Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 1, Number 14, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 16 June 1870 — Page 3
HUDSON, R. N. HUDSON.
BROWN & CO., Proprietors. II. M. ROSE. C. W. BROWN.
Office: North Fifth St., near Main.
The DAII.Y-GAZKTTE is published every afternoon, except Sunday, and sold by the carriers at 20c per week. By mail $10 per year 85 for months 82.50 for 3 months. NEWSBOYS' EDITION of the DAILY GAZETTJ- IS issued every Saturday ai 12
M.,
and is soW'O
news boysexclusively. It is a large• & paper, and contains a large amount of laueous reading, and the news up to of its publication. ThursThe WEEKLY GAZETTE is issueu^eO
Nature has never been called immodest, yet no sooner does Old Winter walk through her forests then
After along pause. "Veil, Yacob MiJler you can go ofer mit de sheeps—but it vas von tarn tight squeeze!"
Vulgar Language.
In every position of life, and in every circumstance, it is the best policy—assuming the more practical position—to guard against the use and the encouragement of vulgar language.^
There is as much connection between the words and the thoughts as there is between the thoughts and the actions. The latter are not only the expression of the former, but they have a power to react upon the soul, and leave the stain of their corruption there.
A young man who allows himself to use one vulgar or profane word, has not only shown that there is afoul spot upon his mind, but, by the utterance of thatword, he extends that spot, and inflames it, till, by indulgence, it will pollute and ruin the whole soul.
Be careful of your words, as well as of your thoughts. If you can control the tongue so that no improper words are pronounced by it, you will soon be able also to control the mind, and save that from corruption.
You extinguish tire-fire by smothering it, or by preventing bad thoughts bursting out in language.
Never utter a word anywhere which you would be ashamed to speak in the presence of the most refined female, or the most religious man. -jt. *.a & =.|
Taking it Philosophically.
Yes, she's false! I struggled how to disbelieve it! But alas now I know it's so. That the form I once thought so beautiful, the heart and mind I loved, doted upon, worshiped, could contain such guile, such deceit, I was loth to believe but "once convinced" is to "be resolved." "I blow my love to heaven," whence it sprung, as pure as ever man felt for woman.. FareweUt .» long, and last farewell to love. Woman, I'll never trust thee more! When she can be false, whatcan be true Those winningarta were naught but gtiilv! With falsehood upon her lips, treachery—black, damning treachery—in tier heart, she. fascinated me, and had me on the very verge of destruction, and tried to destroy me but, thank heaven, after a severe struggle I rise superior to the emergencjT. I loved her for qualities she did not possess. Appearanees arei tle^eptiv^[SuJlP lb Ve—I' 11 think of her no more but as one without heart one whose vows wei^e peijuryj utterly uu worthy of, and incapable of, feeling a kindred flame to the pure one that oiice thrilled my artless heart, and for her I've already learned to loathe, detestand despise the slightest glimpse of her. Horrid spectre, avaunt! Hence from ray thoughts!! Twill more of thee!!!
th(J
a a a a seven daily issues. The WE^KLY^AZCTTEi| three
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prompt attention will
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KK.WK S CO.,
GAZKTTK,
Terre Haute, Ind.
Paragraphs.
beauti-
True politeness is {?ood nature ful and refined by art. The shallowest streams are generally the fastest. The same is true of men.
People in the higher walks of life generally make a great noise when they fall. Fifteen thousand wives are wanted in Kansas.
The best band to accompany a lady vocalist—a hus-band. The oldest maid—Naomi, daughter of Enoch she was 500 before she got a husband.
An innocent writer informs us that mankind embraces woman. He would be a funny kind of a man who did not.
Laws, like sausages, cause us to inspire respect in proportion as we know how they are made. "Scrambled hair" is the latest fashion. It has long been a concomitant of boarding house omelettes. "Darling, it's bed time. All ,the little chickens have gone to bed. les, mama, so has the old hen!'
she
shows her
naked limbs. Whenever you see a vain person continually talking about himself, you may make up your mind that he has not much to talk about.
Nature's sun rises in the morning and goes to rest at nightfall. Many of the rising sons of the present day get up at noon and retire at daybreak.
Fame is »f great service in introducing a man into society, for as soon as he is known to Fame every one is desirous of making his acquaintance.
