Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 2, Number 232, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 March 1872 — Page 2

'fin Riming

HUDSON ROSE, Proprietors. B. N. HTTDSON

M' B0S1C•

Office: North Fifth St., near Main.

IIATTY OrAZKTTE is published every atter,^rJd oxcept Sunday, and sold by the carriers at 18c per week, By mail MO per year iVfor 6 months &2.50 for 3 months,

(JA7ETT1 isal.

RUE* WEEKLY AZETTE is issued every Thursday. andoontains

seven daily issues. The WEEKLY GAZETTE IS the largest paper printed in Terre Haute, and is sold for: One copy, per year, #2.00 three copies, per year, 85.00 five comes per year S8 OO: ten copies, one year, and one to getter up of Club, 915.00 one copy, six months £1 00* one copy, three months 50c. All snp" scriptions must be paid for in advance. The paper will, invariabl be discontinued at expiration of time. Kor Advertising Rates see third page. The GAZETTKestablishment is the best eqmppea

In point of Presses and Types in this section, and orders for any kind of '^'pe Pi lnU12: licited, to which prompt attention will siven.

Address all letters^^

& ROSE

GAZETTE, Terre Haute, Ind.

REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET.

For Governor.

GEN THOMAS VI. BROWNK, Of Randolph county. For lieutenant. Governor,

LfcONIDAS M. SEXTON, Of Rush county. For Congressman at Large,

GODLOVE S. ORTH, Of Tippecanoe county. For Secretary of State, \V. W. CUKRY,

Of Vigo county.

For Auditor of State, COL. JAMES A. W1LDMAN Of Howard county.

For Treasurer of .State, MAJOR JOHN D. GLOVER, Of Lawrence county. For Reporter of Supreme Court,

COL. JAMES B. BLACK, of Marion county. For Clerk of Supreme Court,

CHARLES SCHOLL, Of Clark county.

P.jt Superintendent of Public Instruction, BENJAMIN W. SMITH, Of Marion county.

For Attorney General, JAMES P. DENNY, Of Knox county.

MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1872.

The Germans.

"Wh^t will the Germans do with Carl Schurz?" was asked us by a strong officebolding Grant man yesterday. Our reply was, that as we did not have their conscience or their brains in our keeping, we supposed they would do just what they pleased, as the Germans generally acted that way anyhow, but our judgment was, that they would be found standing in solid phalanx in support of their great countryman in his heroic efforts to weed out corruption in both high and low places, and inaugurate a civil service reform in this country, that will aid greatly in preserving our free institutions and our liberal form of government. ThexGerman element of this country can not be hoodwinked by ambitious demagogues, aud they will follow the dictates of their judgments, aud go where the right leads them, in spite of all partisan prejudices or party affiliations.

This morning the telegraph brings the following announcement of what they are doiug in other portion of the country:

LITTLE ROCK, ARK., March 23.—At a meeting of the' CJertnans in this city last night, the following resolutions were

a\VHEREAS, The tJermau element of the United States have lately banded themselves under Car) Schurz as their leader, under the banner of freedom and justice against corrpptiou, therefore be it

Resolved, That it be the duty of the Turnverien of Little Rock, adhering to the 1 urners' Union, to take such steps in theconi-in"-political eamuaign in Arkansas as will most effectually help to carry out the above mentioned principles against corruption, and to do all in their power to elect and place in power only honest aud competent men.

Resolved,- That the Speaker of the Turnverien be authorized to write to all the German citizens of Little Rock and other parts of the State to take this opportunity to help with their untited strength to csrry out the good work of reform and to call a mass meetingof the German citizens of Little Rock and surrounding country in order to perfect their organizations.

This action of the Germans of Arkansas is perhaps the best answer we can make to the question which was propounded to us. It shows at least what a portion of the German element will do, and if it is true thatithe "German element of the United States have lately banded themselves uuder Carl Schurz as their leader," it shows also, what, in all probalbiUtly, the greater paft of this element throughout tha whole couutry will do.

