Daily Wabash Express, Volume 21, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 22 July 1871 — Page 2

DATLY EXPRESS.

TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.

Saturday Morning, Jnlj 22, 1871.

NEWS A'D NOTES.

of Je3iu Christ" is

BEECUER'S "Life now nearly ready. VrcTOB HCGO is to write a of the Year of Trouble."

NEWCASTLE,

"History

L.u'AYETTE is enforcing the death penalty against unlicensed dogs. IT is said Mr. Vallandigham had written a complete autobiography.

Henry county, has a new

military company, duly armed and equipped. GENERAL HARLAN is making a splendid canvass of Kentucky. Crowds greet him at every appointment.

SPEAKING of the late choice of Yale College, some one thinks it is a big thing of a Porter to jump at once into a President's chair.

TITOMAS XAST handles a bayonet as well as a crayon. He fought in the Seventh Regiment on the 12th. Now he is to cartoon the conflict.

THE London Times says that one manufacturing establishment of small arms in America has a larger production than those of all England combined.

ARTICLES of association of the National Surgical Institute, of Indianapolis, have been filed with the Secretary of State and Recorder of Marion country.

REPORT eays that Cape May is not so well attended this year as last, and fears are entertained that some of the hotels will "go up" in an insolvent balloon.

IN THE political murder of Hoffman for doing perhaps the only good public act of his career, the character of the New York Democracy stands revealed.

Galaxy

DON PIATT'S columns in the

will hereafter be engineered by somebody else—probably Misscellaneous, who is an excellent writer and noted as a wit.

GRAND DUKE ALEXIS, third son of the Emperor Alexander, says a Oerma paper, i-f engaged to marry the eldest daughter of Prince Frederick Charles.

Tribune

THE

says that General Butler't

manifesto declaring himself ''willin' is decidedly able, shrewd, and well considered, and that it means what it says.

DANIEL FRANK, freight brakeman on the Toledo, Wabash A Western Railway, was run over by a train near Roanoke, on Wednesday evening, and instantly killed.

THE trauscript in the Clem case has been completed and placed in the custody of the Sheriff of Marion county to be delivered to the Eoone county Circuit Court.

THE editor of the Indianapolis Journal says he is ready to prove his charges against Mr. Bright, State Printar, whenever that gentleman will plead "no guilty."

IT IS stated as a curious fact that while all the male members of the Beecher family are in favor of woman suffrage, all the female members of the same family are opposed to it.

Literary

TIIE

IVorliJ notes that more of

Oliver Optic's books are taken from the Boston Public Library than of any other author's. Strauge as it may seem, Haw thorne's books rank second in popularity.

Spectator

THE editor of the London

is

not far out of the way when he declares that no toil fatigues like that of reading manuscript. Holding a plough-handle or driving a mowing machine is nothing to it,

TIIE progress at the IloosacTunnel for the month of June was as follows: East end 157 feet, west end 114 feet, arching 09} feet, leaving 3822 feet at the east end and /)612 feet at the ivest end yet to be tunneled.

IT IS wisely suggested that the resignation of Mr. Indian Commissioner Parker, because Congress reduced his office to the grade of a clerkship, is great encourage ment to Congress to proceed in that very direction, and reduce other offices to a clerical grade.

Literary

THE

II'MM is after the lively

Miss Dodge, whose recent assault upon the memory of Charles Dickens, and her heartless disturbance of his remains, suggests to it that she should write her

tff phunt Ghoul

nom

Hamilton.

GEN.

EWELL,

of the Confederate States

army, is cultivating a little garden spot of 4,000 acres in Tennessee. The New York (ilofte thinks he is sub-soiling for the White House, and hopes some day to overtake Horace Greeley

MRS. DAHLUUEN is preparing for publication a memoir of her eon Ulric, which the late Rear-Admiral Dahlgren nearly completed before his death. This is much more sensible and ladv-like than indulging in vituperation against woman's rights.

GEORGE ALFRED TOWNSEND is doing New Jersey tor the Chicago Tribune. He says it is a State battle-fields and blackberry farm*, and that it produces the freeman and the peach with equal spon taniety. both being somewhat below the average in size, but running numerously to the bushel.

rat

THE Chicago

says that the finan­

cial and commercial interests of Kentucky have been shaken to their foundations by the failure of a second-hand clothing-dealer in Paducah. The Democratic papers charge it upon the Administration, as usual.

