Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 1, Number 244, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 March 1871 — Page 3

§hc §miin$ mzme

ADVERTISING RATES.

1 lny 2 lays 8 .lays 1 A'eek 2 A-eeks 3 week." 1 mo. 2 mos. 3 mos. (J mos. 1 ve.ar

1 r.O! 2 (Kti 2 3 OOL 3 00! 4 »*.»• 00 3 7o 4 50, 5 50j UUj 10 00 5 OOi 0 OOj 7 0OJ 8 00 15 00 7 50! 9 IKljlO 60l 12 001 20 00 10 00 12 OO114 00' 00l 30 00

1 1 5(J, 2 oUj 3 00 2 00! 3 001 4 00 3 00: 4 50! 0O 4 0OI 0 00! 8 00 5 00: 9 00112 OOi 15 00115 flOi 17 50j 20 00/ '10 00 ti 0(J! 10 00:12 50.I15 OO'lS 00(21 00! 25 UU| oO 00 8 (HI 14 (loll) OOj-M fH)'28 00,32 00! 40 OOj 7i 00 10 00-48 00!A» OOI.S'2 OO'.'JS 00 14 OOi oO 00100 00 15 00:25 ooilo OOJIIO

00-JO

00i70 00) 80 00|l30 00

20 00150 00 '15 00 80 00.-(0 00,100 00)200 00

aeg- Yearly advertisers will be allowed monthly changes of matter, free of charge. »ar The rates of advertising in the WEEKLY GAZETTE will be half the rates charged in the DAILY.

Advertisements in both the DAILY and WEEKLY, will be charged fall Daily rates and one-half the Weekly rates.

Legal advertisements, one dollar per square fot each insertion in WEEKLY. ri®" Local notices, 10 cents per line. No item, however short, inserted in local column for less than 50cents.

Marriage and Funeral notices, 51.00. Society meetings and Religious notices, 2o cents each insertion. Invariably in advance. «£«-«. M.PEITENGULL, & Co., 37 Park Row. New York, are our sole agents in that city, and are authorized to contract for advertising at our lowest rates.

What Sleep Will Cura.

The cry for rest has always been louder than the cry for food. Not that it is more important but it is often harder to get. The best rest comes from sound sleep. Of the two men or women, otherwise equal, the one who sleeps the best will be the most moral, healthy and afficient.

Sleep will do much to cure irritability of temper, peevishness, uncleanness. It will cure insanity. Tt will restore to vigor an over-worked brain. It will build up and make strong a weary body. It will do much to cure dyspepsia, particularly that variety known as nervous dyspepsia, it will relieve the languor and prostration felt by consumptives. It will curc hypochondria. It will cure the blues. It will cure the headache. It will cure the heartache. It will cure neuralgia. It will cure sorrow. Indeed, we might make a long list of nervous maladies that sleep will cure.

The cure of sleeplessness, however, is not so easy, particularly in those who carry grave responsibilities. The habit of sleeping well is one, which, if broken up for any length of time, is not easily regained. Often a very severe illness, treated by powerful drugs, so deranges the nervous system that sleep is never sweet after it. Or, perhaps, long continued watchfulness produces the same effect or hard study, too little exercise of the muscular system, of tea and whisky drinking and tobacco using. To break up the habit are required

A clean, good bed. A sufficient exercise to produce weariness and pleasant occupation.

Good air, and not too warm a room. Freedom from too much care. A clean stomach. Avoidance of stimulants and narcotics. For those who are overworked, haggard, nervous, who pass sleepless nights, we commend the adoption of such habits as shall secure sleep, otherwise life will be short, and what there is of it sadly imperfect.—Ilcrald. of Health.

The Fate of the Apostles.

All the Apostles were insulted by the enemies of their Maker. They were called to seal their doctrines with their blood, and nobly did tliey bear the trial. Schmacher says:

St. Matthew suffered martyrdom by being slain with a sword, at a distant city of Ethiopia.

St. Mark expired at Alexandria, after having been cruelly dragged through the streets of that city.

St. Luke was hanged upon an olive tree in the classic land of Greece. St. John was put into a caldron of boiling oil, but escaped death in a miraculous manner, and was afterward branded at Patmos.

St. Peter was crucified at Home, with head downward. St. James the Greater was beheaded at Jerusalem.

