Daily Wabash Express, Volume 20, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 16 June 1870 — Page 2

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DAILY EXPRESS.

ptopablloan Mate Tick*.

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:A"HOFFMAN.

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a S5SeoV

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B. C. OF

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AKDR^VT^L. OSBOl

JJ I. HMN

'V. -O f. I

W&I UOVERHOTT

•Sis? as

ij

HOFFMAN having appomt-

edMr. DAVIP A. WELLSone of the Commissioners to revive the laws for the assessment and collection of taxes in the State of New York, the Cincinnati

Tn Cincinnati

Jut 1*. 1870.

Tkursiaj Marauf

as*.-

IIMIHN

or

RVBUO IWWICTIM,

'FIIUKSABASC. HOBBS.

1

AM exchange argues that Utah has a

discovered at

hole is said to have been discovered Sail Lake which communicates with the interior of the earth. It

tb*1

Mormondom is about to be wholly swallowed up, going its way to the subterran oil. flames. Who'll object to such holocanstr

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THB Osage treaty, of which so much has been said, is defunct. In place of it a bill has passed the Senate, allowing the lands to be entered at $1 25 per aere, the. money to po to the Indians, who are to tie removed to a reservation. This spoils a g£at railroad speculation in Southern Kansas, but will be»»od news to the peopie in that section, There in land enough for 50,000 settlers at 160 acres e»ch. will be speedily taken.

Republican

thiniks the enterprise'does credit to their •m« sagacity, as we have a shipping amount opened with theBri#hh Gavarnment, and sart'i'i have some idea of taking Canftda for our

P# balance. By all means, let thefn get the jttart of us, and file their claim. When

••WW

they 0L it allowed, we can levy on it, and foreclose for the balance due us on the whole concern. •Yv"4

A MONTANA paper gives us the grati ill lyiag intelligence that the Uuited States, Vjsli or rather one of the Territories, possesses a politician who unites in himself all the virtnes that go to make up a perfect man ias This fortunate and ehronic possessor of office is "poble, henest, efficient, energet--Ssic, strictly temperate, wide-awake," and his name is JAKES

M.

DBEW

ASHLEY, once

known as Impeacher ASHLEY. Wi te! possession of all those good qualiti no wonder he wan anxious to oust

unce

fitlgliie

twtTJfr

JOHNSON from the Presidential

•\& chair. But, earnestly inquires a Philadelphia journal, is he not too good for

1

his present office, a mere Territorial Gov•**S» ernor? Ought he not to be removed from the temptations of politics altogethsrSs «r, and be enrolled in the missionary, or temperance cause? It is to be feared -ifcv-vi that his many good qualities will be ^:r: wasted in the wilds of Montana, where there are few to emulate the "nobility •Xfftii honesty, efficiency and strict tempeaanee of the superlative ASHLEY.

11

j.

Cliron-

Jy* fete is gratified to know that WELLS has been provided for by his own friends, and hopes that Congress and the administration will not be annoyed with any imi. further importunities for hip continuance as Bevemre Commissioner. That office, happily, expires by limitation at the close of this month. After his attempted betrayal of the interests of the nation by glaring misrepresentations and by fallacions Free Trade arguments in aid of

British manufactures, it was the height of impudence to ask a prolongation of his offiei^ term, at the hands of the Bepub lican party. The New York Democracy are weleome to their acquisition—if, in deed, he has not always really belonged to them. m-$

THK

1

President's recent message,

mangled in transmission by telegraph ns l|r be almost unintellegible, defines his .*--mm position in relation to Cubs. After stat ing the rule which has fhus far governed us in such cases, to wit: that a rebellious people may be recognised as belligerents as soon as they have proved their ability .,/*{ to hold out against the patent govern .ij iuent, the President Bavu that he finds in

