Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 2, Number 272, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 April 1872 — Page 2

(The (Eienin

ADVEB^'X

y\v

*eveiv alterby Hie ::irri§10 per y«ar

is issued every Thurs?1 the Vx-'St mailer of :e Tiie WEEKLY (JAZETXK is j,r!r,ti-d in Terre Haute, and jif •••••ij-y. iH*r yeai,^3.00: three: 6 five copies, |er yvai, one yc ii', auU one to getter &i3.'SO one c.-py, six months' ... _• iiiv, iiiv* -nonths 50«*. AJI I i,! niiisl' be paid i'r a:V:IP The! j1r will, invariabt !t- -lis •onMnwil iration ol time. I K'.r Advertising Rates sie birr! pn^. Tiio GAZETTEehtabiiSI) IN

Of

en is the

point of Presses and Types in

iicited, to which prompt at-tfuMon

^'V Addressa)i letter^udwn

For Secretary of State, W. W. CURRY, Of Vigo county.

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

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

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

CHARLES SCHOLL, Of Clark county.

For Superintendent of Public Instruction, BENJAMIN W. S.MilH, Of Marion county.

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

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1872.

The Great

Our New York exchanges come to us this morning, brim full and running over with accounts of the great meeting of the Liberal and Reform Republicans in that city. The Tribune has the following in relation to it,editorially: "New York gave, last night, the first response to Cincinnati. It was an answer worthy of the noblest cause. The pursuers, whom Gen. Scluirz described as "baying on the track of the independent Senators so fiercely that it would be alarming if the collars round their necks were not so plainly seen," have delighted in declaring the Liberal Republican organization an insignificant movemfeut-by a mere handful of discontented soreheads." The largest meeting in Cooper Institute since the war, and one equal to the best in every element of respectability, influence, and devotion to Republican principle, is the fitting reply. If any resident of New York ever had a doubt as to the purpose of her best citizens to keep the work of reform from stopping at the city limits, this meeting desolves his doubt. If any ever had a fear that Administration patronage, or the crack of the party whip by the party upstarts over the party leaders, could silence or overawe the Reformers, this meeting allays his fear. If any needed the stimulus of seeing tens of thousands co-operating to the Natioual purification, this meeting gives him the cheer that comes wilh the inspiration of numbers, and eloquence, and contagious enthusiasm.

Responses to the Cincinnati call multiply on all hands. Jiut we reckon this the most substantial impetus the good work has yet received—tne most auspicious beginning any great political campaign has had for many a year. It means that the Cincinnati Convention is to be a success alike in numbers, representative character and generous purpose. Let it be equally wise, and it will name the next President of ihe United States.

And now, friends in New York and every State! to work! Of numbers, resolve, enthusiasm, we have enough. But we confront a compact band of officeholders, with their office-seeking allies and dependents, holding in their grasp the splendid organization of a noble party, iwhose name has been for a dozen years the unfailing watch word of victory. They were already alarmed last night will arouse them to their most desperate efforts. We must organize, and at once. The campaign must be aggressive attack is the key of the situation."

In describing the scene at Cooper Institute, the Tribune says: "A croVd of thousands outside Cooper Institute, utterly unable to gain admittance, but unwilling to leave, and making the square ring with that oldtime chorus ot the nation in its times of peril ami heroic effort, "John Brown's body lies mouldering in the ground a crowd inside that filled every seat and packed every aisle, that'overflowed the platform till th« orator had scarcely room to move from one side of the narrow reading desk to the other, and jammed the great space behind (till egress and ingress were impossible) with an audience back of the speakers far larger than the average lecturer is able to get in front of him a crowd that contained the best elements of the gVeat Reform meeting last summer, which be gan the overthrow of Tammany, but was as much larger and more imposing than that as the work of national reform is grander and more imperative that numbered many of the foremost men of the country, and was neither gathered by the Custom House, nor by any of the ordinary appliances of party demonstration that patiently waited for an hour for the sake of getting places at all, and stayed en masse, orderly, but enthusiastic, till the last echo of the last cheer that followed the last speech had died away such was the opeuing, last night, of the Liberal Republican campaign for the Presidency, and the answer of the Empire City to the call to Cincinnati. There has been no such meeting in New York since the war. The speakers, like the audience, were Republican from the start, recognized champions in council and on the field, in the days when to be leading Republicans meant to be tried patriots, but ostracised since by the shoddy contractors Hud Custom House clerks 'who now assurne to control the organization. And the speeches were worthy alike of speakers, audience aud cause."

