Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 2, Number 40, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 18 July 1871 — Page 2

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HUDSON 1ZOSE, Proprietors. B. N. HtTDSON I"

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K08K..

Office: North Fifth St., near Main.

The DAILY GAZETTE is published every afternoon, except Sunday, and sold by the carriers at 20c per week. By mail #10 per year «g for 6 months #2-50 for 3 months. The WEEKLY GAZETTE is issued every Thursdav and contains all the best matter of the seven dally issues. The WEEKLY GAZETTE ia the largest paper printed in Terre Haute, and is sold for: one copy, per year, #2.00 three copies, per year, ftS.OO five copies, per year, 88.00 ten copies, one year, and one to getter up of Club, 915.00 one cepy, six months 91.00 one copy, three months 50c. All subscriptions must be paid for in advance/ The paper will, invariably, be discontinued at expiration or time. For Advertising Rates see third page. The GAZETTE establishment 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.

TUESDAY, JULY 18,1871.

The Office-holders' Humbug. Can anybody tell us what State there is, except perhaps New Jersey and Indiana, •whose delegates* to the approaching Republican National Convention will vote for Grant

We hear a great deal from the officeholders about the certainty ot Grant's nomination but we defy them to name a State beside the two we have mentioned, whose delegates are sure to support him. At the same time twenty States can be named that are sure to vote against him first, last, and every time.—N. Y. Sun. "Why, is Indiana excepted She has given no signs of being in favor of the renomination of Gen. Grant. On the contrary, but few of the Republicans of the State, so far as we understand them, are in favor ot any such thing. In this section of Indiana, we really do not know any Republican, (outside of a little clique of Federal office-holders), who are for him. The most influential Republicans here are opposed to him, and some of them go so far as to declare they will not vote for him if nominated. They are opposed to Gen. Grant's re-nomination^ because they think he is not fit to be President of the United States—because he has shown no fitness for the position since he has occupied the White House —because, neither by natural gifts nor mental acquirements is he suited for so exalted a position.

1

They oppose him because his acts of omission are as censurable as his acts of commission but abovealtotber considerations the Republicans of this portion ot the great West oppose the re-nomination of General Grant, because he has fallen into the hands of corrupt men, and is controlled by them. They do not desire to vote for a man who is in the hands and under the control of such men as Simon Cameron, Ben. Butler, and Roscoe Conkling. They have no confidence in such scheming politicians, and corrupt office-seekers, and they have but little faith in the man who will suffer himself to be, in the least, controlled by such fellows.

Then, there is another reason assigned by Republicans of this section for opposing the re-nomination of Gen. Grant. They are in favor of the one term doc* trine, and would vastly prefer Mr. Greeley, and while they are not particularly enthusiastic in favor of the Philosopher of the Tribune, still they will espouse any idea to defeat Grant.

In looking over the whole field in this section of the State, we really do not know of one single individual who is warmly in favor of the re-nomination of President Grant, unless he holds a Federal office.or is an aspirant for one.

TfitTCivil Service Commission. The questions which the Civil Service Commission forwarded to the President, with the request to lay them before the Attorney General, were two in number: 1st. Whether, *under the Constitution, the President would, by the act of March 3d, be authorized to appoint the Board of Examiners, on whose certificate, after competitive examinations," the winner would be entitled, by virtue of such certificate, to appointment in any of the Departments, whether he was the choice of the Secretary or not 2d. If the first question be decided in the nfegbtive, can the President still lay down rules and regulations by which the Board of Examiners shall give certificates of qualification and character and that then the Secretaries would be bound to select from suoh examined class, or can they go outside, under existing laws regulating appointments, and select whoever they please

The Commissioner considers the weight of authority on the negative side of the first question, and, if so decided by the Attorney (General, the Commission will conclude that the competitive system c&nnot be constitutionally adopted, except in the case those offices which are now in the class of Presidential appointments.

The Commision expects an affirmative answer fo the second question, and, under such decision^ considers it possible to reform the personnel of the service, but will not be able to destroy the abuses of patronage, since, when candidates have once passed the examination, out of the whole number those will receive appointments who are most rigorously urged by their political backers.

