Daily Wabash Express, Volume 21, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 December 1871 — Page 2
:i)A IL4r EX L' Li EB ri
TEBPJB HAUTlj!, INDIANA.
Tuesday ttornjug, December 19,1871
Evidently the woman suffrage
ness
busi
is on the downgrade.—Journal. And thus it will acquire sufficient momenium to carrj it safely over the next and last np grade to final victory.,
As T£T there are no aigns of a Stale Democratic meeting.—Journal. Don't fret yourself into.a fever about ihat. "Vigo" will let you know, by another letter lo the "Sentinel," when you can get ready for a "State Democratic meeting." Till then, try to keep cool.
Me. Boutwell said in his late lecture at the Philadelphia Academy that the State of Texas could hold the gppulation orthe whole Union, even if that popula tion were as dense as that of Massachusetts. And another estimate was that if the whole of New England were as dense ly populated as Massachusetts, it would have 10,500,000 inhabitants. ..
THEforthcoming report of the Bureau of Education promises to be, perhaps, the fullest and best ever issued. The statis tical tables alone will fill 160 pages, to 50 of last year, indicating a wonderful work of investigation and detail labor. Among the special papers contributed and published as appendices will, be a most ad mirable article from Professor Oilman, of the Sheffield scientific school of Yale College, on "The Agricultural and Scientific Schools which have received Landgrant Endowments from the United Statesand another on "The Frew a an Educator," by Major J. G. Noah. Paperson the progress of education in all foreign countries and the educational statistics of the census will also form special features.
General Hawley,of Hartford, seems to have got into deep difficulty through his public statement—that he knew a United States Senator who paid $75,000 for Ms seat. The Wolrd" quotes Blackstone for the General's information, to the effect that "misprision of felony is the concealment of a felony which a man knows but nefer assented to," and declares that if a man says he knows a Senator who procured his seat by a payment of $75,000, or any other snm, without mentioning the name of that Senator, such a concealment will meet the old Judge'.--/ statement. Will "the gentleman in politics" express himself a little more explicitly, say who is this criminal in the Federal Senate, and- save himself from the imputation of" concealing a irreat wrong and crime?
According to the revised trade statistics of Great Britain for 1870, the total value of imports into the Kingdom during that year was £303,257,493. The exports of merchandise were of thevalue of £244,080,577 the declared value of the exports of produce of the United Kingdom being £199,580,822, and the computed value of ,,lhe foreign and colonial produce exported being £44,493,755. These figures show a :heavy balance of trade against the coun try. The difference between the imports and actual exports of the Kingdom, not including merchandise received from other countries for trans-shipment, amounts to 52 per cent. The Philadelphia "Press" presents these figures as conclusive evidence that even England, with her extraordinary manufacturing advantages and enormous accumulations of capital, is losing largely by free trade. The nation as a whole is buying annually one and a half times the amount it sells. The "Press" concludes that such a trade is altogether too "free" for any country, and
England cannot stand it always.
Bravest of Oriental rulers is certainly the Mikado of Japan, and he is honest and consistent as well as progressive. Having reduced the troublesome Daimios from the rank of independent princes to the level of subjects, he has turned from his own high office the mysterious stir roundings so much affected by Eastern rulers. Old Japan was terribly shocked recently to see the Mikado walk and ride about tha streets of Yeddo like any other mortal, and was still further startled from its propriety by being informed that all obeisances to the Emperor were by law prohibited, and that his official em blems were no longer to be stluted- At this rate of progress it will not be many years before Japan has a constitution, and then it will be but -a short step to make the Mikado or President an elective official, and by that time the Brother of the Sun and Moon, in China, will have discovered that the outside barbarians have introduced some of their most important ctwtoma into old Asia.—PUladdphia Inquirer.
society writer of the New York
"Mail" has^ very properly classified the status of cities as follows: In Boston society everybody snubs everybody else in New York society everybody gossips about everybody else in Philadelphia society everybody attends to the morals of everybody else in Baltimore society everybody fraternizes with everybody else and in Chicago society just at present everybody Is borrowing from everybody else. Beston, therefore, is aristocratic New York and Philadelphia, democratic Baltimore, patriarchal and Chicago, communistic.
,T?,e Chinese Embassy, which has just left Marseilles for Shanghai, has labored under a very amusing perplexity. Some time ago the Emperor Napoleon sent over a French army, which burned the palace of their lord and master in repriti nu- lglit!e3
t0
French subjects.
1 be Chinese Embassadors came back to vT!fuEuTror
that the
h£-
offending
6611
hun,s'
and found
him a
fugitive, his own palace in ashes, and no
°Chronid7eiVe
apol°Sies-—^Times
and
W.^5- IFP'SA Lossing, of Adrian, Michigan, had a little neice living with her who didn't eat breakfast enough to suit, so the aunt crammed thick pieces of bread into the child's mouth, and seasoned them with pinches of red pepper. Then she whipped the little girl with a cane from an apple tree berause she cried. The gentle aunt has been sentenced to pay a fine of one hundred dollars, and, in addition will spend the winter in the Detroit House of Correction.
