Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 1, Number 129, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 October 1870 — Page 2

'he J^icning (§azette

JIIJDSOX, BIIOWN & CO., Proprietors.

K. N. HUDSON. C. AV. BROWN. I/. M. ROSE.

OJIice: North Fifth St., near Main.

The DAILY GAZETTE is published every afternoon, except Sunday, and sold by the carriers at 20c per week. By mail $10 per year #5 lor 0 months 82.50 for 3 months. NEWSBOYS' EDITION of the DAILY GAZETTE is issued everv Saturday at 12 M., and is sold by news bovsexclusively. Itis a large3G column paper, ami contains a large amount of miscellaneous reading, and the news up to the hour of its publication. lie WEEKLY GAZETTE is issued every Thursday, anil contains all the best matter of the seven daily issues. The WEEKLY GAZETTEis the largest paper printed in Terre Haute, and is sold lor: one copy, per year, 82.00 three copies, iif year, fjtlj.OO: live copies, per year, 8-S.00 ten copies, one year, and one to getter up of Club, 915.00: one copy, six months gl.OO: one copy, three viontlis i»Oc. All subscriptions must be paid for in advance. The paper will, invariably, be discontinued at expiration of time. For Advertising Rates see third page. The GAZETTEestablishment is the best equipjjed in point of Presses and Types in this sect ion, "and 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.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28,1870.

NORTH AND SOUTH RAILROAD.

The Road a Fixed Fact—Contract Let for its Construction. ATTICA, October 20.

J. J. BINGHAM, ESQ.—Dear Sir: In compliance with your request, I hasten to j?ive you the result of our meeting. Board full. Contract made. Matthews &Chamberlain are the chief contracting parties. They, as the public will learn by inquiry, arc able to make it. Everything is concluded, and the road certain to be made on the line surveyed. As soon as we get decision ot the court, sustaining the tax work will commence. The contracting parties are to construct thirty miles previous to any payment from tiu company. All of course in uoo 1 spirits. »Vory truly,

WlVSLOW

S.

PlEKCE.

We take the above letter from the-Ste/i Unci of yesterday. This road which is to run on tin air line from Attica. south through Brazil and on to the Ohio river, is one in which this city is much interested. Instead of hitting us, it misses us about sixteen miles. This we can not heli), but we must make the most out of it. The road will pass over the great coal regions, and must, of necessity do much business. We must tap it. Tap it at various points, so that going from Chicago to the Ohio river or from the river to Chicago, the traveler can pass through Terre Haute, as well as to go straight along. It is no detriment to Terre Haute that railroads run all around her, so that she taps them in every direction. It would be better that they come within our corporate limits, but it is the most mistaken folly to oppose the building of roads, because they do not come here. Every road built in this section helps develops the mighty resources of this rich valley, and as this great wealth is developed, it pours itself into the lap of the largest communities, and where there is the best market. If we do not reach out our arms and touch those roads wherever they run, then we might be really damaged by them. But if we do this, their Construction is to our advantage.

Winslow S. Pierce is a far seeing, untiring, self-reliant and determined man, and we have but little doubt he will succeed in building this road. Before his never ceasing energy every thing is possible. Then what is Terre Haute to do? Tap this road, and those coal fields, every place, and anywhere that will justify a train of cars to switch off from it and run into this city. By doing this we draw all the trade which would naturally come here, and that is all that we can get, and if we can secure this, it is enough. But we need not oppose this "North and South" road. It is better for Terre Haute that it should be built, than not. If we, as a citizen of Terre Haute, identified with her history and prospeiity, had the power of determining the building of this road, or the not building it, we would unhesitatingly order its construction. If we cannot get roads to run through us, we would have them run as close to us as possible. The closer, the shorter are the line we are compelled to build to tap them.

This is a subject demanding the attention of the property holders and business men of this city. We must be wide awake to the improvements going on around us. If we are not, before we are aware of it, the fountains of our prosperity may be sapped—the channels of our Wealth cut off, and the trade of the country wliftli would naturally fall into this market, adverted in some other direction.

