Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 3, Number 31, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 July 1872 — Page 2

ventng

HUDSON & ROSE, proprietors. Tj. X. BOSK. K. N. HUDSON.,

Office: North Fifth St., near Main.

GAZETTEestablishment

OF NEW YOHK.

For Vice I'renidei*!,

IS. &UA.TZ ItltOH A.

OF MISSOURI.

'or Governor,

THOMAS A. 1IEXIRICK». For Lieutenant Governor, '.VASIIIXUIOX I'Al'W. or J.'ongressman-nt-Large—two to be elected, •JOHN S. WILLI AMft, .MICHAEL KRRIv. i'or Secretary of St te,

OWEN M. EDDY. For Treasurer of State, JAMES B. RYAN. For Auditor of State,

JOHN B. STOLL.

I'or Superintendent of Public Instruction, MILTON B. HOPKINS. For Attorney General,

BAYLESS W. HANNA. For Clerk of the Supreme Court, EDWARD PRICE. For Reporter of the Supreme Court,

JOHN C. ROBINSON.

MONDAY, JULY 8, 1872.

Baltimore Convention.

Tc-morrow the Democratic National Convention meets at the city of Baltimore. There is not it particle of doubt but Mr. Greeley will be the candidate of that convention, for the Presidency. How he will be placed before the people, and what action the convention may deem proper to have in relation to it,-in our judgment,is not a matter of great importance. All that is required is, that the convention so act, that there will be but two Presidential tickets in the field—one put there by the Cincinnati Convention, and the other by the Philadelphia Convention. Let the work of those two conventions go into the field, untrammelled by any other ticket, and the friends of Liberal Republicanism and Democratic Reform need have no fears of the result. A fair open fight between Horace Greeley and Ulysses S. Grant, is all that is desired on the part of the friends of the former. Give us a clear field, and then we will ask no quarters nor give any until the campaign is ended.

Give the people the facts in relation to Grant's administration, and when they come to know them, they will retire him to private life with a certainty unknown in the history of this country. Show to the people his utter and undoubted unfitness for the position he now holds, and they will say to the rings which are making an 'effort to keep him there, we want you as our servants no more forever.

We hope, by to-morrow evening, to lay before our readers much important news from Baltimore, but the convention, in all probability, will not have final action until Wednesday.

THE

Evansville Courier, in noticing

some of the dirty sayings of the editotfbf the Journal against us, says: "We had supposed, of course, sine#tlie GAZETTE has coine out for Hendricks as well as Greeley, that it was walking into the Journal's circulation, but wo had no idea that it had done so to the extent of provoking such an outburst, accompanied with capital letters, as appears above. Our advice to Edmunds is to support Greeley, too, and save what few subscribers way bo loft to his poor old morning concern."

Your advice to Edmunds, Mr. Courier, falls on his ear like water on a duck's back. "His poor old morning concern", has hardly any subscribers to save, and hence he does not care a pinch of dirt, what becomes of them. You do not know your man, Mr. Whittlesey, or you would not "advise him to support Greeley. He has jsaid he won't—and he won't, though hunger gnaws every pound of llesh off his emaciated bones, and gaunt famiue pinches his little soul into the dimensions of mustard seed. He would sooner die and be blessed with the idea, that he died as the mule dietli, than to live a thousand years and do what was right and proper to be done, after he has said, "I won't."

AFTER

the action of the Baltimore

'Convention, then comes work, work, ,work. The friends of the country, aud of civil reform in all the departments of the Government, must be on the alert.

There is to be no sleeping on the pickets -no lounging- in the camps—no dozing the cooling shades. We must be up and at them." Everything that is right and honorable to ensure success must be resorted to. We must overthrow this most corrupt combination of men who control a weak and pleasure-loving President, and put the affairs of the General Government in the hands of men, whose whole lives have shown them to be able and honest. Every impulse of patriot ism every duty which drives us to action, and every desire of an honest purpose, impels us to this. Let us buckle on the armor of^ruth, economy, reform and determination, and all the officeholders and^officeseekers in the nation can not resist the onward march of the people.

Up, guards, and at them

LET'S see! Where can a Greeley Barbecue be appropriately held in this vicinity ?—T. H. Journal, July 6.

At Atherton, ten and a half miles north on E., T. H. & C. R. R. Col. JS. iVT. Hudson

SIR

I wish you to give the above a

place in your paper. I think it will be Rood for "Jim's" disease. We are' all Democrats in this corner, but we tatefctj to vote for Greeley, -if be is endorsed at Baltimore. Youre, R.

