Daily Wabash Express, Volume 21, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 October 1871 — Page 2
DATLV EXPRESS,
TERRB HAUTE, INDIANA.
Thursday Morning, Oct. 19. 1871.
NOTES ASD CLIPPINGS.
TIIEKE are 4,000 unlicensed liquor saloons in Philadelphia. THE "City of Paris," just disabled, had the second-be3t record for speed of any trans-Atlantic cteamer. The Russia has the first.
ESPECTABLE men have begun refusing to run as Democratic candidates in the Stale of New York since Tweed's triumph at Rochester.
IT IS stated that Jay Gould ran his train, bearing bread, and butter to Chicago, sixty miles an hoar, and landed in the hungry city without a liot box or a worn tire.
No-FACT is more clearly established than this: that the more besotted and degraded a white man has become, the core intenee is his hatred of the colored people. One never hears an educated and refined white man cursing the ne
gro. MBS. TXIACY CUTLER
and Miss Lucy
Stone have done a wise thing in inserting as a clause of their platform that their single aim is suffrage, and in giving every one to understand that they are satisfied with marriage as it is, and in no way inclined to free love.
IT IS the opinion of a sagacious cotemporary that, if the New York Tribune" would exhibit less concern about the removal of Collector Murphy and more for tbe Republican victory in the State of New York, that journal would be quite as likely to have an opportunity to rejoice over both achievements.
GREAT geniuses always turn up in great crises. A Chicagoan, fearing from the
general
reputation of that city for "blow
ing," that posterity will not believe the story of the great calamity, suggests that all the damaged safe3 be piled upon a
public
park, making a monument higher
than the dome of the Court House. THE Indianapolis "News" says: Sermons upon the Chicago calamity were preached all over the country on Sunday and many of them declared in so many words that the fire was a judgment upon Chicago for its wickedness. It is really amazing to see what a low estimate so many good and apparently sensible people put upon tue Creator, making him subject to whim and caprice and entirely ignoring the great natural laws which He has ordained and which so wonderfully declare his infinite majesty and power."
THE Missouri "Democrat" declares that "of thirty-five or forty thousand Republicans who voted for Brown last fall, fully nine-tenths are as resolved as any Republicans can be to sustain the Republican nominee for the Presidency. They will not allow any quibble over the matter of a committee to divert them from that purpose. To say that they have 'gone back on their record'in this is to say what is most conspicuonsly false. They have always declared that they would do as they now propose to do, and they are simply preserving their consistency and mean to redeem their pledge. They have not 'come back' or 'gone back' to the national Republican party, whose cause, as they understood and understand it, they never deserted and never intend to desert." \TECE Cleveland "Herald" thinks Kansas can take the red ticket on disgusting Fair shows. At Atchison the main feature of the Fair one day was the baby show, where not only a premium was awarded to the handsomest baby, but also to the ugliest, and also to the fattest. A country baby took the premium for fat, and city young ones took the premiums for ugliness and beauty. The announcement was made that another year the premiums would be increased, the announcement being thus made at this early day that those who propose to compete may be getting their stock ready. There being no limit to age, everybody has a chance to try for the premiums. That style of show should be left to Mormondom, where multiplication of the species is taught as the chief end of man.
SAYS the Philadelphia "Press": Senator Brownlow is one of the most ruggedly honest natures the country ever produced —a sort of modern Andrew Jackson. Dissimulation and dissemblers find no favor in his eyes, and he is always ready with tongue or pen to denounce the wrong or defend the right. In a letter addressed to the people of Tennessee correcting certain misstatements of the new Governor he says: "Instead of Tennessee being quiet and peaceable, as Governor Brown represents it, I believe we ought to have martial law proclaimed and Federal troops enough sent to the State to protect every citizen in his rights, and put a stop tcrthe murder of citizens by Governor Brown's partisan Ku Klux: friends. And I don't hesitate to say that I would support such a proposition in the United States Senate."
