Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 1, Number 80, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 September 1870 — Page 2
Evening
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1870.
Ex-Secretary McCulloch goes to establish, on the 1st of January next, a London branch of the banking house of Jay Cooke & Co.—Exchange.
Jay Cook & Co. is the banking house in New York that got the job of selling all the bonds, and did all the business of the general government during the war. McCulloch was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, and afterwards Secretary of the Treasury. During all of his presiding over the Treasury, Jay Cook & Co. were the
recipients
al fat jobs.
of a shower of government-
They
have made a fortune
of a great many millions. McCulloch is now
ex-Secretary
of the Treasury, and is
a partner of Jay Cook & Co. It don't look right. It don't look as we would like to have it look. Or, rather, we would be glad to have it look as it don't look. Or more specific perhaps, it would be more consistent with the "eternal fitness of things," if this did not look as it does look, and did look as it does not look.
McCulloch goes to London to establish a branch of the banking house of Jay Cook & Co., and Jay Cook & Co. made their immense fortune while McCulloch had control of the Federal treasury. There is "a cat in that meal tub."
THE use of the heliotrope telegraph, or of the method of signaling by mirrors, has been suggested as likely to be adopted in the present European war. This method of telegraphing was first used in the survey of our lakes about the year 1865, though it had long been used by engineers as an aid in measuring angles upon long lines. It was in 1865 that the officers engaged in the lake survey conceived the idea of talking by the "heliotrope." The attempt was made and succeeded admirably. Men who could not see stations conveyed messages back and forth by dots and dashes of light thrown from the instrument. The Morse telegrayhic alphabet was used and the operators soon became so expert that they could converse nearly as rapidly as operators upon telegraphs of wire. In
1866, in the survey of the Lake Superior coast, there were three stations, fifty, sixty and ninety miles apart. The sun came out just as it was setting and during the few minutes in which the light could be used a message was flashed to those three stations to "pack up and be ready when the steamer calls." The dispatch was perfectly understood and the stations thus widely separated spoke as if face to face without intermediate wires, or in fact any physical vehicle of conveyance other than a flash of light. In 1867, a message was sent from Mount Tiptop to St. Ignace, across the waters of Lake Superior a distance of 95 miles, and perfectly understood. The heliotrope is simply a small mirror so adjusted as to cast upon "a reflection of the sun a given line in a given plane. It is portable, easily put in position, and can be made available by either sun-light or by magnesium or electric light. It can thus be used by day or by night, and has the advantage of all other signals that the signal can be seen only at certain points, and over other telegraphing that the dispatches can be sent in any direction and no intermediate power can cut off communication. Thus had the French the heliotrope, and should the intimation be true that the Prussian army is between the French army and Paris. his generals over the heads of the Prussians. This use of light suggests again the wonderful uses to which it is applied. Its use in the miscroscope, the telescope and the camera as used in photography, are but the first letters of the alphabet of its uses, and we may conceive of the possibility of such an arrangement of mirrors and glasses between cities as to show from one to another a map of the "fluctuations and the vast concerns" of each from day to day, with the multitudes in motion, the smoke rising from manufactories and the boats plying the rivers and harbors. Thus too, the approach of vessels, of railroad trains and of storns might possibbly be seen. Truly, the conception that every movement made on the earth may be registered on some vast screen in the remote sky is not so visionary as it is scientific.
THE New Hampshire Nashua Gazette has a curious method of accounting for the fact that the population of that State has declined since the last census was taken. The New England persecution of the South, it thinks, has transferred the patronage of manufacrurers to the Middle States and encouraged Southern manufacturers. The manufacturing class is there fore supposed to have quit New Hampshire. In the absence of statistics upon the manufacturers of that State, and of the number now engaged as operatives, we are unable to say whether there is any decrease in this branch of industry or not. It is much more probable, however, that the opening up of the West will account for whatever diminution of population there is in New England. Emigration is constantly going on from there because there is a wider and better field for enterprise in the West, and the few European immigrants who remain in New England are not sufficient to compensate for the loss. We should be glad to indulge the Gazette in the plesaing fiction that New England is reaping her harvest of retribution for "persecuting" the South, but the facts probably are that Southern patronage has nothing to do with the present state of things in that hardy and aggressive section.