The World says: "The Cooper Institute meeting was a fit tiling, fitly done. The bold reliance on popular support in which it was conceived was justified by the througing, earnest multitudes of whom only a small part were able to gain admittance into the largest public hall in the city. Tlie meeting was appointed at eight o'clock but soon after seven the hjll was packed aud crammed, and at half-past seven there was a retreating steam of people who had vainly tried to wedge themselves into the expectant assembly, aud had failett. A black mass of bees clustering upon a swarming hive is but a faint image of the outside crowds, who, though comipg early, came too late for entrance. If the meeting had been held in the open air, the people attending it would have been measured by acres. The great feature of the meeting was, that the PEOPLE were there. It is demonstrated that the strong, courageous, patriotic popular heart is in this movement, and that is therefore likely to succeed.

this great and spirited meeting to a

THEHE

3 months.

l'J,.a

:'.nd orders for any kind of Type

„f

pnnf

Rf V.

Of Randolph county. For Lieutenant yovernor, USONIDAS M. HEXTON,

Of Rush county.

For Congressman at Large,, GODLOVE 8. ORTH, Of Tippecanoe county.

THE

& ROS

GAZETTE,

Terre Haute, Ind

ITLPLBUC'ALS S I'A-'L'I TICKE I. For yovernor, OEV THOMAS M. BROWNE,

he Democratic

GAZETTE

Terre Haute

quests of all who direct letters, circulars, papers, or other mail matter to put on the name of the county, on the package, as well as the postoffice and State. This greatly facilitates the labors of the clerks in distributing oifice.J, and prevents delaysjoften caused by imperfect or ambigu ous directions.

WE

Reform Demonstration at A'ew York.

will commence to-morrow the publication of the great speech of Senator Schurz, delivered at the Liberal and Reform Republican meeting in New York last week. It is one of the most brilliant efforts of the great Germau, and will command the admiration of honest men everywhere.

THE

Boston G7o6eapprohends an "iron

famine" throughout the civilized world. The fact can no longer be denied or ignored that the demand for iron is now greatly in excess of tlie'supply, aud that it is far beyond the productive capacity of all the furnaces aud mills in existence. New lines of railway are constructing in every land, iron is used now for making thousands of articles heretofore made of other materials, and the supplies of accessible iron ores and coals in the great manufacturing centres are getting short. There need be no apprehension of an iron famine, however, if capitalists of enterprise aud intelligence will turn their at tention to the development of the iron and coal resources of the West. The Iron Mountain and Lake Superior ore are exhaustless. The iron mas ters of Pittsburg are transporting these ores across the coal fields of Indiana to their Pennsylvania furnaces, when they can be converted into pig iron here at less cost, and of better quality, than any iron produced at Pittsburg. The owners of Indiana blast furnaces are now making handsome profits, and while we are glad to see them prospering in their efforts to utilize and develop the natural wealth of our State, we hope that their success will be the means of inducing others to embark in similar enterprises. —hid. Journal.

Discounting Cincinnati.

About this time, expect rumors. The industrious gentlemen who, from Washington offices, speed their inventions on the wings of ttie lightning, will day by day tell the country how Shiftly, and Snooks, and Chivers, had a meeting in that important city, and fixed upon the candidates to be nominated at Cincinnati, and the platform on which they should be preseuted to the country. When all possible sensation has been created by this fabrication, they will put forth another aud another, up to the hour wherein speculation shall be precluded by action.

