Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 1, Number 130, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 October 1870 — Page 2

|J§vening (TyazelU

HUDSON, BROWN & CO., Proprietors. It. sr. HUDSON. C. W. BROM'5. I- 31. ROSE.

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(iAZKTTK.istablishment IS

GAZETTE,

Tcrre Haute, Ind.

.SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20,1870.

A Frenchman's Pl.in of ar.

A French writer on the military situation around Paris, gives the following as the number of French troop-, and recommends the following as the best method to defeat the Prussians:

In addition to the army of the Loire and the troops shut up in Paris, in Metz, and in other besieged towns, lie believes that the available military of France now amounts to 130,000 infantry, 30,000 cavalry, 20,000 artillery, 0,000 eng'neors, 20,000 marines and miscellaneous forces, 400,000 of the fiardc Mobile, and 1,000,000 of the Gar.lo Nafcionalc Sodcntaire. Then there an 175,000 men of the contingent of 1S70 actually called out, and 13,000 France-Tireurs, making a grand total of 1,800,000. With this material the •writer proposes to organize five army corps, each consisting of 75,000 infantry, two or three regiments of cavalry, and two batteries of horse artillery. These will constitute the "troops of the first line. The "troops of the second line" arc to consist of an equal number of the Garde Rationale Sedentaire, similarly organizedexcept that they will have siege pieces instead of mounted artillery, and will be without cavalry. A corps of the first line and a corps of the second willbe united to form an army. Thus there will be fiye armies of 150,000 men each. The author describes with considerable care the host positions for these new forccs to occupy, and the lines of retreat and supply which each will have to maintain, lie stations the first at Amiens, the second at Rouen, the third at

Mans, the fourth at Bourges, and the fifth at Langres—making a complete circle around Paris, interrupting tlio Prussian communications, checking the raids of the German cavalry, and fencing in the invaders with a stout barrier, behind which the remaining million of possiblo French soldiers can organize in security. At the proper moment this outer circle of armies will break in upon the Prussian rear, and the inner circle on the bights around Paris will break ont upon the Prussian front.

This reminds us forcibly of the great anaconda coil by which the venerable

out of

(lie

rebel armies. Put he found

when the circle

began

to be formed, the

rebels would not stand still and be squeezed. They simply broke through the coil, and prepared to light from the outside, rather than from the inner circle. We expect the Prussians willbe apt to do the same thing, and will refuse to be caught in the trap set for them. Perhaps they will not even wait until the French forces get into position, in accordance with the plan of this writer.

If hissbowing of the number of troops at the command of the Republic is true, we do not see why they, in that desperation which steels the arm and gives eourage to the heart, do not scale the ramparts which protect Paris, and getting on the outside, attack their enemies, and drive them from their soil. One million eight hundred thousand men ought to be able to do anything. Armed in defense of their wives and their children, their firesides and their homes, and fighting for all these, how can they be resisted This immense number ot men, if they were Americans, and disregarded death as an American soldier always does when fighting in defense of such interests, they would attack the Prussians in front, and with the strength of lions, and the fury of tigers, scatter them to the winds. If the French can bring into the field this large army, why do they not fight?

SOME

unreasonable creatures in the

shape of men in the

Hid

(Brooklyn) Con­

gress District are overbearing and insulting enough to suggest that our friend and admirer, Mrs. Henry B. Stanton, cannot. run "for Congress in that district until she is a resident of the State, and know no better than to quote the Constitution of the United States on the subject. Out upon such odious tyrants! We demand for her tlio right to run as much as she pleases, and we will guarantee that the Constitution suffers lio strain in the procedure!—N. Y. Tribune.