WE are only now receiving details of the death of VON GRAEFE, the eminent Prussian oculist who died on the 21st of July. He was conceded to be the greatest oculist in the world, having made this branch of the profession a specialty. He inherited a large fortune, and did not therefore need a profession for a support but he entered upon it with great enthusiasm from his love of science. He was the first surgeon to operate successfully in iridectomy and the first to bring a the opthalmascope into use. He was remarkable for never making a change and for devoting the fees tendered him to the support of the hospital in which to treat his patients. The poor came to
him from all parts of Prussia, were operated upon, nursed for several weeks a his hospital and sent home without charge, frepuently with sufficient money to pay their way. His school, to which he was so devoted that he exhausted his vitality, drew students from all parts of
Europe
and America. Since the death
of Humboldt Prussia has suffered no such loss, and Von Graefe, besides his eminence as a man of science, deserves to be mentioned with Peabody and the other distinguished philanthropists of the age, for his services to the poor and the unfortunate.
The Law Giving 160 Acres of Land to Everybody Who Served in the War. The following is the text of the instructions forwarded from the General Land Office to all Registers and Receivers, in regard to pre-emptions under a provision of the new army bill:
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, GEXERAX. LAND OFFICE, Aug. 8,1870. Gentlemen: The following is the 25th section of the act of Congress approved July 15th, 1870, entitled, "An act making appropriations for the support of the army for the year ending June 30, 1871, and for other purposes," viz:
SEC. 26. And be it further enacted, That every private soldier and officer who has served in the army of the United States during the rebellion for ninety days, and remained loyal to the Government, and every seaman, marine, and officer or other person, who has served in the navy of the United States, or in the marine corps or revenue marine during the rebellion for ninety days, and remained loyal to the Government, shall, on payment of the fee or commission to any Register or Receiver of any Land Office required by law, be entitled to enter one quarter section of land, not mineral, of the alternate reserved sections of public lands along the lines of any one of the railroads or other public works in the United States, wherever public lands have been or may be granted by acts of Congress, and to receive the patent therefore under and by virtue of the provisions of the act to secure homesteads to actual [settlers on the public domain, and the acts amendatory thereof, and on the terms and condition therein prescribed and all the provisions of said acts, except as herein modified, shall extend and be applicable to entries under this act, and the Commissioner of the
General Land Office is hereby authorized to prescribe the necessary rules and regulations to carry this section into effect, and determine all facts necessary therefor."
By those provisions the homestead law of May, 20th 1862, and the acts amendatory thereof, are modified so to allow entries to be made by the parties mentioned therein of the maximum quantity of one-quarter section, or one hundred and sixty acres of land, held at the double minimum price of $2,50 per acrc, instead of one-half quarter section, or eighty acres as heretofore.
In case of a party desiring to avail himself thereof, you will require him to file the usual homestead application for the tract desired, if legally liable to entry, to make affidavit according to the form heretofore annexed, instead of the usual homestead affidavit, and, on his doing so, allow hini to make payment of the $10 fee stipulated in the act of May, 20th 1862, and the usual commissions on the price of the land at $2,50 per acre, the entry to be regulary numbered and reported to this office in our monthly homestead returns.
Regarding settlement and cultivation, the requirements of the law in this class of entries
Very respectfully, your obedient servant. [Signed,] JOSEPH WILSON,
Commissioner, Register and Receiver. AFFIDAVIT. LAND OFFICE, AT I, of having filed
my application No.—, for an entry under the provisions of the act of Congress, approved May 20th, 1862, and desiring to avail myself of the 25th section of the act of July 15th, 1870, in regard to land held ^ttlieiioiiblftfflywp^TTEarTam the Identical who was a in the company* commanded by in the war of 1861 that I continued in actual service for ninety days, and have remained loyal to the Government that said applica tion, No.—, is made for my exclusiv benefit, and for the purpose of actual settlement and cultivation, and not directly or indirectly for the use or or benefit of any other person or persons, and that I have not heretofore had the benefit of the Homestead law.
Sworn to and subscribed this day of before Register or Receiver of the Land Office.
Approved: [Signed] J. D. Cox, Secretary.
DEP'T. OF THE INTERIOR, Aug. 8,1870.
'Where tho party was a regimental or staff officer, or was in a different branch of the service, the affidavit must be varied in form according to the facts of the case.
