Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 1, Number 73, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 August 1870 — Page 3
HUDSON, BROWN & CO., Proprietors. JR. X. HUDSON". C. W. BUOWM. L. 51. ROSE.
Office: North Fifth St., near Main.
Tiie
DAILY GAZETTE
is published every after
noon, exccpt Sunday, and sold by the carriers at 20c per week. By mail 810 per year 85 for 6 months 82.50 for 3 months. NEWSBOYS' EDITION of the
DAILY GAZETTE
Superstition of the Alaska Indians. A correspondent of the San Francisco Bulletin writes as follows from Sitka:
It may be unknown to our readers that the Indians of some portions of this Territory have been in the habit of sacrificing the lives of one or more slaves on the death of their chiefs or medicine men. The custom is based on the supposition that in tho spirit land the services of such slaves are necessary to the comfort and well being of the departed, and to avoid the trouble of employing such in that happy hunting ground, they dispatch one of his human chattels at the same time the spirit of the warrior chief takes its upward flight. An instance of this occurred here three weeks ago. About ten o'clock at night the sentinel on the palisade gate, leading tolndiantown, was attracted by the wailing cry of a squaw. Inquiring the cause of her distress, she informed him that her son was then tied up preparatory to being stabbed—the usual mode of dispatching them—for the purpose above mentioned.
The commandant of the post was notified, and an officer was sent to rescue the intended victim of such barbarity. On the officer's arrival a strange sight presented itself. On a bed lay the dying chief an intelligent looking boy of ten or twelve years of age, bound hand and foot, looked the incarnation of despair. Arund him, with drawn knives, stood the relatives of the dying man, at whose signal they would be buried in the vitals of the trembliug youth. The sombre gloom of the apartment, lit up fitfully by tho smouldering fire the wild, unearthly sound of the tin-tin, and wailing death-cry of the tribe outside the house, made up a picture to be appreciated only by a witness of the scene. The officer immediately released the boy and brought him to the garrison, where he was kept until the family of the departed warrior promised not to molest him in the future. This has been the second instance of the kind occuring here since our occupation of the territory.
AT
a very successful seance in Cincinnati the other night, a man burst into tears when the medium described very accurately a tall, blue-eyed spirit standing by him with light side-whiskers, and his hair parted in the middle. "Do you know him?" inquired a man by his side in a sympathetic whisper. 'Know him I guess I do, replied the unhappy man wiping his eyes. "He was engaged to my wife. If he hadn't died he would have been her husband instead of me. O George! George!" lie murmured in a voice choked with emotion, "why, why did you peg out?"
THE
IS
issued every Saturday at 12 jr., and is sold by news boysexclusively. It is a large 36 column paper, and contains a large amount of miscellaneous reading, and the news up to the hour of its publication. The WEEKLY
GAZETTE
9S.OO
ADVIJHTI.SING' RATES
the
GAZETTE
is issued every Tiiur.-,
day, and contains all the best matter of the seven daily issues. The
WEEKLY GAZETTE
ten copies, one year,
is
the largest paper printed in Terre^"te, and is sold for: One copy, per year, 82.00, tnree copies, per year, 85.OO live copies, perye^r
and
one to getter
up of Club, 815.00 one copy, six niont is 81.00: one copy, three months »0c. All sub scriptions must be paid for in advance. The paper will, invariably, be discontinued at ex
for the different issues of
made known on application.
Tiie GA/ETTEestablishment is the best equipped in point of Presses and Types in this section, and orders for any kind of Type Printing solicited, to which prompt attention will be given.
Address all letters, HUDSON, BROWN & CO.,
.GAZETTE,
Terre Haute, Ind.
From the Germantown Chronicle.