THE Country learns with regret tha^ there "is no truth in the report that Collector Murphy has resigned." That official Bhould understand that hia retire* ment from hispre3ent position is demand^ ded by every honest man in the country. The charges made against him by the New York "Tribune" for fraudulent practices upon the government during the war, were supported by the amplest evidence, and so strongly supported indeed, that Collector Murphy has not even attempted to disprove them. The people care nothing about this matter so far as rests between Mr. Thomas Murphy and the "Tribune", though they are quite willing the "Tribue" should have the credit of exposing his frauds upon the government. The country more than •ver at this time desires to see integrity characterizing the holders of office, and they do not recognize any such quality in the collector of the port of New York.
For this reason and none other thev demand that his place shall be filled with "another against whom no such damaging evidence of corruption and peculation rests. The Republican party, in view of its recent great victories, has determined to purify itself, and a good beginning in this direction would be the retirement from its honors of the New York collector
^ifTfirr
AT Dstroit, en .the 15th and 16th °l next month) the old Army of the Cumberland will hold its fifth annual reunion. The end of the establishment of the Society of the Cumberland is to prcs^fe that fraternal feeling which in the war times gave the army such distinction and so many glorious successes- "Says an Eastern journal: "The Army of the Cumberland was in many respects a peculiarly distinctive one. Separated from the body of the United Slates forces, operating throughout the war almost entirely independent of all other armies, led during its entire existence by but three commanders—Sherman, Rosecrans, and Thomas—removed by distance from the demoralizing influences of Washington! it early assumed and to the last retained a character especially its own. Of this character, a3 well as of its victories and trials, its members are yet proud -r and to cherish and revive the old memories, the old associations, and the old virtues, they gather in November."
THE LOWELL FACTORIES.
The Wages of Female Labor—The Character of Mill (xirls—Wage? Paid the Male Help, etc.
A correspondent of the New York "Tribune" has anintercsting letter from Lowell, from which we take the following ex. tract. After describing the city and factories, he says: The wages paid to females are stated to average $3 60 to $3 75 a week clear of board. Feeling much interest in this branch of the manufacturing interest. I asked an Alderman, who politely took time to show me through the mills,many questions as to the financial and social condition of the female operatives. He simply pointed to the different women as we passed them, and asked: "Dothey look worked down, consumptive, downtrodden?" And on Friday of the Fair, when the factories were closed, he pointed to the thousands of gaylyand neatly-dressed girls with happy faces and healthy forms, and asked the same question. Their appearance was in every instance in direct refutation of the silly rant of demagogues. He said that mo3t of them worked by the job or piece, that the amount they made depended in a great measure on their own Rwiftness and diligence. "It's all nonsense about their being worked to death a great many of them get through bv five o'clock, and then quit for the day. They save from one to three dollars per week of their earnings, as you see our savings banks report an aggregate amount of deposits of $7,000,000. Occasionally they get tired of working, and will rest awhile, living on their savings. I have known dozens of them who saved .up enough to buy themselves little cottages when they married, thus being independent of the corporation tax for rent."
All have heard many tales of Lowell girls, of their frolics and gayety I ask: ed, What of their morals Well, you know human nature is human the world over, and it is no better here than elsewhere, but I do not bejievethat there can be found another locality in the world where there are so many females where so little immorality exists. They will joke, but it is death to them among their companions and relatives to go beyond the point of good morals. Then and there ends their chance for marrying. I venture you will-not find' the same number of working people of the same grade of intelligence anywhere."
Of a member of the Common Council I ask the same question. He replied: "My experience is that the girls here are far more moral than in Boston and New York. Nearly all of them have fathers or brothers, and they dare not go astray for fear of being caught. By a sort of social rule among themselves, I think the standard of morals is higher than usual among such masses of humanity. I have been a member of the Common Council for over 14 years, and I do not know of a single assignation house in the city."
Talking with a beavy of bright-eyed, healthy-looking girls, I asked them jf they could save any money at their small wages. "Yes, Sir, that we do." "You dress well doesn't it cost all you make?" "No, Sir we make our own clothes." "Why, I thought you were worked so hard that you had no time of your own." "No, Sir Nan, there, makes $2 a day, aricl she never works before 7 and after 5 o'clock, and not many of us do then we take our resting spells and visit around." "But don't you lose your places in the factory by that?" "No, we generally arrange for some girl to take our places, and it is very seldom they are not willing to take back a smart quick girl whom they know."
