Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 1, Number 89, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 September 1870 — Page 2

Pa

lishment of

a

azcfte

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12,1870.

Tlic Republic of France.

:«The singular rapidity with which this government recognized the Republic of A France, is Very commendable. Presi-

ment Grant's mind seemed to be made up at once, and at once he acted.

Tle

graphic correspondent of the Cincinna 1 Commercial, thus describes how 1 was done ronamittGa lO

iw.1, frinqmittod to thePres-

"Secretary Fish transui"V" ident at Long- Branch Minister burno's official notification of the

Wash-

estab­

Republic

«5tate

France.

structed Secretary

tions to Washburne to *oce

public at once,

He

in­

Fish

to send instruc­

tmze

Ac.

the

the Re­

Secretary

Fish

prepared

instructions, transmitted them to the

Department from his home on the Hudson, and from the

State

Department

thev wore telegraphed to Paris, and by Minister Washburne communicated to the French Secretary of Foreign Affairs, all before the day had expired and the next morning the President was in receipt of a dispatch that the instructions had been obeyed."

Xt will be observed that the official notice of our Minister at Paris to the President, was, that "France had established a Republic.'' Not that she was about to, but had already done so. The existence of the Republic is a fact. How long it can be maintained, is another question. But one thing is clearly true, that having been officially notified of the establishment of a Republic in France, it was the imperative duty of this Government to do just what it has done—give the Re" public our moral aid. No act of General Grant's administration is more American, or more commendable than this one.

Will the Republic, already established, be able to maintain itself? That depends altogether upon the men who are at the head of affairs. If they expect to drive the victorious Prussians from French soil, they will fail. This they cannot do. If they undertake to defend Paris to the last, King William will take it, and then lie will re-establish the Empire, or a monarchy. Kings are opposed to Republics, as Republics are opposed to Kings. What the French people ought to do, now that they are free of Napoleon, and surrounded by an overwhelming force, is to embrace the best terms offered, so that their new form of government is not interfered with. They must consent to their present humiiiiation. They can afford to do this, if it forever relieves them of the Empire, and on ita ruins establishes a permanent Republic.

The great minds of France, have for years been laboring for free thought, freely expressed, in France. The leading men have desired this for a quarter of a century, and as such men now have taken hold of the helm of government, we have great hope that the Republic will be a success. The movement is not one moved by a mob and pushed forward by the lower strata of society, but men take the lead who are capable, and in whose hands the reigns of government are familiar.

How is this for High

Allen is the strongest Democratic county in the State. Wayne is the strongest Republican county. The former is the longest settled, but the latter is by much the most rapid in growth. 5fr6L,D0TfY &)YitS*nrcftTes "'among the" first in the State. Allen is rated at $13,064,340 of taxable property Wayne at $19,831,510, a difference in favor of Wayne of $6,800,000. But Republican Wayne pays $72,824,28 for county government, while Democratic Allen, with fifty per cent, less property to pay with and upon, pays $132,893 80. When Anthony levied a tax for one year for double the sum which had been usual in Rome, the citizens said to him: "You will please then to order two summers and two harvests in this wonderful year for you, who can command us to pay the tax of two years in one, can likewise order the fruits of both years to be gathered in one." The Democratic Anthonys can "call spirits from the vast deep," but the "spirits" have this advantage over the tax-payers of Allen—they won't come. There is no such immunity for taxpayers. —Madison Courier.

VICTOR HUGO, addressing the Paris ians on his entrance into Paris after years of- banishment, pointing to the American flag, says: "That banner of stars speaks to-day to Paris and to France, proclaiming the mir acles of power which are easy to a great people contending for great principles— the liberty of every race, the fraternity of all."

These are no rhetorical fictions. Hugo one of the most brilliant, noble, and de voted men that France overproduced, no sooner returns to the exercise of free speech in the great city which has been so long held under subjectian, than with a word, he restores Amer ica to its full and true prominence before the people of France. Every other Frencn Republican does the same Even in the tearing down the Imperial eagles, the mob paused if they found that, by mistake, the emblem of American Republicanism had been harmed, and immediately restored it, with cheers for the American Republic. America will soon distinguish between the despot who used the power of France to subvert Re publicanism in America, and the Re publicans whose highest ideal of national well-being is symbolled by our flag. Chicago Iribune.

