Daily Wabash Express, Volume 20, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 June 1870 — Page 2
t'-
UMUAtm
T^BBE HA
rUi
.-s
Wedmesfey Merataft JM® 16. 1879.1
MAX r. A. HOffMi 1- "7* AUDITOa Of BTATKa a (JOHN D. EVANS, A nunna or ninj
RQBKRTH. MILROiV
iUlmMHtWHM cwii
CHARLBB A. BAY. ANDMW L. OSBOBira.
NBL80M TBUfi
TO-DAT
Representatives at Washington. We say
muxeuor,
and that is just what we mean
for we have it clearly in our power to carry this District in the approaching canvass, and shall be much to blame if we fail to do so. Everybody knows how VoORHEES' small majority in 1868 was obtained. The votes of non-residents, illegally cast, elected him. Laborers on the I. & V. Bailroad—temporarily stopping in Owen county—were voted in sufficient numbers to overcome the majority of honest votes cast for Major
This year
J^N FLMT IG
6
i'
I WHAT
Jf
BECEKTLV,
f'
1
5
THELegislature
IT
soon as will be ble.
KEEP
THE
the District Convention will
meet, in this city, to nominate a successor to D. W.
VOOBHKES
CARTER.—
DAKIBL
will have no such de
pendence, while our vote will be very materially augmented by the operation of the Fifteenth Amendment. We can, therefore, defeat him, and we mean to do
2?o wan is more fully conscious of the desperate character of his chance for reelection than is
VOOBHKKS
nel,
requisite' to make
DASIEL
realize his worst fears is judicious action in the Convention, to-day, and a thorough canvass following it. Give us a good candidate, thorough organization and efficient work, and The Great Vote-
Dodger will have permission to ^joy permanent rest from his dodging
a healthy city Tenre Haute
must be, if reports are reliable I.,® has a population 01 24,000. In the month of April, 1870, there were only six deaths in thecity. Three of this number died of old age—respectively ®®, 83 and 86. One was killed 6/ .a railroad accident, one died of consumption, and
nary disease/
WHILE
one di&d oj ordx-
We find the above in
Harper'* Bazar
and other periodicals. It: in an item published in the
Terre
Haute it the healthiest city on this continent
and this assertion we are ready to defend. Some years ago there was a great prevalence of diseases incident to malaria in this section but that era is past, and doctors whose principal business was to, dose their patients with quinine, find the greater portion of their occupation gone.' Situated as we are upon an eminence, surrounded by broad prairies, we are always sure of an abundant supply of pure air while the porous nature of the soil, and easy drainage into the Wabash, furnish immunity from the effects of stagnant water or decaying animal or vegetable matter. Add to this a climate in which extremes of heat or cold are rarely, if ever, known, and make due allowance for the high order of morality characteristic of this city, and no philosophy is required to account for its exceptional degree of healthiness.
as the attentive reader of
telegraphic news is aware, certain filibus-
lers
°f Guatemala entered Mexico's preempted lands* and settled down upon
them as farmers. Of course the authori
al. ties ordered the invaders off at once. The idea of men raising anything save insur
reetions is distasteful to the Mexican mind. If the Guatemalians had issued pronunciamentoes instead of staked out farms their labor would have been appreciated. But to come as mere toilers
lp'\l.'* *macks of treason to the proprietors of the Montezumian Halls, and they at once charged the leader of the peaceful invatiers with a deep laid design of estab-
lishing a separate and independent Republic, perhaps like the United States, •y where men have to work,obey the laws and not get up revolutions oftener than once in a few centuries. Suppositions like these drive the true Mexican to frenzy, and the peaceful Guatemalians must expect no mercy at their hands, unless they
arc
w'^'u8
to
Ws
°pen a branch business in
the revolutionary and brigandage line.
HEARTILY
approve the suggestion
of the Philadelphia
Inquirer
about time the reports of bribery of members of Congress On every question, great and small, were treated with tip contempt they deserve. Hon.
Similar charges were preferred and disproved during the struggle over the Georgia bill, and bribery has been the favorite weapon in the hands of the feiu: fri—ds ef theSaa-Diiuingo trmty. If« member of Congnmis guilty of selling his vote he is very properly punished, _qi. and it is hardly lair that thea^ whoattempt, week after week, to bring disgrace upon Senators and Representatives, should go scot-free.
of New Hampshire
has re-electad Cusnr to the U.S. Senate.
is int
J"™*"
out in
it before the people that
Terre Haute
Journal—the
New Albany
the tbre# months ending June
1, 1869, the public debt was reduced $20,050,647, against $31,966,105 for the three months ending Jnne 1.1870. That is the way to repudiate.