St. James the Less was thrown from a lofty pinnacle of the temple, and then beaten to death with a fuller's club.

St. Bartholomew was flayed alive. St. Andrew was bound to a cross, whence lie preached to his persecutors until liedied.

St. Thomas was run through the body by a lance at (-orotnandel, in the East Indies.

St. Jude was shot to deatli with arrows. St. Matthias was first stoned and then beheaded.

St. Barnabas, of the Gentiles, was stoned to death by the Jews at S.alonica. St. Paul, after* various tortures and persecutions, was at length beheaded at Rome by the Emperor Nero.

Such was the fate of the Apostles ac-. cording to traditional statements.

Singular Iudiosycrasy of a Ssotchman. There was lately buried atFrazerbur^h, Scotland, a man of over sixty, who, during the last twenty or thirty years of his life, displayed a proclivity for witnessing coffin building and funerals that almost amounted to a mania. Whatever engaged his energies at the moment, he was never known to miss the chance of visiting the shop of an undertaker when he knew a coftiu was on hand and it was 110 unusual thing for him, when not pressed with work, to sit for hours together watching the progress of the article. The funerals of individuals of note had especial charms for him and whenever in the district, for miles around, he learned that one was to take ptace, he was certain to be present at the churchyard to see the coffin lowered into the grave. To such an extent had his admiration for "covered" coffins worked upon his fancy, that being a poor man, he deprived himself many a day of the ordinary necessaries of life to lay away a shilling to procure a "covered" coffin for himself, and 011

his death-bed he directed atten­

tion to a chest, in which he said he had hidden "five gold sovereigns" to pay for "a grand burial." And such he had, for the numbers attending it were so numerous that it would have been, as one in the procession remarked, "as marrow to Joseph's bones had he been looking up to behold it."

Mail's Rights.

To be a poor fellow to fight to ronsh it to work at the plow, the loom, the sledge hammer, the bellows, and the anvil cut down trees to build houses to dig canals, construct railroads, make steam vessels,

cast

cannons, create cities,

climb to the top of the mast when the sea rolls aud the wind blows to furl a sail that will save the lives of forty female passengers to chuck coal into the furnace, to feed the fire that heats the water, that makes the steam, that urges the ship, that bears the husband that loves the wife to the house that love built in the city that men ouilt to stand in the pitiless storm at night, and guard the slumbers of the town—or in the front of battle, brave the assault tnat would overwhelm the ballot and bonnet, and life and liberty—or when the fierce flames lick the chamber, molint through its terrors to save a woman, who had fainted with a child clinging to her bosom. And not to get the nicest parts of a turkey or chicken, or anything else, if a woman is by and wants them!

AN earley settler of Indiana planted two trees in front of his cabin saying to his wife that they should be the trees of their lives. In 1834 the one named after 'the man fell, and he survived it but kittle. Recently the woman's tree died, and she lived but a day or two longer.

It is rare that such a splendid opening is afforded to a young man of genius as the following advertisement in a London paoer discloses: "Wanted, a young man accustomed to literary work for publishers well practised in analysis and logical digest, as in composition to assist in preparing for the press a series of volumes illustrative of theoscopic science, or the entire system of nature, moral, mental and material. Salary, to commence, 21s. per week. Time, 6J- hours daily."

Dr. Hallywood, who was sent to the State prison Irom Detroit, Mich., in 18(34, for passing counterfeit money, lias been pardoned by President Grant.'

MEDICAL.

PISO'S CUBE FUR

CONSUMPTION WILLneglected

cure pulmonaay complaints, difficult breathing, throat diseases and COUGHS which it terminate in serious and too often fatal diseases cf the lungs.

Try it. If it fails to satisfy you of its efficacy theagent will refund your money.

A. FAIR OFFER. The Proprietors of Piso'i?

CURE FOR CONSUMPTION

Agree to repay the price to all who try the remedy and receive from it no benefit. Thus if itdoes no good it COSTS NOTHING, and if it cures one is satisfied.

PISO'SCURE is very pleasant to the taste, and does not produce nausea. It is intended to soothe and not irritate. I ton res a Cough much quicker than any other medicine, and yet does notdryitup.

If you have "only a Cough," do not let it become something worse, but cure it immedi ateiy.

