Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 2, Number 183, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 January 1872 — Page 2

HUDSON & ROSE, Proprietors. L. M. KOSE. R. N. HtTDSON.

Office: North Fifth St., near Main.

The DAILY

GAZETTE

is published every atter-

noon, except Sunday, and sold by the carrifrsat 15c per week. By mail $10 per yeai, ai for 6 months $2.50 for 3 months. TUP WEEKLY GAZETTE is issued every Thursdav and contains all the best matter of the seven daily issues. The WEEKLY GAZETTE is the largest paper printed in Terre Haute, and is sold for: One copy, per year, $2.00 three copies, per year, $5.00 five copies, per year, £3.0Q ten copies, one year, and one to getter up of Club, $15.00 one cepy, six months $1.00 one copy, three months 50c. All subscriptions must be paid for in advance. The paper will, invariabl be discontinued at expiration of time. iTor Advertising Rates see third page. The GAZETTE establishment 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 De given.

Ad dress all letters,

innol,

HUDSON A ROSE,

GAZETTK, Terrc Haute, Ind.

FOR GOVERNOR IN 1&723

Washington C. De Pauw,

OF FLOYD COUNTY.

THURSDAY, JANUARY 4, 1872.

Legal Reform.

A reform in the judicial and legal profession is suggested in England and will no doubt be carried out. "A Joint Committee of the Inns of the Court iu England has recommended that, after the 31st of December, 'no student Bhall be called to the bar unless he has issed an examination, and obtained a certificate of fitness from the Council of Legal Education.'

There should be some law in this State by which incompetent men could be debared from practice at the judicial bar. About all that is necessary for a man to become a member of the bar of Indiana is to get some one to certify that he is a man of good morals, which is generally far removed from the truth, if we are to judge by some young guerrilla practitioners we know of. There are members of the Terre Haute bar, as there are of every bar in this State no doubt, who disgrace it by their metubership. They know no law, either moral or legal. Conscience, they have not, neither have they any conception of right and justice. They may truthfully be characterized as guerrilla attorneys. Their services, which as a general thing, are more damaging to their own than the opposing client, are made the excuse for exhorbitant charges. Better that they steal the amount, and spare their poor client their bad advice and worse association. This, we are aware, is strong language, but it is fully sustained by the facts in the case. Of all the needed reformations of the day, there is none more needful to the wellbeingof this city than a reformation in our legal practice. Let merit, mental, legal and moral, be the standard by which young men are admitted to practice in our courts of Indiana, and Terre Haut$, thus will the community and the honorable members of tho profession prosper.

Mob Law.

The spirit of mob law in this free country of ours is becoming entirely too prevalent in this enlightened age of the world. Not only does this spirit of mob violence pervade the South, where all the horrors of civil and fraternal strife have combined to engender such feelings, but in the North, the recent lynching of negroes in Clark county being an instance. The latest, however, is the Rochester riots, where a body of illiterate men endeavored to force open the jail and lynch a negro for a terrible crime, it is true, but not justifiable, as the accused had already been indicted by the Grand Jury. Even if he were not under indictment, and his crime the most flagrant known in the whole calender of capital offenses, an unlawful body of men have no right, either legally or morally, to take him from the custody of the sworn officers of the law, for the purpose of execution or any other purpose. Therefore, the full civil force of the city were called out, and the military ordered to their assistance. As usual, the innocent suffered with the guilty, and two innocent men were killed. This is to be regreted, but it can not be helped. The laws must be obeyed, follow what may. Mob law is subversive of all law, order and common decency, and therefore it must be put down at all hazards.

Cat Skinning?.

It appears from the telegraphic reports daily and nightly heralded throughout the length and breadth of our land, that New York with her Tammany sachems, 'Indiana and her cat-skinners, are not the only places afflicted with thieves aud perjurers in high places. Even Chicago has added to her awful calamity, the ordeal of fire through which she has recently passed, and from the effects of which she is rapidly "phoenixing," that of a body of unprincipled Council men, with a few honorable exceptions. Such reports of greater or less magnitude came from all quarters. None, however, strike us as being so unpardonable as that of the Couuciimen of Chicago, who in the hours of their city's direst calamity and greatest need, pilfer the public till in the most shameful and disgraceful manner. They will find that it has been dear speculation to them, however, if they are as vigorously prosecuted as we judge they will be frojn a careful reading of the instructions of the Judge of the Criminal Court to the Grand Jury, and a perusal of the daily press. They are already condemned criminals so far as public opinion is concerned, if the tone of the press of the city, with the eX6eJitioh of the Evening Past, is to be judged from, and the Post is said to be implicated in the, frauds.

