Daily Wabash Express, Volume 21, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 20 September 1871 — Page 2

A E E S S

TBEB3 HATTTB, IITDIA.5IA.. i- ,, j, 7/"i Wednesday Morning, Sept. 26,1871.

NEWS AND VOTINGS.*

THE "Order of the United Sons of Ham" is to be instituted in Indianapolis. J. C. BRECKINRIDGE is devoting himself to his profession with great assiduity, and is said to be making more mone^ than any other lawyer in Kentucky. I 3 THE Indianapolis Fait commences next Monday and the State Fair the week following. Both of these exhibitions promise to snrpasf former oneo.

THE Meridian National Bank, of Indianapolis.hafl been authorized to commence business with a capital stock of $200,000. Hon." John H. Farquhar Is to be its Presdent. ,.J VIRGINIA is re-establishing h§r whipping posts, at the urgent solicitation of the criminals, who prefer taking their little retribution in this way rather itban in the shape of long imprsaonment.

THE Boston "Post," looking somewhat despondiugly at the question of the Gov ernorship, parodies Whittier to this effect:

A BODY which calls itself the Central Committee of the "Peace and Liberty League," has issued a call addressed to all its "fellow-citizens" of Europe to iend delegates to a meeting which is to "come off on the 25th day of the present month. The committee very naively reminds us that it protested last year, not only against the war between Germany and France, but no less than four distinct times afterwards against its continuance This is a rather damaging confession though it proves only anew how little influence philanthropic remonstances like these have on the course of events.

THE following are the appointments for the Indianapolis District of the In diana M. E. Conference: B. F. Rawlins, Presiding Elder. Indianapolis—Meri' dian Street, R. Andrus California Street J.W.Webb Ames Church, X.JVV. As bury Putnamville and Manhattan, Hearing and one to be supplied Monrovia and Belleville, C. Lee Mooresville, J. B. Likely Brooklyn, W. W. Puett Waverjy, W. Meginnis Martinsville, N.Thompson Morgantown, D. Swartz Plainfield, R. L. Cushman Stilesyiljc, Byram Carter, S. Herr. •4 THE editor of the Chicago "Bepubli can" is happy in being able to announce on unimpeachable authority that Mr

Greeley is not given to profane swearing, as certain mischievous editors, envious of his great fame and knowledge of farming, would have the country believe When extremely irritated he may possibly exclaim f'godlemity," but he has been known to weep when afterward reminded of even this slight lapse from verbal chastity. He never adds the word "dam, except when in presence of a great waterpoyer, and ia the most excited conversation he always spells it without the final n, in *vhich it is well known the profanity consists.

IT IS rumored that the King of Greece now visiting his parents at Copenhagen, will never return to his classic capital again, expatriating himself from the kingdom of his adoption, voluntarily re signing his sceptre, crown, court, army and ministry to take his place in the growing society of monarchs out of business. Should this rumor prove true, the people of Greece will bear their loss with equanimity. Indeed, it is to be feared that King George will hardly be missed by his subjects, who never knew much, and cared less, about him. His Majesty cer tainly did nothing remarkable for Greece, save to charge its slender treasury with his royal expenses. While the banditti were murdering travelers in his domain, he was devising a fanciful project for restoring the Olympian games. This immensely practical enterprise failed, and since then the King has not been heard of until now, when we have the not unpleasant rumor of bis abdication.

THE Indianapolis "News," in an article on Tammany, inquires: Now with the influence of the great foreign vote manager, and fraudulent vote manufacturer, and double vote remunerator, gone, dead, decomposing and smelling up to heaven and down to where the smell seems to emanate by anticipation from the Tammany Hall of the future, what is the Democratic prospect in the State of New York? If the Republicans were united it would be bad enough, bnt the Republic are worse divided than the Democracy. Greeley is bent on a split if be can't carry the regular organization for his Presidential claims, and a split has not only been made, but organized. In New York, then, the effect will be less serious than might have been expected. Bot abroad, in the other States, which have depended largely, if not wholly, upon Tammanny for electioneering money, the effect will be disastrous. A lame campaign it must be without money, and where is the money to come from when Tammany can no longer steal? ,®.!

THE Louisville "Courier-Jotirnal" says: The Atlanta "Sun," in its fight against the Democracy, is re-enforced, by the Bowling Greeif (Indiana) "Weekly Aurora Borealis," .and the Shelbyvfflfe (Tennessee) "American Re^e." j||f thafse threegreat journals couWffe conwlh idated under the firm name and style of the "Daily and Weekly United Intellect," we would have another interesting newspaper in this country.

