Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 1, Number 268, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 April 1871 — Page 2
HUDSON 0 HOSE, Proprietors.
K. N. HUDSON
Address all letters,
Fifth
r,. M. K0SE.
OIHce: North Fifth St., near Main.
Th«. DAII.V CAZETTK is published every afternoon, except Sunday, and sold by the carriers iit 20c per week. By mail per year for (i months $2.5O for 3 months. ie WFKKLY
GAZETTE
is issued every Thurs-
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nd
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be
HUDSON ROSE,
GAZETTE,Terre&
Haute, ind
REPUBLICAN CITY TICKET. FOIi MAYOIt,
ALEXANDER THOMAS. FOR MARSHALL, FREDERICK SCHMIDT.
FOK TREASURER, JOHN PADDOCK. FOR CLERK, F. SCHWINGROUBER.
I-'OR ASSESSOR,
WASHINGTON PADDOCK. FOR COUNCILMEN,
First Ward —FRANK C. CRAWFORD. Second Ward - SAMUEL REESE. Third Ward— J. R. WHITTAKER.
J. R. WHIT TAKER.
Fourth Ward—K,.
M. OILMAN.
II''/'?—JACOB W. MILLER.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1871.
Amnesty in the Senate.
We had the pleasure of announcing yesterday that an amnesty bill had passed the House of Representatives, and this afternoon we have the mortification of announcing further, that when this same bill came up for action in the Senate, it was, on yesterday, promptly laid on the table. There it will remain we suppose, until a Christian people will send to the United States Senate, more liberal and enlightened representatives. How Senator Pratt will vote on this most important question, we have no means of knowing, but that Senator Morton is against it, is almost certain. He seems to be hostile to almost every measure, which in our judgment is calculated to allay the hostile feeling of Southern men, and in favor of all those measures which to our mind would bring again peace and good feeling on the part of those men, who six years ago laid down their arms and acknowledged the authority of the Federal Government over them. We greatly regret the side our distinguished Senator has taken in relation to this series of important national measures. We accord to him honesty and an honorable purpose in all this, but we feel convinced that he is greatly wrong, and that the time is not far distant when he himself will think so.
There is not a generous impulse thrilling the natures of noble men everywhere, but speaks aloud for general amnesty. All over this great valley, wherever independant men assemble and talk over the situation of affairs in the South, they favor removing all disabilities, and placing all men in those States, equal before thelaw. This must be done or there is no peace in that section. The white man will not submit to the black man takingcontrolofState governments and legislating for the superior race, as is now the case in someof those
States. The
history of all past ages gives no example where such a thing was submitted to, undersuch circumstances, for any length of time. Federal bayonets may suppress for a time the outburst of Saxon defiance, but it is only a question of time. It will corneas sure as light follows darkness. Northern justice may force the right from Northern Representatives, but if not, the oppressed citizens will right themselves.
In strange contrast with this action of the United States Senate yesterday, is the following remarks of Gen. W. Q. Gresham made at the "Reunion of the Association of the Army of the Tennessee," recently assembled at Cincinnati
MU. PRESIDEXT The hardships and sufferings of our soldiers for the four long yours of bloody war will have been in vain if wo shall fail to establish poaco and concord between tho different sections of our wide-spread country. We fought not for tlie vain purposo of displaying our powers in tins field, nor to gratify foelings of sectional hatred or resentment, but to maintain inviolate the bonds of our Union and free institutions. Our enemies, alike with ourselves, were descendants of the same common stock—our countrymen, many of them our kindred, inheriting the sanitf traditions, and owing allegiance to the same Constitution and laws. The conflict of arms being ended, and the palm of victory being ours, it is our first duty, as brave and magnanimous soldiers, to mako our lato enemies leel, by the liberality of our sentiment and the frankness of our conduct, that their return to their allegiance involves neither dishonor nor humiliation that the passions engendered by the conllict have been banished from our breasts, and that hereafter we will regard as common enemies those who attempt to fan the llames of sectional strife.
