Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 2, Number 88, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 September 1871 — Page 2

Hhe (£v'm 'm$ gazette

HUDSON & ROSE, Proprietors. I,. M. BOSS. R. K. HUDSON..

Office: North Fifth St., near Main.

ThA

DAITJY GAZIKTTB

is published every fitter-

noonfexcept Snnday.and sold by the carriera at' 2Qc per week By mail«10 per year 15 for 0 months -SO for 3 months. rr,?» WEKKLV GAZBTTK is issued every Thursday and contains ail the best matter of the seven daily issues. The WEEKLY GAZETTEis the largest paper p/inted

ID

Terre Haute, and

is sold for: anecopy, per year, 82.00 three copies, per year, 85.00 Ave copies, per year, ftS.OO ten copies, one year, and one to getter up of Club, 915.00 one cepy, six months £1.00 one copy, three months 50c. All subscriptions must be paid for in advance. The paper will, jnvariabl be discontinued at expiratjon of time. For Advertising Rates see third page. The UAZETTEPstablishment 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.

FOR GOVERNOR IN 1872,

Washington C. De Pauw,

OF II-OYJ COraTY.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12,1871.

UP TO the hour of tho meeting of that convention we do not believe that there could have been found fifty men belonging to the Republican party in Louisiana who had any doubt on the subject of the State beine carried for Grant, or any disposition to Vote for anybody else but the moment the people saw United States troops brought to control the action of their convention, such a revolution as was never known in any community took place, And evorybody saw that the State was lost for Grant in 1872 and there is but one thing that will restore the Grant feeling that is tho prompt removal of Casey, Packard, Lowell, Joubert, and the whoie ring ,of Federal officeholders in this city. Should General Grant hesitate he is lost, and lost not only in Louisiana, but in the whole country.—New Orleans 'Mitraileuse.

That is the way a Republican paper speaks of the breaking up of a Radical State Convention, by Gen. Grant's troops, because that convention was supposed to be unfriendly to the re-nom-ipation of the present occupant of the White House. There is reason to suspect that this military interference will not be confined to Louisana alone. If Grant's office»holders, brothers-in-law and relatives, scattered as they are over the country, have dared to break up a jRepublican convention, what chance is there 'for the peaceful- assemblage of Democratic conventions of the people? That question will occur to every sensible man in the nation. The power with which th»Ku Klux law arms him, will not be left inoperative, if Grant's ambition or that of his political janizaries, shall require its exercise. Senator Blair said, two years ago, that he knew Grant we'll, and that he would never leave the Presidential Chair, if, by the employment of force, he desired to retain it. It looks as if Blair would turn out to be a prophet. In the whole history of parties in this country, nothing has occurred of such fearful import as this New Orleans usurpation. Men may steal in office, as they have doue—they may belie their pledges to the country, as they have done—they may plunder the people with theii high tariffs and unjust taxes, as they have done—all these things may be borne but when official scoundrels call in the military to overawe and scatter the peaceful assemblages of the people, we have arrived at a crisis in our history which demands the condemnation of the country.

Gen. Grant's military education—and he lias no other—totally disqualifies him for the administration of civil affairs. Ignorant of the duties of statesmanship, he is at the mercy of the adroit, the cunning, the artful and the corrupt lending himself to the meanest and the basest of his own faction, at whose mercy he is forever exposed. Fellows like Casey (his brother-in-law) will defend this villainy, and the ''little villians" everywhere will wink at the outrage.

Cincinnati & Terre Hunte Railroad. The petition of a large majority of the property holders of this city in favor of th'e city"taking $100,000 in the Cincinnati & Terre Haute Narrow Gauge Railroad, will be presented to the Council this evening. \Ve understand the petition conforms to the. law, and has many more names than a majority of the freeholders, as is required by the law.

