Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 1, Number 256, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 March 1871 — Page 2

vetting (gazette

HUDSON & ROSE, Proprietors. K. N. HUDSON I«. M. ROSE.

Office: North Fifth St., near Main.

The DAILY GAZETTE is published every aiternoon, except Sunday, and sold by the carriers at 20c per week. By mail #10 per year £5 for 6 months &2.50 for 3 months. Tue WEEKLY GAZETTE is issued every Thursday, and contains all the best matter of the seven daily issues. The WEEKLY GAZETTE is the largest paper printed in Terre Haute, and is sold lor: jne copy, per year, £2.00 three copies, per year, $5.00 five copies, per yeai, 9S.OO ten copies, one year, ana one to getter up of Club, $15.00 one cepy, six months gl.OO one copy, three months 50c. All subscriptions must be paid for in advance. The paper will, invariably, be discontinued at expiration of time. Kor Advertising Rates see third page. The GAZETTKestabiishment is the best equipped

In point of Presses and Types in this section, and orders for any kind of Type Printing solicited, to which prompt attention will be given.

Address all letters, HUDSON & ROSE, GAZETTE, Terre Haute, Ind.

REPUBLICAN CITY NOMINATIONS.

The Executive Committee have designated Friday evening, March 31, at early gaslight, for the Republican voters to meet in their respective Wards to select five (5) delegates from each Ward, who will meet at the Court House in Convention the next evening, Saturday, April 1, and nominate a ticket for the Municipal election in May next. The Ward meetings will also select one Councilman for each Ward.

The places of meeting in each Ward arc as follows: First Ward—Engine flouse, Ninth street.

Second Ward—S. Reece's Carpenter Shop. Third Ward—Geo. Gordon's Cooper Shop, on Vl»10 street, opposite the Furniture I^actory.

Fourth Ward—Northern Engine House. Filth Ward—Passenger Depot, estnutSt. W. R. McKEEN,

JOS. FELLENZER, T. E. .LAWES, S. K. ALLEN, TIM. M. GILMAN.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1871.

IT IS said that Messrs. A. V. Stout, A. A. Selover, Gen. Baxter, and Duncan, Sherman & Co. have bought the famous Little Emma silver mine in Utah for $1,500,000, and have deposited with Mr. II. B. Claflin, as trustee, §200,000 to bind the bargain. The Little Emma mine is in the Little Cottonwood Canon, near Salt Lane City. It was sold some months ago to the Bank of California for $900,000. With the exception perhaps of Silver Island in Lake Superior, it is probably the richest silver mine the world. The ore is so rich in the metal that it can be cut with a knife. Good judges estimate the mine to be worth over $100, 000,000. The ore is brought to New York by railroad, and most of it reshipped to Wales, where it is smelted. Some of it is sent to Newark, and there turned into silver bars. Several hundred tons of the ore now lie at the bottom of New York Bay in seventy feet of water, because of a collision with one of the Camden and Amboy steamers.

THE daughter of Owen Lovejoy has been appointed Postmistress of Princeton, Illinois. The Illinois Republican delegation in Congress, out of the regard they have to the memory of her honored father, gave her their earnest sympatny and help, and the Senate approved the nomination the very day it was sent in. The nation cannot afford to forget its obligation to those who, like Owen Lovejoy, were fighters in the front rank of j„7}HV,iarir fw JSe.P.ublican tffia it is a fitting tribute to his worth that a Government based on the principles he maintained should confcr its favors upon his descendents.

MRS. KIXGSLEY, in her recent lecture in Lima, New York, gave utterance to this remark "Show me a family where woman's rights prevail, and I will show you a home of dissension and strife. While, on the other hand, show me a family which is ruled by Its rightful ruler, and where the laws are wisely administered, and I will show you a family where love is the guiding star, and peace and harmony is ever found."

C. P. COBB, CHRISTY & Co., of Aurora, have recovered in the McLean county, Illinois, Circuit Court, last week, verdicts, in suits against the Illinois Central Railroad, to the amount of §26,000. These added to the verdicts given at the December term of said court, amount to about $108,000.