HERE is an instance of rapid promo tion: "Lawience Minor, a colored porter on the steamer Gen. Lvtle, of the Louisville and Cincinnati mail line, has been appointed a professor in Alcorn University, Mississippi, an institution established for the education of the colored race."

JOHN QCIXI'Y ADAMS said a sensible thing when, in referenec to the process of "interviewing," he expressed himself thus: I do not know whv it is any more objectionable to be 'interviewed' out of one's sentiments that than it is to state them in a stump speech. In fact, the somewhat illicit character of the 'interview' seem' to secure for ihern a more extended currency than is accorded to the more formal speech."

BRICK POMKROY, in his La Crosse

Democrat,

applauds the couree of Gov.

Hoffman, and in out strong in allowing all American citizens toparade. He says this i? a right guaranteed by the Constitution. Ae Mr. Pomerov is considered a good Democrat in some quarters, although he refuses to depart, we put hi* opinion on record for what it is worth.

THE Indianapolis .Tourna cautions Mr. Shoemaker "that it will not be well'for him to allow the State Printer, 'or any other man,' to abstract from his files the original vouchers upon which the book paper warrants were issued. Nothing is to be made now by tinkering with the papers. A thief who returns a stolen horse after he has been apprehended, can not, according to the recollection of the law, plead it in bar of an indictment."

THE people of Texas are to vote this fall upon the proposed division of the State. The scheme contemplates three States: one lying east of the Trinity, one between the Trinity and the Colorado and one west of the latter stream. The first district contains 346,389 inhabi tants the next, 280,000 and the westermost about 200,000.

THE rice crop in Louisiana for 2870-71 is estimated at 49,971 barrels of 200 pounds each. The crop for 1869-70 amounted to 100,740 barrels. The crop for 1870-71 was nearly ruined by the drought. The prospect for the crop for 1871-72 is good, but only a small breadth has been sown, so that while there may be a full yield per acre, there will be small yield for the State.

NOT the least important of the fruits of the late European war is the decision of a Committee of the French Assembly favor of adopting the principle of compulsory service, in the reorganization of the military force of the nation. The Committee's resolution will doubtless be followed by the necessary legislative action to make the military resources of France available on the Prussian system That the rest of Europe will follow suit is almost inevitable.

THE code of "honor" established by the Southern chivalry still prevails. A few days ago a gentleman in New Orleans heard that a former partner had called him a thief. He called on him and demanded a retraction, which being refused he shot him dead on the spot without a moment's warning. This murder of an unsuspecting victim he considered an ample vindication of his honor and also of his courage.

THE character of the New York Democracy is shown by its bitier hatred of Hoffman. Two weeks ago he was the most popular man in his party, and would, in all probability, have been its candidate for the Presidential nomination, had it not been for his action in respect to the riots. Now he is more hated by the New York Democracy than is Ben. Butler, whom they destest as much as the devil is said to dislike the holy water.

SOME one writes to a New York paper protesting against the statement that Mayor Hall is politically dead because of his course in regard to the recent riots. The writer avers that,-on the contrary, Mayor Hall is more popular with his party than ever, and that he now stands a very good chance of being nominated for the Presidency, just as Governor Seymour gained sufficient prominence and party favor by his connection with the New York draft riots, in 1863, to secure the nomination in 1S6S.

THE Pope in a recent consistory announced that it was useless to look for human aid in the support of what he calls his rights, that is a restoration of his temporal power. "Nothing," he said, "but a miracle can save us." Whereupon the Indianapolis

Xews

sensibly remarks:

"As miracles are not in the habit of happening there, we must suppose that His Holiness has come to the conclusion that the rest of the world has long held that the best tlung he can do is to confine him self to ecclesiastic duties."

