Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 2, Number 104, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 30 September 1871 — Page 2
'he Evening
HUDSON & HOSE, proprietors.
K. V. M. B06K.
Office: North Fifth St., near Main.
The DAILY GAZETTE is published every afternoon, except Sunday, and sold by the carriers at 20« per week. By mall £10 per year
AS for 6 months #2.50 for 3 months. Tae 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: One copy, per year, 92.00 three copies, per year, 85.00 five copies, per year, 88.00 ten copies, one year, ana one to getter up of Club, £15.00 one cepy, six months 81.OO one copy, three months 50c. All subscriptions must be paid for in advance. TJie paper -will, invariably, be discontinued at expiration of 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 A ROSE, GAZETTE, Terre Haute, Ind.
TOR GOVERNOR IN 1872,
Washington C. De Pauw,
OF FLOTD COUNTY.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30,1871.
THE Hartford (Connecticut) Post, a leading Republican journal, is growing sick over the venality and hypocrisy of its party leaders, and expresses itself on the subject very freely by saying that "the Republican party, or rather the party leaders, need a reminder that the mass of the party are honest and pure, and will not support dishonesty, corruption and trickery, even when they come for indorsement and approval with the sanction of a regular nomination. "With a National Administration so grossly negligent of its trusts, that frauds and peculations to the ex tent of millions go, under its very eyes, for years without arrest or check with official malfeasance going on unrebuked everywhere, and the men who lead the party and undertake to give it tone defending Republican incompetency and crime, while denouncing Democratic shortcomings unsparingly with the whole atmosphere tainted with rot of public morals, and no crime denounced anywhere except by a political opponent of the offender—it is high time the whole gang of demagogues was smitten in the face. Weliope Butler will be nominated, and then that he will be defeated. The Republican party can stand a defeat in Massachusetts very comfortably, and that .seems to be the only point just now where the people cangeta square chance to express an honest opinion of thedemagogery of Republican leaders. The party is carrying to-day all sorts of rascals in all sorts of offices. One more would not break its back, but would very likely straighten it up sufficiently to throw off the whole gang. There are thousands of men in this country who are very tired of voting the Republican tisket as a choice of evils." That is speaking out in meeting very boldly, but not any more so than the case warrants, and no more so than the interests of our common country demand. The men into whoso hands have fallen the destinies of the great Republican party, are corrupt men, and arrant demagogues.
They have prostituted the glories of the past that they may be continued in power. They must be dismissed, and if this cannot be done without disrupting the entire organization—they must be dismissed.
Queen Victoria Insane.
The Queen of England is about to pay the last debt of nature. It is thought she can not survive long. Indeed, she is declared to be not only physically incapablo ef attending to the duties incumbent on her, but actually insane. It is said that Mr. Disraeli, in his speech a few days ago, "deliberately pronounced the Queen to have become 'morally and physically incapable' of performing the duties of her position. In other words he declared her Majesty insane. Mr. Disraeli has done many bold and unprecedented things in the course of his career as a leader in English politics. But he has done nothing so bold and unprecendented as this. The English press, it is true, has been full for some time past of vague hints and outgiving as to the true condition of the sovereign. Her Majesty inherits a constitutional tendency to in sanity, which her manner of life for years past has been such as to strengthen aud develop. During the lifetime of Prince Albert the Queen had accustomed herself to rely implicitly upon his judgment and to act upon his advice in political as well as private matters. His death deprived her not only of a husband to whom she was devotedly attached, but of a counselor who had relieved her of the heaviest burdens imposed on her by her rank and station. She fell at once into a morbid, moody melancholy, from which she has never since emerged. 'A fixed idea,' says the French proverb, 'leads to madness or to death.' The Queen of Great Britain has blooded over her loneliness and her loss in a "luxury of woe" as uncontrolled as that of Artemesia herself. A grand-daughter of George III livingsuch a life could hardly sescape afate like his."
THECincinnati
14
Commercial, referring
to the pressure of the Federal authorities on Stkte politics, has the following sensi-
tbie
suggestions "The danger is, that in the attempt to control th« politics of the States, the President will not only shipwreck his own ,, prospects, but thoso of the Republican -party. Unless something is done to heal the division which Administrative interference has created, or at least to check the ,,, process, the Democracy will next year slip
into power, while the factions are quarrelin« for party supremacy. The President cannot count now, as three years ago, on his military prestige for a triumph over
they have been handsomely
rewarded and that it is not, perhaps, the ,mo8t fortunate thing for the country to emphasise military achievements with civil responsibilities."
