Daily News, Volume 2, Number 46, Franklin, Johnson County, 12 October 1880 — Page 4
DAILY iNEWS
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 42, 1880.
SOT "A POOL'S ERRAND."
A Brilliant 6pe««h at Chl^nRo by Jtidgre Toarjfft*—lxifiral, Clear ami Convincing —What I» to be £xp«ct«d from a Solid
South. Mb. Chairman ajto Ladies ajtd gbxtuehbs of Chicago A great audience and a great city always overwhelm me alike, esj^eciaily when that city in the twice-bull (led wonder of the. world and that audience the mna and daughters of the North went. [Applause.] But it is nm becau«« thin tnurvelouft city ho» risen twice within the years which I might count on my hand, and It to not because you are the builders, that 1 am thus impressed, bat be cause Chicago Itself is nothing compared with that spirit which underlay Its creation, and yon are bat the Indices of the freedom whien lift- made the Northwest what it is. [Applause.] It is because of not only what you are, and of what Chicago fa, bat of what another section of our counuy is not, that I am thus impressed, and I feel called upon to a«k yon here to night to consider two question* Why are you what you are? and why la the South what it is?
It aeen a to me that every man, especially every yonng man, before coating a ballot, should a*k himself tlm one question:
WIIMH OF THE CONTE.VDIKG PARTIES of thia country will most certainly, mo«t read ily, mo#t ourelv and completely subserve my interest as a citizen? For I would put It low upon the ver ba*i« of our individual inter eat not that interest which is a gratification of gre d, nor that Interest which a Mttbsfaction of ambition, but that interest which leads to the development of the highest manhood for good and Kloiy of the country. And I am the more inclined to do this frora the fact that an old and honored citizen of your own State haw recently formulated il»e reason* which in dneert him at the fifty-ninth minute, the eleventh hour of hi* life, to give the remain der to the Democratic party. Ufa words and bin reasons are worthy of consideration, both from what he was and what he la. He wan a charter member of the Konublic&n party. He 1* your Demoeriitic candidate for GovernorLyman Trumbull. [Applause and hisae*.} I say that the reasons given by this man for leaving the Republican paity are worthy of hirn if we determine the motive to be that of sincerity, and that we moat judge from the reasons given. The flr.-tt reason that he gives why he nr«t abandoned the Republican party is that itrt claim to have saved the Nation, and to have put down the rebellion, to have freed the slave, to have restored peace, is a lie.
IT 18 A 8THANUS CLAIM
to come from those lips. It is a strange time to make it. The heart and core of his fife has been Republican. The fame which he has achieved, all that will endure, is Uepnbllfan. And now he comes with this arraignment. I« it true? Nineteen years after the fact, after the Republican purty has In every convention by the mouth of the Presidents it has chosen, "of everv Comrre**tnan it ha« and in* every
bv the mouth of every Congressman it ha« elected, upon every stump and in* every the land, has de-
tted, upon every stum school-house throughout clured that the putting down of the rebellion was its policy, and ha« accepted its responsl bliity--idl responsibilities—therefor 'now to. the first time conies the claim In the mouth of Lyman Trumbull, in the mouth of lJenja win r. Butler. In the mouth* of other men by scores and thousands, that the Republican
Is not entitled to this credit. Kay, ray fellow-citizens, they go further, and, with the eheok of a Government mule, they declnre that the merit for these beneficent acts—bless God!—rests with the Democratic party. [Laughter and applause.] They tell us as a reason therefor that the Democratic Generals led our hosts to victory that Democrats touched elbows with Kepubllcans, and stood with ns in the fore-front of battle. Rut they forget to tell us that when they did so, that whan they took the oath of service, they took also a leave of absence from the Democratic camp for three years or during the war. [Laughter and applause.] They were so far estranged from the Democracy that we were compelled to Invent a new name to distin gulAu them, and we called them "WAK DKMUCHATS." Just as you speak of a "fighting Quaker" and a "Free-Will Baptist,, ami a "white crow"—{laughter and applause]—becuuse tlie distinctive feature ot the Democrat was not found in them. From that moment thev fought the Republican tight, keiit the Republican faith and voted the Republican ticket. I Laughter and applause.] It matters not now many of them there were. Mr. Trumbull tells us that Lincoln received hut 1,600,000 vote* In ISK0, and he tells us that there were of volunteer* two million seven hundred and odd thousand—the more the better. Democracy and Republicanism of that time were not to be Judged by the men that left them, but by the men that stayed with them. {Laughter and applause.] The fact that Democrats caught the rythm of that grand march with which John llrown went on to victory, no more certifies the patriotism or merits of those who stood behind than does the flight of righteous I»ot from Sodom establish the character of that city as a good place to raise a timiily. [Applause and laughter,] It matters not it there was but one Itcpubl lean in all that war the Idea which underlay it wrs Republican the spirit which prompted our resistance was Republican, and we needed no name to tell us who went to battle. (Applause.) Thank Uod, there were
NO "WAK REV'UUUCANS."