A 31AHIA.C PASSENGEIL

ain.

n-

THe CrtrMiefUtah, "Reporter" says: When the .California Express train reached her« at 5:80 this morning, a messenger was dispatched to the residence1 of City Marshal Harnish, requesting that officer to go and apprehend a passenger who was believed to be a maniac and very dangerous. Immediately on receipt of noUce,,Mr. Harnish, accompanied Constable Nelson, proceeded to depot, where the man vgs' sfeen armed with a fielf-cocking revolver loaded, and unmistakably bent upon doing great bodily injury to every

EersonTwicehe

.•••*

Of all gad words of tongue or pen j:fr

The saddest are these—we

9-

MAY

have Ben."

SOME of the Democratiopapefs of Mississippi are insisting upon the right of the people of that state to elect Congressmen this fall. The members. elected in November, 1869, were chosen for this remainder of the Forty-ifirdfriCongress and for the Forty-second, and were admitted to'tKeir' ficaffs iirthfc'lalfer part of last March. Ufi

MB. GREELEY in arecent issue of the "Tribune" explains his position in regard to the re-nomination of Grant. He says that the "Tribune" stated and showed that Grant would be abetter candidate in 1872 than he was in 1868, and would make abetter President yet this was not intended as advocacy of his re-nomina* tion. "AFTER Defeat," is the caption of a leading article in theDemocratic organ at Sacramento, on the day succeeding the California election. Since they got what they were "after" the Chicago "Republican" has no doubt they are entirely satisfied. Bat wait till they hear from Ohio. "After Annihilation" will be the only satisfactory explanation of that performance.

by

the

who would dare to approach

im. fired with deliberate aim at Mr. Nelson, but happily without effect* and was about to dischargfe a third shot, whon Marshal Harnish rushed upon him, throwing him to the ground and taking the pistol from his grasp. The crazy man then threw a jack-knife which he used with fearful effect, cutting a deep wound in the Marshal's right leg, and making another, but not dangerous one in the forehead. The man is powerful as well as desperate, but Marshal Harnish, though wounded, still held him firmly, and at thesame moment,-Mt. Nelson all the time assisting, the man was firmly secured and borne to the city prison, where he is now confined. Who he is, no one knows, further than that he came through direct from San Francisco. It appears that the man's condition was first noticed at Blue Creek, the next station west from here, when the porter of the sleeping car informed conductor Cummings that he saw the person standing on the platform of one of the sleepers, with the pistol in his hand. Mr. Cummings immediately stopped the train, and, upon examination, discovered that the passenger was too stfrely a lunatic. He therefore with great coolness approached the man, and requested him to go back to another car, where he belonged, but this he refused to do. Inside the passengers were still in their berth3. In order to prevent harm to any one, Mr. Cummings had the doors of both cars locked to prevent ingress, so as tp get to Corinne, where aid might be procured. This plan was partially successful, but, in the meantime, the man broke,the end windows and fired one shot at the porter, the ball entering the door-post close by, but seeing the condition of the assailant, both Mr. Cummings and the porter desisted from using their arms. fl

W. Centreville, Maryland. $. We began with the southern or Queen Anne's road, which now runs to within four miles of Centreville, an old town near the Chesapeake shore, and exactly opposite Annapolis. This road is built on the summit ridge between the Ches ter and Choptank rivers and its highest elevation is fully sixty feet above tide- water. The less attractive country through which it pas^fes is, never theless, neither monotonous nor exhaust' ed it is Illinois under a warmer There where heavy sheaves in the golden shocks which, dotted the fields, and the woods, were they were not of second growth, loomed like j»reen walls and toWers against the sky. But thesame features were continually repeated the old, imposing mansions of the former feudal lords were scarce, and the new gray and drab cottages, which indicate the modern "departure," kept as near the railroad as possible, and looked, thought, rather ill at, ease in their bare surroundings.

At the hottest hour of the day we halted where a country road crossed the track, and a half a dozen carriages were waiting under the cedar-trees. Centreville is the venerable county seat of Queen Anne, and we must needs make acquaintances with it. A breeze which

a

had freshened

its dry wings in tliiCbesape&ke blew over the lusty corn the horses trotted nimbly and I could not see that the dark coachmen wf re made miserable by their freedom, or performed their work less willingly for being paid for it. The party was •too cheerful, and out hosts were too in tent on offering their individual hospital ity for a very careful survey of the litlle town. This *nd the other placestwhich we afterward visited all impressed melh the same way—as if they had been far gone in a mild dry-rot, for which the inhabitants have just now discovered the remedy. The brick,, mansions of the last century, with traditions of 'paint clinging to their warped eaves and porticoes the gardens where fruit, flowers and weeds tell equally of the old mellowness of the soil the shabby humbler dwellingsrcrouching with an obsequious air beside their haughty Neighbors the old-fashioned "stores" with placards of newest medicines and labor-saving machines about their doors the large but dingy hotel, whose very door seems to say, "Governors and Senators have entered here the paper-mulberry foliage above and the dust below—all these features are repeated along the Eastern Shore.—From '"Down thftEastern Shore," by BAYARD TAYLOR, in Harper's Magaine for October.