And why should not the Germans stand by Carl Schurz Cau any one give a good and sufficient reason why they should not? Has he done anything, but openly, boldly, manfully, and most ably exposed official corruption, and demanded that corrupt officers be brought to the bar of public justice and puniBhed? Should he be abandoned by the Republican Germans for this Is this to be regarded as the unpardonable sin in the Republican party

We understand, from German authority, that the larger portion of the German Republicans of this city will not abandon the great Missouri Senator for the position he now assumes, but will stand by him, and fight for the right, and for the overthrow of corruption where ever it may be found.

Coal, Iron and Steel.

The discovery of block coal in unlimited quantities, and especially the coal measure along J»he Air Line Railway, in close proximity to this oity, is sure to awaken anew enterprise which cannot tail to rebound to the

rapid

Haute. 5 fTT J- I -J TfOOr* «ir

growth of whatever localities

are foremost in improving the advantages thereby afforded The cities of LaFayette, Terre Haute, and Indianapolis are making active efforts to establish steel works, by the Bessemer process, and we doubt not Terre Haute will be the first place- to secure such works. New Albany has been talking of such works for some time, and we doubt not at the proper time the capital is here ready to establish them Albany Ledger.

-New

The indications are, that Bessemer steel wo^ks will be erected in this city this coming summer. No city in this whole country presents so many reasons why works of this kind should be erected. Our inexhaustible supplies of coal and water. Our beautiful aud healthy location. Our system of common schools, unexcelled by any in the whole West, and the pleasant and agreeable society which welcomes every stranger with warm hands and overflowing hearts. To this may be added our present system of railroads, radiating in every direction, and reaching out to all the markets of the world. These, with others, are the reasons why rival cities admit that Bessemer steei ^orkswill be first built at Terre -.n 'I

The Last Straw.

r»f

Off WS febuest of the owner of the ves-

anew register, under the name of Julia. The announcement of the signing of an enrolled bill to that effect in the House today created some merriment.—Exchange.

How withering is this announcement. It shows how overwhelming and crushing has been the exposure of the New York den of thieves. It is now damaging to the character aud business of a vessel to bear the name of "Bosss Tweed." "But yesterday that name might have stood against the world." To-day, if it was engraved on a dog's collar, the poor dumb brute would be kicked by every honest man who read it.

"THERE will be no opposition to Grant at the Philadelphia Convention."—St. Louis Republican.

Of course not. If Andy Johnson's officeholders were able to give sixty-five votes in the Democratic National Convention of 1SG8, Grant's officeholders will have no dilliculty in giving him every vote in the Republican Convention of 1S712.

Charles Sumner.

The first message ever transmitted by Gen. Grant to Congress embodied arecommendation that the laws be so altered that a leading importer might at the same time be Secretary of the Treasury, and Mr. John Sherman was ready with a bill echoing that recommendation, which he proposed to put through at race-horse .speed under a suspension of the rules. There was a brief pause, but all seemed willing to defer to the chief dispenser of patronage, or, at all events, unwilling to thwart his pleasure. "I object!" at length pealed the sonorous voice of Charles Sumner, aud the project was arrested. Next day, you could find no one willing to admit that he had ever acijuiesced in it. An hour's reflection backing a word of remonstrance had sufficed to kill it very dead.

The acquisition of Santo Domingo was urged upon Congress by the President. Mr Sumner, as Chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs, strenuously opposed it. A majority of the Senate thereupon degraded him from the chairmanship he had long filled with eminent capacity, dignity, and fidelity. That chairmanship was never more honored than while he filled it. It will never again be so honored till he shall have been requested to resume it.

At the opening of this session au investigation of crying abuses in the management of our Custom House was demanded. Mr. Sumner zealously promoted it, as he would have done had he been President. It was stubbornly resisted, but at length grudgingly ordered care being taken that those who had opposed it so long as they safely could should mainly compose the committee, aud that no

Republican who had urged it should bear them company. Mr. Sumner noted the fact, but did not complain of it.