The Attorney General informs the Commission that he will probably have his answer ready within the months

THE artillery and the cavalry are the two branches 0/ the military service, which are held out as £he prizes of honorable ambition at West Point. The graduates who attain the highest honors, p^d whose record is consequently best, professionally and morally, receive this recognition of their merits. F. D. Grant, son of the President, who graduated almost at the veiy foot of his class, has been assigned to -the cavahy over the heads of deserving graduates, who had won distinction by good conduct and attainments, such as he never exhibited. Nepotism is thus carried into West Point, as it hasbeen everywhere else.

A PARIS correspondent says that despite the dictum of the London editor who began his article by saying that the "Paris of other times exists no longer," JPafis is still the same brilliant and lively city of other days, Paris is once more gay. Upon the Boulevard Montmartre constant but ever-changing throngs of people nightly promenade the theaters have $ga-&.opejuedr And their huge pia* cards stare at the passer-by from the kiosques and walls Jules Janln writes his usual Monday feuiUeton in Les Debats and the "local items'' begin to chronicle the run-overs and runaways in the itreete,

Failure of the New Loan.

No intelligence has been received at the Treasury Department tending to corroborate the cable telegram, sent from London to New York, to the effect that Judge Richardson had been perfectly successful in his negotiations for the dis poaal of the new loan in Europe. On the contrary, whatever is known concerning the operations of the" agents sent abroad to place the new bonds is anything but encouraging. In the meantime, the numerous agents employed to sell the new bonds at home have only succeeded in disposing of some sixty-eight millions of them, and those disposed of are only 8f the highest class, and not a doliar of the 4J and 4 per cent, bonds has yet been taken. Thus it will be seen that the en tire amount of the new loan (which has been on the market several months) that has actually been disposed of is less than seventy millions, and of that amount at least sixty millions is in transfer by the national banks, so that the actual new subscriptions are under ten millions.

This is decidedly a bad showing for the refunding scheme of the Administration is, in fact, a practical demonstration of its utter failure.

A SHORT while since the singular phenomenon occurred that a section of the bottom of the Morris and Essex canal in New Jersey caved in, causing the water to disappear from the canal for a distance of more than a mile. This event has been succeeded by a similar disappearance of the bed of the Wyoming canal in Pennsylvania. Whereas, however, the former phenomenon could not be accounted for—it seeming to be a disappearance of the solid earth in the vicinity of the occurrence—the Wyoming canal accident was produced by causes which can be comprehended, and which seem quite natural. At the point where the break occurred, the canal extended over one of the many coal mines in that region The giving way of the bottom of the canal was followed by the flooding of four different mines, producing a sort of subterranean lake two miles long and four feet deep. It is fortunate that the disaster happened early in the morning, and on the 4th of July, as otherwise, the miners employed in the overflowed mines might have been exposed to extreme peril had they fceen at work at the time. The occurrence, however, is a curious one, and, following so closely as it does upon the similar event in the Morris and Essex canal, is worthy of notice.

THE famous and unlucky phrase "neither an inch of our territory nor a stone of our fortresses," which gained M. Jules Favre so much popularity during the FrancS-Prussian war, when applied in answer to the arrogant demands of Prussia, was not of M. Favre's coijuage at all. It belonged originally to the Emperor Alexander of Russia, who, at the commencement of the war, declared to Gen. Fleury, the French Ambassador at St. Petersburg, that in case of a French reverse he would not permit Prussia to take from France either an inch of her soil or a stone of her fortresses. General Fleury telegraphed the declaration to the French Minister of Foreign. Affairs at Paris, and when Jules Favre became Minister of Foreign Affairs under the Government of National Defence, he found the textof his dispatch while rummaging among the former Minister's documents at the Quai d'Orsay, and forthwith adopted it in his reply to Bismarck. It was applauded at the time, but now all Frenchmen deny having approved of it.