Schurz was canvassing
Indiana in I860 he visited Fort \Va?nf and made a speech in one of the public haUsofthatpUce. While In the midst
gSi
.u'"-
!,i_
Democr*tfc
te8-'fied
friends
thelr
appreciation of his
talents and character by throwing a full blown cabbage head upon the platform where he was speaking. The Fort Wayne j^'8
wou'd
give Mr. Schnr* a
very different reception now. Why?—
Jnd. Journal.
.....
The Minds of Animal?-
Dr. W. Lander Lindsay, of whose views on the subject of animal psychology we have before spoken-, is* Scottish physician, devote^ to mental^ dwjsasea, but who also take* a great interest in (fife minds of the lower animals, the studjypf which he is now systematically prdeefctiting. He brieves that snimils have mind.4 as really as do men, and that although vastly and variously lower, they are still kindred to the human mind, and upon analysis yield the same mental elements or rudiments of the faculties. But he goes still further, and affirms not only that animals have true mental natures, but that these are liable to derangement that is, in fact, animals are subject to the same mental diseases as man. He- has recently published an elaborate paper on insanity in the lower animals, in which he gives the most curious and interesting proofs that they also go deranged in all kinds of ways. Even the vexed ques tions of civilization and insanity he finds mixed up with this lower-animal problem. Dr. Tuke, an ancient authority on human insanity, remarks that there is an acutenew *f sensibility, a susceptibility of the emotions, an intense activity of the feelings, which would seem to be peculiar to highly civilized life, and out of this state of the nervous system come various predispositions to mental- disease. Dr.
Lindsley holds that this is equally true of animals. Heaays "The efiect of domestication and breeding in the production of a predisposition to disorders of the whole nervous system, including especially the brain, is another subject of the lirst importance in relation to the symptoms of insanity in animals. High breeding, for instance, in dogs and horses, begets extreme nervous sensibility, including high mental sensitiveness, one result of which is great susceptibility to diseases of the' entire nervous system. The distinguished Parisian physiologist, M. Claude Bernard, has pointed out the effect of b-eeding in the obvious differences a* regards nervous sensibility or irritability between high-bred animals and the same species in the wild or natural'gtate. He says: 'So exquisite' is the nervous sensibility of dogs of the higher breed that the slightest operations bring on fever, and are attended with alarming symptoms'. They cannot, therefore,: be employed in researches connected with the gastric juice in fact, all operations performed within the abdominal cavity are liable to superinduce peritonitis, ,which generally proves fatal.' In dogs of a lower breed the results are totally different, and M. Bernard states that in the horse these differences are, if possible, still more strongly marked."—"Scientific
Miscellany," in Galaxy for January. ,, ,.
He is a tall thin personage, some sixtytwo years of age. His face is bloodlesspale as a gho3t, one might say. He iA so thin as to look almost cadaverous. The outlines of the face are handsome and dignified. There is much of courtly grace and refinement about the bearing and gestures of this pale, weak, and wasted man. He wears a long robe of violet silk, with some kind of dark crape or collar, and has a massive gold chain round his neck, holding attached to it a great gold cross. There ia a certain nervous quivering about his eyes and lips, but otherwise he is perfectly collected and master of the occasion. His voice is thin, but wonderfully clear and penetrating. It is heard all through this great hall—a moment ago so noisy, now so silent. The words fell with a slow, quiet force, like drops of water. Whatever your opinion may be, you cannot choose but listen and, indeed, you want only to listen and sec. For this is the foremost man in the Catholic Church of England. This is the Cardinal Grandison of Disraeli's "Lothair"—Dr. Henry Edward Manning, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Westmintser, successor in that office of the late Cardinal Wiseman.
It is no wonder that the Irishmen at the meeting are enthusiastic about Archbishop Manning.1, An Englishman of Englishmen, with no drop of Irish blood in his veins, he is more Hibernian than the Hibernians themselves in his sym pathies With Ireland. A man of social position, of old family, of the highest education and the most refined instincts, he would leave his Catholic noblemen at any time to go down to his Irish teetotallers at the East End of London. He firmly believes that the salvation of England,is yet to be accomplished through the influence of that religious devotion which is at the bottom of the Irish nature, and which some of us call superstition. He loves his own country dearly, but turns away from her present condition of. in dustrial prosperity to the days before the Reformation, when yet saints trod the English soil. "In England there has been no saint since the Reformation," he said the other day, in sad, sweet tones, to one of whelly different opinions, who listened with a mingling of amazement and reverence. No views that I have ever heard put into living words embodied to anything like the same extent the full claims and pretensions of Ultramontanism. It is quite wonderful to sit and listen One can not but be impressed by the sweetness, the thoughtfulness, the dignity, I had almost said the sanctity of the man who thus pours forth, with a manner full of the most tranquil conviction, opinions which proclaim all modern progress a failure, and glorify the Roman priest or the Irish peasant as the true herald and repositary of light, liberty, and regeneration to a sinking and degraded world.—
"Arehbisfop Manning,'" by Justin McCarthy, in January Galaxy.
Burned to Death.
Mishawaka, Ind., December 17. Special to the IndianapolU Journal.] A house was burned np last night, seven miles east of here, in Elkhart county, in which a man eighty years old, named Pope, lived alone. He is supposed to have been burned up in the house.
