Daily Wabash Express, Volume 21, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 30 January 1872 — Page 2

DA ILX

TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.

Tuesday Horning, January 30, 182.

JOSEPH B. LYMAN, agricultural editor of the New York "Tribune," died on Sunday, the 28th inst.

ONE week fyom next Saturday is the time fixed for the assembling of the Republican County Convention.

DURING the present month, twenty seven Unions 'of the International Society have been organized in this country.

THE "Journal" ia very seriously alarmed leat the colored voters of this county may be slighted by "the Badical managers." We don't know who these "Radical managers" are, but we apprehend that the Republicans of Vigo will be found quite willing to do full justice to every element of the party. The day is past when the "Journal" could frighten any body with its talk about the negro.

BY

A. KECENT

THE Republican National Nominating Convention, assembling in Philadelphia in June next, will be the fifth general convention of the party. Their initial one was held in that city just sixteen years ago the coming summer, when FKEMONT and DAYTON were nominated The Philadelphia "Inquirer" remarks, in this connection, that in that interval of time the American people have wrought political changes which the most astute living statesman in 1856 believed it would require centuries to accomplish. Since the convention held in Musical Fund Hall, in 1856, the nation has gone through the "Border Ruffian" war, the great Re bellion, abolished slavery, taken an ac knowledged place among the foremost powers of the earth, extended her already great territorial area, developed a por tion of the mineral wealth, spanned the oontinent with a railroad, and com menced the building of a second from the great Lake to the Pacific and paid off large portion of the debt incurred i,n the second war for freedom.

One of the Stories Against (Jen. Grant Taken Back. It is one of the most common com plaints against journalists that when in error they do not make proper reparation Not designing to deserve this criticism I wish to correct a statement in one my letters some time since, respecting the alleged gift of Tom Murphy and others of a cottage at Long Branch to Gen eral Grant. At the time, I had every reason to believe that the popular version of the matter was true, the later inquiry has shown that I was in error, as the foJ lowing statement will demonstrate: lately had occasion to meet Judge Edwards .Pierrepont respecting his appoint ment as successor of Hamilton Fish in Grant's Cabinet, and taking advantage of the opportunity, I asked Judge Pierrepont respecting the gifts reported as having been accepted by the President. In reply, he said that for himself he would say positively that he had never given a single dollar either directly or indirectly to General Grant, notwithstanding all newspaper reports to the contrary. He had, as was generally known, subscribed $20,000 to aid the Republican party to carry the Presidential election, but he made no apology for that. The money was mostly spent in this city and State, a portion being spent in other parts of the country, but it was used solely for election purposes, and not paid to General Grant. Respecting the cottage at Long Branch, he said he had often heard General Grant speak of it, of the sum paid for it, and of the difficulty he had raising so large an amount. The Judge was quite satisfied, from all that he had heard in the matter, that the story Of the cottage having been given as a present to General Grant was wholly untrue. In order to gain still further information on this point, I called on Mr. Howard Potter, of the banking firm of Brown Brothers Co., who said that he had been the owner of the Long Branch cottage, but owing to the ill health of one of his family he had concluded to sell it. This he did through Mr. Lewis H. Brown, a real estate broker, who acted as Gen. Grant's agent in the sale. The consideration was forty thousand dollars, and Mr. Potter himself made out the deed in the General's name. He thought the story that the cottage had been presented to General Grant was as absurd aa~the report that he had given it to the President himself.—Correspondent Springfield Jtepbuliean.

rM"

decision of the Post

Office Department the law regarding send ing newspapers by mail has been more clearly defined than it has heretofore stood No name of memorandum can be made on a newspaper inside of the wrap per on which the address is written, ia barely permissible to mark an article with pen or pencil. More than this, sub jects the paper to letter postage, and the violater of the law to fine. No printed card, handbill or advertisement, no writ ten notice, letter, or slip of any kind whatsoever, muBt be folded in the paper, To do any of these thing* is to violate the law.

THE New York papers are much agi tated over the great hardships associated with the necessity of living on incomes from $3,000 to $5,000 per annum, and yet there are in that city hundreds of thousands who do not earn .one-half of either these sums who get along very well and make no complaint. The Boston "Times" sensibly remarks that the great trouble of respectable salaried men is that' they carry their social and domestic views double the heighth of their incomes and only think of how they can ape the social position of those in much easie circumstances, instead of consulting that prudent economy by the exercise of which they might make themselves very com fortable, and through it become in time independent. The wonder of millions how men with incomes of even $3,000 can find room to grumble when others quite as enlightened and refined as they are have to be content with from a third to half of that sum.

of

LOBS COOKTNEY, thirty-five years of age, who recently went into bankruptcy, owed four million, eight hundred thousand dollars. Now let the young rascal get a position in the New York custom house and make the debts —Exchange.

A

money to pay his

GENTLEMAN

in search of a man to

do some work, met oq his way a highly respectable lady, not as young as she once was, and asked her, "Can you tell me where I can find a man?" "No, I can not," she replied, "for I have been looking these twenty years for one myself."

