Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 1, Number 185, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 January 1871 — Page 3

m.

HUDSON HOSE, Proprietors= T,. M. KOSE. N. HUDSON

Office: North Fifth St., near.31p.in.

The

Daita' Gazkttk

is published

uveiy

«, lor (i months 82.50 tor .5 month*.

p-mer, and

a in

T-h^

WKKKLV O

in largest paper printed is sold for one copy. per j-cai, Copies, per year, s5.« o: live copies, l»cryoai, *«».©» ton copies, one ye,r, up of Club, one cop}, *)X

As a natural consequence, docs not Republicanism flourish most- in communities where there is the highest degree of intelligence, and Democracy most where the degree of intelligence is lowest? Otherwise, how does it happen, that the largest Democratic majorities in the whole country should be found in those very wards in New Yor.sc City where the illiterate and unreiined do most delight to congregate? Otherwise, how does it happen that a very large majority of the scholars and literary men of the country, and of the students in tho different literary institutions are Republicans? Of course we know better than to say that in the ranks of Democracy can be found no men of cullure and learning. We only say, in genera!, that Democracy nourishes best 'among the illiterate, and the reason is that the masses of that party are expected to take a great many important matters for granted. They are taught to believe that the party is perfect, entirely free from corruption, and no good Democrat, that is, none recognized as such, ever thinks of bolting or dissenting from party measures.

When a Republican chooses to exercise his independent opinion, on any question, or sees lit to criticise the Republican policy, forthwith the entire Democratic party begins to chuckle in its sleeve, and gloats over the great disruption which is about to come. Senator Seluirz, of Missouri, saw lit to differ from a Republican Administation which he had labored to secure, and what a savage yell of glee went up from the lit tie seven by nine Democratic sheets in the rural districts, and the great party oracle in the metropolis over the stupendous split in tho Republican ranks. Yet Senator Schurz disclaims all idea of abandoning the Republicans. A fresh chuckle of delight is now agitating the Democracy because SenatorSumner happens to differ from a Republican President on a single question pertaining to the foreign policy of the Government. We can pardon the childish simplicity of our Democratic friends, for they have always been taught to believe that fealty to party consists in keeping out of the way of the party lash. Think of a Democratic Chairman of Appropriations arising in a Democratic House and freely criticising a Democratic Administration for extravagance in the use of the public funds. The very idea is preposterous, though corruption might be eating out the very vitals of the Government. One of the fundamental principles of modern Democracy is to share the spoils if you can, and if you cannot, then wink at those who do. Yet it is not more than a 'year and a half since Congressman

Dawes, a radical Republican, rose in his place in the House anddelivercda severe address on Republican extravagance, although there was fifty per cent, more of economy than in the preceding Democratic administration.

This is one of the most important dif--^ferences between the parties. The Republican party frankly acknowledges its mistakes, and tries to correct them. It acknowledges that it contains some very bad men, who area curse to it. It lias so much inherent strength and virtue tliatitis not afraid, when the occasion demands it to appoint a committee with full power to investigate any alleged corruption and report thereon. Now we are -very far from wishing to misrepresent, '"'in tho least, but we think the Democratic party has always followed the opposite course. It never acknowledges any of its errors, but either tries to hide them entirely, or else denies them altogether. For this reason the people have lost confidence in its professions. It will brook 110 criticism from its members, a thing which shows, at once, its inherent weakness. And whenever leading Republicans shall cease to point out and labor to correct the mistakes and errors of the party to which they belong, we hope it will aiso lose the confidence of the people.

THE LEGEND OF ST KATE ROCK.