LET
Haute
THE
Does Catting Off a man's Head Kill Him Instant erf Experiments made in Paris have proved pretty clearly the fallacy of the idea put forth at the time of Traupman's execution by someFrench-physicians,that ahead severed from the body retains life for several hours. The head of a culprit guillotined since the Traupman affair was delivered to the experimenters five minutes after the execution. The face was then bloodless, of a pale and uniform hue the lower jaw had fallen, and the mouth was gaping. The features, which were immovable, bore an expression of stupor, but not of pain. The eyes were open, fixed looking before them the pupils were dilated the corit°a had already commenced to lose its lustre and transparency. Some Bawduststil stuck here and there to theface bnt there was no vestige of any either on the iner surface of the lips or onthe tongue. The opening of the ear was then carefully cleansed, and the experimenters, applying their lips as closely as possible to the orifice, called out three times, in a loud voice, tlfe name of the criminal. Not a feature moved there was no muscular movement either of the eyes or on the face. A piece of lint, saturated with ammonia, was nsxt placed under the nos trils there was no conjunction of the alte nor of face. The conjunctive of each eye was deeply an\ several times successively cauterized with nitrate of silver the light of a candle was brought c'ose to the cornea, and yet no contraction was obser ved either in the eyelids, eyeballs or the pupile.
..
Indiana State University.
The loilowing is the programme of the forty-first commencement of the State University:
Friday, Saturday and Mouday, June 24, 25, and of classes, from 9
A. M.27—Examination
to 12 M. each dar.
Friday, June 24, 7} p.
atodni is
when the quarto form ^leqp. donedfor tire folio/ Sensi-
only Demo-1
ipratic paper ill the Sixth District—is the. only paper in the District committed to grab btMinwriicp
Commercial—an
thority that none will care to has decided that President
RANT
3
it be remembered that the Terre
Journal—the
VOOBHEES
home organ of Mr.
and the only Democratic dai
ly in his District—earnestly advocated the Northern Pacific Railroad bill, and urged the donation of 360,000,000 acres of public lands to "half a dozen railroad companies."
Journal
himself and
it i« this that induces him to bear the odium of shirking public duty in order to attend to his personal interests. The deser tion of his post in the House, at a time when all the important legislation of the session is being perfected, and coming here to make a canvass in advance of his nomination, is the most palpable confes siou of fear and distrust that he could" make. He says, as plainly as acts can speak: "This desperate game demands desperate measures and, in accordance with this view, he rushes from the scene of duty to nurse his sick prospects as if an officer were to leave his command in battle and hurry to Washington for aniw other commission!
THE
has a whining article in
relation to excessive taxation in this city, which is decidedly cool in the organ of the party whose first act, on gaining control of the municipal government, was to nreBBASB THE RATE OF TAXATION. Try it again. Fire another shot at your friends. You are doing splendid execution with vour back-action musket
fact that the
Sentinel
does not wee
the programme laid .down by the new proprietors of the Indianapolis
Sentinel
Journal,
for the political management of that paper, is a pretty good reason why Republicans should like it. As a general rule it' is safe for Republicans to support whatever the
denounces, and a Repub
lican editor may well distrust his course when he finds an approval of it in the Democratic organ. Those so-called Republican journals from which the
Senti
and other Democratic papers, quote, with evident satisfaction, are doing more 'injury to the party whose name they falsely wear than all the acknowledged organs of Democracy can do. -n
greas at Cincinnati this week, New York
BEETHOOV£I|
tivai.
w'.'l appee -, including six grand opera computes and many 6nt-clas» musical' iassociations. The chiming of bells, the iwring of artillery, the clinking of ftve hundred anvils, and the pealing of an immense organ, built especially for the occasion, are to be added to the notes of numerous bands, and orchestras and the voices of the singers.
