Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 2, Number 246, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 18 March 1872 — Page 2
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HUDSON & ROSE, Proprietors. R. N.'HTTDSON
Office: North Fifth St., near Main.
rh« DAILY LABETTE 1S published every atter.MCW! except .Sunday, and sold by the carried "t 15c per week. By mail 810 per year: *5 for 6 months 82.50 for 3 mouths. r?e WKEKLV GAZETTE is issued every Tliurs,\tv and contains aJl the best matter of the seven daily issues. The WEEKLY GAZETTE IS the largest paper p/inted in Terre Haute, and is sold for: one copy, per year, $2.00 three
Copies, per year, §5.00 five copies, per year, OO ten copies, one year, and one to getter up" of Club, $15.00 one copy, six months one copy, three months 50c. All subscript ions must be paid for in advance. The i^iper will, invariabi be discontinued at .c--piriition o( time. f.ir Advertising Rates see third page. The (iAZETTKestablishment is the best equipped' in point of Presses and Types in this section, 1 orders for any kind of Type Printing so
H,.jt-il, to which prompt attention will
Ad'drussall letters, ilUDSON & ROSK,
GAZETTE,
For Attorney General, JAMES P. DENNY, Of Knox county.
MONDAY, MARCH 18, 1872.
Cincinnati Convention.
The Cincinnati Conveniion to be com posed of Reform Republicans, is increas ing in political importance daily. Move ments are being inaugurated in different portions of the country to send individuals to that convention, who are outspoken in favor of all the reforms so persistently advocated by one portion of the Republican party, and so determinedly resisted by the other. That the convention will be a large and influential one, must now be apparent to all Whether it will put in nomintion Presidential ticket, is at this time a mat ter of doubt. Some of its friends advocate postponing the formation of a ticket until after the action of the Philadelphia Convention, while others advocate the making of a ticket at once.
The object of this convention is not, as we understand it, iutended in the least to disrupt the Republican party, but to induce the leaders who now seem to have control of it, to favor informs which are regarded as essential to the well-being of the country, and place at the head of the party, and the Government, a man of wisdom, enlighteued intelligence and statesmanship. This being the case, it seems to us that the proper course to be pursued when the convention meets in May, would be to consult together and then adjourn until after the meeting of the Philadelphia Convention. If the Cincinnati Convention shows by its numbers great strength, and by its members great political influence, might it not reasonably be expected, the delegates to the Philadelphia Convention al though composed in the main of office holders, will see the necessity of endorsing certain reforms, and placing at the head of the Republican ticket some other person than General
Grant? If this can be effected, then there will be no good\ and sufficient reasons for the Cincinnati Convention to make a Presidential ticket, and the Republican party will go through the coming canvass as a unit. But, if at the time of the meeting of the Cincinnati Convention, it is plainly apparent that (Jen. Grant is to be forced through the Philadelphia Convention, then we have no doubt the Reform Convention will place before the American people a Presidential ticket, and ask for it the support of all Reformers. At any rate this Reform Convention is fast assuming National importance, aiid commanding the attention of thinking men all over the country.
PROMPTNESS of action is a character istic of Americans. They do not waste time when there is money to be made, an obnoxious enemy to be killed, or any other duty to be performed. In Corsica, where the vendetta is a nearly sacred institution, a private war may be carried on between two families for a century, and the belligerents will be entirely content if one man is killed in thirty years. Note on the other hand the energy which the American infuses into his local feuds. The other day an American, somewhere in Arizona, was killed by a Mexican. His friends wasted no time, but instantly went out and shot a casual Mexican. The Mexicans, who, though a degenerate race, still have some of the virtues of republicans, collected their forces aud sacrificed another American. In monarchial Corsica, the matter would have rested here jr a half century at least. In free Arizona, what did those spirited Americans do? They instantly made a raid on a Mexican settlement, and killed four men in the handsomest style, and when a fifth man sought refuge in another town and declined to come out and be shot, they blew up the house and shot the man, doubtless as he was sailing through the air. Such is the energy and promptness of the noble borderers of the West.
SENATOR SCHURZ boasts that he carries the Germans in his breeches pocket, but the Germans are not generally at the beck and call of any man.—N. Y. Times.
The above is taken from a leading article in the Times, and we copy it for the purpose of saying, that in our judgment Senator Schurz never said any such thing. It is one of the adopted means resorted to by a portion of the Republican press of the couutry, to destroy the popularity of the great German with his countrymen. One thing, however, is not remembered by this portion of the press, viz.: that the Germans read and think for themselves, and will uot be for or against any measure or man, unless there are good aud sufficient reasons for it.