It has been said that there is no one so happy as a maiden in her teens. We have seen many old soldiers who were fully as happy in their canteens
Many fops wear officers' uniforms with the intention of pleasing the fair sex. They seem to think that if they can only look like soldiers the ladies will deem them killing creatures.
Old Stories Made New.
The plea of Mr. Wliitteruorc, argued so disastrously to ULs client.by.General Butler, that the cadet money all went to the pop.r, .has reyived.the.old story..of. the miller who sometimes had crazy fits, in which he always imagined himself to be the "Lord judging the world.
On theso occasions he would put on a paper crown, ascend a pile of meal bags with great dignity, and call his neighbors succession. The same ones were always judged and these were the millers of his vicinity.
The first summoned was Hans Schmidt: "Hans Schmidt stand opp." "Hans, vat is pean your pislmoss in dat oder world?" "I vas a miller, Oh Lort." .\| "Vas you a joost mon "Vell'ven de vater vas low, and de pishness ish pad, Oh, Lort, I sometimes dakes a leetle extra doles." "Vel Hans, you shall go over mit te gotes, already yet."
And so in succession, all were tried and immediately sentenced to go over to the goats.
Last of all, the miller .invariably tried himself in the following style "Yacob Miller, shtand oop."
Yacob, vat vas your pishness in de odervorlt?" "I vas a miller. Oh, Lort!" "Vas you alvays a joost mon, Yacob?" "Veil, Oh, Lord, ven de vater vas a leetle low, and pishness vas pad, sometimes I dakes a leetle extra doles but, Oh, Lort, I all de viles gives dose extra doles to tie poor.
Clever Conversation
Half-a-dozen clever men when they get together almost inevitablybegin to aim I at brilliant conversation and brilliant conversation, as a general rule, is exceedinirly tiresome. sometimes lament the loss of art, and wjsh that we could hive heard Johnson and Burke calling out each other's powers. The wish is natural enough yet I have little doubt that if any conversation was written down precisely as it was spoken, and not as it ought to have been spoken, it would be scarcely possible to read it. The suc-cessful-hits have come down to us, while the failures have perished, and we rashly infer that the surviving grains are a failsample of the average staple. The inference is surely wrong. Boswell is always sneering at Goldsmith for his efforts to cut in and shine in the conversation, and laughs nt the blunders which ensued when he happened to succeed. Ofold smith's biographers have been very indignant, and tried to prove that he was really brilliant—as though they knew better than those who had talked to him over a hundred dinner-tables The true line of defence, it seems to me would be different, should admit that Goldsmith's talk was silly and blundering, and claim it as a merit. Who does not sympathize with the efforts of a social man to break down a monopoly of talk, and still more with the desire to substitute a little wholesome nonsense for sententious epigrams and ponderous witticisms I have, I confess, a weakness for Johnson, which rather struggles against my convictions but I have a strong impression thatGoldsmith's blundering was a pleasant relief, even to the great doctor's vigorous hard-hitting and still more decidedly that it was better than nine-tenths of tha talk which generally effects to be brilliant. The old conversational excellence is decayed, partly, I imagine, because we have no longer these small societies in which there was perfect ease and in which every man's intimate knowledge of his neighbor's led to much sharper and closer fencing than is often practicable in a mixed assembly, but partly, too, because we have grown wise enough to know that the value of social meetingdepends upon perfect relaxation of mind and the absence of any effort to sparkle and astonish.— of
From the London Times.
The Tomb of Lord Byron.
Some six miles from Nottingham, on the Mansfield line of railway, lies the miserable collection of cottages and small shops dignified by the name of Hucknell Torkard. Approaching it from Nottingham, you pass one or two other small places as grimy and unpoetical looking as itself then' comes a wide sandy tract of unreclaimed land, covered here and there with stunted bushes and blackened furze, which is all that remains of what was once Sherwood Forest, and still bears that name and at length the train stops where the dark woods around Newstead are just visible in the distance. The village is not more than a stone's throw from the station, and consists mainly of one long, dirty, irregular lane, at the top of which is the church. The edifice is a small weather-worn building supposed to date from the eleventh century, and stands in a churchyard that reminds you of nothing but Arabia Petnea without the sun. in a vault beneath the chancel, Lord Byron, his ancestors, and his daughter. Lady Lovelace, are buried. Buried indeed! Shut out not only from the living world but its very remembrance. More lonely, more forsaken by his fellow-men in his death, than in the darkest moments of his selfembittered life.