We suppose the petition will be re. ferred to a committee of the Council, with instructions to report at the next regular meeting, in order that the Coun cil may be satisfied that a majority of the freeholders of the city have signed it. If, after a careful examination, it is discov ered that a majority of our property holders have thus petitioned their representatives, the committee will, in all probability, report in favor of granting the prayer of the petitioners.

In cases of this kind, the parliamentary rule is, that a majority of the committee be composed of the friends of the me'tvdure. If it was not for this rule a committee might be composed of the enemies of a measure submitted to it, and the measure strangled before it ever came before the body at all.

UToi^measure has ever been before tho Common Council of this city, that has been more thoroughly discussed in the press of the city, or among the people, than this railroad. It is understood by the citizeus in all its branches, and being thus ttiily understood they ask their representatives, that their wishes may be carried out.

W. C. DEPAUW,

W

of New Albany, is fa­

vorably spokon of by a number of Democratic papers as a candidato for Governor. If he* would manage the affairs of the StafS'&s tte does his own, he would make a model Governor. and... we- believe he would.—Paoli JSagie.

That is all true, and the sign is good. Washington. C. DePauw is a safe man to entrafetSvlth the Governor's chair. He is a business man. There is no gas and no nonsense about him. Brought up to habits bf Industry, on the farm of the good old John DePauw, his father Washington knows what labor is, and how it should bo protected. Having a large interest iu manufacturing, he knows how iron is rolled, nails made, and glass prep&fe&l 'ffor market. He has a large capital invested in valuable industrial enterprises, giving employment to hundreds of his fellow-citizens. And he Jcnows what schools aud churches mean, ^tooj^He builds them out of his own U^means, and helps others to finish those

Which are begun. His ipunificence and

generosity are proverbial. He is no politician, and, for twenty years, has declined to accept office of any kind, though he is yet under fifty years of age. We know of no man who would be more likely to make a good Governor.

Personal Spite.

The considerations which control the appointments to office under the present dignified Administration are happily illustrated by the correspondent of the Cincinnati Commercial. In his letter dated "Wartburg, Tennessee, August 29, 1871," he thus tells how a woman was made the victim of political hate—and she, too, the widow and mother of two dead Union soldiers! It is a fine commentary on the littleness of the "Long Branch" Government. He thus describes what he knows:

Mrs. Jones, at whose house I am, was ior a considerable time Postmistress at this point. Her husband and son were both Federal soldiers, and both perished for the cause. She gave satisfaction in the discharge of-her official duties, to all but a clique, who wanted the office. The office pays fifty-six dollars a year. This amount of spoil they wanted. They supported Maynard, who represents this District in Congress, and said unto that great man: "Here's a woman in office, who can't vote what good does she do Take her out and put in a loyal man." But this could not be done without some charges, so some charges were fixed up and forwarded to Washington. Mrs. Jones was charged with the crime of letting an Andy Johnson man help her open the mail on Friday's, when it was heavy and the carrier in a hurry. This man had been a Unionist, nobody denied that, but he was an Andy Johnson man. This information was forwarded to the great Maynard, whose mighty soul, in its sublimest flight, never gets above meddling with every little cross-roads postoffiee in the district, and he had her removed. Petition after petition, signed by the Respectable people of iho county, was forwarded to him, but he heeded them not, nor cared not, for a friend of his got the office, and no Andy Johnson man could longer touph the mail bags. And Mrs. Jones, the mother of one dead Union soldier and the wife of another, is thrown out. Nor is this the only evideuce that the people of this district have that Horace Maynard is one of the meanest men in Congress.