Senator Schurz should at once compel
SB.
the editor of the
M-
BOSg-
Terre Haute, lud.
REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET.
For Governor,
OBN. THOMASM.BROWN K, Of Randolph county. i-'or Lieutenant Governor,
LKONIDAS M. SEXTON, Of Rush county. For Congressman at Large,
GODLOVE S. ORTH, Of Tippecanoe county. For Secretary of State,
W. W. CURRY, Of Vigo county. For Auditor of State, COL. JAMES A. WILDMAN,
Of Howard county. For Treasurer of State, MAJOR JOHN D. GLOVER,
Of iMwrencc county.
For Reporter of Supreme Court, COL. JAMES B. BLACK, of Marion county.
For Clerk of Supreme Court, CHARLES SCHOLL, Of Clark county.
P.»r Superintendent of Public Instruct ion, BENJAMIN W. SMITH. Of Marion county.
Times
to substantiate
his assertion or make a retraxit.
WHILE we do not think it proper to publish in the GAZETTE all of Mr. Griswold's letter which appeared in the Cincinnati Commercial on Saturday, yet having published the Times and Chronicle letter, we feel it but justice to him to transfer to our columns what iie says in liis recent article in justification of his management of the St. Lruis, Alton & Terre Haute and the Ohio & Mississippi roads. In referring to the Times and Chronicle article, in this particular, Mr. Griswold say?:
His insinuation that I foiled in my administration of the ,St. Louis, Alton & Terre Haute Railroad, and of the Ohio & Mississippi Railroad, and that the present manager of the latter had redeemed it from the results of my failure, is simply studied insult—blackguardism.
I took charge of the former when it was a wreck—a thing of confusion and rottenness—defaulted on all its mortgages, behind five months on its pay-rolls, and ballasted with debts and executions. My position was the envey of nobody. lu'four years I left it, and was paying the interest on its mortages and dividends on its preferred stock.
I took charge of the Ohio tfc Mississippi when its physical condition was little better. It was in process of foreclosure and reorganization, and paying no interest on any class of its debt. I was on it seven years,and during the last four years paid regularly the interest on its mortgage debt and preferred stock.
Nothing better has ever been since done in respect of either of these roads. It is not my function to look after or into the operations of the present administration of the Ohio fc Mississippi Railway, nor will I concern myself with them further than to defend my own character and the judgment and merit of my own previous management as affected by any policy or pretensions which may be set up in contravention of my own measures. But, if any responsible challenge were made I wonid not hesitate to measure figures or results with all that has been done since my exit by the judgment of any man who is honest.
Referring to what I have said of the two roads with which I have been identified, I have expressed what I know is known to most of those for whose opinious I should or do care, and in straing my feelings to make such utterances I am principally influenced by the wish to exhibit the profligate mendacity, as in the previous detail J. was to show up the chicanery, of the men who are the figure-heads of the institution called the Cincinnati & Terre Haute Railroad Company. W. D. GRISWOLD.
Amnesty and Suffrage.
In answer to a friend's inquiry, we state that, so far as we know, no State now denies the right of suffrage to any citizen because of his having been a secessionist or rebel. Missouri did so prescribe up to her last State election (November 1870,) when proscription was voted down by an overwhelming majority of her non-pro-scribed voters. In every other State, we believe, proscription had already been proscribed by a vote of the people.
None of the amendments ever made to the Federal Constitution denied the right of suffrage to any class or portion of the American people but several of the State Constitutions first adopted under the reconstruction policy did proscribe a considerable portion of the ex-rebels. That of Missouri was especially proscriptive but it was modified more than a year ago.
The question that remains to be decided is this—"shall those who have the right to vote be allowed to vote for those whom they prefer?" On that question, we vote Yea!—N. Y. Tribune.
And so do we.
FORNEY'S
Press is disgusted with the
"Investigation Fever" which prevails in Congress. These investigations "waste time and money they are "originated by disappointed and baffled soreheads nothing ever comes of them that can possibly conduce to the public good," and "they simply serve to gratify private malice or partisan hate." Now, these observations are not entirely accurate. The most important investigation yet undertaken at the present session of Congress is that in regard to the New York Custom House. It did not originate with "baffled soreheads," unless the great commercial and shipping interests of the city and the leading newspapers are thus to be characterized. "ITt is anything but true that nothing conducive to the public good has come from it. It exposed a scandalous system of cofruptidn and fraud in the publi6 servlee, aiid ijt compelled the Administration to make a pretense of adopting means to put an end to this system, and that is something. If it had cost ten times as much as it has cost, it would have been none the less necessary it should be carried out. The same may be said of other investigations which have been ordered, including the "arms investigation." In fact, the "investigation fever" is a necessity of the present condition ot things.— Cin. Commercial.