Mr. Sumner was made acquainted with facts and documents that indicated wrong in the sales of arms by our War Department during the late desperate struggle between France and Germany. Thereupon, he moved an investigation, reciting in a preamble the circumstances which seemed to him suspicious. Itwas perfectly competent for the Senate to strike out the preamble, as prejudging the case, and pass the simple inquiry. But the proposition was met as au attack on the President (whom it did not even hint at), and weeks of angry discussion finally resulted in ordering an investigation by a committee whereon neither Mr. Sumner, Mr. Schurz, nor any one else who had urged the investigation, was placed. This committee was so ashamed of the partiality which had governed its formation that it invited Air. Schurz to attend its sittings and question the witnesses.

Meantime, the two-term journals were let loose on Mr. Sumner. Harper's pictorial black-guard has caricatured and libeled him, from week to week, as though he were a second Tweed or Connolly. If he had been proved a gigantic speculator, he could not have been reviled more unsparingly.—N. Y. Tribune

Tlie Cincinnati Convention—A Republican Movement. The Cincinnati Couvention is to be strictly a Republican body. The call was issued by Republicans, and is addressed to Republicans, and the main object to be accomplished is to bring the Republican party up out of the slough into which the Administration of Grant has plunged it. It will doubtless construct a platform whereon the friends of progressive, liberal, honest government, of whatever party, can consistently stand, but it will nevertheless be a Reform Republican platform.

The convention will unquestionably nominate candidates for President aud Vice President, and both of them will of course be men who have been conspicuous Republicans, as for example Senator Trumbull, Dr. Greeley, Judge Davis, Gov. Gratz Brown, Gov. J. Cox, and the Hon. Charles Francis Adams and neither in the terms of the call nor in the objects contemplated is there any reason why so pronounced a Republican as Dr. Greeley, the founder aud chief architect of the party, should not be placed at the head of the ticket.

It is highly probable that as the grand movement begins to develop its strength, the Democrats may make up their minds to do so wise a thing as to resolve to! support the ticket nominated at Cinicinnati, and thus by adding their votes to those of the Reform Republicans, secure its triumph. Nevertheless, judging from the tone of the Democratic press, we presume that the Democratic leaders will not attempt to interfere with the proceedings at Cincinnati, much less endeavor to dictate its nominations. They will no doubt prefer to leave the entire programme to be arranged by the Reroral Republicans, reserving to themselves the right to determine at a later day what course they will pursue.

This oeing understood, every Republi can who wishes to reform the party, and prevent a repetition of the crimes follies, and corruptions of Grant's administration through another Presidential term, should turn his face toward Cincinnati.—New York Sun.

THE

great Italian tragedian, Salviui,

is at present, or was lately, playing an engagement in Rome. A correspondent thus writes of his "Othello:" "That was a horrible treat, Salvini plays it as I never saw it played. He gives an entirely new interpretation. I was bewildered, and I fancied I had never before seen Shakespeare's 'Othello' represented. It is no stately, dignified, half Spaniard and half Moor, but a "thick-lipped half Moor,and half African, with fiery passions which, when roused, dethrone reason and make him act like a madman, as he is. Salvini's by-play is everything, I never saw a character so intelligently conceived—nay, created—so richly completed and filled up." In the dying scene, instead of stabbing himself, Salvini cuts his throat with his crooked sword.

AN

ambitious footman of Liverpool, named Akers, who, worse than not having the fear ot the law,, had not the knowledge thereof before his eyes, clandestinely married ah English young lady last year, anticipating a share of her pro-

Ey

erty, has lately been sorely rebuted vice Chancellor Wiekens. Under the statute 19 and 20 Vic., cap. 119, it was decided that the husband had incurred forfeiture of all estate right, title, and interest in and to any property which had accrued, or would accrue to him by by virtue of his marriage with

Twppd'for aVhanaeof tho lady who, fortunately for her,

'^name,1 cSigrffi htU pawed a bill granting' under age on the wedding day.

