Daily Wabash Express, Volume 21, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 October 1871 — Page 2
A I E E S S
TEHEE HAUTE, INDIANA.
Tuesday Morning, October 24.1871.
The Newest Departure. Headers of the EXPRESS are not ignor ant of the last attempted Democratic departure. Sagacious leaders of that party perceiving that in losing the October elections they have lost everything, abandon the idea, of nominating a candi' date for the Presidency. Their policy is to induce the Conservative wing of the Republican party to make an independent nomination in opposition to GRANT They hope in this way to obtain all that would come to them from a triumph of their own party, merely sacrificing their pride by an abandonment of the party name. The plan is not a bad one. Theoretically, it is perfect. But there is likely to be some little friction developed in carrying it out. For instance, the movement depends for its success on withdrawing from the support of the relgular Republican party enough conservative* members to constitute majority when united with the Democrats. Can they be withdrawn? Is there anything in the past history of the American people that authorizes us to suppose that they are so unintelligent as not to perceive instantly that this would be a Democratic movement, in everything but name, and that its triumph would be a Democratic triumph? Some man, like Gov. BROWN, of Missouri, supported by CARL SCHURZ, and possibly by Senator TRUMBULL and other conservative Republicans, would be nominal leaders in the enterprise. But it would be initiated by Democrats, supported by Democrats, and, if at all, made a triumph by Democrats. Inspired and carried through by the opponents of the Republican party the scheme, if sue. cessful, would place the government in the hands of those whose genius hit upon the lucky plan and whose adroitness and courage made triumph possible. The Democracy would be restored to power with BROWN or TRUMBULL or ADAMS admitted to a partnership in the fortunate speculation. The utter and irremediable failure of the "new departure" scheme ought to have taught the Democracy the futitility of a change of name or a nominal change of principles, that is not accompanied by the corresponding thing. Of what avail was the ostentatious ac* ceptance of the constitutional amendments, when the Northern Bourbons were repudiating in private conversation and even in local caucuses what they had solemnly affirmed in conventions, and while the more practical Southern Bourbons were rapidly reducing the Republican vote in their vicinity by systematic assassinations? Of what avail will it*be for these artful persons to call themselves Republicans, and induce B. GRATS BROWN or Senator TRUMBULL or CHARLES FRANCS ADAMS to accept their votes for President, so long as they cherish their old heresies more or less Jopenly, and continue their old bad practices? "VVe predict with great confidence that the failure of VALLANDIGHAM'S ingenious patent this year will seem comparatively a success after the abject and pitiful breakdown of the "newest departure" next year.
TJIE New York "Commercial" saucily observes that it is clieeringto note the improvement of the physical condition of Chief Justice CHASE as the period for the holding of the Democratic National Con« vention approaches, and that there is something ineffably touching in the convalescence of this sick man of Ohio. It does seem as though a kind Providence had been working in him and with him purging his body of its pains and ailments and lifting his intellect to the serene heights of disinterested patriotism. If the coming Democratic man is to be a liberal Republican—and much is now said and rumored to this effect—it is just probable that Chief Justice CHASE may be the individual. The Democratic cry all throughout the last Presidential campaign was—"Oh if we had only had Judge CHASE for one candidate!" and we suspect that a good deal of that feelhig has survived.
THE poor, innocent South is making overtures to the laborers of Chicago to come to Dixie this winter, where, the New Orleans "Picayune gravely inform them, labor is much wanted. The Philadelphia "Press" remarks that "never was presumptuous ignorance pushed to a more ludicrous extent than this suggestion displays. ThS independent laborer of ChN cago or any Northern city would just as soon think of going back to Europe and the sixteenth century as to a land where labor is looked down on and despised. The South can have millions of dollars' worth of labor the moment she receives he laborer as man and a citizen, and she will not get it till then."
THE Boston "Post" advises against the desperate project of abandoning the Democratic organization and supporting a conservative Republican for President. It speaks of the Democracy as "that noble organization, imbedded in the principles and history of the Constitution." To which the Portland "Press" replies: 'Certainly, just sis the old trilobite or any other fossil is imbedded in the rock and is no longer of interest to anybody but the paleontologist."