Mr. Greeley was dissatisfied with Gen. GranVs dispensation^of his official patronage.
On the contrary, apart from his Cabinet, in framing which Gen. G. had intimated that he would take no advice, and with regard to which Mr. G. nevpr offered say, Mr. G. "regarded Gen. Grans's selections as eminently judicious. (We speak of those for this State especially.) True, they did not happen, in the main, to be the persons whom G. had recom mended but they were worthy and true men, and were very fairly distributed between,the two "wings" of the party, except that Collector Grinnell had not been identified with either^ I*ew journals approved them more cordially heartily, than this one. It was only when Gen. Grant "turned his back on himself," by removing the foremost of these, his own appointees, and filing their places with some who had been conspiouous as factionists and adversaries in the trying days ot 1866, that any trouble was created here or any dissatisfaction expressed by the Tribune.—N. Y. Tribune.
From the New York Post.
The Cincinnati Convention. The Convention called by the "Liberal Republicans" of Missouri, to meetin Cincinnati on the first Wednesday in May has now come to be .regarded as the key to the National canvass of this year. The call for this meeting was accompanied by a pretty full statement of the prin ciples on which its authors wish the Government to be conducted. The platform adheres to the fundamental doctrines heretofore adopted by the Republican party, including emancipation, the equality of all races in their civil rights, universal suffrage and amnesty, and goes on to demand a reform in the tariff, by the abolition of protective duties, a thorough reform in the civil service by the abolition of "patronage," the restriction of the National Government to its proper ends, and a stop to its encroachments on the States. It is only the "Republicans who desire the reforms set forth" who are invited to meet in "National Mass Convention" in May, "to take such action as our convictions or duty and public exigencies may require."
NEW YORK, March 16.—The Evening Pbst, editorial, says the name of Sumner will give character to* the Cincinnati Convention, and it trusts that the meefc-^ ing in that city wijl be the most influential popular gathering of the vear: that its course may be such -as to determine the success of the Republican party.
A GOOD platform for the Cincinnati Convention would be: "Resolved,
That we are in favor of the
United States under a Republican form of Government, and opposed to the adin is at on a it a
That's enough.^
THE most striking characteristic of our times is the rapid strides which the world is making in science, general intelligence, and inventions. In the olden times every discovery and innovation, was viewed with suspicion and scorn, while these prejudices wer# as rife among the cultivated classes a3 those of the ignorant. The church, especially, frowned upon science, brauded- it as magic, and thus Copernit u^ and Galileo saw the dungeons of the inquisition yawning, between them :t inl .'he exposition of their theories, wliilv Jeimer encountered a storm of ridicule and hate when lie attempted to introduce vaccination, the learned physicians leading the van. Today we see the London journals aie talking of a statue to Jenuer. In further illustration, remember that Faust came near his death iu Paris as a Profe.-sor of the Black Art, though his sin consisted it\ printing the Bible by his new process The first steam press set up in London, so late as 1814, was threatened by a mob and protected by the police in full force! Though Dr. Lardner proved theoretically that no steamship could cross the Atlantic, and denounced the attempt as foolhardy and worthy of lunatics, yet the profound Doctor lived to cross over to Boston in a Cunarder. The good genius of invention has no longer such battles to fight we are all believers and all co-workers now.
A. Melancholy Break-Down.—There are lively break-downs that make an audience laugh, and there are sad and sorrowful break-downs that make the kindhearted grieve. To the latter class belongs the enervation of body and mind which is usually called "general debility," or "nervous weakuess," and which, when neglected, too often terminates in'atrophy and death. A wholesome medicated stimulus is the one thing needed in cases of this description, and science and experience unite in pointing to PLANTATION BITTERS as the true specific. The fact that it combines the properties of an invigorant with those of a regulator and alterative, in exactly the proportions nocessary to produce a radical change in the tone of the system, and the action of the digestive and secretive organs, is an unanswerable argument in its favor as a general restorative. 9
Old Prejudices are Dying Out.—New facts are killing them. The idea that invalids weakened by disease can be relieved by prostratiag them with destructive drugs, is no longer entertained except by monomaniacs. Ever since the introduction of DR. WALKER'S VINEGAR BITTEKS it has been obvious that their regulating and invigorating properties are all-sufficient for the cure of chronic indigestion, rheumatism, constipation, diarrhoea, nervous affections, and malarious fevers, and they are now the standard remedy for these complaints in every section of the Union.
FOUNDRY.