(laughter and applause,] To be a Republican at all was to be ready nnM willing to fight it out on tluitutu* It takes »1 summer. [Applause.] Wo need not call the roster of our braves. Kverv man's thought and prayer atul hope in the Republican party was upon the success of that great cause. [Applause] Kvery man throughout the length of this land that prayed for liberty, and union, and right and righteouAnfeS*. whether he was a Unionist that shut close hi* door and hung out the red string from the window before he uttered h!a prayer in a whisper whether it was the colored man than bowed beneath the shadow of the midnight canebrake whether it was you people of Chicago in your magnificent temple*—everv one of tliOso people prayed [Applause.] An nd thought! tin wished well to Confederate success evenheart whose hoj»e was under the stars and bars evcrv bounty-Jumper and deserter every man wito, 'earinsr a draft, looked on the CHnada side of the Falls and sent back tearful prayers, prayed tor Democratic victory, njibghter and applause.] Why, you remember that when c»«me over the mountain •wall—"cam«» down h»rse and foot upon rredeTiekstown," re said the reason that be came as that he might help elect George B. Meriettaa. vpplause and laughter.] No rebel«ver planned his movement* to aid Republican suet***, thank God. fApplause.] No Knight of the ttotder. Circle nleaded for
for\5ie KeptiiiiicaVi party. [Applause."! And every .force ami power and thought! that
our
ctorv. K*» man dreamed of poisoning the «merteotw or contaminating the clothing of le.Ajaals to aid Hcpublican success. [Aptlau-« Fellow-clUteus, the man who says th»u the was' to put down the rebellion was not, from first to last, from A to litzard, a wtrunuctAN WAR, ta tolerably economical of the truth. (Applause and laughter.] That i» my'opinion anyhow 1 may be wrong. [A voire, "^ou are right t"] But Sir. Tnrmbtvll gives tu» another ntWn why the Republican party ought not to be truamf, ought not to succeed, and ought not to be counttnt h«lr erf the old organisation and that reason Is that Horace Greeley, Mr. Adams, Mr. Seward. Mr. ah, *«», Mr. Trumbull, have left that party, and there upon he tells u* the KepubJIcaa party be Minii nt nnw a Mw-iKtol of tnuimty. IU
julty. [Great
Kcpu ^licaa party party of progress. We nwd a lig funeral every now and then. We have to have it, because the worh! will move aivd if men won't move with the world they must be crushed under It, A party of progrww alwavv drops its dead carcawses along here ami there. [Cheem Hut a.puny that always faces to the rear, like the Democracy, carrics it« eorpsea with it, I Applausr and laugiiter.i No m*n Itlnps to be a fossil, and the war wade heap* of foaalla. (Latyrhter.) piled a tumulus of victory high orar many iTaie i' n*o.\ Tk* *f"» iknl'MBt Yr"°t"r
-on'«etr
rLaughttw and ap ttc« the r«i that
Jon-**!tet»
to-tluy. *fli' stall-Milan *h» UtmlitM tW nxvre^Au tUoJ»«i.t'me B«-J«^( His agi ii: that the new lUtaights that er&wdimr «P»1» him—the new (list were up for soWtfett—wew» past h\» ken. and looked with JeaUws eve# upon tbci» new men. He «nM,Hltws imnp?* are iM^eattse 1 wrought throtigh wwuy year* and the «tnnly ««ldier, etrppta* to the front, aaid "these things are beeauee I fought. And «o me by one we find nonte great name? dropping from the Rer»titit^sn roster, and witfi ev*r» one ol Uiew? name* almoe* we flad mi inatanVa of U»«t dread diswoasa ablch Icnowii throughout the ootinNy as a »OtR« *ut." .itipe.1 tid y*m rra-no-an« men »ev«r leave the
jc*i artcr men amo t«r1 going newed laughter], seeking that eternal home of the useless dead. (More merrimcut.] But whenever yon find a man coming from the Democratic party to the Kepublicstn be comes with faU veins becomes with aKfe beforeliim he comes with hope chock full of days' works. [Applause.] It is this which maitoa the distinctive characteristic be twee ft the two par-
tlos.