Mr. Sumner's Speech.

The full text of Mr. Sumner's speech on the San Domingo question disappoints those who hoped he would fall into the style of a political drab, and assail the members of the administration, against whom public opinion has pitted him, with personal epithet and unwarranted denunciation. To be sure no such an expectation could well have been entertained by those even passably acquainted with Mr. Sumner's history for, while an uncommonly severe polemic,' when his feelings are aroused, he is too much a master of the gall of the King's English to step beyond the strictest bounds of parliamentary rule in his debates. This was signally acknowledged by the bully Brooks, in his violent assault on Sumner for "words spoken in debate" with Senator Butler, of South Carolina. The chivalrous and highly educated Southerner could find no other answer than the bludgeon to Mr. Sumner's clean cut, incisive words. In this San Domingo speech the exChairman of the Foreign Relations

Com­

mittee gives full play to his stinging powers, but the style is dispassionate though earnest, dignified though indignant. Mr. Sumner does not consider the merits of the question of annexation, and so the report of the Commissioners, whatever it may be upon the points submitted to them in the Morton resolutions, can, in a very limited degree, become a reply to the arraign'ment of the Administration upon the alleged extraordinary measures taken to prosecute the scheme of annexation. If

Mr. Sumner's assertions be correct, and if he puts a fair construction upon the voluminous evidence introduced from official records of the State and Navy Departments, and if his statement of the principals of international law be unchallenged, then, were the Republic of San Domingo the very EI Dorado, his criticism of the conduct of the Government must, of necessity, still stand.

This is the new phase of the controversy which this last speech of Mr. Summer presents, and it is to this that the reply of those chosen to answer him must be addressed. We have no disposition, nor should the country at large have, to predetermine the question upon the argument of Mr. Sumner alone. There are two sides to every case, and we prefer to await the defense of the Administration to this somewhat unexpected attack. General Grant's past record is not such as to warrant a hasty conclusion that he has acted with indiscretion. If he has overstepped the constitutional limits circumscribing his

1

action, it has been in obedience to

that pertinacity of will in a supposed good cause, which carried him through the rebellion to the crowning victory at Appomattox. But we are not prepared to concede that the President is at all amendable to the usurpations Mr. Sumner charges. He presents the case strongly and fearlessly, and in a manner that merits and demands an equally frank,an equally pertinentand an equally dignified rejoinder. If this can not be made, then the speech of Mr. Sumner, while it certainly will not have given to a country which has the strongest reasons to have confidence in General Grant, "confirmation strong as proofs of holy writ" of a guilty intention in the conduct BO severely condemned, will have furnished additional evidence of the necessity of dropping this San Domingo business out of our politics, especially from our party counsels, allowing the Republican majority in Congress, and the party elsewhere, to address its energies to what we are frequently pleased to term "live issues."— Indiananolis Journal.

Lost in the Wilderness.

Stories of people who have been lost amid woods and plains, or on the trackless sea, are always read with interest and although, from their nature, there is apt to be a sameness about such narratives, it does not seem to diminish their fascination. We printed some time ago an account of the surprising adventure of Mr. Dormitt, a Texan, who made his solitary way for 1,300 miles, on foot, across the continent from the Pacific slope to his own State. A somewhat similar experience has befallen a Vermonter, Mr. T. C. Evarts, whose escape from starvation in a more northerly wilderness has just now furnished a theme for amazement and sympathy.