HAD HIS MOUSTACHE COLORED.— Thomes Minshall, a young man residing in Chester, Pennsylvania, was terribly poisoned a week or two since by a species of hair dye in common use among barbers everywhere. The Republican says: "While coloring his moustache the barber suffered a drop of the dye to fall upon his lower lip, which was slightly chapped. In" a short time after the part began to swell, became inflamed to an enormous size, and his whole face represented a shocking appearance. Convulsion after convulsion followed, and for some days his life was in great jeopardy. Within the last day or two, however, the swelling has somewhat subsided, and he is in a fair way to recover."

Dead or Dying.—Where the hair is unnaturally dry, you may be sure that it is dying and unless artificially vitalized, it will soon be as dead as leaves in November. Feed the withering fibers and stimulate the torpid scalp with LYON'S KATHAIRON, and the evil, which must otherwise soon culminate in baldness, will he speedily remedied. It is absolutely necessary for the health of the brain, that it be kept moderately moist with a preparation capable of nourishing and invigorating it. LYON'S KATIIAIRON fulfills these conditions, and is the only article that actually puts vewiife info the capillary tubes, through which the natural nourishment has ceased to pass. 'I his pure and harmless vegetable preparaton is absorbed by the skin of the head to the roots of the hair, and passes into the filaments by the force of capillary attraction.

Old Prejudices arc Dying Out.—New facts are killing them. The idea that invalids weakened by disease can be relieved by prostrating them with destructive drugs, is no longer entertained except by monomaniacs. Ever si nee the introduction of DR. WALKER'S VINSGAK BITTERS it has been obvious that their regulating and invigorating properties are all-sufficient for the cure of chronic indigestion, rheumatism, constipation, diarrhoea, nervous affections, aud malarious fevers, and they are now the standard remedy for these complaints in every section of the Union.

FOUNDRY.

F. H. M'ELFRESH. J. BARNARD.

Pho'iiix Foundry

AND

A I N E S O

MeElfresh & Barnard,

Cor. of Ni»tli and Eagle Streets,

(Near the Passenger Depot,)

TERKE HAXJTE,

MANUFACTURE

IND

Steam Engines, Mill Ma

chinery. House Fronts, Fiie Fronts, Circu lar Saw Mills, and all kinds of

IRON AND BIIASS CASTINGS!

REPAIRINfi BOJfK PllOJJPTI-T

Ali parties connected with this establishment being practical mechanics of several years' ex perience, we feel safe in saying that we can ren der satisfaction to our customers, both in point of W orkmansliip and Price. aildwly' McELFKESIi & BARNARD

STEAM EAKESY.

Union Steam Bakery.

KEIVY

FRANK BKEjmiG BHO..

Manufacturers of all kinds ol

Crackers, Cakes, Bread 'A»VI €ASOY!

Dealers In

Foreigu and Domestic Fruits, FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES, LA FA YETTE S TEEET,

Between the two Railroads. Terre Haute, Indiana,

-AUCTION MERCHANTS.

HAYWARD & SCOTT,

Auction & Commission

MERCHANTS, ..

Fourth St., bet. Ohio Walnnt,

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

HAVING

associated ourselves for the pur­

pose of carryiugon the Auction and Commission business, we will be fouDd ready at all times to receive consignments of erchandise, which we will sell at private sale or at auction. Having been connected with the auction business for the past fouiteen years, we feel confident that our transactions will be satisfactory to our patrons.

Regular Sales Every Saturday

OF

HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE

Will also attend to any sales in the city and vicinity on reasonable terms. febl5

WAGON YARD.