Understand, then, once for all, that the Cincinnati Convention will act in utter independence of all cabals, and intrigues, and arrangements, and bargains, and fixings, whether at Washington or elsewhere. Until it meets and acts, no one can know even that a nomination will be made by it, much less whom it will see fit to nominate. Any suspicion that a "slate" has been made for it in Washington will insure the breakiugof that slate, at all events.—JV. Y. Tribune.

ANT10CH.

Description of the City Just Overwhelmed by an Earthquake. Antioc-h is a city of Syria, situated in the northern part of that country, fiftyseven miles west of Aleppo, on the left bank of the river Orontes, about tweufy miles above its mouth. The city is in 37 deg. north and 36 deg, east longitude. Its population is estimated at about 10,000, and the city is surrounded by an ancient wall of from twenty to seventy feet in height. This wall incloses an area of uneven ground several miles in circumference, much of which is now taken up by gardeus. The houses are built mostly of slight or fragile materials, and differ .widely from those of other Oriental cities in having sloping instead of flat roofs. It has about a dozen mosques, but in this singular town, where the designation of Christians was first given to the followers of Jesus Christ, and where taul preached so many famous sermons, there is not at present a single Christian Church. Baths and bazars of the Eastern type are very numerous, and there are manufactories of coarse pottery, cotton stuffs and leather, but the culture of silk is the chief branch of-industry. About ten million drachms of silk were the annual average produce of silk of the district in 1850, 1851 and 1552. The annual export of this gross amount was about seven million drachms, chiefly to France. The other exports are goats' wool, yellow~berries and salted eels. The city walls, ruined aqueduct, bridges and a, port ion of'f pavement are the sole remaining vestiges of ancient magnificence. Antioch was embelished aud named by Seleucus Nicatar, before Christ 301, and though it suffered severely by successive earthquakes it maintained its importance until captured by the Saracens, in A. D. 658. Its ancient population during its most flourishing period was estimated at 400,000. Chrysostom computed the population in his time at 200,000, more than one-half of whom were Christians.

Antioch was the Capital of a Christian principality from 1098 to 1269, since which time it has steadily declined. Some ruins about eight miles southwestward, on the south bank 6f the Orontes, mark the site of the celebrated ancient grove of Daphue aud Temple of Apollo.

"LAST week a slight unpleasantness occurred in the Legislature. Representative Latimer, of Knox County, told brother Morrisou, of Cook, that he, Mr. M., was a "lying Catholic Irishman." Morrison's blood boiled in his very bones, and with a gesture of dissent, he drew1 himself up to his fyll height, and spit in Latimer's Tir»« j*

^ce\ Latimer indignantlv

wiped his cheek with his coat tail, and sat down. No cards. The sad event cast a gloom over the eutire assembly but cheerfulness soon prevailed, and th« legitimate business of throwing paper wads was resumed with vigor. The Stale Register, however, has had its feelings ruffled by the occurrence, apd it demands that the severest punishment be inflicted upon the two men. Blood! Iago blood \—Peoria £III.) Pioneer,

AN

to wait and watcK

gtruetious in the way oi whirh seems to stand on so asis. But it must nevertheless ve its final judgment until the piehopeful anticipations shall ripen, by the progress of events, into established facts." ___

will be a reform meeting held

at Richmond, on Saturday next, to te composed of those who voted for Giant fnd Colfax in 18S, and now approve the per,oral objects of the convention to be held at Cincinnati on the 1st of May. The call is signed by sixty-eight honest {.„! influential .Republicans of old Wavne, and we have no doubt the convention will be full of spirit and enthusiasm.

broadly inti­

mates that the editor of this paper is in the habit of thinking oneway and writing another. Does the

GAZETTEdesire

GAZETTE

to pro­

voke us to an unseemly display of anger What if in a fit of desperation we should squelcbjthe

by calling it a "pro

vincial" paper?—fnd. Journal. Why, in order to be even with you, we will get the editor of the Express to write one stanza of his poetry against you, and thus "squelch"you forever.