I was surprised in various conversations with these girls to find them well educated, using the best English,_ and frequently well versed in the best literature. One gentleman told me that the Irish element was rapidly coming in, and, in his opinion, was not an improvement. He stated that, in combating the small-pox, the Health Board fouud no trouble in the American quarters, but in Irish neighborhoods, it was discouraging. The increase of Catholic churches is another evidence of this Celtic invasion. The Irish are not so neat or quick as the American girls, and are much more quarrelsome.
The wages paid to males per day is $1 20 to $'2, exclusive of board. I have gone through nearly all the mills, and have made the condition of the workmen and labor question a particular point of inquiry and study. I saw no work which would "grind out the life of the young child"—in fact, nearly every young child I saw was in school. My observations and inquiries were not made under the frown of an "avaricious employer the superintendents said to me, "Go where you please ask any question you desire of foreman or employe, whether it be male or female if you desire any information they cannot give, come to me"
Then I was shewn into and through numbers of the "corporation" houses, where the employes live and board I saw the whole system of management in all its details. I saw in no place any evidences of oppression no necessity for the "protection of the ill-paid or over-worked laborer from the exactions of avarice but I found cleanliness, thrift, industry, and as much, in fact, I think, more happiness, than I ever before saw among the same number of the laboring class. The only grumblers about poor wages and long work hours were those notoriously lazy.
In the Middlesex Mills, of which Gen. Butler is one of the largest stockholders, and which he with one other controls, I saw thirty girls working at shawl-looms they would compare favorably with the same number from any part of the world for good looks, health and neatness they were paid by the yard, and it was seldom any of them worked after 5 o'clock, having by that time finished what they desired as a day's work. In the same factory I saw men sitting leisurely on stools while their work went on without their help. They simply watched it. Surely the idea of overwork W3S not drawn from this fac tory. I certainly saw no worse evidences in any other.
THEadherentsof the Lost Cause recently held a reuion, made speeches and ate a roasted ox at Lexington, Missouri. With singular good sense the speakers abstained from predictions Jof another rebellion, restricting themselves to an excusable glorification of Southern valor, and eulogy of the dead.
WHAT BUKNED CHICAGO.
The Bovine Theory Untenable.
From the Cin. Timet and Chr«nide.l The lastilames of burning Chicago are extinguished, and the last of a dozen incendiaries taken- down from teinporay elevation on a lamp-post, and we have now sufficient time to examine a subject that will not improve with smothering, to-wit, that the terrible fire owed one-half its work, if not its origin, to the determined and organized effort of incendiaries. The proposition is sensational, but the evidence is graVe. A scapegoat, or rather, a scapecow, has heen found and located on Deko^eB, but there are certain other facts that give the bovine story a very romantic tinge. In the facts that follow thereis a logical order of events which canf be .much more easily attributed to plan than to chance.
On Saturday" night a fire of unusual proportions breaks out in the very portion of. the city most dangerous to its safety— the very place where the strong wind blowing in from the prairie could catch the flames and sweep them over the residence and business portions of the metropolis. After a night of battle the flames are conquered, with a loss of $3,"000,000. At, nine o'clock the next evening, afire breaks out right in the heart of the town, on Dearborn street, near the Post Office. While the exhausted firemen are extinguishing this, and thus drawn a mile way from the last night's scene of action, a lake of fire firings up as by magic on the very edge of the old fire, and sweeps on with the incoming gale. Toiling over their weary mile of obstructed streets, the firemen attack their new enemy and, while fighting desperately, see the South Side burst into blaze. This the correspondents explain with "flying embers." It was a mile away, and not in the diieciion of the windl Apart of the wearied laborers rushed for the new scene, only to find other fires springing up in every direction, and finally to see the North Side ablaze, and under circumstances that render it very difficult to believe that the fire could, of its~own accord, have jumped the river.