LIFE insurance companies and policyholders can take notice that the vexed question of whether a suicide vitiates a policy has received adjudication that may be final. The case of Weed vs. the Mutual Benefit Life, of New Jersey, has just been decided by the Superior Court of New York, after along and severe fight, and the plaintiff awarded the full amount of the policy, with interest ($12,502 58), on the ground that suicide is an evidence of insanity.
THE New York "Evening Post" again predicts that an earnest effort will be made at the coming session of Congress to inflate the currency by the further issue of greenbacks.
THE "Times and Chronicle" predicts "that CARL SCHURZ will never amass a fortune, or reinstate his brother-in-law in office, by lecturing in Cincinnati."
TBAPB-UEIOHISJI
is corniest In for aopo#
hard blows just now. At the Bes9ion of the State Council of the United Order of American Mechanics in Philadelphia, on Wednesday last, a resolution against unions was adopted, and measures taken looking to a restoration of the old ap prenticeahip system. As this order is very largely composed of workingmen the action of the Council is important.
Last Friday night in the Academy of Music, the same city, Miss ANNA DICKINSON also took ground against the labor organizations, and denounced their influence and example as pernicious Miss DICKINSON strengthened her argu ment by illustrations from the history of the Typographical Union, Bricklayers Association, and the Workingmen's Benevolent organization—the great society of the miners. With all her vigorous eloquence, however, she failed to make a case against other than the excesses of the unions.
THE elect ion of delegates to the Constitutional Convention in West Virginia comes off on Thursday, the 26th inst. Among the questions to be determined by the Convention are a return to the viva vocs mode of voting, instead of the-ballot, as under the present Constitution an abandonment of the township system a revolution backward from the liberal pub licschool system now in vogue and the adoption of an internal improvement policy, like that now in operation in Vir ginia.
IT IS said that no le3s than 5,400 iron steamers are now building in the United Kingdom. This is a state of things calculated to appeal strongly to the feelings of intelligent Congressmen in favor of doing something for American shipbuilding interests.
O tf«
ACCORDING to the New York "Herald," the office of Register in that county, is "worth about $70,00() a year, clear, to the fortunate possessor."
Radicalism.
From the Baltimore American.] Nothing is more amusing than to see those who usurp and misuse the name "Conservatives" standing aghast and holding up their hands in holy horror at every movement made by the men of action, and ejaculating, as if in that one word were concentrated a Pandora's box of evils, "Radicalism." Every now and then they make a heavy charge with a regiment of ancestors, deploying them as field artillery, while they fire off their popguns and flourish their penny trumpets of stale truisms behind the breastworks of "the Constitution." In the meantime day after day, down goes a piece of nonsense after another. The most approved trash, the most trusty clamors, are found to be utterly powerless. We reverence our ancestors, but we claim to have the benefit of their experience. The law of veneration for old age is therefore re* versed, and the world is older to-day than it was in their time. Beside, they are dead and we are living. Let us cherish the lessons of wisdom they have inculcated, and try to perfect the Government they have left us according to the knowledge of to*day. We and the men of eveiry succeeding generation, have the same right to make our own arrangements as our forefathers had to make theirs. Nothing is more absurd than to suppose that the living are to be con tinualiy re stricted by the actions of past generations. lempora matantur, et nos mutamur illos.
Change is itself a changeless law of nature, and when the time approaches for it, we find always a class of clear-sighted men foreseeing and foretelling its approach as a logical necesitv from pending events—men who study the laws of deyelopmentand fearlessly promulgate them. These menare termed Radicals. They are the pioneers of civilization—they are the engineers of political and social reform. Without them the body, politic and social, would become stagnant. While the timid and conservative stand shivering on the brink, they boldly dash into the stream and strike out for the opposite shore. After they have demonstrated the practicability of its passage, and shown that the terra firma on which they have landed is superior to that which they have left then the whole host of conservatives cross over and take possession—denouncing all the while those who have pointed out the way as radicals fanatics, dreamers.