F. II. M'KLFRESH. J. BAKNARD.
Phoenix Foundry
AND
A I I E S O
McElfresh & Barnard,
A
Cor. of Ninth and Eagle Streets,
(Near the Passenger Depot,)
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
MANUFACTURE
All parties connected with this establishment being practical mechanics of several years' ex
Sersatisfaction
erience, we feel safe in saying that we can ren. to our oustomers, both in point of Workmanship and Price. 211dwly McELFRESH & BARNARD.
MEDICAL.
il
FIIJE,
'Ti'iiinnn!iirnfiiiii piji iIIiiI]IillmIif iii in mum II in
W(net
ARNER'fe lPfle Riemedy has never failed even in one case) to cure the very worst cases of Blind, Itching or Bleeding Piles Those who are" afflicted should, immediately call on the druggist and get it, for-Jor itr will with the first application, instantlyafford, com plete relief, auda&w following appllcalionsare only required to elfect a permant .cure without any trouble lheohVeuteoee:ttf use.-
WoMier'Siittle.'Pemady.4S expressly for the piles, and is not recommended• to' cure any other cl}seaae. It has- cured cases of over tliirtj years standing. Price $1.00 For sale- by drig gistaeverywli«re.•. •. 'if i.
an rr ui
wsik
hi^r* bfi*
Warner's' l)yspe£^^3^jfi__is- prepiued ex pressly for Dyspeptics and'tnose suffering fron weak nerves with«habitQal o6nfetipation. There are very few who. 'have nOt employed physi clans for years to retriedy1 what tliis'preparation willdoin a few weeka, by.strengtbeningthe nerves, enriching the circulation, restoring dl gestioh, giving strength mentally and physi callyi eriaibling tljOBe who may haVe be feon fined for years .to their rooi*s. as invalids to again, resume, their occupations in all their duties'6i life. One trial is, all we a&k to'enable this remedy to recommend itself to the moist skeptical.: It is a slightly stimulating tonic and a splendid appetize*, it.strengthens the stomach and restores the geh.era.tiVe organs and digestion to a nohnai and healthy state. Weak, nervousiriid dyspeptic persons should use Warner's Dyspeptic. Tonic, ^or sal^bjr druggists. Price 81.00.-
COIIGH^O MORE.
1
Warner's Cough Balsath is healing,'softening and expectorating. The extraordinary power it possesses in .Immediately relieving, and eventually curing the most obstinate cases ol Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Influenza, Hoarseness, Asthma and Consumption is almost incredible. So prompt is the relief aud certain its effects in ail the above cases, or any affection of the throat aud lungs, that thousands of. physicians are daily prescribing for it and one and all say that is the most healing and expectorating medicine known. One dose always affords relief, and in most cases onebottle affects a cure. Sold by druggist in large bottles. Price $1.00.. It is your own fault if you still cough and suffer The Balsam will cure.
WI3TEOF LIFE.
The Great Blood PurMer andlDelicious Drink Warner's Vinum Vltffi, or Wine of Life, is free from any poisonous drugs or impurities being prepared for those who require a. stimulant,, It fs a splendid appetizer and a tonic, and the finest thing.in the world for purifying the blood It is the most pleasant and delicious artrcn evor offered to tbepublio, far superior to brandy, whisky, wine, bitters, or any «ther article. It is more healthy and cheaper.- Both rmale and female, young or old, lake the Wine of Life. It is, in fact, a, life, preserver. Those who wish to eniov a-good health *nd a free flow of lively spirits, will do well to .take the Wine of litre. It is different from any thing.ever toef0r6iiiu&. It is sold by druggists. Price #1.00, in quart, bottles. T':
Warner's Enimenagogue is the only article known to ciire the Whiles, (it will cure in every case.) Whereils tfee female in which this lm-porfcant-medieine W Hot ,tfa.nted? Mother^ this ever offered y_ou, ana you Is thegreatest shbufd" imhiedi"ateIy.procurfe It is also a sure core for Female xrregularlties, may be depeUaed upori-lrieV^y oa«e #Tid*e the monthly flow tuisfefaen obstructed tbTOUg&cold ordlsefese. Sold by druggi8t8 price $1.90, or sent by mail on tefcetat of U.2&. Addrew 010 State Street, ahicago, Illinois.
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NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. A MONTH to sell our Universal Ce* qpO I meiit, Combination Tunnel,' Button Hole' Cutter, and other articles.
iol
Steam Engines, Mill Ma
chinery, House Fronts, Fire Fronts, Circular Saw Mills, and all kinds of
IRON AND BRASS CASTINGS!