Anything more at variance with the thoughts that crowd upon the mind while standing beside the resting place of genius, than every surrounding of tliis"forlorn grave, it it impossible to imagine. The miserable, poverty-stricken village— the time-worn church, to which none but some three or four of the Byrons seem ever to have been brought for burial save the very poor—the Byron pew, with its green baize lining faded and torn, now fallen into the hands of some decent sort of folks in the village, and above the plain white tablet, without ornament, or outline, or inscription, erected in memory of the author of "Childe Harold," by Mrs. Leigh. She, after all it seems, of all his admirers so loud-voiced in their praise, was and is the only one who, out of her scanty means, had more than words to offer'as a tribute to his deathless fame. Like his own "Manfred,'' "the spirits," he has raised "abandon him," and he rests as he lived, alone.
A Russian newspaper publishes a letter from a German savant,engaged in exploring the plain of Troy, which will cause great excitement in archaeological circles. While making some excavations near the village of Cyplax, this gentleman came suddenly on the ruins of a cyclopean wall about 8 feet thick. The works were actively pushed on, and, from what has already been brought to light, the writer is convinced that he has at last discovered the. remains of the famous Palace of Priam. Indeed, he asserts that the part of the ruins already uncovered exactly tallies with the description of the place given by Homer in the Iliad. As soon as the works are sufficiently advanced, he promises to publish a detailed memoir concerning this marvelous discovery.
How TO GET AN EDUCATION.—Boys say to men: "We want an education and are poor, and father is poor, and we can't get it, so we are going to learn a trade, or go into a store, or do something else." Now, let us say, every boy that wants an education, if he will bend his force to it, can get just as good a one as he wants. The way is open. Education does not come through academies, colleges, and semi naries—these are lielps but it comes by study and reading and comparing, and all the schools, and colleges, and seminaries in the world will not make a scholar of a man without these and with them a man will be one if-he never sees a college. And what i* true of boys is true of girls, and what is true of this pursuit is true of any other. The force must be from yourself, and you must develop it. It is that indomitable "I can" that sets a man astride the world.
A YOUNG lady, being present with her mother and an "edicated" cousin, at a ball, in Denver, Colorado, upon being asked to dance, replied: "O, blazes, boys, I can't dance, but there's mam, jest as good a dancistas ever shuck a foot." She was instantly corrected by her horrified cousin with "Oh, vextation! ^gentlemen, it is an absolute impossibility for me to preambulate the Terpsichorean evolutions but there is my maternal relative, who is just as excellent' a dancer as ovever vibrated a pedal extremity."
A hack on its'Way to'^ckjpot in Boston, the other day, became mixed up in almost interminable funeral procession. Coming to a spot where two ways met, the head of the procession turned one way, the hack anotherv the carriages in the rear followed'the latter, and the deluded drivers noticed not their error im» til thfey^W^pme nesrtheTiepot^^hrar-judge of Dry vv hn* there was turning fcbthtete, and lively time made until the solemn and staid portion of the fhneiSd |rdcd ertaken.
NEW YOBK STOEE. Opinions of the Press.
From the Express, Dec. 20,1869. TERKE HAUxe GOING AHEAD !—It __ with sincere pleasure that we notice from time to time, the improvements that present themselves to the observer, in this, our beautiful city. We can boast of our factories, machine shops, iron works &c., and last, but not least, of our mer chants. Everything for use or luxury and for every station in life can be pro cured as good and as cheap here as in the larger cities, and we are- glad to notice from the general tone of the trade that our merchants and manufacturers are well pleased with the patronage bestowed on them. One house in particular we would speak of at this time. The New York Dry Goods Store, No. 73 Main street, presents at the present time prominent attractions. The proprietors. Messrs. Wittenberg, Ruschaupt & Co., have been engaged in business in this city for about three months, and by strict attention to business, fair dealing, and by always keeping a large and well selected stock, they have gathered around them a large circle of customers, who, as we daily notice, crowd the New York Store, and keep the salesmen busy dealing out every kind of merchandize. Their success is not only attributed to a perfect knowledge of their business, but also to their mode of buying and selling their goods. Being supplied with abundant capital all their purchases are made for cash and from first hands, every change in the market is taken advantage of by their experienced buyers, and^ when their goods are placed upon their counters on sale, they are offered at the lowest possible margin upon cost. A regular system of percentage is adopted by this House, the benefit of purchases below market value is thereby always given to the customers, and by having "oneprice only," all are treated alike, all share the same advantages in buying dry goods, and truly justice is done to all!