Had the 'Heyqre Haute and Bloomfield road been prosecuted, as it ought to have been done months ago, and as it would have been done, had it not been for the childish blundering of persons seeking to get the control of it, this North and South road, in all probability, would not have been built. At least there would not have been the necessity for it, that there is now. The circumstances connected with the failure to prosecute the Bloomfield road, are matters of so much interest, that it may soon require a careful looking into, and a placing of the responsibility where it properly belongs.

Sccrctary Cox.

If there are cogent reasons why Secretary Cox should be driven from the Cab inet, and if the administration stands upon its dignity so far as to conceal them from the country, and allow the false impression to go forth that Secretary Cox falls a martyr to his efforts to purify his department, the only question in the case is whether the President ought not to suffer, for concealing his reasons, the same penalty that would befall him if he liadnone that were valid or justifiable. The President cannot ignore the fact that, like all statesmen and rulers, he is constantly on trial before the tribunal of public opinion, and that, if he fails to put in his defence, the judgments of the court will be rendered as if none existed. Secretary Cox entered upon his office with a high personal reputation for integrity and fidelity. It was understood and proclaimed that the peculiar mission of the administration was to check and root out corruption In all forms. It is generally believed that Mr. Cox has been thoroughly and vigorously faithful in this respect, and that his department has been conducted upon the principles sought to be carried out in the Civil Service bill, viz: the before ruided by

Washington rumors, says that all the positions in the gift of his department have thus been filled with capable and trustworthy men. Really, ir such has been the case for the year and a half during which Mr. Cox has held the portfolio of the Interior, it would seem to prove first, that the President does not oppose any reform of this kind, since he has already

IS

allowed it to be fully carried out and, secondly, that, inasmuch as all these reforms have been already put in practice, they can no longer constitute the "proposed reforms" which, we are told, Mr. Cox urges and the President refuses to sanction. The true reasons for Secretary Cox's removal are still in the dark, and we arc unable to find that the loose statements of Washington correspondents are more than newsmongers' guesses, and rather poor ones at that. But the truth must come out.— Chicago Tribune.

From the San Francisco Alto.

THE DEAD ALIVE.

Twelve Men Killed by tlic Apaches—One Taken Prisoner—He is Released After 2S Days Captivity—How the Apaches