BTZSD,
Eoriginated
XPRESS
BERGMANJF, MAR
ZERRAHN,
with
the mortuary statement for April, and is absolutely true. We will not undertake to say that deaths "from ordinary disease," in this city may not average more than one a month but we do say, after a careful comparison of our mortuary statements with those of such other cities as we have been able to obtain, that
and
GILMORE
are to
officiate.as musical marshals. To accommodate the immense throng who, it is
M.—Valedictory
exercises of the Athenian and Philomathean Literary Societies. Saturday, June 26, 7| e.
M.-—Address
before the Athenian and Philomathean Literary Societies, by General Joho A. Logan. M.
C.,
of Carbondale, Illinois.
Sunday, June 25, 34 p. if.—Baccalaureate sermon, by the President, C. Nutt, D. D.
Monday, .Tune 27, 3J p.
that it is
THOMAS
FITCH, of Nevada, who was charged with having been bribed by the friends of ^•"^Ouba, proved himself entirely innocent ,of the charge, and by way of satisfaction jgg-^jgave the name of his traducer and ad5 ministered to him a sevre cs«tigation.
of the Trustees and Board of Visitors. Monday, June 27, 7j p.
Detore tne Bigma tiu' fraternity by Bishop Bobert J. Keeling, D. D., Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and a poem by Major T.Stanton, Maysville, Kentucky.
Tuesday. June 28.3J
Yellow fevftr is reported New Or-
rawn from
Vickstivg. Oil has been struck in Lincoln county, thefTennessee.
When a man marries a vicious woman he becomes possessed of a devil. The
London Laneet
au
Gquestion-
way
grammatically correct when he said "The United States
is
at peace."
DUBIHO
in the House of
states that John
Bright's haalth hai iaststisHyimpgored. In the Coanecfkot LegisUtnre there are of age.
A colored man, aged twenty-six, now in Delaware, is said to be living with his: fifth wife. I
A bachelor is defined as a man who neglects his opportunity te make some woman miserable.
Sweet-scented Turkish beads, made Into necklaces and bracelets, are very much in vogue this season.
Gen. Longstreet, Surveyor of the port of New Orleans, is so ill as to be unable to attend to office duties.
A Rochester woman has three husbands living, two of whom have other wives.— No divorces yet reported.
An American has bought the old hospital ship Drednaught, at Greenwich, England, for a floating theater.
The English society for the propagation .of the Gospel in foreign parts maintains four hundred and eignty-one clergymen.
The government has given twelve pieces of ordnance to be used in building a fence around the soldiers' monument at Rock Island.
A farmer near Albia, Monroe county, Iowa, has two Chinese field hands, and says they are worth more than their weight in tea.
Representatives of Brazil, the Argentine Confederation and Uruguay have agreed on conditions,of a treaty of peace with Paraguay. 4'^-"
A young shoddyite in New York makes a great display in hotels and public places by lighting his cigars and cigarettes with greenbacks.
Dr. Albert Day has opened.an institution for the reclamation of inebriates of both sexes It is located at Greenwood, in JSeading, Massachusetts.
New York is contemplating a ferry around the island to releave the crush of Broadway, and facilitate travel from one part of the city to another.
A Boston lady, described as young and accomplished, has opened an office for the purpose of carrying on the business of conveyance of real estate. ^jp .»
SometFrench physician has discovered
that jealousy between husband and wife thing more than what he is pleased
LIS
not,
the great Stengerfest is in pro
to call zoanthropic insanity. In 1659 Milwaukee had ten public
gress ai v.nc.uu.u ^schools, now it has twenty-school properwill be celebrating the centenary of (y valued at $323,300. The cost of toil ion per pupil isj$l-4 11 per annum.
with a monster musical fe
The Sun
says: Over 3,000 singers
The magazine
Old and Netv,
The Boston
will here
after be pnblished by Robert's Brothers, and Mrs. Stowe will commence a new serial story in the July number.
Trans&ipt
says that "a good
cook shows her talent by nicely dishing up mince meat, and a good paper is known by tact in serving the "items."
The Alfokans hold, inquests over suicide*, not to determine the mode of their death, but the motive, and to assess the damages on the blameworthy friends of the decee«cd.
The author of "Stone Edge4 and "Let-
expected, will rush to see and hear this yjie both vigorous stories publish- •__! .L.o QI--.: .1 1 j_ „i vcf™ 1T1„ed anonymously, is a sister of Miss Flor ence Nightingale, and the wife of an
great musical uproar, the Empire Skating Rink is to be enlarged so that it can hold 20,000 people. One of the features will be a grand matines of 5,000 singing children. All that is wanted to make the affair a complete success is the addition of a genuine earthquake and a half-dozen nitroglycerine explosions.