Elections in October and November. October 3, Texas Congressional elec tions, continuing three days.

October 9, Rhode Island votes on the Constitutional Amendments. October 10, Iowa, election of Governor, State officers and Legislature.

October 10, Ohio, election of Governor,, State officers and Legislature. October 10, Pennsylvania, election of State officers and Legislature.

October 26, West Virginia, election of a House of Delegates. November 7, Maryland, election of Governor, State officers and Legislature

November 7, Massachusetts, election of Governor and Legislature. November 7, Minnesota, election of Governor, State officers and Legislature.

November 7, Mississippi, election of Legislature. November 7, New

of

Jersey, election

Governor and LegislatureNovember 7, Illinois, election of Con gressman-at-Large.

AN Oswego druggist sprinkled the bench at his door with acids, and the loafers who infested the place found that the ventilating facilities it established in their pantaloons extended through the adjacent epidermis. That seat isn't often occupied now.

AN East Tennesseean, named Spencer, moved his family, containing a wife and three children,to Pennsylvania, a distance of over five hundred miles, carrying all his earthly goods in a Wheelbarrow. He left Tennessee because he could only make fifty cents a day. .ti

IF MR. BONNER is an honorable man, he will either pay the owner of Goldsmith Maid $50,000 for his animal, or else give the same amount for the relief of those poor chambermaids who have lost their, reason by reading Cobb Jr.'s stories, and are now spending their time in lunatic asylums.—N. T. Standard.

AMONG the individual anonymous gifts pledged to defray the expenses of a new edifice for the Church of the Advent, Boaton, is one of $5,000 and another of $50,ft/V\ JWn I W' Sif«

OP GOLDEN BODS AND ASTERS.

From Harper's Bazar.]

MY DEAR GHACE.-—The summer is ftspg beautiful bnt are we not always pleaded when bright early September days come, with their cool air and their

tihowtonictheautumn,the

distances* and the landscape, latelv yfcrtim of passionate heats, is steadied the 6f vital elixir! And early the autumn shoiife! How soon the year begins to fall! Sometimes in July, even while we are panting in the sultriness, we see a yellow leaf, and know that the invisibly autumn isfalreadyimpatiently fingering the leaves', |MaJtJOctOj ber is eager to be in possession. By mid'Aon—t tanjcwt! where, aqd efery kind .of aster is'dotting the dulfe of the undergrowth with crisp Btars of color. How affluent the season is! How profuse its

retfpply

of flowers! I

,walked the other day with Conrad, fr.op) whom nature seems to withhold no secret and he told me thestory of every tree and flower we saw,and of every bir4 we heard. The observations of science are as poetic as the speculations of the imagination. To walk afad talk with a thoroughly inforped man in the fields and woods is as inspiring as to read Sbakspeare and Homer. The forms: which. have been merely a various mass, like, printed .letters:to one who can rat read, become instinct with the most delicate beauty, the mOataiibtle suggestion, a .a

To a man Who'haa studied dl'osely and observed faithfully the wild flowers area calendar. He tells the time by blossoms. He begins withJhe trailing.arbutus or trillium or boustonia^abd ends only with the latest, aster*. Or he does not end at all, but hangs smila* and everlasting over his^winter wjndows. 'The autumn floweils ar«- t«ebly treQiat'kable: they are very profuse, and brilliant, and scentless. They assert themselves to the eye more, than those of the earlier season. Threading the shallow and shaded streams for trout you m«y find the splendid cardinalflower, one pL tlw^rjiqhfflt of the wild blossoms, bat it "is choice infrequent. Or In the moist meadow you may espy the coy arethusa, as gloomy Dis beheld Proserpina in the Sicilian vale. Or, if you know a spot that I know, you may even see a plantation of orchids (Orchis grand/flora), and raise your hat as to a. congress pf kings- But these are-exceptionale You: will not find a stream fringed for miles with cardinals, nor whole meadows purple with the arethusa, nor are there kings enough for many congresses. These are the jewels of the summer, worn now and then, here and there.: But the lavish autumn gilds miles and miles of common highway- wiUi the. gold and blue and white and fifrfilVof asters and solidago, and, a little later, with the fringed gen tian, outpurpling the Tyrian dye.