We should remember that the seeds of the revolutionary struggle in which our late opponents were engaged were inherent in our situation, and were implanted in the very Constitution itself. From the foundation of the Government it was apparent that the great element of discord in our system was the institution of slavery. Our fathers, wisely or unwiselv, postponed its settlement, and when the crisis came, it found the only solution possible consistent with the nature of things. All history attests that great and revolutionary changes in political organizations can rarely be settled except by the arbitrament of arms. But when the struggle is over, when thellamo of battle has ceased, and the cloud of war has drifted away, "let us have peace"—peace in deed as we'll as in name. To that end let us deal frankly with our late enemies, and also with ourselves. They must recognize the fact that in surrendering to the Government they fought so long and so. stubbornly to destroy, they utterly and forever abandon and renounce the heresy that a State may nullify the Federal laws, and the equally pernicious doctrine that the National Government has no power under the Constitution to perpetuate its own existence by force.
Those questions were submitted by our enemies to a tribunal of their own selection, and the decision was irreversably against them and now their safety, no less than our own, compels us to demand that that decision shall be respected, and that in the future they shall be obedient to the national will and 'submit to the authority of the laws. Aud let us, the victors, give the whole world an example of moderation by declaring that we are in favor of perfect amnesty to all, thereby proving that we are alike equal to the demands of war and peace. Let the people of the South have no excuse for saying that they have martyrs in their midst, for the leaders of the rebellion are stronger to-day disfranchised than they would be enfranchised. Let it not hereafter be
written of the soldiers of the Union, and especially of the glorious old Army of the Tennessee, that they knew how to the enemy in the Held, but were not able to 'no magnanimous to a fallen loo.
MMB. PATTI, who has achieved so marvelous a success in Russia, has, says the Steele, imitated some of the diplomatists of that hospitable country by an nounciug that she no longer considers herself bound by a certain treaty into which she had entered. This treaty bound her to appear at tne Italian Opera, in Paris, on the loth of the month of March, for which she would have received the trifling sum of 4,000 francs a night. But what is this to a lady who receives a bouquet of jewels on her benefit night worth 12,000 francs, besides a present from the subscribers of diamonds worth 40,000 franco? The boxes on that grand occasion were let at 600 francs each, and the only drawback to the evening must have been the fact that the songstress was called seventy-live times before the curtain, besides being sent for three times to the
Emperor's box, honors which, if often repeated, would make strength of limb as necessary to the prima donnai as beauty of voice.
THE German papers, at they have a right to do, ara feliciting themselves upon the wonderful results of the late war with France. In their magnitude and importance they surpass any recorded in modem European history. Even those of Jena, in 1806, and of Luipsic, in 1813, are inferior in comparison. The war lasted one hundred and eighty days, or just six calendar months. During this time the German troops fought 17 grand battles aud 156 battles of less importance, captured 26 fortified places, 6,70) pieces of artillery, 120 eagles or flags, ll,6o0 officers and 363,000 men. The killed and wounded on the part of the French was probably half as many more. The number of prisoners is extraordinary. It is far more than the Russians took in the disastrous French campaign of 1812 in Russia.
THE following is the Amnesty bill which has passed the House and is now on the table in the Senate. 'A bill for the removal of legal and political disabilities imposed by the third section of the Fourteenth article of amendments to the Constitution of the United States."
SECTION 1. Be it enacted,&c., Two-thirds of each House concurring therein, That all legal and political disabilities imposed by the third section of the Fourteen article of amendments to the Constitution of tho United States, on persons therein mentioned, because of their having engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the United states, or giving aid or comfort to the armies thereof, be, and the same are hereby removed, provided that this act shall not apply to or in any manner affect or remove the disability of any person included in either of tho folllowing classes, viz. First—Members of the Congress of tho United States who withdrew therefrom and aided tho rebellion Sec-ond—-Officers of the army or navy of the United States who, being about tho age of twenty-one years, left said army or navy and aided the rebellion Third—Members of the State Conventions which adopted the pretended ordinances of secession, who voted for the adoption of such ordinances.
SEC. 2. Be it farther enacted, That before any person shall be entitled to the benefit of this act, he shall within tho district where he resides, before a clerk of some court of the United States, or a United States Commissioner, take and subscribe an oath, or affirmation, to support the Constitution of the United States, and to bear true faith and allegiance to the same, which oath or affirmation shall be forwarded by said officer to the Secretary of State of the United States, wno shall cause a list of all persons complying with the provisions of this act to be laid before Congress at the opening of each session thereof, and the officer before whom such oath or affirmation is made, shall give to the person taking it a certificate of the fact under such forms and regulations as the Secretary of the State may prescribe.