On every occasion, when the Federal office-holders endeavor to control State Conventions, they widen the breach already made in the Republican party. New York is a recent illustration of the troth of this assertion. Will, therefore, the Federal office-holders attempt further to control the action of coming Republican Conventions? Of course they will. "^Without this element Grant has no
con9Wering.
He is aware
pf this fact, •w^faappointees have been
ordered to the front. If they do not exert all their influence, in all the conventions pf the country, off will go their heads. This is understood by officeholders all over the country, and they will not lose their bread and butter for want of any exertion on their part.
There are only two things that can save the Republican party from defeat in the great contest of 1872: First, the immediate and unqualified withdrawal of General Grant from the contest, and second, the nomination of a statesman, by the Republican National Convention, and placing under him a liberal, Christian, and progressive platform. This, and this alone, will continue the Republicans in power. Will it be done?
Rich Men.
The following from the Cincinnati Commercial is good advice "Rich men who intend to give large amounts of property to charitable purposes after their death, should give it before their death, if possible and while they themselves can see that it is properly employed. Wills making great charitable bequests are so often contested and upset now-a-days, by relatives, pretended relatives, or other interested parties, that no man who makes such a will can be sure of its execution, after his death, according to his desire. He can not have any assurance that his property will not fall into the very hands which he wished to keep it out of, or be squandered among lawyers, or be diverted in some other way altogether foreign to his design. The number of instances, during the last few years, in which post mortem charitable bequests have been perverted, furnish a warning that ought to be heeded. There are accounts of two noticeable cases of contested wills of this kind in the papers at this time. One is the case of Mr. Champion, a millionaire of Rochester, who died leaving nearly all his property to religious and charitable purposes. Another is the case of Mr. Bonard, of New York, who, having no relatives he knew of, or wished to assist, left his large property to the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. Both wills are in contest, and it is doubtful if the charitable purpose of either will ever be realized. If they had carried out their designs in due season, before death, they would have had the satisfaction of knowing what became of their property. Peter Cooper, who founded the Cooper Institute, of New York, and who is now over eighty years of age, has i'or twenty years been witness of the benefieient results of his charity and has enjoyed the honors accruing from it. The same thing may be said of Mr. Cor nell, who founded the Cornell University, of Mr. Yassar, who founded the Vassar Female College, and of many others. If you have a million or more that you intend to give for a charitable purpose after death, you had better give it before death.
We believe it was Alexander Pope who said, that he could not rest easy in his grave, were he to leave behind him one dollar unappropriated and one friend in need of it. This is a noble sentiment, and worthy our careful consideration. How much more glorious it is for a man to be his own executor, than to have his estate administered by others. Yet the parsimony of some men's natures cramp3 the generous impulses of their hearts, that they clutch to their bosoms all their immense wealth, and die in the unmanly struggle to hold on to it. Thus dying, they often glide into the other world, unlionored, unwept for, and unre gretted.
TIIE Republican candidate for Governor of Massachusetts, William B. Washburn, was born January 31, 1820, in Wichendon, on the New Hampshire border, and under the shadow of Monadnock, almost, but within the limits of Massachusetts aud of Worcester county. His father, who was a working manufacturer in a small way, died when William was but three yeais old, and his children were left to struggle with poverty and to work their own way in the world. At the age of sixteen, or a little more, he entered the Lawrence Academy, at Groton, aud there fitted for college by hard study, while his friend George Boutwell, now Secretary of the Treasury, was studyiug quite as hard in the evenings and leisure hours, behind the counter of a country store in Groton. The acqaintance then formed has continued, and now Mr. Washburn has no firmer friend than Secretary Boutwell, who was the first man to nominate him for Governor. In 1840 young Washburn entered Yale College, studied there for four years, and graduated honorably in 1844 in' the same class with Senator Ferry, of Connecticut, and Governnor Haight, of California. He served in the State Senate in 1850,' and has been in Congress continuously since 1862. For over twenty years he has been at the head of an extensive lumber firm in Erving, Massachusetts.
THE ladies are carrying everything before them in Australia. In New South Wales the Government has officially announced that it will hereafter make no opposition to ladies operating in the telegraph offices. A Melbourne paper says females are to be employed in the postoffice there, and in various other employments formerly monopolized by men, the gentler sex are steadily pushing their way. Opinions may differ as to the admission of women to the learned professions, but certainly there should be no difference touching their eligibility to handicrafts or light trades they are fitted for and wish to practice. There is many a post filled by a male, especially in the sales departments of shops, that might equally well be occupied by a woman, who would thus release the man to follow a more masculine business.