THE Sentinel, of yesterday, says that there were thirty commitments to the Station House at Indianapolis on Saturday and Sunday last. Of these, six were committed for assault and battery and twenty-one for being drunk and disorderly. That in a population of 40,000 (according to the United States census) is quite a respectable number. The Capital of the State (with its superior church advantages) is not as pious as it should be

THE Democratic majority in Kentucky is larger than it was at the last Congres sional election. It now ranges between 33,000 and 40,000. The "Radical gain" is all in the hope that "fancy painted.''-

Onr Danville Correspondence. DANVILLE, ILLS, Sept 9. Ib the Editor of Terre Haute Gazette:

We were permitted, a few days ago, to pass through that part of the Wabash valley that a few months ago was almost uuknbwn to the traveling public. We passed through this beautiful valley via the Evansville, Terre Haute & Chicago Railway, which is surely one of the best constructed roads in the West, and the finest road-bed and the best ballasted road we ever passed over, for the very short time since its constructed. This road opens out to Terre Haute another avenue of trade and commerce that by her cannot be too highly prized besides its direct connection ^ijth jQhicago and the Northwest.

While Miss Laura"Ream is pleased to call (and very properly too) Terre Haute the city of "magnificent shades," she, if here, might name ours the "coal city," aud, we could very properly add at this time, "and of dust."

We were very carefully carried over the £. T. H. & C. Railroad under the supervision of that early, prompt and careful conductor, Mr. Mailin W. Early, of your city. To convey an idea of the over this road we will just say, we left Newport at 6:40 and reached Perrysft05* fourteen miles in

Minutes, making two stops.

nSniT h?of

the

THOSE

H. V. R.

Noble Sentiment.

Thos. Jefferson the great Democratic President, was as wise as he was patriotic. On being importuned by a relative for a public office, which Jefferson had at his disposal, that grand old statesman wrote the applicant as follows: "The public, will neve'it be made to believe that an appointment of a relative is made on the ground of merit alone, uninfluenced by family views nor can they see with approbation, offices, the disposal of which they entrust to the President for public purposes, divided out as family property."

This doctrine does not suit Grant. He professes to believe that all his relatives are so meritorious that the public must think just as he does, and for that reason, they must all be quartered on the public treasury. Jefferson was a modest old fellows, who had not learned that the offices of the nation belonged to his family, and not to the people. The earlier Presidents had some old-fashioned notions about propriety which are quite unpopular now. Grant did not live in 1800. The fashion of 1871, is more agreeable to his smoking majesty.

IT is curious to observe when a person is unexpectedly blessed with success in any great degree, how quickly his ki*folks rally around him. Newton Booth, the newly elected Governor of California has near relatives iu almost every city of the State, if we are to believe the state ments of newspapers in various localities They are all making themselves known Ind. Sentinel.

This is human nature. When Grant rode into St. Louis on his cord of wood and waited for a purchaser at the wood stand, for an hour or two, there were "none so poor as to do hitn reverence.' He had no "kinfolks" to rally around him then. Now he is President, and his brothers, sisters, uncles, aunts, cousins and brother-in-laws are making themselves known, and their name is legion He has offices to give and relations enough to fill them. So it is with our friend Booth, except as to the offices. People who took but a limited interest in him, as plain "Newton Booth" of Tf»rre Haute, are frantically excited over "His Excellancy Newton Booth, of Sacramento, California." And so the world goes I Its honors, its friendship, and its praises are alike insincere, shallow and evanescent.

will, we

thiuk, be readyfortheitonin two wpekq at which time it will be met Chicago, Dan-ville & Vincennea Railroad which is completed to within thiK miles of this city, and in a few days the track will be laid within six miles, only to be delayed a short time.

Our city is fast building up. The gas works are finished and the piping Is be-

asi

ing laid throughout the city. The F. & M. Institute have built & new Fair Ground, and with their liberal premiums expect a fine exhibition. $100 for best time trotting, and $75 for pacing. The Fair commences September 19.

John Faulds, who was shot by Olmstead, at Catlin, on the 9th of August, to the surprise of everybody, is still living. His mind is almost destroyed, as the ball passed through the brain. Olmstead^is on his farm unmolested. Yours,

J. F. S.

who have feared the approach

of the Asiatic cholera from Eastern Europe to America may take heart of grace. The dreaded disease is abating iu the Baltic provinces, whence we were most likely to import it and in Western Europe the few cases there reported have disappeared. The frost of Autumn will soon stop the march of the pestilence.