How Leau Folks May Grow Fat. We published a week or two since card for those persons who sought a reductive boarding house system, by which their superfluous adipose might be dispensed with. It seems that Dr. Dio Lewis has been thinking in the interest of an opposite class—those who are thin to unloveliness. He certainly has the larger enterprise. For one fat person there area dozen or a score of lean ones. They are dried up, and in danger of blowing away. How their bones rattle in the wind There are cavernous hollows in their temples and cheeks while their eyes roll like great black china saucers. It seems that they have been drinking vinegar all their lives or have the consumption or have allowed life to ooze out of them in some unlawful way. We always feel for them. So does Dr. Dio Lewis. We are always afraid that in the crowd they will get jostled against us, and their sharp angles—bones which no cushion or flesh covers—would do us harm. In fact we set them down as a dangerous class in the community. Fat people are heavy, and dozy, and a burden to themselves. Our reductive boarding house contemplates them as unfortunates and is itself a pure philanthropy. But lean people are really dangerous—and in this age of phosphates are often carried off in the night and burned for dry bones. No doubt a large percentage of murders could be traced to some sort of leanness or other.
Now Dr. Lewis comes sensibly t« the rescue. He sends these skeletons to bed betimes. They have rattled in between the sheets ordinarily at 11 or half-past 11. The doctor tells them that will never do. They must bid the busy, tea-steeped, gossippy world farewell by half-past 8 or 9 o'clock. This fagging out of the flesh resultsi part from late hours. Susie used to be a buxom maid. Now she has a tight skin across her pinched nose and anxious oheeks, Susie has been to more evening dress parados for young children than is consistent with health and flesh. So, though Susie is scarcely in her teens she bids fair to be one of these old skeletons that rattle in the wind before she is 21. All the healthy, happy juices of life are going in this folly, and she will be old and dry and fretted, and good for nothing very young. And the case is the same with Mary, and Alice, and Sarah Jane. Their fathers and mothers ought to put them to bed early for the next ten years to come, instead of ordering hackney coaches, in ordering Tom to take them to evening dissipations at Bigbug's, or at Madam Showoff's.
The first condition of plumpness is early to bed. Dr. Lewis says the second is water. Here we think he may be right, but do not know. We are sure he is right about early retiring. He says when you retire drink water drink all you can—one tumbler, two tumblers, and more if you can. Then take by day abundance of fresh air. Ride—ride till you are hungry. Eat—eat oat meal porrige, cracked wheat, Graham mush, sweet apples baked, and have no scruples about sugar and cream. Take a nap in the day time. Go and see the jolliest persons you know. Avoid the solemnvlsaged. Shun the lugubrious. Cultivate the cheerful—the men and women who laugh. Laugh yourself. Laugh and grow fat. Keep your skin clean. Sleep in a room where the sun shines. Have everything bright and cheery about you. Sleep ten hours if you can. And then, says the Doctor, *'in six months you will be as plump a3 ever your lover could wish."
Rev. Mr. Snow, a fashionable
clerical of New York, was a little displeased when he picked up the^New York Star and saw a sketch of his last sermon under the head of "Sunday Snowbawling. v.
I
Dr. Leonard Marsh, for fifteen years Professor in the University of Vermont, died yesterday morning,
Opinions of the Press
From the Express, Dec. 20,1809. TFRPK HAUTE GOING AHEAD.
with sincere pleasure that we notice from with Sincere improvements that time to tun
their
he observer
SSSty- ,We
our
There is nothing in the dry goods line but what can be bought at the greatest advantage at the New York Store. Their tremendous stock and low prices are bound to draw customers, and no one will need to complain of having "nothing to wear" if they trade at the Store.
THE
73, Main street, near the Court House Square.
