Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 3, Number 81, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 September 1872 — Page 2
(E-vmmd OSxMeffe
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nun SON ROSE, Proprietors. L. M. K08K. B. N. HT7ISON
OFFICE: NOKTII FIFTH ST., near Main.
Liberal Republican and Democratic Kcform Ticket.
For resident in 1872,
HORACE GREEIiEY
OF NEW YOKK.
For Vice President,
15. GRATZ BROTOT,
OF MISSOURI.
For Governor,
THOMAS A. HENDRICKS. For Lieutenant Governor, JOllX R. CRATEXS.
For Congressraan-at-Larp:e—two to be elected, JOHN S. WILLIAMS, MICHAEL C. KERR.
For Secretary of Sts te, OWEN M. EDDY. For Treasurer of State,
JAMES B. RYAN. For Auditor of State, JOHN B. STOLL.
For 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. Klector, Sixth District,
WILLIAM E. MCLEAN, of Vigo.
For Congress,
DANIEL W. VOORHEES.
For Judge of tlie Circuit. Court, CHAMBERS Y. PATTERSON, of Vigo. For Prosecutor of the Circuit Court,
JOHN C. BRIGGS, of Vigo.
For Judge of the Common Pleas Court, JOHN T. SCOTT, of Vigo. For Prosecutor of the Common Pleas Court,
GEORGE W. COLLINGS, of Parke.
For State Senator, RICHARD DUNNIGAN. For Representatives, GRAFTON F. COOKFRLY,
ISAIAH DONHAM. For County Clerk, MARTIN HOLLINGER.
For Sheriff,
JOHN C. KESTER. For Treasurer, JAMES M. SANKEY. For Real Estate Appraiser,
GEORGE W. CARICO. For County Commissioners, First District—JAMES H. KELLY, Stx-ond District—LOUIS SEEBURGER.
For Criminal Court Prosecutor, SANT. C. DAVIS. For Coroner,
CHARLES GERSTMEYER. For Surveyor. ROBERT ALLEN.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4,1872.
Mr. Yoorhecs at the Temple. The largest number of person who have assembled at any one time to hear a speech in this city during the present campaign, assembled last evening at the Temple, to listen to Mr. Voorhees. The assemblage was very large, and we have never witnessed a more earnest and attentive audience. The speaker had the entire sympathy of his hearers from the beginning, and enchained their attention for more than two hours. There are few men who possess more of that singular magnetism which holds large bodies of men spellbound, than D. W. Voorhees. He places himself at once on friendly relations with those before him, and tightens the cords of friendship as he progresses.
As a popular effort, the speech of Mr. Voorhees last evening was indeed masterly. He handled the facts at his command with great skill, and carried his audience step by step to his conclusions with irresistible force. We have hardly ever listened to a more effective political argu ment. Being fully posted in relation to the great measures which have broken the Republican party asunder, he show* ered down on his hearers such an array of facts and figures thai no honest and sincere man could resist his conclusions, and no opponent escape from the toils of his argument. No wonder the people assemble in such vast crowds to hear Mr. Voorhees wherever and whenever he speaks. Perhaps but few men of the times are tlbore gifted before a popular assembly. Never at a loss for words, and possessing a mental organization in complete harmony with itself, he speaks with uncommon ease to himself, and reasons without any apparent effort. 'r A review of his speech is unnecessary in this article, as a full summary of it will be found in the issue of to-day's GA
ZETTE but if Mr. Voorhees makes the speech he delivered at the Temple last evening all over this district, his majority caunot be less than 2,000. The facts established in relation to the inefficiency and corruption of the men in power, are too overwhelming not to arrest public at tention when forcibly presented. The ^American public, when fully informed, will almost as one man arouse itself to virtuous action, and hurl from power and place, men who are shown to be wholly unprincipled and entirely corrupt.
Mr. Voorhees' history of the terrible oppressions imposed on the Southern people by the hord of carpet-baggers who swarmed all over that sunny land and carried with them full protection for all their baseness and thievings from the men in power at Washington, was as thrilling as it was truthful. Who could have listened to it and not felt ashamed and disgraced, that iu this Republic of freemeu, a portion of our fellow-citizens have been so tyrannically robbed of their property and rights of citizenship. Such oppressions have, perhaps, never before been imposed upon a people once free, and certainly never submitted to without armed resistance. And wheu it is remembered that all this huge mouutain of wrong and oppression which the very vorst men in the nation have galled into the boue and blood of the men of the •South, has been sanctioned, and upheld, and supported by all the power and inllueuce of Grant's Administration, there can be but little wonder that honest men everywhere are aroused, and that the people s.re marching upon the cormorants at Washington in masses so great that nothing eau resist them.