Of course Mrs. H. B. Stanton ought to run for Congress, and ought to be elected —if she can get votes enough. Mr. Henry B. Stanton can stay at home and take care of the babies—if Mrs. H. B. S. has favored the world with any. If the Constitution of the United States stands in the way of Mrs. Henry's ambition, let that instrument be kicked aside as anti-progressive. We would be delighted to see the venerabie Mrs. Stanton in Congress—for we believe she is so venerable she would not be compelled to leave lier seat, and be absent any one moment during the entire session. We think her presence there would have a mellowing effect, and if any of the children got sick, her liege lord could bundle them up and hie off to Washington, with a bottle of mother Winslow in each hand. If she wants to go, let her go, and if she can't get votes enough, she will go anyhow if she gets fully bent on going. But we want her to have a seat in Congress for other and higher reasons. We want to see the man who lives with her, punished. He ought to be punished, by being kept constantly rocking the cradle during the remainder of his natural life lor ever attaching himself to such apron strings. We don't pity him any. Our sympathy does not go out in his behalf. However, poor fellow, what a delightful history he could write of matrimouial felicity. He could write feelingly, no doubt, on that subject

But if Madame 8. should ever, get in to

Congress, we suggest that she commence her maiden speech as follows: "Oh wretched woman! oh, defenceless sex! Of the whole animated race We purchase slavery with wealth and honors, A.nd when we take a husband, buy a tyrant

A

stern domestic foe morose,

,irnn'if

...., unjust,

Bound by no law himself, and yet demanding A strict obedience from the frail and weak.

This exordium will startle the House and command its attention, and then she might be able to deliver a lecture on woman's rights before the spell passed off.

IF we would be inclined to reject the following communication under other circumstances, coming to

with the name of

the o^sfequippea

'.in i«int of Presses and Types in ,„d orders for any kind ui Tp.- 1.i.itu Olirited. to wkicli proinpt atti-nnon \.nl

U3 as

it does,

a

respected lady attach­

ed to it, we can do nothing else but publish it. In fair discussion, the columns of the GAZETTKwill always be open to both sides. "Truth has nothing to fear, when reason is left free to combat it." The readers of this paper desire the truth, and they care but little where it comes from, so it is the truth. There are some conclusions in this communication which do not entirely meet our approbation there are others we entirely coincide with:

For the Gazette.

Editor Torre Haute Gazette We see it reiterated time and again in all the leading Republican papers, and the cry is taken up by the little sheets, that the cause of the defeat of the Republican party in this State, is the apathy and indifference of the Republican voters. ]Sow the question that naturally arises is, is this so?

Rather

was it not

the want of principle, and the indirect way in whicli they answered the questions at issue? Are not the people desiring, aye, demanding anew policy, or a change in the modus operandi of legislation, both State and Congressional? Are the burthens of laxation merely misnomers, or is it a galling

yoke

grievous to

be borne? Are trade and commerce paralyzed, or is it just an infatuation of the public mind to consider them so? Who has done this? Where does the responsibility lay AVas it the natural result of the war, or was it the doings of men grown arrogant in the possession of power, and bold in the defiance of the people's interests? Is not the breaking up of parties significant? Men changing from their former views, Democrats going to the Republican ranks, and Republicans who helped inaugurate the Republican party going to the Democratic ranks.

It is of no use to cover over the defeat of the Republican party in this State, by saying there were no issues of any importance before the people, only the success of party organization desired, and the spoils of office. It was not so.

The issne was plainly presented before the people, never more so, and only the Republican papers tried to evade it. A great many papers did so by calling hard names, reading up old records of politicians on issues dead and gone, and appealing to the war prejudice of the people by every means in their power. The issue'is an important one, whether we have heavier taxes, by paying the 5-20 bonds in gold, both principle and interest, and whether we shall submit to funding this debt, at a lower rate of interest to be sure, but irrevocably compel! ing us to pay in gold, what should be paid in the common money of the country, whatever that may be. Money is whatever the sovereign stamp of the Government makes it, and when from under the jurisdiction of our flag, or the flag of the country by which it is stamped, is no avail. If it is gold it is sold for so much bullion. Our government made greenbacks money to all intents and purposes, and a legal tender except in two cases.

