Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 1, Number 94, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 September 1870 — Page 3
tu„
fymittg (gazette
HUDSON, BROWN & CO., Proprietors. R. N. HUDSON. C. W. IJP.OWN. L. 51. ROSE.
Office: North Fifth St., near Main.
The DAILY GAZETTE is published every after noon, except Sunday, and sold by the carri ersat 20c per week. By mail $10 per year §5 for 6 months $2.50 for 3 months. NEWSBOYS' EDITION of the-DAILY GAZETTE IS issued every Saturday at 12 M., and is sold by news boys exclusively. It is a large 36 column paper, and contains a large amount of miscellaneous reading, and the news up to the hour of its publication. Ttie WEEKLY GAZETTE is issued every Thursday, and contains all the best matter of the 6even daily issues. The WEEKLY GAZETTE I the largest paper printed in Terreliaute.aiid is sold for: one copy, per year, S2.00, tnree copies, per year, $5.00 five copies, per ten copies, one year, ana one: toi getter up of Club, $13.00
one
.C«P?},®1X In°sub-
81.00 one copy, three months .0c. Ali sut scriptions must be paid for in a'W.ance. The paper will, invariably, be discontinued at ex ADVEK^Sfis KATES for the different issues of
(}A7FTTEmade known on application. The GAZETTEestablishment is the best equipped in point of Presses and Types in this section, am? orders for any kind of Type Printing solicited, to which prompt attention will be given.
Address all letters, HUDSON, BROWN & CO., GAZETTE, Terre Haute, Ind.
Be Content with Tour Condition. Everybody seems to think thcit he can better his condition by migrating from the country to the city. This we know to be a positive fallacy. A man who is making a fair living where he is, had better stay where he is. If you are on a farm and doing moderately well, remain where you are. If you are making a living for yourself and family by working in a factory, instead of running the risk of becoming poverty-stricken in a great metropolis, be content. If you are earning a reasonable day's wages in the performance of your duty as an employe, work away and bless your lucky stars that you are so well off as you are. If you are laboring in a sawmill, or sweating over a forge, or in a country store, being chaffered about the price of a yard of calico or apiece of tape, hold on, and don't become disgusted with your experience. You may think that you have an outrageously uutoward lot—a life that ought to vex the saints impeccable but wait and think. Think of the poor fellows who have left just such places, and who try, buttryin vain, to find some position in the large cities where they can keep the wolf Irom the door. Whenever there is an opening in the city, hundreds stand ready to iill it.
Thousands and thousands of strong and sturdy men have left good situations in the country because they were unaccountably not satisfied, and come to the city, thinking that they would there find what they were seeking after. They had visions of brown stone fronts and marble palaces, and had an idea that they might occupy them. They came, they saw, but did not conquer.
Our advice—sincere and earnest—to our friends in the country, is, stick to your business stand by your employer let speculation alone consider a certainty' exchanged for an uncertainty a bad bargain don't have your heads turned by rumors of immense fortunes made in New York or elsewhere. Such things are generally mere will-o'-the-wisps—more moonshine than anything else. When in New York we see a hundred or two of able-bodied men applying for a situation as clerk in a thirdrate grocery, just to keep soul and body together, we are led to beliove that all things are not what tliey seem.
We repeat our advice to friends: "Stay, where you are. If you are making a living in the country, don't abandon it for a temporary home in the city coor-liouse, and a final resting place in Potter's Field. —American Odd Fellow.
Exile the Man of Destiny.