IT NOW appears that two bad boys of Melbourne, Australia, were the originators of the report that a party of Americans were about to leave San Francisco, in a chartered three-masted schooner, to capture Australia and the other British colonies in the South Pacific ocean. This audacious hoax frightened Australia into spasms, and caused the expenditure of millions of dollars for defence, besides the enrollment of volunteers* en masse. Although this is the most absurd thing that has been chronicled for the century still, perhaps the bad boys "builded better than they knew," when, out of aspirit of waggery, they set the rumor afloat The Australians should feel satisfied that they have been induced, even by laughable hoax, to place their coast in a condition of defence. If they have missed an attack from an apdcryphal boat's load of Americans—terrible fel lows !—they should not forget the chance of a visit from those dreadful Communist exiles at New Calsdonia, the possibility of whose coming, at last dates, held their undivided attention, iftii

TWO-THIRDS of the New York police are of Irish birth. Their conduct during the riot was most praiseworthy. They were the first to me6t the mob in every instance. None pf them flinched. And yet there tea portion of the press of the country endeavoring to create a national prejudice against these very men, and the church to which they belong, for doing, we suppose, their duty so uuflinchingly. The narrow-minded bigotry which prompts such editors, makes them an object more of pity than censure

The Bridge Over Spring Creek—A Taxpayer's Opinion on the Bridge Question. TERRE HAUTE, July 14, 1871. Editor of Terre Haute Qasette

Yesterday, I had occasion to visit1 our neighboring town of Numa—some eleven miles north of Terre Haute, on the La Fayette road. A friend was with me who had considerable experience in building bridges and culverts, and he remarked as we came to the abutments which are being erected over Spring Creek, that he had never seen a structure being erected on so solid a foundation. The foundation itself composed of massive timbers, were laid some three feet below the bed of the ereek, then the iron abutments some fourteen feet high are pinned down, something in the shape of three sides of an octagno, then there small took and stone called rip rap, which is iutended to keep the water from undermining the foundation, and f.ls°

to.

ffcreSc

ber one

county lives on the other side of it, yet it is the crossing for some twenty-five families living east, who have not the benefits of a bridge. Our old friend, Ned GartreU, says it was much needed and that it is a good' job so far that all the people living along the LaFayette road endorse the Commissioners in thus expending ing their money, and that it is a pity if the people of Terre Haute object to building abridge like that, when it brings to this market thousands of bushels of wheat, corn, and oats, and takes out thousands of dollars worth «f dry goods and groceries.

It seems to me, Mr. Editor, that the building of good roads and good bridges in all the principal approaches to our city, (I mean lasting improvements, for /those that have to be repaired year after year, and are a continual "eye-sore to every person, are not improvements) ought to be encouraged by every welK meaning citizen, without regard to politics. Such work opens up trade, reduces the price of produce, enhances the price of articles that we have to sell, and creates a feeing of general good will throughout ourselves and mankind generally.

Take this for-what you may, it is plain talk from a tax-payer in Terre Haute.

CONFECTIONERY AND BAKERY.

A CARD.

COJfFECTIO^EKY

AND

BAKERY.

HAVING

CURES

refitted the Confectionery and Bak­

ery formerly kept by

MESSRS. MIESSEN & CO., No. 10 North Fourth Street,

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

Weddings, Parties, Festivals, &c.,

In oar line. We have also

NEW AND 8ELXCTEU STOCK. OF

CAOTKEES, HUTS, AC. At the Lowest Possible Prices 1

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

G. F. KINO,

173d3m No.16 North

*ourtli

Paralysis.

Cures Swellings.

dlX

protect the timbera in l?rn^lw?y8Wet-

Thi9

reaches

U"' .-"

lb?vi

tbe

Upon this I understand annm iron bridge is to be ereete*. cost­

ing some $25 per lenial foot, about ONEL fourth more than a wooden bridge would Cost. Upon conferring with the workmen, ueightras, aud farmers in the vicinity, I finn that all, on both sides of the bridge, endorse the building thereof lpartiJjr, though only one man in the

Street.

ELECTRIC OIL.

IMS. SMITH'S

Genuine "Electric" Oil.

NEW COMBINATION.

NERVE POWER WITHOUT PHOSPHORUS A REAL Sedative without Opium or Reaction! INNOCENT even in the mouth of Infants. Twenty

Drops is the LARGEST Dose. Cures Sick Headache in about twenty minutes on rational principles.