DAKIEL MILLER'S

W1GOI YARD

BOARDING HOUSE,

Corner Fourth and Eagle* Streets,

TERRE HAUTE, IND. .,

THE

Undersigned takes great pieasnre in It forming his old friends and customers, and the public generally, that he has again taken charge of his well-known Wagon Yard and .Boarding House, located as above, and that he will be fonnd ready and prompt to accommodate all in the best and most acceptable manner. His boarding house has been greatly enlarged and thoroughly refitted. His wagon Yard is not excelled for accommodations anywhere in the city. Boarders taken by the Dap, Week, or

Month, and PHces JReasonabte. N, B.—The Boarding -House and -Wagon will be under the entire supervision of myge: and family. [58d4wtfJ DAWIEL MII.LEB.

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.

A MONTH to sell our Universal Ce-

qpO I *J ment, Combination Tunnel, Button Hole Cutter, and other articles. TY Co., Saco, Me.

PSYCHOLOGICby

SACO NOVBL4w

Fascination or Sool Charm­

ing, 400 pacres, Heibert Hamilton, B. A. How to use this power (which all possess) at will. Divination, ?piricualism, Sorceries, Demonology, and a thousand other wonders. Price by mail, 31.25, cloth paper covers, §1.00. Copy free to atjenls only. SI, 1.00 monthly easily made. Address, T. W. EVANS, publisher, 1th street, Philadelphia, Pa.

GREAT CHANCE FOR AGENTS. Do you want a situation as agent, locator traveling, with a clia ice to make 85 to 820 per day selling our new 7 strand White Wire Clothes Lines? They last forever samples free, so there is no risk. Address at once, Hudson River Wire Works, cor. Water street and Maiden Lane, N Y., or 16Dearborn street, Chicago. 4w AGENTS WANTED. Theonly complete lifeof

JAMES FISK,

Containing a full account of all his schemes, onterprlM's and assassination. Biographies cf Vanderbitt, Die and other great Railroad ami Financial magnates. GREAT FRAUDS of the TAMMANY RING. Brilliant pen pictures in Hie LIGHTS AND SHADOWS of New York life. JOSIK MANSFIELD, the siren. How a beautflul woman captivated and ruiued her victims. Life of EUWAllU S. JJTOKES, illustrated octavo of over 50U pases. Send SI.00 for outfit, and secure territory at once. Circulars free. UNION PUBLISHING CO., Philadelphia, Chicago or Cincinnati.

$2001 New Map of Indiana—1S72. PER Every It. IL.Station,Town, Village, iDLVTIl AC.

PER

MONTH U.S. Mans for agents, 5 Barciay street, N. Y.

Large stock of popul:ir Charts and E. C. BKIDGMAN, No.

VJOO REWAfil) is offered oy proprietor of Lr. au"i'a atarrli Kemody for a ca.-c of "Cold in Head" C'aiait/i or Oxna,which he cannot cur Sola by iJruggiata at a ol'

Well's Carbolic Tablets,

FOB iouuus, COLDS & HOARSENESS. These Tablets present the Acid in Combination w«* other efficient remedies, in a popular iorm 101 oie Cure of all THROAT and LUNG Diseases. HOARSENESS and ULCERATION of thf THROAT are immediately relieved, and statements are constantly being sent to the propri— of relief in cases of Throat difficulties of years standing. 1 1 4 iv

JL

OBSTRUCTION OF INTESTINES, URINARY, UTERINE, OR ABDOMINAL O-ROANS, POVERTY OR A WANT

OF BLOOD, INTERMITTENT OR REMITTENT FEVEBS, IN FA MA

T1 ON OF THE

IV E O S SLUGGISH CIRCULATION OF

THE BLOOD.

ABSCESSES, TUMORS, A UNDICE, SCROFI LA, DXSPEPSIA, AG UEANEFEVER, OR THEIR CONCOMITANTS.

I Dr. Well's Extract of Jurubeba,

1

is offered to the public as a great invigorator and remedy for all impurities ot the blood, or for organic weakness with their attendant evils. For the foregoing complaints

J&TUrBftlBS.i

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, and animates and fortifies all weak and lymphatic temperaments.

