by every Congress, it is hardly in order tt» increase the force which is to collect it by establishing a special police. We have already too many tithe gatherers in propor tion to the number of tax-payers.

A "colobed brother" put 8 a question in the Washington

Chronicle.

The New York

He

wants to know why the colored barbers of that city, who clamor for social and political equality and seek office for themselves, refuse to shave their fellow darkeys. That colored brother is imper tinent.

Whatever else may be the result of the San Domingo investigation, it is quite certain that it will remove all doubts as to the entire groundlessness of the charges of jobbery which have been malicionsly made against General Babcock, and fully demonstrate the wish of the Domnica11 people for annexation, as well as their utter repudiation of the outlaw Cabral.

Times

"can conceive no

greater misfortune for the country than that which would, be involved in its re lapse into Democratic hands. Compared with the danger of its falling under Dem ocratic rule, all other dangers, and all other issues, seem hardly worth a mo ment's consideration. What are local or personal canses of dissatisfaction in comparison with the disasters which would certainty overtake us within a twelvemonth after the restoration of the Democrats to power?"

:.i

The

Western Educational Review

Review,

"will pauperismaand crime, penury and I want, social discord and public strife,

Prepare tor 1872,

.. ... .mast effective service at a very moderate political perfidy and official corruption [cost." cease to distress the land." I These remarks apply with special force

A CDMtBsroiTOENT of the New York

positively Stated that he had no reliable

Pork Packing.

From the Indianapolis Journal.! Everything indicates that the Presidential campaign of next year will be one of the most exciting that our people hare ever witnessed. For the first tune in a

fteriod

of twelve years all thfyStates of: he Uaion will give their electoral votes, and the animoa of the Democracy, already unmistakably revealed, dearly shows that a Democratic triumph would be followed by an attempt to undo and itopen what most people have come to regard as a final settlement of the issues of the war. The advocates of the Calhoun doctrine of State Kights were never more active in the Democratic party than now, and of all the leading Democratic papers of the North, the New York World is about the only one that is Bisposed to recognize the validity of the constitutional amendments. The few leaders of the party who desired that the next canvass should be made upon questions of finance, tariff and taxation, ni been silenced, and instead of the of conciliation as Breached by Mx. lien dricks at New Orleans, the bugle blast of Blair is summoning the hoeta of- Democracy North and Seuth to.a work of revold tion. These men say that it is idle to talk of tarifia,currency and taxation until the reconstruction ineasures of Congress, and the Constitutional amendment* are trampled under the feet of the vietorroils Democracy. It is easy to see that this will resurrect and reanimate what Northern Democrate haye been- fondly- hopin| were the "dead issues" of: the war, am with these revived the perfect and overwhelming triumph of Republicanism is a=«,ured. In an able leader on the sub-

XT

•ImUm pr»»ted io tie N.i 2*%!2E

of

on appropria

tion to aid in the erection of a Homeo patliic Hospital. It is aniiaillniped that Senator Howe is preparing a letter ior publication giving a general statement of the facts relating to Sumner's displacement from the chairmanship of the Senate bom mittee^on For eign Relations^/and defending t^e Presi -".'dent. *. W •we-

"Few now living ever witnessed a Presidential contest "which convnlsed, the country in every part as it will be stirred by the contest

of

1872.

"We renewedly urge, therefore, the Republicans of every State to begin at once their quiet preparations for the momen Lous struggle, by severally inducing every one whom they can influence to take and read some Republican newspa. per. The result will probably be determined by the fidelity or lukewarmnesfl wherewith this daty shall be fulfilled in the year of silent preparation already well begun.. We shall surely triumph'if the people shall be seasonably find generally enlightened with regard to the animus and purposes oC our adversaries while, uhoiild half of them be left in ignorance, we may be defeated. "We fear nothing from the arguments, the appeals, the sophistries, of the Democratic journals we deprecate only their systematic suppression of facts. They habitually and studiously conceal from their readers the mo3t significant and momentous developments of the rebel spirit still active in several of the late Slave States and smouldering in the rest."