Yet, if the plume of the golden«rod were as infrequent as the spike'of the orchis, would it be more superb? If the delicate asters were as shy as the arethu sa, would they be more prized in the find ing? Perhaps so: but Conrad told me so much of these most common flowers that I was as interested as if they had all been choice exotics and when he detailed the methods by which flowers that seemed hermetically sealed were multiplied— how an eager bee, seeking but a drop of honey, in getting it left an endless wealth of future "flowers and honey behind—it seemed as if no study were so inticing and no knowledge so beautiful as that of flowers.

all As

Yet the flowers themselves, with their lovely history, are butsymbols. I take a country walk, meeting only some grave farmer, who nods to me as faraway as if we were in. different planets, or a gray rabbit, which peers at me and scuds to cover, I seem to myself to be. again promenading the city street. That very rabbit I recognize as a friend in masquerade the queer, shy, evasive Leander, who is as timorous and retiring as any hare. And, if climbing over the wall, I loiter down toward the brook, and observe the delicate and hardy lady's-traces, the nodding and airy noli me-tangere, smile to recognize my familiar fellow passengers of the city. There on the pond is the white water-lily. I like its learned name, Nymphcea odora&i, but that also no stranger. It is only the magnificent Aureliawhom I see daily driving ih her chariot in the Park, ample, queenly, ex panded, luxurious repose. And, again plodding along the road, "who are these in bright array," this long, bright procession winding-out of sight, these common golden-rods, these innumerable asters, but the infinite company of my fellow-travelers, who are sturdy, healthy, contented, and cheerfully commonplace?

This is all natural. Last June afriend in Oregon sent me some stones that had been taken out of the earth deep down in some mineral explorations, and upon those long-buried stones stones were landscape forms a» plainly imprinted-as if they had,been indelibly painted or etched Wete'ihey hints or studies or reminiscenses of that vanished scenery? Surely it is ho stranger that the familiar friends of to-day should be suggested to us by the flowers in solitary pastures than that the dim primordial landscape should be pictured on those long-hidden stones. And shall we be surprised if those friends, in turn, suggest the floWers?" It'"iS' Slfeady autumn as I wite to you, dear Grace, and our journey lies through the yellowipg harvest fieldsf—^-The measured beat of the thresher's flail"—db-you remember the'noble th&ught of Goeth'fe?—is heard pn every side, and already4he dahlias in Ihe garden seem to fear the /ro9t. I rise in the morning, if I am happilly in the Country, and before my bath am baptised with the brilliant coolness of the air/ There is a rose-diamond light an exquisite transparency which invigorates and exhilarates, and before I come down to breakfast I seem, to have ^ken hands with Reginald, and to have neard his hearty, cheerful laugh, and to have been braced by that magnetic temperament— and yet the leaves of twenty autumns have fallen upon Reginald's grave.

I go to the door and step out, and the sweet September warmth, which is not withering, but inspiring, gathers ite in ample embrace, and seems to lay actual hands of benediction upon my head. It is a parent's blessing, which I shall never otherwiee receive, but which is as familiar to me as if I felt it yesterday. And when after a morning of self-denial, doing ffly work, if 1 happen to have any, wistfully turning my eyes to the great beneficent sunshine out-of-doors, which looks at me wonderingly through the windows, as if I were squandering a fortune in losing the day by staying in the house—when, after this morning, I go out for a walk, the maple-trees twinkle at me and the old locusts rustle, as if huge house-dogs wagged their welcoming tails, and I go bounding, my blood and my feet, until I find Placido, my contemporary and comrade.

He and Reginald and I were friends for many a year, and are no less so because Reginald is with us no longer. And as I walk by Placido's side, and hear his cheerful words, and feel the comfortable influence of his temperament—that Steady, hearty .affectionate nature which is the happiest for itself and others—I seem to see what the profuse and sturdy golden-rods and asters around usremotely typify and suggest* When he comes to town they all come with him and I am apt to think that those are very dull who, when Placide is by, do not hear the brook murmuring in the pasture, or see the bright and kindly autumnal flowers. Or„ my dear Grace, have you never watched your grandmother, and remarked that that unostentatious and incessant self-sac-rifice, that tireless patience, that noiseless care, that tender equanimity, are the bright flowers of her autumn, the goldenrods and asters that make her October ao beautiful? In her younger years I could always see traces of these traits, but they were like those orchids and arethuses, only sometimes found. But now the kindness and the cheer are perpetual they

are not theBhy and hidden treasures of a meadow, bat the continuous beauty and charm of the highway.