66

u»ss imitations. Get only

Well's Carbolic Tablets. Friuc, 25 cents pei 3ox. JOHN Q. KELLOGG, 18 Piatt street, New Yor'c, Sole Agent for the United States. Send lor Circular. 4w

O S O N S WORLn-RENOWNED PATENT

Glove-Fitting Corset!

If you want the mosi sat, AsfacWry, best fitting and the (cheapest Corset lor its real value, you have ever worn, buy

THOMSON'S

GENUINE PATENT

GLOYE- FITTING.

No Corset lias ever attained such a reputation in this or any other coun­

try. As now male in length and fullness of bust

IT CAIOOT BE IMPIiOVEI) Every Corset, is stamped with the name THOMSON and the trade mark, a CROWN. Kept by all first-class dealers. THOMSON, liANGDON CO.,

Sole Owners of Patents, 391 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

E A

It is NOT A PHYSIC—It is NOT what is popularly called a BI1TERS, nor is it intended to be such. IT IS A SOUTH AMERICAN plant that has been used for many years by the medical faculty of those countries with wonderful efflcacvas a POWERFUL ALTERATIVE and UNEQUALED PURIFIER OF THE BLOOD, and is a Sure and Perfect Remedy for all diseases of the LIVER AND SPLEEN, ENLARGEMENT OR

JOHN Q. KELLOGG, 18 Piatt street. New York,

Sole Agent for the United States.

Price One Dollar per Bottle. Send for Circular. 4w

PHIS IS NO HUMBUG!

35

I By sending DO CENTS, with age, height, color of eyes and hair, you will receive by return mail, a correct picture of your future husband or wife, with name and date of marriage. Address, \V. FOX, P. O. Drawer No. 24, Fultonville, N. Y. 4w

Profitable Employ ment.

\X7"E desire to engagea few more Agents to sell the World Renowned Improved JBUCIiEYE SEWINe MACHINE, at a liberal salary or on Commission. A Horse and Wagon given to Agents. Full Particulars furnished on application. Address, W. A, HENDERSON & COr, General Agents, Cleveland, Ohio, and St. Louis, Mo. 4w

Whitney's Neats Foot Harness Soap. STEAM REFINED.

X,T

Oils, Blacks, Polishes and soaps at the same time. Put up In large and small size boxes, also in 3 lb. bars. Has been in use for years, and gives perfect satisfaction. Sena

stamp for our WAVERLY. Address, G. WHITNEY & CO., 59 Milk St., Boston, MM. nov8-6m

SADDLES, HARNESS, &C.

PHIMP KABEIi,

Manufacturer of and Wholesale and Retail Dealer in

SADDLES. HARNESS,

COLLARS,WHIPS

Fancy Buffalo Robes,

LADIES9 FOOT MUFFS,

All Kinds of Lap Robes, &c.,

196 MAIN STREET, NEAR SEVENTH,

East of fcfeuciders' Confectionery, novl dw3m TERRE HAUTE, IND.

LOCKS.

CORNELIUS, WALSH & SON,

v. Manufacturers and dealers in

CABINET & TRTJM LOCKS,

TRAVELING BAG FRAMES &\:

TRUNK HAEDWAEE,

Hamilton street. Corner Railroad Avenne, Idly NEWARK v. J.

DEEDS.

BLANKOO'H_.or

DE£ns, neatly

single

oj»e,

printed lo- srt by HP (T,'

oy the quire,

Omgwi! fith ntr«ei

LOWEST PRICES.

1,0WEST PRICKS!

DR5T GOODS,

an(l

ANOTHER STEP FORWARD!

"New Occasions Teach New Duties I"

THEORIES OF BUSINESS, ALIKE WITH THEORIES OF GOVERNMENT, MUST CHANGE WITH THE DEMANDS OF THE HOUR.