General McClernand's Manifasto. General McClernand, a leading Illinois Democrat, has thought himself called upon to issue an address to Frenchmen. It will be remembered that this McClernand was once a General in the Union army, but his miserable failure at the battle of Vicksburg showed that he was as shallow a General as he is a politician. After a short service he left it, and chose as his political comrades, the bitter enemies of the country. He has written a letter, addressed, we should think from its tenor, to the French. Perhaps he thought Napoleon was not equal to the task of issuing proclamations, and has volunteered his assistance in that line. Without Napoleon, he says, Europe would have been shattered to pieces. He is the keystone of the arch. Perhaps Gen. McClernand might study history with profit if he really believes what he says. Our design was, however, to give the General's closing paragraph to his bombastic manifesto, that the reader may form an idea of the frothy enunciation of this policy statesman.
Frenchmen, the stormis up the solemn hour of your nation's crisis has struck. The whitening crucible burns with molten, crackling heat. Unflinching fortitude, sacrificial devotion, are the necessities of your situation. Can you sustain the searching test—the dreadful ordealHark! the dead past speaks. The pyramids of Egypt, the burning sands of Algeria, the chilling snows of Russia, the verdant savannas of America, the countless battle-fields of Europe, commemorative of the glory of French arms, in the inspiriting voice of encouragement, answer aye! Courage, then Frenchmen, courage! Heroes and martyrs ef other times, and, not least, of your own noble land, have defied even greater extremity To the rescue, Frenchmen! All is on the hazard. ••Strike for your altars and your fires,
sfc
5
strike for the green graves of your sires ^i God—and your native land!"
France, Frenchmen proud, heroic France, is-your flashing, teeming bat-tle-stage—the world, all attent, your breathless spectator.
As if the expected recognition from the the Emperor of the French, perhaps the baton of a Marshal, or the' Cross of the Legion of Honor, he announces his residence by prefacing his two columns of rhapsodical wind with the sentence, "My abode is in tne capital of Illinois, the most prosperous and promising State of the American Union." We shall look for a telegram from the Emperor announcing that the Turcos wept at McClerand's tranquility.—Lafayette Courier.
INDIANA NEWS.
The robbers are at their old game about Indianapolis. Senator Morton will speak in Evansvilie to-night. fjk W~
The Richmond District Camp Meeting commences to-day. The New York circus took over ,§1,300 from Jeffersonville on Saturday.
Evansville people haye given ?2,025 to the Germam relief fund. A Knight of Pythias Lodge will be instituted in New Albany on the 7th.
There is to be a balloon ascension at the Jennings County Fair, on the 3d of September.
The Republicans in Vanderburgh county are at work in earnest, and will beat the Democracy sure.
Mrs. Hannah Burson of DeKalb county was burglarized $500 worth last Friday night.
Orson Haddam was found dead in the woods of Grant county last week. Strong drink.
Wm. Frazier, of Wea Plains, committed suicide on Saturday. Physical distress was the cause.
Miss Eunice Hatch, agirlfrom the county of Jay, is going to Utah to become the sixth fraction of a "saint."
A girl in Rush county, at tho mature age of seventeen, boasts that her nineteenth beau is now paying his ahdresses to her.
There are now three hundred and sixtyfive convicts in the southern prison, a less number than at any previous period for a number of years.
An enterprising firm in Knox has purchased the Christian Church building in that town, and is fitting it up for a billiard saloon.
Fred. Akerman, ex-Champion billiardist of Ohio, defeated P. A. Byers, of LaFayette, on Saturday evening, by only seven points, in a carom game of 740.
The passenger and freight business of the New Albany and Chicago Railroad is very good at the present time and is on the in crease.
James Boyd, one of the first settlers of St. Joseph county, died last week at Mishawaka. He emigrated to St. Joseph county from Virginia, and was at one time engaged in navigating tho St. Joseph river with a fleet of koel boats-
James Peck, convicted during the present term of the Vanderburg Criminal Court, for shooting, with intent to kill, James McClintock, has been pardoned by the Governor.
Lena Luella Josephine Roberto Musidora Smith turns up in the census of Brown county. Tho peoplo of that county are unsophisticated. In Chicago that name would have counted three in the census, at least.