BRAZIL, through her legislative chamber, decrees tlm abolition ot slavery. The consummation of this ordinance, we be lieve, clears the entire American continent—the civilized parts of it, atleast—of that villainous system. The Spanish West Indies alone—of all the lands in the Western Hemisphere—still tolerate that worst of the relics of barbarism and e.ven there it can not long survive. v- v:
From Correspondence of the Cincinnati Commercial, 23.
Nine Years on Trial—A Strange Case. At Stevenson I saw Governor Foote, who was returning from the Federal Court, at Knoxville, having secured the release of an ex-Federal soldier, who has been in jail three years for murdpr. During the war he killed a man, was tried by court-martial and sentenced to be hung. Mr. Lincoln pardoned him. After the war he was indicted in a civil court, tried, and again sentenced to be hung. He appealed to the Supreme P?.ur'' au*» pending a decision, lay in
jail
three years His lawyers finally applied to the *ederal Jadge for a writ of habeas crrpus, which was granted, and upon hearing the case Judge Trice released him. The man's life had once been placed in jeopardy, be had been
pardoned, and the civil courts had no right to molest him further. After a nine years' journey through the civil and military courts of the country, including a good assortment of jails and guardhouses, the prisoner finally pulls the right legal striug, and gets out of his difficulties. This is an illustration of the fact that the law is a "complex science."
Ox Friday evening of last week, Gen. D. K. Boswell and wife, of Muncie, Indiana, took passage on the steamer St. Luke for Jefferson City. About 12 o'clock that night the General was taken sick, and went out on the guard of the boat to see if fresh air would not revive him. Desiring some articles from his state-room, he requested his wife to step back and get them. As Mrs. Boswell was returning she saw the General fall over the railing into the river. The boat was immediately stopped, but the General could not be found. The accident occurred on the Missouri river, about ten miles above the mouth. Efforts are being made to recover the body.
MEDICAL.
The Great World Tonic
AND
System Renovator!
What the Public Should Know.
WABASHThese
work.
BITTERS Bitters are a purely vegetable Tonic, the component
WABASH
Drugs having been selected with
the greatest care as to their medicinal Properties. They are no cueap compound prepared with common whisky.
WABASHJust
BITTERS the thing for morning lassi-
tude and depression of spirits caused by late hours or over-
BITTERS Are an infallible remedy for Dys pepsia, Heart Burn, &c., imparting tone and impulse to the di
gestive organs, by their healthy action on the Stomach, Liver and Kidneys.
WABASH
BITTERS Taken regularly three times a day in small wineglassfnl doses will give strength, health and vigor
and a cheerful and contented disposition.
WABASHTake
WABASHAre
Located and Managed as follows:
OPERA STABLE,
Corner of Main and Eighth Streets,
W. R. HUNTER, Homage*
THE FOUTS STABLE
Second Street, bet. Main and Cherry
A. B. FOUTS, Mnnagrer.
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
FOUNDRY.
F. H. M'XLFRESH. J. BAKNABD,
Phoenix Foundry
AND
MACHINE .SHOP!
McElfresh & Barnard,
Cor. of Ninth and Eagle Streets,
(Near the Passenger Depot,)
TERRE HAUTE, IND
ANUFACTURE Steam Engines, Mill Ma•y, iarSaw Mills, and all kinds of
chinery, House Fronts, Fiie Fronts, Circu
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 oar customers, both in point of Workmanship and Price. 211dwly McELFRESH & BARNARD.
BELTINQ.
JOSIAH GATES «fc SOWS,
Manufacturers or
Oak Tanned Leather Belting Hose.
Lace Leather of Superior Quality, and deal' ers in all kinds ot
MANUFACTURERS' AMD
Fire Department Supplies,
NOS. 4 A 6DUTTON STREET,
ld6m Lowell, Massachusetts
BELTINQ.
Hi
CRAFTON & KNIGHT, Manufacturers of
Best Oak Tanned Stretched Leather Belts. AUo, Page'9 Patent Lacing,
uu
Front st., Harding's Block,
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
^OQA For first-class Pianos—sent on trial— no agents. Address, U. S. PIANO CO., 645 Broadway, New York.
9
KT
the
BITTERS it if want pure. rich, electrical blood—blood that invigorates yonr system, and gives the
glow of health to your cheek.
WABASH
BITTERS Are a sure Preventative of a Chill and Intermitent Fevers.