RGPAIKISG DONE PKOMI'TI-I
SACO
IfovBii-
tV CO., Saco, Me. 4w
PSYCHOIiOOICby
ing, 400 pases, Herbert Hamilton, B. A. How to use this power (which all possess) at will. Divination, g'piricualism, Sorceries, I)emonology, and a thousand other wonders. Price by mail, SI.2.1, cloth paper covers, $L,00 Copy free to agents*only. SI,000 monthly easily made. Address,'!'. W. pnblislier,4tli street, Philadelphia,
tstreet,Chicago.aPa.EVANS,makecor.locator
GREAT CHANCE FOE AGENTS. Do you want situation as agent, traveling, with a chance to 85 to 820 per day selling our new 7 strand White
Wire Clothes Lines* They last forever samples free, so there isiiorisk. Address at once, Hudson River Wit Works, Water street and Maiden Lane, N Y., or 16 Dearborn 4w
A'uEM SWAiVrEU. Theonly complete life of
JAMES FISK,
Containing a full account of all his schemes, entf.rpriM'* and assassination. Biographies of VanderbiU, Ure and other great Railroad and Financial magnates. GEEAT FRAUDS of the TAMMANY RING. Brilliant pen pictures in the LIGHTS AND SHADOWS of New York life. JOSIE MANSFIELD, the siren. How a beautfful woman captivated and ruined her victims. Life of E»WAK» S. STOKES, illustrated octavo of over 500 pages. Send $1.00 for outfit, and secure territory at once. Circulars free. UNION PUBLISHING CO., Philadelphia, Chicago or Cincinnati.
$2001 New Map of Indiana—1872.
PFK I Every R. H.Station,Town, Village, &c.
PEK
MONTH Large stocir of popular Charts and U.S. Maps for agents. E. C. BRIDGMAN, No. 5 Barclay street, N. Y.
IJOOREWARD if
me Cure of all THROAT and LUNG Diseases. HOARSENESS and ULCERATION of tbf THROAT are immediately relieved, and statements are constantly being sent to the propri?"r of relief in cases of Throat difficulties of years standing.
TTrpT# Don't be deceived by worthless mitatious. Get only Well's Carbolic Tablets. 25 cents per 3o sc. JOHN Q. KELLOGG, 18 Piatt street, New York, Sole Agent for the United States. Send iOr Circular.
Dr. Well's Extract of Jurubeba,
is offered to the public as a great invigorator and remedy for all impurities oi the blood, or for organic weakness with their attendant evils. For the foregoing complaints
JURUBEBA
Is confidently recommended to every family as a household remedy, and should be freely taken in all derangements of the system. It gives health, vigor and tone to all vital forces, ftrid animates and fortifies all weak and lymphia'tfc temperaments.
JOHN Q. KELLOGG, 18 Piatt street. New York,
Sole Agent for the United States.
Price One Dollar per Bottle. Send for Circular. 4w
millS IS NO HUMBUG! QK By sending CENTS, with age, h.eiglit, color of eyes and liair, you will receive by return mail, a cof rect. picture of ovi-r future husband or wile, wi'tli- name 'and 'dateof marriage. Address, W. FOXI P. O. Drawer No. 24, Fulton ville, J^.Y. "4w
Profitable Employment.
\X7Edesire fo engage a few more Agents tosei 1 the World Renowned Improved BUCKr EYESEWrSiO MAOHlKfi, afalilierWsttlAr^' or on Commission. A. Horse and W^gon given to Agents. Full Pdrticul&rd furnished on application. Address, Wi A* HENDERSON & CO., General Agents, Cleveland, Ohio, and. St.. •Louis,Mo.
I 1
Fascination or Soul Charm
1
Inflamation of the Lungs aa aver Kidney and Bladder diseases, organic Weakness, Female afflictions, General Debility,and all complaints of the Urinary organs, in Male and Female, producing Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Gravel Dropsy and Scrofula,which most generally term inate in Consumptive Decline. It purifies and enriches the Blood, the Billiary, Glandular and Secretive system corrects and strengthens the nervous and muscular forces. It acts like a charm on weak nerves, debillated females, both yeung and old. None should be without it. sold everywhere.
Laboratory—142 Franklin Street, Baltimore
fas TO THE JLADIES. BALTIMORE, February 17,1870.
Ak G. COES & CO.,
gwxetsoi»to L. 1s A. G. does,)
W O E S E E A S S Manufacturers of the Genuine
COES SCREW WRMCHi:^
WithA G..Ooefi9PatentIjockFender, ,,, Established in 1882.
DEEDS.