OHANG-E.

A CMASTOfi!

O. FROEB

Successor to

Gr

au6d3m.

E I S S

LIVERY STABLES. PRAIRIE CITY

Livery Stable Co.,

F0UTS, HUNTER & THOMPSON,

Proprietors

Three First-class Establishments

Located and Managed as follows:

OPERA STABLE

Corner of Main and Eighth Streets,

W. It. HUNTER Manager,

THE F0UTS STABLE

Second Street, bet. Main and Cherry

A. B. FOUTS, Manager,

THE THOMPSON STABLE

Third Street, bet. Ohio and Walnut,

(Opposite the Buntin House)

A. J. THOMPSON, Manager,

The three above named Stables are operated by Fouts, Hunter &. Thompson as a Company First-class rigs can be obtained at any of the three Stables on short notice.

FOUTS, HUNTER & THOMPSON.

augl4dwtf

EDUCATIONAL.

ST. MARY'S

Academic Institute

ST. MARY'S OF THE WOODS,

Vigo County, Ind.

THIS

spacious and elegantly finished furnished Institute, conducted by the

SISTERS of PROVIDENCE

OFFERS TO PUPILS

EVERY ADVANTAGE

CONDUCIVE TO

PLEASURE HEALTH

Together with Unrivalled Facilities for acquir ing a Thorough and

Accomplished Education.

The large Recreation Halls and extensive Cloisters invite to proper exercise, even when the wenther does not perm't out-door amusement. The pleasure grounds are ample, retired, and well shaded with forest trees, pre seuting every inducement to Invigorating ex ercise.

Special care is taken of the health of pupils, for which purpose the services of an experl enced physician have been secured.

The Scholastic Year Begins Sept. 1

For terms and other particulars, address, jy!5d\v2m SISTER SUPERIOR.

ABTIPICIAL LIMBS.

Artificial Limb Co.

stump

A Chartered Company,

Every member of which wears an artificial leg, Manufactures

Adjustable Lacing Socket Limbs.

The most comfortable and durable limb, and the nearest approach to the natural member of any in vention ot the age. The different members ot our company, after trying al most every patent in use have each found great relief from pain and inconvenience in this socket, which can be adjusted, and always conforms to the

slze an(j Shape

Clrculars sent on application to

of the

By our use of the legs, and careful

study, we can now make limbs as near perfection as art can produce, and warrant satisfac tdon.

We have filed bonds according to law, and are authorized to make limbs on U. S. Government orders for soldiers. Infoimation and blanks supplied on application. 9v#i

A

Artificial Limb Manufacturing Co., jlO No. 748 Penn St., Pittsburg, Pa.

FOUNDRY.

F. H. SC'KLFRKSH.

J. BARNARD.

Phcenix Foundry

AND

MACHINE SHOP!

McElfresh & Barnard,

u. 'fikfeW Xj/uUK'TfV'iL

Cor. of Ninth and Eagle Streets,

(Near the Passenger Depot,]!

TERRE HAUTE, IINX.

MANUFACTURE

Steam Engines, Mill Ma­

chinery. House Fronts, Fire Fronts, Circu lar Saw Mills, and all kinds

IRON AND BRASS CASTINGS!

1

R^PAIllIKG DOKE PBOJli?TLT

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. 1 211dwly MCELFRESH A BARNARD.

WANTED—AGENTS

per day) to sell SHUTTLE SEW-

the celebrated HCK

ING MACHINE.

"toefc Hitch" (alike on both sides,) and is fully liThe best and cheapest family sewing to the market. Address. JOHNSON,

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.