THE Eastern Chronicle, published New Glasgow, Nova Scotia, manifests the most entire indifference as to whether the Washington treaty shall be ratified by the Dominion or not. It believes that its ratification will constitute a verv im portant step towards the absorption of Nova Scotia into the American Republic, while the refusal of the Dominion Par Iiament to ratify the treaty, it holds, must necessaryily culminate in a separation from Great Britain, when annexa tion would follow as a matter of course

at

ATTORNEY-GENERAL LEAVITT of Mississippi, a native of the South, testifying before the Congress Committee on KuKlux, expressed his opinion that the existence oftheKu-Klux would be as apparent in the next election as in 1868 and 1869. The New York Tribune justly claims to have already shown how forty thousand Republican voters abandoned the polls at the las tPresidential election. And now we have due warning that the programme of 1868 is to be repeated in 1S72.

WHILE MUCH horror and indignation has been caused in this country by the revolting accocuts of wholesale and coldblooded executions of women in Paris by the triumphant Versailles, it now must be admitted, says the Philadelphia la quirer—on the strength of well authenticated evidence, that the Parisian females were not only made of sterner stuff than was generally supposed, but that in actual battle, and calm, unflinching determination to do or die, they were far more resolute than the men of the Commune. Not only did the females fight desperately to the last, but they met their deaths with an undaunted courage that put to shame the cringing pusillanimity of the sterner sex.

ACCORDING to the new census the total population of the United States is thirtyeight millions, five hundred and fifty thousand. This includes all the States and organized Territories. (_ which there area little over thirty-three and a half millions colored persons approaching five millions: Indians, 25,733 Chinese, 63,196 and Japanese, 55.

CHARLES LEVER, the eminent Irish novelist, received the degree of L. D. D. from Trinity College. Dublin, at the summer commencement. Forty years before he had conferred on him the degree of Bachelor of Medicine.

NEW YORK LETTER.

NEW YORK, July 19, 1871. THE HIOT

With its causes and results, haa been an eye-opener to all parties. Theproclamation forbidding theOrange parade opened theeyes of the long suffering New Torkers and of the country generally to the purposes of the Romish Church, and to the real and immediate danger which threatened religions and civil liberty. The tremenduous outburst of popular indignation which the action of the city authorities evoked opefied the eyes of the Tammany Democrats to the fact that there was a latent virtue in the people irrespective of party, with which it was not safe to tamper farther. The manner in which the riot was met, opened the eyes of the Romish Church to the fact that when its purposes are known, and there is an open attempt to destroy any of the great principles of our government it will find these principles so entrenched in the affections of the people that bullets will defend where ballots cannot. I am told that Bince the assassination of Lincoln, there has not been witnessed in this city such unanimity of sentiment as that which prevailad on the day of the shameful surrender of the city authorities to the demand of fanatics threatening riot, if a hundred or two men were permitted to parade. And you have little idea of the revulsion of political' sentiment which this riot has wrought. A friend with whom I dined the day after the riot,counted on his fingers eight of his own personal acquaintances who had always voted the Democratic ticket, had declared to him that they never would do it again. I told this to another ac quaintance and his reply was, "Why I found three Democrats in one office who declared the same thing to me, and one of them was a Baltimore secessionist at that." There has got to be some pretty vigorous and effective "whipping in" done, or the days of the Tammany King are numbered.

It is amusing to hear the howling which comes from the Romanists and the Democrats as their opponents beat them with the shillelah which they themselves have so unwisely put into unfriendly hands. The priests of Infallibility and their friends and subjects, cry out against the wickedne3B of attributing a religious character to the riot, as if its whole thing was not directly inthe interest,and in exact accordance with the spirit and teachings of the Romau Catholic Church the world over. The fact is, Infallibility has made a blunder in revealing its real purposes too soon. The cat is out, and no coaxing or cursing can get the feline out of sight soon enough to prevent the people from seeing that she is an ugly and dangerous wild cat of the most ferocious kind.

The politicions cry out against the wickedness of attempting to make politi cal capital out of the bloody scenes of Wednesday. How can any one suppose that A. Oakey Hall had any desire to plea«e his constituents when, in obedience to their demand, he forbade peaceable citizens to parade the streets lest the feel ings of his fiiends should be so hurt that they might be precipitated into act? of violence. There was a political insignificance in the mad cry of the Catholic mob with which they greeted HOFFMAN'S proclamation: "This is the man we elected." Go on good friends. The ene mies of law, order and liberty,have cut the club and put it into your hands. Lay it on, though they do howl and curse. The Roman Catholic Church is primarily responsible for this riot and its consequences. And the Democratic authorities of New York City, and perhaps State also, being the tools of the Church are alio responsible.