From every section where Mr. Voorhees has yet spoken this Congressional District, comes the most encouraging reports. He has everywhere been listened to by large crowds of earnest men. So far as we know, there is not one Democrat in the district who intends to vote against hrm on account of his adherence to Mr. Greejey. On the contrary, with the exception of a very few in this county, there are no Democrats in the district who do not intend to vote for Horace Greeley as well as for Mr. Voorhees, and we feel safe inrsaying—and we
time in their lives, to cast their votes for Hendricks and Voorhees.
THE following from the Washington Chronicle, the Administration organ in that city, we transfer to our columns, as an act of justice to an honest but vilified citizen:
In giving publicity yesterday to a statement of an Indiana paper with regard to an indictment said to have been found against our old friend Defrees, we are satisfied that we did injustice to that gentleman. We are sorry that he is
THE Philadelphia Press prints a speech which General Hartranft recently made in Chester county, and then derisively says: '1The man who lallcs such twaddle as thai thinks himself ftfo ?c Governor of a State like Pennsylvania, The speech is not a particularly brilliant one, but it is afar better speech than the best that Grant ever made. And yet the Press professes to think that a man who talks a great deal worse than Hartranft is fit to be the President of the United States!
JOHN A. FINCH, Chairman of the Liberal Republican Central Executive Committee, was in the city yesterday. He is fully posted in relation to the political condition of the State, and speaks in the most encouraging terms in relation to the Reform movement being successful by a large majority.
there are not less than one thousand Lib- of this journal with his customary era. Republicans in thisCongressional S°SiSDistrict, who now intend, for the first
found
just
now in bad political company, but that fact affords no warrant for assailing his personal integrity. The indictment alluded to included the name ot Mr. Defrees. But, so far as we have knowledge of the lacts, there was no reason for impugning his fidelity to the trust confided to him. We are sorry that party wrong to hittt personally should lead him to crow diet. That is from bad to worse.
Who is Senator Wilson's Forger? Several days ago a letter was printed in newspapers friendly to Senator Wilson, addressed to certain Germans in Brooklyn, denying that Mr. Wilson had ever been a Know Nothing. This charge had before met with an ambiguous and evasive answer from Mr. Wilson, and had been conclusively proved. When this flat contradiction appeared, in his interest and in an apparently authentic form, we gave Senator Wilson the benefit of it, but took occasion at the same time to show its falsity. But the Senator, on reading the letter in Augusta, Maine, denounced it as a forgery, and we hasten to give publicity to this statement also.
There remains a mystery about the matter which ought to be cleared up Mr. Frevert, with whom the correspondence was held, has placed the letters in our hands for his own justification. The facts are these: On the 2d of July, Mr. Frevert and eleven other Germans of Brooklyn wrote to Mr. Wilsou announcing themselves as favorable to Grant, but desiring to be informed whether Mr Wilson was ever a Know-Nothing, as reported in some papers and denied in others. On the 27th of August Mr. Frevert received in reply the letter which Mr. Wilson now denounces as forgery. It is dated in Natick, August 26, postmarked "Boston," and bears the frank of Senator Wilson. It isp written in German, and signed ''Henry Wilson per H. A." It is impossible to state whether the frank is a fdfgery or not. If it is, it is sufficiently successful to pass the scrutiny of the Boston and Brooklyn postoffices.
Senator Wilso'ti will do well not to content himself with a simple repudiation of this letter. The facts are important to him,
and -Should
be promptly stated
The so-called forgery is a categorical reply, feb the letter addressed to him by Frevert and others. It purports to have "tiitfen written, not by his hand, but by that of an amanuensis or secretary. It comes unstamped from Boston, bearing his frank. It is written to his political friends, and published in his interest. If it is a forgery, it is a forgery for his benefit alone, founded on information which could only have come from him or his friendly correspondents. A crime has been committed to assist in Mr. Wilson's election, and it behooves him more than any one else to ascertain who has commuted it.—N. Y. Tribune.
