Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 1, Number 230, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 February 1871 — Page 2

^iim

HUDSON J) ROSE, Proprietors. L. M. ROSE.

R. N. HTTDHON.

Office: North Fifth St., near Mal%

The

DAILY UAZKTTE

is published every aiter-

noon, except Sunday, siud sold by the carriers at 20c per week. By mail S1 per year C5 for (j months 82.50 for 3 months.

Tne WEEKLY GAZETTE

is issued every Thurs,

S1* OO tea copies, one yewr, and one to getter up of Club, .$15.00 one copy, six months fcl.OO: enc copy, three months 50c. All stnscripUous must'be paid for ill advance, lne paper will, invariably, be discontinued at expiration ot time. r'or Advertising Rates see thud page. The UAZiCTTEestitblishnieiit is the best equipped in noint of Presses and Types in tJ"S*|CUon, and orders for any land ol i\ pe 1 iintm,, solicited, which prompt attention vill be given.

A'iclrcssuiJ letters, HUDSON & KOSL,

GAZETTE,

Tell Haute, Ind.

MONDAY, FEBRUAKY 27, 1871.

The Labor Kei'orm Party.

There seems to be a movement in many sections of the country, to organize a Labor Reform Party. There are many things connected with this movement which must commend itself to candid men every where. Although wo have but little idea that in a partisan sense, it will amount to much importance during the coming Presidential canvass, still the day is not far distant in this Republic, when the laboring men all over the country, will have to, in self-defense, organize and demand recognition from persons in power. The great contest which has alwavs occurred, in all Republics between capital and labor, is rapidly approaching in this country. Capital at present controls labor with an iron rod. Collossial fortunes are accumulated by certain individuals, owing to the combinations made against the labor of the coantry. The avenues of commerce are so controlled that they take the product of the sweat of the brow, and pour it into the lap of great capitalists, with a prodigolity unparalleled in the history of the world. Even the mass of the legislature of the country is framed to accomplish this very tsate of affairs. Of course this can not always last and when the labor of the country awakens to the true condition of its surroundings, it will be a power that will be felt everywhere.

One of the resolutions passed by the Labor Party of Hamilton county, Ohio, a few days ago, reads as follows

WHEKKAS, The industrial masses of the nation produce its wealth and power during peace, and in time of war defend it and the integrity of its Government, it their just and undeniable right to control its destinies.

That resolution is eminently true. The wealth of this country is its labor, and the strength and power of this country consists in the hard hands and stron muscles of those who follow the plow and fill our workshops. In times of peace this power is passive in times of war it rushes to the front and defends the country from every foe. Without this power this county would be nothing, and Avitli it, it must assert its rights and boldly maintain them.

Tin-: persuasive power of women moves the world. The House of Representatives veslerday agreed to make Miss Viunie Keam a present of live thousand additional dollars lor the statue of Mr. Lincoln, which some Italian marble-cutters recently chiseled out for her. This makes the cost of that wonderful work ol genius £lf,000. Miss Ream understands how to do it.— Cincinnati Enquirer.

TheCincinnati Enquirer ought to know more about statuary, and how statues are made, than to have made the above lling at tL'c fair Viunie. The statue of Mi\ Lincoln above referred to, is as much Miss Ream's as are (lie finest creations of Crawford. It is the rarest thing that a sculptor uses the chisel on the marble. That is purely the mechanical part, and is the work of "Italian marble-cutters" who arc employed for the purpose. By their mechanical skill and the instruments they use in copying, they are un» able to make an exact counterpart of the plaster model before them. The genius of the sculptor consists in first making the clay model of the man, and then executing the plaster cast. After this is done, it is handed over to the mechanical marble-cutter. Powers does this, though not in the same degree that most others do. Some of the finest works of Crawford were put into marble after his death. We have not seen Miss Reams' statue of Lincoln in marble, but we did see it in plaster, and it is a work that America need not be ashamed of, even though the artistic critic D. P. and the tasteful Greeley think differently. "Doon" having spent a few years in Europe, it is not to be supposed he can see any true art in American productions, and the editor of the Tribnnr,can't see "high art" in any thing.

