Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 1, Number 258, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 31 March 1871 — Page 2
ghgimim}§nzctte
HUDSON
a
R. N. HUDSON
ROSE, Proprietors.
M-
ROSE.
Office: North Fifth St., near Main.
The DAILY GAZETTE is published every arterlioon, except Sunday, and sold by the carriers at 20c per week. By mail #10 per year $5 for 6 months 82.50 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 for: v/ue copy, per year, $2.00 three copies, per year, $5.00 Ave copies, per year,
SS.OO ten copies, one year, ana one to getter up of Club, ($15.00 one cepy, six months 81*00 one copy, three months 50c. All subscriptions must be paid for in advance. Ihe paper will, invariably, be discontinued at expiration of time. Kor Advertising Rates see third page. The GAZETTE establishment is the bast equipped in point of Presses and Types in this section, aud 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 eveniug, March 31, at early gaslight, for the Republican voters to meet in their respective Wards to select Ave (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 are as follows: First Ward—Engine House, Ninth street.
Second Ward—S. Reece's Carpenter Shop. Third Ward—Geo. Gordon's Cooper Shop, on Vi"" street, opposite the Furniture Factory.
Fourth Ward—Northern Engine House. Klltli Ward—Passenger Depot, -'estnutSt. W. R. McKEEN,
JOS. FELLENZER, T. E. LAWES, S. K. ALLEN, TIM. M. OILMAN.
FKIDAY, MARCH 31, 1871.
How it Looks.
Passing along our Main street this morning we met four of our most intelligent citizens. To the first we said, "Mr. A., have you read Sumner's speech His reply was, "I have. It is a great speech, and in my judgment unanswerable. The President has blundered in this whole matter, and he must back out of it. We do not want San Domingo with her two hundred thousand Catholic, Spanish negroe". Instead of adding this population to ours, we had much better endeavor to colonize some of our black citizens. The fact is, we do not want San Domingo, and President Grant and his advisers must abandon it."
Leaving number one, we passed on to number two, and said, Mr. B. how do you like Sail Domingo now? "I do not like it at all," says B. "I am opposed to San Domingo and have been fiom the start. Sumner's speech settles that question. However, I will wait patiently to see Senator Morton's reply to it. But I do not know how he can reply to the documentary evidence produced by the Senator from Massachusetts. I think Morton had better let that speech alone, and that President Grant had better abandon the whole matter, or he will create a division in the Republican party which will never be healed."
We passed to number three and inquired, "How are you on the Sumner speech and the San Domingo question, Mr. C?" He said: "I don'tlikeSumner much, never did, but his speech is masterly. I do not know exactly whether I am for San Domingo or against it, and I intend to wait until the Commissioners make their report. I have great faith in old Ben. Wade and will be governed, in a great measure, by what he says. However, the President must not endeavor to force this matter further, or he will send his prospects for renomiuation, up higher than a kite."
Just as we turned down from Main street to come to our office on Fifth, we encountered citizen number four. What is the news to-day, Mr. D.?" we inquired. "News enough," said he. "Sumuer is trying to kill the Republican party. He ought to be kicked out of the Seriate. He always was a disorganizer, aud I never had any confidence in him. Morton will skin him when he comes to reply to hiru, and I will not read his speech until I can read them both together. I am for General Grant, because he is the greatest Captain of the age, and I intend to stick to him, and don't care what this old abolitionist says, and as for Carl Scliurz, he is no American anyhow."
We left number four gritting his teeth, and passed in our sanctum to make a note of it.
Now those four good citizens represent the different phases in this San Domingo question. The great mass of the people are opposed to it, but now and then there is one in favor of it. The settled current ofopinion is, that the whole matter ought to be abandoned, aud if it is not, the Re publican party will be much weakened, and President Grant lose many friends. Wesuppose the Commissioners will make their report in a day or two, and that the President will at once send it to Congress, and then we hope that body will have respect enough for popular opinion, to order the report on the table and printed. Then if Congress should at once adjourn, and leave this question unsettled until it meets again, it would act wisely, and prevent much excitement that will otherwise be occasioned.