TUB. ROUTE

by which we came here was a new and very pleasant one. Going directly to Cincinnati via the Cincinnati, Indianapo lis and Lafayette Road—than which there is hardly a pleasanter or better managed— we took the wide cars of the Atlantic and Great Western. It is impossible to con ceive of a more comfortable way of get ting to New York than by means of this route. The cars, the officials, the em ployes, and the scenery are each all that could be desired. At Lawrenceburg in our State, we came into a

CORNFIELD

'•'as is" a cornfield. After riding some six or eight miles thiough a wilderness of corn literally unbroken, save by a nar row carriage raod now and.then, we be gan to make inquiries in reference thereto. We found that the field, undivided by any fence,only brokenby the roads aforesaid,and by a rod or two of swampy land in a few spots was fourteen miles long, and contained ten thousand acres. No "fish" in this story, but all solid corn The little Yankee girl who gave us the pleasure of her cempanv on the journey, opened her eyes at what she saw, and opened them wider yet when told that •he had not seen the half, and then made a note of it. If she tells the whole truth about this field in Connecticut she will need some good criminal lawyer to plead insanity in order to save her character for veracity. WANDERER.

Tad Lincoln.

Most of those who read the dispatch announcing the death of Thomas Todd Lincoln—says the New York Tribune— will never think of the well-grown young gentleman who died on Saturday at Chicago. The name of "Tad"—a pet name given by himself with his first stammering utterances and adopted by his fond parents and the world—recalls the tricksy ittle sprite who gave to that sad and solemn White House of the great war the comic relief it knew. The years that have followed, spent in study and travel produced an utterly different person! The Tad Lincoln of our history ceased to exist long ago. The modest and cordial voung fellow who passed through NewYork a few weeks ago with his mother will never be known outside of the circle of his mourning friends. But "little Tad" will be remembered as long as any live who bore a personal share in the great movements whose centre for four years was at Washington

He was BO full of lifeand vigor—so bubling over with health and high spirits, that he kept the house alive with his pranks and fantastic enterprises. He was always a "chartered libertine," and after the death of his brother Willie, a prematurely serious and studious child, and the departure of Robert for college, he in stalled himself as the absolute tyrant of the Executive Mansion. He was idolired by both his father and mother, petted and indulged by hi* teachers, and fawned pon and caressed by that noisome horde

of office seekers which infested the anterooms of the White House. He had a very bad opinion of books and no opinion of discipline, and thought very little of any tutor who would not assist him in yoking his kids to a chair or driving his dogs tandem over the South Lawn. He was as shrewd as he was lawless, and always knew whether he could make a tutor serviceable or not. If he found one with obstinate ideas of the superiority of grammer to kite flying as an intellectual employment, he soon found means of getting rid of lum. He had so much to do that he felt he could not waste time in learning to spell. Early in the morning you could hear his shrill pipe resounding through the dreary corridors of the Executive residence. The day passed in a rapid succession of plots and commotions, and when the President laid down his weary pen toward midnight, he generally found his infant goblin asleep under his table or roasting his curly head by the open fire-place and the tall chief would pick up tne child and trudge off to bed with the drowsy little burden on his shoulder,.stooping under the doors and dodging ihe chandeliers. The President took infinite comfort in the child's rude health, fresh fun, and uncontiollable boisterousness. He was pleased to see him growing up in ignorance of books, but with singularly accurate ideas of practical matters. He wa3 a fearless rider, while yet so small that his legs stuck out horizontally from the saddle. _He had that power of taming and attaching animals to himself which seems the especial gift of kindly and unlettered natures. "Let him run," the easy going President would say "he has time enough left to learn his letters and get pokey. Bob was just such a little rascal, and now he is a very decent boy."

It was evident that with all his insubordination and reckless mischief the spoiled child was at heart of a truthful and generous nature. He treated flatterers and office-seekers with a curious coolness and contempt, but he often espoused the cause of some poor widow or tattered soldier, whom he found waiting in the ante-reoms and it was most amusing to see the hearty little fellow dragging his shabby proteges into the Executive presence, ordering the ushers out of the way, and demanding immediate action from headquarters. The President rarely re fused a grace of this kind, and the demands were not so frequent as to lose the charm of novelty.