IT IS clear that the statements lating to the German terms of peace have been chiefly guess-work. The amount of the pecuniary indemnity to be demanded seems to excite greater inter est than the disposal of Alsace and Lor raine. We have, accordingly, all sorts of intimations as to the probable or improbable sum. We may safely indorse the assertion of the "financial journal' referred to in a telegram, to the effect that it would be materially impossi ble for France to pay a sum equal to about sixteen hundred millions of dollars. This, it will be observed, corresponds to the sum given by the Prussian official Mbniteur, at Versailles, though even on that authority we can hardly accept it as conclusive. In fact the limit to which the credit of France can be stretched is tolerably well ascertained, and it does not greatly exceed five liun dred millions of dollars. This is a circumstance which France and Germany must equally recognize. ...

WE give in our issue to-day, a communication from a prominent Republican of this city, on the Legislative "break-up." The writer has had great advantages in knowing whereof he writes, having spent much of the winter at Indianapolis in an official capacity conuected with the Legislature. The columns of the GAk'^sET'TE are open to all Republicans, who .desire to express their views on this important question.

COL. HUDSON of the Gazette, says the breaking up of the Legislature was a piece, "of pure and inexcusable "radical partisanship."—Journal.

Col. Hudson said no such thing.

IT now appears that the Santo Domingo Commission is likely to remain on the island until about the middle of April. Meantime, it may be noted that Senator Wade, speaking without actual knowledge of the precise views of his colleagues, expresses nevertheless the opinion that the report of the Commission will be unanimous in favor of annexation. We hope the Commissioners will be able to give to the people soon a sufficient reason why this country should be annexed to ours. With the reasons lor it now before the popular mind, there is au almost universal senti mcnt against it. 7

RECENTLY, a committee of colored citizens, representatives of five thousand of their race, called on the Fenian exiles, and desired to know if they would be granted a position in the line of march at the public reception to be given tne exiles. They were told that they would be made welcome as citizens by the Irish societies, whose desire it was to remove the impression that the Irish people were not the friends of the negroes. It now remains to be seen if the Grand Marshal, General William M. Tweed, Jr., will assign the colored citizens a place in the parade.

Editors Terre Haute Gazette On Thursday morning last, thirty-four Republican members of the lower House of the State Legislature, resigned their seats in that august body, shook the dust of the Capitol from their feet, and, car-pet-bag in hand, sought retreat to their native jungles! They came and they went away, and in the halls of our Legislature, in truth let us say, "May we never see their like again."

The bold, courageous and independent stand which you have seen fit to take in your paper of Saturday, in denunciation of this disgraceful abandonment of their post of duty, on Thursday last, of the thirty-four Republican members of the House eventuating in the virtual disrup tion of the entire General Assembly, for all business or practical purposes, involving the total and criminal neglect of important and necessary legislation, must commend itself to every honest and reflecting mind, not wholly biased by partisan prejudices and party bigotry. This criminal abandonment of a sworn duty, voluntarily assumed by these "immortal thirty-four," becomes the more reprehensible and the more unjustifiable when we take into consideration the fact now becoming pretty generally understood that the caime assigned for their "Hegira" was a mere pretext and not the real cause, in other words, that the reason assigued for their resignation is a mere sham and a contemptible subterfuge. Now let us look a little into this matter. The cause assigned by the gentlemen in their address is the attempted passage by the Democrats in the Legislature of alleged an un just, unequal, obnoxious and unconstitu tional apportionment bill for Senatorial and Representive purposes, the effect of which bill would be to give the Democracy an ascendency aud an advantage in both branches of the Legislature for years to come. Now, Mr. Editor, it is a most significant fact that there never has been an apportionment bill passed or attempt ed to be passed in our legislative history as a State, which was not obnoxious to either one or the other party, and which was not just as freely denounced by the opposition, as this bill is, as unjust, unequal and damnable. It is nothing after all, but the "old, old »story of gerrymandering the State for party purposes. It will not be forgotten that the present apportionment bill, passed by a Republican Legislature four years ago, was just as bitterly denounced as a contemptible Gerrymander, by the Democracy then, as the amendment attempted now is denounced by the Republicans. The real fact is that the proposed amendment to the bill of 1867, affected really but about fifteen out of the one hundred and fifty constituencies, and could not have so changed the political representation as to give the Democracy any special ascendency or advantage.