We know very well that to absolve communities too abruptly from the restraints of •stablished usageis to endanger social order and beget anarchy. We know the necessity of moving on in legal forms, and that this necessity often compels observances, the essential significance of which has disappeared, and the intellectual basis of which has been undermined. Truth reaches her full action by degres, and not at once. The slowness of conviction on the part of the mass to be moved necessitates agitation those who agitate are generally supposed to be handed over to universal detestation by the use of an epithet—Radicals! If it were not for radicals, when would conservatives begin to think? How long would it take them to move, with every constitutional tendency pinning them down to things as they are?
At every period there are some men in advance of their age—some suited to its practical requirements and others behind their age. Jefferson was among the first of these, and was denounced in his day as a Red Republican—a fanatic—a dreamer— a theorist—a French Democrat—a Radical
One party professedly takes reason for its criterion, and rejects every measure which falls short of its requirements the other extends its view no farther than to the single point that enables it to take one step in advance. Granting that both parties (and who can doubt it?) have the sincere desire to advance society in the right direction, there is still an incompatibility of feeling which prevents their co-operation. One party views society as in a state of transition, and presses forward toward an ultimatum. The other believes in no ultimatum, but acknowledges that certain changes are rendered necessary by a change of circumstances. Incomprehensible as they are to each other, they are both to a certain extent necessary—both are workers in the great field of human improvement and man's amelioration.
THAT was great business the Grand Lodge of Good Templars was engaged in when it reviewed the decision of a subordinate Lodge in the case of the the two members of that subordinate Lodge who were convicted of an offense in chrushing an apple to pulp in their hands, expressing the juice and drinking the same. Could anything be more ridiculous than a picture of full grown men and women deliberating in such a case? Where is Nast? He should take apicture of that scene. Instead of kicking the anpeal out of the Lodge as ridiculous trifling, the Grand Lodge gravely entertained it, and gravely confirmed the decision below. Of course under that ruling the man who eats an apple is not a worthy member of the Lodge. That Lodge should employ a corps of detectives whose special duty it should be to keep an eye on cider'mills, and if they sea a member of thg society with a straw in his hand arrest him forthwith, for that is evidence he contemplates sucking cider from the vent hole.—Cleveland Herald,
OUT OF THE FIRE,
Full Particulars of the Great Disaster at Peshtigo, Wisconsin.
The Tillage Struck by an Electric Ball of Fire.
Statement of an Eye Witness—Heartrending Scenes and Incidents.
From the Fort Wayne Gazette.] Mrs. Phillip Jarrell, sister to Charles G. Davis, Esq., of this city, who arrived here on Thursday last, and, who, with her family so narrowly escaped the ter rible disaster at Peshtigo, last week, gives the following interesting account of the terrible ordeal through which she passed "It was Sunday evening and we were about preparing to retire. An almost death-like stillness hung over the doom ed town. The smoke from the fires around us, and the oppressive heat, was so thick as to be stifling. It hung like a funeral pall over everything. Thedark ness was intense. About 9 o'clock I had occasion to go to the door, and upon open ing it, I felt a lijtht puff of air in my face accompanied with a fearful heat. I noticed that the horizon in the southeast, south and southwest began to be faintly illuminated, and a perceptible trembling of the earth was felt. I was about to close the door when my ears caught the sound of some distant roaring—much like the roaring of a distant cataract, which broke the awful silence, began to apprehend that some awful calamity was about to overtake ua. We were not afraid of the fires from the woods for they were some distance from us and no one had dreamed of danger. The brightening in the horizon soon became intensified into a lurid, ghastly glare, and the rushing, howling noise deepened into a sullen roar, as if all Pandemonium had been let loose. Soonjthe advance gusts of wind struck the town, and then as if the heavens had burst came the electric clap which shook the earth for miles around Instantly every house was ablaze. Terror and confusion seized everybody. Men, women, children and cattle were hurrying in one mass of confusion—none knew whither. The fiery element in one tremendous billow swept over us, enveloping the village in one lurid sheet of flame. The frenzy of despair took possession of all beauts. Strong men bowed before the fiery blasts like so many tender willows. Women and children flitted here and there like so many spectres seeking •afety but, alas, too many were overtaken and borne down, never to again rise, by that terrible ball