The ex-Emperor is reported safely sepulchored at Wilhelmshohe. For the fallen—as for the dead—no sneers. But surely never did fallen greatness halt to a conclusion so lame and impotent. Napoleon's career, even in its most brilliant movements, was cursed by a certain lumpish, wooden inertia peculiarly his own—it has made his final tumble both lumbering and ludicrous. If he had ridden to meet Death and Disaster at Sedan with elan enough to leave his body dead oa the field, our effusive Gallic brethren would no doubt have embalmed it in glory and in tears by this time, .instead of dismissing it with ieers to the eternal dullness of the 'jail. Life is sweet, and the consideration that a living dog is better than a dead lion doubtless hath its solace yet the
Nephew of his Uncle is surely shrewd enough to see that in holding on doggedly the other day to his unable life he missed the bestopportunity thatevercame to him in it. He wrote two folies to suggest the resemblance between himself and Cresar anp Napoleon. The resemblance lay deeper than he knew. Egotists and absolutists alike, they all drank of the blood of the nation to give themstrength, but found in it a virus that proved fatal to them. But his prototypes knew how to quit the stage. "When you have made a point with your audience, leave it," quoth Pelham. The little gray-coated figure on the sea-girt rock, or Csesar, in his mantle muffling up his face, falleu at the base of Pompey's statue, meet their victor Death with the bearing of kings who have reached the end of their stately journeys. "Hell from beneath is moved to meet them at their coming it stirreth up the dead for them, even the great ones of the earth." But the tragedy of Louis dribbles out into a dreary farce. The reporters, keenest eyed ot all animals to discern the sinking ship, dismiss the great monarch with a briefer notice than a baseball player. We have a glimpse of him now in the railway station again, reading the funny papers finally grateful for a new cook, and then he sinks into the "squat palace with comfortable wings" and vanishes from history. It is Macbeth, left dead on the stage, coming out before the footlights in his store-clothes to bow to the audience.
But, whether sublime or ridiculous, the sudden fall of Napoleon only spells over again for us the truth which, though old as itself, the world is so slow to read: that the man whose motive in dealing with politics is solely personal ambition, is sure to meet with downfall in the end. It is one of those "historic verities, "which'' as he has told us himself, are "sacred as religion," one of the most significant hints of those great, eternal currents of order which underline the "incomprehensible world. In the province of God, says Emerson, there is no such thiug as accident. \Thcre has been no lackof doggerel prophecies produced in the last fortnight which arc said to have long asro foretold the overthrow of the Bonaparte dynasty but the preface to Napoleon's own Vie de Ccesar is more curious than any of them when read in the light of late events. "My aim," he says,' 'is to prove that when Providence raises up such men as Ccesar, Charlemagne, and Napoleon, it is to trace out to the peoples the path they ought to follow to stamp with the seal of their genius a new era, and to accomplish in a few years the labor of many centuries." All of which is a truth hackneyed to platitude. God, doubtless, puts nations into the hands of men of genius as molders, as clay is giveu to a potter, to shape them for His nobler uses.
But when the potter begins to make of the clay only a vessel for his private use, his work is taken from him with a swift and terrible retribution. The ides ot March came to Csesar, Waterloo to Na-
Elouis
oleon, and it would have been well for before Sedan if he had profited by their example.—N. Y. Tribune.
King William manages to make both ends meet on
a
zram. 'J '&
SADDLERY.
PHILLIP KAOEL,
Manufacturer, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
Saddles,'Harness, Collars
1SKIOI.ES, WHIPS,
BRUSHES, CURRY-COMBS, BLANKETS ETC., ETC., ETC. The best Material used, and all Work Warranted
LOWEST PRICES IN THE CITY.
Call and see me. I charge nothing for looking at my goods. 213 Main Street, near Seventh, 44d3m Terre Haute, Indiana.
PETER MILLER,
Manufacturer and Dealer in
Saddles and Harness,
TSMK.S MD VALISES,
COLLARS,Bridles,CurryCombs,Horse
0 fi
PH
ft
h? 35 CO
O W
DOES
salary of $1,900,000 per an
Blank
ets—agent for Frank Miller's Harness Oil. &c
..(Old Postoffl.ce Building,)
South 4th st., Terre
Haute, Ind. Id3m
as
MUSICAL.
THE BEST AND CHEAPEST
I A N O S
ORGANS AJfD JIEL01) EON'S,
AT
KUSSNER'S
PAILACJE OP MUSIC,
SOUTH SIDE PUBLIC SQUARE,
Mly Terre^Haute, Ind
PAINTDTG.
WSI.
S.
HEEIiTOBT,
Cor. 6th, La Fayette and Locust sts., Terre Haute, Ind.
GRAINING, PAPER HANGING, CALCIMINING,
and everything usually done
In the line. 20dwfly
THE OLD RELIABLE
iBB
& YEAKLE
House and Sign Painters,
Fourth Rt.,opj. Central Engine Ilonsc.
are prepared to do all work in our line as
CHEAP AS THE CHEAPEST.
We -will give personal attention to all work 56d3m entrusted to us.