The Cowardice of Suicide. 1 The latent Vidtim of the suicidal mania in Indianapolis, is William Q. Smith, who hanged himself, according to the verdict of the jury This yesterday. Deceased, it is alleged, was led to the commission of this horrible and cowardly act by financial embarrassment. When a man deliberately and with premeditation, takes his own life to shirk the responsibility of his debts or the care and protection of a needy family, we consider it the most cowardly and unmanly act that he t?ould be gutty of, notwithstanding the assertion of many, that it takes a brave man to take his own life.

The National Disgrace.

To such a degree is our nation disgraced by its President in the matter of his receiving presents, and showing official favors to his relatives and friends, that even school-boys make Presidential weaknesses of this character the subject of ridicule. A case in point is the rich satire of the Yale College boys, who had tl\eir annual Thanksgiving jubilee. The Committee on Invitations published in the Courant responses to their requests for the attendance of various distinguished personages. Among the wellmade hits perpetrated is the following, which all will pronounce true to life:

EXECUTIVE MANSION,

WASHINGTON, D. C., NOV. 25, 1871. GENTLEMEN

Why Did Sickles Return? Would it not be well to have an vestigation committee appointed to in quire into the reasons which General Sickles has to assign for coming home from Spain If the dashing veteran re turned on private speculation in the "Erie war" and proposes to enter on that war-path for the purpose of assisting Messrs. Barlow and Allen to scalp Fisk and Gould, the people should know it If that was his mission home, better dis pense with his services as Minister to Spain, .with which power our Govern ment is likely to be involved in war al most any time. A man who is hired by the representatives of his Government to look after the interests of that Gov ernment at a foreign land, should not desert his post in the hour of threatened danger to look after individual interests of his own, when such interests are of a speculative Character. The/voice of the entire country raised a terrific howl be cause General Schenck even allowed his name to be used in connection with mining interests in the West, while he was Minister to the Court of St. James Certainly, General Sickles' offense is a greater one, did he return to enter in the Erie war on speculation.

The Royal Cub.

Alexis, one of the royal cubs of the "Great Bear," is on his first tour through the mightiest and most powerful conn try on the face of the earth, with all due deference to the mammoth empire which he represents. He is in a free country, and we hope he will see enough to relate to his superiors whan he gets home to convince them that it would not be policy to be on any other relations with this country than those of peace and harmony. We hope and expect that he will go hence favorably impressed with the workings of our system of gov ernment and the practical workings of our free institutions. May he not only observe our prosperity as a nation, but may he be instructed by them, that a republic is the only true system of gov ernment. On these grounds alone are we gratified at the attentions that he has received since he landed on our shores We are not gratified to see the young men and women of this free country of ours toadying to this royal gentleman We wish 'to see him treated as becomes a gentlemen, but not as a representative of an Emperor who enslaves thtf lower classes of his subjects.

In Deep Waters.

The true prophet, Brigham Young, in his dotage has to answer for some of the many sins of his protracted existence on earth, and even now the day of his earthly judgment is at hand. While he is tottering on the very verge of the grave, he is made to strip himself of his raiment of self-righteousness and infalli bility, and wade through the deep and murky waters of affliction. He is a prisoner under his own roof, in the custody of a United States Marshal in the heart of a city filled with thousands of the "faithful." What the re suit of his trial on the charge of murder will be, we have no idea. If his sentence should be imprisonment, the sudden change of diet and raiment, incident to a change of quarters, certainly would not tend to lengthen his life, as it is stated that his health is very precarious at this time. Now, that he is old and the infirmities ot age are rapidly fitting him for the final judgment, we feel a little sympathy for him, and hope the court here below will give him a change of venue to the court above.

Worse than ho Mormons.

Now, while theoountry is being agitated over the social question of Mormonism, it should not be forgotten that there is another class of religious and social fanatics who style themselves the "Oneida Communists," the practice of which society is more destructive of tlve morals of society than are these of Mormonism. They have no communi ties in the West we believe, but they have in the East. Two of these communities we know of, the existence of one at Oneida, Madison county, New York, and the other at Wallingford, Connecticut. Their business relations, however, are of the most honorable and upright character. They, own all their property inwmmon, live in the same building and socially are asindiscriminate in their relations %s are the most depraved, though they call it science. We think it would he well for the Government to look into the social working of these communities and regulate them in accordance with the workings of the law of common decency at least.