So much a priori. Now as to facts, from a hundred well authenticated instances, bearing the acknowledgment of the heads of police and reliable citizens, we extract the following:
Hannah, Lay & Co., who own a lumber pile near the City Elevator, found a bundie of hay and straw deposited in a risky place, and saturated with kerosene.
A silk dress saturated with kerosene was flung over a garden fence on Wabash avenue, into a back yard, and was picked up dripping with oil.
In the alley between Taylor and Twelfth streets, running from Halsted to Newberry street, a man attired in a black coat was found crouching at the rear of a barn, and in the act of applying a lighted match to dry combustible material.
At 11 o'clock on Tuesday forenoon Charles Coy, employed at the City Elevator, was on Mitchell street, near Canal street, when he heard the cry of fire raised by. soipfi, women. "Rushing into a shed, he discovered a quantity of brimstone on the floor, burning. In this instance, too, the incendiary escaped.
At the drug store of Mead Brothers, on Canal street, Detween Judd and Wilson streets, there was found under the barn, ou Tuesday afternoon, a piece of Manilla rope six feet long, saturated with tar and other combustible substances. The_ ends were frayed, so that it would readily ignite, and on one end a loose knot was tied and soaked in tar. •Mis Fries (examined by police) says her father was a wealthy jeweler. She left the home two days before the fire, and was staying two blocks away from her father's house. On Sunday night she saw the house on fire, and a gang of loafers throwing kerosene into it. She fled to her home, which she found to be on fire. Some men seized her and put her into a street car, and she was borne rapidly to the West Side. Her father aud mother perished.
These little incidents in connection with the sudden and unexpected burning of the water works, the subsequent attempts at incendiarism in the unburned part of the city, and the dispatches that reach us form Louisville, Syracuse and Buffalo of attempted arson, are sufficient to open our eyes to their widest extent, if nothing more.
The explanation of the willful destruction—if willful it was—i» a more difficult matter. TheKu-Klux ideas and hints at the "International" that are beginning to creep into the dispatches are altogether too visionary for adoption. A great fire brings sufficient reward to swell the mob of robbers that infest our cities to obviate the necessity of our going to Europe or to politics for the reason of such fiendish work. We are not prepared to maintain that any body of men carefully planned the destruction of Chicago by fire, but there is at least too much evidence of an organized scheme for a tremendous fire—one that should offer unparalleled opportuni ties for the richest plunder. It is not the first, nor the hundredth time that like work has been attempted, and too great care can not betaken to prevent its repetition there, or its imitation elsewhere.
The Mont Cenis Tunnel.i The openieg of the Mont Cenis Tunnel might supply a text for a variety of sermons. We might dilate upon it from a political, or a scientific, or an aesthetic point of view. We shall not speak in this place of its political significance nor do we desire to discuss its merits considered as an example of engineering skill. It is enough to say that the annihilation of the Alps is one of those rare triumphs which give a poetic tinge to the art of the engineer. Like a great battle or a revolution, it forms a landmark in history. Only a few such feat9have been performed, "and fewer still, it would seem, remain for our descendants. The successful laying of the Trans Atlantic cable and the piercing of the Isthmus of Suez were equally, or perhaps even more impressive in their way but it is rather difficult to see what feat in the immediate future can have the same kind of dramatic com pletencss. The construction of a tunnel from England to France would be a worthy pendant to thfe performance the annihilation for practical purposes of the silver streak of sea might be even more interesting to HS islanders than the abolition of the more brilliant silver of the Alpine snows. The travelers by the old diligences never suffered the horrors of sea-sickness, and humanity would perhaps be relieved from a greater accumulation of horrors. Whether the annexation of England to the continent would be more affecting to the cosmopolitan imagination than the union of Italy to Trans-Alpine regions is a question which we are perhaps hardly competent to decide., When, however, that feat has been performed, it will be difficult to look forward to another of equal merit until the first party of human beings i« enabled to direct its course through the air in a genuine flying machine. But we mnst refrain from speculating on the future. It would be rash to say what wonders are in store for us. We may remember the time when that dilapidated institution, the Thames Tunnel, was still an object of profound admi ration and, indeed, even to the present day we believe that it is the first sight which parties of that variety of foreigner which corresponds to the Cook's tourist of our native land hasten to examine on their visits to London. Even at a recent period we have encountered peasants in remote mountain villages whose one notion of England was that it was the land of the Thames
Tunnel. They have now a more surprising triumph of skill in their own neighborhood and if the labors of our grandchildren are paijie ratio which the
mm
mountains bears to that beneath our rlvar, We may well refrain from the attempt to conceive their PRECISE nature. We may vaguely looltiprwjtrd to the time when all natural obstacles, including the ocean, will lrme their practical,significance, and the whole planet become one country, bound together by a vast network of linea of communication, after thfe -precedent already set by the United States.—The Saturday Review.