*,.,1

theCnban revolt no elements of pcrma neney. They hold no town or city, have no established seat of government, no prize courts, no organization for receiving or collecting revenue, no seaport to which :i price may be carried, and even the ex istence of the sej|iblance.of alegi^ature is iloublfnl. Ilencethe United States would hth? not be justified in interfering as :vgain«t .j,,. the S|aniMh Government, or in regarding the insurgents in any other light than as rebellion whieh cannot maintain itself igainst the constituted authorities of the ,.. inland. iatil hi "St

THE Indianapolis Tiuus says:—We have been regaled from time to time with a pleasing report that the Northern ,,. Prison was paying expenses, and leaving quite a handsome little margin for ihe public strong-box. Hut the Auditor of

State, on Tuesday, dissipated the happy dream by issuing a warrant for S10,Sol 38 (fflrav the expenses of that institution for the fast quarter. If the concern don't iv, whymot* say so and be done with it?

The above, which originated in a paper •||, %.hat died wi the eighth day of ifc* mnn^wasiidane career, is still floating about among swur Slate exchanges. It is time to stop

-t

St. Any man who knows enough to edit a paper for even eight days, ought |p 'tonow that the entire receipts of the convicts' labor,and all other prison revenues, Iare |»aid over to the State, and that

J'be

Auditor draws his warrant for the rxpenses of the institution. This is ne-*^^-*ce«»ary and proper, and has always been the custom The Warden of the State 4s* Prison North paid into the Treasury an amount considerably larger than he drew out on the warrant, alluded to, so that the prison is not only self-supporting, but

jl

son rce of income to the State.

Enquirer

benevolently

diaerediU the Msertion of »«ounty p*p« that "the circulatfca of tfc» Qaebnii Commercial

hufrlko off oo»half' with

in a few weeks. It thinks the stalenent exaggeration^ ...

ALL 80BTS.

TerrieriBCOgnitia—Saosagw. A stern neeemty—• rudder. Idle men are dead all their lives. Holland expects to produce a blue tulip this year.

Dogmatism has been defined as developed puppyism. ANew York family has tried twenty cooks in a month.

One thousand married couples were divorced in Ohio last year. Tenderness, says a sentimental philoso-

xenaerness, tmya a

new elaim to be called the holy lan -pherrirpassion in repose. ...

KUW

In the British army a soldier gets a pension after 21 years' service. Most men are so untruthful that they will even lie in their graves.

George Sand is an inveterate smoker oi cigarettes which she makes hereelf. If you wish to see a woman go off like a flash, just accuse her of using powder.

The event in Parisian journalism is the issue of a journal in the Japanese langoage.

Prince Arthur visits Quebec on the 20th, and will soon after sail for England with his regiment.

It

THE Canadians have been casting up m: their book of items, showing t&e cost of Fenian raids, and make the amount some three millions and think of sending the little bill over to Washington to draw the gold on. The Chicago

Spurgeon defines a gentleman as "one who can serve his God and at the same time paddle his own canoe."

The latest agony in hoop skirts is an attachment which enables the wearer to kneel in charch without tilting.

A man at Atlanta, Ga., recently, who sleeps with his mouth open, had his false teeth stolen by an adroit thief.»«^

Charles H- Sweetser, formerly of New York, but lately of St Paul, Minn., is now literary editor of the Chicago

Times, v.

A good idea when you are making calls on a rainy evening is to take a cotton um brella out with you and bring home 41k one.: bs

A Dayton boy filled a sprinkling can with coal oil, and his father sprinkling the lawn with it. He is having his lawn re-sodded.

Donald G. Mitchell, editor of

and Home,

Hearth

has been commissioned to im­

prove the college grounds at Princeton New Jersey. In view of the tiendishness of the Greek brigands, it is thought that the people of that country well deserve to. be termed Hellenic.

Rev. Mr. Jameson, the Methodist pastor of a church in Kiverhead, Long Island, has disappeare4^ith all the church property he could cafry oft.

Swinburne has issued a collection call ed "Songs before Sunrise." A wit suggests that "We won't go home till mom ing" should be among them.