of fire. Crowds rushed for th.e bridge, but the fiery demon had preceeded them, and their only hope was cutoff. Shrieks and groans rent the air from over 1,000 throats, which intermin gled with the roar of the seething flames, made a sight that would sicken the stoutest heart. Hundreds rushed to the river where temporary refuge was given them, but the frightened cattle rushed in upon them trampling them into a watery grave. Our family, consisting of my husband, four little children and my mother, made our way to the bank. Placing two logs parallel with each other, we crouched down be tween them, and with some quilts that are saved thrown over lis, which we constantly kept saturated with water, we passed the night in safety. Men jumped into the river and had their heads burned from their bodies. Two families, one consisting of thirteen, and the other of eleven, not one escaped. In less than forty minuteB from the time the town was struck, not a vestige of it was left but the smouldering embers of the houses, and hundreds of black and charred remains of its inhabitants. When day light appeared, we repaired to the flats below the village, when we found a number who had escaped. During the fire the streets were lined with men, women and children fleeing for their lives. Many of the families made excavations in the sand, where they buried their household goods. The great mills and factories owned by Wm. B. Ogden, of Chicago, were entirely destroyed, involving a loss of neaerly $3,000,000. _A high embankment on one side of the river afforded a safe refuge for many. The debris from the burning town was hurled by the tornado over and on the heads of those who had taken the river, maiming and killing many. In one short hour the town was destroyed, and nearly four hundred persons ushered into eternity, by one of the most awful visitations ever known in the history of the world. The country surrounding Peshtigo for miles, where but a few days ago existed pleasant farms and an abundance of the necessaries of life, now lies devastated with not a living thing left."
INCIDENTS:
On the site of Peshtigo village, at one point, the remains of what was evidently once three adult human beings were found so thoroughly consumed that the ashes could be all placed in a two quart meare.
At another place the remains of one person was found—a slate pencil, a knife and some metallic trinkets, a few teeth, aieees of a skull, &c., all of which could je held in the palm of the hand.
A little white pig belonging to a family by the name of Coon, plunged into the river with its owners, just keeping its nose out of water for breath. The smoke became so thick that Mr. C. and family were obliged to change quarters and lost track of the pig. Two days afterwards the pig was found rooting among the ruins, all right.
Mistake.
Some of the editors of newspapers in distant parts of the country attribute the rapid spread of the Great Fire to our wooden pavements. This is one of the many misapprehensions into which our cotemporaries have been led by false and sensational reports. The fact is, the Nicolson and other pavements, in the destroyed streets in which they had been laid, are preserved almost uninjured by the fire. They did not burn at all, feeing only slightly damaged in some localities.
It was the great southwest gale, blowing furiously forward a well-started current of irresistible flames, and the intense heat and the raining over the whole city of a perfect flood of sparks, embers and brands of burning timber, that occasioned the wide-spread disaster. The nests of wooden buildings in the region of the fire's first ravages and a demoralized and poorly-handled fire department, gave the sea of rushing flames its start—and once fully started, no human power or instrumentality CDuld stop or even check its progress.—Chicago Journal.
IT IS stated as a fact that neither Commodore VANDERBILT nor GEORGE LAW, two of the richest men in New York, contributed a dime to the Chicago relief fund.
BAKERY.
UNIOM STEAM BAKERY
FRANK HEINIG & BRO.,
Manufacturers ef all kind
Crackers,
Calcesf Bread and Candy,
Dealers in
Foreign & Domestic Fruits. Fancy and Staple Groceries, LAFAYETTE S1BEEI,
Bet. the two oads,
maj28
Terre Ufa-vte. Jnd
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS
CUNDURANGO!
THE WONDERFUL BCXZDT FOR
CVNCER, SYPHILIS, SCROFULA, ULCERS, MALT KHEtX and ALL OTHER CHBNHIU BLOOD DIB* "E AHM
Da. P. T. KEENTS having just returned from Ecuador and bronget with him a quantity ot the genuine Condnrango Bark, secured through the official recommendation and assistance of His Excellency the President of Ecuador, and the Government of that Bepublic, we are prepared to fill orders for it to a limited extent, and at a price about one-quarter of that which the cost of the first very small supply compells us to charge.
A spurious article is now advertised and solder Cundurango. We have, at a considerable expense, and with the co-operation of the authorities of Loja, the province where the plant grows, so dire ted the channel of our supply as to ensure that none but the genuine article shall be sold by us and we particularly attention of the public, for their protection, to this fact.