But, for the sake of argument, let us grant that this apportionment bill was unjust, unequal, infamous and uuconsti tutioual. While it would, doubtless have passed the House on Thursday had not the quorum been broken, we assert that there was no reasonable probability of its passing. Ihc Senate, ahd this fact was wellknown to the Republicans. The Constitution of this State provides, (Section 25, of Art. 4.) "A majority of all the members elected to each House shall be necessary to pass any bill or joint resolution." The bill consequently could not have passed the Senate, and become a law with less than twenty-six votes, and Judge Hughes being absent at Wash ington City, and Senator Cave having previously been granted a leave of absence on account of sickness, there were but twenty-four (24) Democrats left, including Mr. Elliott, the so called Renegade Republican Senator from Fayette and Union, who voted occasionally with one party aud occasionally with the other. Without the vote of Mr. Elliott the bill could have received only 23 votes. In the arson case, the Democracy in the Senate polled, upon the vote of the resolution of expulsion, 24 votes, which was their full strength. But even if the bill, however obnoxious, could have finally passed the Senate, which we assert and affirm it could not have done, which fact was fully known to the Republicans, it could have not been reasonably expected to have passed, even under the suspension of the Constitutional rules requiring all bills to be read on three different days before Saturday the 25th inst. The Governor then, in the event of its passage, could have retained the bill in his possession for three "days before returning it back to the General Assembly with his veto, which would have extended the time until Tuesday or Wednesday, thus giving five or six days additional time of legislation in which all the bills of pressing importance might have been acted upon and passed, such as the appropriation bill, the bill taxing National Banks for municipal pnrposes, and other important measures only awaiting final action. Well, the apportionment bill not being the real, but only the ostensible cause of the disruption, what was the real cause of it The Indianapolis Mirror (Republican), of Saturday, says:

The ostensible was not the real cause of the Republicans resigning, since it was by no means certain that the body could pass any bill over the Governor's veto. The intrepid thirty-four threw themselves into the breach to prevent an adjournment, by which Senator Morton would have been kept out of the Cabinet through fear of a Democratic successor in Congress. And we undertake to say that Morton's ambition ought not to interfere with necessary State legislation.

The Mirror lets the eat out of the bag! It was hinted about the streets of Indianapolis during the early part of the week that the Democrats had agreed upon a programme, by which they proposed, by concurrent vote of both Houses, to adjourn on Saturday, the 25th instant, to reassemble some time in September or October, when if Governor Morton had in the meantime been inducted into Grant's Cabinet, a Democrat could be elected to succeed him.

lISIIi^SliWM^®# _*

But, says the Mirror, "Governor Morton's ambition ought not to interfere with necessary State Legislation." Now you don't say so, surely, do you? For ourselves we insist upon Governor Morton going into the Cabinet at once. The nation demands it. With Governor Morton in the portfolio of the State Di partment, there will be at least one man in the Cabinet who has never been suspected of making the President a valuable present, and one who is not related either by afflifity or consanguinity to either the Grant or Dent families.

The charge made by the Democracy that the resignation of a number of the immortal "thirty-four," was prompted by the personal solicitation of Governor Baker, we can never believe, and we would like to see the evidence in support of this charge, although it is stated that several of them assert that they would not have "done it,had not the Governor told them he wished it. It i3 true that the Governor receives five thousand dollars a year in lieu of house rent, under the provision of the bill of 1805, and that he pays $1,200.00 per year actually for the rent of Col. Sturm's rather indifferent mansion on North Tennessee street, leaving a nice margin of $3,800 per pear to help to swell the niggardly salary of $3,000 a year allowed the chief magistrate of Indiana We belong, however, to the class of persons that believe that Governor Baker's soubriquet of Old Honesty," has been well earned and is as richly deserved by him, as many an honor bestowed, with less reason, upon no small number of modern politicians. We believe further that the Democratic majority in the Legislature were too magnanimous to have passed the bill reducing the Governor's allowance for house rent to two thousand dollars a year, and that Governor Baker knew that fact.