Piso'sCure for Consumption

being a certain remedy for the worst of human ailments, must of necessity be the best remedy for Cough and diseases of the throat which if neglected too olten terminate fatally.

T4- -Sc, Unn^ That 50,000 persons die anil IS 1 UilvL nually in the United States of Consumption. T-f ic U,«ci That 25,000 persons die anil IS cl JCtlL/t nually from heridatory Consumption.

It is a Fact

It is a Fact 1

That 25,000 persons die an nually from Cough ending in Consumption.

Tf io rt "Poof That a slight cough often XL lo tl dtl terminates in Consumption.

It is a Fact It iS a F'ICt

That Consumption can be cured.

That-recent-alKl

protracted

coughs can be cured. That Piso's Cure has currd and will cure these diseases.

T+ That Piso's Cure is war-

it

a aci

IS

ranted.

Sold by Druggists everywhere. E. T. HAZELTINE, Proprietor, Warren, Pennsylvania.

New Combination!!

STerve Power Without Phosphorus. A Koal Sedative without Opium or Reaction. Innocent even in the

Mouth of Infanta!

20 Drops is the Largest Dose.

Cures Sick Headaclie in 20 Minutes on Rational Principles.

It is a sure Cure for

TIE UMA TIS M, N E URAL GI A, DEAFNESS, BURNS, SPRAINS,

CORNS, TETTER, SALT RIIEUM. GATHERED BREASTS, &G.

J. D. PARK, or Cincinnati, says: "I have cured inanv c.i-*- of re throat with the *Electric Oil' andjilways Yeep it in my house."

[From the largest. Drug House in Boston.] We have sold a large quantity of Dr, Smith's "Electric Oil," aiul it is spoken of only with unqualified praise.

Gooil Report from Every Bottle.

WfCRIv^ & I'O'.tI'Klt, Wholesale Druggists, 151 Washington .Street, Roston.

It cures Sick TIeadachv in twenty minutes, Deafness, Silt Rheum, Rheumatism, Erysipelas, Piles, Croup, Neuralgia, Cankers, Felons, Burns, Cuts, Ac. Twenty drops the largest dose. No Alcohol, Capsicum, Camphor, or Wafer in it.

[From I he Largest Drug House in Boston.] We have sold a large quantity of Dr. Smith's "Electric Oil," which is spoken of with unqualified praise, (iuml reports from evervbottle.

1

WEEKS & POTT Eli.

Wholesaler) -u joists, 151 Washington st. Boston Thousands of dollats are lost in time by farmers and business men, when a few diines_ expended for the proper remedy at the right time, would have saved all pain ami trouble. Pain is but a friendly admonition, and nature warns us in time, Some men are skeptical and selfish, others hopeful and generous none have the right to disregard the suffering child or the poor or ignorant. The rich CAN travel a thousand miles and pay 91,000 fees, cure or no cure.

BUT WHAT OF THE POOR?

When on earth, Christ invariably commended every good work the act of the Good Samaritan, and all useful and efficient labor for man's amelioration, and He devoted His

EVERY WAKING HOUR

to unselfish efforts—no time for malignant fanlt-tinding and petty jealousy. In this spirit should every one welcome a real benefaction, like DR.GAIATTIA B. SMITH'S

"ELECTRIC OIL,"

of Philadelphia, a remedial so unlike any other known, as to attract the instant attention of medical men, and all sufferers.

The great cures daily made are

XOT MIRACULOUS,

yet seem likeenchantmsnl. Considerable sums have been offered for tne preparation—and some dealers sell as high as 100 to 200 bottles in a sinle day.

THIS ELECTRIC OIL,

is just what it PURPORTS TO BE, li'o deceptionno misnomer—may be tried on the spot.

DR. SMITH

frequenlly cures men and women, Doctors and Druggists, Ministers and Lawyers of

DEATHLY SICK HEADACHE,

within 20 minutes, in the Drug Stores, when color soon appears on the pallid cheek, the eye begins to brighten up, and cheerfulness takes the place of abject misery.

It is true that Dr, Smith advertises very largely yet, even that hy no means alone accounts toi such rapid and continuous demand. The oil cures, which the people find out.

STRONG «& ARMSTRONG,

of Cleveland sold 193 bottles in one day. WEB*S & POTTER, the eminent Druggists of Boston, seld 430 in one day. GEORGE WEIMKB,of Akron, Ohio, 5 dozen and others in proportion.