BUSS, KKENE &CO., 60 Ceder st. New York.
D. W. BLISS. M. D.. Washington. D. C„ Z. E. BLISS, M. D«, New York P. T. KEBNK, M. D., NewYork.
Greatest Invention of the Age
West's Automatic Lathe for all kinds of wood turning. Also, Durkoe's Automatic Sawing machine for sawing small stuff directly from the log. Work perfectly, and will pay for themselves in six months in saving timber and labor. Send for descriptive book to the manulacturers, J.JD.SPttlStl & CO.,
Geneseo, Livingston Y.
WILL M. ARLETON,
AUTHOR OF
"Betsey And I are Out." EC ITS AND WRITES FOR The Detroit Weekly Tribune, The Best Family Newspaper in the Country, 82 a year. Send for specimen copy and club circular. Address: THE TRIBUNE, Detroit, Mich.
FREE
Try samples of our great 8 pace, $1.00 illustrated weekly—80 years established. Fine steel engrav
ings free to subscribers. Agents make $5 a day. Send for Saturday Gazette, Hallowell, Me.
Solicited by MCNN & CO.., Pulishers Scientific Arneri can, 37 Park Bow. N ¥.
PATENTS
Twenty-five years'experience. Pampnlets containing Patent Laws, with full directions how to obtain Patents, free.
Abound volume of 118 pages, containing the DTew Census by counties and all large cities, 140 Engravings of Mechanical Movements. Patent Laws and rules for obtaining Patents, mailed on receipt of 25 cents.
THE NEW
WHEELER. & WILSON
MACHINE.
WM. SUMNER & CO., Cincinnati, AND ALL
Cities and Towns in the State,
ITHRIDGE:
SURNTTT'S
by
W
S
XX FLINT ^LASS LAMP CHIMNEYS
Stand Heat better than any other made. Agk for DithriJee's and take no other.' See that our name is on every box.
DITHRIDGE & SON, Pittsburg, Pa. B»-Sond for Price List.
COCOAINE
A compound of Cocoa-nut Oil, )'c\ Ackmrwl edged the best promoter of the growth and beauty of the hair. JC3. IiUBNEtfT & CO., Boston. Mass, bold by all lnuririts. Jlctcare of imitations.
IIY SHAKE ANY LOITQER.-Uf, DB. I. W. MARTIN'S AGUE PILLS-
A
GENTS WANTED for the best Books nublished. J. II. SACKQT, Cleveland, O.
Cheapest Advertising
3ST THE WORLD
For 858per Inch per Month, we will sert an Advertisement in 80 first-claaa Indiana Newspapers, including 8 Dailies. Proportionate rates for smaller adv'ta. List sent free. Address
CEO. PROWELL& CO.,
40 and 41 PARK BOW. NEW 10KK.
LADIESand
gentlemen can earn $150 per
month canvassing for popular books. Send for Circular. 11. D. S. Tyler, 108 Griswold St.. Detroit, Mich.
$425
A MONTH
fred. Me.
Horse furnished.
Expenses paid. H. B. SHAW, Al-
S30. We -will Pay $30 Agents $30 per week to sell our great and valuable discoveries. If you want permanent, honorxble and pleasant work, apply for particulars. Address DRYER & CO., Jackson, Michigan.
VOID QUACKS.—A victim of early indiscretion, causing nervous debility, premature deoay, etc., having tried in vain every advestisea remeday, has discovered a simple means of self-cure, which he will send to his fellow-sufferers. Address J. H. REKVES, 78 Ifasmu St., v. T.