Late in the year 1870, an exploring party, of whom Mr. Evarts was one, set forth from Helena, in Montana, to penetrate into the wild regions about the sources of the Snake and Yellowstone rivers. The country into which the little band made its way is very high— fully some eight thousand feet above the level of the sea. It is said that it was never before visited by a white man a hazardous statement, often made, but probable in this instance, the territory is so remote from the various well-known tracks of the earlier pioneers while of later explorations there are no accounts. There are no Indians there, for some not obvious reason, since there is plenty of timber and not a little game. In some spots there are hot springs, and to these are attributed wonderful medicinal virtues which, ere long, will be thoroughly tested. The obscure wilds around the upper waters of the rivers named are crowded with fallen timber, making travel exceedingly hard, whether on foot or in the saddle. The party well mounted, however, and their object being rather to discover what was worth seeing than to get rapidly over the ground, their progress was not unsatisfactory.

One day the whole company scattered in pursuitof game. Mr. Evarts detached himself, as often before, from the rest and nothing fearing, plunged into the woods. He was tempted, it seems, by a deer's trail, and he kept on following it until, to his uneasiness, he saw the sun's rays slanting through the trees low down in the West. Finally the orb dropped below the horizon, and night came on in pitchy darkness. The wanderer camped out as best he could, hoping to retrace his steps and join his friends next day. In the morning he committed the error of starting too early. He could not clearly see the trail, and on this it was needful to return. Alighting from his horse to make sure of it, for a moment Evarts incautiously let go the bridle. Unhappily, au instant after, the animal took fright at something and plunged wildly away. This was a dismal calamity indeed for attached to the saddle were the hunter's carbine, his pistols, ammunition, matches—in a word, his entire equipment, save the clothes in which he stood. Still, he did -i- -J TTn Mmilfrllf- Ilia It appears, however, that his friends, considering that he was well mounted, supposed he would certainly push on and overtake them. In fact they traveled forward two days' journey after missing Evarts before they paused to wait or make search for him. Thus he was literally alone in the wilderness and, to complete his discomfiture, on the second day after he loit his horse two feet of snow fell.

Progress through this he found to impossible, and it really seemed that the solitary man must die in his tracks Kindly nature, nevertheless, had in re serve a provision for his safety. Mr, Evarts, amid the supreme horror of his situation, had given himself up in de spair. But suddeuly it flashed across his mind that five or six miles from the spot where he separated from his partyhe had passed some hot springs. To these he determined to fight his way through the snow, and he succeeded in doing it. On the warm ground close by the spriugs he managed to exist, sleep ing there at night, until the snow passed away. He was safe from per ishing from cold, but it appeared in evitable that he must die of starvation Plenty of elk bounded through the woods and abundant fish were in the streams but Evarts was totally without the means of capturtng either. Fortunately he chanced to find a sort of thistle root thatgrows plentifully near the springs On this root, sodden in the hot water, he supported life. Tne snow disappeared and he resolved to make a fresh effort to escape. But the weather was at night* tearfully cold, and he dared not leave the springs without the means of making lire. He had with him—it was abou the only article not carried off by the horse—a small field glass. It occurred to his mind to try to use the lenses as burning glass. This, too, succeeded. Yet there was danger of being without the help of the sun on occasions when it was most required. Therefore, after setting out from the springs, Evarts, on cloudy days, always carried brands from one stopping place to another. Two nights, despite all precautions, he had to spend without fire and on these he kept alive only by unremitting motion and constant friction of his stiffening limbs. For thirty-seven days, save the roots, he had no food except one small bird and two or three tiny fish and with much wandering, his boots were destroyed and hi-s feet became worn to the bone.

On the thirty-eighth day Evarts was saved. He suddeuly came upon a party 5

who were searching for his they had not the least hope of finding him alive—aud who were as much astonished as delighted by his rescue. He was, to be sure, reduced to a shadow. His former weight was 160 poundsit was now 80. No permanent harm was done him, notwithstanding, by his wild adventure aud we are glad to know that he is a strong and healthy man to-day. This tale of being lost in the wilderness differs from that of Dormitt in many respects, and especially as regards the prodigious distance traveled which made the exploit of the Texan so astonishing: but Mr. Evarts' experience is not less worthy of note on the score of his miraculous preservation under circumstances that seemed certain to be fatal.—N. Y. Times.

was shaving, I was informed, but would soon be down, and in a few moments he made his appearance in his shirt sleeves. I at once stated iuy errand, frankly alluding to my newspaper criticism, and concluding by asking if my appointment as Clerk of the Committee on Foreign Relations would be acceptable to him. 'Acceptable,' said he, 'why of course it will be. My only objection to serving on the committee has been that I feared Sumner would send to Boston for a d—d free nigger for clerk, and I shall be delighted to have you in the committee room.'"