THE

S

ers at loc per week By mail 810 per year

VayTand oontgn. aH the bes^matter o^the

8 0

a one copy, six months

Si oo oue covy,"threemonths50c. All silbSuons mustPJbe paid for in advance The paper will, invariabl be discontinued at expiration of time. for Advertising Kates see third page. The

is the

best

equipped

in point of Presses and Types in this section, and orders for any kind of Type Printing solicited, to which prompt attention will be given.

Address all letters, HUDSON & ROSE,

GAZETTE,

Terre Haute, Ind.

Liberal Republican and Democratic Reform Ticket.

For Vfsidpnt Jn 1872,

IS®58ACE CiREELEY

Liberal Republicans had a grand

demonstration in Cincinnati Saturdayevening. Cassius M. Clay made a powerful speech, reviewing Grant's foreign policy, and the entire demonstration was a great success. There seems to be several Greeley Republicans in Ohio.

HON. GEORGE

W.

JULIAN

made a

speech in Vincennes, on the 4th inst., from which we take the following interesting extracts. It will be recollected that Mr. Julian has long been chairman of the corpmittee on public lands, in the House of Representatives, aud what he says in relation to our extensive domain, is, we have no doubt, entirely true:

My friends, take another subject. I allude now the railway corporations of this country and I may as well take occasion to-day to coin anew phrase in politics, and talk to you a moment about the railway power. You all know how much you used to hear about the old slave power of the South. It bad an estimated capital of twelve hundred mil­

lions

of money in human flesh. It was a consolidated interest, always maintain-

ingits

all

peculiar purposes in the face of

opposition,

and

it

Government

ruled the National

for forty or fifty years. No

man could look it in the face and live. I The slightest tokens of insubordination to its rule banished him forthwith from the paradise of office and power, and there was no political mercy or forgiveness for him afterward. But I am talking to you now about the railway power, which in a little over twenty years has had so marvelous a growth in this country. It is about as hard for a camel to go through the eye of a needle as it is for a man in Congress now-a-days to stand up and face that power in" dead earnest, without being put on the retired political list. I speak from observation and from personal knowledge.

What is this railway power? It represents a capital of two thousand millions of dollars. The network of its ramifications reaches throughout the continent, belting it with ribs of iron, and yet this power is a unit, as against the public, as perfectly as was the slave power. Its hand is felt in Congress, and in our State Legislatures. It manipulates Presidents, and Governors, and popular elections, and it sometimes crawls into our courts of justice and coils itself about the necks of our Judges. In In the State of New Jersey we have the Camden & Amboy Railway, which so proverbially owns the State government that we now familiarly speak of that Commonwealth as the State of Camden and Amboy.

It owns the State about as perfectly as the Little State of Rhode Island is the pocket possession of a half dozen of her manufacturers. The like observation applies to the power of the New York Central Railroad over the State of New York, and the Pennsylvania Central over the State of Pennsylvania. Even the young State of Kausas has succumbed to this power. Her Governor, at the bidding of a railway king, has called on the President of the United States for Federal soldiers, who have been illegally quartered upon the honest settlers upon the Cherokee neutral lands to protect a railroad company in robbing them of their homes upon the soil, honestly aud lawfully acquired under the pre-emption and homestead acts of Congress. And when you come to the great trans-continental lines of railway the fact is true that the Southern Pacific, the Union Pacific, aud the Northern Pacific have never yet seriously demanded of Congress any subsidy, in land or money, which Congress has de nied them. I agree that these roads are doing a great work for the country. They are developing the country, and I would give them due credit but the development theory, I submit, may he carried too far, and too fast. It is one thing to furnish the world the spectacle of a magnificent Government, founded on the acquisition and concentration of great estates, and the power of monopolies over the people, aud quite another thing to preserve the Republican party and in4- /xf /Min inof ifnf AHO Tirltilu roo LJA

tegrity of our institutions, while reason­_ ably favoring commercial enterprises. The power of these corporations over the roads that they control has been likened to the power of the old English barons over the roads running through their territory, and the modern process of "watering their stock" has been aptly enough compared to the process of adulterating the coin of the people by these same old barons. The truth is, commercial feudalism is doing now what was formerly done by the social, and we have the chief mischiefs of the system of William the Norman sustained now by law, but under different forms.