Thirty Tears' Experience
IN THE TBEATMENT OF
Chronic and Sexual Diseasss. A PHYSIOLOGICAL VIEW OP MARRIAGE. The cheapest book ever published—containing nearly three hundred pages, and one hundred and thirty fine plates and engravings of the anatomy of the human organs in a state of health ana disease, with a treatise on early errors, its deplorable consequences upon the mind and bydy, with the author's plan ef treatment—the only rational and successful mode of cure, as shown by a report of cases treate11. A truthful adviser to married and those contemplating marriage, who entertain doubts of their physical condition. Sent free of postage to any address, on receipt of twenty-five cents in stamps or postal currency, by addressing DK. LA CROIX.No.31 Maiden Lane, Albany, N. The author may be consulted upon any of the diseases upon which his book treats, either personally or by mail, and medicines sent to any part of the world
FOUNDRY-
F. H. M'ELFBESH. J. BARNARD
Phoenix Foundry
AND
MACHINE SHOP 1
MeELFRESH Sr. BABNABD
Corner Ninth and Eagle Streets, (Near the Passenger Depot.)
TERRE HAUTE, 1ND.
MANUFACTUREand
steam Engines,
Machinery, House Fronts, Fire Fron Circular Saw Mills, all kinds of
IRON AND BRASS CASTINGS!
REPAIRING DONE PROMPTLY 1
All parties connected with this establishment being practical mechanics of several years' experience, we feel safe in saying that we can render satisfaction to onr customers, both inpointof Workmanship and Price. my26'dwlv MeELFRESH & BARNARD.
CHRIST LEIBINGr.
Custom Boot A Shoe Store,
Main Street, between6th A 7th, Kaufman's BUck.
CUSTOM
WORK done in the neatest rtyle,
and on short notice at reasonable rates. Constantly on hand—a large assortment of self-made Boots and Shoes. Come and examine, yourself. oetl9-3m
.. tsr.
iiuwjifMt imi WMISI awMnw .Hwnwww .• r-irw«)MBMaagafc
I."IT IS COMING, SEE IT!
•IBI
SCH0 0L OF NATURAL HISTORY,
THE ONLY EXCLUSIVE MENAGERIE IN THE
.«»,• -i r- t-
TTZfcTITEID STATBSj
TAN A MB HUGH & CO'S GREAT GOLDEN MENAGERIE,
THE LARGEST AND BEST SHOW ON THIS CONTINENT.
In no other exhibition in America, and probably »iot in the known world, can there befonnd
RO
v«st a variety of wonderful
animals as those owned by this great Menagerie Company
Wore African Elephants "than any other exhibition in ^America. More Ttvo Hum pod Camels than any other exhibition it t»iis country, More Sacred Cattle frosn India than any other exhibition this bide of the Atluntlc. More MnzRvamba XJcna than any other exhibition on this continent. More Mammoth Axiteloaca than any other exhibition in existence. More Australian Ii.ancar.30s than any othc exhibition outside cf Australia. More African Zebras tfe
MI
world.
:myother exhibition in the JTev
Jlcrc African Sprlujr lioclts than any other exhibition ever hi aiij' counjry on th'.' jj'obe. More Snnlh African Pnyker Docks than any other exhibition in the known world. More Cape Cannae than any other exhibition in Xorth
America. Did onr gpnee permit wo rMght mention many other animals that this groat Vcnasrerio Company have greater numbers of than anv other exhibition in existence in the known world. It is emphatically the most colossal GxUibition of the M&ctee&th Century.
LIVING LION LOOSE in the STREET UNCHAINED.
And snbtect to no restraint whatever, except the ever watchful eye of of his keeper, mounted on the very summit 01
ThG Great Golden Oar of Eept,
That, magnificent mass of (tn'.den pplcndor, modeled nftOT aacic:#'Kfryptinn desiirny,^iud constructed on a scale ol m:i„nlncence absolutely ium t'.ak'd In l!u' world, except uy
Tfee Colossal GoMes Cfiariot,
pute, that
The ITaas, Bens & €&g©s Belonging to the Great Golden Menagerie are constructed and ornamented with a style and finish ntlrely new and original with the. great Menagerie Company, and ufldeniahly surpassing
1n point of dazzling brilllanc* ftiwl artistic- cxccntlon anything the world ever drnamod of. On tho sides and ends °f th*5 carriages containing th^ animals nnd paraphanaluv are pHintines selected from designs br that world-renowned Parismn ArMst. Gustav Dore, and arc t'ailhful copies of his incomparable
ILLUSTRATION OF THE HOLY BIBLE!
Tils exhibition being purely zoological, can and does have ©very department conducted on a ehictly moral principle, ana is unquestionably tlin grr.nd^s* nhinftion cf any age or COPntry.