English nobleman.
Paris annually sends 26,000 children into the country to the charge at nurses. Of this number about eleven thousand die in the first year from insufficient care.
In sonde Maryland 'counties,' where schools for white children are closed for want of ftinds, the negroes support, voluntarily bv their own contributio ns, free schools
tot
the colored children.
Vinnie Ream writes from Rome that she hopes to have her Lincoln statue completed by January next. She will accompany it to America in February next, and present it to Congress before i»»adjourns
An Exciting TrUl In Kansas! From the White Cloud Chief.J The hottest day last week, a suit,growing out of a horse trade, came off in the Justice's Court of this place. The eight-by-ten in which the court was held was crowded to suffocation. There were ten men interested in the case, seven lawyers ed, six jurymen, a Justice and
constable, and for)r-nine witnesses, all in tbe room. Beside these there were one hundred and fifty spectators in the room, seventeen jammed in the door, five in the window, and three perched in each of the pigeon-holes cut up in the sides of the cage to admit air.
Thiri was the situation we passed by, at 11 A. if. At 3 p.
At midnight we again made a reconnoisance in force, and found the position of the forces outside unchanged. Onthe igftidl, the constable and six of the lawyers werg jfsleep while the seventh was frantically laying down the law, and his client was threateniug to whip him for slandering him. A disinterastai spectator was adviring the jnry about tli# virdict tbe jurymen were begging for water while the justice was drawing on a pi^ce of paper a plan for a patent beehive and underneath it had written the epitaph
"Sine quo-nan bqrvni"
M.—Meeting
EVERY
M.—Address
before the "Sigma Chi" fraternity by
P. M.—Meeting
the State Board of Education. Tuesday, June 28, 7J.P.
of
M—Address
neas meeting of the Alumni. Wednesday, June 29, 7| p.
be.
fore the Almuni by Hon. Jame* S. Rollins, Columbia, Miisonri. Wednesday, June 29,
A. U.—Btui*
M.—Alumni
reunion and entertainment. Thursday, June 30, 8}
A. M.—Gradua
ting exercises of the senior class. Master's oration by Henrv C. Meredith, A M-, Camhngde Citv. Indiana, and conferring degrees. JJ
SAID
a distinguished (luliuww 10 his n: "liookatme! I began as derman, and here I am at the top of the tree^ and what is mr reward? Why, when I die my son will be the greatMt rascal in the United States." To this the yonag hojwflil replied: "Yes dad, when you die, but «0t 011 then.
one will r^foice to learn that a
distinguished Mew Jersey doctor has found that moquitoes have parasites which give those annoying inseots a $reat deal of trouble. A number of eaptive mosquitoes were examined under a microscope, and they were all found to be positively lousy, each having parasites upon its body which were easily to be seen under a glass of low magnifying power. The mosquitoes seem to be as lively under their torture as human beings are under the sting of the mosouito. It is quite a comfort to know that they too can suffer.
•:i
Alt AJUCBICAX
&•
5
SUTSUANI
5 4 fe T^
o^mmnsemEitTB
Mp
KmrnriNe
CORSET.
Tliisflotstf if eenstrtrUrf o* jewwtoelple, bein»«tea.a«d therekyallo wiu the freest circulation possible, besides ^«!a*?s(4fcet«asea&4ee»lo(ttothew*arer, and at the same time possessing all the advantages et the eommon Corsets in giving
"iMHMUk'.GnM Uiey are
mnrwalUd
ui
the Mark*.
They are particu
larly recommended for somnaer wear, and warm climate*, although equally well adapted to aU seasons of the year. They wre highly recommended by medical and scientific men. For sale by all ftrs^lass dea^r.-Formrc^
(MfAMMTO 1W.)
WELCH & GRIFFITHS,
8ay/rmX Axea! Saws!
Baws. aw Send %SfAi5!*««Sr#s!fa'v •MIM,
•r
DclMlk
Aromatic Aegetable Soap.
VaATE
I
1
A .. -v
TOILET SOAPS...
Fer the Delicate gkla ef Ladles and Children, ESTABLISHED 180*. SFW TOBK. Sold by all Druggists.
IfiATOJf FBEEMASONRV, by Elder D. Bernard, revised edition, to which is appended a revelation of the mysteries of
on receipt oi »z. a SHUBY, Dayton, Ohio.