LANK DEfilDS, neatly printed 10" sale by Single oi*«,oroy th« quire, «t o« nAix«-i ii i{ x\
7
offered^
Jthi: proprietof of Dr. bage'i fL'atiirrli Remedy for a ca^oof '•Cold in Head," Catarrh, or (?2enct,which ho cannot ear,: I Sold by PraggiatB at 50 ctB
Well's Carbolic Tablets, FOB COUGHS, COLDS & HOABSEMSS. These Tablets present the Acid in Combination wi* other efficient remedies, in a popular iorm
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O S O N S
WOEID-EENOWNED PATENT
Grlove-Fittiiig Corset!
if you want the mosi sati i$factory, bent fitting and the eh eapest Corset lor lts:ieal value, you have ever worn, buy ,• THOMSON'S
GENUINE PATENT
GL0YE FITTING.
No Corset has ever attained such a reputation in this or any other coun
try. As now made in length and fullness of bust
IT CAJfSOT BE IMPROVED. Every Corset is stamped with the name THOMSON and the trade mark, a CBOWN. Kept by all first-class dealers. THOMSON, LANGDOST A CO.
Sole Owners off Patents, 391 BROADWAY, JV KW YORK.
E A
It is NOT A PHYSIC—It is NOT what Is popularly called a BIlTERS,jior is ifrjntended to be such. IT IS A SOUTH AMSRICAN plant that has been used for many years by the medical faculty of those countries with wonderful efficacy as a POWERFUL ALTERATIVE ahd UNEQUALED PURIFIER OF THE BLOOD, and is a Sure and Perfect Remedy for all diseases of the LIVER AND SPLEEN, ENLARGEMENT OR
OBSTRUCTION OF INTESTINES, URINARY, UTERINE, OR ABDOMINAL ORGANS, POVERTY OR A WANT.
OF BLOOD, INTERMITTENT OR REMITTENT FEVEBS, INFAMATION OF THE
IV E O S SLUGGISH CIRCULATION OF
THE BLOOD.
ABSCESSES, TUMORS, A UNDICE, SCROFLA,DXSPEPSIA,AGUEANEFEVER, OR THEIR CONCOMITANTS.
just been received and placed on sale.
1
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66
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Whitney's Neats Foot Harness Soap. STEAM REFINED. |~T Oils, Blacks, Polishes and soaps
JL at the same time. Put up in large and small size boxes, also in 3 lb. ba rs. Has been in use for years. ., :and gives perfect satisfaction. Sena stamp" for our WAVERLY. Address, G. WHITNEY & CO., 59 Milk St., Boston, Mass. nov6-6m
edy fails to'cure. It is prepared expres cure the Piles and nothing else, and n&s cured cases of over twenty years' standing. Sold by all Druggists.
yIA FTJG-A
De Sing's Via Fuga is the pure juice of Barks Herbs, Roots, ana Berries,
CONSUMPTION.
3n
J-j
MEDICAL
#1000 REWARD,
I E
VtC
H-JThe
5
pliysica
ous systems, witk a tendency to Consumptive Decllnn. was dispondent and gloomy. 1 tried all "Standard Medicines" with no relief, until I took De Blng's wonderful Remedy. 1 bave taken six bottles, and am now trefefrom that combination of nameless complaints.-How thankful I am to be well.
MKS. LAVINA C. LKAMING, Oxford Str«*
Handsome Serge Plaids,
"V
IffiM
SICARPETS.
1 r:
HIGH-PMCED CARPEi MEN,
J5UY YOIJB TICKETS FOE SAI/T LAKE!
We are bound to do the Carpet Trade. We can undersell you 20 per cent. We liaye large capital and the very best credit. We are buying five pieces of carpets to your one. It costs us nothing to sell carpets. It costs you 20 per cent.
You stand no chance at all of competing with us. You must bow to the inevitable and give to us the lead.
During the past year and nine months we have bent our energies eliieffy' to the
development of our Dry Goods business. Having put that beyond the reach of all
competitors, we now turn our attention to the Carpet Trade, and we start out with the
assertion that in a very short time we shall be selling a larger amount of carpets than
is sold by any retail firm in the State of Indiana. When we propose to do a thing that
settles it. Everybody knows it will be done, and
We do Propose to do the Carpet Trade!
Our Carpet Room is over 011 Dry Goods Store, and so costs us nothing for rent.
It is twenty feet wide and one hundred feet long, and is crowded with a magnificent
stock of goods. Thousands of yards and thousands of dollars worth of new CAR
PETS, OIL CLOTHS, MATTINGS, &C., in elegant styles, for the Spring trade, have
1,0 WEST PRICES! NEWEST STYLKS! BEST ASSORTMENT!