A Woman with an Ossified Face. To those who have never visited the hospitals and anatomical museums of large cities there are conditions of human mold and form divine, as it is in fully developed and healthful proportion, harrowing and strange, and of which their philosophy never dreamed. There is, at the St. Vincent Hospital on South College street, Nashville, Tenn., a case almost taxing credulity itself. The patient was admitted to the institution on the 9th of last month, and is on the list of pay patients. She is a Mrs. Carter, from Carrol County, Tenn. Some years since, near the close of the war, while suffering as an invalid she was sitting in her room before a fire.
Suddenly a species of helplessness came upon her, aud she fell forward with her face upon a heap of burning coals. Her entire face was bedded on the heated fire. Unable to arise, she endeavored to scream, but the very voice was drowned in the fire, that smothered her breath, and was sucked in for air. Writhing in agony, there she lay, burning and helpless, till some of the family came to her relief. It is enough to make the marrow freeze in one's bones to think of it, the agony she endured during that space of time. Ou being removed, it was discovered that the face was literally burned away. The lips, the nose the eye-lashes were crisped, and the eyes themselves, so to speak, were inverted. She recovered of the illness under which she was laboring at the time, and survived the dreadful accident. All mobilty of feature, lineament of countenance and facial expression, are virtually ob literated by the eating fire. What is most singular is that the face seems to have assumed a species of ossification, aud is hard, inflexible, and impenetrable to ordinary touch or puncture.
WE thought it settled that the custom of burying the dead in the cellars of churches is an absurd and unhealthy one. It is maintained, however, by Trinity parish, in Boston. This congregation has petitioned the Legislature for leave to remove its edifice to some more desirable locality. Dr. George Derby testified that there could be no doubt of the injury to health occasioned by such interments. He regarded it, aud it was regarded in England, as a settled question. Dr. John Jeffreys was of a like opinion and so was everybody called, except Lewis Jones, sexton of St. Paul's, who said that bodies were buried under that Church that his family had for years lived within twelve feet of the basement door, and that their health had not suffered. Perhaps a sexton may not be not quite a disinterested witness and perhaps a sexton's family has a peculiar constitutional power of resisting miasma.
THE ancients believed that the individual whose hair was straight and lank, was weak and cowardly.- Frizzled hair was indicative of coarseness aud clumsiness. The hair that especially won their admiration was that which, flowing down, terminated in ringlets. The Emperor Augustus was favored by nature with wonderfully line and abundant hair. Auburn or light brown tresses were thought most distinguished, and the possessor of hair of either tint was pre-supposed to be intelligent, ir'dustrious and of a peaceful disposition. Black
hair was not held in esteem by Romans. Red hair was positively hideous in their eyes. Ages before the time of Sudus it was an omen of wickedness in its possessor. Fortunately, these old-time prejudices have worn away. Men no longer base their estimate of character upon the color of the hair.
DEEPPLOWING
FOR
7il 0 S
&
tf
WORN OUT LANDS.
—The agriculturist should know that all soils, and even granite rock, contain more or less ot the elements of vegetable growth. Soil while in a dense state, so compact that the atmosphere, with the aid of the sun and rain, heat and cold cannot penetrate and decompose them, will be sterile while by disintegrating them they will become fertile, and their power for absorbing and combining with manurial substances greatly increased. Therefore it is that the same quantity of manure, the same season, the same kind ot land, yields far greater returns where the land has been deeply and thoroughly pulverized.
CONFECTIONERY AND BAKERY.
A CARD.
CONFECTIONERY
AND
A E
fitted the Confectionery and Bak-
AVIXG re ery formerly Kept by
MESSRS. MIESSEN & CO.,
]Vo. 16 Xorth Fourth Street,
And engaged tlie services of Mr. Meissen, I am now prepared to furnish orders ot any kind lor
Weddings, Parties, Festivals, &c..
In our line. We have also XKW A SO SELKdio »I«CK OF
CA3TDIES,
173d3m
3STJTS. AC.
At the Lowest Possiole Prices I
We ask a share of the public patronage. N. B. Fresh Milk at all times.
G. F. KING,
Xo. 16 JTortli Fourth Street.
FLOURING MILLS.
TELEGRAPH MILLS,
LAFAYETTE STREET,.
TEIlllE IIAUTE, INDIANA.