Til3 Extinction of Ifie Illinois—A Story -hii Aboriginal Life in the History of IIlinois. '7,iR^Tbe Hon. J. D. Caton delivered a lecKi ture before the Chicago Historical Society, a few night ago, 011 the Aborigines of j) Illinois, in which describing the power of the Illinois tribe of Indians who once had •b their great city where the town of Utica now stands, near Ottawa, in La SalJe county, and the invasion of the Iroquois, *«be gave thefollowingfste^teh of the legend of "Starved Rocfe^ the reuina 111 of

the Illinois met tl .• Seon after tbeirj the great Iroquois

p. W.W

ailer-

noon, except Han 'lay, and ssole1' £, orsat 20c per week. ludil

P-i

•e'u

Newsboys' Kimtion the Uail^ gazette is i^n.Td «£erv Saturday sit. 12 m.,:u«1 is sokib ^!.S™5SSSK-nis„'.„r3.s «»U,.n„ it lid eoniui iis 1*11! ..- laneoiss reading, and the aews up to the Jioui of its publication n-v ivi issupii t-lie

a htiue amount miscel-

-cailing, and the hlication.

Weeki/V Gazette

is issued every -'1U1

S

(i iv, and contains a.!! the best maliei of the

(JEVON

daily issues. Tho

lr

-lli's

one copy, liiree Kiouths AH ..ub-

scriptions must bo paid tor ad\ IV-'"..! r'v paper will, invariably, be uisconluiueu .it ex-t-'itinTi of time.

an licited to which prompt attention will be given.

Address all letters.

HUDSON & HOSE,

Gazette,

Terre Ilaute, ind.

.THURSDAY, JANUARY 5,-1871. —ig»f

Independence of Opinion.

It scc-ms to be a standing puzzle wit! our Democratic friends how it is that a mail may still he a good Republican while criticising the measures of his party and occasionally dissenting from them. It is so different from the old Democratic way of quietly "wailing for orders," that it frequently leads to serious mistakes on their part." This is one reason, among many others, why we prefer the Republican to the Democratic party. The former, as we think, gives far more scope to freedom of opinion, for it ins'ites criticism while the latter seems to infer it. Tiie one encourages thought, discussion and individuality, while tuo other represses it, at least, indirectly.

battle-fields were strewed with their victims almost from the Atlantic coast to the Wabash, and from the great lakes, and even north of them, to the Alleghenies and the Ohio, finally extended their enterprise to the Illinois. With a great slaughter they defeated this hitherto invincible people, laid waste their great city, and scattered them in broken bands over their wide domain. From this terrible blow they never recovered. For a century later they struggled with waning fortunes against northern encroachments, till finally they were exterminated by the

Pattawatomie3 and the Ottawas, at Starved Rock. The Fort St. Louis ot La Salle overlooked the site of their great city and the scene of their first great defeat and slaughter by the conquering Iroquois, which I shall presently relate. From Meaehette, the old Pottawatomie chief, was derived an authentic account of that great event in Indian history, the siege of Starved Rock, and the final extinction of the Illinois tribe.

The death of Pontiac, the great Ottawa chief, occurred in 1766. He was the idol of his own people, and was beloved and obeyed scarcely less by the Pottawatomies. They believed that the Illinois Indians were at least accessory to his murder, and so held them responsible, and consequently the Ottawas and Pottawatomies united all their forces in an attack upon those whose deadly anemies they had now become.

The Illinois Indians never fully recovered from the great calamity which they had suffered a century before at the hands of the Iroquois. By that their spirit and their courage seemed broken and they submitted to encroachments from the north by their more enterprising neighbors with an ill grace, no doubt, but without protecting their rights by force of arms, as they would Stave done in former times, and sought to revenge themselves upon those upon whom they looked as their actual enemies, in an underhand and treacherous way.