Lot of good yard-wide Carpet at 17c. Lot of better yard-wide Carpet at 20c, 25c and 28c. 5,000 yards of very heavy yard-wide Carpets at 30c and 35c. One lot of yard-wide Ingrain Carpets at .50c. All-wool Ingrains at 60c, 65c, 70c and 75c. Finer qualities of all-wool Ingrains at 90c, §1.00 and 1.15. Celebrated makes of "Extra-Super" Ingtains at 1.20, 1.25 and 1.30. Best qualities of "Super-Extra Supers" at 1.25 and 1.30. Imperial three-ply Tapestry Ingrains at 1.35. Best English Brussels Carpets from 1.20 up. Heavy yard-"wide Oil Cloth, 50c worth 65c. Mattings, Rugs, fec., at equally low rates.
We warn the public against shoddy makes of Carpets, pushed off on customers «s
"Family Carpets", "Hand-loom" Carpets, fcc. "Hand-loom" Carpets are rag carpets.
You could 91 alte a fine, smooth, pretty Ingrain or Brussels Carpet 011 a "hand-loom"
about as easy as you could make a watch with a sledge hammer. "Hand-loom," when
applied to any other kind than rag carpet, simply means SHODDY—a carpet to which
no manufacturer will put his name. If you wish only good "Power-loom Carpets, at
the lcfwest prices, buy them out of our New Stock.
O S E O E S
GREAT H. V. CITY DRY GOODS AND CARPET STORE,
Worth Side of Main Street, Terre Hante, Indiana.
A MAN THAT SKATES ON TOO THIN ICE WILL SOONER Ml LATER
GET HIS FEET WET."
So Will any Merchant who Attempts in these Enlightened Days to Transact his Business on the 01(1 Style System of Small Trade, High Prices,and.Big Profits.
We have Five Stores, and expect the coming year to retail over a Million Dollars,
and every one of those Stores is a living witness to the success of the policy of
TOW PRICEvS FAIR DEALING AND GOOD TREATMENT TO ALL.
There is nothing we more detest, especially in a merchant, than "SHODDY
AIRS." This habit of snubbing people becabse they do not dress in silks, meets with
no sympathy from us. We saida yearago, and reiterateitnow, -i-'r, 'j saltan.'rfsfcig «s
1
-m
"WORTH MAKES THE MA5f,'v
(ii ."m« ij .Tj»n A .'
E W A N O E IT 1 I E II E E O W
.Uf .1
And the Rich and Poor alike will receive in the future, as they have in the past, the same courteous treatment at our hands. We shall be more watchful f/han ever that a or in a ha ad in to it it
"Ways That Are Dark and Tricks That Are,Taiib"vf V..
We have faith in the people, and our sales that are now equal to an^y other two stores combined show that the PEOPLE HAVE FATTH'IN US. .-•••• fir-i xr.f 1
I S I A I TR- I
Even former enemies are now putting the seal of approbation upon our conflict with the high-priced "Dry Goods Ring." I
We Believe in Aggressive War
There are just now certain pretty sure indications that our continued success is alarming some of our high-priced friends, they are getting on the war-path," and even offering a few Wamsutta Prints at 8% ceats that we have sold, for and 8 cents for six months past.
following prices will inaugurate the Spring Campaign:
All our Beantiftal Spring Styles of Merrimack, Coclicco, Spragn e,
Garner and Oloncesfer Prints at 9 andlQcenteft jarl.
'The "Standard Prints" of opposition stores we sell at 8 cents.'1. "^Common Prints at 6 cents. Tidy Cotton, 5:cfmt$ a ball. ., ^.rfGood Unbleached Muslin at9 iarid 10 cents. cents.
/Very best and beayiest yard-wide Unbfeached Muslin, Paper Muslins ait the same old -price ofr12^-6ehts Cambric Muslins at 10 cents. Clark's Coition, 5 cents^i ..!Big lots of American Delaines atl2)i cents. ii •,
25,cents
Handsome styles of Spring Cassimeres, 65, 75, 80, 90o#nd ?1.00.
/Best makes of Ticking at 1215,-20,.25, 30and35 cents.
^Pvr.a few days we sball make no advance in either Cotton or Woolen Good*, having- bought kea^ily before the idtmee that took place aTorinigkt ago. .• n- o-i -m*
1
.im A -mm M*. nn -nr -mm -n 9
O S.T EBB BOTHER:!
Greiat. New York Dry €feods Store},
WORTH SIDE OP ISf,,-
-i ••••':,' 7.^,
An &
..
.5 f.