One
Million Acres OP
CHOICE IOWA LAUDS
For sale at 83 per acre and upwards, for cash, or on credit, by the Iowa Hatlraitd lJ«nd Co. Railroads already built through the lands and on all sides of thom. Great inducements to settlers. Send for our free Pamphlet it gives prices, terms, locatiyn: tells who should come west, what they should bring, what it will cost gives plans and elevations ofl8 different styles of ready-made houses, which the Company furnish at from 9250 to 94,000 ready to set up Maps sent if desired address
W. W. WALKER,
Inventors who wish to take out Letters Pa» ent are advised to counsel with MUNN kCeditors of the
Scientific American,
MOUSTACHES
oipe sent for50 cents address H. RICHARDS Box 9096, Now York P. 0.
.1
DRY GOODS.
",:-U
t,cl Jo
M.
I
tO'iv.Vk'Si.
I 1
Mwhenagain
•u \i:
»V H4 K'v-
ii
iilti tli ft
WARREN,H0BERG & CO.
Corner 4th and Main Streets.
.1} ,1 ,1
Have received a full line of Gentlemens'
SUMMER UNDERWEAR!
It,
we went
by, and found the situation pretty much the same, except that one man had stuck himself through the sash, where a glass was broken out another had found a crack in the side of the building, through which he was peeping three men were on the roof, looking down through gimlet hole9 they had bored thiough the shingles one was perched upon the flue, looking down the stove pipe, and we saw several pairs of boots sticking from under the house, belonging to persons who were looking through craeks in the floor.'
Merino Under^fa'ts, .iJ'J',,
Merino Undershirts, JZge3. White Drilling Drawers, Whiter Linen Drawers,
.tA ALSO
1 W4, 'V
Brown,Uleaehed and Blue mixed
"Si' -1
i'i
HALF HOSE!
In
Super Stout, Super Fine, Little. Thread and Heavy Knit, all purchased re'gd'. cently and offered
irmr CHEAP!
Warren, Hoberg & Co.,
i.1 .i /.u .11 -i .a SUCCESSORS TO •».«»
e_ J,
E3DS-A.LX,
3c
OO.
sat -J ti ,t' i.
Italy
has dumfounded the goverument by seriously proposing to lease Mooit Vesuvius. He aays will make roads and lay out pleasure grounds upon its rocky sides, baildketolsandaet up soda foun tgijja its sammit, and help visitors np an down by machinery. To pay him for •Hthia aodamam a .fortune beaides, he will diarae a sipall ad mission fee from aU who wish to step np and the show
tjk 4
,^!i. i) sHita'1, ttgj
THAT '$IG
OUR WARonHIGHl
at FOSTER'S.
Vice-Prudent,
Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
PATENTS.
FRESH
who ho
prosecuted claims before the Patent Ofhce lor over Twenty Years. Their American and European Patent Agency ia the most extensive in the wor!)l. Charges less than any other reliable agency A imiuphlet nontainina full instruction* to invent"!'* i.- ?ent gratis.
MUNN CO.. 37Purk lvow. New York,
A.
MODEL HOUSE.
Being a eripplo, I have uiade house planning a special study ono built last season has 'proved a model of convenionce. beauty, and economy descriptive circular? of Plans, Views, etc-.with generul information of value to all, sent free address (with ptani por script if convenient), GEORGE .1. Architect, Waterbury. Vermont. O 4 VfillVV It'auteit in payiag iSALtiMlliiiS business S. KENNEDY. 413 Chestnut street. Philadelphia, mill? HVKAH SI
*11
I'M
A CHI HE—New Book.
lUHi Free for Stamp, TARRANT & CO., New York. "HTELIrPLACEB Lev* Essays for ww Yoang Men, free, in sealed envelopes, HowardAssociation, BoiP, Philadelphia,Pa
.pj..
Vi I in JLMl Mi -n
IT
S^7 «FC
NO BACKWARD STEPS BE TAKEN! The signs of the times are unmtetakafoM THERE'S ROUBLE IN THE CAWI^MjTHE ENEMY!
The cries of opposition giving up all efforts at competittoiiL 'lliey are marking their Goods up to their old prices!