In the war thus waged by the allies against the Illinois, the latter suffered disaster after disaster, till the sole rem mints of that once proud nation, whose name had been mentioned with respect from Lake Superior to the mouth of the Ohio, and from the Mississippi to the Wabash, now found sullicientspace upon the half acre of land which crowns the summit of Starved Rock. As itssidesare perpendicular, except 011 the south, wher it may be ascended with difficulty by a sort of natural stairway, where some of the steps area yard high and but a few inches wide, and not more than two can asjend abreast, ten men could repel ten thousand, with the means of warefar then at their command. The allies made no attempt to take the fort by storm, but closely besieged it on every side. On the north or river side, the upper rock over hangs the watersomewhat, and tradition tells us how the confederates placed themselves in canoes under the shelving rock and cut the thongs of the besieged when they lowered their vessels to ob tain water from the river, and reduced them by thirst but Meach ette, so far as I know, never men tioned this as one of the means resorted to by the confederates to reduce their enemies, nor from an examination of the ground do I think this probable, but they depended upon a lack of provisions, which mustsoon occur to a savage people, who rarely anticipate the futurein storing up supplies. How long they did hold out Meaehette did not, and probably could not, tell us but at last the time came when the unfortunate remnant could hold out no longer. They awaited but a favorable opportunity to attempt their escape. This"was at last afforded by a dark and stormy night, when, led by their few remaining warriors, all stole in profound silence down the steep and narrow declivity, to be met by a solid wall of their enemies surrounding the point where alone a sortie could be made, and which had been confidently expected. The horrid scene that ensued can be better imagined than described.

No quarter was asked or given. For a time the bowlings of the tempest were drowned by the yells of the combatants and the shrieks of the victims.

But no effort of valor could resist the overwhelming numbers, actuated by the direst hate. The braves fell one by one, fighting like very fiends, and terribly did they revenge themselves upon their enemies. The few women and children whom famine had left but enfeebled skeletons fell easy victims to the war-clubs of the terrible savages, who deemed it as much a duty and almost as^great a glory to slaughter the emaciated women' and the helpless children as to strike down the men who were able to make resistance with arms in their hands. They were bent upon the utter extermination of their hated enemies, and mostsuccessfully did they bend their savage energies to tiie bloody task.

Soon the victims thatched the sloping ground south and west of tho impregnable rock, their bodies lying stark upon the sand which" had been thrown up by the prairie winds. The walls of the feeble and strong had ceased to fret the night winds, whose mournful sighs through the neighboring pines sounded like a sad requiem. Here was enacted the fitting finale to that work of death which had been commenced, scarcely a mile away, a century before by the still more savage and terrible Iroquois.

Still, all were not destroyed. Eleven of the most athletic warriors, in the darkness and confusion of the fight, broke through the besieging lines. They had marked well, from their high perch 011 the isolated rock, the little nook below, where their enemies had moored at least a part of their canoes, and to these they rushed with headlong speed, unnoticed by their foes. Into these they threw themselves, and hurried away down the rapids below. They had been trained to the use of the paddle and the canoe, and knew well every intricacy of the channel, so that they could safely thread it, even in the dark and boisterous night. They knew their deadly enemies would soon be in their wake, and that there was no safe refuge for them short of St. Louis. They had 110 provisions to sustain their waning strength, and yet it was certain death to stop by the way. Their only hope was in pressing forward by night and by day, without a moment's pause, scarcely looking back, yet ever fearing that their pursuers would make their appearance around the point they had last left behind. It was truly a race for life. If they could reach St. Louis, they were safe if overtaken, there was no hope. We must leave to the imagination the details of a race where the stake

Avas

so momentous to the con­

testants. As life is sweeter even than revenge, we may safely assume that the pursued were compelled to even greater exertions than the pursuers. Those who ran for life won the race. They reached St. Louis before their enemies came in sight, and told their appalling tale to the commandant of the Fort from whom they received assurances of protection and were generously supplied with food, which their famished condition so much required. This had barely been done when their enemies arrived and fiercely demanded their victims, that 110 drop of blood of their hated enemies might longer circulate in human veins. This was refused, when they retired with impotent threats of future vengeance which they never had the means of executing.