MARRIED.—In Brookville, on Wendesday morning, the 15tli instant, at the residence of the bride's father, by Rev. J. P. D. John, Mr. John Stephenson, of St. Louis, Missouri, to Miss Cora, only daughter of C. B. Bentley, Esq.

CONFECTIONERY AND BAKERY.

A CARD,

COXFECTIOXEltl

AND

A E

HAVING

a

0 0

STEPHEX A. DOUGLAS was a member of the Senate Committee of Foreign Affairs when Mr. Sumner was made its Chairman. "Mr. Sumner expressed to "Perley" a wish to secure his services as clerk, but desired the assent of the Democratic members of the committee to his appointment. "Perley" had criticised Douglas very severely, and thought that he would probably oppose his appointment. "To ascertain his views," says

Perley, "I went to his house, aud was ushered into the library. The Little Giant

refitted the Confectionery and Bak­

ery formerly kept by

MESSRS. MIESSEN & CO.,

JVo. 10 jYortli Fourth Street,

Aud engaged the services of Mr. Meissen, I am now prepared to furnish orders of any kind for

Weddings, Parties, Festivals, &c..

In our line. We have also

JfEW AXO SELDCrtO HTOCfi OF

CAXMES, BTUTS. «&€.

At the Lowest Posmole Alices I

We ask a share of the public patronage, N. B. Fresh Milk at all times.

hJ

H.

G. F. KIAG,

173d3rn Sfo. 16 or:li Fourth Street.

COAL.

PREMIUM BLOCK COAL,

J. II. WIIITAKElt

IS

PREPARED to furnish to Coal consumer during this Fall and Winter,

THE VERY BEST

Shaft Block Coal

IN THE MARKET,

Iii Qualities to Suit Purchasers.

Call and Examine the Quality of this Coal,

Opposite the !lfar2tet House,

COR. FOURTH & WALNUT STREETS!

93d3m Before purchasing elsewhere.

SADDLES!.

0 3

& hi P5 W

a

A PH

kH

fi

•GO

BOOKS,

SCHOOL BOOKS,

STATIONERY, BLANK BOOKS, MEMORANDUMS)

PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS,

EXTELOPES,

FANCY GOODS

GOLD PENS c&C.,

TERRE

I'Mdtf

A

W

ft

.H •W

5 hn

O

fl 1

& -35

PH P5 E1

P5

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HAUTE, INDIANA.

STEAM BAKERY.

Union Steam Bakery.

FRANK HEINIG& BR0.,

Manufacturers of all kinds of

Crackers, Cakes, Bread

AND

Foreiffii and Domestic Fruits, FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES, LA FA YETTE STREET,

138d

*4

Between the two Railroads. '•.***

Butt,

MEDICAL.

DR ALBUKGER'S

1 CELEBRATED

A E A N I

HERB STOMACH BITTERS

The Great Blood Purifier and

Anti-Dyspeptic Tonic!

THESE

celebrated and well-known Bitters are composed of roots and lierbs, of most Innocent yet specific virtues, and are particularly recommended for restoring weak constitutions and increasing the appetite. They area certain cure for Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Jaundice, Chrome or Nervous Debility, Chronic Diarrhoea, Diseases of the kidnevs, Costiveness, Pain in the Head, Vertigo, Hermorrlioids,

Femaie Weakness, Loss of Appetite, Intermittent aud Remittent Fevers, Flatulence

Constipation, Inwan Piles, Fullness of Blood in the

Head,

Acidity of the

Stomach, N ausea, Heartburn, Disgust of Food, 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 iif the Vision, Dots or Webs Before the

Sight, Dul. I'ain in the llead, Yellowness of the Skin, Pain the Side,Back, Chest, sc„ &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 Complaint, Dyspepsia, or,diseases of the digestive organs, combined witli an 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. Alburger's Laboratory,

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

ttsS-Pri ci pal off] ce, no it heast corner of THIRD and BKO WN Streets, Philadelphia.