One of the tricks into which his idle ness and his enterprise together drove him, was the occasion of much laughter to the judicious, and much horror to the respectable in Washington. He invested, one morning, all his pocket money hi buying the stock in trade of an old woman who Bold gingerbread near the Treasury. He made the Government carpenters give him a board and some trestles, which he set up in the imposing porte-cochere of the White House, and on this rude counter displayed his wares. Every office-seefcer who entered the house that morning bought a toothsome luncheon of the keen little merchant, and when an hour after the opening of the booth a member ot the household discovered the young pastrvman the admired centre of a group ot grinning servants and toadies, he had filled his pockets and his hat with cur rency, the spoil of the American public. The juvenile operator made lively work of his ill-gotten gains, however, and before night was penniless again.

Although Btill a mere child at the death of his father, this terrible shock greatly sobered and steadied him. His brother Robert at once took charge of his education, and he made rapid progress up to the time of his sailing for Europe with his mother. He has ever since re mained with her, displaying a thoughtful devotion and tenderness beyond his years, and strangely at variance with the mischievous thoughtlessness of his child hood. He came back a short while ago, greatly improved by his residence abroad, but always the same cordial, frank, warmhearted bov. In his loss the already fearfully bereaved family will suffer a new and deep affliction, and the world, which never did and never will know him, will not withhold a tribute of regiet for the child whose gayety and affection cheered more than anything else the worn and weary heart of the g'-eat President through the toilsome years of the war.

The Turf.

The New York World is philosophizing over the fact that ten years ago the turl, as an institution, was almost unknown in this country except in the South. To the average American of that time, horse-ra-cing, we are told, meant nothing more than trotting, and where one man attended a genuine horse-race, twenty witnessed the feats of fast trotter. All this is changed now:

The glory of the trotter has departed, and the rural taverns and barber-shops that were once decorated with curious prints of Lady Thome and other eminent equine "ladies," rushingover impos sible roads and dragging skeleton buggies behind them, are now ornamented with more pretentious views of the "Grand Stand" at Jerome Park or Long Branch, with the pleasant accidents of the steeple ch»ge in the foreground.

It has become, in fact, almost a national sport. We are rapidly improving the stock of our race-horses, and before long our races will be run quite as brilliantly as are the Derby and the St. Lwger.

The development of the turf, the editor thinks, is. to a certain extent, an index of the wealth of the fashionable class-

In all large cities we have now an in creasing number of men who have leisure and wealth, and who find the opportunity both for amusement and display upon the race track, and so long as these men exercise a controling influence, the racecourse will remain as it now is, a credit to civilization. The lesson of the decay of the English turf, however, should not jass unheeded, leat in time the strain of raud and disho'ner which of late yearB has come to rest upon the Derby should also blight the famous meetings in which all are now so justly interested.

In July, 1861, Oliver O. Howard, a modest subaltern, fought his first fight at Bull Eun, and in 1871 Major General Howard delivers a peaceable Fourth of July oration almost on the old battlefield.

THE late Princess Letezia Bonaparte Wyse bequeathed her jewelry and other jersonal ornaments to her danghter Adeina, but left to her Ron Lucien her brilliants, and appointed him her universal .legatee and heir.

THE best fruit on the tree is that which tl^e birds have been pecking at. So, in human life, it is the best people who are most injured by slanderers.

ICE CREAM.

ICE CREAM!!

Tin-

DAY AND EVENING,

AT

W. H. W I DDKR'S,

No. 194 Main Street.

Immense Redaction in Hals and Millinery Goods in General.—Mr. Straus is now in New York sending home stacks of Hats and everything in the Millinery line so cheap Well, you have to see and be astonished.

DRY GOODS.

y-v

A

A' s.

~Jrl

9

:u!i

4** i. i'l

4 M'f Ufr

a*iff

"f'f

"*••••.