From the Indianapolis News.
A Sp?c mcn of Organic Argument. The Chicago Inter-Ocean has entered the campaign with a vigorous disregard for truth, which promises well for its final success as an orgau grinder. Its issue of Friday contains the following:
Mr. Greeley himself, in his conspiracy for the nomination, agreed to favor the pensioning of rebel soldiers, and the Indianapolis News, whose editor is a member of the Greeley Central Committee lor the State of Indiana, denounces as "a shameful doctrine the sentiment that the rebel soldiers shall never occupy the same position before the law that Union soldiers occupy" (i. e., paid pensions aud given laud warrants.
There is not a statement iu this that is not false: 1. We challenge the Chicago InterOcean to prove that Mr. Greeley entered into any conspiracy to obtain the nomination. It knows it caunot. 2. He has never in any manner, at any time or place, agreed to "favor the pensioning of rebel soldiers," which, as the Inter-
Ocean knows, is positively pro
hibited by the fourteenth amendment. 3. The editor of the Indianapolis News is not a member of the Greeley State Central Committee for Indiana. 4. The doctrine that rebel soldiers shall never occupy the same position "before the law" as Union soldiers, has no reference to "paid pensions and given land warrants." This, too, is prohibited by the fourteenth amendment, and Senator Morton knew it when he uttered this infamous sentiment. It refers only to the suffrage and the right to hold office.
The News did denounce this as a shameful doctrine, and it denounces it still. So does every true-hearted, honest man. Senator Morton's cold-blooded, selfish sentiment is directly in coin radiction to tlie call for the
Soldiers'
and
Sailors' Convention at Pittsburgh, which prays for amuesty and reconciliation, and we do not believe it is the sentiment of any soldier. Only the stay-at-homes, whose loyalty and bravery has grown so since the war and to whom at this late day "the groans of the dying rebels are sweet music in their ears," reiterate it.
From the New York World.
A Correction.
We think it necessary, or at least fit, in Mr. Marble's temporary absence, to rectify the very erroneous impression respecting his health conveyed in the following paragraph:
From the Springfield Republican.
Mr. Manton Marble, editor and pioprietor of the New York World, has been a growing invalid for two or three years, aud is now thought to be incapable of recovery. He spent most of the winter and spring in the West Indies and New Orleans, and has been during the summer at Sharon Springs. He is quite feeble, and has long been unable to do any work upon his paper. His career as a .lounu-vlist has been brief but brilliant. It begau iu 1857, and supposing it to be at an end now, closes iu 1872, finding him the sole proprietor of the great Democratic dailv paper of the country. lAnfif AAA
worth at least $-5^000. At the last Chrietmas, Mr. Marble seemed iu perfectly good health. Throughout the year then-closing he had
with the figures feefpfe us—that»been discharging bis duties §8 the head
Christinas, he continued his close daily
supervision and control of our columns, though suffering more or
less/^t9P
ical infirmity, until the end of February, when he sailed for Havana. He returned to New York in May considerably improved but by the advice of his physidans, li© conducted to abstain -win severe labor during the summer. For the last three or four weeks he has been rapidly convalescing, in spite of the oppressive weather. After his return from the White Mountains, where he is now sojourning, he expects to resume his ordinary duties with re-established health and vigor. It is with much reluctance that we set forth these personal details but we think it alike due to the misinformed public and our absent chief to arrest the further dissemination of this inconsiderate gossip.
The Human Roof and its Thatching.— If the man deserves well of his country who makes two blades of grass grow where only one grew before, surely he who produces a glorious crop of hair on a comparatively barren scalp deserves the hearty thanks of the obliged party. All honor, therefore, to PROFESSOR E. T. LYON, for, unquestionably, his renowned KATHAIRON accomplishes this object. Gentlemen whose whiskers are shy of making their appearance iu force, or the fibres of whose moustaches disclose those "magnificent distances" for which Washington City was once so famous, will find this HAIR PERSUADER the most wonderful encourager of fibrous development that has ever yet been invented. Both sexes are advised to use it, as, by all odds, it is the best article for improving the growth and beauty of the hair, keeping it free from scurf and dandruff, preventing it from becoming harsh, dry and gray—giving it a rich gloss and endowing it with flexibility—that Toilet Chemistry has ever evolved from the vegetable kingdom.