(EJOQA For first-class Pianos—sent on trial— }P 4CJU no agents. Address, U. S. PIANO CO., 645 Broadway, New York. jyl4-4w

9fif\n

Retailed by one. Wanted agents to

,«JUUsell pictures everywhere. WHITNEY A CO., Norwich, Conn. 4w

8 O'CLOCK.

A.

4w

RIFLES, SHOT-GUNS, REVOLVERS. Gun materials of every kind. Write for Price List, to Great Western Gun Works, Pittsbun&h, Pa. Army guns and Revolvers bought ortcyled lor. Agents wanted. /4\

25

CEXTS will pay for the WREATH the best magazine for old and young— for tlirep months on trial. Address,

THE WREATH, Bediord, Ind.

CRUMBS OF COMFORT! Patented November 1,1870. SAMPLES FREE AT ALL GROCERY STORES. 4w H.

BARTLETT & CO., Philadelphia.

WATCH FIIKK. Prize Candy-boxes, Prize Stationery Packages, Cheap Jewelry, Ac., Ac. Silver Watches given gratis to every agent. $20 per day made selling our goods at Country Fairs and Political Meetings. Send for Circular. Address, MONROE, KENNEDY A CO., ^Pittsburgh, Pa. 4w

ptmecHiNEU

THEA-tfECTAR

IS A PURE A E A

-vith the Green Tea Flavor. Warranted to suit all tastes. For sale everywhere. And for sale wholesale only by the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 8 Church St., New York. P. O- Box 5506. Send

for Thea-Nectar Circular. 4w

AGENTS WANTED FOR

Sexual Scienc

Including Manhood, Womanhood and their mutual interrelations. Love, its Laws, Power, &c., by Prof. O. S. Fowler. Send for Circulars and specimen pages. Address, NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., Cincinnati, Ohio Chicago 111., or St. Louis, Mo. 4w

the delicate and refrealdaf fragrance of genuine Farina ndU

IndlapenaaMe to

S°4p

Toilet

Sold by Dragrfntd

Well's Carbolic Tablets,

FOR COUGHS, COLDS & HOARSENESS. These Tablets present the Acid in Combination with other efficient remedies, in a popular iorm for the Cure of all THROAT and LUNG Diseases. HOARSENESS and ULCERATION of the THROAT are immediately relieved, and statements are constantly being sent to the proprietor of relief in cases of-Shroat difficulties of years standing. /1 A TTrPTA\T Don't be deceived by worthvAIJ liVlit less imitations. Get only Well's Carbolic Tablets. Price, 25 cents per Box, JOHN Q,. KELLOGG, 18 Piatt street, New York. Sole Agent for the United States. Send lor Circular. 4w

HURRICANE

PATENT

A N E N COMPANY, Office, 14 Barclay Street, New York. (Up Stairs.) Ofier to the public a Lantern combining safety and economy with elegance and usefulness. It cannot explode itgives a good light, and consumes less oil than any other it is not disturbed by the highest wind, and if a glass is broken it is easily replaced by means ot the screw. They are universally liked where they'have been tried.

fax9? Psycliomancy

SFN

the Greek, sig

nifying the power of the soul, spirit or mind, and is the basis of all human knowledge. Psycliomaucy is the title of a new work of 400 pages by HEKBKBT HAMILTON, B.A., giving full instructions in the i-clence of Soul Charming and Psychologic Fascination how to exert its wonderful oower over men or animals at will, it teaches Mesmerism, how to become Trance or Writing Mediums, Divination, Spiritualism, Alchemy, Philosophy of*Omens a. Dreams, Briglinm Young's Harem, Guide to Marriage. &c. This is the only booK in the English language professing to teach this occult power, and is of immense advantnge to Merchants, Lawyers, Physicians, and especially to Lovers, in securing the affections of the opposite sex, and all seeking riches or happiness. Price by mail, in cloth, Si.25 paper covers, SI. For sale by J. B. LIPPINCOTT & Co., and CLAXHN, REM-