GENERAL STEWART L. WOODFORD, of Kings county (Brooklyn), has been nom inated for Governor of New York over Horace Greeley, who, with his usual luck, received only a third of the votes of the convention. The man who could not edit the Brooklyn Union is preferred to the founder of the New York Tribune, A contemporary ascribes General Wood ford's triumph to the fact that he is less known than Greeley. The point is not -7 quite true. Greeley is pretty well known "as to what he has done but the Evil "One could not undertake to predict what he might do. Woodford, on the other hand, it is very well known, will break no crockery, appoint no Democrats, en tertain no heterodox vogaries about reforms that are not on the regular calendar, and, in shoit, if he should be elected, which is not probable, he would do about what the majority of the Republican party of the State would expect. He is a fluent, pleasant speaker, a rose-water politician and and a nice young man. he has eloquence and tact in all of which Mr. Greeley is deficient. Hence, he might make a better Governor than one who has certainly proved infinitely

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him 03 an

^'--Chicago

PHOTOGRAPHS of Edgar A. poe are be? ing sold in Richmond for the benefit of his only surviving sister, who resides near that city.

THE Germans carried on the war in so offensive a manner that Napoleon isn't going to fight with them any more.

JOHN A. SUTEB, who first discovered gold in California, has had a grandson appointed to West Point.

.ifti

ON Wednesday, the author of Napoleon le/ellc Cficlor%go)

re

turoedto Pans

after an exile of twenty years. Ht ceUcdan immense ovati6ri. from thepeoand was greeted with enthusiastic fhoute from tens of thousands of Republiclut. He Jeft France when the Republic of'48 was strangled by Louis N. Bofliid returns JiftGi it is rG-estdu~ lished by the downfall of the tirant. The New York limes, referring to his return, remaks:

:l-

"There is something highly dramatic in the changes and retributions that a few hours have brought forth and that Victor Hugo, who was one of the men whom the Emperor could never forgive, should thus have returned'from his island retreat to the gay city of his youth, while the Emperor is a prisoner, is ono of the oddest of the revenges of that ictor Hugo, created a peer in '45 by iiouis Philippe, yet a Democrat, and_£ven a Socialist, in the Legislative Assembly in 1848, denounced the secret policy of President Bonapart, foretold the re-establish-ment of the empire, and was driven from France tor his pains. In the little island of Jersey he wrote the bitter satire, Napoleon le Petit and Les Chatiments, which forever debarred him from imperial pardon. Nearly seventy years old, and shaken with illness, Victor Hugo expected to die in the asylum he had chosen. It was now impossible, he said to an old friend within a few past months, that he should ever return to Paris. But as the proverb says, it is the impossible that always happens. Victor Hugo is received in Paris with open arms, and his imperial persecutor is a ruined exile." l'".C -iX'.ir. .-'-\7 £i£h"

MICHIGAN Republicans echo the delaration of their brethren in other States in favor of the National Administration. They are sensible, too, in the expression of their views upon the tariff' question— avoiding alike the perverted conception of protection behind which monopolists seek shelter, and the rash indifference to domestic industrial interests which distinguishes the ultra free traders: "That the policy of raising revenue by tariff is part of the history of the Government, and has received the sanction, in some form, of every party, and now, since the war has made large resources necessary, should be so adjusted as to be least prejudicial to the industrial interests of every class and section, securing to the home producer a fair competition against the foreign capital and labor."

On this ground the Republican party may confidently stand. Monopolists and free-traders will both assail it, but the main body of the people will sustair it as an exposition of the policy which fosters home industry without aggraudizing a small and greedy class. The policy thus defined affords ample scope for the efforts of revenue reformers, .and at the same time guards effectually the welfare of labor and the credit of the Government.—N. Y. Times.