Let us look at some further facts bearing upon this question. Why, the Northern Pacific Railroad Company alone obtained from Congress a grant of fifty-eigbt millions of acres of the National patrimony. Fifty-eigbt millions! Nearly enough to make three such States as Indiana handed over to one great corporation by a Congress which deliberately voted down every proposition looking to the rights of settlers, or restricting, in any way, the powers of that corporation. That company may sell these lands to-morrow, or It may hold them back twenty or forty years for arise in price, building the road out of other resources, and perhaps becoming, by and by, through the final sale of these lands, the richest corporation on the continent. And when that happens, the road which the Government built will belong to the corporation. More than one hundred aud forty millions of acres have been granted to the different lines of Pacific railways aloue, while over two hundred millions of acres have been granted in aid of all our railroads and other internal improvements, in a little over twenty years past. Over two hundred million! That is to say, an amount nearly equal to the entire area of the original thirteen States, which declared themselves free and independent on the Fourth of July, 1776. Now think of it, and remembering that a real Democracy is only possible where the lands are distributed, and that the landholders of every country govern that country, can you defend this wholesale spoliation and plunder of the people's domain by your rulers to-day? Don't you see that your children and your children's children will pour out their curses on your rulers for this'wanton plunder, perpetrated under the forms of law?

And now, as I have referred to this land question, let me pursue if "in this connection a little further. I lay down this proposition That the lands of the United States, which are fit for agriculture, should be reserved for actual settlers only, in homesteads of moderate size, and on such terms as will bring them within the easy reach of the landless poor, who need them for homes, and are willing to coin their labor into National wealth. I challenge any contradiction of that proposition, from any quarter, for the statement of it proves it. And yet the Government has sold some one hundred and sixty millions of acres siuce 1789, the one half of which, probably at the date of sale, went iiito the clutches of non-resident purchasers, for speculative purposes. The Government deliberately went into partnership with the speculator, to cheat the honest settler out of a home, and to rob the Government out of its productive wealth. This is what it did.

Why, my friends, in the States of Indiana, Illinois, Iowa,. Missouri, Jvansas and California, land speculation has wrought more enduring mischief than war, pestilence or famine. In all these States great stretches of country are today under the control of monopolists, who ptit upon the settler for the priviJejgfc 6t cultivating the earth such a tariff as they please. In the State of CaliforQla, I knd.w oftwoineii whq to-dSTown -V a ft-/****

a_ frontage of land-on the San Joaquin river, forty-odd miles in extent, and the fence that incloses their farm, is over one hundred and forty miles long. I know another monopolist who owns land that will require you to travel seventyfive miles to cross it. I know several men who own from three hundred to five hundred thousand acres each, and a still larger number who own from one hundred thousand to three hundred thousand each, aud still larger numbers who own from twenty thousand to one hundred thousand acres each. They are the landlords of California. They do not wear the badges of royalty, and we do not address them as "Your Grace," or "My Lord," but they have the same infernal power over the people that the English nobility have in England, where a single lord can ride a hundred miles in a straight line on his own land. And you see why it is that the California monopolists are importing Chinamen into that State. They want a basis and background of degraded and starved labor to support the splendid system of aristocracy which they are inaugurating there. Republican Government is a failure in California. The poor man has little chance there, and the Slate has only half a million of people to-day, when otherwise it would have had a million or a milliou and a half. And in the great land States of the South,-outside of the towns and cities not more than one man in fifteen is a landholder, and that in an exclusively agricultural country. To talk about sustaining your free institutions on the basis of such a land policy as that is nonsense, aud 1 am sorry that our fathers, in fighting the "divine right of Kings," forgot to wage their warfare also against the divine right of land monopolists. One-half their work was left undone, and it is now saddled on to their children, who seem unequal to the task of completing it. But 1 tell you, nevertheless, that the effort must be made. If our liberties are to be preserved, we must have small farms, compact communities', free schools, social independence and equality of political rights, in the place of large farms, wasted agriculture, widely scattered settlements, popular ignorance and pampered aristocracy over all.