MANNING & MAGWIRE,
HOUSE & SIGN PAINTERS,
OHIO STREET,
ld6m Between 4th & 5tli street
FRED. LI. MYERS. W. II. DUDDLESTON
MYERS & DUDDLESTON
CARRIAGE AND WAGON.
A I N E S
CORNER OF FIFTH AND CHERRY STS.,
Terre Haute, Ind.
We profess to be asters of our trade, and do work when promised and in the best style. 2Sd0m
SBOCEBIES.
USM&AMTS F. WEST,
SEALER IN
Groceries, (Queensware, Provisions,
AND
COUNTRY PRODUCE,
NO. 75 MAIN STREET, BET. 8th & Oth, Terre Haute, Ind R3S" The Highest Cash price paid for Country Produce. 4dly
TOBACCOS, ETC.
BRASHEARS, BROWN & TITUS,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS Wholesale Dealers In
Groceries and Manufactured Tobaccos
AGENTSfor"Christian
R. J. Christian & Co.'s celebrated
brands' of Comfort," Bright May Pine Apple Black Navy M, and Cherry Brand Black Navy %, and other line brands,
32 AND 34 MAIN STREET Idly Worcester,
HATS AND CAPS.
-W. W. & H.
WHEN,
WHERE,
And
BADGLEY'S
CITY HAT HOUSE!
No. 12 South Fourth Street,
And get a Hat or Cap from the best selected stock In the market. He has just received his fall stock, which is immense.
J. F. BADGLEY,
7uj«r
At the
(Kulin, the celebrated Drill Inventor's last and best.)
A Force Feed Drill, Operated by Spur Gearing.
NO LOOSE COG WHEELS ABOUT IT!
Impossible-to Choke it—The Feed Changed In One Second—Will Sow Any Kind of Grain or Seed. Whether Clean or Foul!
The grain is distributed by means of small double spiral feed wheels working in cups under the hopper these wheels carry the grain
upwards
orce
to a discharge opening in the cup and
it out, and with it
obstructions.
FAMILY GROCER.
JAMES O'MABA,
SUCCESSOR TO
J. E. TOORHEES,
Ohio Street, between Fourth Fifth, TTTILL keep on hand a full supply of Food for man and Beast. A few articles enumerated:
Flour, Feed, Fruit, Poultry,
And a General Assortment of
FAMILY GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS
Will keep constantly on hand afresh supply oi Vegetables of all kinds. Also,
FRESH MEAT MARKET,
and keep all kinds of fresh meat. Leave your orders an they will be filled and delivered promptly to all parts of the city. Will also buy all kinds of
COUNTRY PBODVCE.
Farmers will do well to call before selling. 62d&w3m AS. O'MARA.
GUNSMITH.
JoiL?AFTMSTROAG,
Gunsmith, Stencil Cutter,
SAW FILER AND LOCKSMITH, Third street North of Main, Terre Haute, Ind 8®"A11 work done on short notice, Idly
BOOTS & SH0ES. A&BALCH
1870.
now
To get the Best Bargains in
HATS AND CAPS
Ever offered in this city! By taking the cash and going to-day to
C. H. H.
THE MANSFIELD.
SAY
YES.
JONES & J05ES
HAVE THE
GRAIN
3
DRILL!
force out straws and other
It is utterly impossible to choke it,
and as evidence of this fact the wheat we have in our sample machine is half chaff, and by turning the wheel it is carried through as well as clean wheat.
It will sow any kind of grain, and. in any quantity desired. In other force feed drills to change the feed you remove one cog wheel and put in another and the cog wheels are loose and liable to be lost. In the
FARMERS' FKIEXI) DRILL
the wheels are all fastened to the drill, and the feed is changed by
it is done in
by simply moving a small lever
one second.
Send for Circular showing how the Farmers' Friend came ahead in 1869, to
JO^E§ JOIJTCS,
East Side Public Square,
27 Terre Haute, Ind
BOOKSELLERS.
teopenlng of the Public Schools.
SCHOOL BOOKS, SCHOOL BOOKS! SCHOOL BOOKS!!
September, 18 7 0.
BARTLETT & CO.,
NVITE attention to their NEW and COMPLETE stock of
SCHOOL BOOKS,
Of every kind used in this city and surrounding country. We are FULLY PREPARED to meet the demand for School Books in all the Schools. Call and see our IMMENSE STOCK.