IT

"J

is asserted ou good authority in political circles in New York that the great and good truly pfoui Horace Greeley will soon publish a "card with comments by tfce Tribune," declining all nominations by any political party to any office whatsoever.

This te eminently characteristic ftfthis self-saprifleing political retermn, who is ever ready to be sacrificed for the good of his party and his country.

fc..

v- .i-"V

WE

I am, much to my disap­

pointment, obliged to decline your invitation to the jubile®. One of my horses is ill, and I should hardly feel warranted in being absent at so critical an hour. There is also a fair prospect of a new gift of a house, which I would not like to miss. Admiral Porter or some of the Dents may come. Yours truly,

U. S. GRANT.

When it comes to such a pass that even school-boys ridicule and satirize the President of the United States, then is that President a National disgrace in the eyes of all who have at heart the fair fame and good name of our Republican form of Government, and our free insti tutions. Yet this man will no doubt be a candidate for re-election to the office which he disgraces.

have the pleasure of presenting to our readers to-day a letter from our young correspondent, now attending the College of D'Evian-les-Bain, on Lake Geneva. During a vacation he made some "Views a-foot," and his letters will give what he saw.

IN

a letter descriptive of the new prosperity of Terre Haute, Ind., Dr. Foster give some details of different projects for improving the navigation of the Wabash river, which may be urged upon Congress. His reasons for believing that no measure short of a connection of the headwaters of that river with Lake Michigan can effect the desired object, will attract attention fegm all who are interested in the development of Western Indiana or Eastern Illinois.—New York Tribune.

Fonr Evils.—Whoever habitually uses any alcoholic preparations as an "appetizer" will be likely to suffer from four evils, viz.: an overplus or food in the stomach, impaired ability to digest it, the pangs of dyspepsia, and a doctor's bill.

EGAR

DR. WALKER'S VEGETABLE VIN­

BITTKRS,

the great Teetotal Re­

storative of the age, without over stimulating the palate of irritating the stomach, imparts a healthful appetite, promotes digestion, regulates the liver and bowels, purifies the blood, and thus, instead of entailing four evils, confers four inestimable benefits. 6dw4w

MERCHANT TAILORING.

FRANK KOSEMAN. K. BOKSSTJM.

ROSEMAN & BORSSTJM,

Merchant Tailors,

Have removed to

HUDSON'S BLOCK, SIXTH STREET,

Opposite the Postofflce,

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

They have there opened a New Stock of

Choice and Fashionable Cloths,

CASSIMERES, VESTING S,

Gents' Furnishing Goods!

And everything in their line of trade.

Cutting and Repairing done on short notice. nov20d3m

MEDICAL.

WARNER'S PILE EEMEDY.

W(net

ARNER'S Pile Remedy has never faileo even in one case) to cure the very worst cases of Blind, Itching or Bleeding Piles Those who are afflicted should immediately call on the druggist and get it, for for it will, with the first application, instantly afford complete relief, and a few following applications are only required to effect a permant cure without any trouble inconvenience to use.

Warner's Pile Pemedy is expressly for the Piles, and is not recommended to cure any other disease. It lias cured cases of over thirty years standing. Price 81.00. For sale by druggists everywhere.

NOMORE

WEAK SERVES.

Warner's Dyspepsia Tonic is prepaied ex pressly for Dyspeptics aud those suft'eriiig from weak nerves with habitual constipation.- There are very few who have not employed physi ciaus for years to remedy what this preparation will do in a few weeks, by strengthening the nerves, enriching the circulation, restoring dl gestiou, giving strength mentally and physi cally, enabling those, who may have be con fined for years to their rooivs as invalids to again resume their occupations in all their duties of life. One trial is all we a&k to enable this remedy to recommend itself to the most skeptical. It is a slightly stimulating tonic and a spleudid appetizer, it strengthens the stomach and restores the generative organs and digestion to a normal and healthy state. Weak, nervous and dyspeptic persons should use Warner's Dyspeptic Tonic. For sale by druggists. Price 81.00.

COUGH SO MORE.

Warner's Cough Balsam is healing,softening and expectorating. The extraordinary power it possesses in immediately relieving, and eventually curing the most obstinate cases of Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Influenza, Hoarseness, Asthma and Consumption is almost incredible. So prompt is the relief and certain its effects in all the above Cases, or any affection of the throat and lungs, that thousands of physicians are daily prescribing for it and one and all say that is the most healing and expectorating medicine known. One dose always affords relief, and in most cases one bottle

ICilCiiaUU AAA AJAVOV l/IUCO UUMVVVIC

affects a cure. Sold by druggist in large bottles. your own fault if yi The Balsam will cure.