Si

is in

favor of compulsory education, and thinks that a law compelling the daily attendance at school of every child from the age of five to eighteen years would have a most salutary effect and that it is not only the imperative duty 5f the State to provide a full and free education, but to see that every son and daughter re ceives the benefit -of that education. "Then, and not tiU then," says the

pressingly needed I Each of you know from five to fifty persons who will vote in 1872 if then living, yet who are taking no political journal whatever. You can induce apart of them to take a good one, if you will make the requisite effort. If you have a good and cheap Republican paper issued in your vicinity, give that the preference if you must look further to find one of the right sort, do not hesi tate if one will take a certain journal and another another, accommodate each but do not let a month pass without having every one within the range of your influence supplied with some Republican journal that he will take to his fireside and read in his hours of leisure. This is the duty of the hour do not postpone or neglect it!" "Men who employ others are often ac cused of dictating the votes of their employes—generally without reason. He who attempts this is more apt to set the voter against his party than to secure his vote. But every employer might anil should do his best to extend the circula tion of good political journals' among those who work for him.- A* word, in season may induce several of them to take a journal which will imbue them with just views of public affairs, and arm them with the facts whereby those views are sustained and fortified. Each ot the voters, thus enlightened, becomes thereby a_witness for the trulh and a diffuser of light and zeal among his associ ates and neighbors. This is the right way to help the Good Cause and thus the most quiet citizen may render it

t0

Tndiana-

writing from Aspin-

wall, make3 the astounding announcement that the Darien Exploring Expedition is unprovided with the simplest instruments needed to perform the work for Wftlch--lhe''e*pedition irarerganfoed and sent out. This Writer says that when

.1,220,617 681,639 459,315 433,843 274,257 244,200 169,483 40,064 27,892 12,000 25,000 15,000

*%tal 3,615,110 Average weight, 228 65-100 pounds, which is equal to 4,018,157 hogs of last season's weight.

"Cak you tell me," said Napoleon the firat, "who Jesus Christ was? I will tell you. Alexander, Ca»ar, Charlmange, and myself, have founded great empires but upon what did these creations of our genius depend? Upon force* Jesus alone founded an empire upon love, and this very moment tens of millions would die for him. I am not mistaken. I know human nature well. Those kings were only men, as I am only a man. Jesus Christ was alone. No other ever resembled him. Jesus was not a man, he was more than a man. Thousands have been animated with

such an enthusiasm (or

visibly

mJr

'ook8

present among

»1lke-v «hooid feel tbe inauente °f

v°ice,

my

worbv„Jesus,

alone has so elevated the mind oFman to the unseen, that it is insensible .to timer qr space."

Inno

ing*al,C0'

George H. Morgan, Secretary of the Merchtrnta'Exchange in St. Louis, has-.. made a complete compilation of the hoe rjn® vV!311

State of the Union is

the Democratic press so malignant and so utterly regardless of truth as the most of the papers of that party in Indiana. Calumnies and forgeries about leading Republicans are invented, circulated and persisted in with a brazen effrontery that is unparalleled. Rightly preenming^ upon the ignorance of their subscribers, the publishers of these unscrupulous journals make the most astounding drafts upon their credulity. There are some honora-

Commander Selfridge was. at Aspinwall he was very anxioos to borroir a "level," ble exceptions, which we note with pleasancl that the chief engineer of the partv 11*®- Wnen the New Albatfy

Ledger, for

*e'ra^,

sr* tw"" sr These revelatioi» seeHa'improbable/tut if j- the correction as .soon a that gentl# they have the least foundation in fact the

maB

Darien route talkers are oil an exnensive ^ie

in,to

the

Pub,i-

publicly denounced it but

c^a8a

I ,, is a type, were never known to make nd useless tour. As to the truth or fal- amends for such foul wrongs, and in the sity of the deficient outfit of the expedi-1 next canvass Republicans may expect a tionf we shall be able to decide when let-1 renewal and repetition of all the filth and ters or preliminary reports from Commander Selfridge and Engineer Barnes come to hand.