After their enemies had gone, the Illinois, who never after even claimed that name, thanked their entertainers, and, full of sorrow, which no words can express, slowly paddled their way across the river to seek new friends among the tribes who then occupied the southern part of this State, and who would listen with sympathy to the sad tale they had to relate. Tliey alone remained the

(broken remnant and last representatives

.by La Salle, of their once great nation. Their name, ^ration, whose I even now,

blotted

among tho names of the aboriginal tribes. Henceforth they must cease to be of the present, and could only be remembered as a part of the past. This is the last we know of the iasc of the Illinois. They were once- a great and prosperous people, as advanced and as humane as any of the aborigines aiound them we do not know that a drop of their blood is left circulating through human veins, but their name is perpetuated in this great State, of whose record of the past all of us feel so proud, and of whose future the hopes of all are so sanguine.

Till the morning light revealed that the canoen were gone, the confederates believed that their sanguinary work had been so thoroughly done that not a living soul remained. So soon as the escape was discovered, the pursuit was commenced, but, as we have seen, without success. Thepuisuers returned disappointed and dejected that their enemies' scalps were not hanging from their belts. But surely bloood enough had been spilled—vengeance should have been more than satisfied.

This great event secured to the PoUa watomies all the territory then belonging to Illinois, and extended their possessions to the land of the Peorias or Peoria lake. Chicago was ever favorite resort of the tribe. Here they held their councils and here they concluded the last treaty with the Government in 1838, by which they disposed of all their remaining lauds in the United States, except some specific reservations. In 1835, and for the last time, the whole tribe assembled at Chicago to receive their annuity from the Government, and to make their filia| start for the Missouri river. Chicago had then begun to present the appearance of a city, and these savages, who had been in the habit of visiting it when the grass grew waist high where the Tremont and Sherman houses stand, must have been impressed with the sign that a mightier race had come, and that they must lade away before it.

HOLIMY TOYS.

S 1 1

IN

METROPOLITAN BLOCK,

HAS

THE"

Largest Assortment

OF

HOLIDAY TOYS

IN THE CITY,

AND HAS

REDUCED THE PRICE

SO THAT

All the Little Ones

CAN BE MADE HAPPY

AT A

m: Ju 1 os

DON'T FAIL,

To call and se 175d

our Stock before you purchase

PRINTING AMD BOOK-BINDINg.

GAZETTE

STEAM

Job Printing Office

NORTH FIFTH ST., NEAR MAIN,

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

The GAZETTE ESTABLISHMENT has been thoroughly refitted, and supplied with new material, and is in better trim than ever before, for the

PROMPT, ACCURATE and ARTISTIC

execution of every description of Printing, have

FIVE

STEAM

And our selection of Types embraces all the new and fashionable Job Faces, to an extent of

OYER300 DIFFERENT STYLES,

To which we are constantly adding. In every respect, our Establishment is well-fitted and appointed, and our rule is to permit no Job to leave the office unless it will compare favorably with first class Printing from ANY" other office in the State.

Reference is made to any Job 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 the largest city establishments. Orders solic ited. 8®" OLD BOOKS REBOUND in a superior

rtSV

LEATHER.

JOIOT II. O BOILE, /-I DEALER IN

LEATHER, HIDES,

n. AND FINDINGS,

OIL

-au-

NO. 178 MAIN STREET\

Terre Hanle. ImJiaiia.

8®*Cash paid for Hides,Furs, Telts and Rough Leather. I'-'-fdH

WRENCHES.

A. G. COES «& OO.,

(Successors to «fc A. G. Goes.)

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

COES SCREW WRENCHES

1 •. With A. O. Coes' Patent Look Fepder*. Bitoblithtdin 838

WHOLESALE NOTION HOUSE.

E1XXUSI1ELY WHOLESALE

Notion House.

^^Nexperien of eighteen years iu Terre Ilauie has enabled

U. II. JEITEKS & CO.,

TO SELL ON TTIE:

UIOST ]LM5I!£MA5i TEBffiS.