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

$10,000 Reward.

DR. INGRAHAM'S

MACEDONIAN OIL!

For Internal and External Use.

Read What tlie People Say.

Cured or Catarrh and Deafness oft lO Years Duration.

NEW YORK CITY, March 3,1870.

DR. ISCKAHAM, WOOSTEK, OHIO—Dear Sii The six bottles you sent me by expie is caine safely to me, and I am most happy to stale that the the Oil has cured me oi Catarrh •md Deafness. .No man can realize the difference until he has onCe passed thrc ugh ten years years of deprivation of sound and sense, as I did. I talk Macedonian Oil wherever I go.

Yours, ever in remembrance, DAVID WHITE.

Kidney Complaints and Old Sores Cured oft* Years Standing.

PHILADELPHIA, PENN., June23,1870.

DR. IXGKAHAM, WOOSTEK, OHIO—Gents Macedonian Oil has cured me of Inilamation of the Bladderand 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.

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

RHEUMATISM.

A Lady Seventy-five Years Old Cured Rheumatism. 85 BEAVEU AVE., ALLEGHENY CITY,

Dli. 1NGKAHAM & CO., Manufacturers,

2111Jly

HAVINGthe

0 se 9\ I®

3 ft

6d

O

Bookseller and Stationer!

STANDARD AND MISCELLANEOUS

FOOLSCAP, LETTER and NOTE PAPERS

of

Oct. 12,1869.

DR. INGRAHAM 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 th«»t 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 1-i.liAillllli W 1LL1A3IS.

The Macedonian Oil cures all diseases of the blood or su in, Tetters, Crofula, Piles, or any case of Palsy.

Price 50 cents and SI per bottle. Full Directions in German and Ecglisli. Sold by Druggists.

Wooster, O.

HOTELS.

STEWART HOUSE, Comer of Main and Second Streetst

TERRE HAUTE, ISDIAXA.

thoroughly renovated and refur­

nished house recently, 1 solicit the patronage of my old friends, and the traveling public generally.

Free Buss to and from all trains. ocj27d3m J. M. DAVIS, Proprietor.

TERRE HAUTE HOUSE,

Cor. of Main and Seventh Streets,

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

T. C. BUNTIN, Proprietor.

JACOB BUTZ.

\AT10XAL

GEO. C. BUTZ.

HOUSE,

Corner of Sixth and Main Streets,

IERRE-HA UTE, INDIANA,

JACOB UTZfcSON, Proprietors. This House has been thoroughly refurnished

LOCKS.

CORNELIUS, WALSH & SON,

Manufacturers and dealers in

CABINET & TRUNK LOCKS,

TRAVELING BAG FRAMES & TRUNK HARDWARE, anil ton street, Corner Railroad Avenue, Idly

NEWARK, N.J.

LEATHER.

JOIL\ H. O'BOI LE,

DEALER IN

LEATHER, HIDES, OIL

AND FINDINGS, NO. 178 MAIN STREET,

Id6m~

1

A N

Dealers in

Indiana.

Terre Hantc, Indiana.

pald or

Hldes'Furs,Peltsand

Rough

ueaxner. 124dl4

CLOTHING.

Wholesale and Retail Dealer in

MENS', YOUTHS' AND BOYS'

1

CLOTHING,

And Gents' Furnishing Goods,'

NO. 93 MAIN STREET, Terre Haute, lnd

BOOTS AND SHOES. A.6.B1LCH

Ladles' & dents' Fashionable BOOTS & SHOES,

M*11

2d6m Terre Hante. Ind

BLANK BOOKS.