DR ALBURGER'S

CELEBRATED E A N

HERB STOMACH BITTERS

The Great Blood PuriGer ami

A

-Dyspeptic Tonic!

riHIESE celebrated an®! well-known Bitters are _L composed of roots and herbs, of most innocent yet specific virtues, and are particularly recommended for restoring weak constitutions and increasing tlie appetite. Tiiey area certain cure for Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Jaundice, Chrome or Nervous Debility, Chronic Diarrhoea, Diseases of the kidneys, Costiveuess, Pain in the Head, Vertigo, Hermorrlioids, i^emale Weakness, Loss of Appetite, Intermittent and Remittent Fevers, Flatulence

Constipation, In wart Piles, Fullness of Blood in the

Head,

Acidity of the

Stoinanh, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust, of P'ood, Fullness or Weight in the Stomach,Sour Erucattions, Sinking or Fluttering at the Pit of the Stomach, Hurried or Difficult Breathing. Fluttering of the Heart Dullness of the Vision, Dots or Webs Before the

Sight, Dull Pain in the Head, Yellowness of the Skin, Pain the Side, Back, Chest, &c., &c., Sudden

Flushes of Heat, Burning in the Flesh, Constant Imagining of Evil and

Great Depression of Spirits.

All of which are indications of Liver Com plaint, Dyspepsia, or(diseasesof the digestive organs, combined with au impure blood. These bitters are not a rum drink, as most bitters are. butare put before the public for their medicinal proproperties, and cannot be equalled by any other preparation.

Prepared only at

Dr. Alburgcr's laboratory,

Philadelphia, proprietor of the celebrated Worm Sirup, Infant Carminative and Pulmonic Sirup

wa^Principal office, northeast corner of THIRD and BROWN Streets,Philadelphia.

For sale by Johnson, Holloway & Cowden, 602 Arch Street, Philadelphia, and by Druggists and Dealers in medicines, 211dly

$10,000 Reward.

1)B/ INGRAHAM'S

MACEDONIAN OIL!

For Internal and External Use.

Read What the People Say. €urcl

of Calarrli and Deafness of 10 Years Duration.

NEW YORK CITY, March 8,1S70.

DE. INORAHAM, WOOSTER, OHIO—Dear Sir The six bottles you sent me by express came safely to me, and I am most happy to state that the the Oil has cured me ot Catarrh and Deafness. No man can realize the difference until he has ofice passed through ten years years of deprivation of sound and sense, as I did. I talk Macedonian Oil wherever 1 go.

Yours, ever in remembrance, DAVID WHITE.

Kidney Complaints and Old Sores Cured of Years Standing.

PHILADELPHIA, PENN., June23,1870.

DR. ISGRAHAM, WOOSTER, OHIO—Gents Macedonian Oil has cured me of Inllanvation of the Bladder and Kidney diseases (and old sores) that I had spent a mint of money in trying to get cured. Sirs, it has no equal for the cures of the above diseases. Herald it to the world.

Ohio Street,

M.

MEDICAL^

Yours, respectfully. JOHN J. NIXON, D. D,

RHEUMATISM.

A Lacly Seventy-five Years Rheumatism.

Old Cured of

85 BEAVER AVE., ALLEGHENY CITY, Oct. 12,18C9. DR. INORAHAM Co.—Gents: I suffered 35 years with Rheumatism in my hip joints. I was tortured with pain until my hip was deformed. I used every thing thnt I heard of without obtaining any relief, until about four weeks ago I commenced using your Macedonian Oil. I am now cured, and can walk to market, a thing that I have not been able to do for twenty years. I am gratefully yours,

ELIZABETH WILLIAMS.

The Macedonian Oil cures all diseases of the blond or sUin, Tetters, Crofula, Piles, or any case of Palsy.

Price 50 cents and 'SI per bottle. Full Directions in German aud English. Sold by Druggists.

DR. 1NGRAHAM & CO., Manufacturers, 2lldly Wooster, O.

LEATHER.

JOM II. O'BOTLE,

DEALER IN,

LEATHER, HIDES, ^OIL

A

AND FINDINGS, r** 178 MAIN STREET,

wo

-,l

Terre If ante, Indiana.

8®*Cash paid or Hides,Furs, Pelts aud Rough Leather. 124dl4

WEENCHES.

A." (i. COES & CO.,

(Successors to L. fc A. G. Coes,)

W O E S E A S S Manufacturers of the Genuine COES SCREW WREHCllES

With A. G. Coes' Patent Lock Fendei. JSUabUshedin 839

BLANK BOOKS.