THE New York Tribune, in presenting the great speech of Mr. Sumner to its readers, says "We are sure that the country will accord a paramount weight to the Commissioners' finding as to the facts. If they report that the debt of the Dominican Republic i»under $2,000,000, its undeveloped natural resources vast and easily improved, its climate healthy, and its people heartily and all but unanimously anxious to share our National destinies, the great majority will believe that such is the case.
But
they will not therefore consider the main question decided. Grant that annexation is clearly best for Santo Domingo, how is it for the United States What is to be our allotment of the benefits Of cheap, fertite, unoccupied land, we have an abundance already and it is not obvious, that Santo Domingo can increase our strength or our security against foreign agression. On the contrary, will not her acquisition increase the probability, the hazards, and the expense, of war? In case of hostilities with a strong maritime power, must it not be costly to defend and damaging to abandon our tropical outpost Must we not double our naval armaments on purpose to retain and protect it?
Again: Must there not be a {costly Coast Survey, numerous Light-Houses, appropriations to improve bays, harbors, inlets, and navigable water-courses—not
contingently, but inovitably, if we annex Santo Domingo Are not costly fortifications at the chief city, at Samaua, ana at other important points, inclispensible Will there not be an inland frontier to guard in peace and defend in war against a jealous, vigilant, and nowise contemptible neighbor? Consiuwhat it cost us to expel the the Seminoles from Florida remember that wars waged against distant toes are necessarily most expensive, and you must realize that the annexation of Santo Domingo is a topic requiring the gravest and most dispassionate consideration.
We are not arguing the main question. We are simply stating and elucidating it. Before taking sides upon it, let us master the essential facts, especially those which the Report of the Commissioners is morally certain to embody. Let us refuse to be split into factions and set to quarreling with each other about atopic remote from our experience and our sympathies. If Gen. Grant has decided, as we hear, to remit the whole subject to the action of Congress at its next session, he has shown therein a discretion which others may wisely emulate."
The rumor comes to us from Washington, that President Grant will abandon the acquisition and purchase of San Domingo. This we hope he will do, and thereby save any further differences of opinion in the Republican ranks. Here, in this section of the Northwest, nine Republicans out of every ten are opposed to San Domingo, in every shape and form which it may be presented. President Grant can do no wiser thing than to abandon the whole scheme, at least for the time being, and we entertain the hope that he will do it. Never was a measure more unpopular, and never was there a fact more certainly fixed, than that it will utterly overthrow the Republican organization, if it is persisted in to'a consummation. There are prudential considerations in politics as well as in anything else, and the present is peculiarly a time when the powers at Washington should exercise great prudence.
Our Savings Bank.
South Bend has no institution to which we refer with more pride than the ot. Joseph County Savings Bank. It bears an important and valuable relation to the city as a teacher of economy to a larsie mass of people who
would
otherwise waste
and squander their earnings, and it has been so fairly tested and honestly conducted as to have the public confidence in every respect. Its officers have come to bo regarded by the regular depositors more in the light of personal friends than regular business agents, and we have every reason to believe that their care and caution in investing the funds intrusted to them will never permit this feeling of security to be shaken.—St. Joseph Valley Register.
All over the State the Savings Banks are becoming very popular. In this city now, the deposits reach almost one hundred thousand dollars, and the number of deposits are increasing daily.
THE Chicago Times had the following in a recent issue "That Ulysses S. Grant is a traitor, as black in heart as Jefferson Davis ever was in intent, is a rapidly growing conviction in the public mind."
To which the Post responds that the Times certainly can not mean what it says, else nothing on earth would prevent it from giving Grant a cordial sup port.
Stranger than Fiction.
Readers of Miss Braddons's lurid fiction, Henry Dunbar, will remember that it turns on what seems to be the extravagant hypothesis, that one man may murder another, assume his name and identity, enter into possession of his estate, and be unsuspectingly received by his family and the world at large for the individual he personates. This is so glaring an improbability as to tax the faich of the most credulous of novel lovers. Nevertheless, in all its essential features, Miss Braddon's startling invention has been realized by a recent remarkable case in Chicago. The details of this curious and successful deception show so much perverted ingenuity and readiness of resource, as to entitle it to take rank among celebrated crimes.