The Hartford police recently discovered, crowded together in an eight^by-twel ve room, six women, three men and two children. One of the women was dying, while the rest were quarreling.
The Portland "Press" didn't want Alexis to come there and said: We have
bo
money to spend on grand dukes while the poor remain unfed, unclothed and uninstructed.
There are more life-sustaining elements in a soft-boiled egg than in twenty times its bulk in bread or food of that kind.
Why did the Highlanders do most execution at the battle of Waterloo? Because every man had one kilt before the battle began. "Rainbow colored eyes superinduced by external unfriendly influences" is the Cockney for a black eye.
BOOK BINDINC.
SuflNABBL, B1XDEH, Kt LEB,
And Blank Book Manufacturer, Having the best and newest Bindery in the city. I am prepared to do all kinds of Bindig. Ruling ana Blank Book Manufacturing.
Persons living at a distance can send books by express and have them bound and promptly returned. Old books rebound. All work guaranteed to give satisfaction. •VOver Burnett's Leather Store,
HOME
Are indorsed and prescribed by more load ing Physicians than any tonic or stimulant now in use, They are a SURE PRKVKNTIVU for Fever and
Ague,
St.Locis.
far
WABASH
C. A. SCHNABEL,
So.
U6 Main Street, Terre Hante, Ind.
dedl-tf
gOOK BINDING.
JOSEPH KASBERG having established a new and complete Book Bindery, is prepared to do all kinds of Book Binding and Blank Book manufactnriKg. Magatines bound in t.« best style.
BINDERY adjoining Daily Express Office np-statrs, Terre Haute. Indiana,
Intermittents, Bil'
iousness aud all disorders arising from mias matio causes. They are highly recommended as an anti
dyspeptic,
and in cases of in
digestion are invaluable as an Appetiser and Recnperant, and cases of General Debility they have never in a single instance failed in producing the most happy results. They are particularly BENKFIC1AL TO FEMALES, strengthening the body, invigorating the mind aud giving tone and elasticity to the whole system. Tbe HOME BITTERS 'are compounded with tho greatest care, and no Tonic Stimulant has ever boon offered to the public SO PLEASANT TO THE TASTE, and at the same time combining so many medical agents, indorsed by the medical fraternity as the best known to,tho Pharmacopoeia. It costs litttle to give them a fair trial, and
Every Family should hare a Bottle, We ask every one to read the following certificate from many of the napst ominent phy siciansin'thecountry
St. Louis,
July,
Sesirous
leasure in recommending them to all persons of taking Bitters, as being the best Tonic and Stimulant now offered to the pub lie. I. Ch. Bolsllniere, K. ». F, 0. Porter, M. J), Alfred Heacock, fl. D. t'. Gerick, SI. II. Drake McDowell, H. 1). :iC. A. Warm, M. D, J.
V.
in -u:
Archbishop Manning1.
Whltehlll, M. D. .J f:. A. Clark, ». D, Dr. C, V. F. Ludwl?. G. Hoses, Jf. W. A. Wilcox, H.D, HubertPrimm.
U. S.
Marine Hospital, St. Louis,
July 6,1870—J AS. A. JACKSON
& CO.: Having examined the formula from which your celebrated '.'Stomach Bitters" are prepared, and having witnessed the meth' od of combining the different ingredients, we can safoly recommend them as the besttonio with which we are acquainted. From the great care with which they are compounded, and from the choico materials which entef into them, have no doubt that they wil
irove, as they deserve to be, the most poputonic and stimulant in uso.
r. j.tessssr""?:.«. We cheerfully concur with every word contained in the above testimonial.. John Conzelman, H. Jolt* HartmSn, H. D. Cess. VAstlne H, D. John T. Temple, K, G. 8. Wklker, M. D. K. C. Franklin, M. D.
Cincinnati.
Oct. 19, 1870.—Messrs._ W. B,
Kennedy
& Co., Agents "Hom« Bitters'
Gents—Agreeable to your request, I have examined the formula of the "Home Stomach Bitters," and find the remedies it contains such as are in general use by the Medical Profession. They are very scientifically an pleasantly combined, and as stimulating toB' ics will be found espocially adapted as cor roborants to the treatment of low or debilitated stages Of the system, whether arising from impaired digestion or from malarious DrS.ejfl?.' Vattiers. L.A.James, M. D. K. 8. Wayne, Clioniist. 0. KimpBon, T. D. W. T. Tallferro. M. ». S. 1\ Banner, M. ». J. J. Quinn, Jl. I. 0. 8. JBnscrogt, M. J. H. Buckle, M. D. G. W. Bigler, M. D. W. B. Woodward, M. D. (1. A. Donertr, M. 1.
Chicago.Sept.30,
i870.—J. L.
H. 8. Halm, M. D. J. B. Walker. M. I. Norman 8.
SMITH,
Very respectfully,
Esq
We have examined the formula of the Celebrated Stomach Bitters," and find it to be composed of articles that are considered_ the best 'tonics used by the medical Profession, and one of the best bitters we know of now in
B. McVicar, M. P, G. A. Mariner.
Barnes, H. D.:
For Sale by all & GrOtfer^.