Make War. Last July there was published in the Alta an account of the murder of a party of white men near Kitchen's Ranclie, in Arizona, by the Apache Indians. The names of the murdered men were published at the time, but now Ave are called upon to state that one of those supposed to have been killed isstill alive and well. We give below the story of Mr. B. B. Smith, as he related it yesterday to one of the reporters of the Altai]^ "I am a resident of St. Paul, Minnesota, where my family now reside. In 1862 I came to this coast, and for several years traveled a great deal through Arizona, California, and the northern part of Mexico. After leading the life of an adventurer for a few years, I returned to St. Paul. Last February I came to the coast again and went to San Diego, where I remained until April, and then started for Uriz, the capital of Sonora. I procured a fine saddle horse, and armed with a Henry rifle and two revolvers, I started to make the trij) alone, as the country was familiar to me, and I had traveled over the route a great many times. I overtook a party of seven prospectors on arriving at the line between Arizona and Sonora. It was on the 7tli of July, and I found them encamped near Peter Kitchen's ranch. They started out at 4 p. m., but I stayed and refreshed myself and horse by a couple of hours more rest, promising to overtake them. As soon as the moon rose I took to the saddle and proceeded on my journey. "On arriving within six miles of Monument Station my horse shied at an object just ahead in the road. Lxlismounted, and found it to be the dead body of a man—one of the party that had preceded me. Within a hundred yards I found the dead bodies of the whole party and three of their horses. They had been stripped of their clothing. Things looked a little squally and I hesitated some time before I decided to go forward. I proceeded cautiously on foot, and within a mile I found another body, which upon examination, proved to be that of Juan Innego, a Spanish merchant who resided at Altar, forty miles distant. He was probably on his way to Tueson. I knew him well when I was down there in 1852 and 1853. About twenty rods from there I found the body of a Spaniard known as Cipriano, who Jived in Magdalina. A little further on I came upon the bodies of three unknown men. There is no mistake about it, I was now thoioughly frightened. Death seemed to stare life in the face every way I turned. "While considering what was best to be done I was startled by a voice, near at hand, commanding me in loud English to halt. My Henry rifle was brought up for use, and I now made up my mind to fight to the death. I looked cautiously in every direction, but was unable to discover the person who hailed me. Again I was hailed with, "Who are you still I could not discover where the voice come from, and not kn )wingl stood at the mercy of the person speaking, I replied, "A friend to all nations." I was then commanded to drop my arms, and I did so. At this, a stalwart Mexican, whose name I afterwards learned was Juan Montoia, strode out of the bush, and, taking my horse and arms ordered me to follow him. He led me to a camp of Apache Indians only a few rods distant, where I was placed under guard. Montoia was the leader of the band, which was composed of fifty-six warriors, and his orders were all obeyed promptly. That night and the next day I talked to him in both Spanish and English, and tried to learn from him what was to be my fate I told him I had served through the war as an officer in the United States Army, and showed him my papers, and told him the object of my mission to Sopora. "The next day a number of them started off up the road, and in a short time we heard several shots, and I knew they were murdering other travellers. I remained a prisoner twenty-eight days, and was then released, and proceeded on a mule, which Montoia gave me, to Uriz, the capital of Sonora. While I remained with the party they continued their murdering and plundering most every day. They were held under complete military discipline by Montoia, and were trained to obey commands which he gave by the bugle when in action. All were armed with Henry and Sharpe's rifles, and revolvers. They were well mounted, and fought like veterans when it came to a close contest. Montoia told me he had scouts on the hills as lookouts, and that they signalled to him the approach of parties, and everything of importance regarding them. I have no idea why they spared my life when they killed everybody else on sight. They always had a bigpow-wow and scalp-dance after a killing, and theu the spoils were divided. They took all of my clothing, and gave me some old articles taken from some of their murdered victims, in place of them. After I had visited Uriz, Ireturned to Guaymas by way of Hermosilla. Governor Pesquira treated me very kindly while I remained in Uriz. "At Guaymas, Mr.Willard, the United States Consul, showed me papers containing an account of the massacre of the party. My name, with the initials wrong, appeared among the rest. The account states that my body had been mutilated until it was scarcely recognizable. Copies of these papers had been sent to my family in St. Paul, by my friends. I now determined to come to San Francisco and telegraph to my folks, who have been in mourning for me. "I made an agreement with Capt. Dall, of the steamer Continental, after telling him my story, to bring me to San Francisco, and that as soon as as I could communicate with my relatives, I would pay him for the passage. Off Cape St. Lucas the ship was wrecked in a storm, and I left her in the boat commanded by the carpenter, It looked like a pretty rough deal to jump out of a nest of Apaches into a shipwreck. But we weathered the tempest and reached land safe. The ac count of the wreck as given by the car penter and published in the Alia was very truthful. I don't think I have enjoyed my second trip to this coast as much as I did the first."

A French Ring.

The Tuilleries correspondence reveals the fact that both Cassagnac and Jerome David were regular pensioners on the civil list. The cost of the Prince Imperial's baptism amounted to $180,000. The cousins, male and female, of the Emperor received $250,000 per annum. The Due de Persigny received, in two months, $12,000 Prince Sablonowiski, the Countess Gajan, Madame Claude Vignon, General Morris and many others, are down for various Jsums. There is $250 to General de Failly. The Duchess of Moucby, whose name continuallv appears for similar plums, received $400,000 as a marriage portion. The son ot the American Bonaparte had a pension of $6,000 Madame Battaigi, of $48,000 her sister, Madame Turr, the same the Marquis Pepoli, $5,000. Cousins not contented with pensions, seem to have always been getting extra allowances. The Emperor aid the debts of Prince Achille Murat a ozen times.

INDIANA NEWS.

The coopers of LaFayetto are on a strike. Lafayette is not to have a skating rink after all.

The Allen Circuit Court has 3S divorco cases pending. A soldier's festival will be given at Union City, November 3d.

The price of hogs in Evans villo is cents per pound. Gross.

Aurora people want the Court House moved that to place. Horse thieves are operating in the neighborhood of (Jrecnsburgh.

Evansvillo

sends

live

penitentiary

recruits for

at

the

Jellersonville.

Corn is selling in Wabash count}* at 25c per bushel. It is abundant there. A special election for Mayor, will be held in Evansvillo on the l2tli of November.