ALREADY—saya the Boston "Traveler" —Stokes is being talked of as a lecturer for next season.

li&f

OFT OF niKKJrras.

Father of Life, I turn to Thee! I have no future and the past, A looming darkness, vague and vast, Blots out the sunny days to be Between me and Kternity!

Sometimes my leaguer6& soul cries oat. Is there no refuge anywhere? The waring legions of Uespair. Led by the fiends of Fear ana Donbt,*^ Have hedged my weary path about,.

Lost in the crooked ways that wind

e-

By lurking pitfalls, day by day, While hope and courage ebb away, I, wandering in the dark, and blind* Grope for the clew I may not find:

A thread of Thy celestial light, v** vo- SI Some pitying Angel, fleeing far. Trailed over earth, and star by star Through all the labyrinth of Wound upward to the heavenly height. &."! Vainly I make my heavy moan

The subtile cord is Btf apt and lost— The way of light tw darkness crossed They pass by Death's dim gates alone Who'see Thy face before the Throne! ,,

THE ireSBAND's COSFESSIOJf. a •jitijj'j You told mo not till we were wed

How deep is woman's love Your heart was folded your breast Like, in its nest, the dove ,,t-j And though your eyes were ever bright.

Your bps sweet as arose, I knew not till our wodding-aay~ ni at How strong affection grows.

We whispered love on summer eves. And in the winter time Our lives flowed smoothly, sweetly on.

Like pure and perfect rhymo We pledged our faith when autumn came, Crowned with her golden sheaves,

rQ

And plighted rows anew when spring To being woke the leaves

Kind woris wererever en your lips. Like beauty on arose .JM In trouble's long and darksome honr, &

The* brought me sweet repose. In love your hand passed o'er my brow. And banished all my bare. And tears of goodness from your eyes

Overwhelmed tUydeep despair^

Now we are wed, and in your lwiark£?['/?.J* Love's flowers ripe have grown *'1 No longer in the path of fate r1-

We walk apart, alone The tie that makes our two hearts one" Can never severed be One common hope is ours, one joy,

One common d'estiny.

N or an E

From the Indianapolis Journal, 23th -f Col. Eddy was born in Scipio, Cayflga county, New York, DeCmber 10,1810, whence he removed to. Mishawaka, St Joseph county, in 1836. In 1847 he located at South. Bend, where he has ever since resided until his. election to the office of Secretary of State necessitated the temporary, removal of his home to the Capital.

He was elected a Member of Congress in the year 1852, over Vice President Colfax, then the candidate of the Whig party. In 1855 he was appointed by President Pierce District Attorney for Minnesota, and in 1857 he was made Commissioner of the Indian Trust Lands in Kansas. Colonel Eddy afterward served as a member of the State Senate and in 1859-60 was appointed by the Legislature a member of the Commission "in relation to the settlement, adjustment, and collection of dues to the State from various officers and personB indebted thereto." His colleagues Upon the commission were Hon. W. T. Otto, late Assistant Secretary .of the Interior, and ex Supreme Judge J. T. Elliott. They submutett a lengthy ancfei&austlve report to the General Assembly of 1861, from which yie have had frequent occasion to quote pending the discussion of the frauds of Democratic officers during the past twelve months. Col. Eddy was the author of the larger portion of that report, which must always stand as the best monument to the incorruptible and fearless integrity of the dead Secretary.

In the fall of 1861, orders were given for the organization of.a regiment of volunteers in the Tenth and. Eleventh Congressional districts, and the details committed to the hands of Hon. E. W. H. Ellis and Dr. Eddy. The organization of the regiment was completed on the 6th of December. Mr. Eddy was commissioned its colonel, £nd continued in personal command until July, 1863,. when he was compelled to retire from service by reason of ill health and disability resulting from severe wounds received in the battie of Iuka, Mississippi, while -at -the head of his troops. In that engagement the Forty-eighth lost one hundred and nineteen killed and wounded out of total of four hundred and twenty who entered the tight.

After his retirement from the army Col. Eddy lived in csmparative quiet at his home in South Bend, practicing his profession until he was appointed Collector of Internal Revenue for the Eleventh District by President Johnson, an office he continued to hold until relieved by Mr. Chestnutwood, under the present administration.'' At the Democratic State Convention held January 8,1870, Col. Eddy was nominated for the office of Secretary of State over Jason B. Brown, receiving 634 votes on the first ballot. At the October election the choice of that convention was ratified by a popular election, and since January last Col. Eddy has been a resident of Indianapolis. Such, in brief, is a record of the official life of a man who passed unscathed of dishonorable suspicion through, every partisan contest in which he was engaged, and who will be remembered, by political friends and foes alike, as a thoroughly conscientious officer, and as a courteous gentleman and an honest man in every relation of life. Amid the corruption and fraud of the parly with which he was affiliated, he carried the escutcheon of his manhood unsullied. Of him it can be truly said: a it

Among the faithless, faithful he." His Excellency, the Governor, has is" sued the following order with reference to the Secretary's death:

E

XECUTIVE EPARTMENT,

INDIANAPOLIS, Janury 29th, 1872. It becomes my painful duty to announce the death of Hon. Norman Eddy, Secre tary of the State of Indiana, fie died on Sunday morning, the 28th inst. A good man, a true patriot, and a faithful public servant has departed. The Executive Rooms and theState offices will be closed until Wednesday morning, the 31st instant, as a mark of respect to the deceased

CONRAD BAKER, Governor of Indiana.