THE report that a sandpiper had been drowned in attempting to wade the Ohio river at Louisville is incorrect. The journey was made in safety, and though the adventurous bird took a life preserver along withhim, he had no use for it. The bed of the river is as dry as a floor, with the exception of a narrow channel not quite so broad as Washington street, through which a feeble current flows. —Jnd. Evg. Journal.
"I BELIEVE that mine'will be the fate of Abel," said a devoted wife to her husband one: day. "How so?" inquired the husband. "Because Abel was killed by a club, and your club-will kill me i{ you continue to go to it every night." 5
ABBEY SAGE RICHARDSON has agreed to give fifty reading* after January 1, under the management of the American Literary Bureau.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS
SLATER'S
GANCEK, i»YPIf JIiIS, RCBOFBtA, ULCERS, HALT KIIfcUM and AIX OTHER CUKNMu BLOOD DIS
EASES. Da. P. T. KEENE having just returned from Ecuador and brouget with him a quantity ot the genuine CunUnrango Bark, socured through tho official recommendation and assistance of His Excellency tbe President of Ecuador, and the Go emment of that Kepublic. we are prepared to fill orders for it to a limitedextent,and at a price about one quarter of thit which the coat ot the first very small supply compells us to charge-
A spurI9u» article is now a4verti»ed and sold .«f Cundurango. We have, at a considerable expense, and with the co- peration of the authorities of Lt,ja, tbe province where the plant grows, so nire ted the channel of our supply as to ensure that none but tho genuine article shall be sold by us and we particularly attention of the public, for their protection, to this fact. lllilNS. KKGNE «fc CO., 60 Cedcrst. Nrv York.
D- W.
BLISS.
E. BI.ISS,
D., KewYork. j*S||
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West's Automatic Lathe for all kinds of wood turniog.' Also, Durkee's Automatic Sawing Machine for sawing small stuff directly from the log, Work perfectly, and will pay for themselves in six months in saving timber and labor. Send
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Thirty Years' Experience
IN T» E TBEATJ1K*T OF
Chronic and Sexual Diseases
A PHYSIOLOGICAL VIEW OP HRRKGE.
The cheapest book ever published—con taining nearly three hundred pages, and «nc hundred and thirty fine plates and engravings of the itnatomy of the human organs in a state of health and disease, with a treatise on early errors, its deplorable consequences upon the mind and HvHv. w«th the aathor plan i»f treatmentsuccessful mode of cure, as shown by a report of cases treate*. A truthful adviser to married and those contemplating marriage, wh"entertain d-ubts ot their physical condition. Sent free of postage to any address, on receipt of twenty-five cents, in stamps or io."tat currenc by addressing Da. LA CROIX. No-31 Maiden Lane. Albany, N. Y. The author may be consulted upon any of
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IN BLACK AND COLORS, are recommended for tbeir thorough manufacture and permanent lustre. S. SLATES & SONS,
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CUNDORANGO!
THE WONDERFUL BBUHDT FOB
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M- D.. Washington. D. C., Z.
M. D-, Now York P. T.
rivalled for Attraction.
KKENB,.M.,
MADAME AGNES*,,,
1
descriptive book
to the manuiacturers, J. D. PB)i-(iACO., Gcneseo, Livingston o. V.
WILL M. ARLETON, AUTHOR OF "Betsey and I are Out."