AS. A. JACKSON& CO., Proprietors Labratory
105 107 N.
2d Street,
my26dltaw*ly ST, XiOUI8, MO
MEDICAL..
The Great World Tonic
AND
"SYSTEM RENdVtoO Rl
What the Public Should Know.
BITTERS These Bitters are a purely vegetable Tonic. The somponent
Drugs having been selected
with the greatest care as to their medicinaU Properties. They arc no cheap compound prepared with common whisky.
WABASHJust
BITTERS tho thing for morning lassitude and depression of spirits caused by late hours or
overwork.
WABASHAro
BITTERS an infallible remedy lor Dyspepsia, Heart Burn, &c., imparting toneand impulse to
the digestive organs, by their healthy action on the Stomach, Liver and Kidneys.
WABASH
and vigor, and a cheerful and contented dis position.
WABASH
BITTERS Take it if yon want pure, rich, electrical blood—blood that invigorates your system, and
gives thQ.glow of health to your cheek.
WABASH
WABASHCannot
BITTERS be excelled as a morning Appetizer. Promoting good Digestion, and are infallible
for all tho manifold diseases arising from a deranged and debilitated stomach.
WABASH
BITTERS Are the best bitters in the world for purifying the Blood, cleansing the stomach, gently stim
ulating the Kidneys and acting as a mild cathartic. Da. A. AUNAUD, Solo Proprietor and Manufatnrer of WABiSH BITTERS. S-E, corner Ohio and Fifth streets, Terre Hautq. Ind. auglMf
DIAMONDS, fltC.
BALL, BLA( & CO.,
665 & 567 Broadway, 5. T. Offer for the HOLIDAYS ft' The most complete and best selected assortment ot the following goods to be found in the city: Diamond and Gold Jewelry. Watches for Ladies & Gentlemen Sterling Silver Table Ware. Bronzes, Antique and Modern. Marble and Bronze Clocks. ... Marble Statuary. it l:l.,
FANCY GOObs
GENERALLY.
PROFESSIONAL.
JQRS. WATERS & ELDER,,
Homeopathic Physicians
STTIRGKE OISTS. OrFICl—
Cherry Street btt. Sixth and Sevnih.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS
POULTRY, GAME, FUR Informationconcerning prices and fttjl in structioBilor dressing Poultry for-this market chetitfulry
gir«n
by
TAffBH & DAVBKPOBT, rrodQeft Coamisskm Kercliiat*.
JtSxt
1870—JAMES
Mo.
Oct. 8,1870.—J AS. A. JACKSON & CO.: have examined the formula for making the "Home Stomach Bitters," and used them in the Hospital for the last four months. I con' sider them the most valuable tonic and stim ulant now in use. L. MELCtlER,
vOS.
effective, prompt and certain
1, 2 anil
is 4 Uelmare Areane Varket. PHILADELPHIA?" Having ample facilities and experience, w« feel consignors.
CDPDRANGOT-
N a plaint^,, (tali Koeum, aiul .all liironlc jsIOMI DUieiues, is prepared from tJBj
Menuiiie CunddranKO Bark, from'Loja, Ecuador, secured by the assistance of the authorities of teal oountry It is the most
alternative and
lloo(i pu* liter known.. Sold by all Druggists in pint Dottles, having on them our name, trade mark and directions. Send for a circular. Office and Labratory, ,No. 0t Cedar St., N. Y. -'*~i—•
Chicago Destruction.
A full and oomplete history of Chicago, her past, present and future. With graphic scenes, incidents and full details of the disaster, by Geo. P. Upton and J. W. Sheahan, editors of the Chicago
Tribune.
UNIVERSALIS!.
Send for free sample copy of the CHRISTIAX I.KAI»KK, a first-class weekly journal. published by the New York State Convention of Universalists, and containing tho Sermons of DK. J£. U. t'HAPUi. Terms 12 50 yer year. Address Publisher CHRIS* TIASi
I,
A. JACK'
SON & 00.: Gentlemen—As you hare com mnnicated to the medical profession the rea ipo of the "Home Bitttors, it caanof, therefore, bo considered as a secret or patent medicine, no patent having been taken for it. We have examined the formula for making the "Home Bitters," and unhesitatingly say the combination is one of rare excellence, all the articles used in its Composition are the best of the class to which they belong, being highly Tonic, Stimulant, .Stomachic. Carminative and slightly Lax&tive. The mode bf preparing them is strictly in accordance with the rules of pharmacy. Having used them, seen its effect in our private practice, we take
TnO COLORED PLATES.
Directions and plans for making Walk's, Lawns, Gardens, &a. The handsomest and best FLORAL UUIDSl in the world. All forTnn CentH, to those who think of buying Seeds. Not a quarter the cost. 200,100 sold of 1871.
PPTrPfi' The Doc. No-, i(rice30c Ju (Ei H'O has 19 pieces Vocal and Instr'l Piano Music, woVth $4 in sheet form. Wo will mail two' back Mos. for 1 &0o., four for fOc., or Jan. HfTTC Tr( AT to Dec-, '71, for 82.25, (regMlimtAJLular price, $3.) Bound no-.