EEAL ESTATE COLUMN.
Wharton & ICeeler.
FOB SAI«E!
DWELLINGS, OUT-LOTS!
AND
±\\.
I.l31.£t!
f-.'v
200 acre Farm at $20 per acre. 380 acre Farm at 815 per acre—prairie and timber. asM 10 acres near town at 880 per acre. 30 Improved Farms at from $25 to 5100 per acre.
21 Farms to trade for City Property. 8 S.R AIN.—House and Lot on North Fifth c— ix rooms. Price, $1,100.
A largk new and beautiful Residence of 8 rooms, large lot, new barn, fine shrubs, well and cistern. Call soon or a bargain is lost.
An elegant, small and well improved Farm, north of the city, i- fine repair, to exchange for city property.
Some good Coal Lands at half price. Tested. Some money made by calling on Wharton & Keeler before buying your Real Estate, see their list.
FOR TRADE.—Twenty acres of rich Land, close -to the city, and improved. Will take house and lot in exchange.
One hundred and sixtyacres improved Farm. Plenty of fruit and new dwelling. Will trade for city property, or sell very low.
HOUSE AND LOT—On Eagle, between Sixth and Seventh streets. Eight rooms, well, cistern and stable. Cheap at 53,500.
LOTS, LiOTS, LOTS!
See them—those lots. So cheap. FOR SALE—Lots in Jones' Addition, on South Sixth and Seventh streets. Prices very low. Terms to suit purchasers.
FOR SALE—Lots in Jewett's Addition. Terms 10 per cent, dowu, balance on long ime Very few left.
EARLY'S ADDITION—A limited number ot Lots in Early's Addition are now offered at great inducements. Apply at once.
OUT-LOTS—In all parts of the city. LOST—Hundreds of dollars, by those who purchase property before calling on WHARTON & KEELER.
Eighty acres of fine rich Prairie Bottom, well improved, and good fence—as fine land as can be found in Vigo county. Price 52,500. Terms fair.
Fifty dwellings for sale—all kinds. Do you wish one of those lots before they are all gone? They will double in value in the next three years, as they have in the past three.
The best thing out- an Accident Policy. Come and look at some of our bargains in dwelling property. Very cheap.
House and lot on Main street, between 12th and 13th—lot 25x150, two-story house—for 31,200.
Look at that house and lot for 8700. How do you pass that nice lot on bouth oth at 81,100, worth 81,500.
WANTED—TO TRADE!—A piece of Iowa Land, warranted to be tine Prairie, and goodtor a team oi horses.
Humaston's lots, so cheap—you want one. Lots in Preston's subdivision, Jewett's and Esirley's additions. House and Lot on Bioomington Road—very desirable.
Coiner Lot and House and good inprovemcnts for 82,000.
Lots in Jewett's addition—easiest terms in the w»rld. Bargains ia Real Estate. Come and see them.
Splendid Farm to trade for city property.
FIRE INSURANCE IN THE BEST COMPANIES.
Underwriters, York.
Andes, International, New
NOTICE.
The Cincinnati & Terre Haute Railway Company,
DESIROUS
of enlisting the attention of Man
ufacturers to the advantage of locating manufacturing establishments upon the line of their P-iilwny, will give to any Rolling Mill or Hli-t Furnace Company so locating, lol v-10) acres of ground for works, and the coal iii o:.o hundred (100) acres of Clay or Owen county, Indiana Dlock coal field the ore from one hu a red (100) acres of the Hardin, Pope or Mas-ijio county, Illinois, brown liemati'e beds, and ag-ee to lurnish them with all orders for merchant iron required for the Railway's use for a period of two years.
To any Railway Car Manufactory located upon its line,they will give twenty (20) acres of ground required for works,the timber from one hundred (100) acres of the best oak timbered land in Owen county, and an order for one thousand cars to commence work upon.
To any Car WheelFonndery or Axle Forge, the necessary grounds for works, and liberal orders for their products in kind.
To all other manufacturing establishments ample facilities in the locating and successful prosecut ing of their works.
Circulars descriptive of the manufacturing points upon the line of the Railway will be mailed to any address upon application to
MATT. P.WOOD.