THE

GAZETTE BINDERY turns out The best Blank Book *orb in Terre Haute. We have one of tbe most skillful Rulers in the State, and guarantee satisfaction on complicated work.O'd Jtoeks rebound usual

.TST

Good heavy ALL LINEN TOWELS clown to

DEY GOODS.

SEND THE SICK TO HOSPITAL."

OPENING OF THE SPRING CAMPAIGN!

CLEAR THE DECKS FOR ACTION!

The popular current runs strong in our favor. High-priced Stores are empty, Will there be more "deserted palaces" soon? We are of the people and for the people. We know neither aristocrats or plebians. All are alike in our eyes. "Worth makes the man, and want of it the fellow." "We believe in small profits and big trade.

•PIJSII THINGS."

[Grant's order to Sheridan."

More New Goods! Lower Prices Still!

5,000 yards Atlantic Mills Muslin, 6c

Country stores charge 10c, and Terre Haute stores 9c for same goods.

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

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

Very large lot of BEST AMERICAN DE LAINES down to 12%c

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

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

All other stores charge 12%c for them.

Country stores actually charge 15c for the same goods.

Henceforth We Control the Corset Trade

or TERRE HAUTE:

A superb Glove-fitting FRENCH WOVEN CORSET, all sizes, down to 50 cents. Country stores charge $1.50 for same goods, and Terre Haute fancy stores charge 75c and 81. The celebrated HIP GORE CORSET, extra quality, reduced to 55 cents.

This corset is being sold in fancy goods stores at 75c to 81

Dayton and Maysville Carpet Warp, 29c. Stamped and Boulevard Skirts for Spring, 90c. Coats' Cotton, 5c. Elegant Dress Goods, 12Jc, 15c, 20c, 24c and up.

O S E O E S

eSEil STEW YORK (ITl STORE,

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

CARPETS.

GREAT SALE OF CARPETS!

DOWN GO THE PRICES!

Higli-priced Stores Must Stand Aside!!

CARPETS are very cheap this year, and we intend the public shall know it and shall get the benefit of the decline. Buy no last year's goods they are dear and very likely moth-eaten and damaged. Buy only new, clean fresh goods, and

what is equally important, buy only well-known makes. It costs Carpet Stores twenty cents on a dollar for every yard of Carpet they sell, and so iu order to make any show at all of competing with us they are forced to buy shoddy and unknown makes of Carpets, which they endeavor to palm off on their customers as "Hand Loom" or "Family" Carpets.

We keep only the best brands, snch as Rifions, Lowells, and Hartfords, in the grades of "Extra," "Super Extra" and "Super Extra Super," and the very best makes of "Imperial three-ply" and "English Tapestry Brussels."

Ot'R STflKLK IS BTEW AST® FRESH!

The greater part of it has arrived within a few days. The patterns" are new, very rich and exquisite in design and as we propose •..,.

Smashing the Price of Carpets

This Spring a,s badly as we have Diy Goods, we propose to sell tlieiii twen. ty per cent, belowrecevt prices* .......

Good yard-wide Carpets, 25c, 28c and 30c. goods 30c, 35c and 40c. Good yard-wide Ingriiin Carpets, 50c and 90c. for them.

'All Wool Ingrain, 75e aud 80c. Recent price 90c and $1.

Elegant new styles, very fine and heavy, only Haute Carpet Stores are now at $1.30. ....

Best English Brussels Carpets reduced to $1.25. Our recent price was $1.60 for same goods, and Carpet Stores are now charging $1.75 for them.

,'V--Continued Bargains*in Dry Goods!

Rich assortment of Dress Goods, from 12Jc up to $1. Elegant lines of Parasols at New York prices.

We shall sell Dry Goods cheaper than ever this Spring

O S E O E S

Great New, York Dry, Goods Store,

NORTH SIDE OF MAIN STREET, TERRE HAUTE, IND.