E1»ITS AXD WHITES FOB
The Detroit Weekly Tribuue,
The Best Family Newspaper in the Country, #8 a year. Send for specimen copy and club circular Address: Tlifc 'J'RIBIJMIS, letroit, Mlcti. I7D T? Try samp'es of our great 8 paee,
any organization in the world. TV J.
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XTZHHRUDGOS' XX FLINT GLASS LAMP CHIMNEYS Stand H* at better than any other made.
Ask for DithriJgo's and take no other® See that our name is on every box.
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COCOAINE
Aeompouiul ot Coctxt-nut ACKIK odirod the best promoter of the growth and beauty of the hair. m. EIIiWSTI 4 CO., Iioston. Ma#*., bold by all ilf! Jleirare or' imitations
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Cheapest Advertisings
1ST THE WORLD FAr$5Sier Inch per month, we will sert an Advertisement in 80 first-clasx Indiana Newspapers, including Dailies. Proportionate rates for smaller adv'ts. List sent tree. Address
CEO. PHOWEUL& CO..
40 an.I 41 PARK BOW. NfcW YOBK.
AMUSEMENT.
UNDER A WOMAN'S MANAGEMENT.
TERRE HAUTE, [ND.- ONE DAY ONLY.
7 Thursday, October 19,1871.
-.-if 3 7 Jf ,t. "jt
From "Ocean to Ocean" Las been the marked specialty of the twentieth annual tour ot
LAKE'S HIPPV-OLYMHAD
MIMMOTH
AND
^The' mbat thoroughly organizedaVd ct*hple(etirp:anization in the world, forming
its entirety a combination unequaled for Elegance, unsurpassed for Merit, and un-
vii'.fcia l' Jji
•irf e:t in tf.'ii.i.n I
1
knowledge of the habits and customs of these
comprising many rare
the nineteenth century.
som
(rrErus
This Gigantic Confederation is under the management of
a
*3*
MADAM aAOBTES LAKEr
In the Arenic Department will be found those onl^ whgsejjamea are famons in the annals of .amusement, comprising ir^Vf »t:
"Forty Star -?Vrtists,}"
In the way of EQUESTRIANS, EQUESTRIENNES, GYMNASTS and ACROBATS,
"W FEMALE ARTISTS,
M'DLLE GETACIE, MRS.
MISS EMMA LAKE,
S!
LENGEL
Foremost among the Equestrians is the celebrated and wonderful
WOODA COOK, the Champion Somersault
MASTER OBENj
man of the World!
,MK. BASKISi
MR. HKSiBl JBNSriSr«S„»i. I-.-CJXAXHL1E €LIBK,
SIM RHINE HART, the Champion teaper of the World!
T^WO GrIR,IE-A.T CLC"TO7 JTSI
jimmy Reynolds,. Johnny avenport.
The above names are a sufficient guarantee of the high-toned and refined char
ter of the Arenic Department. In addition to those of whom we have made men
tion will be found a full and efficient troupe, among whom will be found the best
Equestrians, Gymnasts, best Athletes, and best Acrobats known to the profession, the
whole forming a CONGRESS OF TRUSTS, who for Merit, Artistic and Elegance,
in their MANY MATCHLESS FEATS OF DARING challenge comparison with
1
THE ZOOLOGICAL DEPARTMEiNT
Is under the supervision of the famed .. ..
HERB, ELIJA'H LENGEL/
Whose prowess and well known ability to cope with and subdue the most ferocious
of LIVING WILD ANIMALS has gained for him the appellation of the LION
KING. The Department comprises specimens of all rare and ferocious animals,
and offers to the student of Natural History anj^oftuui^of gaining a
vr MONSTERS ©F THE FORESTS,
Which by years of Rtudy could not be derived from books. At each exhibition
HERR LENGEL, accompanied by MRS. SAM. RHINEIIART, will enter the dens
of the animals, and give an exhibition of their skill and daring.
The Performing Elephant "BISMARCK" is with this Show.