He pays'his respects to the system of National Banks in the following scathing language:

We have in our country a system of National Banks, including some seventeen hundred financial corporations and representing capital of perhaps three hundred millions of money. The old monster that General Jackson crushed some thirty-five or forty years ago wi a hardly a respectable strippling in comparison with this modern giant. What part these banks are destined to take in our politics I do not pretend to forecast. I I have my apprehensions, but time alone can determine the truth. I do not propose to discuss that aspect of the question. These banks yield to their stock-holders a profit of from fifteen to twenty percent, per annum, clear of all expenses. I ask you the question, does the little clerical work involved in running the machinery of these banks, justify these enormous profits, which are taken out of your pockets Why, I meta friend the other day who told me he had made a little money during the war, and that he had invested thirty thousand dollars in one of the National Banks of his town aud he said it was bringing him twenty per cent, per annum, clear of expenses, or about six thousand dollars a year. Said he: "I live in idleness and ease, and am growiug rich out of the hard toil ot the men who wring from our forests and our prairies, or quarry from the mines the wealth of the world, and I don't contribute a farthing to the productive wealth or industry of the country." I said to him, "Do you justify that system Said he, "No "man can defend it." And I agree with him. Its tendency is to make the rich richer and the poor poorer. I tell you to-day, and you know it quite as weil as I do, that you—I mean the people of the United States—have a right to a sound National currency without the costly machinery of these National banks, which area pure monopoly, demanded by no public necessity, and rendering no.service to the country which can justify the expense which the occasion, or the profits they receive.

MEDICAL.

WAENEB'S

FJULE REIIKttl.

W(net

ARNER'S Pile Remedy has never faileo even in one case) to cure ttie very worst cases of Blind, Itching or Bleeding Piles Those who are afflicted should immediately call on the druggist and get it, for for it will, with the lirstapplication, Instantly afford complete relief, and a few follow! tig applications are only required to effect a permaut cure without any trouble inconvenience to use.

Warner's Pile Pemedy is expressly for the Piles, and is not recommended to 'cure any other disease, It has cured cases of over thirtj years standing. Price 31.00. For sale bj- druggists everywhere.

IS O MOKE

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si.oo.

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O S I E O E

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Handsome Grass Cloth Suits $3.50, S4.00, $5.00, and $6.00. Handsome Victoria Lawn Suits $4.00, $5.00, and $6.00. These Suits are far below the prices usually charged for them.

PARASOLS AND SUM UMBRELLAS!

Parasols as low as 35 cts, worth 50 cts. Hlindsome-lined Parasols $1.00, worth $1.50. Parasols with Tourist's sticks $1.50, worth $2.00 Fanchon Parasols $2.00, usual price $3.00.

A A I N S I N N O I O N S

PRICES!

cts.

25

bplendid line of bilk Striped Grenudines only 20

cts a yard.

ct8.

has been 40 cts. Finer grade still of these goods 30 cts, recent price 5® ctf. Big lot of Black and White Mohair Plaids 12i cts, worth 25 tts.

STREET. TERRE HAUTE. INF.

CARPETS.

YICTORIOUS!

Our recent onslaught upon the Carpet trade caused a decided sensation. We have never seeu a more complete success. Within 24 hours after we had announced our prices to the public, our Carpet room was crowded with customers, and each week our sales of these goods have continued to increase.

It is the Hit Bird that Flutters!

This aedouuts for the fluttering among our competitors. They got their backs up at once and rushed into print to tell the people that they had reduced their Car pets to the price of ours. The people answered, "We don't believe you, and even if you have, Foster Brothers compelled you to lower your prices, or you would never have done it. We propose to give our patronage to the merchants whose prices are so low that they have never had to reduce them to meet the prices of other stores." •,

THE "AMBULACE RIDER" BACKED DOWN

55E MAKES A3KT INGLORIOUS FIZZLE!

His "Hand Loom" and "Family" Carpets Prove to be a Humbug

Kuowing, as we did, that his "Hand Loom" Carpets, for which he was charging $1.40 and $1.50, were exactly the goods that were selling at $1.20 and $1.25, and that his so-called "Family" Carpels at $1.00 were the same as our 85c goods, we submitted to hi'm four distinct challenges on the subject, which he has not dared to accept.

The brief campaign of the past few weeks has placed us

AT THE HEAD OF THE CARPET TRADE

WE PROPOSE TO KEEP THE LEAD I

We shall do it by offering to the public ouly well kuown brauda of Carpets and by always representing our goods trt be just what they. are. As we shall keep no makes of Carpets to which the manufacturers are ashamed to put their names, it will never become necessary for us to dub any of them "Finger Tiooms" or "Family Frauds."

A E W I E S

Common yard wide Carpets, 18c. i-

Good yard wide Carpets, 22 and 25c. Better and heavier Carpets, 25 and 30c. Still better and heavier, 35c, 40c and 45e. Ingrain Carpets, yard wide, 50c, 60c and 65c. Better Ingrain Carpets, 70c, 75c and 80c. Extra heavy Ingrain Carpets, 80c, 90c and $1.00. ft Finer qualities of all wool Ingrains, at 90c, $1.00 and $1.15.