[Fron»the largest Drug House west of St. Louis.] ST. JOSEPH, MARCH 12. DR. SMrrir—Send us 30 dozen small and 20 dozeii large size of your "Electric Oil," It. has made a number of cures here and gives good satisfaction.

5

HARDY & CO.

It cures and that Is why it sells, PROVIDENCE, May 10. DR.SMITH—DearSir: We are entirely out of Dollar size ot your "Electric Oil." Not a single bottle in the store. Send Ave gross large-and ten eross small. We are having large sales.

Yours, truiy,

16wv

J. BALCH A SON.

WRENCHES.

A- Cx. COES & CO.,

(Successors to L. & A. G. does,)

W O E S E

MASS.,

& Manufacturers of the Genoine

COES SCREW WRENCHES

With A. G. Goes'Patent Lock Fender.

Etlablithcdin

.838 A

MEDICAL.

A Cataplasm of Rhubarb.

LAID

upon the pit of the stomach of a child, will cause the bowels to be emptied, and alloeskept in contact with a raw surface will produce same effect as if tli« medicine had been taken into the stomach. So said the great Dr. Clutterback. Very many persons know the operation of croton oil when placed upon the tongue, to say the least, it is speedy. Purga tives in some sha,e, are indispensable in the practice of medicine. Many diseases are incurable without them and all of the simple disorders of the system are benefitted by their use. The great desideratum in their administration has been to get one which has either laxative or purgative, as was needed—always mild but always efficient—and the use of which did not make it necessary to continue its use. This has at last been done. EDWARD WILDEK'SFAM-IJ-Y PILI^S fulfill all the requirements of the case. They area laxative, yet sure purgative, yet mild. In small doses, they meet the first want in large doses, they fulfill the latter but in whatever quantity given, they create no necessity for they create no morbid state of the alimentary canal tube, but leave it cleansed and urge it to renewed health. They are, in brief, a blessing to the individual who suffers from constipation and needs a laxative, and are indispensable to him who is parched with fever and requires a purgative. Use them, all you who value health.

Helminthology.

A distinguished physiologist has declared that it seems to be a principle of nature that every situation capable of supporting organic bodies should be peopled with them. The huge whale is often driven tomadessbyan almost invisible member of the tribe of vermes. The history of Helminthology abounds in illustrations of the influence of worms in the production of disease and in the exasperation of their symptoms. The frequency of worms in the bodies of men, their obviousness to the senses., together with their common connection with enfeebled and morbid states ot the animal economy, all tend to render them an object of interest from the remotest periods. The very ablest minds have been devoted to the study of these entoza with the view of discovering some substance which was capable of speedily, safely and permanently expelling them from the human sytem. EDWARD WILDER'S MOTHER'S WORM SYRUP is a true vermicide, a geunine worm destroyer, a bona fide vermifuge. Its taste is delightful, its effects are quick, its results unfailing. It is free from danger. No intestinal worm can live in itspresense. Mothers! destroy the worms which infest your little ones, with this delightful syrup.,

Dr. Laennec.

This renowned Frenchman did more perhaps to clear up the mysteries which before his time had invested the nature of chest diseases than any other physician who ever lived. Yet with all his skill in detecting the nature and form ol the malady before him, he was sadly deficient in his knowledge of remedies. He drew vivid pictures of coughs, colds, pleurisy, consumption, croup, bronchitis, catarrhs and all the affections of the air passages still he left but few words concerning their treatment. The youngest physician to-day knows better how to manage any one of these chest troubles he knows the value of the wild cherry he is acquainted with its supreme virtues he is aware of the many potent agents which enter into the combination of Edward Wilders Compound Extract of Wild Cherry, and knows that with the use of this truly great medicine he is fully master ol the situation. He has no fear in the presence of croup, no misgivings at the advance of bronchitis he grapples wtth consumption, and subdues every cough, cold, orcatarrh. Hence every family should always have this invaluable medicine at hand.