POSTMASTER GENERAL

CRESWELL

exchange says "Gen. Sherman rises superior to all the blandishments of royalty. The Khedive placed a palace at his disposal, but the hero of the great march preferred the simple accommodations of a little two-story aubcrge at Cairo. No stuff and nonsense about old Tecumseh. Swiug him a hammock in the open air, with a eood gingham awning to keep oft' the dews of heaven, and the stars and stripes for a bed-quilt, and for sound, refreshing slumber he will outsnooze any pampered minion of royalty that ever cuddled in swans' down, or laid himself down to rest behind ikembroidered curtains."

NEW ADVEBTI8£MiiNTS.

A MONTH to sell our Universal Cement, Combination Tunnel, Button

Ifole Cutter, and other articles. SACO NOVELTY CO., Saco, Me. 4w

RAPIDLY with Stcncil Key Cheek Our tits. Cata­

MOSEYS

logues, samples and full particulars FREE. S. Si. SPE^CEK,

Brattleboro, Vt.

WANTED.—Agents for our new lO-puge iaper, the Contributor Thirteen departments, religious and secular. Rev. A. B. Earle writes for it. $1 00 a year a $2.00 premium to each subscriber. For Agent*.' terms, address,

JAMES H. EARLE, Boston, Mass.

TJiTT} 17 Hats, Caps, Belts, Shirts, Badges, Jj lli Trumpets, &c., for Service and Parade. At the old Manufactory, 1-12 Grand St., N. Y. CAIRNS & BRO., late H. T. GRATA CAP. Send for Illustrated Circulars.

Agents Wanted K'v?i,:v.*r'

Kdith O'Gormnii, Escaped Nun. true Book. One lady made #25 CONN. PUB. CO., Cin. O.

by

A brave, week.

$2001 Map of Indiana—1872.

p™ Every R. K.Station, Town, Village, &c.

PER

MONTH I Large stock of popular Charts and U. S. Maps for agents. E. C. BRIDGMAN, No. 5 Barclay street, N. Y.

A l?\fnrW wanted for the BRIGHT SIDE OF i\.\XJLiii O NEW YOKK, a Library of Information pertaining to its Institutions and Ob jects ol interest. See that the book you get is by Rev. J. F. Richmond, five years a City Missionary. A work worth having, and not a Sensation book. 200 Engravings. Agents sell 40 a day. E. B. TItEAT, Publisher, 805 Broadway, N. Y.

AGENTS 1 WANTED.

Illustrated History of the

Holy Bible. Will contain 750 royal octavo pps., double colunjjis, illustrated with 300 Engravings by Dore and others with Maps, Notes, etc. Cl«rgymen, School Teachers, Young Men from the country, men of business tact, wanted as Agents. Send for circulars, terms, &c. The success of our Agents is unequalled. Special inducements to experienced Agents. Addiess, O. A. BROWNING, Toledo,

O.

Life of JAMES FISK.

Brilliant Pen Pictures of the

Sights and Sensations of Ni'w York.

TAMMANY FRAUDS

Biographies of Vanderbilt, Drew, Gould and other Railroad Magnates. All about JOSIE MANSFIELD, the siren, and EDWAfitl* S. STOKES, the assassin. Octavo of over 5(0 pages, profusely illustrated. AGENTS WANT ED. Send $1.00 for outfit, and secure territory atonce. Circularsl'ree. UNION PUBLISHING CO., Philadelphia, Chicago or Cincinnati.