-m 4'*"
1
'?u
1
A W O N irfei
?.*Hy
'it*, I mi''
1
I
jis.sx •$
1
-, 'X
ii3.v iii
%V
So
just.Educed. yl .vfvgyyn
•'Yard-wide English Prints, worth 25centei!f6rl33^*eents.'Aa jp .• rl -ftrf',' .. Nice line of Alpacas at 25 and 30 cents: ,J Big lots of Black Alpaeas at 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, and 50 cents. besfl Alpacas are much under price, havi'ng Jteen bought before the advance.
Miy1 ".•
)t,
$•?
BXTSHTESS CARDS.
a,-. 1'PBOmSIOHAL
STEPHEN J. VOU.N'li, |. I).
Office at No.
12
And ]^oarj Public.
Office, on Ohio Street, bet. Third & Fourth
Terre XTanlo, ludiann.
1ERRE-HAUTE, INDIANA,
JACOB BUTZ, Proprietor.
This House has been thoroughly refurnished
LEASHES.
PAINTING.
WM. 8. ME1TON,
PAINTER
Cor. 6th, La Fayette and Locust sts. TERRE HAUTE, IND. THE OLD RELIABLE
KABB & YEAKJLE
House and Sign Pai3|ters?
CORY'S NEW BUILDING,-
Fifth Street, between Main and OI»i#
GUNSMITH.
joaor ARISTKOS^, Gunsmith, Stencil Cutter,
•M/! Saw Filer and Locksmith,
THIRD STREET, NORTH OF MAIN,
Terre Hante, Indiana.
CLOTHING.
JwEKLANGER, I Wholesale and Retail Dealer in MENS', YOUTHS' AND BOYS'
CLOTHING,:.,,
And Gents' Furnishing Goods,
t'i\
1
OPERA HOUSE,
*4
v-
South Fifth St.,
Opposite St. Joseph's Catholic Church, TERRE UAUTE, IS».
«a_ Prompt atleution paid to all professional cans, day or night. febl'i
JOAB & IIAIiPEB,
Attorneys and Collecting Agents,
'i'orrc Haute, Indiana.
Htjj, Office, JSo. (ifi Ohio Street, south side.
J. IS. ELAKE,
ATTOKSfEY AT LAW
HOTELS.' ___
E A S S
Fool of Main Street
TERRE HAUTE, IKIMAXA.
Free Buss to and from all trains. J. M. DAVIS, Proprietor.
TEKKE HAUTE MOUSE.
Cor. of Main and Seventh Streets,
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
E. V. IIUSTOST, Iffauacer.
JACOB Bt7TZ. GEO. C. BCTZ.
JfATlOTAI- HOUSE,
Corner of Sixth and Main Streets,
1
JOUST IS. O'BOILE,
Dealer in
Leather, Hides, Oil and Findings.
NO.
178
MAIN STREET\
Terre Hante, Indiana.
BOOTS AND SHOES. A.6.BALCH
Ladies' & Gents' Fashionable
BOOTS «& SHOES,
MADE
to order. Shop at O'Boyle Bros. Boot and Shoe Store, Main street, Terre Haute ndiana.
CHANGE.
A CHAIGfi
O. F. FROEB
Snceessor to
W E I S S
au6d3m.
LIQUORS.
A. ffl'BOMLD,
Dealer in
Copper Distilled Whisky,
AND PURE WINES,
No. 9 *"ourli Street, bet. Main and Oliio
B®" Pure French Brandies for Medical pur poses.
Terre Haute, Indiana,
GROCERIES.
"lujiSAirireo^
WHOLESALE
Grocers and Liquor Dealers,
Cor. of Main and Fiftli Sis.,
Terre Hante, Ind.
K.W.BlPPETOE)(a
Groceries and Provisions,
No. 155 Main Street,
Terre Hante, Indiana.
WEST & AiiUar,
fijHj Wli DEALERS IN t- "-so
Groceries, ^ueensware, Provisions,
AND
St COUNTRY PRODUCE,
No. 75 Main Street, bet. Eighth and Ninth
Terre Hante, Indiana.
STORE.
FEES
A. A N
'-//{ff .Iealerln
amaar. Feed, Baled Hay, Ckrn Oats, and all ,. kinds of Seeds, 5DRTH THIRD ST., NEAR MAIN ia TSKBX HATTTE, IND. V'
Fcharge
I3ED delivered in, all parts of the city tree
a
1,1 Br"
GAS AKD STEAM FITTER,
OHIO. STREET, .'-•nurfo
Set. £th :\J116th
-fSS
Terre Hante, ind.
,is
maa