ONLY COMPLETE MENAGERIE ON THIS CONTINENTS
EXTRAORDINARY
Jore
JUST ADDED
To tho Groat Golden Menagerie A TTTLL CARGO CFI.rVTK'G ANIMALS brought bv the Ajjentof the Great Menagerie Com-
iany direct troin Africa, consisting of many animal never heseen on this continent. Some of the varieties were never on exhibition In any Menagerie in the known world, and ara entirely new to naturalist, having rrc- ntly been discovered ill the Terr heart of uninhabitable Central Africa by the Aeent of this Great Menagerie Company while accompanying Dr. Livingstone on his rectal* tour of discovery through that unhospitnble region. Bememticr they are to
BO
serm only
WITHOUT EXTUA CHARGE.
REMEMBER,
No Circus Performance But all Menagerie, AT TERRE HAUTE,
Wednesday Oct. 25th.
Afternoon & Evening, at 11-2 & 7 1-2 P. M.
Admission 50 Uts. Children underl0years25Ct s.
TO TilE PUBLIC.
REMEMBER DAY AND DATE, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25ra, AND NOT UNTIL THEN will this Congress of Animated Nature visit Terre Haute. JJU not be confounded with the Day and Date of any other so-called "Circus and enagerie" visiting Terre Haute.
AMUSEMENT.
In the Great Golden Me
nagerie.
A LIVING BLACK RHINOCEROS, THE OREAT AFRICAN ELAND, The Only WHITE ZEBRA ever Captured,
A WHITE TARTARY YAK. A ROCKY MOUNTAIN MOOSE, TWO HUMPrD BACTRIAN CAMEL.
THE RED STAG OF INDIA, GREAT AFRICAN HARTEBESTE CAZEMEIAN BLESS BOCK,
THE KAFFRARIAN IMPOON, GREAT BARBARY AOUDAD, HIPPOPOTAMUS, Toeether with A FULL CAEGO OF TriE MOST EXTRAOTlT1TVARY ANIMALS known to Katnrallsts. TO BE SEEN
j'
,D
O A S O OF PIECE*. GOODS FOB
~f
HKRZ& ARNOLD.
NEW©
Of Great Importance!
The Firm of HEEZ & ARNOLD
will Dissolve in January, 1872.
REDUCTION OF STOCK
Is Now the Question.
HOW WILL IT BE ACCOMPLISHED?
By Selling Off' All GOODS at and. Below Cost.
Look out for a Slaughter in Fancy Goods and Notions, the like of whicli was never before witnessed in Terre Haute.
OVER $25,000 WORTH
Of New Stock to be Closed Out at a sacrifice FOR CASH.
Sales to commence this day, and be continued until tho day of dissolution.
FINE MERCHANT TAILORING,
Scotch, English, French and Domestic
Casslnaeres, Coatings of the X^atest
Styles, Cloths and Doeskins in
All Shades and Qualities,
And a Reautifui Line of Vestings.
THE LARGEST AND HANDSOMEST STOCK OF
Fine Furnishing Goods
EVER BROUGHT TO THIS IffAKUDT. OUR STOCK OF E A A E O I N
la the Best and Largest in the City, and we defy Competition in Prices.
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.
Besidis 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.
Carpets at Cost! WalljjPaper at Cost! Oil Cloths atfCost!
5—
HEBZ «& ARNOLD,
Great Opera House Baz&ar
CLOTHING.
OPEN THIS MORNING.
ERLANGER & CO.,
Fashionable Merchant Tailors and One-Price Clothiers, Middle Room Opera House Building
CARPETS. WALL PAPER, &C.
Mattings at (Lsfc Curtains anil iidesat jt
UORWHOLE %T9VUL AT COST!
The illeilthof our ?enior cvn^jN l»u to rv.ira ha ti« 'n iii ». fii.-i fore we have determined to close up our affairs. We will sell our IMMENSE S O A 0 3 an at re in a A manufactures now, as the bnlk of oar sto3k wai parchIOJ bafore fie tt el,hii// advance.
Parties desiring to furnish will not have such a chance again for years. V&^The Sale is Positive.
HUME, ADAMS & CO.