Indigestion,

"Which makes sleep a pain, and turns its balm to wormwood," is, we all know, the most, common of all the disorders of the stomach. It is also the most obstinate. It has been the most written about. No disease presents such various, contrary, and incompatible symptoms. They contradict all the laws of order, constancy and inconsistency, which regulate natural events they bother the doctor, and can only be read by him who is skilled in the book of nature. It is self evident that the different forms of indigestion are to be met by corresponding methods of cure. It has been said that the perfection of medical skill is the talent of applying to each individual case its precise and as it were, its indi /idual cure. This is the object which every conscientious physician pursues unceasingly, and never can rest satisfied until he has overtaken. Edward Wilder's Stomach Bitters, their body being the purest of copper-.distilled whisky, makes this object attainable alike to all. They area specific—the disease specifying the remedy, the remedy the disease. They are a combination of substances which meet the speciality ot the disorder by a corresponding speciality ot cure. They should be Gqp in every well-regu-lated family they arc indispensable to health

Gaudianna River.

The British army when it advanced on Talavara and fought the celebrated battle, which was followed by a retreat into the plains, lost more men by the malarial diseases contracted on the banks of. the Gaudiana than by the bullets of the enemy. They died by thousands All Europe believed that the im ading army was extirpated. Yet malarial diseases are no more common in Europe than in our own country they exist throughout the length and breadth of our land—everywhere at some time aud in some shape are we made to feel the sickaning influence of miasm. The three great actors in this equation of disease are solar heat, moisture, and vegetable decomposition. The tiio, if separated, are harmless together they are more potent for evil than any other known agents so long as they exist, just so long will we have need of a medicine which will overcome their pernicious effects, so long will it be necessary to have a remedy capable of meeting and beating the insidious enemy. Of all known agents for this purpose, none is to compare with Edioard Wilder's Chill Tonic, the master of every form aud variety and grade and degree of malarial disease and of miasmatic poison. Try it, all you who are suffering from any form of ague, and fever or chills and fever, as a cure is guaranteed in every case.

St. Louis Hospital, Paris.

This ancient Institution is one of tlielargest, and to the. medical student, the most interesting of the many public charities which adorn the gay capitol of the French. It receives within its walls annually thousands of sick poor. A considerable portion of the building is set apart lor patients suffering with diseases of tli® skin, and every patient, old or young, is taking potash in some shape, and Honduras sarsaparilla in some form. They were esteemed by the renowned physicians who had charge of the skin department as well-specific in almost every variety of cutaneous disease, whether of rheumatic or scrofulous or simple origin. Thej' were given in tetter,ringworm, nettle-ash, roseasli/pimples, scrofula, ulcers, old sores, falling of the hair, etc. In all they did good, in niost they effected a cure. But it has remained for Edward Wilder's Sarsaparilla atifp Potash to perform the most remarkable cures awarded to any known medicine. It possesses virtues shared by no other combination of these substances. It is a tli erapeiftic marvel. Against all the diseases at which it is aimed it is siinp'.y resistless it never fails. See to it that you suffer not one day longer with any of the ills which it cures. Get it at once.

EDWARD WILDER,

SOLE PROPRIETOR,

215 1L7-1N STREET, MARBLE FRONT

LOUISVILLE, KY. Oetl5dy

S I N

WE

Twrvri? —ronsumers will consult

and much

MEDICAL.

$1,000 REWARD

Forfails

any case of Blind, Bleeding, Itching, or Ulcerated Piles that Ie Binics'ti Pile Remedy to cure. It is prepared expressly to cure the Piles and nothing else, and has cured cases of over twenty years' standing. Sold by all Druggists.

VIA.

RETAIL DRY GOODS.

WE ARE RECEIYING

TO

In a few days wo will announce the items of the

FINEST Stock ever brought to Terre Haute.

Tuell, Ripley & Deming.

OHM.K OF MAIN ANI FIFTH STREETS.

PURE WHITE LEAD.

ESTABLISHED 1827.

ECTCSTEFtf, HILLS & (O..

E N I A N

PURE WHITE LEAD.

FIRST PREMIUM,

LARGE SILVER MEDAL,

warded by the Industrial Exposition for superiority over all other "White Lead exhibited.