The brief but pointed eulogy of Col Eddy conveyed in the Governor's words is best attested when it is known that, although he has held

BO

many public

stations, he died poor. He leaves a wife, son and two daughters in his immediate family, besides two married daughters residing elsewhere. His remains will be taken to South Bend for interment.

Yesterday the painful news went forth that Col. Eddy had died suddenly of heart disease, at his lesidence, corner of West and New York streets, in this city, and though it seemed hard to realize the fact, it was only too true. His death was sudden indeed, bul not entirely unexpected by his family and intimate friends, who have known for several years that the dread angel might claim him at almost any moment in the way and manner of his death yesterday.

Colonel Eddy had been complaining some days of his old Iuka wound, and also of the trouble about his heart, and had not visited his office since last Thursday, but had been going about the house much as usual until yesterday morning about half past 8 o'clock, when he fell to the floor in the act of helping himself to some medicine, in his own room. Mrs. E. hastened to his side but found him insensible and speechless. The household was speedily called in, the stricken man was lifted to his couch, and physicians were summoned in exceeding haste, but all their offices were of no avail. Within the hour that he Was stricken the good man's spirit passed peacefully away amid the most touching demonstrations of affection

c.

'\?*K*$Zgp

mm

"by his family and friends, who are plunged in the deepest affliction by his death. The usual tokens of respect will be observed on this occasion, and the State offices will remain closed until Wednesday.

This afternoon at two o'clock, there will be a meeting of the State officers to arrange for tSe funeral, which will take plaice at Soath Bend, probably on Wednesday.—Ind, Journal, 29th.

TILTOSIAN TRIFLES.

The next Republican candidate for the Vice-Presidency of the United States should be a negro, and we reiterate our nomination for Frederick Douglass for that post.—Oolden Age.

Mr. Sumner's argument in behalf of giving to negroes by law the same privileges with whites in public conveyances, in hotels, and in public institutions, was characterized by the same tine sense of justice which has distinguished all this orator's life-long defenses of a proscribed race.—Oolden Age.

The Rev. Dr. Crook (who ordinarily appears as a man of excellent sense) lately forgot himself ffo far as to say: '"The'killing even of Fisk is a crime." Will our Methodist neighbor, who uttered these words, take the ground that murder is right or wrong according as its victim is a good or bad man? Ia it not just as wrong to kill a libertine aa' a bishop.—Golclen. Age.

If any of our Congregational friends think that the action at Oberlin, resulting in the consolidation of the individual churches (hitherto free) into a. central and national council (which will inevitably usurp power over, the local churches) is not a departure from the policy of. the Pilgrims, let these friends ponder the following words of the "Methodist:"^ "A few weeks ago J,he Congregational churches adopted for themselves John Wesley's basis of_ Christian Union.— Oolden Age. .iWitili^nqo Kiq A

As

WE

expected, the Rev."Gilbert Ha­

ven, candidate for a Methodist bishopric, has done the generous thing. Without absolutely declining an office which he has not yet been asked to accept, he nev erlheless voluntarily blinds his ambitious eyes to the possibility of his own preferment, and nobly declares that the new bishop should be chosen from the negro racel His argument for this choice does credit to his head and heart. We have already witnessed a negro in the United States Seriate why not a negro on the bench of Methodist bishops? If Mr. Haven were black, we would consent to no other candidate than himself.—Oolden AgeJ*ii -timfw* -Hit v,u. .il?

My interest i'if ^o&F $ubli£sfcaPeer ie disturbed at remembering (as I muot) that John Stuart Mill of England, for his advocacy of woman suffrage, is wearing the laurel that ought to crown the brow of Charles Sumner of America. I grieve to hear reformers say (aa they do) that the chief of American Senators, after having been a life-long champion negroes, at last fails in chivalry of states manship toward woman. Having spent thirty years of eloquence on the righti of the one class, how can you now sit dumb concering the rights of the other?— lilton to Sumner.