Price $1.00. It is cough and suffer.

WISE OF LIFE.

The Great Blood Purifier and Delicious Drink' Warner's Vinum Vitee, or Wine of Life, is free from any poisonous drugs or impurities being prepared for those who require a stimulant. It is a splendid appetizer and a tonic, and the finest thing in the world for purifying the blood. It is the most pleasant and delicious article ever offered to the public, far superior to brandy, whisky, wine, bitters, or any other article. It is more healthy and cheaper. Both male and female, young or old, take the Wine of Life. It is. in fact, a life preserver. Those who wish to eqjoy a good health and a free flow of lively spirits, will do well to take the Wine of Life. It is different from any thing ever before in use. It is sold by druggists. Price $1.00, In quart bottles.

EMMESAGOGUE.

Warner's Emmenagogue is the only article known to cure the Whites, (it will cure in every case.) Where is the female in which this important medicine is not wanted Mothers, this the greatest blessing ever offered you, and you should immediately procure it. It is also a sure cure for Female Irregularities, and may be depended upon in every case where the monthly flow has been obstructed through cold or disease. Sold by druggists. Price $1.00, or sent by mail on receipt of $1.25. Address 619 State Street, ohicago, Illinois. dly.

#1000 REWARD,

For

any case of Blind, Bleeding, Itching, or Ulcerated Piles that lie Kiu^s'it Pile Rem* edy falls to cure. It is prepai ed expressly to cure the Piles and nothing else, and has cured cases of over twenty years' standing. Sold by all Druggists.

VIA FU6A.i4 "i'.Vi

DoBing'sVia Fuga is the pure juice of Barks Herbs, Roots, ana Berries,

t.r

CONSUMPTION.

lufiamatlon of the Lungs all aver Kidney and Bladder diseases, organic Weakness, Female afflictions. General Debility,and all complaints of the Urinary organs, in Male and Fem'ale, og Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Gravel ind Scroiula,whichmostgenerally term-

Consumptive Decline. It purifies and

enriches the Blood, the Billiary, Glandular and Secretive system corrects and strengthens the nervous and musculair forces. It acts like a charm on weak nerves, debiliated females, both ~&ting and old. None should be without it. old everywhere. laboratory—142 Franklin -Street, Baltimore

TOTHEUBiis. 7 BALTIMORE,February17,1870.

IhsfolMteena suflerer from Kidney Complaint producing Gravel and those afflictions peculiar women, prostrating my physical and neryous systems, with a tendency to Consumptive Decline. I was dispondent and gloomy. 1 tried all "Standard Medicines" with no relief, until I took De Bing's wonderful Remedy. I have taken six bottles, and am now tree from that combination of nameless complaints. How thankful I am to be well.

MBS. LAVINA C.

IIKAXING, Oxford Street.

BELTING.

CRAFTON Sc KNIGHT,

Manufacturers of

Best Oak Tanned Stretched Leather Belts Alto, Page's Patent Lacing, Front St., Harding's Block,

NEWSPAPERS.

XASBY'S PAPER.

The Toledo Blade.

THE PEOPLE'S FAYORITE.

A largequarto sheet, containing fifty-six columns filled with news from all parts of the world, choice original and selected Tales, Sketches, Poetry, Wit and Humor.

SPECIAL FEATURES! The BIJA.DE

has more interesting and popular

specialities than any other newspaper published. Notice the following: PARSON MSB¥'S LETTERS!

The most populr humorous literature of the age—read and laughed over by everybody—are written expressly for the BLADE. "These letters," says a distinguished statesman, "have done more towards the correction of some of the greatest evils In our government, and the spread of sound political principles among the people, than all the speeches politicians ever made." LETTERS ABOUT THE WEST.

Dr. Miller, one of the edlto of the BLADE, spent the^pust summer traveling through the West for the special purpose of gathering reliable information for the benefit of those who think of emigrating or making investments there, and the information on this subject— contained in the columns of the BLADE from week to week—may enable such persons to avoid mistakes which a lifetime would hardly correct.