Forward" is always the llepnbllcan
the other which
present
ture. The other, like a buzzard, finds nothing good until it is rotten. [Laughter and applause.]
It seems too me—I may be wrong about it, I admit that—but it seems to me that there is in this campaign but one question to be asked and answered by the voter or rather it seems to me that every question that may be raised hinges upon that. It is said that there are tnv ana great questions to be decided at tuis time that there are questions of the currency the question of a protective tariff the question as to our future financial condition the question of a fair ballot and an boneto count but every one of these questions hinges upon another which lies underneath it, and the answer to which controls it.
The Republican party has been termed a sectional party, yet strangely enough it is the Democratic party whose action raises at this time the question of a sectional issue. There is no question as to a Republican policy. It is li red and settled. Everybody knows it, old and young, and we can take it as a fised factor in any estimate of the future that that policy, which has been the pillar of fire and cloud which has led us through the Bed Sea of war out of the wilderness of financial depression into the bright Canaan of prosperity, that will beat he policy of the Republican party in the future, as it has been in the past.
Applause.] But when you come to consider the probable or possible action of the Democratic party there arises this question:
WHAT WILL THE SOLID SOUTH DO, What will the Solid South think, what will the Solid South say, in regard to this matter?
And so the voter, before he determines what he shall do, must ask himself with regard to the currency—what will be the action, what will be the feeling of the Solid South with regard to that? When he asks himself with re itard to the public debt and public credit, he must inquire, will the Solid South protect that '•redit, which is dt-.-troj iug its own by repudiation? He
must
ask himself with regard to
tiie protective tariiT, will the Solid South give protection to our industry which has been solid in favor of free trade ever since the war And when he goes beyond that, and inquires with regard to a free Fallot, that most priceless heritage of a freeman, he must ask himself, what will the Solid South do or saymade solid by fraud, made solid by violence and blood?
But we are asked sometimes what fear there can be if the Solid South should predominate. Let me tell you what you can always count upon. If you wish to know what the Democratic party in power will do, you have only to ask yourself one question: What can it do? and you have got the answer. There is one thing about the Democratic hing mean about it. It uses ill the appointed means of grace without scruple. [Laughter.] ft never did stand on u-iflesyet. You and I have known time and
tv, there is noth the apn
-tcruple. [Laughter, trifles yet. You and again when the wiseacres of the country' have u»ld us the Democratic party will not do this —why, they told us that it would not seize upon Kansas, but it did its level best, didn't i! They told us that it dare not pass the Fugitive Slave law, but they made you here in Chicago hunt the fleeing slave. They told us that it would not—no, it could not—I remember as late as December, 1801, that a Senator of the United States passed through the country lecturing upon the Impossibility of civil war in America. All the same it came, didn't it? [Laughter.] But then they tell us, they have told us, that the Democratic party oi tlie Solid South could never submit to the. outrages that were shown upon the Ku-Klux tvjord. On no! Nevertheless, men bled and died. Nevertheless the rifle clubs and the nlldozers' whip made themselves heard and
It. Oh, the Democratic party cannot, even Keep its graveyards out of the census. [Laughter.] It means business all the time and if von want to know what they will do, Just inquire what they can do. Now, let us think of it a minute.