11
2
CHOPPING MADE EAST
S I N E
Mishawaka Steel Bit Axe.
NONE GENUINE UNLESS STAMPED. J. S. BAUi
A
tile*
i-vJ
With over 400
pities, and DO illnstrntlonM. It is now ready for delivery, A (JEWS WAHiTCB Send $1.00 for outfit an-o AUBilia. nAil 1 tlf.ohoieeottemtory. Union Piiblishing Co., Chicago. 111., or Phila., Pa.
a l»EU, 128S itroadway, Hew
50thYEA^
NEW YORK OBSERVES
#3 per Annum, including Tear Book for 1872. S1I»XE1" E. KOKSi (.JR.. it CO., 37 Park Row, Sew York..
SS SAMPLE COriii3 PBEE.
CO., Hishawaka, Ind.
AGSECVRKD OK BttSET REFUND ED.—Send to W. C. Hamilton & Co .Wholesale Druggists, Cincinnati. Ohio, for one bottle KKE»*FEVeKAW» AGUJR TOXIC. Sent prepaid for $1.3
FOR THE KIDKETS AND I.IVF.K Use Hamilton's ElICHU AW» DANI1)LION- Just what your physician prescribos. Pont prepaid, for ®l per bottle, by W. C. Hamilton & Co., Druggists, Cincinnati, Ohio-
Agents
BITTERS Taken rognlarly three times a day in small wineglassful doses will give strength, health
wanted-utew popular
MAP OF INDIANA.—Shows every Rail road. Station, Town, Village,
&c.
Small cap
ital required. Large profits. Send for descriptive circular. E. C, BRIDG31AN.5 Barclay street. New York. 4 QENT8—Wanted.r-Agents make more ney at .work for us than a', anything else- Business light and permanent- Particulars free. G.
StiVsoji
&
PuUUkert,
$425
BITTERS Are a sure Preventive of a ohul and Intermitent Fevers.
SoS,
Fine Art
Portland, Maine.
A MOUTH! Expenses paid.
fred, Me.
10,000 Agents Wanted Immediately. 8SOO can bet made in sixtyfive days. Kvery reader of this, behold and young, should send SI. and get six samples thai must sell for $1 each, with full particulars. Send at once, as I am determined to have 10,010 Agents within the next sixty days. Address J, C. HEAULEY. Millfield. Ohio.
AVOID
QUACKS.-A victim of early indiscretion, o*using nervous debility, progiatare decay, «to., having tried in vain every advertised remedy* has discoveredi a simple means of self-cure, which he will send to his fellow-sufferers. Address J. H. KEKVESi 78
Na»»au St.. iV.
K-
THIKTY TEARS' EXPERIENCE IN THE TREATMENT OF Chronic and Sexual Diseases.
A PHYSIOLOGICAL VIEW OF HABBIAOE, The cheapest book ever pa )dl
___ ublishod— con-
taining-aearly three hundred pages, and one hnndred and thirty fino plates and engravings of the anatomy ot the human organs in a state of health and disease, with a treatise on early errors, its deplorable consequences upon the mind and body, with the author's plan of treatment—the only rational add successful mode of cure, a- shown by a report cases treated. A truthful adviser to the married and those contemplating marriage, who entertain doubts of their physical condition. Sent free of pestage to any address, on receipt of twenty-five cents in stamps or postal currency, by addressing Be. A CROIX. No. 31 Maiden Lane.
BARBER SHOP.
SOMETHING NEW.
NEW BATII -Ajro—
BARBER SHOP.
Everything New and First-class. Style Perfect Satisfaction gir to *U customers. between 4th and 3 oetlOdly
if
lib
mm™
OVER. ONE UlI IS BRED PAGES, Prihtcd in Two Colors, en superb
Papeb.
Tinted
1'onr Huiulr««5 KliKravlii^a of
Flowers, Plants and Vegetables, with Descriptions, and
E
Address, .--5*5^ JAMES TICK, iv Rochester, Si. T.
eepjes for Iffl, gilt-Sides
•'i and edges, ®5. The Music is by llays, Thomas. Kinkel, Gounod,etc AHdrfefs MHXTIIT VJ. L. PKTERS, 599 BroadiUUii J. I1.1J way N. V. P. O. Box 54 !).
YILL M. CA^RLBTO^
AUTnOR OF
"Betsey and aro Out," EDITS AND WRITK8 PO«
Tlie Detroit Weekly Tribune, The Best Family Newspaper in tho Country, *2 a year. Send for specimen copy and club circular. Address: TrtK TKIBlTSiK, 1)»troit, Sich,
HOUSEHOLD MAGAZINE
VVFAF K5 offered free during the oom ingyear to every subscriber of.Merry's Museum, the Toledo Blade Ppmeroyjs Demoorat etc.. which is an evidence of its worth an_ popularity. Horace Greeley, James Parton,
Theodore Tilton."HaiTTlamiiton, ctc., write In cJubbinir, it offers threo first-class-periodicals for.the price of
lor every number.
one of them. A variety of premiums on equally liberal terms. It is an Original, first-class magasinc. Volume begins with
!?an '72. 'Three specimen copics free. Address S. S. VVO0I)"'kewburehTN. 1".