As the story is now revealed, it begins with th« arrival in New York of one Gumbleton, an Irishman of good family, in the spring of 1870. With him he brought a letter of credit for £1,600, which he sold soon after his arrival to a New York banking house for a little less than $9,000. He then went to Baltimore, where he made the acquaintance of a young German, named Alfred Zeigenmeyer, with whom he soon became intimate. Together the two friends, in November of last year, traveled to Chicago, where Gumbleton placed on deposit in the National Bank of Commerce the sum of $300. 80011 after, accompanied by the young German, he shipped two boxes containing clothing to Manhattan, Kansas. From that time nothing definite appears to be known of him, until on the 2d of January of the present year his dead body was found in the lake, with a rope around his neck, and showing other indications of violence. Ever since that date the detectives have been untiring in their elForts to unravel the mystery, which have at last culminated in fixing the crime on Ziegenmeyer and causing his arrest at Bremen, where he is now held awaiting a requisition from Washington. If the police theory of his movements subsequent to the murder is entirely correct, it is necessary tocredithim with surprising cooluess and cunning in villainy.
Assuming the detective version to be true, it appears that Zeigenmeyer, immediately after the murder, presented himself at the bank with Gumbleton's certificate of deposit, and stated that he was his victim's partner, and that Gumbleton had gone to New York, leaving him full authority to draw the $300. The bank refused to deliver the money without the owner's indorsement. This Zeigenmeyer promised to get from New York, and after an interval of six days for that pretended object, returned with a forged endorsement, and secured the money. This was, apparently, his last appearance in the character of Zeigenmeyer From that time forth he adopted the name and identity of the murdered man. Indeed, at his lodgings he was already known as Gumbleton, although the two had lived there together uuder their proper names from the 16th to the 19th of November, when Gumbleton disappeared moreover, in personal appearance the two men were as unlike as can be conceived, Gumbleton being a mau of fortyfive, of about the medium height, with dark complexion, black hair and beard, aud an Irishman, while Ziegenmeyer was but twenty-one. tall, light, fairhaired and beardless, and a German, speaking English only imperfectly. That under these circumstances the deception could have been successfully carried out seems only less wonderful than the audacity which inspired it.
As Gumbleton, Ziegenmeyer then procured the return of the boxes sent to Kansas, which he at once sold, and turned his atteution to the great prize, the eiarht thousand aud odd dollars in New York. To obtain this, he forged to the banking house with whom the money was deposited a letter so skillfully executed as to satisfy them that it was the genuine Gumbleton's hand-writing. The balance was promptly forwarded to Ziegenmeyer in a draft on Chicago. There still remained the difficulty of identification, and the trick by which this was surmounted is not the least ingenious iu this singular record of rascally
astuteness. The pretended Gumbleton entered into negotiations to buy a farm, but when the time came to close the sale he had no money but his draft, which he could not cash. The anxious seller took the bait, and obligingly identified him at his own bank, and even went so far as to add his own endorsement to the draft. The bank officials, to be quite secure, wrote to the New York house, and were assured that everything was right. So the draft was paid, but the farm was not bought, and within a day or two afterward, on the 21st of December, Mr. ZiegenmeyerGumbleton vanished from Chicago, to be no more heard of until his arrest in Bremen on the charge of murder.
Regarding all the circumstances of this elaborate villainy, so carefully planned and so skillfully executed, it may be doubted if anything in sensational fiction approaches it in romantic improbability. Yet the facts seem to be undeniable, and they are presented on the respectable authority of a well known Chicago journal.—New York Times.
CONFECTIONERY AND BAKERY. A CARD.
COSrFECTIOHnEKY
AND
A E
AVING refitted the Confectionery and Bakery formerly kept by
MESSRS. MIESSEN & CO.,
]\To. 16 North Fourth Street,
And engaged the services of Mr. Meissen, I am now x^repared to l'urnish orders ol any kiau loi
Weddings, Parties, Festivals, &c..
In oar Hue. We have also
NEW A.Y* SELECTED SKM Ii OF
CANDIES, OTTH. •&€.
At the Lowest
173d3m
Possiole
Prices I
We ask a share of the public patronage. N. B. l«'resh Milk at all times.
G. F. KL\G,
Xo. 16 Worth Fourth Street,.