The New York Store has become one of the most popular institutions of the place. If good goods at low prices, kind treatment and fair dealings, can build up a trade, the New York Store will take the rank among the largest business houses of Terre Haute.
THE New York Store is located at No. 73, Main street, near the Court House Square.
From the Terre Haute journal, Dec. 18, '69. Trade has now fully begun with our merchants. All are busy as bees to get their goods in order and ready for sale. One of the establishments so engaged is the New York Dry Goods Store, No. 73, Main street. Their force of sa!esmen has been hard at work for the past few days in opening and marking the new purchases just received and which were bought at the great forced sales in the Eastern market. To look at all the muslins, flannels, prints, shawls, dress goods, furs, etc., besides the smaller articles usually kept in in a large house of this kind, will certainly be to buy, for as regards prices, as we know from personal observation, they are certainly the lowest we ever heard of.
The one price system, as adopted by this house, works like a charm. There is no overcharging, no trying to make an extra dime. The dealings at the New York Store are fair and square, and every attention is shown to all their patrons. It is the constant.study of the proprietors to place before their customers any and all goods at the lowest rates and by charging the lowest per centage upon the cost of the goods, the customer receives the direct benefit of purchases made under the market value. It is a well known fact that the New York Store has been offering unusual inducements to buyers since it was opened. The recent heavy declines in all kinds of dry goods, however, enables them to sell goods still cheaper, as their facilities for buying are unequaled.
There is nothing in the dry goods line but what can be bought at the greatest advantage at the New York Store. Their tremendous stock and low prices are bound to draw customers, and no one will need to complain of having "nothing to wear" if they trade at the New York Store. -,y*.
PKICE
NO LIEYIATION! JUSTICE TO ALL! And the best
ning Gazette.
Bargains in Dry flo*d»
AT THE
York Store, 73 Main Street, Near Cmir House Square fH
New
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NEW YORK STORE.—We made a hasty 'call at this large dry goods establishment on Wednesday. Messrs. Wittenberg, Ruschaupt & Co., occupy the elegant store room, 73 Main street Their handsome banner, hung in the middle of the street, indicates the location the full length of Main street. The first floor of the building is used as a refiul room and the second and third floors for notions and duplicate stock. In the spring they will open out a stock of carpet, wall paper, and shades. Their present stock of Dress Goods, including Merinos, Empress Cloths, Black Alpaca, and also lower and cheaper grades of Dress Goods, is most complete. In Shawls they have the best domestic manufecture of Shawls, &c., and a very full stock of imported Paisleys, Broche, Ac., which they offer for sale at low prices. They have also a full line of domestics. To enumerate their stock in full would be an endless task.
Mr. Charles Wittenberg, the head of this house, is one of the most popular diy goods men in this State. He learned the rudiments of the dry goods business with Mr. M. W. Williams, at the Old Prairie City Store, in this city, 18 years ago. Mf. Fr&l. Ruschaupt, has been long experienced in the business. Mr. Harmon Schweitzer, the other member of the firm, has been long and favorably known to our citizens, having been for 12 years a leading salesman in the house of W, B. Ryce & Co., in this city. -Saturday
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was
WE find the following ^fugitive item in the Ohio Farmer. Some_of our readers may desire to tiy-the wHfiedysi *•'«A viiry scanty supply of grain, requiring an excess of green fowl, or an unwholefeome diet of any description, dr skwejt run for fowls,: are the principal cause* of chicken cholera. Six grains of rhubarb, six grains of powdered chalk, and three grains of cayenne pepper may be given. If the disease is not soon checks ed, give one grain of powdered Ipecac every four hours.