Brigham Young has officially announced that he has but sixteen wives and only forty-nine children. How that poer old man has been slandered!

The

Wpectator

speaks of a wealthy class

in England "which is daily growing more earless of culture, more vulgar in extravagance and vice."

Miss Amy M.Bradely has been appointed Examin^n* of School for New Hanoyer couuty, N. C. She is the pioneer female office-holder in North Carolina.

A joker at Dayton says the reason wLy the fish have been dying in the canal is because a certain citizen has been bathing in a ditch which empties into it.

An|exchange says: "Trying to do business without advertising is like winking through a pair of green goggles. You may raiow that you are doing it but nobody else does."

The Mississippi legislators make a good thing of it. Besides drawing eight dollars a day, one of them keeps a butcher shop and another plays the fiddle at private parties."" ",,

Some one sent to a Richmond paper, as original, an extract from the Song of Solomon, and the editor published it "as a fair specimen of the poetical effusion* which are daily thrown into our wastebasket." .0,

Two ladiee in New York, one of them no leBS a person than Md. Demorest, have formed a partnership for carrying on a wholesale tea business. Ladies have long been employed as "tasters" by many leading houses, with marked success. :ES£

A Conductor's Story—A Coffin Without a Corpse. A western railway conductor tells thi* horrible story:

I was running on a train between Detroit and Chicago, in 186—. A gentleman of Chicago was taken East the dead body of his brother for burial among the family friends in New England. During the night the wooden coffin, by reason of the friction of the nails against those of the large rough box which enclosed it, or in some more mysterious way, caught fire, and before discovered the corpse was burned to a crisp, the outer covering* of the coffin being but little injured. When the horrible fact was made known by rae to the brother, after taking him aside, I thought lie would then die. His grief unmanned me more and broke niecfown more completely than all the killing I had ever seen. "His sister must never know this," said he, after a long paroxysm of grief "it will kill her." All the employes of the company acquainted with what had happened were sworn to secrecy. An elegant new coffin was procured at Chicago, in which the burned remains were carefully fastened, and the grief-stricken brother conveyed the ashes, literally, of the dead East, and they were buried "without any friend, save on?, knowing that ll\e coffin contained no corpse. And that brother has kept this secret from his people and from the press to this '.y. -f

"My «od! Let me die!" At about 8:45 eaeh night on whieh Anna Dickinson speaks her piece entitled "Whited Sepulchres"—provided she begins promptly at 8 o'clock—that exclamation comes in. It can be depended upon just that tninute of time, for then she gets along in her Mormon story to her visit to one of the polygamists, where she experienced such moral agony at the sight of the much-married household as to wish to shuffle off this mortal coil as soon as possible. But her host on that dtcasion declares that Anna partook of an entertainment provided, with a relish for strawberries not at all in keeping with such mental agony as should court instant death. Anna not only ate heartily, but wa« so inquisitive that the wives were obliged to snub her. And more than that, she made such a business matter of it as to take a reporter along with her, who, with pencil and paper, took down not only everything that took place, but much more than was said or done. At the very instant of time when Anna was so shocked as to pray for death, she was putting herself outside bountiful supply of strawberries and cream, was asking very impudent questions, and her amanuensis was tax notes for her lecture.—Exchange.

ting

Affair

Awnl

Fearful

Accident,

Circus

Three Men Devoured Alive by tfce Lions.

From the Middletown, (Mo.,) Banner. The unuoual quiet little village of Middletown waa lately thrown into a painful fever of excitement on the morning of May 12th, by an awful catastrophe, which occurred to the band lately attached to James Robinson & Co.'s circus and animal show, and led by Prof. M. C. Sexton.

Upon starting out from Cincinnati for the season, the management determined to produced something novel in the way of a band chariot, and conceived the idea of mounting the band upon the colossal den of performing Numidian lions, and which would form one of the principal and most imposing features of the show.

Although repeatedly warned by Prof. Sexton that he deemed the cage insecure and dangerous in the extreme, the managers still persisted in compelling the Band to ride upon it. Nothing, however, occured until the fatal morning of the 12th.