Pat)€rs of which the

Sentinel

falsehoods such papers have been hea, ing upon prominent men of theRepubli can party for years. The best way of en countering and disposing of such calum nies is to circulate the truth. Let Republicans give a generous support to their home papers, and those who are able can do good service to the canse by subscri-

sendmg

packing in the West during the past sea- r^ePu"|lcan paper to those of their neighson, of which the following is a condens-1

some good reliable

8 are not a to

Pay ^or

There still exists a singular document which was confiscated, or seized, or carried away, or stolen, by Napoleon from Rome in the days of his conquests, but which has since been restored. This is a letter from one Tublius Lentulus to the Emperor Tiberius, which contains a mi-, nute description of the features of Christ.' Francis E. Willard places it in the moutli of Powers, the sculptor, as part of the inspiration which enabled him to produce his head of our Lord. The maunscript reads thus: "Conscript Fathers! There

8*800 I1*8

a man

appeared here, who is still liv

I ing, named Jesus Christ, whose power is wonderful. He has the title given to him of the Great Prophet his disciples call him the Son of God. There is an air of serenity in his countenance which attracts at once the love and reverence of those who see him. His hair is of the color of new wine from the roots to his ears, and from thence to the shoulders, it is curled, and falls down the lowest part of thenK Upon the forehead it parts in two. His forehead is fair, his face without any defect, and his air majestic and agreeable. His beard is thick and forked, 1ms eyes gray and extremely lively, There is something wonderfully charming in his face. He talks little, but with great gravity."

~A pet ~goat,,halonging ,-U an .IrijthmsB. in Macon, Georgia, eat up seventy dollars in greenbacks, which lie found in an open Itiimlr in Kia mastAn'o maim TU« TatoL

4ru"k

in

master's

There is a colored youth aeyc^y-Sve

1 here is a colored youtn aeyenty-five jears eld, attending school at Americas, Georgia,,

r?t^T

*V

**T

"r'"9

-Sag

n^jajiaaiar

GLEANINGS

The Buffalo skating rink jh to be converted into a livery stable/'

Canadian of deal

once more.

crows as A Pittsburgh policeman named Mackerell keeps an eye on the suckers of that village.

The Rev. W. G. Mellen, of flfcrtroit, has acceptedXcall to a church ea rotten Island.

An oyster weighing three, pounds is on exhibition in the windotf of ai' Newark saloon. :'J* 'W'

Vary niceiugar ha*jbeeijimadeiiLWar-1 ren county^ low^ from the sayp of the box. 'I at .'

liWt!

A letter was fatel^ dropped into poet office at Niagara Falls directed "finninnaAAnAli 1 I linn

Schichagough, Illinoyse.''^ The Hon, Hans Mattsoa denies that he Intends to resign his position aa Secretary of State jn Minnesota^

"Festus" Bailey has writteH a heir poem, "Life fie6ln8e,'w'S56' Knisin leiqcth quality not stated.

Connecticut still boasto thirty-three of those tough old ladie^ the widows of Revolutionary soldiers.

The aged'Archduchess Sophia of Aus tria, mother of the unfortunate Maximilian/has becsome insane.

Viscount Goderich is reported spooney on a Washington helle, "quite* smashed with her, weally, you know.% ,TrP Ji

The prospers of a large crop ^f peacti es dni*ingLthe coming season throaghQU:

VT—1

Massachusettsmembers session

#.

you

$

"Only where Republican newspapers are generally diffused and read will the voters be made acquainted with the nntet essential facts whereon on/next choice of President should be based. "Republicans who are alive in off years!

must do the work that is now

In a town not far distant from Atlanta, an offender against the" municipal laws was sentenced, to imprisonment in jail* A young man who was indebted to him offered to pay the debt by taking his place in the calaboose, but the. 3d[ayor,wpuldn't accept the substitute. r*

Anccdote of ^en

A dMent regard for truth compels us to admit that reverence for .exalted poei tion is not characteristic of the*|olitical society of Washington. And if ever there was a man who regarded with entire indifference the mere formal conventionalities .. of society, it is the late acting Vice-President, ex-Senator Wade, of Ohio^ During the impeachment .trial, th^following is reported-to have occurred between himself, and Chief-justice Chase, who. presided!.- The session jrasto open at Icelve. o'clock il, and it- waa within twenty minutes of that time, and the Chief Justice had .riot'madfe his apr appeatance in the Victf»President'« room',which, for the time, was used by Mr. Chase as a robing-room. The hahds of the clock crept slowly bat surely nearer the figure "XII.," when suddenly the the door was thrown open, and in stalked the Chief Justice* He walked hurriedly to the wardrobe but his robe of office was not upon jte accustomed peg, nor on any peg. What was to be done? Pages were summoned this, that, and the other room, desk, and .drawer were examined, but no robe was discovered. In the midst of this .excitement, the grim, honest old hero, Ben Wade, made his appearance, with a nod and a grunt, to the flurried occupants of the room. He walked to the hat-rack, and after depositing his hat went to sofa on the other side of the room to leave his umbrella in a safe place. The excitement was still going on, when Wade, after learning the cause of the trouble, without entering info the flurry of the hunt, leaned over the sofa and with his umbrella hooked np an uncer-tain-looking black bundle. Seeing it was the long-looked-fcr robe, he held it toward Mr. Chase with,