The Mitchell Commercial says: "One day last week, in company with Mr. Campbell, civil engineer, of Cincinnati, some of our business men passed over and examined a portion of the contemplated Rockport and Mitchell railroad. They make a very favorable report of the route as far French Lick. They met with but one difficult obstruction. From French Lick to the head waters of Davis's creek there is a considerable hill, which, however, can be easily overcome. All along the road the part}1- were received with smiles and treated with the greatest hospitality. Our peoplo are greatly encouraged with the prospect of getting the road."
A Clerical Mischief-Makcr. The Rev. J. G. White, seems to be a self-elected candidate for mob violence. How many times during the past five years we have recorded the fact of his being rotten-egged and brick-batted, we do not know, but we judge that the public peace has been broken in consequence of his harangues not less than a dozen times in this and the neighboring States. His l^stjiggeargjj^^Sft^itSfeelPW^bl fltfws: "Half Fare, Only 25 cts. Admission. "GO AND HEAR "REV. J. G. WHITE, "AT CONCERT HALIL, "To-night, Aug. 22, 1870, "ON AURICULAR CONFESSION!!!" "Awful disclosures will be made to fathers, husbands, and brothers, from the
SECRETS of the Roman clorgy, relative to communications with females, in confession, which they daro not reveal under less penalty than'endless damnation,' and the priests are challenged to deny the books or the facts. Silence is assent dis cussion is ruin. "TO MEN ONLY."
This circular having been industriously scattered through the town, the Irish Catholics of St. Charles assembled at
The right of free speech is exercised in this and most other countries, subject to the conditions of ordinary politeness and common decency. If A meets D, and calls him a liar, he is only exercising the right of free speech. If he gets knocked down, he has a cause of action for assault and battery. The amount of damages which a jury would award him would probably not exceed one cent and even this would be a high rate of compensation for the lacerated and bespattered cloth of the Rev. J. G. White. Granting all that can be said in his favor and all that can be said in favor of freedom of speech, it is plain that his lectures cost more than they come to. The city of Quincy was once thrown info a tumult of three days' duration by his diatribes, and the Governor was finally appealed to to call out the militia. The city of Quincy contains a number of clergymen full of zeal for the Protestant faith. We presume that they have preached against the errors and iniquities of Rome as faithfully and far more effectively than the Rev. J. G. White iscapable of doing. Yet never was one of them the cause of a riot or a disturbance since the gospel of peace and love was first delivered to that goodly town. But no sooner does the Rev. J. G. W. present himself than the community is thrown into disorder, firearms are brought into requisition, and the devil's artilleiy of hate, jealousy and revenge, unlimbered for active operations. We have no sympathy for him. He is a mischief-maker, and a rock of offence. His performances are an injury to the Protestant religion, and measures should be taken, by the clergy of ilia own faith, to suppress him. —Chicago Tribune.
CARELESS handling of a loaded gun left Mr. Botts of Washington county, a widower. Botts expressed great contriUon, but he'll have a new suit of broadcloth and be looking around in less than a year.!'
NE\V YORK thieves stole four boa constrictors the other day from a Brazilian vessel lying in East Elver.
PRINTING AND BOOK-BINDING.
GAZ 13rlvT'l^
STEAK
JobPrintmgOfflce,
NORTH FIFTH ST., NEAR MAIN
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
The GAZETTE ESTABLISHMENT has been thoroughly refitted, and supplied with new material, and is in better trim than ever before, for the
PROMPT, ACCURATE and ARTISTIC execution of every description of Printing have
FIVE
STEAM
We
11K1»SES,
And our selection of Types embraces all the new
and fashionable Job Faces, to an extent of
OYER 300 DIFFERENT STYLES,
To which we are constantly adding. In every respect, our Establishment is well-fitted and appointed, and our rule is to permit no Job to leave the office unless it will compare favorably with first class Printing from ANY other office in the State.
Reference is made to any Job hearing our Imprint.
E
Gazette Bindery.
Has also been enlarged and refitted, enabling to furnish
BLANK BOOKS
of every description of as good workmanship as the largest city establishments. Orders solicited.
B®-OLD BOOKS REBOUND in a superior manner.
MACHINE CARDS.
SARGENT CARD CLOTHING CO. WORCESTER, MASS
Manufacturers ot
COTTON, WOOL
AND
Flax Machine Card Clothing
Of every Variety, Manufacturers' Supplies, C.'irii ing Machines, Etc. AND and Stripping Cards of every description furnished to order.