They are "Wholesale Dealers in

YANKEE" NOTIONS,

WHITE GOODS,

Phillips' Cotton Yarn,

CARPET CHAINS AND BATTS

Buck, Sheep and Kiel Gloves,

UNDER-SHIRTS AND DRAWEES,

Xnrragauset Suspciidcrs.

S A I S O S I E (At Bottom Prices.) Cigars, Envelopes. Paper, tic.,

In short, everything in the Yankee Notion line

All Orders Promptly Attended to.

Merchants from tiie Country

Don't fail to call at the Great Yankee NO' tion House,

NO. 110 MAIN STREET,

TERItE HAUTE, IND.

"This Caps the Climax."

We are Sole Agents for BRAY'S FATENT CLIMAX CORSET STEELS. Wklwtf

C-EOCEBIES, NOTIONS & PBOBUCE. tiltOCElUES.

JUST

RECEIVED, a large stocky of Groceries, which will be sold at tliej

Lowest Retail Price.

JT. U. PATE5CK CO.

YANKEE XOTION*.

A

LARGE AND GENERAL Assortment Yankee Notions, which will be sold

At Retail at JoMmig Prices.

HERE'S YOUR CHANCE.

J. U. PATRICK & CO."

O E

I^HE

HIGHEST MARKET PRICE in] Cash foi all kinds 01

Country Produce.

J. 17. PATRICK & CO.

NO. 81 MAIN STREET,

S0dw"m TERRE HAUTE, IND

STE AMB AKER Y.

Union Steam Bakery.

FRANK HEINIG & PR0.,

Manufacturers of all kinds ot

a s, a s, Br ad

AND

A N

.. Dealers in

We

Foreign and Domestic Fruits,

FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES,

LA FA YETTE STREET,

Between the two Railroads. 138d Terre Ifnufo, Ymliaiia.f

PAINftlNGK

WOT. S. 5IELTOIV,

A I N E

JCor. 6th, La Fayette and Locnst sts.,

1

DOES

"^7"E 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, «.: Between 4th &5th street Id 6m

SISTILLEKS.

WALS1I, BROOKS & KEILOGG,

Successors to

SAMUEL M. MURPHY & CO., I "Tf5' CINCINNATI niSTIT,T,ERY, OFFICF STORES) S. W. cor. ICilgour and* '-j-17 and IS) "West Kecond fjfist Pearl sts. street.

Distillers ot

Cologne Spirits, Alcohol & Domestic Liquors, and dealers in Pnrc Bonrbon and Rye Whiskies.

GAS FITTSEffi

A. RIEF,

GiS AND STEAM FILTER,

OHIO STREET,

Between Second and Third,

112d3m (_TERRE HAUTE. IND

s-

Terre Haute, Ind.

'J t%f. ____

GRAINING, PAPER HANGING, CALCIMINING, and everything usually donp in the line. SOdwfly

THE OLD RELIABLE

BARR & YEAKLE1-

Hoitse and Sign Painters,

Fottrlli St., opp. Central Engine House.

1

FOSTEE ESOTHEP.S.

Iligh'imccd Stores can buy Ihcm.

go 1 2

priced stores charge 15c.

I

ers to buy immediately.

prices.

E O O W A S I

Higli-Priceil Stores with crowds of people OUTSIDE, looking at handsome windows.

Foster Brothers' Store with crowds of people INSIDE, buying lots of cheap goods.

ANOTHER GREAT FALL

In tiie Dry Goods Market, especially on

S I N S A N E S S O O S

Tiicusnuds of yards of Musliais sold iza New Tork at a fearful sacrifice. We propose 4o give Slsem (o ©isr casloincrs foa* less

Until Further Notice we will sell

5,00© yards Atlantic Mills Muslin at Gc, other stores are now charging lOe.

4,00© yards of Dwight Mills Muslin at Sc, now selling in town at 12lc.

'-4,500 yards of yard-wide Unbleached Muslins 7c, other stores are charging lie.