Thf

1»9" 1

Th^ food f^B« awisfl#, dottolmdiaeer in the public parks of Boston cost abont ten dollars a week.

usett* propoees to pay tjie of the Legislature $750 each'

per^seasion, without reference to the

Lieutenant Colouel D. C. Wagnerj'formerly member "of "theetaff of General Halleck, died in San Franciaco on the' 8th instant.

Fifty Chines^ have arrived at Batod Rouge to work in the cotton factory of the Penitentiary. One hundred mbrenre coining.

Last we5k{,w'as poor. oii6 for "Nathan murderers." Only two. were discovered, so far as the returns have been received

Kit Carson's eldest son is in the Quartermaster's Department at Leaven worth, Kansas. '1 The other six are in Colorado' Territory On a ferm.«-j

-'Mi:

The water works tunnel at Buffalo lias been extended sixty feet into the lake. The tunnel is to be nine

feet

in diaigefer

and over 700 feet long. -J I" mJ8 HtUt King George, of. Greece, has written a letter of thanks to United States Minister Tuckerman, for his elaborate report upon the Grecian brigands.

Hartford held a meeting the Other evening aiid took steps for the erection of a monument to the late Dr. Horace Wells, for his discovery of anesthesia.

In Augusta, Michigan, Thursday, Sarah, a daughter of Wilder* Woods, Esq., shot herself dead because of her hope* less love for a married man of the neighf borhood.

August Setzer, Marshall of St. Louis has sued James J. McBride, a lawyer of that city, for. five thousand dollars, for knocking him down with a loaded cane, in court. tmiimli giti

A meeting of the meu' horn in the "cold summer" (1816) was lately held at Syracuse/ Twenty-four persons were present, but none of them remembered much of that remarkable season.

The New York

Sun

says: "Theliope of

the people of Germany exists in the fact that there is to-day but one tyrant to be overthrown, where before thirty-six stood in the way of progress."

In the Common Council of Providence, R. I., Friday, a ^solution raising: £he salary of Mayor Doyle to three thousand dollars, received a tie vote, when Mr. Doyle, with becoming mqdesty, gave the affirmative casting vote.

"Here,

here's yer darned old frock you've been maiimy such a confounnetlfiat tibatUfi

The

smiled a smile. The Chief Justice was too overjoyed to do anything but speedily get inside of his robe and if on that morning the heated, crowded audience saw the Chief Justic* look redder than nsual they now know the cause of it.' It was all about that "£rock."-^Ei)rroB's DaAWEB. in Harper1*,3taga^*e for -April

REWOVATINC itl -ftLSd si

HAVJE XOIJR

a .id A Hit

The Irwh-

into Mattresses if desired. Work nail*

thite waiefca

exl

effect—or vice-versa?

A Great Offer.„M

S!-

f,

last fifteeajreanb/ giceers ai of wateli-«i|^aihH thoroughly demonstrated the strebftt. steadiness, dnrability and accuracy of the Waltbam Witch. To Rktisfia that class in all these' respects^ is to deeid die question- ai to the real value ~of these .tMne-iweip,

•.#

-4.

•szpssm&Bl wawtate^rf -tfcefar

r-s

..Moiejthan of theee watchei are now speaking for themselves in the pockets of

superiority over all otber^ The superior .organisation and great extent of the pompany's Works at Waltham enables them to prodnce watch'es at a price which renders competition fStile, and' those who boy as7 'ether watch merely pay from 25 to £0 .jier cent, more for thtir watches than is necessary.