Now that Napoleon is overthrown, the New York World, which has been most unrestrained in its exhibitions of sympathy for France, comes out in a double leaded editorial showing why the Germans should not feel displeased at it. It was not that it loved Csesarless, but that it loved R'jme more. It was very fond of the Germans, but it greatly preferred the French. And the World says that all the Republican sympathy expressed for Germany was merely a. bid for votes. Now, the fact is, that nine out. of every ten Republicans throughout the country sympathized with Germany, and nine out of every ten rebels and Democrats sympathized with France. And it was all very natural.. The Republicans and Union men sympathized with those who befriended thehi in their troubles, and the rebels and Democrats sympathized with those who befriended them.

The attitude of the one man out of ten who is an exception to the general current of sympathy in his party, can be understood by an inquiry into his religious tondpnmpjL

IIL)

Oleaginous Food.

Abstinence from the use of lard and pork meat, and other gross food, with weekly fastings and personal ablutions imposed on the Hebrew nation, have largely aided in making them a healthy and profific people, in every portion of the globe—exempting them to a great extent from the plagues and pestilences which have depopulated other nations. Doubtless, it was in anticipation, in part, of their to be scattered condition, that these precepts were made part and parcel of their religion, as a means of preserving them a peculiar people to Himself—a people whose greatest glory is yet to come, and will not tarry and for the accomplishment of whose preservation, in health and numbers, in spite of exposure to the disease of every clime, Divinity has ordered the strict observance of the fundamental principles of hygiene. It was upon cleanliness and temperance that the Howards relied as protectors against noisome dungeons and the plagues of the Orient. Nor can we as well account for the remarkable fact that at this hour the most filthy part of modern Rome, the Ghetto, with its dilapidated houses and odorous atmosphere, is made by law the Hebrew quarter and yet to them it is not an unhealthy locality—presenting a striking exemplification of that Divine beneficence which, while it makes obedience a test of fidelity, causes that obedience to be followed by a direct blesssing, the blessing of bodily health. And so might we speak of the numerous purgations, by water and fire, which occupy so large a space in Mosaic history—all designed in their bearings to promote purity of body, purity of clothing, purity of habitation—all leading upward to a higher and holier end, purity of heart and soul, lor now and for aye.—Exchange.

THE Terre Haute papers are quarreling as to whether or not Dau Voorhees drew his year's salary in advance. It strikes us as a small thing to quarrel about Any body who knows Dan Voorhees knows that he could never have staid in Washington if he hadn't got his pay in advance. His financial, like his political reputation, has always been considerably below par. If he hadn't defended Mary Harris successfully he would have gone into liquidation six years ago. —Fort Wayne Gazette.

THE New York Times gives it as its deliberate conviction "that on the reassembling of Congress in December, the Secretary of the Treasury will have it in his power to announce that the principal of the funded debt of the United States which fell to his charge in March, 1S69, as $2,107,000,000, at an annual interest charge of $124,000,000, lias been reduced to $1,900,000,000, and the yearly interest chage to $110,000,000. The former is already down to $1,970,000,000 and the interest $11G, 000,000 per annum." We incline to the opinion that our New York contemporary isover sanguine. -,

Two young girls, at boarding school, at New York, devotedly attached to one another, finding that at the close of the term, they were to be separated,, eon eluded to take poison and die together, rather than live apart. It was accoordingly done, but discovered by the teacher, powerful antidotes administered, and the girls lived. Each accused the other of treachery, and, after a dreadful quarrel, they separated the most bitter and deadlv enemies.

PHINEAS KENNEY, the father of Methodism in New Bedford, Mass., and familiarly known as Father Kennej', died in that city on Wednesday

SAVANNAH is not satisfied wifcli the census returns of tho U. S. Marshal, and propose to have another enumeration ,1 ™a^-e at the expense of the city.

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INDIANA EWS.

The editors' convention of the Eleventh district meets at Valparaiso on the 14th of October.

Miss Kate Meyer, of Ohio county, proposes to ride a fast horse in the speed ring at the State Fair.

Miss Ellen Darley, of Dubois county, was terribly burned last Friday, by her clothes taking fire from tho cook stove. She is not expected to recover.

John Simpson, of Michigan City, fell across the railroad track in front of a passing train last Sunday, and had his right arm taken off, and was othorwise seriously hurt. CP**"*

The teachers of Perry county, following the example of those in numerous other counties of the State, have organized a teachers'association, and will hold their first meeting at Tell City on the 17th,

The Stark County Ledger saj's most of the corn in that county is out of danger from frost, and that the yield will be one of the best ever realized. It adds that the farmers of Stark design putting in more wheat this fall than ever before.