As such the people have been compelled to receive it, and are content therewith, for it answers all the purposes of ^fb^'oses to give him gold for his bonds, in order that he may sell them, and by speculation in that commodity, and the. gold when it becomes due realizes in the end more than if it had drawn at the original rate of interest. The Republican papers lament that the ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment, and in consequence the voting of the negro population helped, notwithstanding the negro vote was all on their side, to cause the overthrow of the Republican party. Now, did it do this? There is a justice about the recognition of the African before the law, that commends itself to every thinking or candid man, and the necessity was so strong for his self-pro-tection, "if we took from him the boasted protection of his master, wo must give him that of manhood, in a republican government, or at once cease to be a Republic. We think but few men left the party for this reason. There area few men that never know where they stand until the opposite party declare themselves, but we think all such have left the party long ago. But there is an injustice in paying the bondholder more "than the contract. That the people see and recognize, and are looking about them for relief.

These issues were before the people, and they have been and are making up their minds about them. Those Democrats whose interest it is to get gold for their bonds, go where they can feel the strong arm of protection thrown around them— to the Republican party. The men who were not so fortunate in investment and speculation in bonds, but periled thoir lives for their country's good, and took their pay in greenbacks, must go where? They must bestir themselves or they will feel the iron hand of caste, and the merciless grasp of the money-lender tighter than ever. The recent results of the elections in this State show where a great many of these men who have had their eyes opened to this monstrous injustice and wrong, have gone, and although the Republican papers make confident predictions of the results of'72, we think they will have to change their policy or find themselves in a hopeless minority again. Respectfully,

A WOMAN'.

For the Gazette.

Art Thoughts.

Hence, as I have said elsewhere, the business of a painter is to paint. If he can color, he is a painter, though he cannot do anything else. If he cannot color, he is no painter, though he can do everything else. But it is, in fact, im possible, if he can color, but that he should be able to do more for a faithful study of color will give power over form, though the most intense study of form, will give no power over color. The man who can see all the greys, and reds, and purples in a peach, will paint the peach rightly round, and rightly altogether but the man who studies only its roundness, may not see its purples and greys and if he does not,'.willnever get it to look like a peach so that great power over color, is always a sign of large general art—intellect. The student maybe led into folly by philosopers, and into falsehood by purists, but he is safe if lie holds the hand of a colorist. -A- JOHN RUSK IN.

Excitement—Wild Amimal at Large. CLOVERLAND, IND., Oct. 27,1S70. Editor Terrc Ilaute Gazette:^'

SIR—Much excitement has'prevailed in our quiet village and vicinity for a few days, occasioned by the hearing and seeing of a wild beast, supposed to be a lynx. It has been shot at a few times, and attempts have been made to chase and capture it with dogs* but all efforts have, up to this time, been unsuccessful. A circle hunt is talked of. At present it is prowling the woods one and a half miles south from here. Children are afraid to attend school. It travels, and can IMB heard at night only. CLIFFE.

MIXED PARAGRAPH'S.

A pair of tights—two drunkards. All card players know a good deal. A promising sign—The pawnbroker's. Female XVths are the coming barbers of Vicksburg.

A Detroit girl weeps every time she tries to sing. So do her hearers. The Pope is well. He prefers to remain in home rather than roam.

The canals have already cost the people of Now York i'2o,000,0110. The young lady who was up il»^ lark is'now down with the rheumatism.

Raffaelle's birthday has been lately celebrated, lle'd been an old man had he lived.

Akron, Ohio, women get their husbands drulik, and then prepare the corpse with a poker.

The man who meets a remark with "Fiddlesticks!" clearly wishes to do violins to one's feelings.

A youthful settlement has set up in business in Kansas under, the fascinating name of New Chicago.