These time-pieces combine every improvement (hat along 'experience has prCted -of the 1 real practical use., Having Kad the re^isal to I of nearly every ii^y4nttOn in Iratch-m'akinf originating in'thfs eDuntryorin Europe, only those were finally -adopted. Which revere, testing by tbe mot stniful artisan^ {n oar1 •works, atid ldng'tf^e on the jyait df'the pnbli'c,

t—,^-osc

r/

demonstrated .to be essential to. /sorrect' aAd enduHB^^KlTSrfw AfjkonvM WVWtfhld particularise: A.'

to the train by the broakage oimaia-sprhic*, is orictaal with Um American Watch Company, who. having had the refusal of all other contrivances. adopted' Fon's patent pinion as being the best and faultless.

Hardened u0 iampered^bair-springsinojf imiversany admitted by W^atehmakers to be the best, arei nsed allkrades ^ef Walthain

AIL

tham sotihs

«ap»

are saidfo ^e goodt

:Va^hj|s have dust-jM-oof

^|FBliffote®1 i^K|y

kvvw

'^C movement froio duste

uid imenint the ne^essit^of the frequent Our neir pateat *teni-w»ader. or keyless watch s, already a-decided success, ana a winding 4 by

cleaning neeeisary in otherWittche*.

5

fie'rfj

great' improvement on any -stem-' watok in the Ameri»n market, and by fu the cheapest, jratch ot" its qaality now onered

living in portions:of

tates where watchmakers do no

abound, watches with the above mentionei improyemeptswhichtsndtp easure accuracy, cleanliness. dttrabuity *nd couvemence, must prove invaluable.

The trademarks of the various styles- mtde by the Contpany areas tellows -j.-, Amckicah VVatchCo.. Waltham, Mass. "Sla*. WatcS Co Waltham, Mas#.

Am«sica» Watch, Co., Crescent St., Waltham, Mass. .Apfleton, Tbact

Sc

Co., Waltham, Mass.

Amkricak Watoh Co., Adams St., Waltham, Mass. Waliham WAtoH Co,, Walthami

P. S. Babtmtjt. Waltham. Mass. Wn. Ei.i.krt, Waltham, Mass*. HO)» Watch Co.'," Boston, Mbbs. Examine the spelling of these names carefully before buying. Any variation even of .Asingle letter, indicates a counterfeit.

Bor sale by all leading jewelers. No watches retailed by the Company. An illustrated history of watch-making, containing much imormation to watch-wear-ers sent to any address on application. 1MBB1IIH APPliKIM, Gen. A gen ta for American Watch Co., 182 Broadway, S'cir York.

I

UNCLiE JOSH'S

TRUNK FULL OF FUN. A Portfolio of first-class Wit and Humor, containing the Richest Comical Stories, Cruel Sella, Side-Splitting Jokes, Humorous Poetry. Quaint Parodies, Burlesque Sermons, New Conundrums and Mirth-Provokin Speeches ever published. Intersperse witL Curious Puzsles, Amusing.Card Tricks, Feits of Parlor Magic, and- nearly 200 Funny Engravings. Illustrated Cover* Price 15 cents. Sent by mail, postage paid, to any part oCthe United States, on receipt of priee. DICK PITZliERALD.Publishers, 18 Ann-st., N. Y. iat.R.8. FITCH'S Family Physician. 90pages sent by mail free. Teaches' %ow to cure alJ diseases ofjhe, person.: skin, hair^eyes. complexion. Write to .714 Broad1 way New York.

BUHtllfim (IU.) Nl'BSEEr. 19th Year. 6(10 Acres. 13' Greenhouses. JjarAssortment—all sixes Best.Stock 1-Low gest Prices 1 Wonld you know What, When and How to Plant! Fruit. Shade. Evergreen Trees, Root Grafts, Seedlings, Osage Plants, Apple Seeds. Barly Rose Potatoes, (shrubs, Roses. Greenhouse and Garden Plants, Jcc.. ho. Flower and Vegetable Needs! "Finest, Best Collection—Sorts and aualft Send 10 cents for New, Illustrated, Descriptive Catalogue—90 pages. Send stamp, each, for'Catalogue* of Seeds, with plain directions —94 pases Bedding and Garden Plants—32 pages,- and Wholesale Price List—24 pages. Address F. K. PHCENfX, Bloomington, ills. Ql?f T. TP01?|?0 —Canvassers wantOfiLL 1

ed

We-keeponly

"Extra, three-ply'

in every county. D.yton, 0.'