The people of Fort Wayne groan under

heavy

taxation, and pray to be relieved. James W. King defeated lor Auditor of Fountain county, proposes to contest the election,

John Jones, who shot and killed Hall, at Attica, on the 12th and escaped has been captured.

The Evansville Journal is publishing a series of interesting letters from Pi of. Richard Owen.

By the overturning of a buggy, Fred Wahusiedler had a few ribs broken at Evansville the other day.

They have a "dollar" store in Evansville. We thought these humbugs had played.

The game law regarding quails is not observed in this State. They are netted in a most cruel manner.

Jno. W. Wilson was robbed a few nights ago in Hamilton county, of $900 and §1,100 in notes, liobber not caught.

It is stated that 900 voters failed to visit the polls in Wabash county, 700 of whom Were Republicans.

The Covington people want a Republican paper there. Democrats are throwing off on The Friend."

The trial of Lauring and Jenkins, for the murder of Beard commenced in the Vanderburg Criminal Court on Tuesday.

Mr. Daniel I. Henderson will soon commence boring in earnest for coal oil on his farm near New Washington, Clarlco county.

A little daughter of N. A. Tipton of Fountain county, was found dead in her bed on Saturday. She retired the evening before in usual good health.

The work on the Water Works in Evansville is progressing—to the tune of §300,000 or more. Music for the 25,000 of its inhabitants. Democracy.

Our genial and small friend, Tom Royston, of the First National, is starting geological garden. His first "animal" is a wild pigeon, which he has nearly tamed. He keeps it in his show window.—Evansville Courier.

Did he dig that pigeon out of the ground? According to the U. S. census, there is a servant girl in this city, sixteen years old, who owns realest&te worth §50,000. Ladies who lind nicely dressed young gentlemen "sitting up with the hired girl," must not be astonished. She is sweet sixteen beyond doubt.—Evansville Journal.

Mr. Ilarrel, of Bryantsbnrg, reported some days ago as having been shot while attempting to separate some parties that were fighting, died about noon yesterday. Several arrests wero made at the time, but all the parties wero acquitted, as nothing could oe proven against tliem.—Madison Courier.

The Hamilton County Register says: The Miesse brick on the square at Noblesville, was considerably shaken by the earthquake last week. Mr. Dave Moss was in his office at the time and noticed two distinct shocks, which made him feel uncomfortable for a moment. The feeling he experienced was that the building had no "foundation, but appeared as if it was being tossed on an ocean of water.

Giants.

In one of his recent lectures, Prof. Silliman, the younger, alluded to the discovery of the skeleton of an enormous lizard of eighty feet. The Professor inferred, g.s no living specimen of such magnitude has been found, that the species which it represents had degenerated. The verity of his position he rather singularly endeavored to enforce by an allusion to the well-known existence of giants in old times. The following list is the data upon which the singular hypothesis is based:

The giant exhibited at Rouen, in 1830, the Professor says, measured nearly eighteen feet.

Garapius saw a girl that was ten feet high. The giant Galabra, brought from Ara bia to Rome, under Claudius Caesar, was ten feet high.

Fannum, who lived in the time of Eugene II., measured lli feet. The Chevaliei Scrog, in his voyage to the Peak of Teneriffe, found in one of the caverns of that mountain the head of the Gunich, who had CiO teeth and was not less than 15 feet high.

The giant Farragua, slain by Orlando, nephew of Charlemagne, was 20 feet high.

In 1500, near Roune, was found a skeleton whose skull helci a bushel of corn, and who was 19 feet high.

The giant Racart was 83 feet high his thigh-bones were found in 1703 near the River Moderi.

In 1623, near the castle in Dauphine, a tomb was thirty feet long, sixteen wide, and eight feet high, on which was cut in gray stone these words: "Keutolochus Rex." The skeleton was found entire, twenty-five and a fourth feet long, ten feet across the shoulders, and five feet from the breast bone to the back.

Near Palerno, in Sicily, in 131G, was found the skeleton of a giant thirty feet high, and, in 1559, another forty-four feet high.

Near Mazarino, in Sicily, in 1816, was found the skeleton of a giant 30 feet high The head was the size of a hogshead, and each of his teeth weighed five ounces.