Uk 1 i4 Hv-ri

miut* a

I ffiy/ pi

.•'KliJii ti qlitt fjrtt'ijti

to close out Summer Goods:

i5We

'?i t-

nU\

Levying a City Tax for the year one thousand eipht liun tred and seventy-one (1871), proTiding fur the general expenses of tho city, payiner interest and providing for the redemption of the principal of the Bonds issued to the Kvansville, T, H. & C. R. R.

its of Terre Haute, seventy-five (75) cents and a 10II tax ot fifty (50) cents on evory male inlabi'ant of said city, sano and not a pauper, oftheageof twenty-one (2l) years and not exceeding fifty (50) years of ane.

SECTION 2. That for paying the interest on and providing for the redemption of the Bonds issued to the T. H. C. R. R. Co. there shall be assessed, levied and collected for the year 1871. on eaeh one hundred dollars of valuation of real estate and personal property lawfully subject to taxation within the corporate limits or said city, ten cents to p*y interest and five cents to be adued to the Sinking Fund wherewith to redeem said bonds when due.

SBCTMN 3 That for completing the payment oi principal and interest of the Normal School Bonds issued by the city, there shall be assessed, levied and collected for the year 1871 five (5) cents on eaeh one hundred (S10U) dollars of valuation of real estate and personal property in said city lawfully subject to taxation.

SUCTION 4 An emergency existing for tne immediate taking effect of this ordinance, all rules hindering the same are hereby suspended and this ordinance shall be in force from and after its passage and publication once each of the papers of the city.

DRY GOODS.

NEW YORK STORE,

•u

1-2 Counter will contain our Frou Frou Grenadines, Striped Grenadines, Alsace Plaids, Check Lenos, Figured Alpacas, Piques, &c. -VJ

TEJilt E-HAV XIX IS DIANA.

CITY ORDINANCES. MEDICAL.

N ORDINANCE Dr. GOTTLIEB FISCH'S BITTERS.

Co., and to complete the pnyinrntof principal and interest of the Noimal School Debt. ..

SECTION.1. Be it ordainetl bu the Common Council of the City of Terre Haute, That for the year one thousand eight hundred and seventyone (1871) there shall be assessed, levied and collected for the general purposes of the city on each one hundred dollars of valuation of, real estate and pergonal property lawfully subject to taxation within the corporate Iim-

ALEX THO.AS. Mayor.

Attest: F, SCHWROBOUBKR. Clerk.-

N ORDINANCE

For making Stone Gutter on Cherry street between Water street and High Water Mark el the River. 'SECTION 1. Be it ordained Lv the Common Council of the City of Terre Haute. That the ratters on both sides of ^hen-y street, between Water street and *Tigh Water Mark of ihe River be. and the same is hereby order-

""W

for

immediate taking effect of this ordinance, all rules hindering the passage of the same are suspended, the same shall be in force from

SI»I

and after its passage Adopted July 18.1871. ALEX. THOMAS, Mayor.

Attest: F. ScawisoR"CBK«. Clerk.

REMOVAL.

JJRMOVED.

IR.

WALTS

HAS REMOVED his office to Beach's Block, corner ef Main and Sixth streets, twe doors north of the Postoffice. Residence. North South hird street, between Poplar and Swan. aprll-dSm

-•V

r/1

v''

French and Scotch Ginghams, Linen and French Lawns, Yo Semite Stripes, Iron Grenadines, Summer Silks, Caepe Maretz. Silk Challi, and ail our 4Summer Suitings" will be offered in patterns at, and in some cases below, cost.

Parasols will be cheaper than they were ever known to be in Terre Haute. Fine Fans !—Ladies, now is the time to buy.

Thin Hose !—If you do not need them this season it wiil pay you to buy them or next Children's Hosiery !—"We have a line of very fine Hose for Children and Misses—most too good for the market—which we will sell at a bargain. (Persons who buy fine goods will please take notice.) llarseilles Trimming I—By the pietfe, or' what is left of a piece, will be closed out cheap.

Marseilles Quilts.—Some low priced and some very fine and costly will beincludad in the sale. jLace Points !—Black and White Points, Rotunds Lama, Light Brocade and renadine Shawls are to be sold at corresponding low rate^. •»ii •-'i-.'vit. v-I it.'.ii.n.' ..V

WHAT XT IMilEJAlSrS

do not intend to pack up a yard of Summer Goods or an article for Summer wear to hold as dead stock during the winter. r.