OFFER THE ABOVE BRAND OF WHITF LEAD TO THE PUBLIC WITH the POSITIVE ASSURANCE that it is perfectly PURE, and will give

1 ONE OUNCE OF GOLD

For every ounce of ADULTERATION that it may be found to contain, mr For sale by dealers generally.

their

FUGA

De Bing's Via Fuga is the pure juice of Barks, Herbs, Roots, and Berries,

CONSUMPTION.

and Bladder diseases, organic Weakness, Female afflictions. General Debility, and all complaints of the Urinary organs, in Male and Female, producing Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Gravel Dropsy and Scrolula,which mostgeuerally terminate in Consumptive Decline. It purifies and enriches the Blood, the Billiary, Glandular and Secretive system corrects and strengthens the nervous and muscular forces. It acts like a charm on weak nerves, debiliated females, both yiung and old. None should be without it. Sold everywhere.

1 J! IA 11/AAlr I1ADO am (1 1 1

Laboratory—142 Franklin Street, Baltimore.

TO THE LADIES. BALTIMORE, February 17,1870.

I have bef a sufierer from Kidney Complaint producing Gravel and those afflictions peculiar to women, prostrating my physical and nervous systems, with a tendency to Consumptive Decline. I was dispondent and gloomy. I tried all "Standard Medicines" with no relief, until I took De Bing's wonderful Remedy. I have taken six bottles, and am now tree from that combination of nameless complaints. How thankful I am to be well. -v, _.(lRg LAVINA C. LEAMING, dly Oxford Street.

TAILORING-.

A E N

A TTiOB. ,3,

Comer of Second, and Afain Streets, (Opposite the Stewart House.) dents" Clothing: Hade la the Best Style mtr

Catting done Promptly. 107d3m

CHOLERA.

RECIPE FOB THE CURE OF CHOLERA, Hoa

Sent with full dlrectiott" for ONEIDOMJAR and Stamp. Address, E. H. STIVERS, Madison, Jones co., Iowa.

P.S. Also, cures CHICKEN CHOLERA. 13w3

ECKSTEIN, HILLS & CO., Cincinnati,

INTEREST by bearing in mind that a large proportion

^r?i,2q Atii as PURE WHITE LEAD is adulterated to the extent of from 50 to 00 per cent

of it does not contain a particle of Lead. 113dw0m

For Sale by GULICK BERRY, Wholesale Druggists.

WESTERN LANDS.

Homestead and Pre-emption.

IHAVEcompiled

a full, concise and complete

statement, plainly printed for the information of persons, intending to take up a Homestead or Pre-Emption in this poetry of the West, erabracing Iowa, Dakota, and Nebraska and other sections. It explains how to proceed to secure 160 acres of Rich Farming Land for Nothirg. six months before you leave your home, in tne 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 cent?. The information alone, which, it gives is worth

ii T! 85 to anybody. Men who came here two and

Inflamation of the Lungs all Liver Kidney three years ago, and took a farm, are to-day in-

dependent.

To YOUNG MEN.

This country is being crossed with riumerou Railroads from every direction to Siour City Iowa. Six Railroads will be made totnis city within one year. One is already In operation connecting us with Chicago and 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, on the U. P. Railroad. The Missouri River gives us the Mountain Trade. Tius it will be seen that no section of country ofl'ers such unprecedented 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 belief. Every man who takes a homestead now will 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 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 Ihis country. For one dollar remitted to me 1 will give truthful and definite answers to all questions on this subject desired bv such persons. Tell them the best place to locate, and what business is overcrowded and what branch is neglected. Address, jjAjjIEIi

R4.T J^siS. C. Commissioner of Emigration, d"iy Box 185, Sioux CITY, Iowa

BISTILLEBS.

WALSH, BROOKS & KELLOGG,

"%v Successors to

SAMUEL M. MURPHY & CO., CINCINNATI i. DISTILLERY, OFFICE A STORES, g. w.

cor. Kilgour and

17

East

and 19 West Second

Pearl sts. street.

Distillers ot

Cologne Spirits, Alcohol & Domestic Liquors, and dealers in

Pare Bourbon and Rye Whiskies. Id6m

LIFE INSURANCE.

Li O O

Without

A A?

I

THE EMPIRE

Mutual Life Insurance Co.

OF NEW YORK.

Has achieved a success without a parallel in the history of Life Insurance!

Cheapest Life Insurance Company in the World!

A Life Policy, covering $10,000, can be obtained from this Reliable and Progressive Company which will cost the insured (aged 35) only $185.80,

any Small Addition

for Interest.

This policy will hold good for two years without further payments, so that the cash payment of a S10,000 policy in thisCompanj- will be equa to only $97.90 per year.