NEW YORK STORE—We
ANY
in
lwas^f
ketones, machine shops, iron works, &c and last, but not least, of our merchant Everything for use or luxury, and for every station in life can be procured as good and as cheap here as in the larger cities, and we are glad to notice from the general tone of the trade that our merchants and manufacturer are well pleased with the
patronage
bestowed
on them. One house in particular we would speak of at this time. 1 he New York Dry Goods Store, No. 73 Mam street, presents at the present time prominent attractions. The proprietors, Messrs. Wittenberg, Ruschaupt & Co., have been engaged in business in this
city
for about
three months, and by strict attention to business, fair dealing, and by always a a a they have gathered around them a laree circle of customers, who, as wedailynotice, crowd the New York fctoie, and keep the salesmen busy dealing out e^ ery kind of merchandize. Their success is not only attributed to a perfect knowledge of
business, but also to their
mode of buying and selling their g°°ds. Being supplied with abundant capital all their purchases are made for cash and from first
hands,
every change in the
market is taken advantage of by their experienced buyers, and when their goods are placed upon their counters on sale, they are offered at the lowest possible margin upon cost. A regular system of percentage is adopted by this House, the benefit of purchases below market value is thereby always given to the customers, and by having "oneprice only," all are treated alike, all share the same advantages in buying dry goods, and truly justice is done to all!
The New York Store has become one of the most popular institutions of the place. If good goods at low prices, kind treatment and fair dealings, can build up a trade, the New York Store will take the rank among the largest business
houses of Terre Haute.
0^£ PRICE OJJL1!
N O E I A I O N JUSTICE TO ALL!
And tiie best Ilstrffains in "O Goods
AT THE
73 Main Street,
New York Store, year Cour House Square
From the Terre Haute Journal, Dec. 18, '69.
Trade has now fully begun with our merchants. All are busy as bees to get their goods in order and ready for sale. One of the establishments so engaged is the New York Dry Goods Store, is o. 73, Main street. Their force of salesmen has been hard at work for the past few days in opening and marking the new purchases just received and which were bought at the great forced sales in the Eastern market. To look at all the muslins, flannels, prints, shawls, dress goods, furs, etc., besides the smaller articles usually kept in in a large house of this kind, will certainly be to buy, for as regards prices, as we know from personal observation, they are certainly the lowest we ever heard of. ji.ii
The one price system, as adopted by this house, works like a charm. There is no overcharging, no trying to make an extra dime. The dealings at the Aew York Store are fair and square, and every attention is shown to all their patrons. It is the constant study of the proprietors to place before their customers any and all goods at the lowest rates and by charging the lowest per centage upon the cost ol the goods, the customer receives the direct benefit of purchases made under the market value. It is a well known fact that the New York Store has been offering unusual inducements to buyers since it was opened. The recent h6avy declines in all kinds of dry goods, however, enables them "to sell goods still cheaper, as their facilities for buying are unequaled.
Mr. Charles Wittenberg, the head of this house, is one of the most popular dry goods men in this State. Pie learned the rudiments of the dry goods business with Mr. M. W. Williams, at the Old Prairie City Store, in this city, 18 years ago. Mr. Fred. Ruschaupt, has been longexperienced in the business. Mr. Harmon Schweitzer, the other member of the firm, has been long and favorably known to our citizens, having been for 12 years a leadin"- salesman in the house of W. S. Ryce & Co., in this city. -Saturday Evenip,q Gazette.
F. I
THE New York Store of Wittenberg, Ruschaupt &Co., 73 Main street, Terre Haute, is now in receipt of a magnificent stock of new dress goods, staple goods, ladies dress goods, &c. They have also added to their stock a fine line of carpets, wall papers, shades, curtain materials, &c., selected by Mr. Wittenberg himself in the Eastern markets. The are clever gentlemen to deal with, and spare no pains to build np a trade.—Fori*
1
New York
New York Store is located at No.
child can be sent to the New York
Store, and will buy a3 cheap as the best iudge of Dry Goods.
NEW YOBS STORE. Opinions of the Press. From the Sullivan Democrat.
THE NEW YORK STORE,
NEW YORK STORE,
Court House Sfluare.
THE
AT
NEW YORK STORE, 73
near Court House Square.