& Co Phi la. Agents wanted for this book, Medical Works, Perfumery, Jewelry, &c. Sample-! free to Agents only. For single copies by mail, and terms to Agents, address, T.W. EV­

ANS,

Publisher, 41 South Eighth street, Philadelphia, Pa. 4w AGENTS WANTED FOR

A strangely fascinating, powerfully written, and thoroughly reliable book. From a new stand-point and upon a subject of vital and absorbing interest. In two parts. Showing the horrors of the barbarous system of treatmentin vogue in many prisons and the advantages of the system recently inaugurated in others. Together with a true and detailed account of the maltreatment and cruelties practiced upon criminals also, shame-faced criminalities wish female convicts, mutinies, murders, starvings, whippings, hair-breadth escapes, sketches and incidents, narratives, pen pictures, sunshine and shade, illustrative of prison life. "Written by a Convict, in a Convict's Ceil. In one vol. 540 pages, over 50 elegant engravings, made expressly for this book. 48 sample pages, sample illustrations, sent on application—or, a. bound prospectus, for 80 cents. C. F. VENT, Cincinnati, New York and Chicago. 4w

E A

Is a South American plant that has been used for many years by tho medical faculty of those countries with wonderful efficacy, and is a Sure and Perfect Remedy for all Diseases of the LIVER AND SPLEEN, ENLARGEMENT OR

OBSTRUCTION OF INTESTINES, URINARY, UTERINE, OR ABDOMINAL ORGANS, POVERTY OR A WANT

OF BLOOD, INTERMITTENT OR REMITTENT FEVEBS, INFAMATION OF THE a.i.a

IV E O S SLUGGISH CIRCtJLATION OF

THE BLOOD

ABSCESSES,. TUMORS, JA uhfDICE SCROFULA, DXSPEPSIA, AGUE ANE FEVER, OR

THEIR CONCOMITANTS.

Dr. Well's Extract of Jurubeba,

Is a most perfect Alterative, and is offered to public as a great In vigorator and Remedy for all Impurities of the Blood, or 1 or Organic Weakness with their attendant evils. For the foregoing complaints

DR. WELL'S EXTRACT JURUBEBA Is confidently recommended to every family as household remedy, and should be freely taken in all derangements of th6 system.

It is NOT A PHYSIC—It is NOT what is popularly called a BITTERS, nor is it intended as such but is simply a powerful alterative, giving health, vigor and tone to all the vital forces, and animates and fortifies all Weak and lymphatic temperaments.

JOHN KELLOGG. 18 Piatt street. New York/-

Sole Agent for the United States.

Price One Dollar per Bottle. Send for Circular. 4w

•THE

Novelty Clothes Wringer.

HELPS Actiirs

Nothing, except the Sewing Machine, ha» ever been invented which so much relieves the labor of the household as the Wringer. Bat Its usefulness does not end here. The saving of clothing is of much greater importance. It Is often remarked that articles of fine texture last twice as long when wrung In a Wringer aswhen wrung by hand. The NOVELTY has Gog-wheels on both ends. The rolls are allowed to ipaiate freely at either end. These, besides other advantages which it contains, seem to be indispensable to a practical wringer.—New York Independent.

The Novelty Wringer.—Has become an Indispensable institution in thousands of families. And we believe its great and increasing popularity is fully merited—for the Novelty erdently possesses all the requisites of a firstclass, practical machine. Indeed, after using one for many months in our own family, we are prepared to endorse the Novelty as unsurpassed (the laundress says wnequaled,) by any of the several wringers previously tried.—Moore's Rural New Yorker.

Sold everywhere. H. B. PHELPS CO., iw Gen. Agta., 102 Chambers St., N.

upon all who come.

Good Grain Bags.....

Carpets

-j"

V.

DBY GOODS.

AN

10

A SAFE INVESTMENT!

Gold Dollars for Fifty. Cents!