Gen'l Sup't C. & T. H. R. R., Terre Haute. Ind.
WINES.
«. KPPELnr,
DEALER IN
Fine Wines and Liquors
No. 13 .South Fourth St., 1«lld!y TERRE HATTTR. IND
BLANK BOOKS.
TBlank
HE GAZETTE BINDERY turns out the best Book work In Terre Haute, We have ne of the most skillful Rulers in the 8tate, and guarantee satisfaction on complicated work. Old I Books rewound,
NEW APYEBTISEMENTS.
1 A made from 50 Call and examine, or J." 12 Somples sent {postage free) ,fur, 50 cts. that retail quick for 810. R^L. WOLCOTT, 181 Chatham Square, N. Y. AaKA A MONTH easily made w4tli Steucil and Key-Check Dierf^ S- curi Circular and Samples free. boro, Vt.
Send
S. M. SPENCER Brattle-
RARE CHANCE FOR AGENTS.
AGENTS, we will pay you *40 per week in cash, if you will engage with us AT ONOB. EVeythinir furnished and expenses paid. Address. 1". A. & CO.,
Charlotte, Mich.
AGENTS WANTED FOR
Prof. FOWLER'S GREAT WORK,
On Manhood, Womanhood and their Mutual Inter-relations Love, its Laws, Powers, etc.
for specimen pages and circulars, with terms. Address, NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., Chicago, 111. Louis, Mo.
Cincinnati, Ohio or St.
"rtSTCHOMAIfCT OK SOUL CIIARMJL
I
WO." How either sex may fascinate and gain the love and affections of any person they choose, instantly. This simple mental acquirement all can possess, free, by mail, for 25 cents, together with a marriage guide, Egyptian Oracle, Dreams, Hints to Ladies, Ac. A queer, exciting book. 100,000 sold. Address, T. WILLI AM & CO., Publishers, Philadelphia.
Well's Carbolic Tablets,
FOR COl'liMS, colons & HOARSENESS. Those Tablets present the Acid in Combination with other efficient remedies, in a popular lorm im uie 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.
A
TTTVFf Don't be deceived by worthJL At"JW less imitations. Get on\y Well's Carbolic Tablets. Pnco, 25 cents pel 3ot. JOHN Q. KELLOGG, 18 Piatt street, New York, Sole Agent for the United States. Send for Circular. 4w
AGEIVTS WMTED For GOODSPEED'S
PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN BOOTH The great work of the year. Prospectus, postpaid, 75 cents. An immense sale guaranteed. Also, for my CAMPAIGN CHARTS and NEW MAPS. J. W. GOODSPEED, Chicago, Cincinnati or St. Louis.
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
MEDICAL SCHOOL,
BALTIMORE, MARYLAND.
The next Annual Session of this Institution, will begin October 1st, 1872, and continue five months. The Clinical advantages of the Scbool are unsurpassed.
Fees, including Dissection and Hospital Tickets, 865. For CATALOGUES containing full particulars apply to
Prof. CHAS. W. CHANCELLOR, Dean. Baltimore, Md.
Cincinnati Wesley an College
FOR YOUNG LADIES.
Bcv.lUCIFS H. HUGBEE, D.D., The thirty-first pear will open September 18th. This is the first chartered College for young women in the U. 8. It has the finest educational structure in the West, and is entirely furnished. There are now about four hundred graduates. The College has seven Departments, and a large Faculty of able and experienced Teachers. Charges reasonable. Send to the President, at Cincinnati, O., for an Ulustrale4 catalogue.
KENNEDY'S HENLOCK OINTMENT AND PLASTER. The proprietor,has, by theassistance of Eminent Physicians and
Chemists, succeeded in utilizing jthe medicinal properties contained in the Oil, Pitch and Resin of the Hemlock Tree, and obtained a valuable preparation to be applied as a Salve or Plaster for RheumatismsCroup, Pain or Soreness of the Bach, Chest or stomach, Piles, Salt Rheum, Scurvy, Sores, Ulcers, Bunions,
Sore Corns,
Frost Bites, Chilblains, Sore Breasts and Nipples, Ringworms, Chafing and Skin Diseases of in
flammatory nacure. JOHN D. PARK Cincinnati, Ohio.