WHAT CAN THKY DO?
Well, in the first place, they-can make your Supreme Court solidly State-rights for a gen eration. They can put twenty-one men on there, in accordance with a pending measure, and give you Died Scott decisions the rest qi your mortal lives. (Laughter.]' Well, it ain't much it ain't any thing to what they can do. They can split Texas into four more States, and get eight Senators and four more Representatives and twelve more Electoral votes out of it and then thev can many the Mormon Church, which admits of polygamy laughter], and make a State out of Utah and the Saints. Then they can step over into New Mexico and strike hands witu the Greasers-r natural-born Democrats— (laughter and applause]—men that hate water and schools as the Dovli hates holy water. I say they can make out of these each a State, and give themselves 15fl solid Electoral votes instead of 188. It ain't much but your children would never see that Senate changed—never. Well, they tell us this can not be done,because they say Hancock Is a patriot Hancock is a great man Hancock will stand by the country. Fellow-citizens, a man is always Just as big as his friends, Just as good as his frieuds, and ust as stroug as his friends, and no better, t'ou act on it every day of your lives. You say that a man is known by the company he ceeps
and
you conduct vour business upon
hnt very principle. If your debtor spends his time In gambling hells, you do not give him any more credit, that is certain. Now, I say that Winfleld Scott nancock, if he should become President by the 138 votes of a Solid South, will do what the Solid South demands. He must do it. A man is not a great man simply because he buys his trousers by the a«re laughter and applause] a man is not necessarily a great pat riot simply because he failed to desert during the Rebellion. I tell yon, fellow citizens, that every mau who Jumped over the counter and got under a musket in 1881 gave more, and showed more of patriotism, than Winfleld S. Hancock. [Applause.] The clerk gave what the widow cast into the treasury of the Lord—all that he had WINFIKLD S. HAJiCOCK JUST MADK AN tKVBST-
MBNT IX HIS LINK OK BtlStNKSS,
that was all. The one tore his life out of Its projected orbit, and faced pauperism as well as danger faced |overty for his children as well as Rebel prisons for himself: the other had only to sit still and look handsome, and do his duty tolerably well, to reap honor and riory. [Ixmd applause.] I do not believe ?hat there could nave been found any man who could stand in Winfleld S. Hancock's place and do other than fee did. What was le? A Captain in the Federal army at the beginning of the War, the pet of the Command er-ln-Onlef, sworn to sustain that flag, a native of Pennsylvania, where In the name of God could he have gone eseept go where ho did? I Loud applause.] There was nothing else for him to do, except to herd with deserters and bounty-Jumpers, that is all. He could not get around it in any other way. Now I say, feUow-citiaens, that this man, however great ha may be, will obey the behests of the controlling power of the party which elects him, if it should. Why? We have three man In our history who have abandoned the connclls of their party—Fillmore, Tyler, and Andrew Johnson and every one of them has one down W history aa a renegade. Winfleld
Hancock will never do it. But they say h« -'vas a great soldier, and therefore he was nominated?' That la not the reason he was uuwrnaWKl, fellow ciu/. n*. Diu think wlut voi. It wiw tirat presented »n»» at Oiacinuati? It was the voieeof Louisiana, Dut Ioutsi*na eUoos"© him beeanse lie was a r\-denil soldier? I will toll you why they el.ose him. Theyelto-e him for the son that the old darkey
Jumped
into theiiver
«Uift pulled out the boy who uad fallen orerboard from his boat, When he was commendwt lor his bravery, wnnebody said, l« vour boy, unele?"' "My boy! Br'SSA«od, no.
Well, what made you hnnp in and pull nun out then?** "What made me lump in arter him? Brea* God, he had all the bait.in his pocket." 1 Applause and laughter.] Wlnnem S, Hancock was nominated for the reason. Laughter. 1 It was not the soldier, but it was the soldier's uniform with Order Nopinned do Its coat tail. The untfonn was up i&i" Northern vote*. Order No. 40 a pledge ard promise to the Solid South that he would give Uiem all they aaked, even to the half of W* Kingdom. Order No, *0 means nothing to wu. Yon great-hearted, good-natured peop}»» of the North have made haste to forget all that there was in the War, and *11 that baa been since. Did you ever think
WHAT ORDER SIO. MKAXS?