AGENTS .WANTED TOR

CincVriuati, C.hicuVo't

The mo-fc

His d^lnl'tj'estabtished'aali'rHUoaaTiwi "aii? 'rupl(ilv-^e^l'lDg"'rclicioiu work ever TRVTTRRU7^7R^rrcaTlj^TUB"M?ffING

CO., NTV:

Well's Carbolic Tablets,

FOR COUGHS, COLDS & HOARSENESS. These Tablets present the Acid in Combination with other efficient remedies, in a popular iorm ioi une Cure of all THROAT and LUNG Diseases. HOARSENESS and ULCERATION of the THROAT are immediately relieved, and statements are constantly being sent to the proprietor of relief in cases of Throat difficulties of years standing. 1 A TTHPTI Don't be deceived by worthvAU AXl/JJl less Imitations. Get oniy Well's Carbolic Tablets. Price, 25 cents pei 3oic. JOHN Q,. KELLOGG, 18 Piatt street, New York, Sole Agent for the United States. Send lor Circular. 4w

GENTS **7 ANTED FOR DR. FOOT'S New and Wonderful Work

PLAIN HOME TALK

About the Human System—Tne Habits of Men and Women—The Causes and Prevention of.Disease—Our Sexual Relations and Social Natures embracing MEDICAL COMMON SENSE applied to Causes, Prevention and Cure of Chronic Diseases—the Natural Relatiousof Men and Women to each other—Society—Love—Marriage— Parentage-Etc., Etc. Nearly 1.000 Pages, with two hundred illustrations. Price in cloth 13 25 German, $3.50. Send for full table of contents, with terms to agents, &c. UNION PUBLISHING COMPANY, Chicago, Illinois.

eiTJBHT AWAY

TO ANY BOOK AGENT,

A $5.GO GREENBACK AND A SPECIMEN OF TUB

GREAT INDUSTRIES

OF THE UNITED STATES.

1,800 PAGES and 500 ENGRAVINGS! WRITTEN

BY

20 EMINENT AUTHORS,

CLUDING

IN­

HORACE GREELEY

AND

JOHN B.

GOUGH. AGENTS WANTED in every town to solicit orders for this work, on liberal terms. It sells to all classes, and no library should be without it. It is a complete history of ail branches of industry, processes of manufactures, etc. No like work ever betore published. One agent sold 138 in eight days, another 125 in one week, another 263 in two weeks. An early application will secure a choice in territory. Full particulars and terms will be sent free, with a specimen of this Great Work, and a $5 Greenback. J. B. BURR, HYDE & CO., Hartford, Conn. Chicago, Ills., or Cincinnati, O.

Oh, Would I Were a Child Again!

sighs the weary and exhausted one, as the languor and lassitude of spring comes upon him. Come and receive vigor and strength from the wonderful South American

TONIC

E A

Long and successfully used ijpi its native country, as a -Potverful Tonic and Potent Purifier of the Blood, it is found even to exceed the anticipations founded on its great reputation. According to the medical and scientific periodicals of London aid Paris, it possesses tEe

MOST

BRFCUL properties known to

Pow-

MATERIA

MEDICA.ONIC Dr. Well's Extract of Jurubeba, is a perfpet remedy for all diseases of the BLOOD, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, GLANDULOUS TUMORS, DROPSY, SCROFULA, INTERNAL ABCESSES, and will remove .all obstruction), of the LIVER, SPLEEN, INTESTINES,UTERINE and URINARY ORGANS.

It is strengtheuiug and nourishing. Likenutricious food taken into the stomach, it assiia ilates and diffuses isself through the circulation, giviug vigor and health.

It regulates the bowels, quiet? the nerves, acts directly on the secretive organs, and, by its powerful Tonic and restoring effects, products heiJih/ aud ligorous action to the whole tystem.

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

Sole Agent for the United States.

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

Whitney's Seats Foot Harness Soap.

STEAM REFINED.

XTOils,

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. Send

stamp for our WAVERLY. Address, G. WHITNEY & CO., 59 Milk St., Boston, Mass. nov6-6m

WISE.