We have no doubt there were giants in these days, and the past was more pro lific in producing them than the present But the history of the giants of the olden time was not more than that of dwarfs, several of wlionj were even smaller than theThumbs and Nutts of our time.

Sleep, Fainting', Apoplexy. When a man is asleep, his pulse beats and his lungs play, but he is without sense, and you can easily wake him up

If a person "faints," he too is without sense, but he has no pulse and does not breathe.

Apoplexy is between the two the lungs play as in sleep, and there is no sense, as in fainting, but you can't shake the man back to life.

In sleep the face is natural. In the fainting fit, it has a pallor of death.

In apoplexy, it is so swollen, turgid and fairly iivid. If a man is asleep, let him alone nature will wake him up as soon as he has got sleep enough.

When a man faints lay him down flat on the floor and he will, "come too" in double quick time. He fainted because the heart missed a beat, failed for an instant, failed for only once to send the proper amount of blood to the brain. If you place the patient in a horizontal position, lay him on his back, it does not require much force of the heart to send the blood on a level head but if you set a man up, the blood has to shoot upwards to the head, and this requires much more

force yet in nine cases out of ten, if a person faints and falls to the floor, the first thing is to .run and set him up, or to place him in a chair.

In apoplexy, as there is too much blood in the head one can see that the best position is to set a man up and the blood naturally tends downward, as much water will come out of a bottle when turned upside down, if the cork is out.

If, then a man is asleep, let him sleep, for his face is natural. If a man has fainted, lay him flat on his back for his lace has a deadly pallor.

If a mail is apopletic, setliim in a t'hair, because the face is turgid,

MEECHANTJTAILOEING.

Flue Merchant Tailoring

-AT-

7*3 MAIN li'fllEET.

W. SI.

_OF-

Fine Black! and Colored

CLOTHS,

BEAVERS, DOESKINS, CA SSIMERES, cVC.

A Large Variety of Fine French and English

Fancy Cassimcre Pant Patterns

Beautiful Mixtures, for Suiting

And plenty of

PLAIN COLORS FOR MODEST MEN

PRICES MOKE KEASOJfAULE

THAN TIIEY WERE LAST FALL.

tSST" Call and Examine the Stock. 90d2m

GROCERIES,^NOTIONS&PR0LUCE. GROCERIES.

JUST

RECEIVED, a large stock of Groceries, which will be sold at the

Lowest Retail Price.

J. IJ. PATRICK & 4:0.

YANKEE NOTIONS.

A

LARGE AND GENERAL Assortment Yankee Notions, which will be sold

THE

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 to a discharge opening in the cup and orce it out, and with it force out straws and other obstructions. It is utterly impossible to choke it, and as evidence of this fact the wheat we have in our sample machine is half chair, and by turning the wheel it is carried through as well as clean wheat.

Itwill 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' FRIEND DRILL

the wheels are all fastened to the drill, and the feed is changed by bysimpty moving a small lever —it is done in one second.

Send for Circular showing liow the Farmers' Friend came ahead in 1869, to

JOXES «& JOXES, East Side Public Square,

27 Terre Haute, Ind

REAL ESTATE.

13. HOLMES,

Notary Public, Real Estate Agent,

AND

CONVEYANCER,

OFFICE, Second Floor, No. 115 Main St.* ldy Terre Haute, lnd

ill*

swollen,

livid,

with its excess of blood.—Hall &• Journal of Ifcalih.

BAJfWISXEB

AS just received liis

FALL AND WINTER STOCK

A

0

At Retail at Jobbing Prices.

HERE'S YOUB CHANGE.

JT. U. PATRICK & CO.

O E

HIGHEST MARKET PRICE in Cash for all kinds of

Country Produce.

J. IJ. PATRICK «& CO.,

NO. 81 MAIN STREET,

80dw3m TERRE HAUTE, IND.

THE MANSFIELD.

SAY YES.

JOJiEl & JONES

IIAVEITHE

GRAIN

DRILL!

(Knhn, the celebrated Drill Inventor's last and best.)

A Force Feed Drill, Operated ly Spui Gearing.

NO LOOSE COG WHEELS ABOUT IT I

Goods of us. Try it!

SIIAWI!,

Immense lots!

V-.?

FOSTER BROTHERS.

THE RICHEST! THE NEWEST!