The Band took their places and the procession commenced to move amid the shouts of the multitude •f rustics who had assembled to witness the grand pageant, and hear, the enlivening'strains of music. Not a thought of danger was entertained by any one, but the awful catastrophe was about to occur.

As the driver endeavored to make a turn in the streets the leaders became entangled and threw the entire team into confusion and he lost control of them, and becoming frightened they broke into a violent run. Upon the opposite side of the street the fore-wheel of the cage came in contact with a large rock with such force as to cause the braces and stanchions which supported the roof to give way thereby precipitAing the entire band into the awful pit below.

For an instant the vast crowd were paralyzed with fear, bnt for a moment only, and then arose such a shriek of agony as was never heard before. The awful groans of terror and ajgeny which arose from the poor victims who were being torn, lacerated by the frightful monsters below, was heart-rending and sickening to a terrible degree.

Every moment some one of the band would extricate themselves from the debris, and leap over the sides ot

the

cage to. the ground with a wild spring and faint away from striking the earth, so great was their terror. But human nature could not stand and see men literally devoured before their very eyes, for there were willing heartM and strong arms ready to render every assistance necessary to rescue the unfortunate victims of this shocking calamity.

A hardware store which happened to stand opposite was invaded by the request of the noble hearted proprietor, and pitchforks,crowbars and long bars of iron, and in fact every available weapon was brought into requisition, The side-doois of the cage were quickly torn from their fastenings, and then a horrible sight was presented to view. Mingled among the brilliant uniform of the poor unfortunates lay legs, arms, torn from their sockets and half devoured, while the savage brutes glared ferociously with their sickly green-colored eyes upon the petrified crowd. Professor Charles White arrived at this moment, and gave orders in regard to extricating the dead and wounded—he well knowing it would be a dflicult and dangerous undertaking to re move them from the infuriated monsters.

Stationing men with forks and bars at everv available point, he sprang fearlessly into" the den amid the savage monsters, and commenced raising the wounded, and passing them upon the outside to their friends. He had succeeded in removing the wounded, and was proceeding to gather up the remains of the lifeless, when the mammoth lion, known to showmen as old Nero, sprang with a frightful roar npon his keeper, fastening his teeth and claws in him in his neck and slioul ders, lacerating him in a horrible man' ner. Prof. White made three herculean efforts to shake the monster off, but without avail, and gave orders to fire upon him.

The contents of four of Colt's navys were immediately poured into the carcass of the ferocious animal and he fell dead and the brave little man, notwithstanding the fearful manner in which lie was wounded, never left the cage until every vestige of the dead were carefully gathered together and placed upon a sheet, preparatory for burial. It was found three of the ten who mounted the cage a short time before were killed outright, and four others terribly lacerated. The names of the killed are August Schoer, Conrad Freeiz ana Charles Greiner. Coffins were procured and an immediate burial determined upon, as the bodies were so frightfully torn and lacerated as to be unrecognizable to their most intimate friends. It was a melancholy day for Middletown, and a sadder day for the friends and companions of the deceased.

Of all that vast multidude who started out in the morning with anticipations of a glad holiday few left for their homes with dry ey* after the triple funeral— for the entire community followed the remains to the quiet little cemetery. At midnight the carcass of the slain beast was quietly buried on the Iot^ where was intended to be given the exhibition but which was never accomplished. There is a terrible responsibility resting upon some one which should be thoroughly investigated and the guilty parties brought to a quick and speedy punishment. The lions are the same ones which nearly cost Prof. Charles White his life two years ago while traveling with the Thayer and Noyes party, and were known to be a verv dangerous cage of animals. Every attention js being given to the sufferers bv the kind and hospitable citizens of Middletown, and it is to be hoped they will soou recover from their wounds, apd at lasi accounts they were all pronounced out of danger. !,...