WABASH
BITTERS Cannot be excelled as a morning Appetizer, Promoting good Digestion, and are infallible for all
the manifold diseases arising from a deranged and debilitated stomach.
BITTERS the best Bitters in the world for purifying the Blood, cleansing the Stomach, gently stimu
lating the Kidneys and acting as a mild cathartic.
»R.
ARNAUD, Sole Proprietor and Manufacturer of WABASH BITTERS, southeast corner of Ohio and Fifth Sts. Terre Haute, Ind. aug26tfS
CHANGE.
A €HANO£!
O. F. FROEB
Successor to
W E I S S
au6d3m.
LIVERY STABLES.
PRAIRIE CITY
Livery Stable Co.,
FOUTS, HUNTER &TH0MPS0N,
Proprietors..
Three First-class Establishments
jy!4-4w
KAA Retailed by one.' Wanted agents to sell pictures everywhere. WHITNEY & CO., Norwich, Conn. 4w
8 O'CLOCK.
4w
RIFLES, SHOT-GUNS, REVOLVERS. Onn materials of every kind. "Write for Price List, to Great Western Gun Works, Pittsburgh, Pa. Army guns and Revolvers bought or traded tor. Agents wanted. 4w
Ch** CENTS will pay for the WREATH— the best magazine for old and young— twKJ for three months on trial. Address,
THE WREATH, Bedford, Ind.
CRUMBS OF COMFORT!
Patented November 1,1870.
SAMPLES FREE AT ALL GROCERY STORES. 4w H. A. BARTLETT & CO., Philadelphia. WATCH FREE. Prize Candy-boxes, Prize Stationery Packages, Cheap Jewelry, Ac., &c. Silver Watches given gratis to every agent. $20 per day made selling onr goods at Conntry Fairs and Political Meetings. Send for Circular. Address, MONROE, KENNEDY & CO., Pittsburgh, Pa. 4w
THEA-NECTAR
IS A PURE A E A
NEK I
•vith the Green Tea Flavor, Warranted to suit all tastes, For sale everywhere. And for sale wholesale only by the Oreat 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, fcc., by Prof. O. S. Fowler. Send for Circulars and specimen pages. Address, NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., Cincinnati, Ohio Chicago, Ilh, or St. Louis, Mo. 4w
1*1
refreshing
frofraaee of genuine Farina rue Water, and Is lodlapcaaoMe t»
Toilet
tlem and
-©a
so%c°iot
•rery Lady or Oen-^
Soldi by Drugirlftta
Dealer* la PERFUMERY.
Well's Carbolic Tablets,
FOB 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 Throat difficulties of years standing. if1 ITTTTAU Don't be deceived by worth \JJ\. A AVR-UI 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 ior Circular. 4w
HURRICANE PATENT A E
COMPANY,
Office, 14 Barclay Street, New York. (Up Stairs.) Ofter to the public a Lantern combining safety and economy with elegance and usefulness. Itcannot explode it gives 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. 1 hey are universally liked where they have been tried.
•^v%yi Psychomancy the g^IM™
nifying the power of the soul, spirit or mind, and is the basis of all human knowledge. Psychomancy is the title of a new work of 400 pages by HERBERT HAMILTON, B.A., glvmtr full instructions in the science 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 and Dreams, Brigliam Young's Harem, Guide to Marriage, Stc. This is the only boon in the English language professing to teach this occult power, aud is of immense advantage to Merchants, Lawyers, Physicians, aud especially to Lovers, in securing the atfections of the opposite sex, and all seeking riches or happiness. Price by mail, in cloth, 81.25 paper covers, SI. For sale by J. B. LIPFINCOTT & Co., and CLAXEN, REM SEN & Co., Phila. Agents wanted for this book, Medical Works, Perfuraeiy, Jewelry, &c. Sample* free to Agents only. For single copies by mail, and terms ,to Agents, address, T.W. EVANS, 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 Cell. In one vol. 640 pages, over 50 elegant engravings, made expressly far 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 E A
Is a South American plant that has been used for many years by the 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
I E O S SLUGGISH CIRCULATION OF
THE BLOOD,
ABSCESSES, TUMORS, JAUNDICE, SCROFULA, DXSPEPSIA. AG UEANEFEVER, OR
THEIR CONCOMITANTS.
Dr. Well's Extract of Jnrnbeba,
Is a most perfect Alterative, and is offered to
going complaints
DR. WEIL'S EXTRACT JURUBEBA
Is confidently recommended to every family as household remedy, and shonld be freely taken in all derangements of the system.