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ANY child can be sentto the NewjYqpk Store, &hd Will buy as cheap wfthe latest
THE New Y'ork SU*e of Wittenberg, Ruschaupt A Co., ^3 Main street, Terre Haute, is now in receipt of a magnificent stock of new dress goods, staple goods, ladies d"** fe^^c/ added to their stock a fine line of carpets, wall papers, shades, curtain materials* Ac., selected by Mr. Wittenlierg himself in the Eastorn markets. The are clever gentlemen to deal with, and spare no pains to build up a trade.—Pari* Beacon and /Made*
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THE jjNEJT YORK JIO Jp,
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73 MAIN STREET,
Near the Court House Square.
We have just received a full line of Lama and Lube Points^ Lawns and Grenadines, Mozambique* and Piques, Shetland and Barge Shawls, Linens for Shawls, &«., &c., &e.
THE HEW YORK STORE,
73 MAIN STREET,
NEAR COURT HOUSE SQUARE,
Has earned a reputation for
Low
Prices and Fair Dealing!
OUR LINE OF FLANNELS, JEANS, CASSIMERES, LINENS, COTTONADES, CHECKS, HICKORY, DENIERS AND TICKINGS CAN NOT BE BEAT.
THE NEW YORK STORE
73 MAIN STREET,
Near the Court House Square!
We are opening: a fall line of Prints, Bleached and Brown Musi* ns, Ginghams, Ac., which we will sell at our popular prices.* ....
,NEW YORK STORE/
••A: MAHHI8TBEET ***'10 t-bJiST-: SMtWe
NEAR COURT HOUSE SQUARE.
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We offer speeial inducements in Kid Gloyes, Lace Mitts, Lisle Thread, Gloves, Silk Gloves, Ac. I •AS* i: •-,•!! 5-. h-yj
House Keepers will Save Money by Buying their Table Linens Napkin?, Doylas, Towels, Ac., at the .'INw »-''MtH' "t &
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NEW YORK BTORE,,
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Linen Handkerchiefs, Lace and Embroidered Handkerchief Silk Handkerchiefs, Linen Fans, Silk Fans, Willow Fans, and .mww :.
Parasols* cheap at ,vf)U Wi-3^V*P
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NEW^ YORE STORE. Opinions of the Press
From the Sullivan Democrat.
THE NEW YORK STORE, AT TERRE HAUTE.—This establishment has now one of the finest stocks of goods ever brought to that city. Their buyer is evidently a man of taste and well acquainted with the wants of the oeople. The stock comprises every article in the Dry Goods line from the most substantial to the richest dress goods. The business in every department is systematically and honorably conducted, there is one price only for every article, and all customers are treated with the best attention and courtesy. We predict for the New York Sjore a large trade, for people will buy where the best inducements are offered
NEW Y'ORK STOBE, 73 Main Street near Court House Square.*
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-V „From the Prairie Beacon and Valley Blade. Visiting Terre Haute a few days ago, we, of course, dropped into the New York Store, and were agreeably surprised to meet our old friend Harmon Schweitzer, now a partner in this establishment. We have seen some big things in the way of Dry Goods Stores, but the New York Store looms up above them all, in quality and quantity of goods, displayed taste and systematical arrangement and general management. From the crowds of eager buyers that fill this House, we must judge that the proprietors offer extra inducements to their customers, as the accommodating clerks were busy as bees in cutting oft' and putting up all kinds of merchandise. We say, success to the New Y'ork Store, an# the one price sys
'-Ti IV
ON THE "RAMPAGE"—"NOTES OF TRAVEL."—On Wednesday morning, 8th inst., we got aboard Beattie's "Lightning Express" bound for "the East." Arrived at Merom about 10:30 A. M., when we "changed hacks" for Sullivan, at which place we arrived just in time for the train for Terre Haute. Arrived at the latter named place about 4 r. M., and put up at the Terre Haute House, of which that prince of good fellows. Capt. T. C. Buntin, is proprietor. We went "down town," and and stopped in at the "New York .Store," of Wittenberg, Ruschaupt & Co., where we found quite an array of clerks, both ladies and gentlemen, busy waiting upon the throng of customers in the store, and anxious to secure a portion a portion of the -»ood and cheap goods they have on sale. It strikes us very forrttbly that this establishment is the store of the city. The immense variety of all kinds of Dry Goods draws buyers from all parts of the country, and the proprietors are determined to supply all their customers at the lowest prices. Try them. —Bobimon Argm. v*
THK New Y'ork Store, 73 Main street, near Court House Square.