THE

GAZETTE BINDERY turns out the best Blank Book work in Terre Haute' We have one of the most skillful Balers In the State, and guarantee satisfaction on complicated Totk.O'd Hooks rabowulaa mat!

•i

FAMILY SBOCER.

JAMES O'MARA,

SUCCESSOR TO

J. E. YOORHEES,

between Fourth and Fifth,

V\riLL keep on hand a full supply of Food foi man and Beast. A few articles enumerated

Flour, Feed, Fruit, Poultry,

And a General Assortment ot *." ".

FAMILY GROCERIES AND PROVISION

Will keep constantly on hand a fresli supply ol Vegetables of all kinds. Also,

FRESII MEAT MARKET,

and keep all kinds of fresh meat. Leave your orders and they will be filled and delivered promptly to all parts of the city. Will also buj all kinds of

COUNTRY PBOBCCE.

Farmers will do well to call before selling. 62d«tw6m AS. O'MARA

PAINTIHO

«M. S. JI KLTOX,

PAINTER,

Cor. 6th, La Fayette and Locust sts., Terre Haute, Ind.

DOES

GRAINING, PAPER HANGING, CALCIMINING,

and everything usually done

in the line. 20dwfly

THE OLD KE1LIABLE

BARB & l'EAKLE

House and Sign Painters,

CORY'S NEW BUILDING,

Fifth street, between Main and Ohio sts.

"^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 & MAGW1KE, HOUSE & SIGN PAINTERS, OHIO STREET,

ld6m Between 4th & 5th street

BOBACK'S BITTEES.

Greenbacks are Good,

BUT

Roback's are Better!

ROBACK'S ROBACIi'S ROBACK'S

STOM.iCK STOMACH STOMACH

BITTERN S S CURES S S... DYSPEPSIA... S S..SICK HEADACH..R S

INDIGESTION SCROFULA

s.

s..

K..

K....

K.

O

OLD SOKES O

Sold everywhere and used by everybody,

ERUPTIONS O O REMOVES BILE O

O

O...RESTORES SHATTERED....B

C.... O AND C..BROKEN DOWN..B

BJ

C..CONSTITUTIONS..B

.B

AAAAAAAA

The Blood Pills

Are the most active and thorough Pills that have ever been introduced. They act so di rectly upon the Liver, exciting that organ to such an extent as that the system does not relapse into its former condition, which is too apt to be the case with simply a purgative pill. They are really a

Blood and Liver Pill,

And in conjunction With the

BLOOD PURIFIER,

Will cure all the atorementioned diseases, and Z-..... themselves will relieve and cure

Headache, Costiveness, Colic, Cholera Morbus, Indigestion, Fain in the Bowels, Dizziness, etc., etc.

DR. ROBACK'S

Stomach Bitters

Should be used by convalescents to strengthen the prostration which always follows acute disease.

Try these medicines, and you will never regret it. Ask your neighbors who have used them, and they will say thev are GOOi MEI -ICINES, and you should trv" them before going for a Physician.

IT. S. PROP. ME©. CO.,

Sole Proprietor,

Nos. 56 & 58 East Third Street,

CINCINNATI, OHIO, r.v

FOR SALE BY

Druggists Everywhere.!

211dly

BOOTS AND SHOES.

A.«. BAL€H

Ladies'& Gents' Fashionable BOOTS & IHO£§,

J^JADE to order, No. 146 Main street, between

5th & 6th up stairs. 2d6m Terre Haute, Ind

CLOTHING.

«T. ERLANGER,

Wholesale and Retail Dealer in

MENS', YOUTHS' AND BOYS' CLOTHING,1 And Gents' Furnishing Goods,

NO. 93 MAIN STREET,

ld6m•••" Terre Haute, Ind

BELTING.

CRAFTON & KNIGHT,

Manufacturers of

Best Oak Tanned Stretched Leather Belts. Also, Page18 Patent Lacing,

ront St., Harding's Block

r-

Worcester. Mass

.w

•Ih.: W-x

"k. Jfi,

WITH A L.ITIKTG PROFIT,

so we can stand it, if you can.

O

COSTIYENESS

ROBACK'S STOMACH BITTERS.

Good yard wide Carpets at

Dayton and Maysville Carpet Warp,

Good double Shawls, S3 50.