—What it was? Let me give you one tdesi of It. The Reconstruction art* empower Generals ta command of district* in the South to regulate affairs within the Provisional State Government*. Thev were not State Government*. T»w* act declared that there were no legal (lovenunenta titers, And evesry one of those district commanders is remembered at the South to-day. [Applause.] Tfcatiuaaulflk-ent Utoma* applauseK who taraed bis back upon Virginia, who refused to listen to the pray er* ot his family, wtxvjw members on that acaoant ratase*! to look apou hi* dead see. was ot« of them. Gray «y^.cata-b«*rt*d Meade Wim iimithir IRwyn?- wlwt* tfMEMrtdt
trom tne torge, ana first snowed toe metue the soldier there Qrd, the scholarly and quiej patriot Canby, who folded his arms uponthe lava -bed and met death as he had lived, calm-
aoseamen,
as summer's eve—all of these were among and every one of them, except Winfleld S. Hancock, is cursed to the bittei end to-day by every one of thes solid Deiao cratic South. Now, -what did Hancock do' Did yon ever think of it? He was authorised to sav to this Judge who was meting out injustice, "Come down off of that bench. tt» was authorised to say to that Governor wbj was pardoning criminals, "Step down arn out." Ho was authorized to say to that Sheriff who held the process of a court in his haml, and would not execute it, "Get out, and I wul put a man there." What did be say? He said, "I will do none of these things." Did it mean anything? Nothing to you. Did It meananv thing to the people of the South? Jutt think that in the July before there met there in New Orleans a company of men as you have met here to-night to discuss the political situation. They were white and colored Unionists of Louisiana met to organize the Republican partv. Upon a gotten-up plea or cry of prov ocation from every street and alley came or ganized bands.armed to the teeth, who called themselves "Tlie firemen of New Orleans God only knows what names t'ney muster under to-night and when that sun went down there were 400 Union men lying in their blood on the streets of New Orleans. Phil Sheridan was sent there, and these men began to thinf that the avenger of blood was on their heels, and they lifted up their voices and prayed to Andrew Johnson to take him aw ay, and he took him and he sent instead Winfleld S. Hancock, and his very first act was to say, will not enforce this law." And in March 1867, these very men, in battalions and com panies, marched past his- hotel, giving him a public serenade and cheering for Haucock and Jeff Davis
THAT IS WHAT IT XBAXT THERB. But now what does the Republican party otfer in this present situation? I feel almost ashamed to tell you howL feel about it, be cause, living where I have lived, feeling what have felt ever since the storm of war was over, I feel that there is an intensity in my conviction which yon can hardly respond to. Hiy friends, I am not talking wliat somebody told me. I have seen hundreds of bleeding blacks I have seen many a mangled form, owing its torture to the Kn Klux. 1 have seen tuat Ku-Klux in their midnight array and a liner bodv of cavalry I never saw upon the battle-field. I know what I speak of. I do not insult your intelligence, however, by call ing your attention to a part when the terrible whole is before vou. I sav to you merely that Ku-KIuxism, the Rifle Club, the tissue-ballot, and all that we have seen at the South, are the logical outgrowth of a lack of self-govern-ment, and of the presence of Slavery, itoiorance, poverty, intolerance—a Chi nese wall set up against the stranger, Now, what does the Republican party propose? You were proud of it when it saia to the slave, "Go freewe were all proud when it said, "Peace is restored, and even the Rebel may come home." We were never so uncharitable as Mr. Lyman Trumbull when he said: "Could impudence go farther than that the ex-Rebel should ask to rule the Nation?" We were always willing he should rule tlie Nation if he would do it" fairly. We were always willing he should have the power if he could get it by the ballot and not by the bullet. But the Republican party, says and means that there is no use of putting tne ballot against the revolver and the bulldozers' whip in the other scale. That is what we complain of. Now. what remedy does the Republican party offer? Ah, that is the beau ty of it. It comes in its very last Convention, here in Chicago, and, catching the very spirit and essence of the Nazarene's religion, it says
We pledge gifts, we pledge the revenues ol the Nation, we pledge our own prosperity." For what? "To give to the ignorant of the South education." [Applause.] Never was there a nobler utterance since man declared for freedom. And now, fellow-citi-zens, let me say to you that that
EDUCATION MHAfeS DEATH TO KO-KLOXISM, eath to intolerance. It kills the rifle club ispoils the tissue ballot it simply meansana that is the significance of the Republican ,trty to-day—that we mean to make the *outn as free, as prosperous, as intelligent as we are at the North. Is that hate? If it be, God grant that it may forever more abound. Is that sectionalism? If it be, God grant that we may be sectional forever. It is giving not only peace, but it is giving prosperity and freedom to a Nation bound In the chains of
Srejudice
and intolerance. I tell you, Mr.