The Cheapest! The Largest!

And the best assorted stock of Dress Goods in Terre Ilaute is always to he found at the Great Sew York City Foster Brothers'.

ENGLISH AND FRENCH MERINOS.

A large lot of very line 53eriios, 50c usual price, 75c. Elegant assortment, beautiful goods, at 871-2 worth $1.15. Still liner, and very wide, at $1 others charge p.25. You can save from 20 to 40c a yard by buying your Merinos of us.

ElIPieiESiS CLOTHS AJfB VEJ/9BKIS.

Large lot, very tine, nearly yard wide, 50c sold last year at 75c Beautiful, high colors, very fine goods, 70c high-priced stores sell at $1.

Our very finest, of superb quality, $1: others charge $1.50.

A N E S S O O S

Large lot Alexandria Poplins, 22c worth at least 35c. Very fine lot of Chene Poplins, 25c sold last year at 40c. Job lot of "Sorosis" Cloths, very handsome, 50c: worth 75c. £lcgant Serge Poplins, very wide, 65c sold elsewhere at $1. Very large lot of Chameleon Poplins, 28c cheap even at 40c. Beautiful Striped Velours, 65c worth last year $1.25. Elegant Reps, just arrived, 25c worth 35c. Immense lot of wide Paris Poplins, 40c sold last year at 75c. Fine double-fold colored Alpacas, 22c others charge 30c. A very large stock of Dagmar Cloths at 35c worth 50c. A fine assortment of Sicilian Cloths, 65c, very beautiful. Also, a very complete assortment of all qualities in PLAID POPLINS, PLAID MOIIAIRS, and PLAID SERGES in ALL WOOL DeLAINES, Australian Crepe Cloths, Bombazine, BLACK SILKS, COLORED SILKS and poplins, «fcc., all at prices that remind you of 1860. You can save from 5 to 70c a yard by buying your Dress

These are all NEW Goods, fresh from New York. Don't buy the old styles of last year. The merchants ot the West, with hardly an exception, are loaded down with old Dress Goods, bought at War prices, for which they ask about double what they are worth.

FURS, FTJ3EZ& I FTFR&

Splendid stock of FURS iust received, at prices tha will give us almost the entire trade upon these goods.

VELVETS VELVETS! VELVETS!!

At about half last year's prices.

Blankets, Blankets! Blankets!!

At §2 a pair that .arc all wool. Better qualities as cheap, proportionately.

SHAWLS I SHAWLS'!

Splendid styles!

Lowest

O S E O E S

NEW YORK CITY STORE, Opera House Block,

124 JMAJN ST., TERKE HAUTE, DD.

286 BLEECKEK ST., NEW YORK CITY.

167 EIGHTH AVENUE, HEW YORK CITY, a

Store of

£l. lpao as

Good quality, double width, 23c, others sell at 30c. Fine liUStrc, imported Goods, 23 others charge 35c. Better quality, very pretty black, 30c cheap at 45c. Very line quality, and rich in color, 40c worth COc. Silk Lustre, superb goods, that will not fade, 50c worth 75c. An extraordinary cheap lot at COc same as others sell at $1. You can save from 8 to 40c a yard by buying your Alpacas of us

rates!

„s7i" ,-tt .A!

94 COIiUMBIA ST., FORT WAYNE, IND.

WESTE^ LANBS.

Homestead and Pre-emption.

II AVEcompllcil a full, concise and complete" .statement,plainly printed fortheinfoninttirm ot persons, intending u, take up a lloniestejul or rre-Emption in this poetrv of the West, embracing Iowa, Dakota, anclNebraska and oJhcr sections. It explains liow to proc cd to secui 100 acres of Rich Farming I,niul for Nothing, six months before you leave your home, in Iho most healthful climate, in "short it contains just such instructions as are needed by those intending to make a Home and Fortune in the Free Lands of the "West. I will send one of these printed Guides to any person for 25 rents. 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 independent.

To YOUNG Jinx.