Launt Thompson lias

prepared

a design

for the soldiers' monument to be erected on Boston Common. Stars are clearly the best astronomers because they have studded the heavens since the creation.

The empty throne of Spain still goes a begging like our worse than empty embassy to England. "It is a poor rule that won't work both ways," as the boy said wno threw the ferule at the schoolmaster's head.

In England and Wales there are 57,713 people of unsound mind, under the cognizance of the Lunacy Commissioners.

A maiden a!l forlorn—Victoria's youngest, who is engaged to the Marquis of Lorn.—i\r. Y. Com. Advtrtiuer.

Doremus' idea of a duel is for both parties to swallow strychnine, and then play poker for the stomach-pump.

Upward of twenty youn^r women-are studying theology in the United States, with the view of becoming preachers.

It begins to look ominous when the woman of the period wants her club she used to be satisfied with her broomstick.

To promote pedestrian exercise among students, have

no

drinking place within

three miles ol' any institution of learning. A young1 man having married an heiress said that it wasn't the face of his wife that struck him so much ab her figure.

The squares and pleasure grounds of Paris have been planted with cabbages and cauliflowers lor the use of the inhabitants.

An English critic describes Hawthorne's "English Note Books" as "two volumes of prejudice tempered by a love of antiquity."

The Charleston Courier says that a young widow of that place has just celebrated her wooden wedding by marrying a blockhead.

Since M. Gambetta, the French Minister of the Interior, escaped from Paris, he may be called the Minister of the Exterior.

The street'ears adopted in London, on the New York plan, area great success, and new lines of road are-in contemplation.

Figaro says that if "whatever is, is right," it follows logically that whatever isn't is also right, which makes things nice ali round.

The youth of St. Louis are being rapidly thinned out, owing to their inordinate indulgence in stealing rides on locomotives.

Susan B. Anthony's ailment turns out to be, not a disorder of the windpipe, but a disarrangement of the fungiform pa11

General Apathy is credited with the Radical defeat in Indiana, notwithstanding the noble warlike qualities displayed by the colored troops.

Pet poodles are now amused with rubber rats, which squeal and jump when bitten. It gives me little darlings exercise and cheerful spirits, you see.

Prussia patterns after the "best government on earth." As fast as she occupies the "late rebellious territory" she appoints tax collectors and assessors to "honestly collect the revenue." "What did the Israelites do after they crossed the Red Sea asked the Superintendent of a Sunday school. "They dried themselves," said a shrill voiced little girl.

Mrs. Dorothy Trissell, with feminine curiosity, wanted to see if her husband's gun was loaded. She found out by putting the muzzle in her mouth and pull­

ing

the trigger with her toes. The way a Colorado deacon laid up treasures ill heaven is thus touchingly recorded on his tombstone: "When circumstances rendered it impossible for him to attend the stated preaching of the gospel, he made it a sacred rule to kill an Indian every Sabbath."

[From the ifes Moines (la.) Register, Oct. 22,

Marriage of Miss Lizzie E. Hoynton, tlie Young Lady Who Makes Hood Speeches and (iood Cake.

We made mention a day or two since of the receipt of tlie wedding cards of Captain W.S. Harbert, of Des Moines and Miss Lizzie E. Boynton, of Craw fordsville, Indiana. Yesterday brought the intelligence of their marriage on the ISth instant. The ceremony was per formed by President Tuttlc, of Wabash Coliegej and all acquainted with this eminent divince will feel assured that the nuptial knot was well and gracefully tied. The bride was attired in white satin, with veil. There were live lo vrely bridesmaids in white, and five groomsmen in black. The ceremonies were impressive, of course, and were witnessed by a large assemblage of the good people of Crawfordsville and many of the distinguished per sonages of the State. The bridal presents were many and costly—elegant evidence of the esteem and love in which the bride is held at home.