'l' Leslie's First Study of Art. We have seen the Academy compelled to refuse acting as an Academy in the case of Sully but in two years, owing perhapB to union with the artists, it was prepared to come forward with grace and promptness to help young Leslie offto Europe. This lad, a clockmaker's son had had his boyish enthusiasm stirred to its depths by the acting of George Frederick Cooke. He had seen the theatre steps covered, on a. Sunday night, with servants and porters, who exchanged their hats for night-caps, and patiently waited for the opening of the box-offices next day. He had seen a man raise himself and scramble over the heads of these crowds to the ticket window. The mag netism of a furore so universal had pos sessed him completely, and it found .2 vent in his pencils, while it prepared him an audience exceptionally prepossessed to admire his work. At the directors' meeting, then, Mr. S. F. Bradford, of the bookselling firm of Bradford & Inskeep, exhibited some theatrical drawings in water color as the work of an apprentice of sixteen in his employ. The aquarelles in question represent Cooke, Cooper, and Warren in their most striking poses as Othello, Falstaff, and Richard: they are still kept in the collection, and are indeed odd memoranda of the stage costume and stmt of that time. The specimens of young Leslie's talent had. a success of enthusiasm his masters volunteered to forego five unexpired years of his time, and one of them, Mr. Innskeep, accompanied him to England, where he entered upon that cheery and charming career that has closed all to soon. The Academy con tributed to his outfit one hundred dollar^ and the following resolution does credit to the hearts of the gentlemen ,of the Board: "Resolved, That Master Lea lie be an eleve of this Academy, and that we will afford all the facilities in oiir p'oVer toward forwarding the views of his friends, in giving him an education cal culated to call forth the powers of his mind, and raise him to that rank among artists to which we are informed he ar dently aspires, and to which, in our opinion, he must attain should a munifi cent patronage foater and protect the laudable ambition which at present stimulates his genius to exertions

INCINNATI

IT

BO

extrabr

dinary.—From THE FIRST AMERICAN ART ACADEMY, in the February number of Lippincott's Magazine.

THE Senate Committee, yesterday,' brought out another striking piece of testimony, which will not suit Mr. Greeley or Senators Bayard and Casserly Mr. A. T. Stewart, having a few days since sworn that Mr. Murphy made good a Collector as he ever knew, Mr. Hutton, of Benkard & Hutton, an old merchant of twenty-four years' standing deposed that he desired to bear witness to the increased ability, efficiency, and hon esty which has characterized the administration of the Custom house at this Port within the last few years. He was followed by Mr. Moore who has been for twenty-five years the Custom-house clerk of Phelps, Dodge & Co. He swore that unless in the General Order business, there was no cause of complaint in the Customs service, except that he thought there was not force enough to do the work the clerks work faithfully, but the force has not heen increased in proportion to the increase of business, and the Collector told him that the failure to increase the force was caused by a desire to be economical. This declaration elicited from Senator Buckingham the remark that an increase of force and expense was not exactly the business of a Committee on Retrenchment.—N. Y. Times.

JOSH BILLINGS says: "Most men concede that it looks foolish to see a boy dragging a heavy sled up hill for the 'fleetin'' pleasure of riding dowo again. But it appears to me that boy is a sage by the side of that young man who works hard all the week and drinks up his wages on Saturday night."

THE! National Temperance Society is about to publish a book entitled "A Forty Years' Fight with the Drink Demon." The fight was with old Bourbon, of course. If it had been with Cincinnati whisky the fighter would have been floored in less than forty-eight hours.—Louisville Courier-Journal.

MAYOR OAKEY HALL, late of the deceased Tammany, charges that Mr. Bergh changed his name in Russia.^ If Russia is a good place to change things, Oakey had betier go over there and change his morals.—Churier-Jomud.

emissaries are busy in cir­

culating a report that there are eighteen hundred cases of confluent small-pox iff Indianapolis.—Louisville Courier-Jowrnm-fjj

OVER three hundred boflaloes, killed by Alexis, have been cut up by enterprising butchers at St. Joseph, and customers demand more.

IS

avowed of Janauschek, that she

has never smiled since some tragical love affair, in which she was in real life an actor.

SINCE the overthrow of Queen Isabella it is said that the book stores of Madrid have doubled in number.

ADVEFTTISEM ENTS

FREE TO BOOK AGENTS,

We will send a handsome OProspeotus^ of our Sew Illtutrated Family Bible, containing over SSOO fine Scripture Illustrations to an: Book Agent, free of charge. Address Nation

AI PKAIII»A TIL IIIT*AINNFTTI

ql fuoixsnxng I/O., i/moaj Ohio, or St. Louis, Mo.

WTHE TESTIMONY OF ALL

CABLE SCREW WIRE

5'?}

The driest and easiest Boots and Shoes ever worn.' BRIGUS& BROTHER'S 0AT1KIGU1 Oi NiOWIB AND VKI8T1BLII

Si3EDS.

AND

JSummer iloTvcrhig BalBs",'f6r 1872| Now ready. Consisting of over 130 pages, on rose-tinted paper, with upwardg cf 400 separate cuts, and Six BeaatUJal. Colored Plates! Cover, a"beautiful design,.in colors. The richest Catalogue ever published. Send 25 cents for copy, not one-half the value of the colored plates. In the first order, amounting to not less than »l, the price of Catalogue. 25c-, will be refunded in seeds. Ifew customers placed on the same footing with old. Free to old oustomers. Quality of seeda, size of packets, prices and premiums offered, make it t» the advantage of all to purchase seeds of us, See Catalogue for extraordinary inducements.

You will miss it if you do not see our Catalogue before ordering Seeds. Either of our two Chromos. for 1872, sue 19x 24—one a flower plate of Bulbous Plants, consisting of Lilies. Ac,—the other of -Annual, Biennial and Perennial Plants, guaranteed the

Most Elegant Floral Chromds erer issued in this country.# A superb jj&rlor ornament mailed, post-paid,

OF

receipt of

75o. also free, on conditions peeined in Catalogue. Address BRIGGS & BROTHER, (EatablUhed 1845.1 Becheatfr. Bf.