W mi F. ILj.l
coeoAiNE
A compound of
edpred
NEW YORK STORE.
IF-A-lsTCY
And desirable articles for the Holiday Trade. ». /T
K££3i E *^O'RFluid Extract, jjau make it interesting for our eiwtomer* to »ie their selections for the The wonderful remedy for aneer, Syphl- Holidays at the
NEW YORK
Jfcw Dress Goods, New Shawls, New Kirt Gloves, Lace Collars, Handkerchiefs, Bows, Ties. Tortoise, Shell and Jet Jewelry, in profusion and cheap at
NEW YORK STORE. MALNrS£.,
Near Court
CTION NOTICE. i.' ftCO-r
The qualified voters of Harrison townshiy Vigo eounty. Irdiana, are hereby notinod that, Byvinue of and in pursuance of an order of the Board ot County Commissioners of said county, rendered at the regular December session. of said Board, on
,Monday, January 22, 1S72,
the pells of said township will be opened at the sevoral voting places therein", to-wit: FirstWard Gottleib Reiss, Inspector, at the Ninth Street Bngine House.
Second Ward Grafton F. Cookcny, Jnspector.'at Bleemelhl'S Brewsry. Thirfl ward Martin Kercheval, Inspector, at Kercheval's Grocery Store.
Fourth Ward L. F. Keilsnider, Inspectcr, at the No. 8 Engine Hoftse. Fifth Ward- tsaac:Beanohamp. Inspector, atlmbery's Brewery.
Sixth Precinct George W. Naylor, Inspectcr, at the New Court House. This precinct includes all of illarrison township outside «f the city ot Terre Haute.
The polls will be opened as aforesaid for the purpose of receiving and taking the votes of the legal voters of said township Upon the subject of an appropriationby said township of one huntlred unu fifty thousand dollars (8160.0utf) to aid in the construction of the Terre Haute & Southwestern ltailroad,
AUSTIN, SHRYER
A
Cocoa-nut Oil,4'C-
NNTJATJ
Acknowl
tJiebe$t promoter of the grotcth and beauty of '.he hair.
JOS. BtTEHETt S 00., Boston, Mnss.
SOid by all di uggista.
Beware of imitativiu.
By order of the Board. 16-dtd A. J. CRAWFORD, Sec'y.
O CONTRACTORS.,.,
Sealed proposals will be received by tho Common Council of the city of Terre tiauto at their next regular meeting, to-wit:' on the evening of the 2ith of December, 1871, for grading Crawford street, between Third and Sixth streets, including sidewalks distance 1,030 feet.
Bonds will be required for the iaithml performahce of said.wqrk, according to the plans and specifications on
Hou89
25 pieces Plaid Dress Goods,
AtlSl-S cents.
100 pieces Seeded Alpacas
'"'iri-—— At IS cents.
65 piefifis Robe Patterns,
sr. At IS coat IB. i£U
30 pieces, Biaritz Stripes
A.t 25 cents:
Handsome New Dress Goods,
At 30c, 35n and 40c.
25 pieces Alexander Poplins,
"."Ui At only SOc.
NOTICES.
j-srA
file
in the (fiice
o' the Citv Engineer. The Council reserves tho right to reject any bid that they may deem not in the interest of the city also to tako possession of the work at any time before completion, and finish the same atthe expense of the contractor under the bid specified in his contract, if he fails to perform the work in a satisfactory manner.
By order of the Common CounciL RICHARD STROUT, City Engineer.
A
Horso furnished. H.B. SHAW, Al-
NNUAL MEETING.
Three Haute,Ind.
1872,
10
A
between the hours of
a. m. and 3 p.m. for 'he purpose of electing seven Directors for tbe ensuing year. 8 dtd C. M. WARREN, Cashier.
NNUAL ELECTION.
Terse Haotk
Albany. N. Y. The author
may be consulted upon any of the diseases upon which his books treats, either personally or by mail, and medicines sent to any part of the world.
&
Indianapolis R. B. Co., Skcbktart's Offick,
Tikbi
Hautr,
December 5. 1871
The annual meeting of the Stockholders of this Company will be held at the office of the Company In Terre Haute, on Monday. January 1st, 1872, between the hours of 10 and 12 o'clock a. m., for the purpose of electing Directors for tbe ensuing year.
By order efthe Board, 6-dtd R. A. MORRIS. Sec'y.
ATTORNEYS.
B. CHEADLE,
ATTORNEY AT LAW^ 80 Main Street, nov-22-d3m Terre Haute, Indiana
E.
BQOM8
GOODS, s,
Squara
'n JUST RECEIVED iP.i
USEFUL,
.Xt+
SAMUEL liOYSE,
dccl5-w4t Auditor of Vigo County.
LSSOLUTIOX. i«i ti1?'«
(00
& CO.