At tho late meeting of the Crawford County Teachers' Institute a pledge was signed by the female teachers not to wear corsets for one year. What a pity it is, remarks the Leavenworth Independent, that they should thus be deprived of the privilege of even squeezing themselves.

We learn from the Lafayette Journal that a sad accident occurred at Wyandotte Mill, Friday afternoon last. A son of Mr, Armstrong, about 14 years old, took a musket out for tho purpose of shooting a chicken, and while in tho act of climbing down from the forebay of tho mill-race, managed to dischargo it, tho charge taking effect in the armpit, carrying away the arm and a portion of the shoulder-blade Dr, Glick was sent for, and made the amputation Saturday morning. He was compelled to amputate the entire shoulder joint and a portion of the shoulder-blade and collar. The doctor regards the unfortunate young man as in a very critical condition, but entertains some hopes of his recovery.

Of the death ot W. II. Walker, Mayor of Evansville, which took place on Friday morning, the Evansville Journal say: The death of Hon. William Ilall Walker, which occurred yesterday morning at the residence of his brother, Geoge

B.

Walker,

near this city, was not unexpected, as he had been confined to his bed almost constantly since April last.

Mr. Walker was born at Salem, New Jersey, Sejjt. 18, 1811 came to Cincinnati with his father and family in 1817, and shortly afterwards removed to Franklin county, Indiana, where the family continued to reside until 1836, when they removed to this city..

Ho was elected Auditor in 1846, and retained the office for seventeen years, during which time, in 1849, he went to California, and remained four years, the Auditor's office being managed by his brother. James T. Walkor, Esq., in his absence. He was elected Mayor in 1868, and during most of his residence here, dealt extensively in real estate, of which he was a largo owner. Mr. Walker was a widower, his wife having died about thirteen years ago. He leaves two daughters and ono son, the eldest being about seventeen years old, and the youngest about thirteen. As will be seen by the notice of the Iiir dependent Order of Odd Fellows, of which he was a member, his funeral will be conducted under their supervision, from St. tui oiiurcu,(nii5uuuHy arccrnoou. The following members having been selected as pall bearers Daniel Woolsey, Hiram Nelson, James Swanson, John F. Glover, Saunders Sansoin, James E. Pittman, Ronald Fisher and Green Bellamy. When the announcement of his death reached the city, business was suspended in the courts, and city and county offices, and the public schools were closed. .,u. ?i

Forgiving.

"I'll never forgive Fred!" said Dora, angrily, as she came into the parlor, holding up before her mother the fragment of a little toy—a sofa—a piece of the set of furniture her uncle had given her a few days before. "Dora, my child!" "Well, I mean just what I say," con tinued the angry little girl. "Fred came rushing into the summer house, just as he always does, and trod on it with his his great boots and when I spoke him about it, he said he didn't care a bit, and wished he had broken my chairs, too." "Think 'before you say more, my dear, Perhaps you vexed Frederick by your manner of speaking." "I only told him he was careless and stupid, and so he was. It's too bad. No, I will never forgive him and as she turned over the ruined toy in her hands her face grew dark with angry feelings, "Hark, Dora! listen some one knocking, I am sure."

Little Willie, a younger brother, stopped playing with his blocks on the floor, and looked at the door as if expecting a visitor. "What do you mean, mamma I do not hear any one," said Dora. "Have you forgotten, my daughter, that there is a door to every heart? You have opened it once this morning, and let in an evil hateful thing. No picture that could be made of it would be too dark to represent what is now in your heart."

Dora flung her head, for she began to understand her mother. "And now, if you will listen, you will find One, your best friend, at that door, He is knocking gently. Dear little daughter, let Him in. He has a message for you, and it is: 'If ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your Father which is in Heaven forgive your trespasses and that word 'men, means ev erybody."