New Seeds and Plants

Sent by Mail or Express.

OUR SEED AND PLANT CATALOGUES for 187 Numbering 175 pages, and containing TWO COLOBED PLATES, Each worth twice the cost of Catalogue, mail ed.to all applicants on reeeipt of 25 oents,

Beedemen. 38 Cortlandt Stroet.N

Profitable Business Will be given one or two persons, of either sex, in TKRHB HAUTE and adjoining towns, by which they may realize from $300 to 81000 year, with but little interference, with ordi nary occupation, in'selling liO Uot.HOLD AR-riciiES of real merit and universal use. If the whole time is devoted a much larger sum may be realized. Circulars free, giving complete list of articles and commissions allowed.

T. 8. COOK & CO., Hoboken.N. J.

1 GESiT8-W»iilel.—Agents make more mjney at work for us than as anything else. Business light ahd permanent. Particulars free. Q-. STINSON & Soy, Fine Art Publishers, Portland, Maine.

ACUTE CURED OB MOJTEY REFUND ED.—Send to W. C.Hamilton A Co., Wholesale Druggists, Cincinnati, Ohio, for one bottle KRESS FCVJKKAJI1) AUUE TONIC, b'ent prepaid for $1.

FOR THE KIDNEYS AND LITEBUse Hamilton's BtCHV AND DANDEL ION. Just what your physician prescribes Sent prepaid, for $1 per bottle, by W. C, Hamilton & Co., Druggists, Cincinnati, Ohio

USE J. S. BALL & CO.'S

CELEBRATED

lishawaka Steel Bit

TO

Axe

Beware of counterfeits, The genuine stamped. J, S. BAI.li A CO., Mishawahn, Ind

PKRSONS HARD OF HEARING AND DEAF.—Imbued with a desire to benefit my fellow creatures, I will forward to all siifierers, free of charge, a prescription which has completely cured myself and many others, of deafness of several years' standing after having employed in vain, a number of the most eminent physioiahs in this country and Europe. Address with stamp. Rev'd H. THIEMANN'S. P. Missouri.

VT Ibli AtOT AA Box 2775, -St. Louis.

CANCEES. TtTMOBS. ULCERS Astonishing cures by Drs. Kline and Lind ley, at the Philadelphia Cancer Institute. 931 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa. At Branch Offices by Dr. Dalton. 288 W. Fourth St., Cin Cinnati, 0. by Dr. Greene, Charlotte, N- C.. by Drs. Healy & Benton, Cer. of Broad anc Alabama Sts., Atlanta, 6a. by Dr. Bramball, 42 £f. Court St,. Memphis, Tenn. WONDERFUL CANCER ANTIDOTES N» Knife, No Caustic Medicines, No Bloody Little Pain. For particulars, call on or address either of the above.

Better than any other for Children.

Last three times as lopg.

MANUFACTURERS.

CITY

PLANING

[MILLS.'

CXIFT & WILLIAMS.

Manufacturers of.

SASH, DOORS, BLINDS,

Window and Door Frames, ttoulding Brackets, Star! Bailings,

Ballssters, v. Newell Posts Florins and Siding.

And all description oi Finished Lumber

WH0LB8ALK AND RETAIL D8ALCK8 IK

-PUN-IE LUMBER,

Lath and Shingles,

Slate Roofing, Cement Roofing, Roofing Felt.

Custom Sawing, Planing and

Wocd Turning:,

1

DONE TO ORDER. All Work Warranted. Corner Ninth and Mulberry Sts.

BAKERY.

UNION STEAM BAKERY

FRANK SEINIG & BRO.,

Manufacturersef all kind. ~K:

Crackers, ,, ,•

Cakesf

f:w

:7

Bread ana Candy. Dealers in

Foreign & Domestic Fruits.

Fancy and Staple Groceries,

}ZAFATBTTE S1BBE7,. 'M Bet. the two Bailroads, 3^i,i may28 Terre Waute. Ind

BUSINESS DIRECTORY

TEBRE HAUTE

BUSINESS DIRECTORY I

The Name, Business and Location of the Leadiner Houses or &&

TerreHaute-S«£

fijS'A*

Those oi our readers who make purchases in Terre Haute, by cutting this out and liiwrig it as a BEFBBEHCB will save time and trouble. The selection has been carefully made and is

CLASS.

R. GARVIN, Main cor. Fifth. Oars, Car Wheels and General Iron Workers. SEATH & EAGER, bet- Ninth and TenthCarMt* Wall Paper and Honse Far. iiisbing RYCE'S ARPET HALL, 77 Main-st.,

Carriage Jlannfaetnrers. n»r

SCOTT, OREN A 00..Main oor. First" SCOTT. GRAFF & CO., 3 S. Seoond-et China, Glass A Qneensware. H. S. RICHARDSON CO.,78 Main-st.