EDWIN S. LAW REN CE,
Idyl Superintendent.
BELTING-.
JOSIA1I GATES «& SONS,
Manufacturers or
Oak Tanned Leather Belting Hose
Lace Leather of Superior Quality, and dealers, in all kinds ol£
MANUFACTURERS'
Fire Department Supplies,
NOS. 4 & 6 DUTTON STREET,
ldGm Lowell, Massachusetts
CARPETS.
Glen Echo Carpet Mills,
GERMANTOWN, PIIIL'A.
McCALLIIM, CREASE & SLOAN,
MANUFACTURERS,
Warehouse, 509 Chestnut Street, PHILADELPHIA.
WE
Con
cert Hall and rotten-egged and brick-bat-ted the establishment and the orator in the old, familiar way. According to the St. Charles Clarion, the reverend gentleman was armed with a revolver, which he drew on his assailants, and behaved himself in other respects not at all like the Prince of Peace. The same newspaper, after rebuking, in a proper manner, the mob which broke up the meeting, says: "Yet we are far from holding the lecturer himself blameless. Evidently, he makes his living by tho means of such proceedings as he had just been the cause of in this community and, judging from what we have seen, we believe him to be a strolling mountebank, who retails in the 'public places his quack nostrums for the cure of Catholicism, and deliberately seeks the notoriety of egg-martyrdom."
INVITE the attention of tho trade to our new and choice designs in this celebrated make of goods.
GRATE BAR. A E N
Furnace Grate Bar,
FOR
STEAMBOATS,
STATIONARY FURNACES, ETC.
RECEIVEDU.
the HighestPremiums ever award
ed in t.he S. (a Silver Medal,) and "honorable mention at the Paris Exposition." Guaranteed more durable, and to make more steam with less fuel than any other Bar in use.
The superiority of these Bars over others is owing to the distribution of the metal in such a manner that all strain in consequence of expansion from heat is relieved, so that they will neither warp nor break. They give, also, more air surface for draft, and are at least one-third lighter than any other Bars, and save 15 to 30 per cent, in fuel. They are now in use in more than 8,000 places,comprising some oft !*e largest steamships, steamboats and manufacturing companies in the United States. No alternation of Furnace required. BARBAROUX & CO.,
Louisville, Kentucky,
Sole Manufacturers, for the South & West. Alo, builders of Steam Engines, Mill Machinery, Saw Mills, etc..
AND WROUGHT IRON BRIDGES. Id6m
LATHES, ETC.
WOOD, LIGHT & CO.,
Manufacturers of
ENGINE LATHES,
From 16 to 100 Inch Swing, and from 0 to 30 feet long.
PLANERS
To Plane from 4 to 30 feet long, from 24 to GO inches wide.
NASMYTH'S STEAM HAMMERS,
GUN
MACHINERY, Mill Work, Shafting and Hangers, Patent Self-oiling Box. Warehouse, 107 Liberty street, New York City. Manufactory, Junction Whop, Worcester, Masachusetts. idly
wins.
NEW JERSEY WIRE MILLS. HENRY ROBERTS,
Manufacturer of
REFINED IRON WIRE, Market and Stone Wire,
Spring,
Tinners'wire.
Wire Mill, Newark, Neio Jersey.
VARNISHES.
ESTABLISHED, 1836.
JOHN D. FITJMJERALD,
(Late D. Price & Fitz-Gerald,) Manufacturers of IMPROVED COPAL VARNISHES,
Idly NEWARK. N.
they are selling at 12 l-2c are
F0STE3 BROTHERS.
HSI
a®
A TRICK THAT WILL NOT WORK
About six weeks since we Smashed the Price of
The Heaviest Unbleached Muslin made to 12k,
And we have eyer Since sold them at that Price. At that time firms that were once prominent and popular were charging
16 AID 18 CTS. FOR TH13 SAME G001S.
This tremendous Reduction, made by us, in the Prices of Muslins
CREATED A OREAT SENSATION,
And .crowded our establishment with eager buyers, high-priced stores were
STMUCM 1UMSS WITH AMAZEMENT.