NEW JERSEY WIRE MILLS. HEJTBl ROBERTS,

Manufacturer ol "ii'

j# .pi

_•-» wREFINED

3

IRON WIRE,

Market and Stone Wire, "r

BRIGHTandBail,

Annealed Telegraph Wire, Cop­

pered Pail Rivet, Screw, Buckle, Umbrell^Spdng, Bridge^ ^e^ce, Broym, Btrgsh,and

Wire Mill. NewarTc, tfew Jersey.

D2EDS.

BLANK

DEEDS, neatly printed tor sale by

single one, or by the quire, At the

OAflrrn office, North tjtin stxeet, I ft'- I f,*,

STBAM BAKE?.".

Union Steam Bakery.

P-:-

FK. IIEIXIG & ISEfO..

Manufacturer- of all Sclmlf o!

Crackers, Cakes, Bread

CANDY!

Dealers 1

Foreign ami Fruits,

FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES,

LA FA YETTE STREET\

Between the two Railroads. Terre Haute, Indiana.

SALOON.

OBIID OPENING!

OF THE

BRILLIANT SALOON,

(Late "Red Light,")

Second Street, between Main and Cherry. Regular Lunch at the Brilliant Loin 9 ta 11 A. M. every day. At this neat, comfortable establishment, Hoosier gentlemen can lake 'whisky straight," but when the Wabash gets low, "Suckers" will put themselves outside of mint juleps by the aid of a straw.

JOHN F. YOUNG, Proprietor,

mhlldlm Late of Edgar Co., 111.

SADDLES, HARNESS, £C.

PHILIP KABEL,

Manufacturer of and Wholesale Dealer in

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

MEDICAL.

WARNER'S

PILE 1SEMS5BY.

W(net

ARNER'S Pile Remedy has never faileo 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 lor it will, with the first application, instantly afford complete relief, and a few following applications are only required to effect a pennant cure without any trouble inconvenience to use.

Warner's Pile Pemedy is expressly for the Piles, aud is not recommended to cure any other disease. It has cured cases of over thirtj years standing. Price $1.00. For sale by druggists everywhere.

]\tO MORE

WEAM

Warner's Dyspepsia- Tonic is prepaied ex pressly for Dyspeptics and those suffering from weak nerves with habitual constipation. There are very few who have not einjjloyed physi cians for years to remedy what this preparation will do in a few weeks, by strengthening the nerves, enriching the circulation, restoring dl gestion, giving strength mentally and physi cally, enabling those who may have be in con fined for years to their rooi"S as invalids to again resume their occupations in all their duties ol life. One trial is all we ask to enable this remedy to recommend itself to the most skeptical. It is a slightly stimulating tonic and a splendid appetizer, it strengthens the stomach aud restores the generative organs and digestion to a normal and healthy state. Weak,.nervous and dyspeptic persons should use Warner's Dyspeptic Tonic. For sale by druggists. Price 81.00.

COUGH 1?0 MOBE.

Warner's Cough Balsam is healing,softening and expectorating. The extraordinary power it possesses in immediately relieving, and eventually curing the most obstinate cases ot Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Influenza, Hoarsendfcs, Asthma and Consumption is almost incredible. So prompt is the relief and certain its effects in all the above cases, ortiny affection of the throat and 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 one bottle affects a cure. Sold by druggist in large bottles. Price #1.00. It is your own fault if you still cough and suff'er The Balsam will cure.

WDTE OF LIFE.

The Great Blood Purifier and Delicious DrinkWainer's Vinum Vitse, or Wine of Life, is free from any poisonous drugs or impurities being prepared for those who require a stimulant. It is a splendid appetizer and a tonic, and the finest thing in theworld for purifying the blood. It is the most pleasant and delicious article ever offered to the public, far superior to brandy, whisky, wine, bitters, or any other article. It is more healthy and cheaper. Both male and female, young or old, take the Wine of Life. It is. in fact, a life preserver. Those who wish to enjoy a good health and a free flow of lively spirits, will do well to take the Wine of Life. It is different from any thing ever before in use. It is sold by druggists. Price S1.00, In quart bottles.

EJKMEXAGOGUE.