FOSTER BROTHERS I
Are marching on flushed with one of the greatest victories ever achieved over the old fogy high priced system of selling Di Goods and Carpets.^
Where is now that boasted arrogance that was to drive us from the field in less than thirty days? Where are the Merchants that promised to defeat us if it cost them ten thousand dollars to do it? A few poor prints sold for a few days at our prices, and they give up the contest, and cease all epipositlon.
With deserted stores and idle clerks they pass up and down in front of ottr establishment wondering why it is that we are always so busy. Ask any of the vast -'"k r»T ir«j smthrt
Crowds of Customers
-3K
m-H
aiij «»•.: 'if
That daily fill our Store and they will tell yon "for years these high priced Stores have b: jn demanding of us the most extortionate rates, and it was only when
FOSTER BROTHERS
Came down upon them like an avalanche that they in the least degree showed any signs of being willing to sell for a moderate profit." We appeal to the public to say if this is not the \5-'
i'*"a
But this is not all, for they invariably add, "hereafter we will do all our trading
ARRIVALS FROM NEW YORK:
Fine and handsome Muslins for 8 cents, others charge I2J. Extra yard wide Muslins only 10 cents a yard. ', j, Common Muslins 6 and 7 cents, same as others sell at 8 and 9 cents,
Good Prints5, 6, and 7 cents best Sprague Prints 8 cents. Best Spring DeLaines 11 cents, worth 20. A fs T." Elegant Brocade Alpacas 18 cents, others charge 25cents.
Good line of Alpacas—our price 20 cents. In fine qualities of Dress Goods we have anew stock, just arrived, at the prices of common goods in high priced stores.
Black Silks from $1 to $4 per yard, generally sold at from $1.50 to $6. ^_ Beautiful line of Percales at 25 cents, others charge 40 cents. Elegant line of Fancy Goods at Panic Prices. «-..««. /I Parasols for 40, 50, CO, 70, 85 cents, $1, $2, $2,50 and $3." All Silk large Sun Umbrella $1 and $1,25. 'jL ,' Shawls $2, $2,50, $3,00, $3,50, $4,50 and up to $50.
These Goods are nearly one half cheaper than can be found in other stores. ... i- j,,-. .(tauui. cm wi ,.} ist lii. Lama Lace Points, fine quality, at $o.
Piles of other goods equally cheap. Ours is the only concern in Terre Haute having stores in New York City, therefore
THE ONLY NEW YORK STORE IS
FOSTER BROTHERS,
ii
Main St., Opera Honse Block,
North Hide oi" Street.
it /UT.
.^1 .'iv
r/si Jfi:
'yj-ji/il. 1.
\t-ibay,
IT I
int
:xrt
1 r«- 1 ?*«.»
.-tivuai
We are going with the times, and sell all Goods in our line, at any time, w|
di6r,
'J t%i, '•&»«<
•*ii tui'Sil
pittU'
.ifts, 1. »l tefvA
.1 ...i, lol Oc jli-li'1. '-Z. I: tfil (Si
at,1i
"i'i
(VS.J
Jfl Lsv. r,'.. ,if
4S- -..i ivj»,
i'.JS
is:li '.iiiUi
OR NO PANIC!
ttJ
.*
1. in I ,li
*.
MATTERS NOT
iftI) lil
j.. i-i tii.,
••tfifrs mW-'Jti fo.tife- iwii&ij ea-j iw
if fit-
J. ts,» •aj.Cij
•il.
£'.
HERZ & ARNOLD,
.. •.ittfih j.:.- it/
t* 'Uil.
IA
s: JC .*5U'|
•if,.
iilit.
J.i /«. I" 'fetJ AiHf
ir
hi
rfA'SiKS
JA£.
Cheaper than il any other Honse
inii
5
IN TBE WEST.
ite&A.- ii
•-•Till ail? tir^ 1*'
t-i.
1 wi.'jJti ui
v. U/ii uc
CALL AND SEE FOR YOURSELVES,
t&Zhi.* U:j
u.*. ••dj i-. L-U A :ii ,. t.
£lttj i. it
A S J- E-.I IKTI. R.NI A'JIJA .. ,L :A
.v..j.-' ^ifr- fi 5 j^ii I* «v edit, 1 .lit
,1 iIs 3uiti fAi 'in ,n
lif.j Jo.-i fc»& rrf ::.a
\-nii
iw
rti
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ui ai^r.
i'
la
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.IT il
A
jstjiL ad4 sa .M''u IS
r!sis 1*:
2,Li2ceu
r1*
fiarm'*
ito
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'.in?: I -S.llJfJi'tJj ).