THH CITY,

HAT HOUSE

Haviiic closcd out my Stock Wrocerie.* and gone into tlie

HAT AND (1AP BUSINESS

oxoluiively, I am now prepared to «ell Iho same atcreatlr

REDUCED PRICES!

Having purchased them 'recently at

PANIC PRICES

FOK CASH, whfch enables me to

SELL CHEAPER

My stock is all new and all the latest B^les. Call

Than the Chew and before pnrtfiaeinir ehiewhere

J, P, BADGLEY, JW». 12, Soilth 4th Street,

way31

Terre

KID FITTING

CORSET.

This Corset is eonatnrated on an entoely new principle, beinxqpCT^tnd ^ereby^allowwearer, all the advantages of the* common Corsets in giving c—Tort,they are %nrioaUed in the market.

They are particu­

larly recommended for summer wear, ana warm climates, although equally well adapted to all seasons of the year. They are highly recommended by medical and scientific men. For sale by all ta^olaas deaUre.Fordrcular«, prices, etc.. address the WOBCESTEK 8K1KT CO., Werewler, MSH.

(ESTABUffiBKlk 18M0

WELCH & GRIFFITHS,

8awB!Axes! Saws! SAWS of all desmptwns. AXES. OTLTING and MILL FDRNISHINGS. CIBCULAK BAWSwith Solid Teeth. ?V^ratedTe^th instablePoints .sBp

.enqr to all Inserted Xeeth

S a •"*Send WK&H GKIFFITHsf" n, K*M. or D« trait, Mick.

Aromatic A®fi»®table Soap

(^0^ CO

TOILET

SOAPS

For the Delicate Rkia of fcadles aad Children ESTABLISHED 180«. tOBK. Sold by all Druggists.

IOATOai FBEEMASOXKY, by Elder D. Bernard, revised edition, to which is

appended a revelation of the mysteries of OnD-FKLLOWgmr: entire woik of .00 pages, octavo, cloth-embossed, will be sent.pott-patn on receipt of $2. Address RE\ SHUEY.Dayton.Ohio.

One Million Acres

OF

CHOICE IOWA LANDS

For sale at JS per aero and upwards, for cash, or on credit, by the Iowa K«llroa«l Land Co. Railroads already built through the lands and on all sides of them. Great inducements to settlers. Send for our free Pamphlet: it icivos prices,terms.locatiyn tclUwhoshould como west, what they should bring, what it will cost (fives plans and elevations oi lSditfeAnt styles of ready-made houses, which the Company furnish at from 8250 to $4,000 ready

Company

,US

wiliKEKt Vice-Pretuient, Cedar Hapldtt, Iown.

PATENTS.

Inventors who wish to take out Letters Patent are advised to counsel with MUNN & CO.. editors of the

Scieiitific American,

who ha_v«

prosecuted claims befor® the Patent (Jnicc tor over Twenty Years. Their American and European l'i'tent Agency iR the most extensive in tbc worbl. ChnrROS than any other reliable iisoncy A p:imibli:t euntnininit full instruction* to inventors -ent srratis.

MUNN & t- 37 Park Row, New ork, A.

MODEL HOUSE. Boing a cripple. 1 have in ado house planning fl' special ftmly one built last season has proved a model of conveniouce, beauty, ana economy (irscviptive rirou 1

H_

WKLLPIACED

cipe sent for

3986,

of Plans,

Views,etc..with general information of value to all. sent free atWlrcrJi? (with .itainp or script if convenient), GEORGE J. COLBY, Architect, Waterbury. Vermont. 41 A "PCHfW Wanted in ljA.ljJ24i9lU.-E4.ni business: S. DY. 413 Chestnut street, Philadelphia, rriTTl Hl'JIAS MACHINE—'Sew Book, lllij Free for Stamp, TAKRANT&C0., New York.

Love Essays for

Young Men, free, in sealed envelopes, Howard Association, BoxP, Philadelphia,Pa

MOUSTACHES

sr'Arvi

50

conts address

Box

II. RICHARDS

New York

P. 0.

DRY COODS.