EXTRAORDINARY SALE!

O N A E W A S O N E

EfOT anHH YOUR OPPORTUNITY!

Recently a nondescript concern, manipulated by a couple of Chicago Wholesale Merchants, came Into Terre. Haute to make money out of the MPAID FOR STOCK of A. Johnson dc Co. We soon found out that these men were running a regular "Peter Funk" establishment, and that they refused to sell anything that did not bring a big profit. We were shown many goods bought of them for which the buyer had paid nearly double our retail priccs, and in no case that came under our observation had the goods been bought as low as we would hare sold them. We therefore proposed to drive these illegitimate dealers in UNPAID-FOR GOODS out ot town, EVEN IF IT TOOK A LOSS ON OUR PART OF FIVE THOUSAND DOLLAIfS TO DO IT. To this end we immediately closed up our store for one day and marked down our entire stock, in many cases to FIFTY CENTS ON A DOLLAR, thus virtually selling

GOLD DOLLARS FOR FIFTY CENTS!

The intelligence of what we have done has ran like wild-fire all over the country, and the people are gathering together what ready money they

can and are hastening in to our great sale. Within & few days we have sold many thousand dollars worth of Dry Goods and Carpets at less than present wholesale

prices. Our store has been literally packed with customers, and our sales have been so enormous that we have found it difficult to secure clerks enough to wait

The "Peter Funk" Establishment has "Played Out,

And as they have found that they cannot fool our people quite as easily as they made their brags they would do, they are, we understand, about to pack up their

old stock and leave. Our great sale will continue

A FEW LON BR!

Entire stock of best Sprague Prints selling at 9c

All our Gloucester, Garner and Oriental t*rints at.../. //..i. .. Ai ,.V. 9c ALL makes of our best. Prints selling at— 9c These Prints are now worth lljc at wholesale in New York City, as any Dry Goods Merchant will tell you.

Also, yard-wide White Muslin, nearly as good as Lonsdale, at 12£e This Muslin is now worth 14c wholesale. "V,

Also, one of the heaviest yard-wide Unbleached Muslins made, at 10p This Muslin is worth at wholesale 11 }c.

Our very be§t. ajad.finest and heaviest Unbleached Muslin, 12Jc now worth at wholesale 13Jc. jit- -v i-t&cati-Elegant Dress Goods

Factory Jeans „25c, 30c, 40c, 60c and 60c

Beautiful White Blankets .$3.60, 4.00,5.00 and 6.00 per pair Plaid Factory Flannels 25c, 30c, 40c and 50c

Shawls, all styles, ..$1.00,1.50, 2.00, 2.50,3.00 and up

Coats' Cotton, also Clark's Cotton 5c a spool Dayton Carpet Warp. 30c

I rFine Dress Goods, Silks, Poplins, Camlet Cloths, Alpacas,. Ac., at half the prices of country stores. -f**.

Fine Ingrain Carpets „60c, 75c, 90c and $1.00 Best Brussels Carpets

1 1

4 J,

PILES OF OTHER GbODg EQUALLY CHEAP!

sj$

O S E O E S

Great New York Dry Goods Store,

stkkbt, terre hac#®,

26c an^f 25c

„26c

-t25rit^d 30c

.$1.25

-A

AdSi'tk »V

ELECTRIC OIL.

DR. 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

mi

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

June 17,1870.

DH. U-. B. SMITH—CINCINNATI,

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 wel 1. JOHN TOOMEY

Express Ofllce. C7 West Fourth street. FORT PLAIN. July 12,

Dr. Smith Send me more Oil ana more circulars. It is going like '-hot cakes." Send some circulars also to Sutllff & Co., Cherry Valley, 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., &c.,

Yours respectfully, FRED. H. McCALLUM, Dgiggist.

Sore on Deafness, Salt Rheum, &c.