Answers to Correspondents. Under this head we give every week several columns of carefully prepared and accurate answers to questions upon all subjects. The reliability of this department has given the BLADE a wide popularity. Besides these special features the BLADE publishes continually

THE BEST STORIES,

Original and selected, and every number contains a Young Folks' Department and an Agricultural Department, a Religious Department ana a Commercial Department, all prepared expressly for the BLADE,renderingitthe most complete and perfect Family Newspaper published anywhere.

Remember that the BLADE is a National Newspaper—not a paper for either the East, the West, the North or the South alone, but for the Whole Country.

TERMS.—Single copies, $2 per year Clubs of five, $1.75 each Club? of ten and over, $1.50 each, and an extra copy to every person getting up a Club of Ten.

PAT! We pay liberally, In cash, all who assist us in extending the circulation of the BLADE.

AOENTS WANTED.—We want an Agent at every Postofflce iu the United States. Send for our Special Circular to Agents.

SPECIMEN COPIES sent free to any address. Send for a copy, and at the same time give us the addresses of a dozen or so of your friends, at different Postoffices, to whom we will send copies free and postage paid. Address

1812

IN

MILLER, LOCKE & CO., Toledo, Ohio.

THE WORLD. 1872.

the year 1872 General Grant's successor is to be chosen the Forty-third Congress to be elected.

The people's votes, white and black, North and South, will thus decide the future destiny of the Republic, select its rulers, pi escribe their course.

How to influence the people's votes? By the newspaper—for it includes every other agency. It makes known events and facts —among all influences the chief. It assembles the vaster outside audiences which cannot gather to the State House, the pulpit, or the stump. It is the constant interpreter of men's affairs, and of errors or truth is the daily seedsower.

Next November is our political harvest-time As we sow we shall reap. THE WORLD'S sflted-sowing will be fruitful to the extent that its circulation is widely pushed by those who approve its aim.

THE WORLD will aim to represent and combine the labors aha votes of I.—All those who find best insurance of the people's prosperity, peace and progress in a government administered on the principles and in the pure practice of Jeflerson and Jackson, and who descry the fount and origin of the present corruptions, extravagance, misgovernment, subversion of public liberties, and insecurity of private rights in our rulers' lawless usurpation of interdicted and undelegated powers— usurpation that to-day marches deliberately on to the subjugation of popular rule and the possession of dictatorial power—for by acts of Congress General Grant may even now des-roy the freedom of State elections, invade the States at his pleasure, and declare martial law of his own nee will.

II.—All those who would maintain the honor of the republic, and would preserve public credit by punctual payment of the public debts.

III.—All thoso who would cut down to fewer and fit objects all appropriations of the people's money (to-day more than douole, nearly treble, the appropriations of a Democratic Congress eleven years ago, not counting annuities to Indians, pensigns to soldiers, ana interest on debt) and who would oblige all spending of the peopled money got by taxes, to be with honesty and thrift likewise all those who would spare a little of the people's landed estate for the landless millions hereafter and stop its Squandering dominions in a day upon those who already own much..

IV.—'All those who would reduce the number of commodities taxed by our tariff from thousands to a few dozens, aud so empty our custom-houses of half their officials, rid the statute books of half their odious snares for honesty or bribes to fraud and unfetter scores of our native industries.

V.—All those who would lower the rates also of our tariff taxes to the point of most easily yielding the largest revenue—who would abandon the protectionist system of reducing the revenue whilst increasing the extortionate profits of a few at the expense of all other industries.

VI.—All those who would abolish every unlawful tax, like that on incomes every unjust tax like that which gives banks the people's profits on a national currency every unequal ard indeterminate tax, like that levied most cruelly upon the poor—the tax of our lrredeem able paper-money.

THE WEEKLY WORLD. A large quarto sheet, printed throughout in large type, and published every Wednesday morning. Among its prominent featured are: 1. Its very Full and Accurate Market Reports, embracing the Live Stock Markets of New York, Albany, Brighton, Cambridge,:and Philadelphia the New York Country Produce Market, and General Produce Markets of the country and full reports of the New Yoik Money Market. Each of these reports is compiled with great care, and contains the latest quotations that can be obtained up to the time of putting the paper to press. 2. Its Agricultural Department, which contains each week articles on practical and scientific farming that are of great value to the American farmers. 8. A very full report of the proceedings of the Farmers' Club ol the American Institute is printed in each issue of the Weekly

Club....... 25 00 Fifty copies, one' year, separately addressed, and Semi-Weekly, one year, to getterup of Club „50 00 One huuered copies, one year, separately addressed, and the Daily, one year, to get-ter-Op of Club............:.......'. 100 00

BirectlonsJ

it 1 Additions to Clubs may. be mad« at any time in tne year at tho above Club rates.