TERRE
HAUTE.—This establishment has now one of the finest stocks of goods ever brought to that city. Their buyer is evidently a man ol taste and well acquainted with the wants of the people. The stock comprises every article in the Dry Goods line from the most substantial to the richest dress goods. The business in every department is systematically and honorably conducted, there is one price only for every article, and all customers are treated with the best attention and courtesy. We predict for the New York Sjore a large trade, for people will buy where the best inducements are offered
Main Street
From the Prairie Beacon and Valley Blade.
Visiting Terre Haute a few days ago, we, of course, dropped into the New York Store, and were agreeably surprised to meet our old friend Harmon Schweitzer, now a partner in this establishment. We have seen some big things in the wTay of Dry Goods Stores, but the New York Store looms up above them all, in quality and quantity of goods, displayed taste and systematical arrangement and general management. From the crowds of eager buyers that fill this House, we must judge that the proprietors ofl'er extra inducements to their customers, as the accommodating clerks were busy as bees in cutting off and putting up all kinds of merchandise. We say, success to the New York Store, and the one price sys tem.
73 Main street, near
ON TIIE "RAMPAGE''—"NOTESOP TRAVEL."—On Wednesday morning, Sthinst.,
we got aboard Beattie's "Lightning Express" bound for "the East." Arrived at Merom about 10:30 A. M., when we "changed hacks" for Sullivan, at which place we arrived just in time for the train for Terre Haute. Arrived at the latter named place about 4 p. M., and put up at the Terre Haute House, of which that prince of good fellows, Capt. T. C. Buntin, is proprietor. We went "down town," and and stopped in at the "New York Store," of Wittenberg, Ruschaupt & Co., where we found quite an array of clerks, both ladies and gentlemen, busy waiting upon the throng of customers in the store, and anxious to secure a portion a portion of the good and cheap goods they have on sale. It strikes us very forcibly that this establishment is the store of the city. The immense variety of all kinds of Dry Goods draws buyers from all parts of the country, and the proprietors are determined to supply all their customers at the lowest prices. Try them. —Robinson Argus.
New York Store, 73 Main street,
near Court House Square.
table-cloths and the thousand other articles kept in a large house like this. Satisfaction is expressed on every countenance, and all seem pleased with the bargains just made. The one price system, cheap goods and large stock, is building up a trade for the New York Store that the proprietors may well be proud of.
COTTON
made a hasty
call at this large dry goods establishment on Wednesday. Messrs. Wittenberg, Ruschaupt & Co., occupy the elegant store room, 73 Main street Their handsome banner, hung in the middle of the street, indicates the location the full length of Main street. The first floor of the building is used as a retail room and the second and third floors for notions and duplicate stock. In the spring they will open out a stock of carpet, wall paper, and shades. Their present stock of Dress Goods, including Merinos, Empress Cloths, Black Alpaca, and also lower and cheaper grades of Dress Goods, is most complete. In Shawls they have the best domestic manufacture of Shawls, &c., and a very full stock of imported Paisleys, Broche, &c., which they offer for sale a£ low prices. They have also a full line of domestics. To enumerate their stock in full would be an endless task.
parasols, silk parasols, sun um
brellas, at New York Store, 73 Main street, near Court House Square.
From tue Clark Co., Ills., Herald
BUILDING UP A TRADE.—With
CARPET
Beacon.»A
most
men it takes not only capital but years to build up a trade and make the investment pay, and there are very few whose efforts are crowned with complete success, particularly in the Dry Goods line. It requires peculiar talent and tact, even where sufficient umouiit of cftpitnl is backlug 1 and strengthening its spinal column, to gain the coveted goal and to arrive at the desired point, but here and there a case occurs, that is so marked that no observer can fail to notice it, and it fives us pleasure to notice the successful operations of Messrs. Wittenberg, Ruschaupt & Co., in building up a trade at their New Yook Store, No. id Main street, Terre Haute, Ind. The one price system and the firm determination to sell Dry Goods cheap, a large and well
selected
stock, together with polite treat
ment of all their customers have made the New York Store one of the most popular Houses in Terre Haute, and built up a trade for the proprietors, agreeably exceeding their expectations. Success to the New York Store!