It is not a physic which m»v give temporary relief to the sufferer for the first few doses, but whic.h, from continued use brings Piles and kindred diseases to aid in weakening the invalid, nor is It a doctored liquor, which, under the popular name of "Bitters" is so extensively palmed off" on the public as sovereign remedies but it is a most powerful Tonic and alterative, pronounced so by the leading medical authorities of London and Paris, and has been long used by the regular physicians of other countries witli wonderful remedial results.
Dr. Well's Extract of Jurubetta,
retains all the medical virtues peculiar to the plant and must be taken as a permanent cura tive agent.
IN there wantof action in yourl.ivcr ami Spleen? Unless relieved at oncc, the blood becomes impure by deleterious secre tions, producing scrofulous or skin diseases, Blotches, Felons, Postules, Canker, Pimples, &c., &c.
Take Jnrnbeba to cleanse, purify and re store the vitiated blood to healthy action. Have yon a Dyspeptic Stomach Un less digestion is promptly aided the system is debilitated with loss of vital force, poverty oi the Blood, Dropsical Tendency, General Weak neps or Lassitude.
Take it to assist digestion without reaction it will impart youthful vigor to the weary sufferer.
Have yon weakness of the Intestines? You are in danger of Chronic Diarrhoea or the dreadful Inflammation of the Bowels.
Take it to allay irritation and ward off ten dency to inflammations. Have yon weakness of the Uterine or Urinary Organs You must procure instant relief or you are liable to suffering worse than death.
Ta&e it to strengthen organic weakness or life becomes a burden. Finally it should be frequently taken to keep the system in perfect health' or you are other wise in great danger of malarial, miasmatic or contagious diseases.
JOHN Q: KELLOGG, 18 Piatt street. New York,
Sole Agent for the United States.
Price One Dollar per Bottle. Send for Circular. 4w
SEWING- MACHINES.
Extraordinary
$10 OFFER
30 DATS OJi fRIAI,.
MONTHLY PAYMENTS. PRICE REDUCED.
THE GREAT AMERICAN SEWING MACHINE CO. have concluded to offer their whole Stock of Superior and widely-known. MACHINES, upon the above unparalleled terms, to EVERYBODY,
EVKRYWHERE, who have„or can find use for a really Good SEWING MACHINE, Cheaper than the Cheapest. Every One is welcome to a MONTH'S FREE TRIAL at their OWN HOME. The best and ONLY TRUE GUARANTEE of its
QUALITY, is a MONTH'S FREE trial. The object of giving a free trial is to show How GOOD our MACHINE is. This is the Simplest and most certain way to convince you that our Machine is
JUST WHAT
YOU WANT. The Secret of Safety is ih ONE MONTH'S TRIAL. No one parts with the Machine after trial. All pay for it and keep it. Btiy no MACHINE until you have found it a
GOOD ONE, EASY to ieom. EASY to manage. EASY to work, EASY to keep in order, PERFECT in construction, SIMPLE, RELIA-BT.E, and SATIS FACTORY. Any company who will refuse yon THIS MUCH cannot have as gocJ a Sewing Machine as ours. Buy only when you know the machine does not take an hour to get ready to do a minutes work. Buy ONLY when you flnd a Machine that is
READY in a MINUTE to do ANY KIND OF WORK and is always ready, and never out of order. A month's TRIAL answers ALL QUESTIONS, soloes all DOUBTS, prevents all MISTAKES., and is the
ONLY SAFE WAY to get your MONEYS WORTH. TRYJT. YOU cannot LOSE. Write for our Confidential Circulars and illustrated PAMPHLET, containg full particulars, which we will send you by return of mall free, with SAMPLES OF SEWING, that you can judge for yourself. And remember. that we sell our GOOD MACHINE at a LOW PRICE upon extraordinary favorable terms of payment, and upon their own merits.
Don't hesitate because you are uncertain whether you want a Serving Machine or not, nor because you have one Of another kind. Try a Good one, they are always useful, and will make money for you, or help you to save it. And if you have another, ours will show you that the one you have could be improved. The company stake the very existence of their Business on the merits of this Wonderful and Extraordinary Machine. County Bights given free t6 Good, Smart Agents. Canvassers,- male and female wanted' everywhere. Write for particulars and address:
GREAT AMERICAN MACHINE CO., Cor. Joh*an^TOgtget,
r"'
V'.vfs
CAEPETS.