Carpet Stores charge for the same

Carpet Stores charge 65c and 75c

Now being sold in Terre

SAS FIXTURES.

M'HENRY & CO,, 6 and 8 East Fourth and 162 Main St., CIN CINNATI.

THE PLACE TO BUY

EITHER AT 1 I

WHOLESALE OR RETAIL,

EVERYTHING IN THE LINE OF

Gas Fixtures, Lamps and Chandeliers, Pipe, Pumps, Tools. &c

In GAS FIXTURES,

WE

offer a choice selection of the Dest designs in Bronze and 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 (jas Fixtures, for lighting

Churches, Halls, Dwellings, Stores, &c

Oil Lamps and Chandeliers.

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

BRACKET LANPS, HALL AND TABLE LIGHTS LANTERNS, *c

Furnished wiili the latest improvements in Burners, Shades, &c. Oil that will not explode' and Chimneys that will not break.

Iu 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, tc.

Bath Tubs, Closets, Washstands, wash Trays, Bath Boilers, Sinks, &

01 Gas and Steam Fitters' Tools,

We have a full iire, consisting of

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

6c

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

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

The Dome Gas Stoves,

For summer cooking. We have a full assortment of these cheap and desirable substitutes, during warm weather, for the Kitchen Range and Stove. For family use, they coinbir. COMFORT AND ECONOMY, being free fro.* the annoyance of HEAT, SMOKE and ASUES.

No family should be without

:'DOME

GAS

.STOVE." Remember the place, ld6m McHENRY CO.

FAMILY GBOCEB.

JAMES O'MARA,

SUCCESSOR TO

J. E. VOORHEES,

Ohio Street, between Fourth and Fifth,

VT7"JLL keep on hand a full supply of Food for man and Beast. A few articles enumerated

Flour, Feed, Fruit, Poultry,

And a General Assortment of

FAMILY GROCERIES AXD PROVISIONS Will keep constantly on hand afresh supply Vegetables of all kinds. Also,

FRESH MEAT MARKET,

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

COUNTRY PRODUCE.

Farmers will do well to call before selling. 62d&w6m AS. O'MARA

PAINTING-.

WM. S. MEIiTOKF,

PAINTER,

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

D®.pRAINmO

PAPER HANGING, CAL-

CIMIN1NG, and everything usually done in the line. 20dwfly

THE OLD RELIABLE

BARRAITAKLE

House and Sign Painters,

CORY'S NEW BUILDING, Fifth street, between Main and Ohio sts.

"^TE 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.

FEED STOBE.

•T

Dealer in

Flour, Feed, Baled Hay. Corn Oats, and all kinds of Seeds, NORTH THIRD ST., NEAR MAIN

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

FEED

delivered in all parts of the city free of charge id6m

BELTING.

JOSIAII GATES SOUTS, Manufacturers or Oak Tanned Leather Belting Hose.

Lace Leatlierof Superior Quality, and dealere* in all kinds oi

MANUFACTURERS'

AND A

Fire Department Supplies,

NOS. 4 & 6 DUTTON STREET,

ldGm Lowell, Massachusetts

CABPETS.

Glen Echo Carpet Mills,

GERMANTOWN. FflTL'A.

McCALLUM, CREASE & SLOAN,

MANUFACTURERS,

Warehouse, 509 Chestnut Street, PHILADELPHIA.

WE

INVITE the attention of the trade to our new and choice designs in this cele brated make of goods.

VABNISHES.

ESTABLISHED, 1836.

JOSDV D. i^ITZ-GERALD,

{Late D. Price & FitzGerald,)

Manufacturers °f

IMPROVED COPAL TARNISHES,

ldyr -ii. NEWARK N

CASES.

BusinesB, Visit ""poses, In any

-—t- 7 ^ously, neatly

and cheaplyprinted at the GAZETTE STEAM fOB OFFlCEj Filth street. We keep the larcenf assortment of card stock in

rect from Eastern Mill*

the cjtv- bouirht