WARP, all colors at the New
York Store, 73 Main street, near Court House Square.' U\ t'WJ 'i
hi
It
»HliS
From the Brazil Miner.
"We take pleasure in presenting to our readers a short sketch of one of the largest and most successful Dry Goods Houses in Terre Haute. The New York Store, 73 Main Street, was opened in September last The proprietors, young energetic men have shown by their unparalleled succe^lhat they are thoroughly posted in their business and are supplied with sufficient capital to make all their purchases for cash. The strict adherence to the one price system, their large and always complete stock, and their attention and politeness to every customer, have made the New York Store at once a popular and profitable store to buy at, and the crowds that daily visit this store show best, that the people appreciate the efforts of Messrs. Wittenberg, Ruscbau
Co. to aeU goods oneap
At Half Price from this date.
38dw
From the Hoosier State.
THEREisoneHouseinthe
beautiful city
of Terre Haute that will not fail to attract the attention ot any one passing down Main street toward the old Court House, a new style of sign, a neat flag is displayed across the street, and informs the citizen as well as the stranger, that here the New York Store, the Dry Goods Aouse of the place, is to be found. We enter. A busy throng is presented to our view. The farmer, the mechanic, the richly dressed lady all seem engaged in the same pursuit, and the obliging clerks are displaying the rich dress goods and shawls, the comfortable looking flannels, and blankets, muslins, prints, toweling,
SET AIL DBY MODS.
ATJG-TJST 11, 1870.
4 1 1 4
TUELL, RIPLEY & DEMING'S
GRAND SEMI-ANNUAL
Clearance Sales Have Commenced!
Japanese Poplins, Lenos, Check Mozambique®, and all
SlTMMlSK OOODS
.h
40 per cent, off for goods for Traveling Suits.
10,000 yards Merimac and other Standard Prints at 10 Cents per yard.
Elegant styles Jaconet Lawns at half price. Satin striped Grenadines reduced to 371 cents.
Elegant Lineof Black Alpacas from 25 cents.
Muslin Grenadines at 20 cents, worth 50 cents.
Hosiery, White Goods and Notions at price to insure IMMEDIATE SALE.
We Must Make Room for Fall Stock,
And ae reyda to offer Great BargainSjin Summer Goods.
Good yard-wide bleached and Brown Muslin at 10c. per yard.
The best brands of Blaclied and Brown Muslins at exceedingly low prices.
I E
RIPLEY A N DEMING,
Corner Main and Fifth Sts
HERZ & ARNOLD.
We fear NO Opposition.
sol1
tion Prices.
•. V/J -v/.v
next man,
TIMES^:
Ut uXt~i.il
with
We are not governed by Competi
We sell only GOOD Goods
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We buy them AS CHEAP, as the
And sell- at prices to SUIT THE
Wl-
«Between Third and Fourth Sts.
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BURNETT'S EXTRACTS.
BURNETT'S fiavorog EXTRACTS,
,T
.»$&•.« .-!€ v/MiaS-.*} LEMON, VANILLA, &C.
.'7 CINCINNATI.
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Main StreeV*i'ii
89
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tliese
Extracts consists in
PURITY and Great Strength.
They are warranted free from the poisonous oils and acids which enter into the composition oi many of the lictitious fruit flavors now in the market. They are not only TRITE TO THEIR NAMES, but are PREPARED FROM FRUITS OF THE BEST QUALITY, and are so highly concentrated that a comparatively small quantity only need be used.
POPIJI.AR HOTELS.
"Pre-eminently superior."—!Parker House, Boston. The best in the world."—[Fifth Avenue Hotel, N. Y.
V*71, XI. 1, "Used exclusively for years."—[Continental Hotel, Philadelphia. "Wefind them to bo the best."—[Southern Hatel, St. Louis. "None have compared with yours in purity and strength."—[Burnet House, Cincinnati.