JL. X^. PROFITS
Keep things lively. Siig profits strangle business. FOSTER BROTHERS.
No credit! No failure! We only sell for cash. FOSTER BROTHERS.
To di a large business, goods must he sold at low prices. FOSTER BROTHERS.
A credit business necessitates big profits. We do not sail in that boat. FOSTER BROTHERS.
The largest merchants of the country ar« those who make the lowest prices. FOSTER BROTHERS.
Our annual retail sales of one mill loir a year is based on the theory of keeping always the best goods mid retailing them at wholesale prices. FOSTER BROTHERS.
There is often as much economy in a judicious expenditure of money as there is in absolute self-denial. Therefore buy all your dry goods of
Cash buyers justly demand low prices. FOSTER BROTHERS
AT THE HEAD OF THE CARPET TRADE!
WE PROPOSE TO KEEP THE LEAD!
We shall do it by offeriug to the public only well kuown brauJs of Carpets, and by always representing our goods to be just what they are. As we shall keep no makes of Carpets to which the manufacturers are ashamed to put their names, i* „.in —..— f-M- ii* to dub any of them "Finger Looms" oc it will never become necessary for us "Family Frauds."
DB? aOODS.
NOW COMMENCES THE SLAUGHTER!
GREAT CLEARING SALE!
A FAIR EX€EAN6E XO KOBEIiltl I
The People must have our Merchandise, and we must have their Money.
WE NEVEK CARRY G00DS0VER FliOM ONE SEASON TO ANOTHER.
They Must go for What they Will Bring!
This is the Way we Always Keep our Stock so Fresh aud Attractive!
ACLE&9 SH KKI»-i\OTllP?t» II ELI)BACK
A Fearful Reduction in Prices!
FINE DRESS. GOODS FOB- THE PRICE OF COMMON PRINTS
Elegant tine of Striped Grenadines, only 12$c just reduced from 25c. Finer qualities Silk Striped Grenadines, down to 15c former price, 30c. Handsome styles Summer Dels^inesj 12£c marked down from 22c. "Dolly Varden" Alpacas, 18c former price, 28 and 30c. Plaid Japanese Poplins, 15c, 18c and 20c just marked down from 25c and 30c. Fine Japanese Poplins, 35c, 40c, 60c, 60c, and 70c greatly reduced. Our entire stock of Spring and Summer Dress Goods will be marked down to
the above basis, as we would rather Ibse a thousand dollars upon it than carry over ahy portion to another year. The sale of thes,e goods at these prices will commence upon
MONDAY, JULY 29.
1!X TRIO It MX AY BARGAINS Iff All DEPABTM EK TS!
Splendid line of best Prints, 10c worth 11c at wholesale. Yard wide Percales worth 25c reduced to 12£c^ Good Unbleached Muslins, 9 and 10c. Elegant line of White Marseilles, 18c, 20c, 25c and 3®c. Very handsome wide Grass Cloth Suitings, 18c and 20c worth 25c
PARASOLS AND SUN UMBREIJLAS!
Our entire stpek closing out at Cost. We have some very beautiful styles left
SHAWLS! SHAWLS! SHAWLS!
Spring and Summer Shawls at less, in some instances, than the cost of production. ALL MUST GO.
NOTIONS. HOSIERY AND GLOYES
All kinds of Fancy Goods sold at retail at wholesale prices. Best Knitting Cotton, 5c a ball others charge 10c. Good white Corseta 25 eents worth 50 cents. Coats and Clarks Cotton Scenta a spool. Gteat Bargainsi in HosieryrEmbroiderie8, Laces, Ribbons, Ladies'
A E N O
Many of these goods are so much below regular rates that some of thetn will all be sold within the first ten days of this great sale, so we request all to act in at an a to
O S E
Great New York Dry
FOSTER BROTHERS.
JET E W PRICIES:
Common yard wide Carpets, 18c. Good yard wide Carpets, 22 and 25c. Better and heavier Carpets, 26 and 30c. Still better and heavier, 35c, 40c and 45c. Ingrain Carpets, yard wide, 50c, 60c and 65c. Better Ingrain Carpets, 70c, 75c and 80c. Extra heavy Ingrain Carpets, 80c, 90c and $1.00. Finer qualities of all wool Ingrains, at 90c, $1.00 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. Heavy yard wide Oil Cloth, 50 worth 65e. Mattings, Rugs, &c., at equally low rates.