COAL,
PREMIUM BLOCK COAL,
J. II. WHITAKEI!
PREPARED to furnish to Coal consumer during this Fall and Wiuter,
THE VERY BEST
Shaft Block Coal
IN THE MARKET,
Iu Qualities to Suit Purchasers.
Call and Examine the Quality of this Coal
Opposite the 31irkct House,
COR. FOURTH A WALNUT STREETS
93d3m Before purchasing elsewhere.
SADDLERY.
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BOOK STORE.
1 5 O
Bookseller and Stationer!
STANDARD AND MISCELLANEOUS
BOOKS,
SCHOOL BOOKS,
STATIONERY,
BLANK BOOKS,
MEMORANDUMS}
FOOLSCAP,
KMdtf
LETTER and
NOTE PAPERS
PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS,
ENTELOPES,
FANCY GOODS,
GOLD PEN,% &C.,
TERRE
HAUTE, INDIANA.
TOBACCOS, ETC.
VRASHEARS, BROWN & TITUS, I QXmSSIOX MERCHANTS
Wholesale Dealers in
Groceries and Manufactured Tobaccos
AGENTS
for R. J. Christian fc Co.'s celebrated
brands of "Christian Comfort," Bright May Pine Apple Black Navy %, and Cherry Brand Black Navy %, and other fine brands,
32 AND 84 MAIN STREET Idly Worcester, Maw.
APPLE PARERS.
D. II. WmTTEMORE, Manufacturer of APPLE PARERS,
And Paring, Coring A Slicing Machines, Idy Worcester, Man.
MEDICAL.
DR ALBURGER'S
CELEBRATED
A. E A
HERB STOMACH BITTERS
The Great Blood Purifier and
Anti-Dyspeptic Tonic!
THESE
celebrated an A well-known Bitters are composed of roots and herbs, 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, Chronic or Nervous Debility, Chronic Diarrhcea, Diseases of the liidnevs, Costiveness, Pain in the Head, Vertigo, Hermorrhoids,
Female Weakness, Loss of Appetite, Intermittent and Remittent Fevers, Flatulence
Constipation, Inwaiv Piles, Fullness of Blood in the
Head,
Acidity of the
Stomach, N a us a, 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 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 Complaint, Dyspepsia, or.diseases of the digestive organs, combined with an impure blood. These bitters are not a rum drink, as most bitters are, but are put before the public for their medicinal proproperties, and cannot be equalled by any other preparation.
Prepared only at
]r.
DR. IXGRAHAM'S
MACEDONIAN OIL!
For Internal and External Use.
Read What the People Say. €urel
Price 50 cents and SI per bottle. Full Directions in German and English. Sold by Druggists.
DR. INGRAHAM & CO., Manufacturers, 211dly Wooster, O.
HOTELS.
STEWART HOUSE,
Corner of Jkain and Second Streets, TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.
HAVINGthe
(.6
Alburgcr's Laboratory,
Philadelphia, proprietor of the celebrated Worm Sirup, Infant Carminative and Pulmonic Sirup.
itSuPrincipal office, northeast corner of THIRD and BitOWN Streets, Philadelphia.
For sale by Johnson, Holloway & Cowden, 602 Arch Slreet, Philadelphia, and by Druggist.- and Dealers in medicines, 211dly
$10,000 Reward.
of Catarrh and Deafness of IO Years Duration.
NEW YORK CITY, March 3,1870.
DR. IXGKAXIAM, "WOOSTKR, OHIO—Dear Sii. The six bottles you sent me by express came safely to me, and I am most happy to sLate that the the Oil has cured me
01
Catarrh nnd Deaf
ness. .No man can realize the inference until lie has once passed Mux ugh 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 &orcs Cured of Years Standius
Old
PHILADELPHIA, PENN.,June23,1870.
DR. INGKAHAM, WOOSTEK, OHIO—Gents: Macedonian Oil lias cured me of Inflamation 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 of Rheumatism. 85 BEAVER AVE., ALLEGHENY CITY,
Oct. 12,1809.
DR. INGRAHAM Co.—Gents: I suffered 35 years with Rheumatism in my liip joints. I was tortured with pain until my hip was deformed. I used every thing ths»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 abletodo for twenty years. I am gratefully yours,
JKLIZABETII WILLIAMS.