HIE highest market price paid for
Wheat, Rye, Oats, Corn
AND BUCKWHEAT.
Wlieat Flour, Kyu Flour, Buckwheat Flour, ami I£i In-dried Corn }leal,
All of tlie best Quality, and sold at the Lowest Prices, wholesale or retail, ill barrels or ill sacks Also, Ground Feed, coarse and fine, Bran, &c
RICHARDSON & GIFFHORN.
KMdy
SADDLERY.
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A a
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BOOH STORE.
O O
Bookseller and Stationer!
STANDARD AND MISCELLANEOUS
BOOKS,
SCHOOL BOOKS,
STATIONERY, BLANK BOOKS, MEMORANDUMS
FOOLSCAP,
LETTER and
NOTE PAPERS
PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS,
ENVELOPES,
FANCY GrOODS
GOLD rEXS) d-c.,
TEURE HAUTE, INDIANA. HHdtf
WAGONYARD.
DANIEL MILLER'S
NEW WAGON YARD
AND
HOARDING HOUSE, Corner Fourth aud Eagle Streets, TERRE HAUTE, IND.
1HIE
Undersigned takes great p.easure in ir forming his old friends and customers, anu the public generally, that he has again taken charge of his well-known Wagon Yard and Boarding House, located as above, and that he will be found ready aud prompt to accommodate all in the best and most acceptable manner. His boarding house has been greatly enlarged and thoroughly refitted. His Wagon Yard Is not excelled for accommodations anywhere in the city. Boarders taken by the Day, Week or
Month, and Prices Reasonable. N, B.—The Boarding House and Wagon Ya will be under the entire supervision of mysel aud family. [5Sd&wtf] DAXIEL MILLER.
SOMETHING XEW.
MEDIKONES—AMedicines,
MEDICAL.
DR A 1.151 I\(i Hlt'S CELEBRATED
CJ E It 31 A. IV ~::r
HERB STOMACH BITTERS
The Great liloort PnriMeran«l
Anti-Dyspeptic Tonic!
THESEcelebratedan.4and
well-known Bitters are
composed of routs and lierbs, ol most innocent yet specilic virtues, are purticuianjrccommended for restoring weak consUtutions ind increasing the appetite. Iliey aieaccitain cure for
)laint, Dyspepsia, Jaundice, Chronic is Debility, Chronic Diairhcea, LHstlie kidneys,
Liver Compl or Nervous eases ol .. in the Head, Vertigo, liermorrhoiiis
Costiveness,
am
Female Weakness, .Loss of Appetite, Intermittent and Remittent Fevers, Flatulence
Constipation, Iu\vai\ Piles, Fullness of Blood in the
Head,
Acidity of the
Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust of Food, Fullness or Weight in the stomach,Sour Erircat tions, Sinking or Fluttering at the Pit of tlie Stomach, Hurried or Difficult Breathing. Fluttering of the Heart Dullness the Vision, Dots or Webs Before the
Sight, Dull Pain in the Head, Yellowness of the Skin, Pain the Side, Back, Chest, Ac., &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, aud cannot be equalled by any other preparation.
Prepared only at
Dr. Alfourgcr*s [Laboratory, Philadelphia, proprietor of the celebrated Worm Sirup, Infant Carminative and Pulmonic Sirup. li^Principal office, northeast corner of THIRD and BROWN Streets, Philadelphia.
For sale by Johnson, Holloway & Cowden, G02 Arch Street, Philadelphia, aud by Druggists and Dealers in medicines, 211dly
HOTELS.
STEWART HOUSE, Corner of Main and Second Streetst TEIUIE IIAUTE, INDIANA.
HAVINGmy
thoroughly renovated and refur
nished the house recently, 1 solicit the patronage of old trie mis, and the traveling public generally.
Free Buss to and from all trains. oc}'-~d3iu J. M. DAVIS, Proprietor.
TERRE HAUTE HOUSE,
Cor. of Main and Seventh Streets,
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
T. C. BUNTIN, Proprietor.
6d
JACOB BUTZ. GEO. C. BUTZ. NATIONAL HOUSE, Corner of Sixth and Main Streets. TERRE-HAUTE, INDIANA,
A COB UTZ &• SOX, Proprietors.
This House has been thoroughly refurnished
STEAM BAKERY.
Union Steam
Bakery.