They could not buy the goods at wholesale for what we were selling them at retail. At last a concern not very far from us, hereafter to be known as
POLL PARROT & CO.,
Have attempted to follow us, by advertising at their door, "HEAVIEST MUSLIN MADE, 13 l-2c." We liave quietly investigated tlie matter to-day, and liave ascertained tliat these Parties arc not selling their Best Unbleached Muslin at that Price, but, on the contrary, are asking
For all their Best makes 16 2-3 cts.
W© stand ready to furnish the public with proof of what we assert
if* |he concern in quoeiioii will call lij»o«» us
to !o
liAlJSMEi' AST© XiAIJREti IS,
And we have this day ordered these inferior goods from New York and when they'arrive will sell them for 11 cts. a yard, This must make that conccrn feel PRETTY CHEAP, as it shows them up
customers in no enviable light. No, gentlemen, calling Laurel I and Laurel II the Best Muslins made is a trick that will not work.
Constant Arrivals of IVew (xoods!
Good Unbleached Muslins, and 7 cts. Yard wide Unbleached Muslins, 8 cts. The very best made, yard wide. 121-2 cts. Good yard wide White Muslin, 10 cts. Good Unbleached Canton Flannels, 121-2 and 15 cts. Good all Wool Blankets, $2.00 a pair. Buy your Muslin of us and Save 3 to 6 cents per yard. Good quality all Wool Bed Flannel, 20 cts.
Coats'best Six Cord Spool Cotton, 5 cts. Anew lot of Cottage Carpets, 30 cts. Extra all Wool Ingrain Carpets, 75,85c and $1.00. 500 Pieces Good Prints, 6,7, and 8 cts, a yard. Our Prints and Muslins are less than Wholesale Prices. Heavy Waterproof, for suits, very dark, 90c per yard. Tremendous lots of Winter Shawls now arriving. Good Shawls, $2.00, $2.50, $3.00 and $4.00 New lot of Heavy Factory Jeans, 30,35,50 and 05 cts. Dry Goods will be sold very Cheap by us this Fall. Elegant Iiines of Dress Goods now opening. We have no Old Stock in Dress Goods. Merino Shirts and Drawers for both Ladies and Gents. Our Fall and Winter Stock will all be
NEW, FASHIONABLE AND DESIRABLE!
Buy not a Dollars' Worth of Fall Goods until you have Examined our Stock. -J,...
O S E E 0 E S
NEW YORK CITY STORE, Opera Iltrase lilo/
124 MLiXtf ST.9 TERRE HAUTE, DTD.
286 BLEECKER ST., KEW YORK CITY-
The
.SO.
TIlC goods that
s*'
167 EIGHTH AVEHfUE, UEW ¥ORAITY94 COLIJMBU ST-FORT"AY3^»™«
WESTERN LANDS.
Homestead and Pre-emption...
AVE compiled a full,
concise
and complete
statement, plainly printed for the information nersons. intending to take up a Homestead
of persons, intending to take up or Pre-Emption in this poetry of the vV est, em bracing Iowa, Dakota, and Nebraska and of nei sections. It explains how to proceed to secure 160 acres of Rich Farming Land for Notning, six months before you leave your home, in ine most healthful climate. In short it contains just such instructions as are needed by those intending to make a Home and Fortune in tne Free Lands of the West. I will send one ot these printed Guides to an^ person for 25 cents. The information alone, which, it gives is wortli 35 to anybody. Men who came here two arid three years ago, and took a farm, are to-day in* dependent.
To YOUNG MEN.
This country is being crossed with numerous Railroads from every direction to bioux ciiy, Iowa. Six Railroads will be made to this cit within one year. One is already In operation connecting us with Chicago and the U. P. Railroad and two more will be completed beforo soring connecting us with Dubuque and McGregor, direct. Three more will be completed connecting us direct with St
River gives us the Mountain Trade. be seen that no section of country offers such unprecedented advantages for business, speculation and making a fortune, for the country is being populated, and towns and cities are beinL built, and fortunes made almost beyond belief. Every man who takes a homestead nowwiii have a railroad market at his own door. And any enterprising young man with a small capital can establish himself in a permanent paying business, if he selects the right location ana right branch of trade. Eighteen years residency in the western country, and a large portion ot the time employed as a Mercantile Agent in tni* country, has made me familiar with all tns branches of business and the best locations in this country. For one dollar remitted to me will give truthful and definite answers to all questions on this subject desired by such persons. Tell them the
best
place to locate, and
what business is overcrowded and what biancu is neglected. Address,
DANIEIj SC0
TT,
S C. Commissioner of Emigration,
7(\1Y Box 185, Sioux
CITY, Iowa
REFRIGERATOR
DON'T WASTE MONEY
On a poorly made,
IMPERFECT, UNVENTILATED ICE CHEST, OF FOREIGN MAKE,
When, for the same, or less price, you can pro« cure one of
JOSEPH W. WAYNE'S
Celebrrted Patent Self-Ventilating
AMERICAN REFRIGERATORS,
WHICH
are the only ones that have stood the test of time,several thousand of then having gone into successful use during the past seven 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 as sortment in the West, at the salesroom ot
Joseph W. Wayne,
Manufacturer of
Patent JRefrigerators, Improved Beer and Ale Coolers, and lee Chests •-.•'"i Of all kinds,
SGI WEST FIFTH ST., Id2m CINICNNAT-.