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WARREN,HOBERG & CO.

Corner 4th and Main Streets.

Have received a full line of Gentlemons'

SUMMER UNDERWEAR!

AliSO-

uiifs

iU'.-r JT-*

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Brown,Blcaohcd and Bluo mixed

'S£ui

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ALF HOSE!'

.-V T.

Tii'*fin?*•'JStout,

Super Fine,

fJule Thread and, Heavy nil, iH purchased re..C,-,. eenf Iff and offered,

w.fl_ ,at-uot7 tsff .tuft*4' VERY CHEAP! it.Q

4

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Warren*' Hoberg & Co.'j

/. 'iw ...

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SHCCBSS0RS TO

lTy

Haute, Ind.

OUR WAR#HIGH PRICES STILL CONTINUES

NO BACKWARD STJCPS WILL BE TAKEN! The signs of the times are unmistakable! THERE'S TROUBLE IN THE CAMP OF THE ENEST! The cries of opposition Stores grow fainter! They are

Tins up all efforts at competition! They are marking their Goods up to their old prices!

FOSTER BROTHERS

Aie marching on flushed*with ttne of the greatest victories ever achieved over the old fogy high priced system of selling Dry Goods and Carpets.

Where is now that boasted arrogance that was to drive ns from the field in less than thirty days? Where arc lie Merchants that promised to defeat ns 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 opposition.

With deserted stores and idle clerks they pass up and down in front of our establishment wondering why it is that we are always so busy. Ask any of the vast ,J

Crowds of Customers

That daily fill our Store7ind they will tell you "for years these high priced Stores have been demanding of us the most extortionate rates, and it was only when

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short sleev es

Merino Undershirts,

loag

Merino Undershirts, White Drilling Drawers, White" Linen Drawers,

sleeves.

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ft is it

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FOSTER BROTHERS 7

Game 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 a

1

SPIRIT OF THE PEOPLE.

But this is not all, for they invariably add, "hereafter we will do all our trading at FOSTER'S."

FRESH ARRIVALS FROM NEW YORK:

Fine and handsome Muslins for 8 cents, others charge 12*. Extra yard wide Muslins only lOcents a yard.

Common Muslin* ti and 7 cents, same as others sell at 8 and 9 cents. Good Prints5, and 7 cents best Spragne Prints 8 cents. Beat Spring DeLaines 11 cents, worth 20.

1

Elegant Brocade Alpacas ]8 cents, othere charge 25 cents, Good line of Alpacas—our price 20 cents. .• In fine qualities of Dress Goods we have a new stock, just arrived, ai the prices of common goods in high priced stores.

Black Silks from $1 to S4 per yard, generally sold at from !j].50 to ?o. ^.j. Beautiful line of Percales at 25 cents, others charge 40 cents. Elegant linp of Fancy (roods at Panic Prices. v. Parasols for 40, 50, CO, 70, S5 cents, $1, $2, $2,50 and $3.

All Silk large Sun Umbrella $1 and $1,25. t* Shawls $2, S2,50, S3.00, $3,50, $4,50 and up to $50. These Goods are nearly one half cheaper than can be found in other stores. Lama Lace Points, line quality, at $5. ,f Piles of other goods equally cheap. Ours is the only concern in Terre Haute having stores in N«w York City, therefore

THE ONLY NEW YORK STORE IS

FOSTER

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IT MATTERS NOT

7 'v 1 i« £T" i-wtsa

HERZ & ARNOLD.

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are ^oing with the times, and sell all (woods in our line, at any time,

II THE WEST.

CALL AND SEE FOR YOURSELVES,

ftr

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wio?A.-V~O }c .wSyz',l

a.t4jb 113

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ii- .i.. '.' s-wJf til

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BROTHERS,

".1 jJe J'lte i.'f A IN ortli side of* Street.

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I?-.'.