Tiie Nineteenth Century is by Nature Revolutionary.

THE TOMBSTONES OF OUR FATHERS ARE NOT W HITE ENOUGH FOR THE DEAD OF 1872.

WE TAKE NO TIMID COUNSEi..

EXPANSION AND PROGRESS TSIE MOTTO.

We are Now Opening our Sixth Store .it Grand Rapids. Micli.

And as this will increase our combined business about two hundred thousand dollars a year, we shall be able to buy and sell goods still cheaper this Spring than ever before. We .areolten asked, do we intend ultimately to monopolize all the principal points of Indiana and Michigan. Our answer is always in the spirit that

NO MAN KNOWETH HIS DESTINY."

In this young aud growing couutry a firm that is true that the interests of the people, and breaks loose from the old damaging Western custom of "High Prices and Big Profit*,"

throwing itself upon the bosom of the loving, earnest, wide­

awake people of the West, distributes its merchandise fairly, honestly aud cheaply we say any firm thus pushing forward, cannot tell where such a great mercantile reformation will carry it. Its members must only be true to every duty of the present, have faith in the times iu which they live, and leave the rest to the development of a people and a nation that cannot be matched the broad world over.

The More Stores we Have the Cheaper we Can Buy and Sell Our Goods.

Large Arrivals of New Goods!

For the next sixty days we shall be constantly and almost daily receiving large lots of new Spring Goods. As fast as they are put upon the market every novelty of the season will be at once bought by our New York partners and added to our stock here.

OUK SALES OF DRESS GOODS KXOKMOIS!

OIK STOCK THE MOST ATTRACTIVE IX TOWN!

PRETTIEST GOODS.

LARGEST ASSORTMENT.

A.11 our best Merrimack, Sprague, Cocheco aud other best makes of Prints, 10c, a yard. Common Prints, Gc. Fast Colored Prints, 8c.

Immense stocks of Tickings, Denims, Striped Shirtings, Checks, Table Linens, Cassimeres, Balmoral and Boulevard Skirts, Fancy Goods, &c. Coats' Cotton, 5c. Clark's Cotton, same price. Dexter's Tidy Cotton, 5c a ball.

French woven Corsets, 50c. Good common Corsets, 25c.

"'DOLLY YARDEN" Goods in Different Materials.

Elegaut Display in Wool, Cloth, Paisley and Broclie Sliawls!

O E O

Great New York Dry Goods Store,

NORTH SIDE OF MAIN STREET. TERRE HAUTE, INT.

OABPETS.

HIGH-PRICED CARPET MEN,

mix ¥OUft TI€K£TN FOR SALT IAEE!

We are bound to do the Carpet Trade. We can undersell you 20 per cent. We have 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 chiefly 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

Wei do Propbse to do the Carpet Trade!

Our Carpet' Room is over our 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 CARTETS, OIL CLOTHS, MATTINGS, &C., in elegant styles, for the Spring trade, have just been received and placed on sale.

NEWEST STYLES 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. Allrwool Ingrains at 60c, 65c, 70c and 75c. Finer qualities of all-wool Ingrains at 90o, $1.00 and 1.15. Celebrated makes of "Extra-Super" Ingrains at 1.20, 1.25 and 1.30. v.

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, &c., at equally low rates. We warn the public against shoddy makes of Carpets, pushed off on customers as "Family Carpets", "Hand-loom" Carpets, &c. "Hand-loom" Carpets are rag carpets. You could make a fine, smooth,

pretty

Ingrain or Brussels Carpet on 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 lowest prices, buy them out of our New Stock.

O S E O E S

GffiEAT N. ¥. CITY DRY GOODS AM) ARPET STORE,

Horlh Side of Main Street, Terre Haute, Indiana.

ai

BUSINESS CABJDS.

PROFESSIONAL.

STEPHEN J. YOUNG, M. 1). Office at No. 12 South Fifth St.,

Opposite St. Joseph's Catholic Church, TERRE ISAUTE, Ei#.