The Macedonian Oil cures all diseases of the blood or sUin, Tetters, Crofula, Piles, or any case of Palsy.
thoroughly renovated and refur
nished house recently, 1 solicit the patronage of my old friends, and the traveling publie generally. te«~Free Buss to and from all trai ,s. ocj27d3m J. M.
DAVIS,
Proprietor.
TDKBE HAUTE HOUSE,
Cor. of Main and Seventh Streets,
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
6d
T. C. BUNTIN, Proprietor.
JACOB BUTZ. GEO. C. BUTZ.
JfAXIOJIAL HOUSE,
Corner of Sixth and Main Streets. 1ERRE-HAUTE, INDIANA,
A COB UTZ & SON, Proprietors.
This House has been thoroughly refurnished
LOCKS.
CORNELIUS, WALSH & SON,
Manufacturers and dealers in
CABINET & TRUNK LOCKS,
TRAVELING BAG FRAMES & TRUNK HARDWARE, Hamilton street, Corner Railroad Avenue, Idly NEWARK, N.J.
LEATHEB.
JOIL\ H. O'BOYLE,
DEALER IN
LEATHER, HIDES,
OIL
AND FINDINGS,
NO. 178 MAIN STREET,, Terre Haute, Indiana.
8®"Cash paid or Hides, Furs, Pelts and Rough Leather. 124dl4
CLOTHING.
J. ERLANGER,
"Wholesale and Retail Dealer In
MENS', YOUTHS' AND BOYS' CLOTHING,
ldfim
5
And Gents' Fnrnishing Goods,
NO. 93 MAIN STREET, Terre Haute, lnd
BOOTS AND SHOES. A. Cr. BALCH
Ladies' & Gents' Fashionable BOOTS & SHOES,
J^ADE to order, No. 146 Main street, between 5th & 6th up stairs, 2d6m Terre Haute, Ind
BLANK BOOKS.
1.1HE
GAZETTE BINDERY turns out the best Blank Book work in Terre Haute. We have one of the most skillful Rulers in the 8tate, ind guarantee satisfaction on complicated work.O'd Hooks rebound
as usual
Good heavy ALL LINEN TOWELS down to
LEY 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 ple-
bians. All are alike in our eyes. "Worth makes the man, and want of it the fel
low." We believe in small profits and big trade.
PUSH THINGS."
[Grant's order to Sheridan."
More New Goods! Lower Prices Still!
5,000 yards Atlantic Mills Musliii, ...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
OF TERRE HAUTE!
A superb Glove-fitting FRENCH WOVEN CORSET, all sizes, down to 50 cents.
Country stores charge SI.50 for same goods, and Terre Haute 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 81
Dayton and Maysville Carpet Warp, 29c. Stamped and Boulevard Skirts for Spring, flOc.
Coats' Cotton, 5c. Elegant Dress Goods, 12Jc, 15c, 20c, 24c and up.
O S E O E S
GREAT JTEW YORK CITY STORE,
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
CARPETS,
GREAT SALE OF CARPETS!
DOWN THE PRICES!
High-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'T 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 eosts 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, sncli as Rifiona, 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."
OUR STOCK IS MW AO FBESiH!
The greater part of it has arrived within a few days. The patterns are new,
very rich and exquisite in design aud as we propose
Smashing the Price of Carpets
This Spring as badly as we have Dry Goods, we propose to »ell tiieiii tweil typer cent, below recevt prices.
Good yard-wide Carpets, 25c, 28c and 30c. goods 30c, 35c and 40c.
Good yard-wide Ingrain Carpets, 50c and 90c. for them.
All Wool Ingrain, 75e and 80c. Recent price 90c and $1. Elegant new styles, very fine and heavy, only $1. Now being sold in Terre 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, aud Carpet Stores are now charging $1.75 for them.
Continued Bargains in Dry Goods!
Rich assortment of Dress Goods, from 12Jc up to|I.
Elegant lines of Parasols at New York prices. •*.
We shall sell Dry Goods cheaper than ever this Spring.