O S I E O E S
GREAT If. ¥. CITY DRY GOODS AND CARPET STORE,
Aorlli Hide of Main Street. Terre H»ne. Indiana.
O E I
s" j-.y O yrn im •itoiT
oods Store,
TOJ go
NOBTH SIDE OF MAIN STREET, TEEBE HAUTE, INP,
STTSX2TZSS CARDS. PROFESSIONAL. STEPHEN J. YOUNG, M.
Office at No. 12 South Fifth St.,
Opposite St. Joseph's Catholic Church,
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
Prompt attention paid to ak professional calls day or night. feblO
JOAB HARPER,
Attorneys and Collecting Agents,
Terre Haute, Indiana. Office, No. 66 Ohio Street, south side.
J. H. BLAKE,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
And Notary Public.
Office, on Ohio Street, bet. Third & Fourth
Terre Hnnte, Indiana.
HOTELS.
E A II 1 S
JFboi of Aiain Streett TERRS HAUTE, IM)JA.\A.
B®*" Free Buss to aud from all trains. J. M. DAVIS, Proprietor.
LEATHER
JOHsTaTcrBOYLE,
Dealer In
Leather, Hides, Oil and Findings, NO. 178 MAIN STREET,
Terre Hnnte, Indiana.
BOOTS AND SHOES.
A. G. BAIXH
Ladies' & Gents' Fashionable
BOOTS «& SHOE^
MADEyhoeStore,
to
Older.
Shop atO'Boyle Bros. Boot
and Main street, Terre Hauie nciiana.
CHANSE.
A. CHAN® 43
O. 3H\ FROEB
Sncccssor to
(jr
W E I S S
aufid3m.
LIQUORS.
A. II'DOIALD, Dealer in
Copper Distilled Whisky,
AND PURE W INES,
X«.9 Fourtli Street, bet. Main and Ohio
e®* Pure French Brandies for Medical pur pone*.
PAINTING^
\VM. S. MELTON,
PAINTER,
Cor.
6th,
La Fayette and Locust sis.,
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
THE OLD RELIABLE
BABB AYEAKLE
House and Sign Painters,
CORY'S NEW BUILDING,
Fifth Street, between Main and Ohio
aUNSMITH.
JOiOk ABHSTBOM,
Gunsmith, Stencil Cutter,
Saw Filer and Locksmith, THIRD STREET, NORTH OF MAIN,
Terre Manie, Indiana.
GROCERIES.
WHOLESALE
Grocers and Liquor Dealers,
Cor. of Main and Fifth Sts., Terre Hante, Ind
K. W. R1PPETOJE,
Groceries and Provisions,
No. 155 Main Street,
Terre Haute, Indiana.
WEST & ALLEW,
DEALERS IN
Groceries, Queensware, Provisions,
AND
COUNTRY PRODUCE,
75
Main Street, bet. Eighth and Ninth
Terre Haute, Indiana.
CLOTHING.
J. ERLANGER,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
MENS', YOUTHS' AND BOYS' CLOTHING, And Gents' Furnishing Goods,
OPERA HOUSE,
Terre Haute. Indiana.
FEED STORE.
J. A. BURG-AN9
Dealer in
Flour, Feed, Baled Hay, Corn Oats, and all kinds of Seeds, NORTH THIRD ST., NEAR MA 1N
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
FEEDdelivered
in all parts of the city tree
charge ldflm
6AS
HTTSB.
A. KIEF A CO.,
GAS AJfD STEAM FITTER.
OHIO STREET,
Bet. 5t,h and 6th, Tprro Hnnte. Ind.
TOBACCOS, ETC.
BRASIIEARS, BROWN & TITUS,
COMmSSIOX MERCHANTS Wholesale Dealers In Groceries and Manufactured Tobaccos I
A
GENTS for R. J. Christian A Co.'s celebrated A brands of "Christian Comfort," Bright May
Black Navy %, and Cherry Brand
Black Navy %, and other fine brands,
S2
AN&
34 MAIN STREET Worcester.