BARTLETT & CO., 101 MAIN STREET.
1
91dw
AAiJI
Ladies' & Gents' Fashionable
boots & SHOES,
M-®th
ADE
to order, No. 146 Main street, between & 6th up stairs, 2d 6m
MACHINES?.
B. BALL & CO.,
WORCESTER, MASS.
!S Manufacturers of
Woodwortli's,
MOLDING,and
WAlso
Mass.
rri ft* nj
Vi"'
r$.
Zki
Daniels and Dimension Planers.
Matching, Tenoning, Morticing,
Shaping Boring Machines Scroll Saws* Re-Sawing, Hand Boring, Wood Turning Lathes, and & variety of other Machines for working
the best Patent Door, Hub and Rail Car Morticing Machlnes ln the world. Send for our Illustrated Catalogue. Hv
I
-V
1 A
x::J
BETAXL DBY GOODS.
'4 r~
f.{ si
FALL TRADE OPEIV.
TtJELL, RIPLEY & DEALING'S
EStPOftlUM
Is Replete with all the Novelties in
FANCY DRY GOODS
We have very Complete Lines of
STAPLE. GOODp.
1'
10,000 yards Dark Prints, remnants, at 6i cts. per yard. 5,000 yards elegant fast-colored Madder Prints at 83 cts. One case, 2,500 yards, Ruby 9 cts. 50,000yards choice Standard 10 cts. Yard wide Brown Muslin at' 8! cts. per yard.
Heavy Sheeting at 10 cts. per yard. Extra at 12 ets. pear yard, i}
Black and Fancy Silks at very low prices. Tartan Plaids. Our stock of these goods cannot be surpassed in the State.
tTUELL,
RIPLEY
A N
DEMING,
Corner Main and Fifth Sts.
EERZ & ARNOLD.
Look Out for New Goods Daily
AT
II E 1$ "2K It IN" O I' S.
We propose to bring to this Market
A SELECTION OF FANCY GOODS
1
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1
f-wiO- ij—ji--1! A
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1 .f»-. .!,«'
Sim
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INSURE SUCH PRICES AS
1 vI
'lit.*
.M ...
.*• .'AA' /_! I j- aiif»,t 'I f»t 3s- I
««.!'« .'»i ftWj-vT 1.' n.'iuxv II .,r ,{f tn -fW tr -U iMilL l. I 1 ^irn WtoI*-*
rw id't,, JSJ .. uti J] J- tAi I A J"W I d4,
3
IIERZ &
-4 tJkk-
ff-:« rr
T*
t-Ju'-t"
1 '5
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1
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:a .--.a »e
-1870.
-fl fiiW F-
Jl
sPXlx-
)Mit
Unsurpassed by any in this city, and
'2"), i) wt j,
T,
ilBnr.it -r.i
A dJ'
o,il HfT
TO
1 1
"•?•& .snU'jn Oii' Si.!" 'U'? 'M
$
Merit ther? patronage ot the ladies of
'|iV»v -Jili
4
4s *l4. V» WM t* *,,{'r
,, .....
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TERRE HAUTE ANI) "VICINITY.
nat vf .f hifft
orf
I''
wia 89 Main Street,
.• i. iO?, A
'W
luai
.Afti &$ii9V ti&fikj
wii. ?it« iW\ .tte
i,
'isii'iiit ri ..
Between Third and Fourth Sts." mm
y.
jtJf 1.' til i.'" :v'.'iyfi 1
LIFE INSURANCE.
O O A I
A -»j *jLW-,*in{l7 tfill
THE KJIPIItK
.»n
Mutual Life Insurance Co.
OF NEW YORK,
Has achieved a success without a parallel in the history of Life Insurance!
Cheapest Life Insurance Company in the World!
A Life Policy, covering $10,000, can be obtained from this Reliable and Progressive Company which will cost the insured (aged 35) only $183.80,
Without any Small Addition for Interest.
This policy will hold good for two yearswithout further payments, so that the cash payment of a $10,000 policy in this Company will be equa to only $97.90 per year. u'-
A large number of policies have already taken by some of the best citizens in this candi date for public favor, which is destined to do a large business here, and why should it not, for for notice some of Its liberal and distinctive features:
Ordinary Whole-life Policies are Absolutely Non-forfeitable from the Payment of the First Annual Premium.