"STEAMSHIPS.
Only Direct Line to Franee.
THE
General Trans-Atlantic Company's Mall Steamships between New York and Havre, calling at Brest. The splendid vessels on this favorite route for the Continent
SAIL EVERY ALTERNATE SATURDAY. Rates of passage, payable in gold (including
WTo6llrest
cabin £75.
or Havre—First cabin, SI-JO second
To
Paris, (including railway ticket),
8145 and F7S. Excursion tickets 10 per cent reduction. These steamers do not carry steerage passen gers.
American passengers going to or returning iron the Continent of Europe, by taking this lino avoid both transit by English railways and the discomforts of crossing the Channel, besides saving time, trouble and expense. Apply by lettei or paid telegram to GEO. MACKENZIE, Agent, No. 5S Broadway, N. Y. ldlO
RUBBER SOODS,
INDIA RUBBER GOODS.
MACHINE BELTING, ENGINE AND HYDRANT HOSE,
Steam Packing, Boots and Shoes, Clothing, Carriage and Nursery Cloths, Druggiste' Goods, Combs, Syringes, Breast Pumps, Nipples, Ac. Stationery Articles, Elastic Bands, Pen and Pencil Cases, Rulers, Inks, tc. Piano Covers, Door Mats, Balls and Toys, and every other article made of India Rubber.
All kinds of goods made to order for mechanical and manufactured purposes. All goods sold at manufacturing prices.
WALSH,
:!j
BART & HICKCOX,
Agents 1 or all tha Principal Manufacturers, IdSm 49 West Fourth st., Cincinnati
DISTILLERS.
BROOKS & KELLOGG,
Successors to
SAMUEL M. MURPHY & CO., CINCINNATI niSTIX/IjERY, OFFICE A STORES, S.jW. cor. Kilgour and- 17 and 19 West Second
East Pearl sts. street. Distillers ol Cologne Spirits, Alcohol & Domestic Liquors and dealers in
Pure Bourbon and Rye Whiskies.
ldGm
LOCKS.
CORNELIUSTWALSH & SON,
1
Manufacturers and dealers in
CABINET & TRUNK LOCKS,
TRAVELING BAG FRAMES & TRUNK HARDWARE,
Hamilton street, Corner Railroad Avenue,
IdLC NEWARK, N..
BRASS WORKS.
«fc EDWARDS,
s. Manufacturers of
'LUMBERS' BRASS WORK
Of every description, and superior
CAST ALE PUMPS
^And dealer in-.
PLUMBERS'XATERIALS,
W5J-Corporations ai^l Gas Companies supplied idly NEWARK, N.J.
iELTINCr.
CRA] ON & KNIGHT, Manufacturers of Best
OA
Tanned Stretched Leather Belts. Also, Page's Patent Lacing, ,, .37 Front St., Harding's Block,
dy Worcester, Mass,
WRENCHES.
A. G. COES & CO., ('(Successors to L. & A. G. does,) W O E S E A S S
Manufacturers of the Genuine
COES SCREW WRENCHES. With A. G-. Coes' Patent Lock Fend or., i:
Established in .839
CARDS.
ARDS of eveiy description for Business, Visiting, Wedding or Funeral purposes, in any numberfrom 100 to 100,000, expeditiously, neatly and cheaply printed at the GAZETTE STEAM
OB OFFICE, Fifth streets We keep the largest assortment of card stock
in the
rect from Eastern Mills. ...
citv— bought di
'/'I