I think, dear Grace, if it is riot following a fancy too finely, that we can sometimes see the same flowering in genius, in later works of the same hand there is a certain uniform tranquility of tone—a more pervasive gentleness and kindoess and charity. Indeed, in these early autumnal days, in the wide-lying wealth of golden-rod and aster, old age seems itself a kind of benediction. How many of ns secretly deplore the inevitable necessity!' How many gri^dge to cpunt the jApaing yea^s, and reluctantly and4 sadly own to themselves that they are yount

sorrow^ |hi|i|i, jdfusions and be reaveniflnts of every kma. The children grow up their merry voices are heard no more: they marry aind depart, and the home resumes the silence of the honeys itfoon—s-a silence, alasl without hope of being broken. With youth go lose and ecstasy':' the- purple light, the bloom of dawii, the dream of the unimaginable fu ture! But ii is only yobth that thinks so dear Grace for 'who have been ihe happiest human beings you have known?

Is the coy purple .of-the arethusa in the meadow more beautiful than that of the fringed gentian by. the way? Is the gold of the dog-tooth violet in May.more splendid than that of this universal golden-rod? That fiery passion, that proud disdain, that eager grasp of youth, are they more satisfactory than the contemplative repose, the charity, the sweet •humor of thai later day? Who, indeed, would have it always June, or always In dian summer? .. And who would supplant the fiowera of May by those of September? Not.you and I, dear Grace—YOH, who are wreathed with roses I, who hold an aster. These autumn days, these tranquil splendors, these abundant flowers, plead for themselves. In September how perfect September seems You, too, will discov er it when you. have left June behind. You pass the Cape of Good Hope, and §11 the way seems doubtful. But yet you are sailing straight to the Spice Island. You glide under new constellations, as in traversing the year you pass among con stantly changing flowers. ,/ni "There is no great and no small

Xo the God who loveth all 1

and the season of golden-rods and asters is as beautiful as that of lilies and r6ses Your affectionate friend, -I AN OLD BACHELOR.

IT IS proposed to cut down Bunker Hill, at Charleston. If it is done, a Catholic church and a cemetery containing 8,000 graves will have to be removed, and Buhker Hill Monument lowered 46 feet, at a cost of $3,271,111.

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS

THE UEW DISINFECTANT!

Eromo Cfclorahm

iiijNOir-POISVNOIIS, ODOR LESS, j»7ti POWERFUL DEODORIZER AN" DISINFECTANT, ENTIRELY HARMLESS AND SAFE.

ARRESTS AND PREVENTS CONTAGION Used in private dwellings, hotels, restau rants, public schools, hospitals, insane asy lums, dispensaries, jails, prisons, poorhouses, on ships, steamboiats, and in tone ment houses, markets, for water-closets, uri nals, sinks, sewers, cesspools, stables, &e.

A epeeific in all -contagious and pestilential diseases, as oholera, tjphoid fever, ship fever, small-pox, scarlet fever, measles, diseases of animals, Ac. Prepared only by

TILDEN & CO., 176 William St.* N. Sold by all druggists.

%003 GIFTS.

•J Grand Gift Concert and Distribution for th Benefit of the Foundling Asylum of Neto or an So an S a or to J.) Orphans'Home,

Indiana. Or,

Hon. H.

Mnj.

ITHRIDGE XX FLINT GLASS LAMP CHIMNEYS

Staiid lit at' better than .any other made Ask for Dithridge'8 and take no, other. See that our name is on every box DITHRIDGE & $ON, Pittsburg, Pa

BarSend for Price List.

The CONGRESS ARCTIC

The Best Winter Overshoe Mo Buckles to break! No Trouble to put on!

Neat, Genteel, Stylish!

A.SK YOUR SHOE DEALER FOR II

CD 1717 *0R ONE MONTH TO ALL rlrjri WHO ASIC F0KIT 75o to Jan., J. ,71.

9VSQ t0 Jllly.

serial story

r/Mm

-'i( if?

ii

"IHf

•W*,

Washington, J). C. -l

To be held in Washington (as soon as all Tickets are sold, of wbich Ten Days' Notice will be given,) and not later than November OO/l 1ff71 finmkaw af iinlrn 23d, 1871. Entire number of tickets, 52,000 85 each. 1,003 Gifts, amounting to $200,000. to be awarded. Send for Circular, giving list of Gifts and References. Tickets can be had of RILEY & SARGENT, Philadelphia, Columbus, 0., and.Richmond

P. C.

DEVLIN, General Agent

MOCDLLOUGH,

Elkton.

GKO.

T.

CASTLK,

Baltimore.

Hon. J. S.

NKGLEY,

Pittsburg, Trustee.