Warner's Emmenagogue is the only article known to cure the Whites, (it will cure in every case.) Where is the female in which this important medicine is not wanted Mothers, this is the greatest blessing ever offered yon, and you should immediately procure it. It is also a sure cure for Female Irregularities, and may be depended upon in every case where the monthly flow has been obstructed through cold or disease. Sold by druggists. Price $1.00, or sent by mail on receipt of 81.25. Address 619 State Street. Chicago, Illinois. dly.

MACHINE CARDS.

SARGENT CARD CLOTHING CO.

WORCESTER, MAS?

Manufacturers of

COTTON, WOOL

AND

HAND•furnishedEDWIN

DAILY

66

and Retail

SADDLES, HARNESS,

COLLARS,WHIPS

Fancy Buffalo Robes,

A I O O MUFFS,

AH Kinds of Lap Robes, &c.,

190 MAIN STREET, NEAR SET1STH,

1

Flax Machine Card Clothing

DJ every Variety, Manufacturers' Supplies, Car.

& vJs

in«Mac^Etc-

and Stripping Cards of every description to order. LAWRENCE, ylld Superintendent.

1 ,_4

LOWEST PRICES.

k6D0LLY

just been received and placed on sale.

LOWEST PRICES!

DBS' GOODS.

A N O E S E O W A

"New Occasions Teach New Duties

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

The Nineteen tli Century is by Nature Revolutionary.

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

WE TAKE NO TIMID COUNSEL.

EXPANSION AND PROGRESS TIIE MOTTO.

We are Now Opening our Sixth Store at Grand Rapids, Mich.

And as tbis 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 are olteu asked, do we intend ultimately to monopolize all the principal poiuts of Indiana and Michigan. Our answer is always in the spirit that

NO MAN KN0WETH HIS DESTINY."

In this young and growing country 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 Profits," and throwing itself upon the bosom of the loving, earnest, wideawake people of the West, distributes its merchandise fairly, honestly and 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 in which they live, and leave the rest to the development of a peopJeand 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 ^ixty 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.

OUR OF DRESS GOODS EXOIUfOUS!

O S O E O S A A I E I O W N

PRETTIEST GOODS.

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

LARGEST ASSORTMENT.

A.11 our best Merrimack, Sprague, Cocheco and other best makes of Prints, 10c a yard. Common Prints, 6c. 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.

YARDEN" Goods in Different Materials.

Elegaiit Display in Wool, Cloth, Paisley and Broche Shawls!

O E O E S

Great Hew York Dry Goods Store,

NORTH mm OF MAIN STREET. TERRE HAUTE. INI\

CARPETS.

HIGH-PRICED CARPET MEN,

BUY YOI'R TIl'KF/rJU FOR SALT JxAKE

Wc are bound to do the Carpet Trade. We can undersell you 20 per cent. We haye large capital and the very best credit. We are buying fiye 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 b.ow to the inevitable and give to us the lead

During the past year and nine months we have bent our energies chiefly to th

development of our Dry Goods business. Having put that beyond the reach of a^

competitors, we now turn our attention to the Carpet Trade, and we start out with th

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 tha

settles it. Everybody knows it will be done, and

We do Propose 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 CAR

PETS, OIL CLOTHS, MATTINGS, &C., in elegant styles, for the Spring trade, hav

NEWEST STYLES!

•.

Lot of good yard-wide Carpet at 17c. j, Lot of better yard-wide Carpet at 20c, ^5c 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 (JO'c, 65c, 70c and 75c. Finer qualities of all-wool Ingrains at 90c, fl.OO and 1.15. Celebrated makes of "Extra-Super" Ingrains 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. sHeavy yard-wide Oil Cloth, 50c worth 65c. .. ,.t Mattings, Rugs, &c,, at equally low rates. -r Ifj, :.,-7 We warn the public against shoddy makes of Carpets, pushed off on customers as "Family Carpets", "Hand-loom" Carpets, fcc. "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," whe

applied to any other kind than rag carpet, simply means SHODDY—a carpet to whic no manufacturer will put his name. If you wish only good "Power-loom Carpets

the lowest prices, buy them out of our New Stocks

O E O E S

-t

GREAT N. T. CITY DRY GOODS AND CARPET STORK

Worth Side of Main Street, T^rre HftDte, Indiana.