We use them exclusively."-[Sherman House, Chicago.
FAMILY GROCERS.
Cincinnati, February 5,1870.
Messrs. Joseph Burnett & Co., Boston: GENTLEMEN—We have sold your Flavoring Extracts for more than ten years. They have given perfect satisfaction, and sales have constantly increased. We eould not be induced to sell, nor would our customers take any other Extracts. Yours truly,
JOSEPH R. FEEBLES' SONS, Northeast corner Filth and Race sth.
Cincinnati, November 17,1869.
Messrs. Joseph Burnett & Co., Boston: GENTLEMEN—Your Flavoring Extracts please my customers better than any others, and they are the only kinds I use in flavoring my soda syrups, having proved them to be the BEST.
Yours, respectfully, T. S. PENDERY, Fifth A Vine sts.
Wholesale Confectioners, &c.
,, Office of L. N. Smith & Co., Wholesale Confectioners, &c., Cincinnati, April 30,1870. Messrs. Joseph Burnett & Co., Boston:
GENTS—We have been selling your Extracts for some time, and find they suit our trade better than any others, and we do not hesitate to say that they are the VERY BEST we have ever used or sold.
Wholesale Grocers' Sundries
From the well-known house of J. T. Warren «fc Co., who can supply dealers with all kinds and sizes of these favorite Extracts:
Office of J. T. Warren & Co., Cincinnati, January 3,1890.
Messrs. Joseph Burnett & Co., Boston: GENTLEMEN—The large and increasing demand we have had for your Flavoring Extracts convinces us they are taking the place of chear, impure brands. THEY SELL UPON THEIR, MERITS, and give entire satisfaction to our jobbing trade. Vary truly yours, ... J. T. WARREN & CO.
®as~ Great euro should be useu in ine selection of flavoring extracts. Cakes, Pies, Puddings, Ice Creams, &c., depend upon their flavor for their success hence only the most healthful and pure kinds of extracts should be used.
BURNETT'S EXTRACTS are for sale by ALL DEALERS' IN FINE GROCERIES, and by DRUGGISTS. Many dealers desire to sell cheaper impure brands, affording larger profits. Beware of them.
A Magnificent Head of Hair
IS SECURED & RETAINED BY THE USE OF
BURNETT'S .. COCOAINE
A COMPOUND OF COCOANUT OIL, &c., 70R DRESSING THE HAIR.
For efficacy »nd agreeableness it is without an ^""promotes the growth of the Hair, and is ood for BALDNESS, DANDRUFF, and IRRI
GATIONS OF THE SCALP. Apply BURNETT'S COCOAINE to the Hair, to render it pliable, soft and brilliant.
The qualities of BURNETT'S COCOAINE, as preventing the Hair from falling, are truly remarkable.
Burnett's Cocoaine cleans, perfumes & dresses the Hair beautifully.—[Home Journal. Burnett's Cocoaine for the Hair is unequaled —[True Flag, Boston.
Jos. Burnett & Co., Boston,
SOLE PROPRIETORS.
Idwts6m Fors ale ly nil Dmgglsts
GAS FIXTURES.
M'HENBY & CO., and 8 East Fourth and 162 Main St.,
THE PLACE TO BUY
EITHEE AT
WHOLESALE OR RETAIL,
EVERYTHING IN THE I^INE OF
Gas Fixtures, Lamps and Chandeliers, Pipe, Pumps, Tools,
In GAS FIXTURES,
WE
offer a choice selection of the best assigns in Bronze and Gilt that have been produced this season in the principal manufactories of the East. In our stock will be found all that is new or desirable in Gas 1 ixtures, for lighting
Churches, Halls, Dwellings, Stores, &c
Oil Lamps and Chandeliers.
In this line, our assortment ooTiiprisM all the late patterns and improvements Chandeliers, iHANGING LAMPS,
BRACKET LANPS, W-htk IIALL AND TABLE LlOHls LANTERNS, *c.