O S E
Great New? Tork Bry/G6o#,
'A 41
6c
Carpet Stores charge for the same
Carpet Stores charge 65c and 75c
O E S
NORTH SIDE OF MAIN STREET, TERRE HAUTE, I ID*.
mm
GAS FIXTURES. &
M'HENRY & CO,, 6 and 8 East Fourth and 162 Main St., CINCINNATI.
THE PLACE TO BUY
EITHER AT
WHOLESALE OR RETAIL,
EVERYTHING IN THE LINE OF
Gas Fixtures, Lamps and Chandeliers, Pipe, Pumps, Tools,
In
itc
GAS FIXTURES,
WE
offer a choice selection of the best designs in Bronze and Gilt that have been produced thiseeason in the principal manufactories of the East. In our stock will be found all that is new or desirable in Gas Fixtures, for lighting
Churches, 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 LAN PS, HALL AND TABLE LIGHTS LANTERNS, rtc
Furnished wii.h the latest improvements In Burners, Shades, &c. Oil that will not explode' and Chimneys that will not break.
In 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 1 Istern and Well Pumps, Lift and Force Pumps,
Beer Pumps, Uarden Pumps, Ac. Bath Tubs, Closets, Washstands, wash Trays,
Bath Boilers, Sinks, &
01 Gas and Steam Fitters' Tools,
"We have a full lire, consisting of 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' A ugurs,
Chisels, Ac., Ac,
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 conibir, COMFORT AND ECONOMY, being free ftw the annoyance of HEAT, SMOKE and ASHES.
No family should be without
:iDOME
GAS
STOVE." Remember the place, ld6m MCHENRY S CO.
FAMIL7 GROCER.
JAMES O'MARA,
SUCCESSOR TO
J. £. YOORHEES,
Ohio Street, between Fourth and Fifth,
\X7"ILL keep on hand a full snpply of Food for man and Beast. A few articles enumerated
Flour, Feed, Fruit, Poultry,
And a General Assortment ot
FAMILY GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS Will keep constantly on hand a fresh supply Vegetables of all kinds. Also,
FRESH MEAT MARKET,
and keep all kinds of fresh meat. Leave your orders an they will be filled and delivered promptly to all parts of the city. Will also buy all kinds of
COUNTRY PRODUCE.
Farmers will do well to call before selling. 62d&wfim JAS. O'MARA
PAINTING.
Wl. S. MELTOX, PAINTER,
Cor. 6th, La Fayette and Locnst sis., Terre Haute, Ind.
DOES
GRAINING, PAPER HANGING, CALC1MIN1NG,
and everything usually done
in the line. 20dwfly
THE OLD RELIABLE
BARB & 1EAKLE
House and Sign Painters,
CORY'S NEW BUILDING, Fifth street, between Main and Ohio sts.
E are prepared to do all work In our line aa
CHEAP AS THE CHEAPEST.
We will give personal attention to all work
56d3m entrusted to ns.
FEED STORE.
J.
A. BURGAN,
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 ldfim
BELTING.
JOSIAII GATES & SONS,
Manufacturers or
Oak Taniied Leather Belting Hose.
Lace Leather of Superior Quality, and dealers in all kinds ot,
ANU ACTURERS'
Fire Department Supplies,
NOS. 4 & 6 DUTTON STREET,
ld6m Lowell, Massachusetts
CARPETS.
Glen Echo Carpet Mills,
GERMANTOWN, FHTL'A.
McCALLUM, CREASE & SLOAN,
MANUFACTURERS,
Warehouse, 509 Chestnut Street, PHILADELPHIA.
"fwrE INVITE the attention of the trade to W wir new and choice designa in this cele brated make of goods.
VARNISHES.
ESTABLISHED, 1836.
Jttior ». FITZ-GERAi.l,
(Hate D, Price A Fitz-Gerald,)
Manufacturers of
IMPROVED COPAL TARNISHES,: Idyr NEWARK N
CABDS.
CARDSof
every description for Business, Visit
Ing, Wedding or Funeral purposes, in any' number from 100 to 100,000, expeditiously, neatly and cheaply printed at the GAZETTE STEAM pOB OFFICE, Filth street. We keep the large HMortment or card stock In tlia citv—bought 1 net from Eastern Mill*