HOW CHEAP.

As cheap as we think they would sell at auction, without regard to cost. Only one price will be named. Th« se Goods are the best we hare in the store, but they must make room for Fall Stock, and all ''Summer Fabrics" not sold within 30 days will be sold at

AUCTIOILT

for cash in hand, to the highest bidder. Ladies who desire to select their goods and avoid the confusion of an auction room, now have a better oppor tunity than was ever offered in the city.

TUELL, RIPLEY & DEMING,"

Cor. Main and Fifth Sts,

S

Just received at tha NSW

YORK ONE-PRICE DBT GOODS STORE, the following very cheap goods: 50 Linen and Lawn Suite 36 Handscme Lace Points.

150 pieces White Marseilles. 100 dozen Cheap Hosiery."

TUELL. RIPLEY & DEMING*

CLEARANCE SALES! •3?J!

mh'I

TUELL, RIPLEY & DEMING

sf" -*1 -.,.1 WILL .INAUGURATE THEIR EXT RAORDINART BALES ON

MONDAY, JULY 10th,

1

This preparation of the great Scientist, Dr. Gottlieb Flsch, of Cferraany, tt based on the fact thai, aa all materials of the body are derived from Food, all Vital Force,-or Healtti ia derived from the Foro* stored up in Food. D*

MUSICAL INSTRUCTION.

A

THOROUGH Coarae of instruction! on either Piano, Violin, Gnitar, Onran or Melodeon. and cultivation of the voiea may be secured by applying directly to

Prof. GEORGE A. HABTUHG, Or by leaving orders at Eissner's Palace of

MUMC. 006-dly

th.11

TEHEE HAUTE

MUSICAL INSTITUTE.

Music tanghtin all its branehes, both thee-

edT to be paved" Vith stone according to the retically anB practically. Ins^inei»tal«nf rim nf mairinir stnne arntters. vocal lessons forty cent* each• of a fall hears

-Sptl"™ ^rVach^r^orty^minut^ oration no paplla taken for a term less tban six months pupils may enter at any time Institute rooms over the Postoffice. For far-

jupil si ther particulars address

septl- 1*

•v-

FiscKt BUtert

1

enables th«

•System to liberate sn4 appropriate these Forces creates Appetite, caret Dyspepsia, with its result lug Debility and lack O Nervous Energy so tone* the Btomacta and Liver ai to make Constipation and liilionsaesHlnipossible

iaforoes the System so can tide over bad results o! clmnKinK climate, water. Ac., and better endnre th« demands often BMipM tedly made on Its Force and Energy. Ladles la dellcate health, aged persons, and all emaciated SIM weak after sickness, will

(3ba-y*utiL*iM-jt.) rnpidly strengthen by eslng this great preparation. •vWhoerer uses this reined has for physician a gifted Scientestof Germany.

A N A O

Terre Haute, Indiana, WHOLESALE AOEHTR.

je28-dw3m

MUSICAL.

ANTON SHIDS, Principal

BINDING.

BOOK

BINDING.

JOSEPH KASBBRG having established a new and complete Book Bindery, is preaared to do all kinds of Book Binding and Blank Book manufacturing. Magaiines bound tLebest style.

JOSEPH KA8BERG, 159 Wain St.. over

a

Cox' Book Store,

desl-t' Terre Haute. Ind.

S81iiiBI&

Circular Saw Mills, and all kinds of

DRY GOODS. DRY GOODS.

00 pes New Summer Dress Goods

40 dos. Doable Shirt Fronts. 00 Shetland Shawls, 25 pes Black Alpaca.

The abpve Goods wiU be sold at extremely low prices, and we invite the attention of buyers to his fast. i.»,} •».

1

Pi

.-.if

1

73 MAIN STREET, Near Courthouse Square.

Of their Entire Stock of

SPRING AND SUMMER DRY GOODS!

.. At Greatly Reduced Prices.