Prompt attention paid to all professional calls, day or night. febl'i

JOAB & HAEPKB,

Attorneys and Collecting Agent!?,

Terre Hiiui«, Indiana.

8S, Office, No. 66 Ohio Street, south side.

J. IS* BLAKE,

ATT4t10»T5CY

Aud Noturj Public.

Office, on Ohio Street, bet. Third Fourth

Torre XEnnle, Indiana.

HOTELS.

A k* O IT

Foot of 3:ain Street TKRRi: HAl'Ti:, 151)1ASA.

OUT" Free Bliss to and from ft]] trains. J. AI. DAVIS, Proprietor.

TE11JRE MAtJTJE fiaOffc*

Cor. of Main and Seventh Streets.

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

JE.

P. ECSIOX, JACOB BUTZ.

A. M'UONAILB,

Deader in

Copper Distilled Whisky,

AX» PURE WINES,

No. 9 Fourth Street, bet. Main mid Oltio fi®* Pure French Brandies for Medical pur poses.

PAINTm

WI. S. MEI/TOKs

PAINTER,

Cor. 6th, La Fajette aal Locust sis. TERRE HAUTE, IND.

THE OLD BEL,IABL,K

J8SAKK jk^SfJEAKIili

House and Sign Fainter*-,

CORY'S NEW BUILDING^

Fifth Street, betweenr,Slain mitl Ohio

GUNSMITH.

JOIOT ABMSTKOIti,

Gunsmith, Stencil Cutter, Saw Filer and Locksmith,

THIRD STREET, NORTH OF MAIN,. Terre Haute, Indiana.

CLOTHINOr.

J. ERLANGER,

Wholesale and Retail Dealer In MENS', YOUTHS' AND BOYS'

CLOTHING,

And Gents' Furnishing Goods, """""opera house,

Terre Haute, Indiana.

GROCERIES.

HUJ.MAW & COX,

WHOLESALE

Grocers and Liquor Dealers, Cor. of Main and Fifth Sts.,

Terre Hante, Ind.

IS. W. ltlPPETOE,

Groceries and Provisions, No. 155 Main Street,

Terre Hante, Indiana.

WEST & ALLM, DEALEBS IN

Groceries, Queensware, Provision*, AND COUNTRY PRODUCE, No. 75 Main Street, bet. Eighth and Ninth

Terre Hante, Indiana.

FEED STORE.

J. ArBURGAN,

Dealer In

Flour, Feed, Baled Hay, Corn Oats, and a kinds of Seeds, NORTH THIRD ST., NEAR MAIN

TEBRB HAUTE, IND.

FEEDdelivered

In all parts of the city tree

charge lfiitm

OAS FITTSE.

A.BIEFA€0.,

GAS AND STEAM FITTER,

I OHIO BTBEET,

Bet. 5th and 6th, Terre Hante, Ind,

S

hnl

AT UW

:iL U5 £E

US

er is ley Ing inaf

vaact tlihe PE lot ire nd

Milliliter.

UKO. C. BUTZ.

-NATWNAJA HOU&E,

Corner of Sixth and Main Streets,

1ERRE-HA TJTE, INDIANA,

JACOB BUTZ, Proprietor.

This Honse has beenthoroughly refurnished

LEATHER.

JOHN H. O'BOTJLE,

Dealer in

Leather, Hides, Oil and Findings. NO. 178 MAIN STREET,

Terre Hante, Indiana.

BOOTS AND SHOES. A. O. BALCH

Ladies' & Gents' Fashionable

BOOTS & SXtOJSS,

MADEShoeStore,

to order. Shop at O'Boyle Bros. Boot and Main street, Terre Haute ndiana.

CHANGE.

A CMAJfGU!

O. FROEB

Successor to

\V

au6d3m.

E I S S

LIQUOES.

a

iml rel

n-l

ts. it-1