6,00© yards Lawrence Mills Muslins flc, others all charging for the same

8,000 yards of extremely heavy Muslin, full yard wide, only 10c high-

These prices we can only guarantee while the present great decline in Muslins

continues. They may advance again at almost any day, so we advise our custom­

We elaiszi iSie hoaor of haiiiig smaslaed the Salgli-prieed sysleia.

anil oi bciug always ihe first 4© notify ihc people of a deelisse in

MOBE HTJ3W C1.ESSH.S!

At times during the last two weeks the crowds of customers have been so

great that some, have been unable to get waited upon. We have recontly added

largely added largely to our help, and unless the rush becomes still more extraor­

dinary, we hope to accommodate all who come to trade with us.

Another pile at $3.50. Another at£4, &c. I

ix,

'i'sn 4 y'inih'Ci

X'T Atii

ft:?!*, it-'

,VX ''I) *Hit"'"

IdGm

124

Beautiful Holiday Presents!

Dress] Gcods Cut into Patterns Ready to Wrap up!

Big lot of Embossed Skirts only $2.25.

Choice of a largo pile at $2.50 a patterni [Choice of another pile at $3 a dress.

A lot of double-width Alpacas, closing at 11c per yard.

-. Shawls for Holiday Presents, $2, $2.50, $3, $4, $5, $C and £7.

Balmoral Skirts, 65c, 75c, $1, $1.25, $1.50, $2 and $2.50.

Best quality Dayton Carpet Warp 30c a pound.

Lot of English Brussels Carpets $1.25, carpet stores charge $1.00.

Big lot of all-wool Ingrain Carpets reduced to 75c.

Good quality of Carpets 30c, 40c, 50c and 55c—very cheap.

New lots of Furs cheaper than ever, $2.50 to $75 a set.

Double-fold Plaid Flannels 22c—a great bargain.

.t

GIOTCS, Hosiery? Worsted Goods, Scarfs, KQitShawI^, Fancy tloods.

vf. .. Bearer Clotlis, Astraclian CIoaMngg, Jcaisg, Flannel, ..

'Colored Bed Spreads, Table lincn^ Oi!

Clotlis, dSrc., •£rc.:„-*r

FANCY, ''JET A.TVI JEWELRY

AT HALF TIIE USUAT/PRICES

JHf-

This is a grand opportunity for PRESENTS at reasonable rates.3

'it

'--f

•vma.

TP*

4

.-

buyin

O S E E A O E IS

NEW YOItK CITY STORE, Opera Ilouse Hlock,

MAIN ST., TERRE HAUTE, I^2.

•f 28(B BliEECKER ST., NEW YORK ill Y.J

107 EIGHTH AVENUE, NEW YOllK €irflV

o* &

•-si*

94 COLVMRIA ST^ FORT WAYpS

HOLIDAY

HV-.

'f-s-

JFAMILYJjEOCEE.

SUCCESSOR TO

$ E O O I 5 E E S

£0/ii'o &trcct, bciivcc.n Fourth and Fifth,

\\TII-L keep

011

hand a full f-upply of Food for

man and lieast. A lew articles enumerated:

Flour, Feed, Fruit, Poultry,

And a General Assortment of

FAMILY GROCERIES AN]) PIIOYIEIONS Will keep constantly on hand afresh supply of Vegetables of all kinds. Also, "/-FRESH MEAT MARKET, and keep all kinds of fresh meat. Leave yonr. orders and they ill filled mid delivered promptly to all parts of the city. Will also buy a in so •nr. COl'STKY PRODUCE,

Farmers will do 62dctwf!m

roll to call before selling. AS. O'JIAliA

DEALEl* IJJ

Groceries, Queens ware, ProYisioii&r

COUNTRY PRODUCE, NO. 75 MAIN STREET, SET. Sth & Oth, Terre Haute, «®"The Highest Cash price paid for Country Produce. -idly

JTAILQEING-.