It is NOT A PHYSIC—It is NOT what Is popu larly called a BITTERS, nor is it intended ai such but is simply a powerful alterative,givi ng health, vigor and tone to all the yital forces, and animates and fortifies all weak and lymphatic temperaments.
JOHN Q. 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.
Nothing, except tbe Sewing Machine, has ever been invented which so much relieves the labor of tbe household as the Wringer. But 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 a Wringer aswhen wrung by hand. The NOVELTY has Cog-wlieels on both ends. The rolls are allowed to late freely at either end. These, besides er advantages which it contains, seem to be indispensable to a practical wringer.—New York Independent.
The Novelty Wringer.—Hasbecome an indispensable institution In thousands of families. And we believe Its great and increasing jopularity is fully merited—for the Novelty evdeutly possesses all tbe requisites of a flrstclass, practical machine. Indeed, after using one for many months in onr own family, we are prepared to endorse the Novelty as unsurpassed the laundress says ttnequaled,) by any of the several wringers previously tried.—Moore1* Jtural New Yorker.
Sold everywhere.
Worcester, Mw.
4w
Carpets
Jr. B. PHELPS A CO.,
Qen.AgUti 103 Chambers St,, N.X»
DRY GOODS.
"Gone Where the Woodbine Twineth."
AWARDING TO PETER FUNKS!
CHICAGO WHOLESALE MERCHANTS.
We said a few weeks ago that we wonld shut up or driye out of town a certain nondescript auction concern if it cost us a loss of flye thousand dollars to do it.
WE HAVE DONE IT!
Within forty-eight hours after we opened our batteries upon them their lines began to waYer within a week or ten days their auctions were a COMPLETE and LAUGHABLE FAILURE, and the Nondescripts could be seen jumping around upon their counters, yelling away at the top of their xoices and knocking down goods to empty store stools in the Tain attempt to entice into their store the crowds of people hastening to our great sale. Finding all their attempts at getting up a sale useless, they next endeavored to sell their old stock at auction to the other dry goods merchants. But even in this they lamentably failed, as the other merchants dared not buy their stock thus openly, for fear it would injure their trade. Then they commenced to sell their goods to the other dry goods merchants SECRETLY. We found it out, and, true to the interests of the masses of the people, we told them of it. That stopped THAT business. Now these chaps, whose auction sale we closed up, appear in print with a poorly got up story, that no body believes, to the eifect that they have bought the old stock and added new goods to it and propose to retail it out.
WHAT IS THE LESSON TAUGHT!
IT IS, THAT THERE EXISTS IN THIS PLACE AT I.EAST ONE FIRM THAT PROPOSES TO ALLOW ^O INTERFERENCE OF OUTSIDERS WITH THE DESTINY OF THE RETAIL DRY GOODS TRADE OF TERRE HAUTE.
If there are any oilier traveling concerns liovering around, we tell tiiem that if they land here under similar circumstances, flicy will get similar treatment.
THE GREAT SALE TO CONTINUE!
Tlie following goods were bought by our stores in New York before the recent great advance, and tliey are now sending litem tons in New and Handsome Styles almost daily. These prices cannot last mnch longer:
Entire stock of best Sprague Prints selling at 9c All our Gloucester, Garner and Oriental Prints at ...,.9c ALL makes of our best Prints selling at- 9c
These Prints are now worth ll$c 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$c This Muslin is now worth 14c wholesale.
Also, one of the heaviest yard-wide Unbleached Muslins made, at 10c This Muslin is worth at wholesale 11 £c.
Our very best and finest and heaviest Unbleached Muslin, 12$c now worth at wholesale 13£c.
Elegant Dress Goods .....12$c, 15c, 20c and 25c Factory Jeans 25c, 30c, 40c, 50c and GOc
Beautiful White Blankets 1 93.50, 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 Good Grain Bags „26c
Fine Dress Goods, Silks, Poplins, Camlet Cloths, Alpacas, &c., at half the prices of country stores.
Fine Ingrain Carpets .w.......... .:........60c, 75c, 90c and $1.00 Best Brussels Carpets ,...$1.25
PILES OF OTHER GOODS- EQUALLY CHEAP
O S E O E S
Great New York Dry Goods Store,
-J *•.
tarn
NORTH SIDE OP MAIN ST REET, TERRE HAUTE, INT,
vi a
ELECTRIC OIL.
DB. SMITH'S
Genuine "Electric" Oil.
UEW 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,June17,1870.