The marriage of Miss Boynton, whose great eminence as a writer and speaker in the lists of woman suffrage reformers has given her a national reputation, will excite much attention and attract a great deal of newspaper comment. In common with other ladies prominently before the public, she has been adjudged as one of those dreadful strong minded females too anxious for suffrage and office to care anything about matrimony or that domestic haven which true women are supposed to love above^ all things else. But a woman more refined, with a gentler heart, or tastes and loves more domestic than this same gifted girl, does not live, that we were ever acquainted with. Her writings, through all of which is a pervading sense of soul and graceful charm of tenderness, bear witness to this and her position in social circles, where she has even been one of society's queens, attests it. We have several times noticed an article floating about in the Indiana papers to the effect that Lizzie Boynton could, make a better speech and bake more and better kinds of bread and cake than any girl in the Hoosier State, and this is testimony of what we affirm. Furthermore, in the bountiful basket of delicious cake now before us, the Register's portion of the marriage feast, we have proof that the item was every bit true and not a whit too complimentary,

The Cause of Genrtml Lee's Death. The attending physicians of General Lee, Dr. Barton and Dr. Madison, pronounce the opinion that the immediate cause of his death was "mental and physical fatigue, inducing venous congestion of the brain, which, however, never proceeded as far as apoplexy or paralysis,

but gradually caused cerebral exhaustion and death." The original cause they hold to be

which will be sold at the

the

strain upon his mental constitution, occasioned by the weight of his responsibilities as military leader of the fortunes of the South, by grief at the

issue

struggle, and by the tax

of that

upon

his sym­

pathies resulting from the vast correspondence he was continually receiving from the maimed, and wounded, and orphaned, and impoverished of the South, who came to him from force of habit with their grievances. He died rather from moral than physical cause—that his physical development was well nigh perfect, and that there was no merely physical reason why he might not have lived for years.

MERCHANT TAILORING.

Fine Merchant Tailoring

-AT-

NO. 7» MAIX STREET.

W. Iff. BA3TSISTEB

AS just received his

FALL AND WINTER STOCK

—OF-

Eine Blackf anil Colored

CLOTHS,

BEAVERS, DOESKINS, CASSIMERES, .VC.

A Large Variety of Fine French and English

Fancy Gassimcro Pant Patterns

Beautiful Mixtures, for Suitings,

Ancl plenty of

PLAIN COLORS FOR AIODEST 21EN

PRICES MORE REASONABLE

THAN TIIEY WERE LAST FALL.

W3T Call and Examine the Stock. 90d2m

GROCERIES, NOTIONS & PRODUCE.

GROCERIES.

Lowest Retail Price.

J. U. PATRICK «& CO.

-i

YANKEE NOTIONS. A

LARGE AND GENERAL Assortment Yankee Notions, which will he sold

THE RICHEST!

tLa

a!

At Retail at Jobbing Prices.

"-.HERE'S YOUR CIIANCE.

J. XT." PATBSICK &

CO.

O E

TIIE

HIGHEST MARKET TRICE in Cash foi all kinds of

Country Produce.

J. IT. PATRICK & CO.,

NO. 81 MAIN STREET,

S0d\v." TERRE HAUTE, IND.

THE MANSFIELD.

•i SAY "YES.

JOKES & JOKES

IIAVEITIIK

MTV

DRILL!

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

A Force Feed Drill, Operated by Spur Gearini?.

NO LOOSE COO 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!

Myfcs

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 lialf 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. Inthefjp, r,t a

FARMERS' FRIE^I DRILL

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

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

fol

27

.i

.TOXES «& JOUES,

East Side Public Square,

.. Terre Haute. Inl

REAL ESTATE.

15. HOLMES,

Notary Public, Real Estate Agent, AND -r

1

CONVEYANCER,

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

^FOSTER BROTHERS.

•f

-f -*TJk

'Ini

The Cheapest! The Largest!