All Restrictions upon Travel'and Residence are Removed, and no Permits Required.
No Accumulation of Interest or Loan.® of Deferred Premiums, and no Increase of Annual Payments on any Class of Policies.j
The EMPIRE has organized a Board of Insurance, consisting of some of our best and most reliable citizens, to whom all desiring Life Insurance would do well to refer for further information, before taking policies elsewhere. Call at the office of the Board,
On Ohio Street, between 3d and 4th,
Or upon any of the following gentlemen, who are members of the Board, and who will give any information desired:
W. H. STEWART, Sheriff. Dr. W. D. MULL, Physician. A. F. FOUTS, Liveryman. Hon. G. F. COOKERLY, Mayor. L. SEEBURGER, Butcher.. M. SCHOEMEHL, City Treasurer. W. W. JOHNSON, Physician.
Idly
J, H. DOUGLASS,
Vi -r Soliciting Agent.
GAS FIXTURES.
M'HENRY & CO., 6 and 8 East Fourth and 162 Main St., -. CINCHNNATI.
THE PLACE TO BUY EITHER AT
WHOLESALE OB RETAIL,
EVERYTHING IN THE UNE OF
Gas Fixtures, Lamps and €handeliers, Pipe, Pumps, Tools, &c
In GAS FIXTURES,
WE
1
offer a choice selection of the best designs 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, &c L-u:' .. •*.•:* r» il- ot? is thh
Oil Lamps and Chandeliers.
In this line, our assortment comprises all the late patterns and improvements in Chande-
HANGING LAMPS, BRACKET LANPS, HALL AND TABLE LIGHTS
t.h.
LANTERNS, Ac.
Furnished wuh the latest improvements in Burners. Shades. Ac.: Oil that will not explode and Chimneys that will not break. »_
In Iron Pipes and. Fittings,
Our stock is full and complete, and our prices as low as the lowest.
Iii Pumps and Plumbers' Goods,
We have all that can be wanted iii the'way oi
Cistern and Well Pump3, Lift and Force Pumps, Beer Pumps, Garden Pumps, &c. I #. ii}1' Bath Tubs, Closets, sj ..
Washstands, Wash Trays,
1 Bath Boilers, Sinks, A
Of Gas and Steam Fitters' Tools,
We have a full lire, consisting ot
Screw-outting Machines, Stocks ana Dies, Drills, Reamers and Taps. f...| Patent Pipe Cutters, ,T £, \i t:i Patent and Ordinary Pipe {Tongs,
Pipe Vises,
r,
Meter and Burner Plyers, Gas Fitters' Augurs.
I'M Chisels, Ac.. &c. -OCt NV'jt
SI
1
3'Ji
The Dome Gas Stoves,
For summer cooking. We have a full assortment of these cheap and desirable substitutes, during warm weather, for the Kitchen Range and Stove. For family use, they combine COMFORT AND ECONOMY, being free from the annoyance of HEAT, SMOKE and ASHES.
No family should be without "DOME GAS STOVE." *3T Remember the place, ld6m McHENRY S CO.
SAWWOBKS.
PASSAIC SAW WORKS, NEWARK, NEW JERSEY, rr
^lt]
[Trade Mark Challenge RXB.]
RICHARDSON BBOSL
5a& SSfeSSSBSSffiSS?. BSS
Comics, and every Ascription of Light Saws, oi ^Bveiysaw^svroiranted perfect challenges inspection. Warranted of uniform good temper. GMronnd thin on back and gauged. Idly
BLANK BOOKS.
rBlank
IE GAZETTE
PAPEB.
The Leading Paper House
,»r
OF THE WEST.
1
S I
'"i
d& r?- Adk
,*itl & n&tAm rul
•_
iX -'1
SWlltlER €& 31'CALL, ,» '-Uk. *S .f* Wi5«* .KB'ii. ''-.v?1"
Manufacturers and Wholesale
PAPER"" DEALERS,
230 and 232 Walnut Street,
CINCINNATI OHIO,
Proprietors of .**
"Franklin" and "Fair Grove" Mills,*
HAMILTON, OHIO.
We keep on hand the largest assortment In the West, of,
Printers' and Binders'
O S O
Such as .....