Clothing (Wholesale and Betail.) S. FRANK. Main oor. Fourth-. KUPJ?ENHEIMER & BRO., 118 Main-st Confectionery and Ice Cream Parlors W, H. SCUDDER, 194 Main-stl

Cigars, Tobacco, £c.

N.KATZENBACH. 147Main-st. Cane and SawMill's Castings, Ac. J. A. PARKER, oor. First and Walnut.

Drag?fsts (Wholesale and Retail.) W. C. BtJNTIN & CO., Main-st GULICK &

BERRY,

Hats, Caps and Straw ovds J. H.SYKES. 113 Main-st. -. HairWorfc. MRS. E. B. MESSMORE CO., 7S. Fifth-st.

Leather and Finding*.

L. A BURNETT A CO.. 144 and 146 Main-st. Liquors, Ac. (Wholesale.) J. B. LYNE & CO., 229 Main-st.

Merchant Tailors.'

W, H. BANNISTER.79 Main-st. •1 SCHLEWING, 192Main-st. '"MMillinery and krancy Goods. J. W. GASKILL, 10 South Fonrth-st.

II

20

STRICTLY FIRST-

Agricultural lmplcmenta-". JONBS JcJONBS, e. s- squareArt Emporium—Picture*. Frame tookingOlasses, Hnsie etc. B. (JASa, 91 Main-st.

Books, Stationery, Ac."

BARTLBTT & CO., 101 Main-st. #J5 B. G. COX. 159 Main-st. A.H. DOOLEY,OperaHouso Bookstore. Boots and Shorn (Wholesale A Retail.) N. ANDREWS, 141 Main-st. N. BOLAND, 145 Main-st. ENGLES & TUTT, 107 Main-st. J, B. LUDOW 101 CO., Main cor. fixth.

Bnslnfesa College*.

Main oor. Fourth.

Dry Goods and Kotlons (Wholesale and Retail.) TUELL, RIPLEY&DEMING,Maineor Fifth W. S. RlfCK & CO., Main cor. {Sixth, 1

The most Popular House. ,, f. WARREN, HOBERG fc CO., Opera Honse cor WITTENBERG, RUSCHHAUPT CO., 73Main-st

Iry

Goods (Wholesale.)

CASH, BROTHER CO., 94 Main street. Dentists L. H. BARTHOLOMEW, 157 National Block. Fancy Goods,«tc. (Wholesale A Retail) T. H. RIDDLE, 151 Main-st

Fnrnitnre (Wholesale and Retail.) E. D. HARVEY,83 Main-st. •,• Grocers (Wholesale.) BEMENT& QOi, 16(5 and 162Main-st.t HULMAN&CUX, Main cor. Fifth.

Grocers (WhOlesaleand Retail' JOSEPH STRONG. 187 Main-st. Gas and Steam Fitting. A. R1EF, 46 Ohio-st. Hardware, Ac. (Wholesale A Retail. J. COOK SON, 152 and 154 Main-st. S. CORY CO., 121 Main-st.

N. cor. Mam and Third

Nurseryman and Florists. HEINL BROS., Greenhouses and Hale Sale, grounds, southeast city, near Blast

Furnaoe. t,-.. Notions, Ac. (Wholesale.) U. R. JEFFERS & CO,, 140 Main-st. WITTIG & DICK. 148 Main-st.

Pianos, Organs and Mnsic. L. KI8SNER, 48 Ohio-st. Plow Manufacturers. -r' PHILIP NEWHART, First-st. Phoenix Foundry and Machine Works McELFRESH BARNARD, cor 9th Eagle

Photographers.

J. W. HUSHER, oor. Main and Sixth.D. H. WRIGHT. 105 Main-st. Roofing (Slate aad Gravel.) CLIFT WILLIAAfS, cor. 9th and .Mulberry Real Estate, Ins. A Collecting Agents. GRIMES ROYSE. 4 S. Fifth-st.

Stelnway Pianos.

A. SHIDE, Agent, over Postoffioe.' Saddles and Harness!'

m,

4

1,1

PHILIP KADEL, 196 Main-st.: Saddlery Hardware (Wholesale.) F. A. ROSS, 5 S. Fifth-st.

Sewina: Machines/

Z. S. WHEELER. Weed Agency, 7 S. Fifth. StetAn and Gas. D. W. WATSON. 190 Main-st. ,v

Stoves, Tinware, Ac

S. R. HENDERSON. Ill Main-st SMITH & WHEELER, 150 Main-sti Stoves, Mantles and Grates, R.L. BALL, 128 Main-st. 'r-

Stencil Dles and Stock.

J. R. FOOTE, 139 Main-st. Sash, Doors, Blinds and l.umber. CLIFT WILLIAMS, cor. 9th and Mulberry

Stationary and Portable Engines. J. A. PARKER, cer. First and Walnnt,. Tin and Slate Roofling, MOORE HAGERTY, 181 Main -Et. Trunk and Traveling Bag Mannfac turers. V. G. DICKHOUT. 196 Jfain-st.

Watches, Jewelry and Diamonds. J, R. FREEMAN. Opera Honse. J. R. TILLOTSON. 99 Main-st.

BOOTS & SHOES.

CHRIST LEIBINGr.