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TTII I J? ,+T From the Hoosier State. THERE is one House in the beautiful city of Terre Haute that will not fail to attract the attention ot any one passing down Main street toward the old Court House, a new style of sign, a neat flag is displayed across the street, and informs the citizen as well as the stranger, that here the New York Store, the Dry Goods House of the place, is to be found. We enter. A busy throng is presented to our view. The farmer, the mechanic, the richly dressed lady all seem engaged in the same pursuit, and the obliging clerks are displaying the rich dress goods and shawls, the comfortable looking flannels, and blankets, muslins, prints, toweling, table-cloths and the thousand other articles kept in a large house like this. Satisfaction is expressed on every countenance, and all seem pleased with the bargains just made. The one price system, cheap goods and large stock, is building up a trade for the New York Store that the proprietors may well be proud of.
COTTON parasols, silk parasols, sun umbrellas, at New York Store, 73 Main street, near Court House Square.
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From tne Clark Co., Ills., Herald.'
BUILDING UP A TRADE.—With most men it takes not only capital but years to build up a trade and make the investment pay, and there are veiy few whose efforts are crowned with complete success, particularly in the Dry Goods line. It requires peculiar talent and tact, even where a sufficient amount of capital is backing it and strengthening its spinal column, to gain the coveted goal and to arrive at the desired point, but here and there a case occurs, that is so marked that no observer can fail to notice it, and it gives us pleasure to notice the successful operations of Messrs. Wittenberg, Ruschaupt & Co., in building up a trade at their New Yook Store, No. 73 Main street, Terre Haute, Ina. The one price system and the firm determination to sell Dry Goods cheap, a large and well selected stock, together with polite treatment of all their customers have made the New Yofk Store one of the most popular Houses in Terre Haute,' and built up a 'Made for the proprietors, agreeably exceeding their expectations. Success to the New York Store! ,st,4. ,ln t-t'&If vr»vt I «'iJ twdkiti if ',*i
CARPET WARP, all colors at the New York Store, 73 Main street, near Court House Square.yjj^^j^^i ^,- y* 5
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Froni tlie Brazil Miner.
W6 take pleasure in presenting to our readers a short sketch of and most successful Dry t^od^^ouses Terre Haute. The
New
York Store,^3
Main Street, was opened in September last. The pmprictors.youi^ enc^ettc men, have shown by ^eir jm^aueiOT success tiiat they are thoroughly posted intiieirbusiness and are supplied with canital to make all their purohs^s for cash The strict adherence to the me price system, their large andalwavs complete stock, and ttieir attention and politeness to every customer, have i^^the-New York 8fofe iitJ once a popular tad profitable to buy at, and the crowds that dally visit this store, show best, that the jieople appreciate the efforts of Messrs. Wittenberg, Ruschaupt A Co. to sell goods cheap.
EEFRIGEBATOB.
DO^N'T WASTE MONEY
1
ijtL* On poorly made, .-
IMPERFECT, UNVENTILATED ICE CHEST OF FOREIGN MAKE,
When, for the.same, or less price, you can jro-
cure one of
JOSEPH W. WAYNE'S
-V Celebrrted Patent Sell-Ventilating
AMERICAN REFRIGERATOKS,
WHICH
are the only ones that have stood the test of time, several thousand of them having gone into successful use during the pastseven years, while the various other patents that have, from time to time, been introduced in competition with them, have invariably failed. The largest, most varied, and best assortment in the West, at the salesroom of
Joseph W. Wayne,
Manufacturer of
Patent Refrigerators, Improved Beer and Ale Coolers, and Ice Chests Of all kinds, •«1
W2m
WEST FIFTH £»T.,
CINCINNATI.
GASHXTUBES.
co.^
6 and -S East Fourth and 162 Main St., COCUMNATI.
THE PLACE TO BUY,
HTHELL AT
WHOLESALE OR RETAIL,
EVERYTHING IN THE LINK OF
Gas Fixtures, Lamps and Chandeliers, Pipe, Pumps, Tools, «c
In GAS FIXTURES,
WE
i-.'lit-:
NEW YORK STORE, 73 Main street, near Court House Square.
offer a choice selection of the best Assigns in Bronze and Gilt that have been produced this season in the principal manufactories of the East. In our stock will be found all that is new or desirable in Gas Fixtures, for lighting
Churches, Halls, Dwellings, Stores, &cj
Oil Lamps and Chandeliers.