Bill Heads, Letter and Note Heads, Statements of Account, •.
Bills of Lading, Dray Tickets, ...... I rEmbossed Note Paper,
Ball'Tickets,
7
Flat Note, Cap Letter, Folio, Demy, Medium, Royal,» Super Roya and Imperial,
Colored Poster, Cover and Label Papers Envelopes and
ri
Blotting Paper
Book,'News and Wrapping Papers,-
Of our own manufacture, all of which we ofle at the lowest market price. Samples sent free of charge.
CARD STOCK.
Our stock is from the best Eastern manufacturers, and will be found equal to any made in the country. Particular attention is called to ouT large variety of
Favorite Blanks and Bristol Sheets,
which embraces all the desirable grades in use. We have the largest variety of sizes and qualities of any house in the West, and our arrangements with manufacturers enable us to sell at Eastern prices. Customers will find it to their advantage to examine our stock before purchasing elsewhere.
Samples sent free of charge.
SNIDER & M'CALL,
vH
Manufacturers and Wholesale
A E E A E S
230 and 232 Walnut Street,
Idly CINCINNATI.
GBATE BAB. A E N
Furnace Grate Bar,
FOR niiil'.yy
STEAMBOATS,
STATIONARY FURNACES, ETC.
RECEIVEDU.S.
with
less
theHighestPremiums ever award
ed in the (a Silver Medal,) and "honorable mention at the Paris Exposition." Guar* anteed more durable, and to make
more
steam
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 largest steamships, steamboats and manufacturing companies in tne. United States. No alternation of Furnace requir-" ed. BARBAROUX A CO.,
••v
feet long.-
j' rj• •T J.Oj*
PLANERS
To Plane from 4 to 30 feet long, from 24 to CO inches wide.
NASMYTH'S STEAM HAMMERS,
GUN
MACHINERY, Mill Work, Shafting and ,t Hangers, Patent Self-oiling Box. Warehouse, 107 Liberty street, New York City. u. Manufactory, Junction Shop, Worcester, Masachusetts. Idly
WIBE.
NEW JERSEY WIRE MILLS.: HENRY ROBERTS,
Manufacturer of
REFINED IRON WIBE, ''Market and Stone Wire,
BRIGHTPail
r,
Louisville, Kentucky,
5
Sole Manufacturers, for the South & West.: Alo, builders of Steam Engines, Mill Machin-"t ery, Saw Mills, etc.. v,, sf
AND WROUGHT IRON BRIDGES. Id6m
LATHES, ETC.
WOOD, LIGHT & CO.,
Manufacturers of
Engine
lathes,
ii'OKl
From 16 to 100 inch Swing, and from to 30
and Annealed Telegraph Wire, Cop-
pered Bail, Rivet, Screw, Buckle, Uiubrella, Spring, Bridge, Fence, Broom, Brush, and Tinners "wire. "V
Wire Mill, Newark, New Jersey.
1
1-
MACHINE CABDS.
ouriU
SARGENT CARD CLOTHING CO. WORCESTER, MASS.f
Flax Machine Card Clothing
RI
J.
BINDERY tarns out the best
Book work in Terre Haute. We have
one of the most skillful Rulers in the State,
guarantee satisfaction on complicated work.Old Books rebound aa usual.!' p. -,.v.
i: i:
Manufacturers OJJ
COTTON, wbOL
fAND t„-
tyrs'I
3
Of every Variety, Manufacturers' Supplies, Cai ing Machines, Etc.
HANDfurnished
and Stripping Cards of every descrip-, tion to order. EDWIN S. LAWRENCE, Idyl Superintendent.
ASBICULTUBAL.
llAlZ^IO^EXBURimARDT,
Manufacturers of
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS,^
Carriage, Buggy & Wagon Material, of every 5 variety,
jr. L. LINDSEY,
COMMISSION LUMBER DEALER,
Office, No. 482 West Front Street,
CINCINNATI. OHIO.
DEEDS.
BLANKOffice,or
And
td
.JJFCRWF -I-' SR,3 JEFF.ERSONVILLE.IND OG LUMBEB.
Gh 6
if 7
DEEDS, neatly printed, lor sale by
single one, by the quire, nt the IAit,y GAZETTE North 6th street. ,.
tS