,n.

it

S2

Jan.,''73. THE METHODIST. Every week a Lecture Room Talk.by Beecher Sermon or article by 1 alma go,,

Beecher in popularity.)

(second only to

Mrs. Writing's

BIO LEADERS.

For something to GEORGE W

interesting, send your address GATES, Frankfort, N. X.

$500 PER WEEK.,

Can be made by any smart man who can keep his business to himself. Send Stamp for particulars to HOWARD CO., Williatnsbugh, N.Y.

gOBTH.KAST MISSOURI Farms and Unimproved Lands for Sale by

Parts, Mo.

71) 7 T7 Trjr samples of onr great 8 page, ILr Pi illustrated weekly—30 years established. Fine steel engravt ings free to subscribers. Agents make $o a day, Send for Saturday Gazette, Hallowell, Me*

& ?lt *i' SALE. A

DMINISTRA-TOB'S SALE. ft#?-" ..•?«'! On Saturday, October 14, 1871, the undersigned Administrator of the estate of David C. Stunkard, deceased, will offer for sale at Public Auction, the following personal property belonging to said estate, to-wit:

The half Interest in theSteamer Zanesville. One bay horse. ?&&••>* Two sets of double harness. Two SroS axled lqgmbef |a§* One hay scale. Two sorrel horses (matched-) One coal wagon. The said property will be offered atCarico a Livery Stable, corner Third and Walnni streets, in Terre Haute.

TIFMSOF SALE:—A credit of six months, the nrchaser executing hit note at six per cent. West, with P«'^£^XRRICK. sep!4-d2t-w4t Administrator.

nL3AlI

THE LARGEST

great

exposing secret workings of Ro­

manism in-America, and much other good reading.

Q- Halsted,

114

$30, We "will Pay $30 Agents $30 per week to sell our great and valuable discoveries. If you want permanent, honors ble and pleasant work, apply for particulars. Address DRYER & CO., Jackgen, Michigan.

Greatest Invention of the Age

West's Automatic Lathe for all kinds of wood turning. Also, Dnrkee's Automatic Sawing Machine for sawing small stuff direct ly from the log. Work perfectly, and will pay for themselves in six months in saving timber and labor. Send, for descriptive book to^he.manulacturers, i. A CO., ,'A Qeneseo, Livingston Co., Bcir York

'i-'EVER

Nassaust., New York.

THE CURTAIN RAISED How i( is done, and who does it. The Alena Bonk, 192 pages gorgeously 'illustrated with cuts, positions, &o. Sent by mail, securely sealed, for fifty cents. Grand Circular, free. Address EDGAR JOHNSON. 688BROADWAY, New York

TUELL. RIPLEY & DEMINC-

INSURANCE.

•*fr5r,4.r

MCNDTT

& Moss,

Ladies ilV F'mcl/

Bias Prffifed Tietf, Tassel End fies, Windsor Ties, Gros Grain and Roman Bows,

»*r

•ALSO

W.llW&g* -rir

Cotton Quilting, White Brussels A'et Yaleneiennes Collars, Valenciennes and. Hamburg Edges, Tucked Embroidery, Black Blonde, Beal Guimpure and.Duchesse Laces.

A great variety of Handkerchiels, some fine bright Striped Shawls, as well as the modest [styles plenty of Embossed Wool Skirts a handsome stock of Dress Goods, Black Silk Velvet and Velvet Elbbons, Tabby Velvet, Opera Flannels and Light Cloakmgs.

We have a first-class stock of Hosiery, Ladies' Merino Dra^verff&nd Vests.

HOUSEKEEPERS CAN GET

A complete outfit of Sheetings of all widths, Pillow Case and ordinary Muslins, bleached, Half Bleached and Brown Table Linen fronf'25e to $2.00 per yard Turkey Tabling, Napkins, Doyles, Towels, Crash, Bed Tickings Blankets, Carpet Chain, Cotton Batting, Bed Spreads, Furniture Chintz, Checks, &c., &o.f „V" f* •••, v. 'Op-: hu-. "'itel

iW THE,MEN WE HAVE

2

A fall stock of Cloths, Cassimeres, Jeans, Flannels, colored and white Canton Flannels, Denims for overalls, Check, Hiekory, and Mnslins for shirting. All numbers of Eichardson's Celebrated Irish Linen.

British and German Cotton Half Hose of fine, stout and heavy rough qualities Country Knit and Machine made Wool Half Hose. Colored Cotton Linen and Bandanna Handkerchiefs.

The nicest of Paper Collars and Little Notions."^ (Sportsmen will bear in mind that wo have material expressly for Hunting Suits.)t« "Sr r* -m fit* i.*

CHILDBED AND MISSES I An »k5«i !fsH i*. ii

5

Hose of all sizes and qualities.] rttif A'' 'ii'It •i.'tlfc1'

ft-''}-*.