FRANK HEINIG & BltO.,
Manufacturers of all kinds ot
Crackers, Cakes, Bread A"0
A N
*Dealeisin .'
Foreign aud Domestic Fruits,
FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES,
LA FA YETTE STREET\
Between the two Railroads.
133d Terre liaute, Indiana.
TAILORING.
W A E N
TAILOB,
Corner of Second and Main Streets, (Opposite the Stewart House.) Gents' Clothing Made in the Best Style «5S~Cutting done Promptly. 107d3m
GASJITTER.
A. BI£F,
OAS AND STEA3I FITTER,
OHIO STREET,
Between Second and Third,
112d3m TERRE HAUTE, IND
LOOKS.
CORNELIUS, WALSH & SON,
Manufacturers and dealers in
CABINET & TRUNK LOCKS,
TRAVELING BAG FRAMES &
TRUNK HARDWARE,
Hamilton street, Corner Railroad Avenue, Idly NEWARK, N.J.
LEATHER.
JOHN II. O'BOYLE,
DEALER IN
LEATHER, HIDES,
8®="Cash
ldfim
Book, (sent free), containing
a newly-discovered Cure for many Diseases without using of interest to all. Address, Drs. WELLS & STELL No. 37 West 21st street, Now York City. 29wl2
Loom" or "Family" Carpets.
OIL
AND FI^DOGS,
NO. 178 MAIN STREET\ Terre Haute, Indiana.
paid or Hides, Furs, Pelts and Rough
Leather. 124dl4
CLOTHINCr.
J. ERLANGER, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
MENS', YOUTHS' AND BOYS'
CLOTHING, ,,
And Gents' Furnishing Goods,'
NO. 93 MAIN STREET, Terre Haute, Ind
BOOTS AND SHOES. A. KAIX'II
Ladies'&Gents' Fashionable
BOOTS & SHOES,
MADE
to order, No. 146 Main street, between 3th & 6th up stairs,
A1"m
BELTING.
GRAFTON & KNIGHT, Manufacturers of
Best Oak Tanned Stretched Leather Belts.
Also, Page18 Patent Lacing, ront St., Harding's Block Worcester Masa
'S: 'J.:
Terre Haute. Ind
DRY GOODS.
'SEND THE SICK TO HOSPITAL.
OPENING OF THE SPRING CAMPAIGN
Good heavy ALL LINEN TOWELS dov, to
CLEAR THE DECKS L'OR ACTION!
Will there be more "deserted palaces" soon?
Dayton and Maysville Carpet Warp, 29c.
The popular current runs strong in our favor. High-priced Stores are empty
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 (joods! Lower Prices Still!
5,000 yards Atlantic Mills Muslin, 6c Country stores charge 10c, aud Terre Haute stores 9c for same goods. 4,000 yards of yard-wide EXTRA HEAVY Unbleached Mnslin,down to 10c
This is one of the very best Muslins made, other stores charge 15c and 10c. Very large lot of BEST AMERICAN DE LAINES down to .13%c Country stores charge for the same goods 25c, Terre Haute stores 22c.
Big Lot of the best SPRAGUE PRINTS down lo 10c
All other stores './Large 12£e for them.
Country stores actually charge 15c for tlie 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 S1.50 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 SI
Stamped and Boulevard Skirts for Spring, 90c.
Coats' Cotton, 5c.
Elegant Dress Goods, 12^c, 15c, 20c, 2-lc and up.
0 S E O E S
OSEAT NEW YORK CITY S TO It K.
TERRE HAUrE, IND.
OAEPSTS.
GREAT SALE OF CARPETS!
DOWN GO THE PRICES!
Higli-priced Stares 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, aud so in 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
We keep only the best brands, sncli 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."
OUR STOCK IS JEW AJTD 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 as badly as we have Dry Goods, we propose to sell tlieui twen•tj per cent, below receirt 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, 7oe aud 80c. Recent price 90c and $1. Now being sold in Terre
Elegant new styles, very .fine and heavy, only $1. 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!
:'1'.
Elegant lines of Parasols at New York prices.
99
Carpet Stores charge for the same
Carpet Stores charge 6oc and 75c
...
Rich assortment of Dress Goods, from 12Jc up to $1.
We shall sell Dry Goods chfeaperthan ever this Spring.:
O S E O E S
Great New York Dry Goods Store,
NORTH SIDE OF MAIN STREET, TERRE HAUTE, IND.
uAS FIXTURES.