Copartnership existing between A.G Austin. J. G. Shryer and B. H. Corn well under the firm name of Austin, Shryer & Co., will be dissolved by mutual consent January 15, 1672, J. G. Shryer retiring. A. G. Austin and B. H. Cornwell will continue the business under the firm name of A. G. Austin A
All persons indebted to Austin, Shryer & Co. will call and settle at ence. as business must be closed by January 1st, 1S72, ls-dwtoianl
MEETING.
The Arindfil'McctinB ef the Stockholders of the Vigo Iron Company will be held at the Office of the Company in Terre Haute, on Wednesday. January, 10th, 1871, between the hours of 10 and 12 i. M., for the purpose of electing Directors.
i''
J*
I
.leO -t
V- 4 in. 4 f-'i-i'
tixl
OUR REAL LACES,
•.,
I
OPENING
KID
FIRST NATIONAL BANK.
Dec- 9, 1871.
The Annual Meeting the Stockholders of this Bank for the purpose of electing seven Directors for the ensuing year, will be held at the Banking House on the second Tuesday in January next (9th prox.) between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m- and 4 o'clock p. M. 11-dtd S. A. HERRICK, Cashier.
AL ELECTION,
STATE BANK,
TNATIONAL,
krbr
H&utk Doc.
7th,
1871.
Notice is hereby given that the Annual Meeting of. the Stockholders of this Bank will be held at their Banking tfouso, on Tuesday, Januury 9th,
utji
-i
for Holiday Sales in dude Black
Thread Barbes. Point Lace Collars, Handkerchiefs and Barbes, Point Applique Collars, Valenciennes Collars and Handkerchiefs also, have a varied assortment of Hemstitch, Initialed, Tape Bordered and Cordercd Handkerchiefs for Ladies' ,and Gcrtlemcn's use, 75c to #10 per dozen.
Tie "Perilbt"
CVif. Alj hit 4
GLOVE, introduced by us ta our patrons, is steadily gaining in favar and cannot be surpassed in-durability and elegance of fit. Just opened fall assortment of one and two buttons in Mode Colors, Opera Colors, Black and White, at reduced .prices, viz: 81-90 and $2.25 per pair.
Our Housekeeping Goods Stock Our Hosiery and Glove Stock Our Cloth and CaBSim9re Stock Our Fancy Goods Stock Our Blanket and flannel Stock Our Boulevard Skirts Our Panoy Scarfs: Our Shawl Stock 'J'V"* Our Cloak Stock, .f Combine the grcatost variety and lowest prices to be fonnd in any one honse in West ernlndiana.
WARREN, HOBERG &
Opera
Si
P. BEAUCHAMP
H'vu^
ATTORNEY AT LAW
And Notary Pmblio,
Ornoi- -On Ohio Street, bet. Third & Fourth •23-st
J.'i
3»
i'vl' SK
9
¥&***
iwrf'ir.v
We keep the Best Brands of BLACK ALPACAS that ia imported. .. We ofler them at lower figures than any other house in the trade. BgjUTry us and jbe convinced. 51K
iriRl£ STOKE, 73 Main "Street, ftrti Near Court House Square.£ij,?i JUa
DRY GOODS, &C.
5 ttHtr *(SA.r
uSaa
oi y:
.fc*" suxs
9i*
i». *!. -4 iU?1"
*1
xrtlL
it'
vswiRyai-jf sd'.
r' 'wt
edl .-•S,4fr»Js»'a O.i1
ORNAMENTAL
w.
'i b'X3r ^^,
HOLIDAYK-.~:i-
GIFTO
-J
td £aur(U &v j.j-
.fcrtt-
f-T'
Warren," Moberg &
*i k.
UM !fi.
niiifi .ths
O.,
OPERA HOUSE CORNER,
ARE
now offering a very large and varied assortment of Fancy ana Staple Dry Goods at such low prices thai all can in: dulgo in the luxury of making friends happy.
Our FINE PURS
FOR
Ladies and Children, comprising Genuine Hudson Bay Sable, Dark Eastern Mink, Canada and Alaska Sable, Siberian Squirrel* 8ilver Fox. Persian Lamb, French Coney, Astrachan and Grey Seal, we shaU' offer much below fall priccs. ... .,..
Our Dross Goods
8TOOK
contains many elo?ant .goods in Black and Fancy Mlks, Irish foplins. Velours, Epinglines, French Merinot. Satines. Rich Bright Plaid Poplins Brocne de Chines also an immense variety of low and medium price Dress Goods, suitable forpres ents, at 15,20,25.35 and 50 p«r yard.
CO.,
XVobko
Corner.
A 8$
at rfl
BAKERY.
UNIOS STEAM BAKERY
FMtfK ftEINlfr & BKO Manufacturers of all kind vr Crackers,
Cakes,
£read anfl
C4U
Candy,
-J-? si\ Deftlera in vhi a it-
Foreign & Domestic Fruits.
Fancy and Staple Groceries, LAFAYETTE STREET,
Bet. the two Bailroads,'
mr28 Terre Haute. Jnd
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that the nndersignin ted Administrator of tbe lanady, late of Vigo county, 4 to be sol
ed has been appointed Administrator of tbe inielCanady, late of Vigo count Said estate is supposed to be sol vent. JOHN W. CANADT, Adm'r.
estate of Oanie deoeased.
del3-w3«r
HERZ4ARNOLO.