O

'S

IB! !(»-'-.» I Vrl 1 v.u i"

a

Will find beautiful Plaids and suitable Trimmings, material for those jaunty little jackets Rubber Combs the nicest shades of narrow and broad cord edged and Gros Grain Ribbon Merino Underwear and „11 cm A nunlifiAQ

Vii

THE: TRADE

iiilrt* Uit iW' 1- a, tIiKJ:

We invite to inspect our stock of Prints, Ticks, Ginghams, Bleached and Brown Mus ins, Canton and Wool Flannels, Jeans, Tweeds, Repellants, Checks Stripes, Grain Bags, low and medium priced Dress Goods, Table Linens, Colored Cambrics, Thread, Buttons, Braids, Tape, Pins, Needles, Knitting Cotton, Carpet Chain, Cotton and Wool Yarns, Batts, White Goods and other articles of which wo are a a a

TUELL, RIPLEY & DEMING,

Comer Main and Fifth Streets, Terre Haute,

CLOTHING.

OPEN THIS MORNING.

A S A O O

OF PIECE GOODS POB^v'wi

FINE MERCHANT TAILORING

Scotch^ GEngli^li, Frcneli and Domestie

Cassimeres Coatings of the latest hiit-y. (ussm- s'fi

Styles, Cloths and ]oeskins In

Shades and Qualities,g

And a Beautiful liine of Nestings.

AND HANDSOMEST

Find Furnishing Goods

BROUGHT TO THIS /•'•IS HE. OUR

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STOCK

E A A E O O I 3 S 3

feihe,Best,and Largest.in. the City, and Competition in Prices. O S W t,

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7

We believe in Square Dealing,and treating, all alike. Every article has the Price Marked on it in Plain Figures, and there will be no deviation.

Besides our well-known Diamond "D" Shirt„ we have the Agency for the Coat~ Fitting Shirt," which we make to urder on short notice. It is something entirely New and decidedly Good. Call and look at it.

I fifeTv4*

17 94.

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It is Wisdom and Economy

TO INSURE IN THE

BEST COMPANIES,

[•'MA AND inEBE IS '.-V li'i.' fk NONE BETTER

i, -. THAN THE

Old Insurance Co.

OF NOliTH AMERICA.

It irthe OLXMBST and ha« the LARGEST SURPLUS orer &11 liabilities of any In«uranco Company in the United States.

CRIMES Sc ROY8E, Agents.

BINDINC.

OOK BINDING. JOSEPH KASBERG barinc established a new and complete Book bindery, is prepared to do aU kinds of Book Binding and Blank Book manufacturing- ltacaiines bound

^BINDElfy'idjoining Daily Express Office' up-sUiro, Terre Haute. Indiana.

LEV WOOLEN MILLS. WOOLEN GOODS CHEAP

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STOCK OF

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ERLANGER & CO.

Fashionable Merchant Tailors and Cne-Price Clothiers, Middle Boom Opera House Building

wt: St 'j!

l^Prices Cut Down.

i.'- v. Woolen Goods Retailing at Wholesale Prices.

Yon can select from the finest stock of HOME-MADE WOOLEN GOODS! Erer offered in this market, consisting of CASS1KEBES. TWEEDS,

WARREN, HOBERC A CO.

"DRESg GOODS DEPARTMENT."

Warren, Hoberg & Co.

Open This Morning large lots of fresh, attractive

FALL' DRESS GOODS,

tii all the New and Handsome Styles of th# season.

•j..-- ... ... "If-.•:»•«

1 i* I nit v. ...... St*r At 15c, 20c, 25c, 30c, 35c, 40c, and 50c per yard.

ELEGANT LINE OF

BLACK AND COLORED DRESS SILKS

French Merinos and Cashmeres, Yelonrs,

SATTIWES, PLAID POPLOS, etc. etc

•Now open a full line of our Celebrated "HORSE SHOE" BLACK .,. ALPACaS, unrivalled in durability and brilliancj of color,

30o, 35c, 40c, 50c, and 60c per yard. Customers will please remember that onr prices are not advanced. Our MOURNING DRESS GOODS DEPARTMENT is fall and complete! All th« new and desirable Fabrics in use on sale at 8

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W.SH BANNISTER,

A W 7 9 a S

.... 1» MOW receiving"^

Fall and Winter Stock of Pine Black & Colored

Cloths, "i- Beavers and Doeskins,

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Fil Jsf Irtts! f'U'T

Fine French, English and American Cassimeres.