SPIRIT OF THE PEOPLE.
1
11
*i" "s',
ill
.ITAF, 4
has
ai sai*
T-5vJ ^8 Jj... iej j•
WHITE GOODS
s-j.'
I
A'..*5. i.'.i
1V"l
'aw
1
t,
Isi
,i'J.
rtjt
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4
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Be particular to observe that we arson the north side of the Main street, a there are parties on the south side representing themselves to strangers as the New York City Store.
ii
f,
I tfiviiJo iw uviiJim I., .zu-tji/? aJj in iu t—»"i oaiiiidnii:,i.
I J:ui Si!
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At 89 Main Street, between 3d and Mh Sts.
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We are seQing
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OVER" §40,000 WORTH
Of Fine Fancy Drew and Qtefii*
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To be sold pdsiti^ely without
THE HIGHEST BIDDER!
Commcnciiiff Monday, June 6$ at ii «?i and
and
8
a.
ia
P. M., continuing fitm day
the Stock is entirely disposed*)/.
The citizens of Terre Haute and vieintty wtUpftms4. .as. oiitaa bear iu mind that this Is a
Which must and will be sold 3t your OWN fignrpi, without tettfll to pqt^, ill
Ladies Sales every moj-jilng atip o'clock A.1L JP. V«. to
s,. i.f. ..dwin» «t i,
»The Stock eonsists tn part of
LaQ
At precisely 10 4. M. and 9
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.jmrs TIT*?*
tady-'iq
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-'ammd
E A I S IWe offbr *t retail
5.000 Yards good Bleached Muslin,
At 10 Cents.
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5,000 Yards Lm&n, XewS^lci vii ,».• At Cents per Yard. i'fli ,-Sift\ T--5,000 Yards Spring Delaines, mmm
Jat
lfandsome Lace Collars at 25 cents. Lace Handkerchiefs, Real Beauties, at 26 oral* enL ,PJ Plain Handkerchief^ at 60 cents per down. Yeil Berege at 30 cents per yard. I Ladies Extra Hose at 10 cents per pair.
Llama Lace Foints. Botinds and Jackets. Beaftittii! anew and elegant dress goods, Brocade Orenadin Pure Silks and Japanese Cloths at more attractive
than were ever offered in Terre Haute.
Xf: a asoir. ..1^ box
Remember the Name and Race:
TueE'Bipley & Deming'E
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itaed «idai
MarJLM oitcx
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5.:buxt- I'tiT—. ataL
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GREAT TRUSTEE'S SALE"
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reeorve
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C. JWXTTIQ & 'CO.,
... 0i£
170 MIA.I1ST ST., DEMIKG H^OOK, .1 si, iinrt
*it? j«. et Terre Haute, Indiana, •!VS
t"
tt.amfM..: iu
mAt A•»»
Silks. Merinos, Alpacas, Cohurgs, Delaines,
Ginghams, Jaconets. Cambrics, Briltistttfl^ i«5 Piques, Table Xinen^ Napkins, Towels Tweeds,
CasgLmereg,
Hatineta,
line of Brown a«d
Will commence every Gents and es accompanying
Mr. C. P. TROY,
of the
A
Queen (My 0
ssistea I
ly Clerks.
BmomiI
Maslins, 01ore%Ho0iM*jr,
Trimmings, etc., Hi
endless variety.
Hasnnm-v
THE LADIES are respectfnlly invited to attead tha
I'/
%,
rmm»
,»"• .--.J
n-i-'-». jfc iAi- jjt «K»
At 121-2 Cents.
Ticking, that will hold feathers, iM.'J At 30. Cents per Tard.
300 All Linen Towels, At 10 Gents a piece.
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Corner Main and Fifth Street*. sq ,xiessxi
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TJIBIF I' «K-"R •YTOAJT
to
day
w*
BONi FIDE TRtSilEE'S
M'
U* ,:4
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'.'id A. (iaiwiMn: £a\m
«i
cially for their benefit,
IsTIO-IiT QAJLiBS14
il JR. •g.ici
1*. Jf.
as they anre espe
O*c1OOIl
preetaely, fw tlIMIl,
foXww$on*w
twai® officiates*
by a host of polite Mul„ge
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