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 stiQ" 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 PLAIN, 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 Valley, as they sent in for a supply of the Oil Please send by first express, and oblige,
D. E. BECKE Druggist.
Yours truly,
Not a Failure! Not One! (From Canada.) NEW HAMBURG, ONT., July 12. Dr. Smith, Phila: I have sold the OilforDealness, Sickness, Neuralgia, Ac., and in every case it has given satisfaction. I can procure quite a number of letters. We want more of the large size, &c., &e.,
Yours respectfully, FRED. H. McCALLUM, Druggist.
Sure on Deafness, Salt Rheum, &c.
Cnres Rheumatism. Cares Salt Ithenm Cnres Erysipelas. Cures Paralysis. Cnres Swellings. Cnres Chilblains. Cnres Headache. Cures Bnrns and Frosts. Cnres Piles, Scald Head Felons, Car Bnnckles, Mump^, Croup, Diptheria, Neuralgia, Gout, Wounds, Swelled Glands, Stiff* Joints, Canker, Tootb Ache, Cramps, Bloody Flax, £c., Ac.
TRY IT FOR YOURSELF.
SALT RHEUM it ciires every time (if yon use no soap on the and it cures most fails in Deafness or Rheumatism.
parts while applying the Oil, tall cutaneous diseases—seldom
See Agents'name in Weekly. For sale by best Druggists. splOdy
MEDICAL.
DR ALBUBGER'S
CELEBRATED
E A N
HERB STOMACH BITTERS
The 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 recommended for restoring weak constitutions and increasing the appetite. They area certain cure for Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Jaundice, Chrom or Nervous Debility, Chronic Diarrhoea, Diseases of the kidneys, Costiveness, I'ain the Head, Vertigo, Hermorrhoids, female Weakness, Loss of Appetite, Intermittent and Remittent Fevers, Flatulence
Constipation, Inwaiv Piles, Fullness of Blood in the
Head,
Acidityofthe
S to a N a a Heartburn, Disgust of Food, Fullness or Weight in theStomach.Sour Erucattions, Sinking or Fluttering at the Pit of the Stomach, Hurried or Difficult Breathing. Fluttering of the Heart Dullness of the Vision, Dofs 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 Depress! on 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
Dr.'Alburger's laboratory,
Philadelphia, proprietor of the celebrated Worm Sirup, Infant Carminative and Pulmonic Sirup. HauPrincipal office, northeast corner of THIRD andBROWN Streets,Philadelphia.
For sale by Johnson, Holloway & Cowden, 602 Arch Street, Philadelphia, and by Druggist* and Dealers in medicines, 211dly
WAGON YARD.
DAMEL MILLER'S
JfEW W1GOX YARD
BOARDING HOUSE,
Corner Fonrtb and Eagle Streets, TERRE HAUTE, IND.
THE
Undersigned takes great pieasnre in In forming his old friends and customers, and the public generally, that be has again taken charge of his well-known Wagon Yard and Boarding House, located as above, and that he will be found ready and prompt to accommodate all in the best and most acceptable manner. His boarding house haa 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 Reasonabte. N, B.—The Boarding House and Wagon Ya Will be under the entire supervision of mysel and family. [68d&wtf] DANIEL MILLER.
TOBACCOS, ETC.
BRASHEABS, BROWN & TITUS,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
Wholesale Dealers in
Groceries and Manufactured Tobaccos
APineApple"Christian
GENTS for R. J. Christian & Co.'s celebrated brands of Comfort," Bright May %, Black Navy %, and Cherry Brand lack Navy %, and other nne brands,
:s
25c and 30c
32 AND 34 MAIN STREET Worcester, Mass. dl£
WEBB.
NEW JERSEY WIRE MILLS. HENRY ROBERTS,
Manufacturer
REFINED IRON WIRE, Market and Stone Wire,
BRIGHTPail
and Annealed Telegraph Wire, Coppered Bail, Rivet, Screw, Buckle, Umbrella, Spring,Bridge,Fence, Broom,Brush.and Tlnnen/Wire.
Wire Mill, Newark, Nedr'Jersey.
VARNISHES.
ESTABLISHED, 1836.
JOHN D. FITZGERALD, {Late D. Price & Mtz-Gerald,)
Manufacturers
IMPR0YED COPAL VARNISHES,
ldy NEWARK N
CARLS.
Business, Visit poses, in any lously, neatly
and cheaply printed at the G'AZETTE STEAV JOB OFFICE, Filth streets We keep the largr at assortment of card stock in theoltr—tuvgfct 41pect from Eastern Mlty