-'f &

FOSTER BROTHERS.

Mi

ANOTHER TURN OF THE SCREW!

Greater and Greater Grows the Pressure—Finer and Finer we are Grinding

THE BIG PROFIT SYSTEM!

Fainter and Fainter are the Attempts Made to Sustain it.

A WORD TO OUJS COMPETITORS.

We understand that certain merchants in this city, and a very large number of

country merchants, are complaining bitterly at what they term our monopoly of

the Dry Goods trade. Gentlemen, we came to Terre Haute to break up Monopo­

lies—not to form them Our road to success is not a royal road. There is no secret

about it. Any one who wishes to do so, may walk in it.

mark down your old stock about one-Iialf—GET RID OF IT—buy new goods as cheaply as we do,

think they are so simple-minded as not to know, tor instance, that an Atlantic Mills

Musliu is the s^j^e in your store as in ours. You are selling it at TlvX cents per

yard, and we are selling it at SIX cents, but this neither makes yours nor ours any

better or worse. It is the same muslin still. That is all, gentlemen now drive

ahead exactly as you please. Your abuse only advertises us and injures yourselves,

More iVew Goods! Lower Prices Still!

5,000 yards Atlantic Mills Muslin,....,.,.. Gc

Country stores ciiarge 10c, and Terre Haut stores 9c for same goods.

4,000 yards of yard-wide EXTRA HEAVY Unbleached Mnslin,down to 10c

This is one of the very best Muslins made, other stores charge 15c and 16c.

Very large lot of EEST AMERICAN BE LAINFS down to lS^c

Country stores charge for the same goods 25e, Terre Haute stores 22c.

Big Lot of the best SPRAGUE PRINTS down to ................10c

f•••'•• All other stores cliargc 12%c: for them.

Good heavy ALL LINEN TOWELS down to .! *...6e

Country stores actually charge 15c for the same goods.

Henceforth We Control the Corset Trade

OF TERRE IIAUTE

A superb Glove-fitting FUENCH WOVEN CORSET, all sizes, down to 50 cent?.

Country stores charge $1.50 for same goods, and Terre ITaute fancy stores charge 75c and SI.

The celebrated HIP GORE CORSET, extra quality, reduced to 55 cents.

This corset is being sold in fancy goods stores at 75c to SI

We liave recently been enlarging onr Xotiou Department, and in the Future ire propose to malic it as difficult for liigli-priced notion stores to overcharge tlie people as we liave already made it for high-priced dry goods stores.

Best quality of English Brussels Carpet,*.". :.... SI 25

Two Bushel Grain Bags, 28c. Blankets, SI 40 per pair

All numbers Coats'Cotton, 5c. Extra quality of Waterproof, 85c

jt

.it

s-

Elegant Dress Goods, 25c worth 40c.French Merinos, 50c. Thesegoods areallWool

FURS closing out at give away prices rather than carry them over. Balmoral Skirts 75c

Stamped Skirts, 9Cc. Plaid Shirting Flannels, COc, and piles of other goods equalty cheap.

l¥e arc now engaged in baying an entirely new stock of goods for

tlie opening of onr MAMMOTH ESTABLISHMENT at Evansville, and a portion oi thesegoods, which we are buying at fabulonsly low prices, are being received here, which is enabling ns to ofTer a great many new goods at fearfully low ratee.

hv $r*t$

O S E It O S

KBEATjJfEWjTOBK CITY STORE,

MIDDLE OF THE OPERA HOUSE BLOCK,

s|if

......

Si

II®

Yon have

and in selling them,

©nSy

and the Sabbath-like stillness of your stores

will soon be broken up by the same eager throng of customers that so constantly

meet at our establishment. Far better do this, than seek to bolster up a business

"growing smaller by degrees and beautifully less," by slander and abuse of us—for

in this your customers are finding you out. You make a great mistake when you

to

BE CONTENT

28c

29c

Square Shawls,... .....SI 75

•fjg'&nv ,h

:s 'r4 i"b

r'ty

ITBRRE HAUTE, IND,

PRINTING AND BOCK-BINDING.

GAZETTE

STEA32

Job Printing Office,

NORTH FIFTH ST., NEAI1 MAJJs,

TETIKK HAUTE, IN1.