Dora's heart was softening. The tears came into her eyes. She opening the door of her heart a little way. Willie, who has been listening, came, and putting his little arms around her neck, kissed her, but said nothing. Her heart's door swung wide open now, and love entered. "Yes, mother, I will forgive Freddy," sobbed Dora. "I was as much to blame as he and I know I spoke spitefully, or he would have felt sorrv when he did it." "Then, my darling, thank that dear Frienu wno has found His way into your heart with His love, and now go to Freddy and make it up with him."

Dora laid away the fragments of the sofa and went out with sunshine in her face and joy in her heart forits door was closed again, and her best Friend was within.—Sundag School Scholar.

MR. BELMONT has fifty horses, and among them some of the finest racers on the continent. Among these are the old horse Kentucky, for which Jerome paid $40,000 when he was in running trim, though he was afterward sold for $15,000. Kentucky fell lame and has not been run for some time. He is now again in training. Kingfisher, just bought for $15,000, Telegram and Glenleg are among the most celebrated. The stables are crowded with young horses from two to four years old, who are coming forward. Mr. Belmont spends a portion of the spring and autumn in his elegant retreat.

IT WAS Victor Hugo, now a member of the French Provisional Government, who said of Louis N. Bonaparte, that "He was not the nephew of his uncle, the son of his father, nor the father of his son."

FEINTING "AND BOOK-BINDING^ Gazette

STEAM,

Job Printing Officii,

NORTH FIFTH ST., NEAR MAIN, m. fiij .J. Lv TERUIL HAUTE, INI). riot*,**#' -*rs

Is, nil

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. We have

i.l

FIVE

EiM

-t.M PRESSES, -, -ft! ,vr. And our selection of Types embraces all the new and fashionable Job Faces, to an extent of OYER 300

DIFFERENT

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 intheState. ...

Reference is made to any Job bearing our Imprint.

E

Gazette Bindery,

Has also been enlarged and refitted, enabling us to furnish

BLANK BOOKS

of every description of as good workmanship as tho largest city establishments. Orders solicited. «®-OLD BOOKS REBOUND in a superior

INSURANCE.

013,331,104.

IIACJEK A MCITEEW,

GliijNERAL

Insurance A0-ents,

OFFICE, DOWLING'S HALL.

THE

very best and most reliable Insurance Companies represented by this firm. .,

I.-- ')n''iVptt" '"bHARTFORD FIRE INSURANCE '•!. **2|544,210 FRANKLIN OF PHILADELPHIA 2,825,731 SPRINGFIELD, 939,609 MERCHANTS OF HARTFORD, 559,568 NORTH AMERICAN, 802,572

Policies written in the above named Companies as cheap as in any first-class Companies represented in the city. 4

NEARLY $14,000,000.

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IF YOU \VANT!

LIFE INSURANCE Why not Get the Best!

JT does not cost any more, and you know you are in a sound Company.

iETNA LIFE INSURANCE CO.,

ASSETS $13,000,000,

Is represented by L. Office Dowling's Hall.

SUMMER (OMPLAOT

'i lAND '-.f_.

CHRONIC DIABBH(EA.

Brunker's Carminative Balsam NEVER

FAILS to cure Summer Complaint in children or Chronic Diarrhoea in adults. It is indispensable for infants. Physicians acknowledge it to be the best Carminative ever brought before the public. Sold, wholesale and retail, by

H. A. IJAVIS &c CO., MAIN STREET, Agents, Terre Haute.

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ESLTING-.

[JOSI IH GATES & SOUTS,

Manufacturers orf'f ".

Oak Tanned leather Belting Hose.

Lace Leather of Superior Quality, and dealersjn all kinds ot,.

a MANUFACTURERS'ij •fkH AND

Fire Department Supplies,

NOS. 4 & GDUTTON STREET,

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McCALLUM, CREASE & SLOAN,

i.

MANUFACTURERS,

Warehouse, 509 Chestnut Street,

PHILil|DELPHIA.

WE

INVITE th4 attention of the trade to pur new and feliOice designs in this celebrated make of gor

VAftlpstrEsr

ESTABLISHED, 1836.

JOHN ». 0TZ.GERALD,

(Late D. Pr ce Fitz-Gerald,) Man ifacturere of

IMPR0TED Ci PAL TARNISHES,

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NEWARK, N.