124 Main St., Opera House, Block

Be particular~to observe that we are on the north side of the Main street, a there are parties on the south side representing themselves to strangers ag, the New York Citv Store.

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Cheaper than any other House

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At 89 Main Street, between 3d and 4th Sts.

\US 'ms

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Tlut

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21-2 cents for Prints was a Squib!

1

E A IS

•I

..-g We offer at retail

3,000 Yards good Bleached' Muslin, At 10 Cents rt&

5,000 Yards Lawn,

S,000 Yards Spring Delaines, At 121-2 Cents.

Ticking, that will hold Feathers, At 20 Cents per Yard,

300 All Linen Towels, At 10Cents a piece. (I 4s I

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We propose to carry these rates into our .KiW?9 4

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'-(fSns*. to "jt, ,i_ fii A-"' 'tij

Handsome Laco Collars at 25 cents. o**, 3 Lace Handkerchiefs, Real Beantles, at 26 cento eaeb. *m, Plain Handkerchiefs at 60 cents per doien. Veil Berege at 30 cents per yard. ^w Ladies Extra Hose at 10 cents per pair.

few-1 til 'fO

Llama Lace Points, Botinds and Jackets Bezkntine, anew and elegant dress goods, Brocade Grenadine^ Pure Silks and Japanese Cloths at more attractire prions than were ever offered in Terre Haute.

H) CJtl Mi 9UMtl .'hi

Remember the Name and Place:

Tuell, Ripley & Deming't

stei'sir

.»* «tf 1*

At precisely 10

'X i*f •*$)?

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Hew Ntylea

At 11 Cents per Yard.:I«?t

1ft

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WHITE G00J)S AND NOTION DEPMTMMT^

HU «V."

•1 We are selling .'*T.p« j-.f-r r^T r-r» t&tisnte?'*-

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11

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GHEAT TRUSTEE'S SALE

a sjrrjTu-

Of Fine Fanoy Dress and 8la|lle

ftr Q" O O ID S! 9

To be sold positively without reserve to

THE HIGHEST BIDDER!

1

-AT-

Jta rj'ut

C. WITTIG- & CO.,

170 M-A.X3ST ST., DEMINO BLOCS,

Terre Haute, Indiana..

Commencing Monday, June 6th, at 10 o'clock 4.M, and

and 8 P. 31., continuing from day to day tfnffl the Stock is entirely disposed of.

The citizens oj' Terre Haute mid vicinity will pltik'sc bear in mind that tlvim is a in frfyfat

BONi FIDE TRUSTEE'S SALE

4 -i WhicJi miifitand will be nolcl at your OWN figures, without regard to coif. .....

Ladies Sales every morning at 10 o'clock A. M. & 2 P. M,

The Stock consists in part of

.s "1 I

Silks, Merinos, Alpacas, Coburgs, Delaines, .73 Ginghams, Jaconets. Curabrics, *m Piqnes, Table Linens, Napkins, Towels, Jama,

Tweeds, Cassimeres, Satinets, a fall line of Brown and Bleached ... Mnslins, Gloves, Hosiery,

TrimminKs, etc., in

"Morning and'Afternoon Sales

...

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war ,« ixJixao-'

nad

Comer Main and Fifth Street*. sla n.A (i utittsW

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at 1.

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litam

OYER-$40,000 WORTH

'-n-kiin 'i teoltlixorr a*u-

A. M. mid 2

JP.

cially for their benefit, & *. I 'ryt I '1

*1

Will commence every evening at 8 o'clock .. Gents and Ladles accompanying 1

Mr, C, JP, TROY, the favorite AueUonesr of the Queen City, (Cincinnati) officiates, assisted by a host of polite (md gentlemanly cierks. vv •''v?.k.\ °v:- yr

is 1:*

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ill

41. S

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Poplins, Print*,

Brilliants, Nainsooks,

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a

-••it- endless variety. ... ..

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THE LADIES are respectfully Invited to attend the

M. as they are espe­

1

C. P. TROY, Anetleneer.^