BEST ASSORTMENT!

BTJSI1TSSS CARDS.

PROFESSIONAL^

STEPHEN J. YOUNlx, M. D. Office at No. 12 South Fifth St.,

Opposite St. Joseph's Catholic Church,

TERRK HAFTE, ISA.

lis, Prompt attention paid to all professional calls, day or night. febln

•SOA15 HAKPI-R,

Attorneys aid Collecting Agents,

Terre Hantc, Indiana.

aa. Office, No. 66 Ohio Street, south syle.

J. IS. BLAKE,

ATTOBJFET AT LAW

And Notary Public.

Office, on Ohio Street, bet. Third & Fourth

Terre IIanlo. Indiana.

HOTELS

E A O W Foot of Main Street,

TERKE HAUTE, INDIANA.

Free Buss to and from all trains. J. M.

DAVIS, proprietor.

TERRE HAUTE HOUSE, Cor. of Main and Seventh Streets,

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

E. P. HUSTON, Manager.

JACOB BUTZ. GEO. C. BUTZ.

NATION"AI

HOUSE,

Corner of Sixth and Main Stref.ts. 1ERRE-HA UTE, INDIANA, JACOB BUTZ, Proprietor.

This House has been thoroughly refurnished

LEATHER.

JOHN H. O'BOILE,

Dealer in

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

Terre Hante, Indiana.

BOOTS AND SHOES. A. G. RALCH

Ladies' & Gents' Fashionable

BOOTS & SHOES,

MADE

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

CHANGE.

A CHANGE!

O. FROEB

Successor to

W E I S S

aufi13m.

LIOUOES^

A. H'DOHTALD,

Dea'er in

Copper Distilled Whisky,

AND PURE WINES,

No. 9 Fourth Street, bet. Main and Oliio

«egf-Pure French Brandies for Medical pur poses.

PAnram

WM. S. MELTON,

A I N E Cor. 6th,

La Fayette and Locust sts., TERRE HAUTE, IND.

THE OLD RELIABLE

RARR & 1EAKLE

House and Sign Painters,

CORY'S NEW BUILDING,

Filth Street, between Main and Ohio

GUNSMITH.

JOIO ARMSTROJSU,

Gunsmith, Stencil Cutter, Saw Filer and Locksmith,

THIRD STREET, NORTH OF MAIN,

Terre Hante, Indiana.

CLOTHINCH

J. EBLANGER,

Wholesale and Betail Dealer in

MENS', YOUTHS' AND BOYS' CLOTHING, And Gents' Furnishing Goods,

OPERA HOUSE,

Terre Haute, Indiana.

GROCERIES.

HUEJIAtf A COX,

WHOLESALE

Grocers and Liquor Dealers,

Cor. of Main and Fifth Sis., Terre Hante, Ind. R. W. RIPPETOE,

Groceries and Provisions,—

Ho. 155 Main Street,

Terre Hante, Indiana.

"WEST & ALLEA, in n:

DEALERS IN

Groceries, Queens ware, Provision

AND

COUNTRY PRODUCE,

No.

75

Main Street, bet. Eighth and Ninth

Terre Hante, Indiana.

FEED STORE.

J. A. BURGAN, Dealer in,

Flour, Feed, Baled ila kinds

FEEDdelivered

Lay, Corn Oats, and all of See" Beds,

NORTH THIRD ST., NEAR MAIN

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

in all parts of the city tree

charge ldftno

OAS FITTEB.

A. RIISl!' A CO.,

GAS AND STEAM FITTER, OHIO STREET,

Bet. 5tb and 6tbf Terre I^f