Changes in CIlb lists made only on request of persons receiving Club packages, stating date of subscription, edition, postofflce, and State to which It has previously been sent.

TEBMS.—Cash

rV

WOBLD,

the

the day g/ter the meeting of the Club. By this arrangement the report appears in the Weekly WoBLDone week in advance of itsjfet lication in any other weekly paper. 4. A portion of the Weekly

WORLD

is reserv­

ed for family reading matter, including original and selected stories, poems, waifsof humor, and extracts from books and periodicals. Particular attention, will be given to this department daring the year. 5, A special feature of the Weekly WORLD is a carefully compiled summary of the news of each week, ltis made so complete that no one who reads it can Jail of being well posted on all the important news of the day. ,,,,

CAMPAIGN YEAR-REDUCED RATES.

TERMS BY MAIL-WEEKLY WORLD. One copy 1 year* $2 00 Five copies, one year, separately addressed 8 00 Ten copies, one year, separately addressed, and an xtra copy to getter upof Club 15 00 Twenty copies, one year, separately addressed, and an extra copy to getter-up of

in advance., Send Postofflce

Money Order, Bank Draft, or Registered Letter. Bills sent by Mail will be at the rfsk of the sender.

We have no traveling agents. Specimen copies, posters, etc., sent free of charge, wherever and whenever desired. Address all orders or letters to, THE WORLD, dec23 85 Yark Row, New York.

WBSK0SSS.

k. a? CQES & CO.,

(AicMMt*-* to L.* A. G. Octet,)

W O E S E A S S

Manufacturers of the Genuine.

€OE§ SCREW WRENCHES With A. Q. Goes' Patent Lock Fendtir*.

SUtMUhed 4n I Li r*' '-1'1

•.i'l

il!:SCoat8'

iL.V* 1 VJv

3K& fe*

r'J TEKHB HAUTE.

,_i

DM QOODS,

Si-

A HAPPY NEW YEAR

TO YOU ALL!

The Old Year, with its pleasures and cares, its strug­

gles and its triumphs, has joined the agos of the years that are past. It was a year of

bright promise to us, and it has not left its pledges unfulfilled. Our highest anticipa­

tions have been more than realized, and we have been enabled to plant our flag higher

upon the battlements of the enemy than ever before. We trust it has treated with

equal kindness all of the many thousands of our customers whom we wished a happy

New Year a year ago to-day. If to some it has not been thus gracious, we ask for them

a double portion of joy in the year to come.

To-day, then, we Bring yon Glad Greeting!

A new year opens upon us fresh duties beckon us forward new opportunities are

arising, and greater achievements must be accomplished. We are no longer strangers

to each other. The clear, untarnished record of nearly two years is before you, and

in its light you have been kind enough to judge us. We start to-day upon the New

Year with fairer prospects for the future than ever before. We have lived down the

slanders of our enemies, and have forced some of them to admit the monstrous false­

hoods they have uttered against us. We have gained the confidence and support of a

larger constituency of customers than has ever been secured by any other retail Dry

Goods establishment in Western Indiana. Our sales now equal if in fact they do not

largely exceed the combined sales of any two of our competitors, and yet the year up­

on which we have just entered must witness still greater achievements won by us over

the ruinous old-fashioned credit credit system of the High-priced Siores.

HEADQUARTERS FOR PRINTS

AND MUSLINS.

We have just received an entirely new stock of beautiful styles of

MERRIMACK, PACIFIC, SPRAGUE, C0CHEC0, GLOUCESTER

And oclier best makes of American Prints we shall sell

At lO Cents a Yard for the Entire Assortment*

N E W II I E S I O N S N S

A very lieavy yard-wide Unbleached Muslin at 10c« A good article of heavy Muslin at 8c* We sell the very best and heaviest made at

Good line of double-width Alpticas at 25c.

12

STYLES OF *•& rb /VI

Just received by express, at

Good Waterproof from 85c np. Dayton Carpet Warp, 30c. I

IS I

•%t

4 N

Great Bargains in Carpet# and Oil Cloths*

:O

l-2e.

Prettiest Stock of Dress Goods we Hare Ever Had!

Handsome assortment ol Australian Cloths at 30c. Beautiftil Shot Poplins, rich Velours, Camlet Cloths, French and German plaid Poplins, Crape and Empress Cloths, Japanese,

O S E O I I S I I

NORTH SIDE OP MAIN} STREET, TERRE HAUTE, JNr.