CINCINNATI, June 17,1870.

DR. G. B. SMITH—Dear Sir My mother sea ed her foot so badly she could not walk, which alarmingly swelled. My little boy had lumps on his throat and very stiff neck. I got up in the night and bathed his'throat and chest and gave him twenty drops of your Oil. They are now both well. JOHNTOOMEY,

Express Office. 67 West Fourth street.

FORT PJ-AIN, July 12.

Dr. Smith Send me more Oil and more circulars. It is going like '-hot cakes." Send some circulars also to Sutllff & Co., Cherry Val' ley, as they sent in for a supply of the Oil, Please send by first express, and oblige,

Yours truly, D. E. BECKE Druggist.

Not a Failure! Not One! (From Canada.) NEW HAMBURG, ONT., July 12. Dr. Smith, Phila: I have sold the Oil for Dealness, Sickness, Neuralgia, &c., and in every case it has given satisfaction. I can procure quite a numberof letters. We want more of the large size, &c., &<5.,

Yours respectfully, FRED! H. McCALLUM, Druggist.

Sure on Deafness, Salt Rheum, &c.

Rheumatism.

Cures

Cures Salt Kheum. Cures Erysipelas.

T« ., 'J.

Cures Chilblains Cures Headache.. Cures Burns and Frosts. Cures Piles, Scald Mead Felons, Car* Bunckles, Mumps, Croup, Diptberia, Neuralgia,

©out,

Glands, Stiff

Wounds, Swelled

Canker,.,Tootb

Ache, Cramps,Joints, Bloody Flux,

£c

c.

TRY IT FOR YOURSELF.

SALT RHEUM it cures every time (if yon use no soap on the parts while applying the Oil, and it cures most all cutaneous diseases—seldom fails in Deafness or Rheumatism.

(1

.1

See Agents' name in Weekly. For sale by best Druggists. splOdy

EYE AND EAB.

EYE&EAR

DR. CHAS. E. WALL, WHO,

for the past seven years, has operated with universal success in Indianapolis, can be consulted on all diseases of these delicate organs, FREE OF CHARGE, at the

National Hotel, Terre Haute. Friday, May 26,1871,

For a few days only. Cross Eye removed In one minute. All operations to restore lost Sight or Hearing made with guaranteed success.

Patients call early. 306dtf

TOBACCOS, ETC.

BRASHEARS, BROWN & TITUS,

COMMISSION MERCHANTS

Wholesale Dealers in .yr$

Groceries and Manufactured Tobaccos

AGENTS

for R.

j.

yB,

Christian & Co.'s celebrated

brands of "Christian Comfort," Bright May

Pine Apple Black Navy %,and Cherry Brand Black Navy %, and other fine brands,

32 AND 34 MAIN STREET Worcester, Mass.

HOTELS.

E A O S E Yi1

v&

Foot of Jkcdn Street,

TERSE HAUTE, INDIANA.

HAVINGthe

maytdtf

thoroughly renovated and refur­

nished house recently, 1 solicit the patronage \f my old lriends, and the travelinj

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

TERRE HAUTE HOUSE,

Cor. of Main and Seventh Streets,

"I

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

j9dtf E. P. HUSTON, Manager.-

JACOB BUTZ. GEO. C. BUTZ.

nrATioisrAIL HOU§E, Comer of Sixth and MainStreeU, 1ERRE-HA UTE, INDIANA,

JACOBBUTZ&SON,Proprietor*.

This House has been thoroughly refurnished

GUNSMITH.

JOinr

ARMSTRONG,

Gunsmith, §tencil Gutter,

SAW FILER AND LOCKSMITH, Third street North of -Mala, g.n.a TerreHWte- Ind

WORKHOM

on »Uort

IIOUM

Idly

-m

STEAKBAEEEY.

Union Steam Bakery.

PL.

». Manufacturers of all kinds ol

I

Crackers, C^kes, Bread

ts,

AND

A N

Dealers in

Foreign and Domestic Fruits,

FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES,

S LA^ FAYETTE STREET,

Between the two Railroads. 138d Terre Haute. Indiana.