0'.":*'™v.

will dispose of One Hundred PiMi'S, MsloDBOHS, and OboaHs of six first-class makers, including Waters', nt ixtreuelt iow pkicss, voa CASH, BDKtKO THfS MONTH, or will take, a part cash and balance in monthly or quarterly installment*.

who^enja^e^n our new business make from •a Full partie ul^isam

in their own localities instructions sent free

FOR PER LIKE, We,will insert an advertisement 'j.' ONE iMIOlTTIi

In Eighty-two First-cfa'ss

INDIANA NEWSPAPERS Including Kine DailiesWe refer to the nublisher of this paper, to whom ou^ responsibility ft -well known.

LIST SBKT FItBE.

Hoi. 40

4b

CO.,

41 Park Bow, Sfew/XmlB.

ColJ"

CUTLBR BROS. & CO., Boston.

EMPLOYMENT for ALL.

SAI.ARY PER WEEK, and exenser, paid Agents, to sell our new iveries. Address R. SwajtT &

$30, enser, pa

and Co

prepared to rarnish all classes with constant employment at home, the Whole*of the time or for the spare moments* -Business'new, light, and profitable- Persons of either sex easily earn from 50c to $5 per evening, and a proportional sunk 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 such as are nit well satisfied, we will send $1 to pay for the trouble of writing Full particulars, a valuable sample, whicL 'will do to eommence Work on. and a copy of ike People'! Literary

OwmjxiiM**—one of the

largest and best family newspapers ever published—all sent free by tnail. Reader, if you want permanent, profitable work, address, E.-C. ALLEN A CO,,

Augusta, Maine.

fBBSYCHOMAWCT.—Any lady or gentleman can make el.OOQ a m«nth, secure -itsus TION, or 80UL CHARMING. 400 pa«es cloth. Full- instructions to use- this power over men or animals at will, how to Mesmerise, become Trance or WrttinK Mediums, Dirination,SpIrituallsm, Alolremy, Pjhiloso-

in

MHMHcii

niag^of

ARTS

The popular current runs strongly in onr favor. High priced stores are empty. Will theirbe.mace "deserted palaoto" soon? We are of the "people and for the people. We know neither aristocrats or ple-

in small

•Mi-.

{Grant's order to Sheridan."]'

MORE NEW GOODS! 10WER PR1CES STILL! P.OOO yardaAtUuttio -MiUa Mn«lin..~ ............P.».......... Qnintry atores chargelOc, anATcrre Haute atprts 9c for same good* 4 0 0 0 a of a id E A E A a he us in do 1 0

Thi* is one of the very best Muslins made, other stores charge 16c attd 16c Very jarge lot of BEST AMKhfOAN D«LAINfe8 doirn

CeuaUy stores^harge for the fame goods 25c, Terre Hante storea 82e.'|s,» 7 Big ^t of t^^PBttNTO, doifn ... ....

Country stpm actually chargel^cfor theMtae goods. I I

HENCEFORTH WE ,4-

lWM"-

fb noifeli/uji r--

We are receiving one Spring Stock the daycare arriving every train. "saeet-v/.

wt

A

OJ

oi'pb Jon osi new ymil' jf'.vvi *s»? :{iti

'i

Slli

At** V* AlUi

Brice. by mail. ft. Notice—Any

person w'UniK to aet as a«nt. trill-feeeive a sample of the work/rse. As.ne capital isreoaired, all desirous of jenteel ettfloyment shonld send for tfcefce«kt eneteetafflOett. for nostaae, to T.-W. SVAK8

3c

CO., 41 Soath 8th

St^ Philadelphia. •Il» 4CACHI.-A

1Bpre-

neve-

simplemeaas of

self-aim, aUek tie wilt send, fljeto his felIowwwfisrenu Address

S.

TiJMLK, 78

N a a N I»l Ojtl. B*«Kand IP for Ladles and

QB1AT en free for 2 parte Co., OinriUnati t)

PIANOTUNlNC.

Tut

I

consequently no mixinc of feathers taar-21-49u,, J. JU,VA1? SWKW.

3-i iJ

.i

2-'L.