In connection with the Menagerie will be found a large and complete Aviary,
and beautiful specimens of the Ornithological Kingdom.
forget the DAY and DATE,'arid do" not fail to see the great Show of Do not
Remember, the Procession will take place each dad at 10 o'clock A. M. DO 8@-: See the NOT FAIL TO SEE IT. The like may never occur again
LIVING. WILD, ANIMALS
ON THE PUBLIC STREETS!
PROFESSOR BONTON, the eminent and well known musician, has charge of
the Brass and Suing Band, $ocb.wiU lead the Grand Street Disylay. ,/.
gST" Door open at 1 and 9 o'clock p. M.
The
„„YUTvrrVW
mi
06LOSSAL MENAGERIE!
$2#
..
4
r-
"Jti*
A if
I'liim 'Kl
jf.
"MBS.'SAM RHINEHARDTT,
N- 'DLLE MILLTE.
&
unit
Horse-
1
mxr-
i-*!
yjvrw
Good
Carpets at Cost!»
-«».*.•}
L. Sit *,n
ADMISSION—To Circus and Menagerie, 50«ente. Cbiidreu nnder 10 years, i?&/> jbsiEPH,' General
25 Cents.
E/fKESC-^
-n,
HERZ & ARNOLD.
HURRAH FOR THE VICTOR!
:YS
j- a'*»M 1^-,
».! «.• ..4
bs :ujf
W ah1 !«ss)3s«s5-I
H'iiJ&tea "iff
The time has come when the business men Haute will enueavor to show their facilties and capacities for the.-
-3-Killh'i i*f f.[ '•J'i '"k
imb
Firn&WIttTER TRADE.
1 7
iHa .Twe have always been at .the head of the
hxl-'i
fjKiW
Fancy Groocis Trade
:.•«
SfX
io
xAL
I 3
this city, and wish to iijform 'the Ladies of Terre Haute and vicinity that we are more than ever prepared to retain our position for the coming season.
Quick Sales and Small Profits!
Our mottoi
I
.-r, •of'rtrls.!..
1TEW AND FEESII GOODS!
Low Prices, and plenty of customers the result
•—II
Open!
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HERZ 4& ARNOLD,
Great Opera House Bazsar
CLOTHING.
OPEN THIS MORNING.
O A S O O OP PIECE GOODS FOR
FINE MERCHANT TAILORING,
Scotch, English, French and Domestic fi'm i'M
Casslmeres, Coatings of the latest
Styles, Cloths and Doeskins in
All Shades and Qualities,
And a XBeautiful Line of Vestings.1
THE LARGEST AND HANDSOMEST STOCK OP
Pine Furnishing Goods'
£VER BROUGHT MARKET." OUR STOCK OF E A A E O I N
Is the Best and Largest in the City, and we defy Competition in Prices. -AP\-' r- -ry-l'r-
We believe in Square Dealing, and treating all alike. Every article has the Price Marked on it in Plain Figures, and there will be no deviation.
Besides our well-known Diamond "D" Shirt„ we have the Agency for the Coat..Fitting hirt,which we make to urder on short, notice. It is something entirely New and decidedly Good. Call and look at it.
for
News
.{is
mnO
lOKniIOLK ST JCfC
The illealth of anr *enio.- OMPJLI HJM
manufactures now, as the bulk
ADPART?M
desiring
afi5r«!
the
at Cost!
WallKPaper
Si 1
Oil Cloths at Cost!r
.»'*
A
'i mi- -git.w
Mattings at C.si I
fore we have determined to close up our affairs. We will sell onr IM.YFEN3E QTOPK A TCHR
and
AT FIIJUREI than
:n
ERLANGER & CO.,
Fashionable Merchant Tailors and One-Price Clothiers, Middle Room Opera House Building
CARPETS, WALL PAPER, &C.
People.
J. J.
Curtains and .I'liiesnt Lost
IT OST!
a
of our
to furnish
will not have such
U'VVF
UPWAB1
EIA B»IPT THA
stock W*. purchased bafore the 1^'E HA^Y
a chance again
BffluT/i# Sate if* Positive. ^w *n -r
»!5*p
4 I 'V '4
for YEAR..
HUME, ADAMS & fcO.,