Furnished wuh the
latest
improvements Sin
Burners, Shades. &c. Oil that will not explore an 1 Chimneys that will not break.
In Iroa Pipes and Fittings,
Our stock is full and complete, and our prices as low as the lowest.
In Pumps and Plumbers' Goods,
We have all that can be wanted in the|way ol
Cistern and Well Pumps, Lift and Force Pumps, Beer Pumps, Garden 1 umps, Ac.,
I* Meter and Burner Plyers, Gas Fitters'Augurs, Chisels, Ac., &c
'its
Tiie Dome Gas Stoves,
For summer .cooking. sutis/itu'tes, ment of these -cheap and Range during warm weather for the and Stove, ^or family use, COMFORT AN© ECONOMY, bemf*AgHEgroofrom the annoyance of HEAT, SMOKE
No family shoeSd be without DOME GAS STOVE Bar Remember the PIace'McIIENRY CO.
Id3m j-' «j
'if.
SAWWOKSa
PASSAIC SAW WORKS, NEWARK, NEW JERSE\,
2? V--
qi
[Trade Mark Challenge RXB.]
U|tICHABD!SOK
BROS-
MANUFACTURERSSuperiorCross
thEverysaw^Is^mminted
a
.vl-
Tempered Ma
chine Ground, Extra Cast Steel, Circular, Mulv, Gang, Pit, Drag and Cat Saws. Also Hand Panel Ripping, Butcher. Bow, Back. Compass, and every description of Light Saws, ol
perfect challenges liv
spection. Warranted of uniform .good temper. Ground thin on beck and ganged.* "7
NEW^ YORK TRIBUNE. The Great Farmers' Paper!
THE PAPER OF THE PEOPLE,
NOW IS THE TIME TO SUBSCRIBE FOR THE
GREAT FAMILY NEWSPAPER.
It is Cheap because its Circulation is Larger than that of any other Newspaper.
NOW IS THE TIME TO FORM CLIJBS
THE NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE contains all the important Editorials published in the Daily Tribune, except tho^e of merely local interest also Literary and Scientific Intelligenoe Reviews of the most interesting and important New Books letters from our large corps of Correspondents latest news received by Telegraph from all parts of the world a summary of all important intelligence in this city and elsewhere a Synopsis of the Proceedings of Congress and State Legislature when ia session Foreign News received by every steamer Exclusive Reports of the Proceedings ol the Farme s' Club of the American Institute Talks about Fruit Stock, Financial, Cattle, Dry Goods, and General Market Reports,
The full Reports of the American Institute Farmers' Club, and the various Agricultural Reports, in each number, are richly worth a year's subscription.
HORTICULTURAL DEPARTMENT. To keep pace with the growing interest in practical Horticulture, and to comply with frequent appeals lrom all parts of the country for information on the subject, we have engaged the services of a person who is experienced in rural att'airs to write in a lucid style a series of articles on the Management of Small Farms, Fruit and Vegetable Culture, and how to make them pay, giving general and specific directions from planting to the ultimate disposal of the crops.
Of late years there has been a lucrative business carried on by unprincipled men, in selling worthless and old plants under new names to the inexperienced. The Tribune will be always readv to guard the Farmeragainst any such imposition that comes within our knowledge.
VETERINARY DEPARTMENT. To make The Tribune still more valuable to its agricultural readers, we have engaged Prof. JAMES LAW, Veterinary Surgeon in Cornell University, taanswer questions concerning diseases of Cattle, Horses, Sheep, and other domestic animals, and to prescribe remedies. Answers and. prescriptions will be given only through the columns of The Tribune. We are sure that this new feature in The Tribune will add largely to its readers, as all owners of animals are liable to need the information proffered. Inquiries should be made as brief as possible, that the questions, answers, and prescriptions may be published together. In short, we intend that The Tribune shall keep in the advance in all that concerns the Agricultural, Manufacturing, Mining and other interests of the country, and that for variety and completeness, It shail remain altogether the most valuable, interesting and instructive Newspaper published in the world.