hairman, there is no such thing as avoiding it. It
may
not come to-day it may not be
that the American people are yet enough awake but It is as certain to come as God is to be the God of right. [Loud applause.] We have waited long, the colored man has waited long, the white man has waited long but deep down below all this runs the river of human liberty and free thought, and that is what the Republican party means shall prevail. And so it has put two self-made men at the head of its ticket. I thank God that they are there. I hope that the North will never vote for a man for President who has not at some time of his life
EARXKD HIS DAILY BREAD,
[Loud appiause.] I want that his hands should have blistered or his brains shonld have sweat before he is counted worthy to stand at the head of our column. [Applause.] We have two men of that stamp, and wo have something more. They oast their roots into the rich soil of free thought. I will not refer to our leader he has been most eloquently pictured here to-night but I want to call your attention to that man whom I suppose the General, being his townsman, was too modest to refer to that man, whom I am al noat as proud to greet as our leader as Gen. iarfleld himself, Chester A. Arthur. [Loud applause I say I am glad of it, not because he is a man of the most equable temper not because he is a man of the most refined and cultivated character, but because he is a man who lias faced violence for principle. Do you remember the first act of his public life, when he came a stripling to the Bar of New York City, and went into the prison and took by the hand a colored man condemned to be rendered back into slavery, and led him into the temple of Justice, and aiter one of the most gallant flgbts in our legal annals, sent him forth, a soul redeemed from bondage? [Loud applause.] Iam glad that the Republican partv has remembered to put one there whose life is linked with liberty in that first struggle. Iam glad that we, put these men, both of them representing this great idea, upon that magnificent platform, and say to the Solid South we moan that the North shall be as solid as the South until every free boy along the Appalachian range may come up to honor, may come up to preferment, may come up to knowledge, may come up to excellence as easily as have these men—the product of the free North. [Applause.]
jBgp-If the Southern war claims are not to be paid if it is right as well as desirable that none of them be allowed, would it not be safer to keep the Government in the hands of the party that positively opposes their payment than place it in the hands of one for whose only safeguard against the pressure of their payment will be the President? It is true that General Hancock pledges himself to veto all bills providing for or looking to their payment, but with the Solid South against him and Congress in its hands, it will not be difficult to pass a bill referring the claims to £he local courts for settlement. There are now three bills pending, and among unfinished business proposir such disposition of the claims.—
noti OotnmerdoL
Air Intolerance is never wise, and an Intolerant section can never be sensible or just. For that reason the rale of the intolerant South can only bring disaster upon tlie countey,
AnneaMRt.
The following notice is taken from the Indianapolis
Journal
they are
in regard to the Col
lier Combination, which appears here next Wednesday evening: At the Park Theater, Comer's magnificent company prwienled The Banker's Daughter* to a line audience. The piece has proved a very great attraction thmuirhoat the country, and deservedly so, for is the best society play before the public, Mr. Collier's company has been especially selected for the play, and
fully up to the requirements of
their parts. There will be matinees at txth the Park Theater and English's this afternoon, and the evening performance rinses the engagement.