January 1.1871. -.wurau'»•

'41

&

French and Italian Sillis, Satins, Velveteens, dc., at greatly reducedrates,

1

1

2,2.80,3,3.50,4,5

Elegant Striped Cloth Shawls at 3,4,5 and 6 dollars. 3 Cloaks, to order or ready made, 4,5,6 and 7 dollars, almost half '"price. *-.*,

and Clark's Cotton, Five Cents a Spool!

A

and 6 dollars*

1

"-f

8 5 0

Factory Je^ns, 50J and60 t?enls. V-.-JEI

~ts ••fjim''-£1

Fresh Arrival of Xew Furs at Reduced Prices

#$3* -Milt FIT '5 i*'l O*

As compared with those prevailing before the Holidays. •m i*

Coney Furs at $2 and $ 2 5 0 as 1 a a 1 Finer kinds of Furs at $3.75, $3, $3.50, $4, #5, #6* #7, $8 and $10 set, and up to #75, at which latter pritee we will clWe ont a few $100

1 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.

WATCHthat

$135

FREE to Agents to introduce ar

tides sell in every house Co., Pittsburgh, Pa.

8 O O

years standing.

4

SHiWLSr

CAUTION.

Mtnnrl inc.

•£l"

1!

iiJj' 3:^ Vi'" f'S'S'

3,J

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Great New- York Dry Goods Store,

a

LATTA & 4

4w

DQQ A MONTH.—Horse and carriage ftirrjpO/C'tl nished expenses paid samples free. H. B. SHAW, Alfred, Me. 4w

RIFLES, SHOT-GUNS, REYOLYERS. Gun materials of every kind. Write for Price List, to Great Western Gun Works, Pittsburgh, Pa. Army guns and Revolvers bought or traded for. Agents wanted. n6-4w A RARE CHANCE FOR AGENTS. Agents, we will pay you $40 p.er week in Cash if ou will engage with us at once. Everything furnished and expenses paid. Address, F. A. ELLS & CO., Charlotte, Mich. 06

FREE TO BOOK AGENTS, We wili send a handsome Prospectus of our new Illustrated Family Bible, containiD over 200 fine Scripture Illustrations to any Book Agent, free of charge. Address, NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., Chicago, 111., Cincinnati, 0.,or St, Louis, Mo. n6-4w

A WEEK! Best Cheap Shuttle Sew ing Machine in the world. Agents

wanted. J. S. HAYS, Great Falls, N. H. 4w

$10 from 50 12 SAMPLES

8

tent (portage paid) for Fifty Gents,

retail easily for'

THIS

Ui&t

for Ten Douirt. R. L. "WOLCOTT,N.Y.

IS NO HUMBUG By sending 0*J CENTS with age, height, color of eyes and hair, you will re ceive by return mail, a eorrect picture of youi future husband or wife, with name and date ot marriage. Address, w. FOX, P. O. Drawer No 24, Fultonville, N. Y. deco-4w

Profitable Employment.

We desire to engage a few more agents to sell the World-renowned

IMPROVED

BUCKEYE

SEWING MACHINE, at a liberal salary or on Commission. A Horse and Wagon given to Agents. Full particulars furnished on application. Address, W. A. HENDERSON & £0. General Agents, Cleveland, Ohio, and St. Louis Mo., 6-4w

AGENTS WANTED FOR OUR GREAT WORK,

Mormons and Mormonism,

By a sister of a high priest. Crushing evidence against Brigham Young and Elders, Plots, Assassinations, and Victims. Illustrated. Address, W. E. Bliss, Toledo,

O. Nettleton & Co., Cin. O.,

or Belknap & Bliss, Hartford, Conn. 4w AGENTS WANTED FOR

ROMAiM SM AS IT WAS.

An entirely new, authentic, exhaustive and standard work, eminently adapted to the times. It fully uncovers the whole Romish system, and exposes its insidious workings to secure full control. EXTRA TERMS FOR THE WEST. CONN. PUBLISHING CO., Hartfor^ Coun.

Whitney's IVeats Foot Harness Soap* STEAM REFINED.

XT

Oils, Blacks, Polishes and soaps at the same time. Put up in large and small size boxes, also in 3 lb. bars. Has been in use for years, and gives perfect satistaction. Send

stamp for our WAVEBLY. Address, G. WHITNEY & CO.,59 Milk St., Boston, Mass. novS-tim

York. P. O. Circular.