This country is being crossed with numorov.s Railroads from every direction to Sioux City, Iowa. Six Railroads will lie made to this «-ify within one year. One is already in opejatu ii connecting us with Chicago and the IJ. I5. Railroad and two more will be completed before spring, connecting us with Dubuque and McGregor, direct. Three more will be completed

be seen that no section of country ofi'ers such unprecedented advantages for business, speculation and making fortune, for the country is bciny populated, and towns and cities are being built, and fortunes made almost beyond belief. Every man who takes a homestead now will have a railroad market at his own door, And any enterprising j'oung man with a small capital can establish himself in a peniianent paying business, if he selects tin right location and right branch of trade. Eighteen years residence in the western country, and a large portion of the time employed as a Mercantile Agent in this country, has made me familiar with all the branches of business and the best locations in this country. For one doll.-.r remitted to me I 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 branch is neglected. Address,

XOTS""3?

DANIEL SCOTT.

S. C. Commissioner of Emigration,

7(1 ly Box 183, S.iorx CITY. Iowa

WASTE MONEY On a, poorly made,

IMPERFECT, UNVENTILATET) ICE CIIEST, OF FOREIGN MAKE, When, for the same, or less price, you can procure one of

.IOSEFII W. WAYNE'S

Celcbrrted Patent Self-Ventilating

AMERICAN REFRIGERATORS,

7IIICII are the only ones that have stood the test of time,seVeral thousand of them 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 tliem, have invariably failed. The largest, most varied, and best assortment in the West, at the salesroom of

Joseph W. Wayne,

Manufacturer of

Patent JRefriterators, Improved Beer and Ale Coolers, and lee Chests Of all kinds, 8S1WEST TTIX^TI-I ST.,

Idlim CINICNNA'l I

BELTING-.

~"'"iosLiH"GATES & fcoss.

Manufacturers or

Oak Tanned Leather Belting Rose.

Lace Leather of Superior Quality, and dealersjn all kinds 01

MANUFACTURERS'

AXD

Fire Departinent Supplies,

.NOS. 1 & 0 BUTTON STREET, Lowell, Massachusetts. Id Cm

RUBBER GOODS.

INDIA RUBBER (WOODS.

EELTIKG,

EXC-IXE a:d hydrant hose, Steam Packing, Hoots and Shoes, Clothing, Carriage and Nursery Cloths, Druggists' Goods, Combs, Syringes, Breast Pumps, Nipples, Ac. Stationery Articles, Elastic Bands, Pen and Pencil Cases, Rulers, Iivks, etc. 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 & IIICKCOX,

Agents for all th3 Principal Manufacturer IdCm 4!) West Fourth St., Cincinnati.

DISTILLERS.

WALSH^BROOKS & KELLOGG,

Successors to

SAMUEL M. MURPHY & CO.,CINCINNATI ni.sTii.T.Kiiy, S. W. cor.Kilgour and

East Pearl sts.

OFFICE STOKES, 17 and 1!) West Second street.

Distillers ol

Cologne Spirits, Alcohol fc Domestic Liquors and dealers in

Pure Hourboii and Rye Whiskies. IdCm

LOOKS.

CORNELIUS, WALSH & SON,

,i Manufacturers and dealers in

CABINET&TETJKE LOCKS,

TRAVELING BAG FRAMES & TRUNK HARDWARE, Hamilton street, Corner Railroad Avenue, Idly NEWARK, N...1

BRASSWOBKS^

BRUN c& EIWAIsI§, Manufacturers of

PLUMBERS' BRASS WORE

Of every description, and superior

CAST ALE And dealer in PLUMBERS' MATERIALS,

«®"Corporations and Gas Companies supplied Idly NEWARK, N. .7.

BELTING. ..

ciilFTON & KATG1IT,' Manufacturers of

Best Oak Tanned Stretched Leather Icis. Also, Page's Patent Lacing, 37 Front St., Harding's Blcclr, ldy Worcester, Mass

WRENCHES^

A. G. COES & CO.,

(Successors to

IJ.&

A. G. Coes,)

W O E S E A S S Manufacturers of the Genuine

COES SCREW WRENCHES, With A. G. Coes' Patent Lock Fender. Established In .839

VARNISHES.

ESTABLISHED, 1^0.

JOHN 1.

FITX-«ERAI,I9

(Late D. Price & Filz- Gerald,)

I

:*-U. Manufacturers of 'V**-

MPR0YED COPAL VARNISHES,

ldyT

NEWARK, N.J.