Custom Boot & Shoe Store,

Main Street between 6th 7th, Kaufman's Block.

CUSTOMshort

WORK done in the neatest style

and on notice at reasonable rates. Constantly on hand—a large assortment of self-made Boots and Shoes, Come and eX' amino, yourself. rGood Eastern Work at low prices. cctl9-3m

If yon want something good in the way of a nice Boot or Shoe

call at I. K. CLATFKL-

TBB'S

and see a pair of

the Exoelsior Gaiters. They are the latest style, nice and convenient.

My Specialty:—Men'sFipe W Work. •^.Repairing dose with Neatness and Dispatch.

LOCAL NOTICES.

RICHARDSON USES,

In full assortment: also Bleactied Goods in New York Mills, Wamsntta. Lonsdale, Hill, Hadley, Hope. Ac. Utica and Waltham 8-4, 9-4,10*4 Bleached and Brown Sheetings.

I3LANKETS,

11

Miss M. A. RARIDAN, 80 Main-st. S. L. STRAUS, 149 Main-st. Marble Scotch Granite Monuments F. B. E. W. PALMER & CO.,

DRY GOODS, AC.

THE

itii no

n'.i s.rtbiiv.ibei pitf

4 f.Closing out. i'

-9

BUT' :/o

AisnsroTjnsrGE

.- a n»vw-v»nsw

diate clearance.

oar stock

•Jfil

TUELL. RIPLEY DEMING,

litysa ti! ci (Fifth and Main street,

SSI

EBBE.

VTS

Warren, -floberg & Co.'s.

tu ,06J ,7

.i:.•'! ?L -!s Jt v. .bvjel 'Jtaw __ •. n-SJ&fJ $1*1 '"J 'i 'id* v* rit ':hV

-f rrtt w- ft

&.* \\in Oi

SHAWLS,:

ijsiisitJ .iM thai •gai 1- «M?-: ?»•.«

•t Cost and below.: E.'t fr'ffSt'S •510'iftrf

UNDERWEAR,

At Cost and below.

I

fuvii

~y.

FANCY GOODS,

Regardless of Value. 1

Satins de Chene, in cloth shades, reduced to 25 cents per yard

S*

DAYS iMGEft!

tiiy.1*---*1-

ABEA^?IT

Closing Out ©ale

OF

rt1 S""

-iaa'. tie*- 'SfV-i',

WINTER '4RY^rGOODS!

it

IFFFTCR- O/' ATCIA

•-•1% VTitj.

.jj ye^.rcU '.'T

iwja 'jilt 'i

1

A-B-

is* f-»d

Si,) tJ -jn':..

O sif "oi MTfc oiiw •/»•»«, in-if' li! "TJ- .« -i il I •jji'-.rtjl.t

Still farther redactions in prices of every .description of Winter Goods to close them out before Inventory. r.jrji

FURS! FURS!!

At Cost and below.

I'T 4

i'/i

kii

SljT ,* itC,' 111' i»ih .ai'vusttijiii

••nu

DRESS GOODS,

At a Great Reduction. -aoo i»mo won tktu

ir^ri .if,.

.a.

J.-

CLOAKS

Regardless of value

HOSIERY,

Reduced in Price.

,r

FANCY SILKS,

Also, special bargains in Waterproofs, Cloths, Cassi meres, Flannels, Housekeeping Goods, Linens, Sheet ings, Towelings, etc., etc., for the Next Twenty Days at

Semi-Annual» Clearance Sales!

All WINTER GOODS are marked down DRESS GOODS to cost and in some cases below cost.

...

These goods are alfofrecent purcliasaii arid are aa good and fashionable aa oan be bought anywhere. We want to use our money in the purchase of Spring Oooas. We'are determined to keep no Winter Fabrics until next season^and we know that by making prices LOW ENOUGH we candispo3e of our pre* ent in a very few day

AU-Wool Plaids, All Dress Goods, ranging in value from '25 cents to 50 cents,

Reduced to the uniform price of 25 cents per yard. Children's Merino Hose, reduced to 50 cents per dozen pair, Children's Fine Hose reduced to FLAT COST in every instance

Ladies' Fleeced Hose reduced to FLAT COST in every instance Ladies' Berlin Fleeced Gloves, nice quality and desirable col-

ors, at 18 cents per pair. Children's Merino Fleeced Moves, nice quality and desirable

colors, at 15 cents per pair. All Hosiery, Gloves and Underwear at prices tojnsure imme­

Skirts at 75 cents, $1.00 and $1.25.

We cannot enumerate the bargains we offer, But we are determined to get Hd ir heavy fabrics, and it behooves every one in need of Dry Goodi to inject our it. .. .'1 [1-1 let 5 a 7 f-

TUELL RIPLEY & DEMING,-

Corner Main and Fifth Streets,

jf'o.

At Cost and below.

WARREN, HOBERG & CO'S.,

TUELL. RIPLEV & D£MINC.

CLEARANCE SALE!

Tuell, Ripley & Deming

Opera House Comer.

rr-..

USTIDIAKT-A.,

PROSPECTUS.

THE

NEW YORK TRIBUNE,

FOR 187S.