ShsC liSS'
sf.T
CLO
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
TO THE PUBLIC.
Having just returned from the Eastern market*, where I have purchased one of the most complete svockH of
FALL and WINTER
CLOTHING
evehplaced on the shelves of a tferre Haute clothier. I most respectfully Invite th! attention of the buying public to a
of my late purchaeep, aa my low prici-* are
BIG FEATURE.
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PHILIP SCHLOSS,
420 Main stree
GEO. H. HUGHES,
PRACTICAL
Wedding and Invitation work a specialty. SI 1-2 ft. Second Stmt, Up-stalrs, over Locke's Paper Honee
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Wholesale Provisions
Pork, Lard Bacon, Snarar Cured
AV
Warns.
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L. KUSSNER,
Palace oMusic
213 OHIO STREET.
TERRE HAUTE, IND^A
Oldeit smic booM In W«*te«s Indian*? Ahray* tfce hifift #tock on tend kep* ta tlii» city, rtssxw and orfsna rested the rait w8* pay fa*
1
idths
4
All over the City and Gel Prices, then £0 to
OWEN, PIXLEY & CO.'S
Wholesale Manufacturers of Men's, Youths', Hoys' and Children's
rr isr C3-1
And Purchase Your Fall and Winter Goods at
MANUFACTURERS' PRICES.
Tlvir Mammoth Stock of Gents' Furnishing Goods that ftr bcin^ retailed stf.
vTO-BIBIIsra- PRICES.
ALL SHADES AXD GRADES OF
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Daily additions being inside to their already Attractive stoc careful inspection.
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CARPENTER AND BUILDER.
Manufacturer of Dreiifiicke's
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t*ADB MA^ OrwtEn.TRADEMARK glish Bemedj Annn fa111 ng cure for flemlna)Weakne,««,
Spermatorrhea. Impotf-ncy, and all Ii*eftM*tbsi folloif IK' qnetfee «f Self-
•EF9II TAXJIt-AbiijNe: k».AFnt TAUML of Memory. UnhrerttJ Lassitude, 'Pain la tlie Back, XHmneM of Nfeton. Prtm*fan Old Age, and may other l)J# *w« that Wad to buMtnlty or Oonxngiptton and a Premature grave. far"Pnil particular* In our pamphlet, whldhwe deafm cotend free by nail toeverr owe. §W The 1 Proi Specific Medicine t» «o)d by aJl |xr package, or *lx par ka^ax for $1, or will
LkiVf
k, and thev invito
•BCOTJSBS.
Nos. 84, 36. 38, 40 and 42 N. Pennsylvania st ., Indianapolis, Ind. .. Nos. 508 and 510 Main street, Torre Haute, Ind. Greeneastle, Indiana. Fort Wayne, Indiana. DesMoines, Iowa. Bloomington, Illinois.
Dayton, Ohio. Lockport, New York. Utica, New York. Springfield, Ohio.
508 & 510 MAIN ST., TERRE HAUTE, IND.
once
ggliita at SI
im. or fix jmtMgM Tor 91, or will
More to the Front.
John H. Sykes, the popular hat man is again' on deck with one of the most complete stocks of fall aud whiter head gear for gents ever shown in Terre Ilaute. Mr. "Sykes ha« long been intimately con nected with the mercantile interests of this city, and those who have once pa ronized him will never fail' to call again 82w2
0f]irlo
GET
YOUR SHIRTS
'MADE TO
1VL EA STTIR/
1P» AT
Se
*eot free by mall od rtcttpi ot the money by addremftng ,, UK ({MAT MKStCniE CO. *Vo. 9 Mechanic* Stock, Draorr, Micfl.
Sold tn Tme Hmte *ad by all UrnggiaU (SVC?* wbere* '.» -A), $
mL
HUNTBRS'l
Shirt Factory,
HATS&BONNETS
AT EMIL BAUER'S
Wholesale and Retail Millinery large** tfock and krfettTptjlcea^
$
,'.cSSi 4'"
..iii
,T
11-
1. 'S
4
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