Jt

vra3fc-

'A splendid, all whaleblone, nicely fitting COBSE?T rtducerf tdv-.'i.U Fancy stores in Terre Haute sell the same qualit^ for 68c. A Supprb gl^ye-fitUng FBElNCH WOVEN COR8EP, all sizes, "down to..U........64tB ^ntry^ftores chafge fl,50 for,same-foods, and T^ pante fiincy stohri

The eel&&? Glove fitting ^IP (SQfii^0BSEr Sliced

Dayton andJtfajBville Carpet Stamped Boulevard Skirts for spring^.,*

Coats Elegant

P.

bar-nowt FOSTExi itRO TBERS

TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA. iTfrl CARPETS-

GREAT SAl^^FsiDARPETS!

DOWN GO_THJ3 PRICES!

HIGH PRICED STORES XVST STAND ASIDE

Our Stock is The greater part of it has arrived within a colors.and exquisite in design and as we

n» 1

Cr.vSY"fei 11 «q T.

CARPETS are very cheap this year, and we intend th» pdblid shall know it a&d shall ib benefiLpf the decline. Buy no last year's goods they are dear and very likely motneaten and damaged. Buy only new. clean, fresh goods, ana what is equally important, bn^ ouiy iiow« iwou guuvoj auu wunt is vifuaii/ iiH|iur*aiit| dhj only well known makes. It° costs Carpat Stores twenty cents on a dollar for every yard of Carpet they sell, and so in order to make any show at all of competing Withus-they areiforced to buyshoddy and unknown makes of Carpets, which they sndeavortopalm ot on their .——„ "Hand Loom" or "Family" Carpets tomers as

PROPOSE SMASHING THE PRICE OF CARPETS

This Spring as badly as w« have Dry Goods. *E P&OPME TO SEUL THEM TWENT¥ PER CEST. BELOff BECEHT PKtCEN,

Good yard-wide Carpets, 25c, 28c and 30c. Carpet Stores charge for the same goods, 90t, 35c and 40c. Goodyaed-wide Ingrain Carpets. 50c and 60e. Carpet Stores charge 65c and 75c for them. 'All-Wool Ingrain, 75c and 80c. Recent price 90: and $1.

Elegant new styles, very find heavy, only tl 00 now being sold in Terra Hante Carpet Stores at $1 80. Best English Brussels Carpets reduced to SI 25: our recent price was 9160 fer same goods, and Carpet Stores are now charging tl 75 for them,

Continued Bargains in Dry Goods!

Rich assortment of Dresi Goods, from 12}£o up to 91 004. Elegant lines of Parasols at New York prices, We shall sell Dry Goods cheaper than ever this Spring/

'l -•4 f* FOSTER BROTHERS' won -i ,H

s'A.

••pitq

JBtiCK

Ji.ij hi sat «-i

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TERRE HA UTE, IND.

TUELL, RIPLEY It CO- 7^

.....J,-,

i© Jwt itoeive^^

SPIUNGBHAWiS.

i- z/t jl ml I*n-

s-'sii oi kui We are ln receipt bf some beaatiftil atylaa^^ tK:

A V"

r.i T|

^We feave just opened a new an^'beautiful slop^^of^Caliooe, inciod^^ English prints on very fine yard wide Cambric. •i J.viJi -ai -siti iitii:

BLEACHED MUSLINS.

We are in receipt of Itonsdale, soft finished, Hill, Had ley, Wamsetta, and New York Mills muslins, as well as some of the cheaper kieds and half bleached goods. -u.

BR0WNi| MUSLINS,

We have a very complete line of fine and heavy brown goods at the loweet prices the market affords. Hi xniji

8HEETIMSSI":

Utica, Waltham and other leading brands, bleached and brown, 9-4,10-4 and 11-4 wide also heavy and fine linen sbeet*nS' in 'ti

PILLOW 583 ,..

S«: ota «(, isirti- A nice stock of 5-3 and #-4 g6ods. Hi. ..-tie

•i' I .0

V.

fit

ryi

ro on unuu jjuuiu ui auiu/ umpvio* fe the best brands, sueh as Rifion.s. Lowells and Hart fords in the grades of :ra." Super Extra" and "Super Extra Super.]' and the very best makes of Imperial -ply" and English Tapestry Brussels.. *3T

H»tc

S

h«f\

,1

and Fresh

ays. The patterns are new, very rieh in

t*»ht« Oil

Great $ew ^y. Goods Store.