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G. HAGER.

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MEDICAL.

FOSTER BROTHERS.

A THICK THAT WILL NOT WORK.

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Muslins

STYLES,

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,j Lowell, Massachusetts Mau. a

CARPETS.

Glen Echo Carpet Mills,

,, GERMA^TOWN, PHIL'A.,

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About six tv6eks since we Smashed the Price of

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The Heaviest Unbleached Musliiimade to 12k,

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And we have ever Since sold them at that Price At that time other firms in the city were charging

ana Hiit'ii inuj nrriic will sell llicm fl/r 11 CtS. a yiird, I'll is IllUSt

make those conccrns feel PRETTY CHEAP, as it shows them up to customers imio enviable light. Xo, gentlemen, calling Laurel and Laurel II the Best Muslins made is a trick that will not work.

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Constant Arrivals of New Goods!

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. .V(t" Buy your Muslin of us and Save 3 toO cents per yard. Good quality all Wool Bed Flannel, 20 cts. Coats9 best Six Cord Spool Cotton, 5 cts.t ,Mi Anew lot of Cottage Carpets, 30 cts. ,r 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 suite, very dark, 00c per yard. Tremendous lots of Winter Shawls now arriving. Good Shawls, $2.00, #2.50, $3.00 and $4.00 New lot of Heavjf Factory Jeans, 30,35,50 and 65 cts. Dry Goods will be sold very Cheap by us this Fall. Elegant Lines 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

Buy riot a Dollars' Worth of Fall Goods until you hare

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Jbxammea our Stock. -u

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NEW Y0KK CITY STORE, Opera House Block,

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124 MAOT ST., TERRE HAUTE, DTO. 286 BLEECHER ST., 5FEW YOBK TLTY. -,,107 EIGHTH AYETFUE, HEW YORK CITY. 94 COLUMBIA §T^ FORT WAYNE, EFD.

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FOR TILE SAME GOODS.

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This tremendous Seduction, made by us, in the Priccs of

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CREATED A tillEAT SENSATION,

And crowded our establishment with eager buyers, high-priced stores were

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STRUCK DUMB WITH AMAZEMENT.

They could not buy the goods at wholesale for what we were selling tliem at retail.

At last other merchants attempted to follow us, by advertising at their door, cents.",

The goods they are selling at 12 l-2c are

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"Heaviest Muslin Made at

LA1JBEK/111 AMD LAUREL II,

And we have this day ordered these inferior goods from New York,

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NEW, FASHIONABLE AND DESIRABLE!

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WESTERN LANDS.

Homestead arid Pre-emption.

HAVE compiled a full, concise and complete#

.18

istatement, plainly printed for the information of persons, intending to take up a Homestead

persons, inte~

or Pre-Emption in this poetry of the W est, em*

bracing Iowa, Dakota, and Nebraska and of he* sections. It explains how to proceed to secure 160 acres of Rich Farming Land for Nothing, six months before you leave your home, in the most healthful climate. In short it contains just such instructions as are needed1 By those intending to make a Home and Fortune in the Free Lands of the West. I will send one oi these printed Guides to any person for 25 cents. The information alone, which, it gives is worth $5 to anybody. Men who came here two and three years ago, and took a farm, are to-day in* dependent.

To YotrsG

MEN.

This country is being crossed with numerous Railroads from every direction to Sioux City, Iowa. Six Railroads will be made to this city within one year. One is already in operation connecting us with Chicago and the U. P. Railroad and two more will be completed before snrine, connecting us with Dubuque and Mc Greeor, direct. Three more will be completed within a year, connecting us direct with St Paul Minn.. Yankton, Dakota, and Columbua Nebraska!theU. P. Railroad The Misncur River gives us the Mountain Trade. T! us it wi be seen that no section of country offers such unprecedented advantages for business, specu* lation and making a fortune, for the country is being populated, and towns and cities are being built, and fortunes made almost beyond belie/. Every man who takes a homestead now wili 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 residenc# in the western country, and a large portion of the time employed as a Mercantile Agent in thi* country, has made me familiar with all th« branches of business and the best locations in this country. For one dollar remitted to me 1 will give truthful and definite answers to all questions on this subject desired by such per•sons. Tell them the best place to locate, and what business Is overcrowded and what branch is neglected. Address,

8

7DJY

The

«'}K* -V

12 1-2

DANIEL SCOTT,

S. C. Commissioner of Emigration,

Box

1*5,

Sioux

CITY.