In this line, our assortment comprises all the late patterns and improvements in Chandeliers, HANGING LAMPS,
BRACKET LANPSS, HALL AND TABLE LIGHTS, LANTERNS, &c.,
Furnished with the latest Improvements [in Burners, Shades. &c. Oil that will not explode" and Chimneys that will not bre:k.
III Iron Pipes and Fittings,
Our stock is full and complete, and our prices as low as the lowest.
In Pumps and Plumbers' Goods,
We In'Vf all that can be wanted in thje way of
Cistern and "Well Pumps, Lift and Force Pumps,' Beer Pumps, Garden Pumps, Ac. .,
Bath Tubs, Closet)*, Waslistalids. Wash Trays, Hath Boilers, SmKs, &c
Of [Gas and Steam Fitters" Tools,
We have a full li'-e,consist ins of
S-lew-cutting Machines, Slocks and Dies, Drills, Reamers and Taps,
IP
Patent Pipe .'utt«-!s, Patent and Ordinary Pipe Tn .S, Pipe Vises.
Meter and Burner Plytrs, .. Gas Fitters' Augurs, Chisels, Ac., Ac.,
The Dome Gas Stoves,
For summer cooking. We have a full assoitment of these cheap and desirable substitutes, during warm weather, for the Kitchen Ran}. and Stove. For family use, they combii COMFORT AND ECONOMY, being free fr the annoyance of HEAT, HMOKK and .VSHKS.
••DOME GAS
No familv should be without STOVE."' i-nsr Reniembt'r the place, ______
LD3M McllENRY A* CO.
..... DISTILLE2S.
n.4I.SII. ItitOOKK
& KKI,I.(Mi(i,
Successors to
SAMUEL M. MURPHY & CO.,* CINCINNATI* •t)1STILI.KHY, S. W. cor. Kilgour and
TE ist Pearl sts.
TOFKICE STORES.* 17 and 19 West Seeoncl street.
Distillers of
Cologne Spirits, Alcohol & Domestic lJtjiiorR and dealws in
Pure Bourbon and Rye Whiskies." Idtim
CARPETS.
(Sleii Echo Carpet Mills,
GERMANTOWN, PHIL'A.r
McCALLUM, CREASE & SLOAN,
MANUFACTURERS,!
Warehouse, 509 Chestnut Street,
3L
PHILADELPHIA.
WE
INVITE the attention of the trade to our new ami choU-e designs in thiscelebrated*make of goods.
Mc€AIiI.t M, CREASE & SLOAN,
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF
Carpetings, Oil-Cloths, Mattings, Warehouse, o09 Chestnut Street,
PHILADELPHIA.
The attention of buyers is directed to on large and well selected slock ot
Foreign and Domestic Carpetings.
Idly
BELTING.
JOMIAH (KATESA S&NH9
iW&i iii :f?i Manutacturersor ^s
Oak Tanned Leather Belting Hose.
Lace Leather of Superior Quality, and dealer4in all kinds of
MANUFACTURERS'
isrs
AND
Fire Department Supplies,
ldfini
NOS. 4 A 6 DUTTON STREET, Lowell, Massachusetts
MANTELSAND&EATES. RANKINGS MARCH PATENT, 186$).
MANTELS.
Cleanest Open Fire."
TRON JAIL BUILDERS, and manufacturej-s ol I all kinds ot Wronght and Cast Iron Work used in the erection of buildings. •&- Please call and examine, or send for circu-
N. B.—Have removed salesroom from the Burnet House to our new store, Pearl street, east oi Plum street Cincinnati.
VI
.Tw «, rn
!ld3m G. S. RANKIN & CO.
ttOTHIHa.
.T. KIUA"(iEK. t' ,i Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
:j
YOUTHS' AND BOW CLOTHING,
•1 And Gents' Furnishing Goods, I' -SWfiifJ+f' .*•"** '•. NO. 93 MAIN„STREET,
lil6m
KM
iiif
Terre Haute, Ind