And the best assorted stock of Dress Goods in Tcrre Haute is always to he found at the Great New York City Store of Foster Brothers'.-

targe lot Alexandria Poplins, 22c worth at least 35c. Very fine lot of Claene Poplins, 25c sold last year at 40c. Job lot of "Sorosis" Cloths, very handsome, 50c: worth 75c. Elegant 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,.fust arrived, 25c worth 35c. Immense lot of wide Paris Poplins, 40c sold last year at

Fine double-fold colored Alpacas, 22c others charge 30c. A very large stock ofDagmar Cloths at 35c worth 50c. A fine assortment of Sicilian Cloths, 65c, very beautiful. Also, a very complete assortment of all qualities in PLAID POPIL\S, PLAID MOHAIRS, and PLAID SERGES in ALL WOOL DeLAIlVES, Australian Crepe Cloths, Bombazine, BLACK. SILKS, COLORED SILKS and poplins, «&c., all at prices that remind you of I860. You can save from 5 to 70c a yard by buying your Dress Goodsofus. Tryit!

These fire all NEW Goods, fresli from New York. Don't buy tlie old styles oi last year. The merchants of 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.

I^TTITS

/f $

....... j..-

THE1NEWEST!

A. O l- I* -4. A. &

Good qualify* double width, 22e, otlicrssell lit XOe. Fine liUStve, imported Goods, 25c: others charge 35c. Kctter quality, very pretty hlaek, 30c cheap at 43c. Very fine quality, and rich in color, 40c worth 60c. Silk Lustre, superb goods, that will not fade,50c worth 75c. An extraordinary cheap let at 60c same as others sell at $1. You can save from 8 to 40c a yard by buying your Alpacas of us.

ENGLISH Am FRENCH MERINOS.

A large lot of very fine 3Ec:iuoa,~50c: usual price, 75c. Elegant assortment, beautiful goods, at 871-3 worth $1.15.. Still liner, and very wide, at $1 others charge $1.25. You can save from 20 to 40c a yard by buying your Merinos of us.

CLOTHS A3S"J VELOUKS.

Ziargc lot, very line, nearly yard wide, 50c sold lasi year at 75c 12eautifuL Irigli colors, very line goods, 70c high-priced stores

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

A N E E S S O O S

I

Splendid stock of FURS iust received, at prices that 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. ,4

SttXWL'S, SHAWLS! SHAWLS

Immense lots! Splendid styles! Lowest rates!

i( -i?

T.' ft

,p

"r

O S E O E S

IT

-V Si

75c.

,1

ifthl 'i'ii .7^

I }W

'II

ti'NEW YOBK CITY STOKE, Opera Honsc Block,'

ht in*' •Jj&'iHji

124 ZIATK ST., TERRE HAUTE, 286 RLEECKER ST., WEW YORK CITY. 167 EIGHTH AVEJTUE, HEW YORK CITY. 94 COLUMBIA ST., FORT WAYNE, OD.

'"."vj-! :.

r-t

It

u1

-.}*i

•WESTEEN LANES.

Homestead and Pre-emption.

Istatement,plainlyafull,conciseand

HAVE compiled ccmplde printed for the informal ion of persons, intending to take up a Home&tead or Pre-Emption in this poetry of the West, embracing Iowa, Dakota, ancl Nebiaska and other sections. It explains how to proceed to secure 160 acres of Rich Farming Land for Noihimr, six months before you leave your home, in tlie 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 cents. The information alone, which, it gives is worth S5 to anybody. Men who came here two and three years ago, and took a farm, arc to-day independent.

To

YOUNG MEN.

This country is being crossed with numerors 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 ai:d the U. P. Railroad and two more will be completed before spring, connecting us with Dubuque and McGregor, direct. Three more will be completed within a year, connecting us direct with St.