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Jl'i CKlTIllr .i 11 l?i:. i:

mm- s^^msm

t. New] jloocls, [em6racing\ll the ^aTeltiea of

JEIjTETEER

GASES'.

1 yiivnf to

We have^received s6nw desirable allies of tiie' lxest qaality of domestieGinK haaa and have a fine liy Frcach and Scotch good*. .'iq tr/5 i.tKi -)rft MAdifi orj

$&i

is W/rtT A&CfciT5»/r

BARN8LET DAMASKS. .9l1 j, -,

'i •.•frtal' :i?. i»dt n5 eaaoiitf'.

We have an nnnsoaHy attractive fct of se celebrated Jfbla linens, two faida wide and «f «xq^t«dougin. ,=.f,»

We ba*ft rabdved oor %ring stock of Salf Itl^h^ ndJBro^^

«M»a jdiIf- ''t 'to r, f' .aits.i. t... .rf •M

t-rr

We .womd Call

..... 36r

BOVtJBVAW

and

oc

-«iPMe e^e^^Vae a Me anee^* ftO 12Jc, 15c,

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EDMUM C. FISHEfi,

nmi

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WHOTTS^1^

in a

some

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:lWifidot J-.-i,. TTS 'IV il£ ii-5!

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b^ii ta as 4! aftrtcH 1-

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~mnrmr

H0BERG&C0

HOUSE mmtt

just receiycd an elegant line of

9

mteir, iwimat

^UhiiUU^Sbawll."

viau,»ij-#jidiTt'.touvmi

ring Styles of jDassime^S I

is ii a a

KEWBl SPRmG CALICOES etc.

W. H. BANNISTER.

•iyjor* i»«HM

Please call and examine his

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178 BROADWAY, NEW TOBK. •Or

Jt

Absolute. SectoHtjr $04 72T for erery $100 of Llahmty,

(New York Insurance lUpdrt, 1870. p. XVI0 ... •. ,lw- »»»J iS -eo-'j 11.'. '«-«J

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Inteating Its nMney«4 eaek

iv:'v

Boards

'V„'" •}i.09tn i.

TERSE

T, COOKEBL7, PrMidMt S. jr. YOU1TQ, Mad. Examiner D. W. VOOBHEBS, SAXXm STOlfX, 'I

JU. Jf'-

D. O.' ohhhib TOED A.'"BOSS.

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BA

HiiWl'l Vl.

oiia 7.":»«!

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ibmt "B. jotobxtfi™

J. B. EOTXrrft«,

Low Cask Rates... -a t-t "*•!••!&*boa.coUHwiifo

All Policies and Dfvffends non-Porfeitable.o til

JIo BestriotitmmResidence or TraT«l.(

J* -#t Entire Profits Divided among Policy Holders*

KUPPENHEIMER & BRO*

..i?E3L»? M- A I jti:

aWT- ti 4 4

HAYE BEMOVED TO

]sr6. 118 IVIa-in

A**

1

(The Itoow latelj ocenpled by Goodman Co.J

$-i

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rfoifv

We are just ncftr rood 111) Bill it

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WARRENs HOBERGh&

dpera kotue Onrtwr"

THt OlWAT RI?4D?WtTEK8 FOR PRY GOODS

*m*r*

AT:

V. S

Is now opening liis Spring Stock ol

Cloths, Cassimeres, Testings, &c,

He would call the attention of purchasers to a Beautiful Line of

ENGLISH AND FRENCH DIAGONALS I 0

A

Stripes Mixed English Suitings, mmT

AMERICAN CASSIMERES l?inm

15' a:itsi ih it!'.tt ix s!

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Mellonior Spring Oyer^oats^

Atoek

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atom

INSURANCE COMPANY*

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as

p'U

to -inT

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White Piqaea, and

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34.T si,

Camhnetrm

iial attention to a lot of POPLIN at $X.OO each They are .rery bui (j.iy

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$ tu.

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MERCHANT TAILORING

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W. H. BANNISTER.

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President

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-ii afi .li- $B \6 ftny

tj- uto direetio» of Local

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