THEA-NECTAR

IS A PURE BLACK TEA, with the Green Tea flavor. Warranted to suit all tastes. Far sale everywhere in our "trade mctrk" pound and half pound packages ONLY. And for sale wholesale only by the Great Atlantic A Pacific T'ea Co., 8 Church St., New Box 5506. send for Thea-Jfectar oG

PURE CHINESE

AGESX WAMTEH.

The Clreat Chicago Tire!

The Crowning Horror of the 19tfi Century. 100,000 persons reduced to beggary, tearful

Scenes, Heartrending Incidents.

600 to 1,000 copies of this Book selling per day. Sample Copy, postpaid, 50c. Address, J. W. GOODSPEED, Chicago, Cincinnati or St. Louis.

delicate and nbMhlif fragrance of genuine Fsiia*

to

Well's Carbolic Tablets,

FOJt LOl tillS, COLDS & H0ABSENESS. These Tablets present the Acid in Combination w'*h other efficient remedies, in a popular iorm ioi tne Cure of all THROAT and LUNG Diseases. HOARSENESS and ULCERATION of tb" THROAT are immediately relieved, and statements are constantly being sent to the propr:?' of relief in cases of Throat difficulties of

Don't be deceived by worthless imitations Get only

Well's.Carbolic Tablets. Price, 25 cents pei 3o X. JOHN Q. KELLOGG, 18 Piatt street. New Yor't, Sole Agent for the United States. Send ior Circular.

AGENTS WANTED FOR

W O N E S

OF TUB WORLD,"

The most most lavishly illustrated and cheapest 000k of modern times, and just adapted for holi.iay gifts. Agents for this work will secuie choice of territory for the grandest religious volume of the century, now nearly ready, en* titled" "JESUS," by Rev. Dr. Deems. For circulars address, U. S. PUBLISHING CO., 160.Union St., Chicago, Ills. 410 Market

St., St. Louis, Mo.p

177 W. Fourth St., Cincinnati, O.

Reduction of Prices

TO CONFORM TO

REDUCTION OF DUTIES. GREAT SAYING TO CONSUMERS

BT GETTING UP CLUBS.

MP" Send for our New Price List and a club lorm will accompany it, containing full direction—making a large saving to consumers and remunerative to club organizers. THE GREAT AMERICAN TEA CO., 81 AKD 33 V£SEY STREET,

P. O. Box 6643c NEW YORK.

E A

Is a South American plant that has been used for many years by the medical faculty of those countries with wonderful efficacy, and is a Bure and Perfect Remedy for all Diseases of the LIVER AND SPLEEN, ENLARGEMENT OR

OBSTRUCTION OF INTESTINES, URINARY. UTERINE, OR ABDOMINAL Si£l ORGANS, POVERTY OR A WANT

OF BLOOD, INTERMITTENT OR REMITTENT TFEVEBS, INF

AM A TI ON OF THE LIVER, DROPSY,,..

SLUGGISH CIRCULATION OF THE BLOOD,

ABSCESSES, TUMORS, JAUNDICE, SCROFLA, DXSJPEPSIA, A UEANEFEVER, OR 1HEIR CONCOMITANTS. Dr. Well's Extract of Jurubeba, Is a most perfect Alterative, and is offered to

fmpurlasa

mblic great In vigorator and Remedy for all ties of the Blood, or lor Organic Weakness with their .attendant evils.. For the foregoing complaints |)K. WELL'S EXTRACT JURUBEBA Is confidently recommended to every family as household remedy, and should be freely taken in all derangements of the system.

It is NOT A PHYSIO—It is NOT what is popularly called a BITTERS, nor is it intended''as such but is simply a powerful alterative, giving health, vigor and tone to all the vital lorces, and animates and fortifies all weak and lymphatic temperaments. «... JOHN KELLOGG, r-J IS Piatt street. New York,

Sole Agent for the United States.

Price One Dollar per Bottle. Send for Circular, 4w

LOCKS.

CORNELIUS, WALSH & SON,

Manufacturers and dealers in

CABINET & TRUNK LOCKS,

TRAVELING BAG FRAMES &

,-TRUNK HARDWARE-,

Hamilton street. Corner Railroad Avenue, Idly NEWARK N.J.

•ACtBICULTUBAL.

&

HALL, MOORE & BURKHARDT,

Manufacturers of

2:

AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS,

Carriage, Boggy A Wagoh Material, of every Ai variety, foJMB JEFFERSONTILLE,IND J' J?-'* -jW*-