A large number of policies have already taken by some of the best citizens in tliiscandi date for public favor, which is destined to do a large business here, and why should it not, for for notice some of its liberal aud distinctive eat res

Ordinary Wliole-life Policies are Absolutely Is on-forfeitable from the Payment of the First Annual Premium.

All Restrictions upon Travel and Residence are Removed, and no Permits Required.

No Accumulation of Interest or Loan? of Deferred Premiums, and no Increase of Annual Payments on any Class of Policies.

The EMPIRE has organized a Board ol Insurance, consisting of some of our best and most reliable citizens, to whom all desiring Life Insurance would do well to refer for further information, before taking policies elsewhere. Call at the office of the Board

On Oiiio Street, between 3d and itJi,

Or upon any of the following gentlemen, who are members of the Board, and who will give any information desired:

W. H. STEWART, Sheriff. Dr. W. D. MULL, Physician. A. F. FOUTS, Liveryman. Hon. G. F. COOKERLY, Mayor. L. SEEBURGER, Butcher. M. SCHOEMEHL, City Treasurer. W. W. JOHNSON, Physician.'

J, H. DOUGLASS,

Idly

Manager Western I liana

REFRIGERATOR.

DON'T WASTE 3IOINEV

On a poorly made,

IMPERFECT, UNVENT4LATKI ICE CITEST OF FOREIGN MAKE, When, for the same, or less price, you can procure one of

JOSEPH W. W AYME'S Celebrrted Patent Self-Ventilating AMERICAN REFRIGERATORS,

Y^HICH 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 them, have invariably failed. The largest, most varied, and best assortinent in the West, at the salesroom ol

Joseph W. IVayne,

Manufacturer of

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

SSI WEST FIFTH ST., Idem CINICNNA11.

BPBBEB BOOBS.

INDIA RUBBER (HOODS. .i MACHINE BELTING,

ENGINE AND HYDRANT HOSE, Steam Packing, BoDts and Shoes, Clothing,Carriage and Nursery Cloths, Druggists' Goods, Combs, Syringes, Ereast Pumps, Nipples, &c. Stationery Articles, Elastic Bands, Pen and Pencil Cases, Rulers, Inks, fcc. Piano Covers, Door Mats, Balls and Toys, and every other article made of India Rubber.

Al kinds of goods made to order for mechanical and manufactured purposes. All goods sold at manufacturing prices.

BART & HICKCOX,

Agents lor all the Principal Manufacturers ld6m 49 West Fourth st., Cincinnati.

MACHINERY.

R. BALL & CO.,

WORCESTER, ASS.

Manufacturers of

Wood worth's, Daniels and Dimension Planers.

MOLDING,and

Matching, Tenoning, Morticing,

Shaping Boring Machines Scroll Saws' Re-Sawing, Hand Boring, Wood Turning

Lathes,

and a variety of other Machines for working wood. Also, the best Patent Door, Hub and Rail Car Morticing Machines in tne world.

Bar" Send for our Illustrated Catalogue.

SAW WORKS.

PASSAIC SAW WORfeS, NEWARK, NEW JERSEY,

[Trade Mark Challenge RXB.]^.

RICHARDSON BROS..

MANUFACTURERS

SCOTT

Superior Tempered Ma­

chine Ground, Extra Cast Steel, Circular, Mill, Muly, Gang, Pit, Drag and Cross Cut Saws. Also, Hand Panel Ripping, Butcher, Bow, Back. Compass, and every description of Light Saws, ot the very best quality. ,,

Every saw is warranted perfect challenges inspection. Warranted of uniform good temper. Ground thin on back and gauged.

BRASS WORKS.

I*Kl A EDWARDS,

-"Manufacturers oP^'''

PLUMBERS' BRASS WORK

•, 'J- of every description, and superior

CAST ALE PUMPS

And dealer in

PLUMBERS' MATERIALS,

••"Corporations and Gas Companies supplied diy Newark,N.J.

PAPEE.

The

Leading Paper House

OF THE WEST.

S\1D£U M'CALL,

Manufacturers and Wholesale

PAPER DEALERS,

230 and 232 Walnut Street?

CINCIXXATJ. I

no

Proprietors of

"Franklin" anl "Fair Grove" Mills,

HAMILTON, OI.IIO.