5

The GAZETTE ESTABLISHMKKT lias Ken thoroughly refitted, and .supplied avitli lit material, and is in belter trim than ever befoie. for the

PROMPT, ACCURATE

and

ARTISTIC

execution of every description of Printing. \V«have

FIVE

STEAJMT

1'RESSIIS

And our selection of Types embraces fill the and fashionable Job Faces, to an extent ot

OVER 300

1

DIFFERENT

STYLES,

To which ive are constantly adding. In ever respect, our Establishment is well-fitted and ap pointed, and our rule is to permit no Job to leave the office unless it will compnre favorably with first class Printing from ANY other ollic in the State.

Reference is made to any Job bearing our Imprint.

II E

Gazette Bindery,

Has also been enlarged and refitted, enabling UR to furnish

BLANK BOOKS

of every description of as good workmanship as the largest city establishments. Orders solicited. 8®* OLD BOOKS REBOUND in a superior manner.

3AS FIXTURES.

M'lIENRY & CO,,

6 and 8 East Fourth and 162 Main St.,

CI1N CITS IS' ATI.

THE PLACE 10 BUY

KITH Kit AT

WHOLESALE RETAIL,

EVERYTHING IK/TIIE LIXE OF

Gas Fixtures, Lamps aud Chandeliers, Pipe, Pumps, Tools.

&:v

In GAS FIXTURES,

II/'E offer a choice selection of the Dest «esigns in Bronze and Gill that have been produced this season in the principal manufactories of the East. In our stock Aviil be found all that is new or desirable in Gas Fixtures, for lighting

Churches, Halls, Dwellings, Stores, &c

Oil Lamps and Chandeliers.

In this line, onr assortment comprises all the late patterns and improvements in Chauueliers, HANGING LAMPS,

r*

BRACKET LA NFS, HALL AND TABLE LIGHTS LAKTliRNS, «Vc

Furnished wiili the latest, improvements in Burners, Shades, &c.: Oil that will not explode and Chimneys that will not break.r ..?! •.

Ill Iron Pipes and Fittings,

Our stock is full and complete, and our prices as low as the lowest.

In Pumps and Plumbers' Goods,

We have all that can be wanted in the way istern and Well Pumps, Lift and Force Pumps,

Beer Pumps, Garden Pumps, Ac. Bath Tubs, Closets, Waslistands, wash Trays,

Bath Boilers, Sinks, &

01 Gas and Steam Fitters' Tools,

We have a full lire, consisting of 'r

Screw-cutting Machines, Slocks and Dies, Drills, Reamers and Taps.

Patent Pipe Cutters, Patent and Ordinary Pipe Tongs, Pipe Vises,

Meter and Burner Plyers. Gas Fitters' Augurs, Chisels, &c., &c,

The Dome Gas Stoves,

For summer cooking. We liave a full assortment 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 fr..t the annoyance of JIKAT, SMOKE and ASHES.

No family should be without...MDOME OAS STOVE." Remember the place, id6M MCHENRY & co.

BELTING.

JOSIAIi OATES & soars.

an la lu rers or

Oak Tanned Leather Belting Hose.

Lace Leather of Superior Quality, and dealers in all kinds ol

MANUFA CTUREES'

Fire Department Supplies,

NOS. 4_& 6 BUTTON STREET,

ldfim Lowell, Massachusetts

CAEPETS^

'Glen Echo Carpet JUIIIS,

GERMANTOWN. PHIL'A.

McCALLUM, GREASE & SLOAN,

MANUFACTURERS,

iVareliouse, 509 Chestnut Street,

i-f-m

PHILADELPHIA. rE INVITE the attention of the trade top: W our uew and clioice.designs in this cele brated make of goods.

VARNISHES.

ESTABLISHED, 1836.

JOim D. F1TZ-GERALD,

Manufacturers of

IMPROVED COPAL TARNISHES,

ldyi NEWARK N

CAEJDS.

/^lARDSof every description for Business, Visit Vj

ing, Wedding or Funeral purposes, in outnumber from 100 to 100,000, expeditiously, neatly and cheaply printed at the GAZETTE STEAM fOB OFFICE, Filth street. We keep the largest^ assortment of card stock In the citv- bought rect from Eastern Mills -. -4/

....

{Late D. Price & Mtz-Oerald,)