BEAUTIFUL LINE OF"

DIAGONALS, STKIPES AND MIXED SUITINGS

Beaver Coatings,

And a General Variety

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J4 •, a

MEWj^ORK store,

73 Main Street,

ITE-A.lt COURT HOUSE SQUARE

We offer our entire stock of CABPETS, OIL CLOTHS and MATTINGS at TWENTY-FIVE PER CENT. BELOW PBESENT PACTOBY PRICES.

Sale to continue until every yard of Carpet sold .,

Cotton Chain Carpets at »V 33 Cottage Carpets at 33 All-wool Ingrain Carpets at 05

Super Ingrain Carpets at 85 Hashfort Carpets at 1 12 Lowell Carpets at 1 25 Three-ply Carpets at ..1 45 Brussels Carpets at 95 Oil Cloths at 50 ctsper square yard

BOOM I1BATEB, CLOTIIEK DUYER.

A

I

I O I E A E in

The Greatest Household Invention of the Age for Koonomy, Convenience and Daetalnesa.

,A La:, 'Is

UUf W

JEAW8. FtASHELS,

In many styles, tiiat will not shrink. Waterprodfs, Coverlets. Spreads, Woolen Sheeting, Blankets and Yarns. Mo Cotton or Shoddy in these goods.

All we ask is to givens a call: examine ourGoodc learn onr prices, and save yourselves many dollars.

KENNEDY CO.. Vigo Woolen Mills,

18-1 Terre Haute, Ind

LOCAL NOTICES.

R1CHARDSOH IHHI, 5

In fall assortment: also Bleached Goods in New Ydrk Mills, Wamsntta, Lonsdale, Hill, Hadley, Hope, ke. Utiea and WalUiam 8-4, M, 10-4 Bleached and Brown Sheet(h««.

TUELL, RIPLEY DEMING. fifth and, Main gtr*et.

1

It is a neat piece of furniture, a general purpose machine is the most simple of construction, cheapest most durable, ornamental and ready sale of any thine before the people, and can be manufactured from a sample machine, in any village, by ordinary workmen.

The merit of the BOSWBLL HEATER and ORYER is acknowledged to have no riral in any point. It is the most eren and healthy Room Heater in America. As a Fruit Dryer the price of the machine is saved each season in weight of fruit by solidfying the nutriment in place of evaporating it, ana tne iruit is clean, infinitely better, and Is now becoming the only Marketable Fruit. A machine is kept in operation at the Terre Haute News Depot, opposite the Postomce. for the inspection of tne people* where orders or Uaehines nd Territory are wee'vodby jyl8-4tf M. P- CRAFT

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at

WARREN, HOBERG & CO'S.,

Qreat Headquarters for Dry Goods, Opera oiise Corner

CLOTHING.

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1871.1 FALL: CAMPAIGN.

25c,

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Gents' Furnishing Goods.

These Goods were bought in New Work, direct from the Im porters and will be made up in the best style and sold at reasonable prices. Call and see for yourselves.

CARPETS.

ri A TJDT?TQ 25 per cent, less than liM n,r

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present. Factory prices,

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8©*The opportunity to buy Carpels at the above prices will not present itse again this year, aa the immense advance in Wool has enhanced the prices of al Woolen G6ods at least 25 per cent.

NEW YORK STORE 73 MAIN STREET,

'J,'A* :i iPT.)i(i-Jjj'ear Court House Square,

FRUIT DRYER.

B08WELL'9

Standard |:Fruit

WITTENBERG, RUSCHHAUPT & CO.. Prop'r.

FAMILY GROCERIES.

DAN MILLER

Wholesale and Retail Dealer In Groceries,Provisions, Nails,Pee Flour, Fish, Salt. Shingles,

1

Sio.t &o-,

Ceraer Fourth and Eagle Streets, Terre Haate Connected with the above is a first-olaa Wagon Tard and Boarding House, the pro-

Srietorship

of which has again been resumed

Mr. Miller, who guarantees to all who may patronise him, gooa accommodations at reasonable charges. tar Board by the Meal, Day, Week or Month, mlldwtf DAN MILLER. Proprietor.

WINES.

WINES

jirrS

viiis

JACGI5 FISHER

Has just reoeivevi nnthor choice lot ef

RHINE, FRENCH AND CALIFORNIA WINES,

Which he will sell by the bottle or gallon a reasonable prices. Try a bottle, if you want a pore article.

PARTIES will be furnished promptly by the gallon or in dosens.

PIANO TUNINC.

WILLI1H ZOBEL

PIANO TUNER.

»DKRS left at B. G. COX'S Book StJl will receive nrompt attention. ul5 a

on