Cares Rbenmntlsm. Cares Salt Bhenm Cures Erysipelas. Cures Paralysis. Cares Swellings. CHres Chilblains. Cares Headachc. Cares Barns and Frosts. Cnres Piles, Scald Head Felons, CarBanckles, Stamps, Croup, Diptheria, Bfenralgria, Gont, Wonnds, Swelled Glands, Stiff Joints, Canker, Tooth Ache, Cramps, Bloody Flax, £c., Ac.

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.

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

MEDICAL.

DR ALBURGER'S

CELEBRATED.

E A N

HERB STOMACH BITTERS

The Great Blood Purifier and

Anti-Dyspeptic Tonic!

THESE

celebrated and well-known Bitters arc 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 DebJUty, Chronic Diarrhoea, Diseases of the kidneys, Costiveness, Pain the Head, Vertigo, Hermorrhoids, ifeinale Weakness, Loss of Appetite, Intermittent and Remittent Fevers, Flatulence

Constipation, In ware Piles, Fullness of Blood in the

Head,

Acidity of the

Stomach, Nause a, Heartburn, Disgust of Food,FullnessorWeightin 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 Bvil and' Great De Spi

ireat Depression of Spirits.

All of which are indications of Liver Com-

plaint, Dyspepsia, or,diseases of the digestive organs, combined with an impure blood. These bitters are not a rum drink, as most bitters are, butare put before the public for their medicinal propropertles, and cannot be equalled by any other preparation.

Prepared only at

Dr. Allrarger's Laboratory,

Philadelphia, proprietor of the celebrated Worm Sirup, Infant Carminative and Pulmonic Sirup. BauPrincipal office, northeast corner of THIRD andBROWN Streets, Philadelphia.

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

WA&ON YARD.

DMLEL niLIEB'S

WJEW WAOOST YARD 4 AND 7J

BOARDING HOUSE, Corner Fourth and Eagle Streets,

3

TERRE HAUTE, IND.^jj

THE

Undersigned takes great pieasure in In forming his old friends and customers, and

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.

Boarder» taken by the Day, Week or Monthj and Prices JReasonabte.

N, B.—The Boarding House and Wagon Ya will be under the entire supervision of mysel and family. f68dfewtf] DANIEL MILLER.

TOBACCOS, ETC.

BBASHEARS, BROWN & TITUS, ,.,,

coaenssiour

merchants

.j. Wholesale Dealers in ,,,

Groceries and Manufactured Tobaccos

AGENTSfor

R. J.Christian

A Co.'s celebrated

brands of'^Christian Comfort," Bright May ,PlneApp" aCk-Navy

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

32 AND 34 MAIN STREET •f dlS Worcester, Mass.

VIBE.

NEW JERSEY WIRE MILLS.

HMBY ROBERTS, •jsi: Manufacturer of vl.

REFINED IRON WIRE, Market and Stone Wire,:"

BRIGHTPail

and Annealed Telegraph-wire, Coppered Bail, Rivet, Screw, Buckle, Unibrelfa, Spring, Bridge, Fence, Broom, Brush, and Tlnners'wire.

Wire Mill, Newark, New Jersey.

VARNISHES.

ft*

nro.

ESTABLISHED, 1836.

JOHX D. FITZ-GERALD, **, -J(Late D. Price Sr Fitz- Gerald,)

i$rt

Manufacturers

IMPROVED COPAL TARNISHES,

ldy NEWARK N

cim

CARDSof

every description for Business, Visit

lng» Wedding or Funeral

Ing. Wedding or Funeral purposes, in any nberftam 1 cheaply pr.„ JOB OFFICE, Filth street. We keep the laiy'st assortment or card stock in the citv—bought a* ^tfromEastern'UP' ~ir 1

number

from

ioo

to 100,000, expeditfo

iw tu 1W.VW, ciueuiuuunay, neatly

and cheaply printed at the GAZETTE STEAV

•JPZ.