WHITE GOODS, THIN DRESS gGOODS, GRENA DINES, SHAWLS, LACE POINTS, W3ITE LAWN and COLORED LINEtf READY-

MADE SUITS, PARASOLS, SUN UMBRELLAS,

LADIES', MISSES' and CHILDREN IIJUERY

Have all been reduced. Having anticipated the rise in KI-AT tton .ia 1 C.ittnn Good*, we have purchased in large quantities and will give ir uto.-nsr-t the advantage of the Miue.

Not a yard of Cotton Fabric haa been marked up. although the have advanced 25 per cent, in New York. Parties defiring to p.irc'ia*e sh uld not delay doing so a moment.

We shall offer Extra Bargains for the next Sixty Days.

WARREN, IIOBKllGr & CO.,

7 OPERA HOUSE.

CLOTHING.

YOU CAN SAVE MONEY

BY BUYING CLOTHING

AND

Gent's Furnishing Goods,

ERIiANGrER & GO'S

jTheir Merchant Tailoring Department is Stocked with all styles of

SCOTCH, ENGLISH. FRENCH AND DOMESTIC

CLOTHS,

F. H. M'ELFBESH. J. BARNARD

IRON AND BRASS CASTINGS!

REPAIRING DONE PROMPTLY 1

All parties connected with this establishment being practical mechanics of soveral years' experience, we feel safe in saying that we ctn render satisfaction to our eustomers, both in point of Workmanship and Price. my*V lw |y McELFRESU BARNARD.

ROOFINC.

ROOFING.

CLIFT & WILLIAMS.

Agent* and Dealers in

John's Patent Asbestos Rooflnp Book River Paper Co's Buildint Roofing Slate, Felt and Cement Roofing, Chicago Elastic Stone Roofing PAPEBS, used in the place of Plastering on tbt inside, and for 8heathing under the tiding on the outside.

Roofs applied in eity and country and warranted. Call on us at the Prairie Cit\ Planing Mills, eeraer of *tk and Mulberry streets. mayl4dtt

isr y. s.-'t

..

73 Main Street,

NEAR COURT HOUSE SQUARK.

REDUCTIONS!

Warren, Hoberg & Co.

Will commence SATURDAY, JULY 8th,

ONE-PRICE STORE.

Their Goods are all Marked in Plain Figures at the LOWHT PRICES.

Their DIAMOND "D" is the Best Fitting Ire«* shir in the Market.

They have a Full Line of GAUZE UNDERSHIRTS for Men and Boys.

COATINGS

Middle Room, Opera House Building,

FOUNDRY

mri

Phoenix Foundry

j* AND

'wt

MACHINE SHOP!

MoELvaesH a BABNABD

Corner Ninth and Eagle Streets,

(Near the Passenger Depot,)

-TERRE HAUTE, IND.

Steam Engines. Mill

ANUFACTURE Machinery. II»i

Hense Fronts, fire Fronts,

mmt.

OISTE PRICE ONLY.

WARREN. HOBERC it CO*

Rnielilaanpl Co.

r:':..

OLOS XlfcTQ- OUT SALE

and VJESTItfOS

WOOD STOVE.

Early Breakfast

WOOD

COOKIE

STOVE

10,860 Sold in 1870.

OVER30,000 IN ACTUAL USE

THE LARGEST OVEN of any Stove in the United states. Palent Indestructible Double Fire Bottom-

USES LESS FUEL than Stoves with ovens one-third smaller. HOT AIR CHAMBER in front of oven.

EVERY STOVE GU IRANTEED to fire perfect satisfaction, and it* b*king qiiaii(i«s equal to those of the old-fashioned brick oven.

Manufactured from a No. 1 Charcoal Iror by

REDWA7 & BURTON,

'incinaatl, Ohl*.

For sale by all tile Stove Dealers like

J-J

IC.

je20-d3ut Terre Haute, ind,

WHEAT, RYE, OATS, &C.

TELEGRAPH MILLS, LAFAYETTE STREET, TEBBE HAUTE. (K». Highest market price paid for Wheat, Rye, Oats, CornA Back wheat

Wheat Floor, Bye Floar, Back wheat Floar, All of the best quality, and sold at the Lew est Prices, Wholesale or Retail, in Barrels or Sacks. Ue, Oroaa Feed, Coarse and Fine, A Braa

BICJUK»S05:«.eiFF110B!l, Prep**', ip3Q,dly.

'.•j