LEATHEB.

JOIDT II. O'JBOYUE,

DEALER IJ^

LEATHER, HIDES, OIL

AND FINDINGS, NO. 178 MAIN STREETS Terre Saute, Indiana.

S9~Cash paid or Hides,Furs, Pelts and Rough Leather. 124dl4

BOOTS AMD SHOES.

A.,

€r. BAJLCH

Ladies'& Gents' Fashionable

BOOTS

&

MADE&to

FEED STORE.

J. A. BtJRGAN,

Dealer in:

Flour, Feed, Baled Hay, Corn Oats, and all kinds of Seeds,

NORTH THIRD ST., NEAR MAIN TEBRE HAUTE, IND. IEED delivered in all parts of the city tree

charge ld6m

CHOLERA.

RECIPE FOR THE CURE OF

HOG CHOLERA,

Sent with full directions for ONE DOLLAR and Stamp. Address, E. H. STIVERS,

CELEBRATED

E E A

HERB STOMACft BITTERS

Tbe Great Blood Purifier and

Anti-Dyspeptic Tonic!

THESE

celebrated and well-known Bitters are composed of roots and herbs, of most innocent yet specific virtues, and are particularly reded for restoring weak constitutions commem and increasing the appetite, cure for

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

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

P§r

IBS'

FRANK HEIMG & BRO. —jr

»SO£S9

order, No. 146 Main street, between

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

V,

ot

Madison, Jones co., Iowa.

S. Also cures CHICKEN CHOLERA. 13w3

MEDICAL.

DR AJjBUKGER'S

They area certain

Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Jaundice, Chrome or Nervous DeblUty, Chronic Diarrhoea, Diseases of the kidneys, Costiveness, Pain the Head, Vertigo, Hermorrhoids, jfeinale Weakness, Loss of Appe- vtite, Iuternlittent and Remittent Fevers, Flatulence

Constipation, In wart'. Piles, Fullness of Blood in the

Head,

I

Acidity of the

Stomach, N ause 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

JV

Great Depression

!P

of Spirits.

All of which are indications of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Or.dlseases 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®^

Dr. Alburger's Laboratory,'

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

M»Prineipal office, northeast cornerof THIRD anaBROWN Streets,Philadelphia.

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

FOUNDRY.

F. H. M'BXiFKKSH. 3. BARNARD.

Phoenix Foundry

AND

MACHINE SHOP!

*HcDlfresli & Barnard,

5-

d"v*!!'

Cor. of Ninth and Eagle Streets,

(**ear

tlie

Psissenger Depot.)

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

MANUFACTUREFronts,

steam Engines, Miii Ma-

chlnerv. House Fire Fronts,Oireular Saw Mills, and all kinds of'

IRON AND BRASS CASTINGS!

REPAIRING DONE PROMPTLY.

All parties connected with this establishment being practical mechanics of several years' experience, we feel safe in saying that we can render satisfaction to our customers, both In point of Workmanship and Price. 211dwly MCELFRESH A BARNARD.

WBENCEES.

A. O. COES Sd CO, iH.8uaeeaorttoL.AA. O. Coet,) WORCESTER, MASS.,

.....

Manufacturers of the Qei^iine

COES SCREW W«MCHE§

With A. O. Coes' Patent Liock Fender. .. JSUabUthedin 8»

LUMBEB.

J. L. LINDSEY, (jri

COMMISSION LUMBER DEALER

A

Office, No.482 WestP^ont ^mcn^rATi, oaio.

Good quality Unbleached Muslin.

-l'.J

wikmi

DOT GOODS.

'at '--m-

wsuK •.

Mfc Si M..

Our line ot battle extends all the way from Fort Wayne on the north, to Evaasville on the south. The senior partners have been out from New York holding a grand inspection Each corps of the grand army has passed in review, and its organization and dig cipline been declared perfect. Our lines of*communication are firmly established and well protected.