It has been well observed that a careml reading and study of the Farmers' Club Reports in The Tribunealone will save a Farmer hundreds of dollais in his crop. In addition to these reports, we shall continue to print the best things written on the subject of agriculture by American and foreign writers,'and shall increase these features from year toyear. As it is, no prudent Farmer can do without it. As a lesson to his workmen alone, every Farmer should place the Wnotiy Tribune upon his table every Satnrday evening.
The Tribune is the best and cheapest paper tn the country. This is not said in a spirit of boastfulness. It has fallen to New York to create the greatest newspapers of the country. Here concentrate the commerce, the manufactures, the mineral resources, the agricultural wealth of the Republic. Here all the news gathers, and the patronage is so large that journalists can afford to print it. This is the strength of The Tribune. We print the cheapest, and liest edited weekly newspaper in the country. We have all the advantages around us. We have great Daily and Semi-Weekly editions. All the elaborate and intricate machinery of our establishment—perhaps the most complete in America—is devoted to the purpose of making The Weekly Tribune the best and cheapest newspaper in the world. The result is that we have so systematized and expanded our resources that every copy of The Weekly Tribune contains as much matter as a duodecimo volume. Think of it! For two dollars, the subscriber to The Tribune for one year buys as much reading matter as though he filled a shelf of his library with fifty volumes, containing the greatest works in the language. The force of cheapness can no further go.
THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE is the paper of the people. Here the eager student may learn the last lession of science. Here the scholar may read reviews of the best books. Here may be found correspondence from all parts of the world, the observations of sincere and gifted men, who serve the Tribune in almost every country. ...
The Tribune is strong by reason of its enormous circulation and great cheapness. It has long been conceeded that The Weekly Tribune has the largest circulation of any newspaper in the country. For years we have printed twice as many papers, perhaps, as all of the other weekly editions of the city dailies combined, This is why we are enabled to do our work so thoroughly and cheaply. The larger our circulation, the better paper we can make.
What are the practical suggestions? Many. Let every subscriber renew his subscription, ana urge his neighbor to do the same. If a man cannot afford to pay two dollars, let him raise a club, by inducing his neighbors to subscribe, and we shall send him a copy gratis for his trouble. No newspaper so large and complete as The Weekly Tribune was ever before offered at so low a price. Even when our currency was at par with gold, no such paper but The Tribune was offered at that price and The Tribune then cost us far less than it now does. We have solved the problem of making the best ana cheapest newspaper in America.
TERMS OF THE WEEKLY" TRIBUNE. TO MAIL STJBSCRIBEBS: One copy, one year, 52 issues ?2 00 5 copies, SO 10 copies, to one address, «150 each (and one extra copy) 10 copies, to names of subscribers, at one Post Office, 8100 each (and one extra jcopy) 20 copies to one address, #1 25 each (and one extra copy) 20 copies, to names of subscribers, at one Post
Post Office, 81 35 each (and one extra copy) 50 copies, to one address, 51 each (and one extra copy)? 50 copi6S, toiiuni€s of sxiDScrbers at one Post Office, 81 10 each (and one extra copy.) THE NEW YORK SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE is published every Tuesday and Friday, and b^ ing printed twice a week, we can, of course print all that appears in our weekly edition, inr eluding everything on the subject of Agriculture, and can add much interesting and valuable matter, for which there is not sufficient room in The Weekly Tribune. The Semi-Week-ly Tribune also gives, in the course of a year, three or four of the
BEST AND LATEST POPULAR NOVELS, bv living authors. The cost of these alone, if bought in book form, would be from six to eight dollars. Nowhere else can so much current intelligence and permanent literary matter be had at so cheap a rate as in The Semi-Weekly. Tribune. TERMS OF THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE. Mail subscribers, 1 copy, 1 year—104 num-
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