1i,
®eadv for tlie
HOLIDAY TRADE!
#3*
HERZ & ARNOLD have To-day opened thoir
4.?'si
W'l wL
I ilf
ABYEBTISE.
In the form ef handsomely printed'
POSTERS,
Circulars and Small BHls
Or if. as is most generally the case, your wares especially.,, Ml-T%t
'Address a Particular Class,
-.if" •!. ri *J2 :i !i -j-'-.
Besiege every avenue by which the attention of that class can be reached by well-phrased appeals to their tastes, fancies and interests. If you have posters, circulars and handbills, it is important that they are pat and scattered in tha right places.
The surest way to reach the particular tjiass yon aim at. is to make sure that
NOBODY IS PASSED OVER
It is certain tnat
Fifty Per Cent. May be Added
To the trade of many honses in this city by
Prudent
Distribution of Circulars.
Bills and
ADVETISING FAYS!
the interestsl of buiness men may thus be adva ced by having their
JOB PBINTISU JfO 7" I
'^^nandsbmeVaatf Chespljr Doas"
•"r'p
tv V.
ne
ELEGANT-TOY STORE.
.fjSi! .'iS!? •f'*' /I .1-
'M.
A.T 89 IsAJL-TTXr STREET.
•••i jf,.
-v.'ssr
1 4*
With a stock of TOYS that will please everybody.
ti
rh
At Theif Great Opera House Bazaar
I'hey have just been receivins: an elegant line of
NOTIONS, FANCY GOODS &
ADVERTISING.
Suitable for the Holiday Trade,
Which will. sold at figures to astoniBh .ali.
TO BO BUSINESS.!
•iris.
¥on Must Attract the Attention
Of those you wish to become your eustoae If your wares are of that sort that are
USED BT EVERYBODY
Ton oannot well make your business too public, er draw too many into your storo to see what you have to offer.-
^''5'
A,
swa-,'
•Mf &V
OFFIC* OF THE 1XFXI81
MBM
Rfl
St. Louis....L've Jt*ana Mattoon Terre Haute..." Indianapolis Ar Crestline
1
Fix Y®nr Standard on tlie Outer "Wall
Cleveland I Buffalo Albany Cincinnati Coin ibus....
..v."
Pittsburg Horritburg... Philadelphia Baltimore Washington.. Boston New York....
1%
sr-
V.
TIME TABLE.
Indianapolis & St, Louis
RAILROAD.
THROUGH tiPBESS TRAINS DAILY
—BETWEjSN-
s:r_
XjOTJXS
AnJ All Kusjern Cities and Towns.
Condensed Time, Ddc 1st, 1871.
KASTWARD.
W .®
W
•-t/j
a
e*n
7.00 am 11 ?5 am 1.25 3.45 6.20 4.20 am 7.30 am
4.15 9.02 10.3.1 2.43 3 .10am
9.30 pin 2 21 am 3.58 am 6.50 am 50 am 6.4y in n.ta 4.10 am 2.20 4.20 6.15
I.55 150 am 11.55 2.45 am 12.10 l( 35 pin .'1.( 5 am 2.
Louisville
9,10 am Ml a ui T.ip am 4.46 ml 2.10 am 2.80 am 11.36 a 6 40am 7."^0 a ra 10 00 am 11.20 11.50 am
3.4i. 3.(fl 5.05 ll.-.i) 7,0li
Si I am
ft.5u am
II.00
am
7.C0 am
O.B
S
S
WESTWARD.
txi 9 1 Sg
9
CO
Leave
Indianapolis. Greencastle... Terre Haute...Ar
3.15 a mi 7.15 a 4.37 a m| 9.03 am 5.45 a 10.30 a 8.20 am 1.00 10.02 a in 2.52 11.47 a m! 4.30 1.25 mi ".25 2.00 6.4^ 2.15 ml 7,00
J/attoon Pana Litchfield Alton Bast St, Louis St. Louis—..
8.0U 9,30
'0.45 1.09 am 2.55 am 4.41 am 6.25 am 7.00 am 7.15 am
Direct Connections
Made at ST. LOUIS for KANSAS CITY and nil Principal Points in MISSOUh I. KAN- .. SAB, COLORADO, and the Wei«t.
fffi~ELE(jlA'T
SLEEPIXi CAlt!S~®B
On All Sight Trsinx.
JJuj yonr Tickets by way of Indianapolis & St. Louis R. R. O, 8. PEASE. Qen'l Supt., St- L»uis.
S- F. PIERSON, tten'l. Tkt. Agt St. Louis.
BAKING POWDERS.
USE THE BEST.
It will Prove the Cheapest
l, 18 RAPIDLY BECOMING A
FAMILY FAVORITE.
It is strictly pure. It is alwaya rolicble. It is economical. tt is tho bast. Full weight guaranteed.
'5..
•rQive it a trial and be cenvinced of its superiority over all others. If your Grocer has not got it. ask him to order a supply.
J. fl. BURttlLL Jt'CO Proprietors, Manufactory and Wholesale Depot, 261 Walnut Street, Cincinnati, Obie. 2-deodlmP
I
V"
1 r3«