We keep on hand the largest assortment In West, of

Printers" and Binders'

O 1 3 S O

Such as

Bill Heads, Letter and Note Heads, Statements of Account,

Bills of Lading, Dray Tickets, Embossed Note Paper

Ball Tickets, Flat Note, Cap Letter, Folio, Demy, Medium, Royal,

Super Roya and Imperial, Colored Poster, Cover and Label Papers

Knvelopesand Blotting Pape

Book, News and Wrapping Papers

Of our own manufacture, all of which we oile at the lowest market price. Samples sent free of charge.'

CARD STOCK.

Our stock is from the best Eastern manufacturers, and will be found equal to any made in the country. Particular attention is called to our large variety of

Favorite Blanks and Bristol Sheets,

which embraces all the desirable grades in use We have the largest variety of sizes and qualities of any house in the West, and our arrangements with manufacturers enable us to sell at Eastern prices. Customers will find it to tlieii advantage to examine our stock before purchasing elsewhere.

Samples sent free of charge.

SXIRER «fc MT1LL,

Manufacturersand Wholesale

A E II E A E S

230 and 232 Walnut Street,

fciiuy CINCINNATI.

GRATE BAR.

X* .A.

rV

13

Furnace Grate Bar,

FOR

STEAMBOATS,

STATIONARY FURNACES, ETC.:

R' ECEIVEI) 1 he ipthest Premiumsever awarded in the 1T. S. (a Silver Medal,) and "honorable mention at the Paris Exposition."' Guaranteed more durable, and to make more steam with less fuel than any other liar in use.

The superiorit of these Bars over others is owing to the distribution of the metal in such* mangier that, all strain in consequence of expansion from heat is relieved, so that they will neither warp nor break. They give, also, more air snrface for draft, and are at least one-third lighter than anv other liars, and save 15 to 30 per cent, in fuel. 'They are now in use in more than 8,W)U places,comprising some off

ue

largest steamships,

steamboat* and manufacturing companies in the United Slates. Noalternation of Furnace requi» ed. BARBAROUX & CO.,

Louisville, Kentucky,

Sole Manufacturers, for the South & es Alo, builders of Steam Engines, Mill Machinery, Saw Mills, etc.,

AND WROUGHT IRON BRIDGES. ldfini

MACHINE CARDS.

SARGENT CARD CLOTHING TO. •"WORCESTER, MASS.

Manufacturers ot

COTTONY, WOOI^

Flax Machine Card Clothing

Ol every Variety, Manufacturers'Supplies,Car ing Machines, Etc.

HANDfurnishedEDWIN

and Stripping Cards of every descriition to order. S. LAWRENCE, Idyl Superintendent.

LATHES, ETC.

WOOD, LIGHT & O.,

... Manufacturers of

ENGINE LATHES,

From 16 to 100 Inch Swing, and from 0 to 3 feet long.

PLANERS

To Plane from 4 to 30 feet long, from 24 to M) inchcs wide.

NASMYTli'S STEAM HAMMERS.

CVUN

I MACHINERY, Mill Work, Shafting and Ha ngers, Patent Self-oiling Box. Warehouse, 107 Libert^ street, New York City. Manufactory, Junction Shop, Worcester, Massachusetts. Idly

WIRE.

NEW JERSEY WIRE MILLS.

1IKXRY ROBERTS,

Manufacturer ot

REFINED IRON WIRE,

Market and Stone Wire,

BRTGITTandBridge,Fence,

Annealed Telegraph Wire, Cop­

pered Pail Pail, Rivet, Screw, Buckle, Dmbrelli!. Spring, Broom, Brush, and 'llnners Wire.

Wire Mill, Newark, New Jersey.

AGRICULTURAL.

HA LL, MOORE & RURKHARDT,

Manufacturers of ..33 Hȣ*i

AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS,

Carriage, Buggy & Wagon Material, of ev6ry ^tx variety, JEFFERSONVILLE, 1ND

LUMBER.

J. LINDSEY,

COMMISSION LUMBER DEALER,

Office, No. 482 West Front Street,

CINCINNATI. OJUOi

PEEPS. f.

BTsingle

*rv

k.4l4

TAXK DEEDS, neatly printed. lor sale by one, or by the quire, at Mie DAIVT UAZETTE Office, North 5th street*