M'HENRY & COT,
6 and 8 East Fourth and 162 Main St.,
CINCINNATI.
THE PLACE 10 BUY •EITHER AT
WHOLESALE OR RETAIL,
EVERYTHING IK THE LIKE OF
Gas Fixtures, Lamps aud Cliaudeliers, Pipe, Pumps, Tools.
WE
01
6c
&c
In GAS FIXTURES,
offer a choice selection of the Dest UPsigns in Bronze and Gilt that have been produced this season in the principal manufactories of the Kast. In our stock will be found all that is new or desirable in Gas Fixtures, for lighting
Churches, Halls, Dwellings, Stores, &e
Oil Lamps and Chandeliers.
In this line, our assortment comprises all the late patterns and improvements in Cliaudeliers, HANGING LAMPS,
BRACKET LA NFS, HALL AND TABLK LIGHTS LANTEKNS, ,Vc
Furnished wuh the latest improvements in Burners, Shades. Ac. Oil that will not explodeand Chimneys that will not break.
ILL
Irou Pipes ami Fittiugs,
Our stock is full and complete, and our prices as low as the lowest.
In Pumps ami Plumbers' Goods,
We have all that can be wanted in the way
btern and Well Pumps, Lift and Force Pumps, Beer Pumps, Garden Pumps, Ac.
Bath Tubs, Closets, Washstands, Wash Trays, Bath Boilers, Sinks, A
Gas and Steam Fitters' Tools,
We have a full lire, consisting of
Screw-cutting Machines, Stocks and Dies, Drills, Reamers and Taps.
Patent Pipe Cutters, Patent and Ordinary Pipe Tonus, Pipe Vises,
Meter and Burner Plyers, Gas Fitters'Augurs, Chisels, 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 familv use, they coiubir COMFORT AND ECONOMY, being free fro.rf the annoyance of
HEAT, SMOKE
and
ASIIES.
No family should be without
:IDOME
STOVE." Remember the place, idly MCHENRY
GAS
A CO.
FAMILY GROCER.
JAMES O'MARA,
SUCCESSOR TO
J. E. VOORHEES,
l^Ohio Street, between Fourth and Fifth, \X/"ILL keep on liand a full supply 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 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 the city. Will also buy all kinds of
COUNTRY PRODUCE.
Farmers will do well to call before selling. 62d&w6m JAS. O'MARA
PAINTINS.
WM. S. MELTON,
PAINTER,
Cor. 6th, La Fayette anl Locust sts., Terre Haute, Ind.
DOESGRAINING,PAPER
C1MIN1NG,
HANGING,CAL-
and everything usually done
in the line. 20dwfly
THE OLD RELIABLE
BARR & YEAKLE
House and Sign Painters,
CORY'S NEW BUILDIXG, Fifth street, between Main and Ohio sts.
"^7"E are prepared to do all work in our line as
CHEAP AS THE CHEAPEST.
We will give personal attention to all work
56d3m entrusted to us.
FEED STORE.
J. A. BURGAN,
Dealer in
Flour, Feed, Baled liny, Corn Oats, and all kinds of Seeds, NORTH THIRD ST., NEAR MAIN
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
FEEDdelivered
in all parts of the city free ot
charge ldfim
BELTING-.
JOSIAH GATES & SONS,
Manulacturers or
Oak Tanned Leather Belting Hose.
Lace Leather of Superior Quality, and dealers in all kinds ol,„
MANUFACTURERS'
Fire Department Supplies,
NOS. 4 & 6 DUTTON STREET,
ldGm Lowell, Massachusetts
CARPETS.
Glen Echo Carpet Mills,
GERMANTOWN, FHIL'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.
VARNISHES. ESTABLISHED, 1836.
JOHN D. FITZ-GERALD,
(Late D. Price & Fitz-Gerald,) Manufacturers of IMPROVED COPAL TARNISHES,
ldyj NEWARK N
CARDS.
CARDSof
every description for Business, Visit
ing. Wedding or Funeral purposes, in any numbei^vm 100 to 100,000, expeditiously, neatly
and
cheaplyprinted at
the GAZETTE STEAM
fOB OFFICE^ Filth street. We keep the large assortment
of
card stock In the city— bought
met from Eastern Mill*