3

•m

The consolidation of Italy, so long fragmentary and impotent, into one powerful State, with Rome as its capital the humiliation of Prance through a series of crushing defeats, ending with the siege and capitulation of her proud metropolis the expulsion of the Bourbons from the Spanish throne, and the substitution for them of a scion of the most liberal among royal houses the virtual absorption of the kingdoms of Saxeny. Wurtemberg, Bavaria, with Baden, Hesse, the Hanse Towns, &c., under the headship of Prussia, into the triumphant and powerful empire of Qermany and the arming of Russia to reassert her preponderance in the councils of Europe, or to prosecute her often postponed but never relinquished designs on the great oity lounded by Constantino, and the vast but decaying and anarchial dominion of the Sultan, all combine to invest with profound interest the ever-changing phases oi our tidings from the

Old World. THE TRIBUNK, through trusted correspondents stationed at all points in Europe where great movements are in progress or imminent, aims to present a complete and instructive panorama of events on that continent, and to mirror the prolonged struggle between middle'age Feudalism and Ecclesiasticism on the one hand and Nine-teenth-Century skepticism and secularism on the other. Recognizing a Divine Providence in all that proceeds and is, it looks hopefully on the great conflict as destined (like our own recent convulsion) to evolve from strife, disaster, and seeming chaos, a fairer and happier future for the toiling masses of mankind. "In our own conntry, a war upon corruption and rascality in office has been inaugurated in our City, whereby the government of our State has been revolutionized through an initial triumph of Reform whioh surpasses the most sanguine anticipations. It is morally certain that the movement thus inaugurated cannot, in its progress, be circumscribed to aay locality or any party, but that its purifying influence is destined to be felt in every part of the Union, rebuking veniality, exposing robbery, wresting power from politicians by trade, and confiding it in these worthiest and fittest to wield it, 'To this beneficent and vitally needed Reform, TBK

TRIBUNK will devote its best (nergies, rogardless of personal inteiests or party predilections, esteeming the choice of honest and faithful men to office as of all New Departures the most essontial and auspicious.

The virtual surrender by the Democratic party of its hostility to Equal Rights regardless of Color has divested our current politics of half their bygone intensity. However parties may henceforth rise or fall, it is clear that the fundamental principles which I have hitherto honorably distinguished the

Republicans are henceforth to be regarded as practically aceepted by the whole country. The right of every man to his own limbs.and sinews—the equality of all citizens before the law—the inability of a State toenslave any portion of its people—the duty of the Union to guarantee to every citizen the full enjoyment of his liberty until he forfeits it by crime—such are the broad and firm' foundations of our National edifico and' palsied be the hand which shall seek to displace thom 1 Though not yet twenty years old, the Republican party has completed thenoble fabric of Emancipation, and may fairly invoke thereon the sternest judgment of Man and the benignant smile of Qod.

Henceforth, the mission of our Republic is one oi Peaceful Progress. To protect theweak and the humble from violence and oppression—to extend the boundaries and diffuse the blessings of Civilization—to stimulate Ingenuity to the production of new inventions for economizing Labor and thus enlarging Production—to draw nearer to each other the producers of Food and Fabrics, of Grains and Metals, and thus enhance the gains of Industry by reducing the cost of-' transportation and exchanges between farm-' ers and artisans—such is the inspiring task to which this Nation now addresses itself, and by which it would fain contribute to tho progress, enlightenment, and happiness of our race. To this great and good work, THR TRIBUNE contributes its zealous, persist efforts.

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TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE.

DAILY TRIBUNE, Mail Subscribers, $10 per SKXIannum. -WKRKLX TRIBUNK, Mail Subscribers, 54 per annnm. Five copies, or over, t'i each an extra copy will be sent for every club of ten sent tor at one time or, if

Sreferred,

4

a copy ef Recellections of a

usy Lite, by Mr. Greeley. TERMS OF THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE, To Mail Subscribers. One Copy, one year, 52 issues $2 Five Copies, one year, 52 issues

To ONE ADDRESS, (all atone Postoffioe.) 10 Copies $1 50 each 20 Copies 1 25 each 50 Copies 1 00 each

And One Extra Copy to each Club. To NAMXS

OF

SUBSCRIBRBS (all at one Post' office.)

10 Copies W each 20 Copies 1 35 each 50 Copies 1 10 each

And One Extra Copy to each Club. Persons entitled to an extra copy can. if referred, have either of the following ooks, postage prepaid: Political Economy, by Horace Greeley: Pear Culture for Profit, by P. T. Quinn The Elements of Agriculture by Geo. E, Waring.

Advertising Hates.

DAILY TRIBUNK, 30C., 40c., 50c.. 75c.. and 81 per line. SEMI-WSKKLY TRIBUXE, 25 and 50 cents per line. WEEKLY TRIBUNK, 82, $3, and $5 per line.

According to position in the paper*

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COAL.

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All Good.

O. C.

OAEET,

AGENT FOB

BA

RTLETT COMPANY,

OFFICE: Rankin's Drue Stort, Sixth St, l'"\

Jt i'.,

4

».