Iowa

EEFEIGEBATOB.

DON'T WASTE MONET

On a poorly made,

IMPERFECT, UNVENTILATEI) ICE CHEST OF FOREIGN MAKE, When, for the same, or less price, you' can procure one of

JOSEPH W. WAYNE'S

Celebrrted Patent Self-Ventilating

AMERICAN REFRIGERATORS, WHICH

are the only ones that have

stooi

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 invariabls failed. The largest most varied, and best as sortment in the West, at the salesroom ot

Joseph W. Wayne,

Manufacturer of

Patent Refrigerators, Improved Beer antf Ale Coolers, and Ice Chests rj

Of all kinds,

SSIWEST FIFTH ST., Id2m CINICNNAT'.

STEAMSHIPS.

Only Direct Line to France. 1

1HE 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 wine:)

To Brest or navre—First cabin, $140 second cabin 875. To Paris, (including railway ticket), S145 and 378. Excursion tickets 10 per cent reduction.

These steamers do not carry steerage passen gers. American passengersgoingto or returning froa the Continent of Europe, by taking this line avoid both transit by English railways and the discomforts of crossing the Channel, besides sa^ ing time, trouble and expense. Apply by lettei or paid telegram to GEO. MACKENZIE, Agent, No. 58 Broadway, N. Y. ldlO

RUBBER GOODS.

INDIA RUBBER GOODS.

MACHINE BELTING, ENGINE AND HYDRANT HOSE,

Steam Packing, Boots and Shoes, Clothing, Carriage and Nursery Cloths, Druggistf.' Goods, Combs, Syringes, Breast Pumps, Nipples, Ac. Stationery Articles, Elastic Bands, Pen and Pencil Cases, Rulers, Inks, £c. 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.

BART HICKCOX,

Agents lor all the Principal Manufactureiis, ld3m 49 "West Fourth st., Cincinnati

DISTILLERS.

-5-

WALSH, BROOKS & KELLOGG,

Successors to

SAMUEL M. MURPHY & CO., CINCINNATI DISTILLERY S.|W. cor.Kilgour and

East Pearl sts.

OFFICE STORES, 17 and,19 West Second street.

Distillers ot

Cologne Spirits, Alcohol 6 Domestic Liquors and dealers in

Pare Bourbon and Rye Whiskies. Id

CORNELIUSTWALSH

6

LOCKS.,

& SON,

"1!sfi-vi Manufacturers and dealers in. .,, rv.

CABINET & TRUNK LOCKS,

TRAVELING BAG FRAMES & TRUNK HARDWARE,

Hamilton street, Corner Railroad Avenue, Idly NEWARK, N..

BRASS WOBES. *1

BRUIT & EDWARDS,

Manufacturers of

PLUMBERS' BRASS WORK

Of every description, and superior

CAST ALE PUMPS

Mj,

And dealer in

PLUMBERS' MATERIALS,

Incorporations and Gas Companies supplied Idly NEWARK, N.J.

EELTIN&.

CRAFTON KNIGHT,

v'

Manufacturers of

riir •,

Best Oak Tanned Stretched Leather Belts. Also, Page's Patent Lacing,^'*'* 37

Front st., Harding's Block,

ldy Worcester, Mass,

WBENCBES.

A. G. GOES & CO., {Successors to L. & A. G. Coes,) W O E S E A S S

Manufacturers of the Genuine

COES SCREW WRENCHES. With A. Q. Coes' Patent Lock Fendnr. Established in .839 ,'

CASES.

CARDSof

every description for Business, Visit­

ing, Wedding or Funeral purposes, in any number from 100 to 100,000, expeditiously, neatly* »W VV IWjWVj VA^VUIUVUPlJt 1IV«U and cheaply printed at the GAZET1E STEAM rOB OFFICE^ Fifth street. We keep the largest assortment of card stock in the city—bought dl