Another Forward Movement

Has been ordered. Our *guns are shotted with

LO^IIIE AITFIB AILL MISLWS AT 121-3 CENTS,

Coats' best Six Cord Spool Cotton, 5c a spool all numbers either white, black or colored Best quality Dayton Carpet Warp reduced to. 28c

5

SPLENDID BARGAINS IK DRESS 000D8!

Elegant Linen ready-made Suits,. .......... '. .$3.50, f4, f5f6and |7 Also, Grass Cloth and Victoria Lawn Suits... at same prices Big stock of Buflj also Drab Linens, andjQrass Cloths^ at.«... -20 and 25c Our elegant lineof 20agoods reduced

Our large assortment of 25c Chenes reduced to..~... 20c Splendid qualities of 30c Dress Goods reduced to 25c

Our 40c fine Poplinets and Camlet Cloths redticed to~

Our finer goods, always sold very cheap, will be sold cheaper still. Our Black and Colored Silks and Poplins reduced f$mm $1 to Our Lawns, Organdies, Percales and Cambrics lower fthaneyer. We will sell a splendid alt whalebone Corset for..

The celebrated Kid-fitting" Hip Gore borset will lftaold at..... The best French woven Corsets usually sold lor65cj.wfll lie sold fbr..... 50c Parasols and Sun Umbrellas as low as. „30c and 35 Silk parasols for ladies at .. Silk Sun Umbrellas

Ourfl 50, |2, f2 50, f3 and |3 50 Parasols all reduced »lo«t 15 per cent

Customers ^an come from a diatan ce witteowfe any fear of this advertisement being overdrawn.

O S I I E O S S

Txreat 4 New- York Dry GJoods Store,

1 K-.

IV fiTE'fci JL.

AlT.'fJf/i'rl.''.

All, THROUGH THE STATE!

v-•

1

With good fast-colored Lawns, of which we sell 11 yards for $1, with wash Poplins at 12|c, and Silk Parasols at 90e and $ 1, and $ big lot of Freeman Prints at 7c, and other equally as effective amunition..

The first corps, with its headquarters at Fort Wnyne, has. already_c9mmenced the grand movement. \*.

[Read the dispatch sent us from the General in command.],

"Forward movement great success! Enemy scattered and demoralized. Our sales enormous—larger than ever before in 4he three yeare history of our Fort Wayne store. Have challenged any two dry goods houses in this city to combine their sales and then compare them, thus combined, with ours. They dare not take up the challenge. I shall soon have nothing left to fight, or anything worthy the name of "the opposition" to contend with." .« -ir s, ^3

Vn

E E A E O E O V*'

A-

1

..

UP, BOYS, AND AT TH^M!

It!

Yard-wide Best "Hill" Yard-wide Best "Lonsdale" Muslin 12}£c Yard-wide "Long Clqth" Muslin, worth 15 cents, reduced to '. 10c

..

&

Our 25c'Feather Ticking will be reduced to....'.....' 1 20c Our extra heavy 40c Table Linens reduced to -*35c Our handsome 25c Nottingham Lace reduced to... ...20c Our fine stock of all-wool 85c Cassimeres reduced to 75c Our f3 Square SliarflB reduced to. $2(50 Our elegant assortment ot $3'50 Shawls reduced to f3 Our best American A Grain Bags reduced to ............29 Our 30c yard wide Carpets redneed to....

.i... .7.

Our 60c yard wide Ingrain Carpets reduced to. ,...v »....50c Our ail-wool extra quality 85c Carpets reduced to........ -75c Our Super extra" Bifton Carpets reduced from ?1 to 85c Our Super extra stlper" Carpets reduced from |1 25 to »•$! 10 Best English Bnunels Carpet reduced from $1.25 to $1.00.

A

N0BTH SIDE OF STBEKT, XEBBIf HAUTE, »T.

Ml

iS-

7c

25c and 28c

S»i*

..25c

'•'4

OAS FIXTURES.

M'HENBY & CO(

6 and 8 East

Fourtl^and

162 Main St

CINCINNATI.