Heavy yard wide Oil Clotb, 50 worth 65c. -M Mattings, Rugs, &c., at equally low rates, wwil ,$J9" .'

-iif'Mi

2 e.guu.

t&

O S E

i.'J. br

fJ

p:

Celebrated makes of "Extra-Super" Ingrains, iat $1.20, 1.2-5 and 1.30. Best qualities of "Super-Extra-Supers," at $1.25 and 1.30.t Imperial three-ply Tapestry Ingrains, at $1.35. '•13\ Best English Brussels Carpets,.from $1.20 up.

O E S

S&igSTk Y. CITT DRY GOODS AND CARPtT STORE,

,^v m, 0 WJ- it

O is Kortli SWf of Ufa!* Indiana. TT

All the other

Until receutly the price

it

BUSINESS CARDS.

PROFESSIONAL.

STEPBE^JTYOM M.D Office at No. 12 South Fifth St.,

Opposite St. Joseph's Catholic Church, TERRE HAUTE, IAD.

Prompt attention paid to ah professional calls day or night. febl"

JO All & HARPER,

Attorneys and Collecting Agents,

Terre IXante, Indiana.

B3. Office, No. 66 Ohio Street, south side.

J. II. BLAKE,

ATTORNEY AT IjAW And A'otary PubSic.

Office, on Ohio Street, bet. Third j?ourth

Terre Hanfe. Iuriim:

HOTELS.

E A I S if Foot of Main, Street

TERRE HAETI, IJJDIASA.

Free Buss to and £r0m all trains.

J. M.

DAVIS, Proi»rit*tor.

LEATHER.

JOHN II. O'lSOYfi^r.

Dealer in

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

T«Vre Haute. Indiana.

BOOTS AND SHOES. A. G.BALCM

Ladies' & Gents' FasMoiialHe BOOTS &

MADEShoeStore,

to order. Shop at Q'Boyle JBros. Boot and ilain street, Terre Haute ml iana.

CHANGE.

A €MAN©D!

F. JEHE&OIl3B

Successor to

W E I S S

(JT

aufid.Sm.

LIQUORS,

A.

Dealer in

Copper Distilled Wliisiiy, AK3

PURE WISES,

So. 9 fourth Street, bet. Main and Ubio

Pure French Brandies for Medical pur poses.

PAINTING.

VM. S. MAXTOX,

A I N E

Cor.

6th,

La Fayette and Locust sisTERRE HAUTE, IND.

THE OLD RELIABLE

BARK & YEAMLIi

House and Sign Painter**.

CORY'S NEW BUILDING,

Filth Street, between Main and Obi

GUNSMITH.

JOIOT AKMSTltOJK€*•

Gunsmith, Stencil Cutter. Saw Filer and Locksmith,

THIRD STREET, NORTH OF MAIN,

Terre Hante, Indiana.

CLOTHIM

J. EitLANGEK,

Wholesale and Betall Dealer In

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

OPERA HOUSE,

Terre Hante, Indiana.

GROCERIES.

HUI'MAN & COX. WHOLESALE

Groccrs and Liquor Dealers,

Cor. of Main and Fifth Sts., Terre Hante, Ind.

K.W.R1PPETOE,

Groceries and Provisions.

Xo. 155 Main Stre«(,

Terre Hante, Indiana.

WEST & AULJK*.

DEALERS IN

Groceries, Queensware, Provisions,

AND

COUNTRY PRODUCE,

iVTo. 75 Main Street, bet. Eighth and Ninth Terre Hante. In«llnna.

FEED STORE,

jr. ATSXJISSAIV,

Dealer In

Flonr, Feed, Baled Hay, Corn OfltK, and kinds of Seeds,

NORTH XHIKD ST., NEAR TERBB HAUTE, INS. TiEED delivered in all parts of the city tree charge M*)---

GAS FITTER. BIEF&CO.,

GAS AND STEAM EXTTEE

OHIO STREET,

Bet. 5th and 6th.

T*rr«« IlHntA. Iiirt.

TOBACCOS, ETC.

BRASHEARS, BROWN & TITUS.

(OMOINSSM MEKCIJAKTS

Wholesale Dealers in

Groceries and Manufactured Tobaccos GENTS for R. J. Christian A Co.'s celebrated

32.AND 34 M-^rgr STREET"

dH