Paul,

Minn., Yankton, Dakota, and Columbus. Nebraska, oil the U. P. Railroad. The Missouri River gives us theMountain Trade. Ti us it will be seen that no section of country offers such unprecedentQd advantages for business, speculation and making a fortune, for the country is being populated, and towns and cities are being built, and fortunes made almost beyond beliei. Every man who takes a homestead now "vvill 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 locathm and right branch of trade. Eighteen yeais 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 dollar remitted to me 1 will give truthful and definite answers to all questions 011 this subject desired by such persons. Tell them the best, place to locate, and what business is overcrowded and what branch is neglected. Address,

DANIEL RCOTT

S. C. Commissioner of Emigration,

7dly Box 1H5, Sioux

CITY.

Iowa

REFRIGERATOR.

DON'T WASTE MONEY On a poorly made, IMPERFECT. UNVF/XTILATF.I) ICE ClIEST,

OF FOREIGN MAKE,

"When, for tlie same, or less price, you can procure one of

JOSEPH W. WAME'&

Celebrrted Patent Self-Ventilating

AMERICA* REFKIGi EK AT0R S,

TrrlllCH are the oTily ones that have stood the tost 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 them, have invariably failed. The largest, most varied, and best assortment in the West, at the salesroom ot

Joseph W. Wayne,

Manufacturer of

Patent Refrigerators, Improved Beer and Ale Coolers, and Ice Chests Of all kinds,

SSJ1 WEST FIFTH ST., Id Cm CINICNNA'II

BELTING.

JOSIAII €rATJES & S03TS.

Manutacturers or

Oak Tanned Leather Belting Hose.

Lace Leather of Superior Quality, and dealers^in all kinds ot

MANUFACTURERS'

Fire Department Supplies,

JNOS. 4 & 6 DUTTON STREET,

ldCm Lowell, Massachusetts.

RUBBER GOODS.

INBIARUBBERGOODS.

MACHINE BELTING,

ENGINE AND HYDRANT HOSE, Steam Packing, Boots and Shoes, Clothing, Carriage and Nursery Cloths, Druggists' Goods, Combs, Syringes, Breast Pumps, Nipples, Ac. Stationery Articles, Elastic Bands, Pen and Pencil Cases, Rulers, Inks, etc. Piano Covers, Door Mats, Balls and Toys, and every other articie 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 Manufacturer1., IdGm 49 West Fourth st., Cincinnati.

DISTILLERS. SJ.

WALSH, BROOKS

KELLOGG9

"v

Successors to

SAMUEL M. MURPHY & CO., CINCINNATI DIKTIT/LKKY, S. W. cor. Kilgour and

East Pearl sts.

OFF1CK A STOKES, 17 and 19 West Second street.

Distillers ol

Cologne Spirits, Alcohol & Domestic Liquor?, ami dealers in

.Pure Hourboii and Rye Wliiskies.

ld(im

LOCES.

CORNELIUS, WALSH & SON,

Manufacturers and dealers in

CABINET & TRUNK LOCKS,

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

BRASSWORKS^

BSM

&

Manufacturers of

PLUMBERS' BRASS WORK

Of every description, and superior

OAST ALE PUMPS And dealer in PLUMBERS' MATERIALS, ^©•Corporations and Gas Companies supplied

Idly NEWARK, N. J.

BELTING-.

CRAFTON & KNIGHT, Manufacturers of Best Oak Tanned Stretched Lehllicr Belts. r- Also, Page18 Patent Lacing, 37 Front st., Harding's Block, ldy -.jt Worcester, Mass

WRENCHES.

A. G. COES Sc Gp., (Successors to L.& A. G. Coes,)

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

COES SCREW WRENCHES,

Vfj With A. G. Coes' Patent Lock Fendsr. r-'.' Established in .839

VARNISHES.

^/ESTABLISHED, 1836.

A: ':i -Liv .!•••

JOH¥ l. FITZ-CIEBALD,

(Late D. Price & Fitz-Gerald,) Manufacturers of ..p

IMPROVED COPAL VARNISHES*

Idyl

J'

NEWARK,N.J