THE PLACE TO BUY KITHER AT -V

WHOLESALE OR RETAIL,

r*

KVEKYTHING IN THK LINK OF

Gas Fixtures,

-$'

Lamps and Chandeliers, Pipe, Pumps, Tools. Xc

v: In GAS FIXTURES,

WE

offer a choice selection of the nest designs iq Bronze and Qilt that have been produced this season in the principal manufac-' toftesof the East. In our stock will be found f«

is new or

lighting

desirable in Gas Fixtures, for

Churches, Halls,» Dwellings, Stores, &c

Oil Lamps and Chandeliers.

In this line, our assortment comprises all tbe Ueni

1118 aud

improvements in Chande

HANGING LAMPS, BRACKET LANPS, HALL AND TABLE LIGHTS

LANTERNS, Ac

Furnished wiih the latest improvements in Burners, Shades, Ac. Oil that will not explode' and Chimneys that will not break.

In Iron Pipes andTittings,

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

In Pumps and Plumbers' Gpods,

We have all that can be wanted in the way

'f tern and Well Pumpa, Lift and Force Pumps, Beer Pumps, Garden Pumps, £c.

Bath. Tubs, Closets, Washstands, Wash Trays, Bath Boilers, Sinks, A

01 Gas and Steam Fitters' Tools,

We have a full lire, consisting of

Screw-cntting Machines, Stocks ana Dies, Drills, Reamers and Taps.

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

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

Tire 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 combiro COMFORT AND ECONOMY, being free fiw, the annoyance of HEAT, SMOKE and ASHES

No family should be without "t)OME

STOVE." Remember the place, r-

IDLY MCHENRY

GAS

co.

WAOON 7AED.

DMIEL SULLEB'S

MEW WAGON YARD

AND

BOARDING HOUSE,

Corner Fourth and Eagle Streets,

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

THE

•Ss-Ay-,

ii'..

Undersigned takes great pleasure in in,,, forming his old friends and customers, andr

will be found ready and 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 and family. f68d&wtf] DANIEL MILLER,

PAINTING.

is 5

ffM. fit. SELTOir,

PAINTER,

Cor. 6th, La Fayette and Locust sis.,

nt*. Terre Haute, Ind.

I'VOIIS'DRA^I^G.PAPERHANGING,CAL-^done'",usuallyeverythingand/CIMIN1NG,

in the line. SOawfly

THE OLD RELIABLE

Vt.-A BAKR & TEAHLE

.f NO. MAIN

50c

......25c 50c

I1

2

ii v.-

House and Sign Painters,

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

"^7"E are prepared to do all work In onr line as-

CHEAP AS THE CHEAPEST.

We will give personal attention to all work' 56d3m entrusted to us.

BELTING.

JOS1AH GATES & SOXS*

Manufacturers ot

•V

Oak Tanned Leather Belting Hose.i

Lace Leather of Suierior Quality, and dealera in all kinds ot MANUFACTURERS'

ldOm-

1Sc

&

w.

:jMd'

Fire Department Supplies,

N0S. 4 4 6 DUTTON STREET, Lowell, Massachusett

CLOTHING.

J. ERLANGER,

1

Wholesale and Retail Dealer in

MENS', YOUTHS' AND B0YS\ CLOTHING, And Gei^s' Furnishing Goods, I

STREET,

ld6m Terre Haute,"'Ind

WIRE.

NEW JEBSEY WIRE HILLS.

HESGBT ROBERTS, I Manufacturer otJ

REFINED IRON WIRE, 'Market and Stone Wire,

Spring, Bridge, Fence,:

Tinners'Wire. Wire Mill, Newark, New Jersey.

VAMISEES.

ESTABLISHED, 1888.

JQHST».

(Late D.

,i

iWce fr

ldy NlfiWARK N

CAEDS.

p*

I:

r/

FlTZ-GERAXJk

••r.

IMz-QeraZd,)'

Mannttctnrera of S-

DtPROTED COPAL VARNISHES,

sifrem lpO tp meoo, expeditiously, neatly leaply prtntM at the cSZETTE STEA-fi FJLCE, Pifth rtreet. We keep the lai*e

and chea POB OFJ1CE, Pifth ntreet. We keep the lartt aaKxrtment of card atock in the eitT—b

wet from BMfona MUM

JUgh.