W". O

TAIiJOTS,

Corner of Second and Main Streets, (Opposite the Stewart House.) 2I::«ie in the Eest Style

Cutting done Promptly. lOTdSni

GAS FIXTURES.

M'HENRY OO., 6 and 8 East Fourth and 1(32 Main St.,

THE PLACE TO BUY EITHER AT

EVERYTHING IX THE LI.NE OF

Cas Fixtures, Lamps and Cliaiuleliers, Pipe, Piiiups, Tools, ivc

In GAS FIXTURES,

WE

ofler a choice selection of the best designs in Bronze ami 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, Kails, Dwellings,-Stores, &c

Oil Lamps and Chandeliers.

In this line, our assortment comprises all the late patterns and improvements in. Chandeliers, HANGING LAMFP.

,.

IjRACKLT LAN PP. HALL AND TABLE LIGHTS

Screw-ctitting Machines, .-Stocks nnd Dies, Drills, Reamers and Taps.

1X

LANThKKS, rto

Furnished wi.Vh the'Ifttest'improvements in Burners, Shades, X)il that will not explode and Chimneys that wY!l"n4t break.

Iii iron Pipegjjuid Fittings,

Our stock is frill a.nd (^Miplete, and our prices as low as the lowest. #•...•

In Pumps aiul Plumbers' Goods,

We have all that can be wanted in the way

("istern and Well Pump?, Lilt and Force Tumps, Beer Tumps, Garden Pumps, Hc.

Tnbh

Bath

bs, (losets,

"•rays,

W'aslistaiuis. \Vash Trai

:u.i

Bath Boilers, Sinks, &

0i Oas and Stcuni Fitters' Tools,

,. ..We have a full live, consisting of

Patent Pipe Cotters

7 Patent, and Ordinaiy Pipe Tongs Pipe Vises, Meter and Burner riyers,

Gas Fitters' Augurs, Chisels, &c.,&c,"

Tiie Dome (?as Stoves,

For summer cooking-. We have a full assort-ment-of these cheap and desirable substitutes, during warm weather, for the Kitchen Range and Stove. For family use, they combir COMFORT AND ECONOMY, being free l'ro^i the annoyance of

heat, sjiox.e

and

asiies.

No family should he without

:DOME

CAS

STOVE." *J®~ Remember the place, IdOm McHENRY & CO.

BELTJNG.

^O&lAli s,

Manuiacturers or

Oak Tanned Leather Belting Hese.

Lace Leather of Superior Quality, and dealnds ot ers in all kim

MANUFACTURERS'

.Fire Department Supplies,

NOS. 4 & DUTTON STREET,

Id 6m

I,owell, Massachusetts

OAEPETS.

Glen Eclio Carpet Mills,

GERMANTOWN, PIIIL'A.

MeCALLLM, CREASE & SLOAN,

I MANUFACTURERS, i_- A r-.

Warehouse, 500 Chestnnt Street,

w1our

E INVITE the attention of the trade to new and chc bratod make of goods.

our new and choice designs in this eele

LOCKS.

CORNELIUS, WALSH & SON,

Manufacturers and dealers in

CABINET & TRUNK LOCKS,

TRAVELING BAG FRAMES & TRUNK HARDWARE, a

Hamilton street, QtonerjRailroad Avenue,

Idly ,*C NEWARK, N. .1.

(jgEST

ISHED, 183C. '-3, •,

ESTAB

13. FITlg-CEMAIwB,

{Late D. Price & Fitz-Gerald,)

Manufacturers of

BLPR0YEB COPAL YAI1NISI1ES, iTl i-'l

ldyx

l-i'

NEW AH F\ N

BELTING.^ -,

'4~* -1 Manufacturers of

Ecst Oak Tanned Stretclied Leather Bells

rj: Also, Page's Patent Lacing,

Iii. 37 Front St., Harding's Block,

"Wofiesti