Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 2, Number 120, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 October 1871 — Page 2
^vmhtQ gazette
HUDSON & ROSE, Proprietors. B. N. HTTDSON ...I"
Office: North Fifth St., near Main.
The DAILY GAZETTE is published every alternoon, except Sunday, and sold by the carriers at 20c per week. By mail 810 per year for 6 months 82.50 for 3 months. Tne 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, 82.00 three copies, per year, #5.00 five copies, per ye 88.00 ten copies, one year, and one to getter up of Clnb, 815.00 one cepy, six months 81.OO one copy, three months 00c. All subscriptions must be paid for in advance. The paper will, invariabl be discontinued at expiration of time. tfor 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.
FOE GOVERNOR IN 1872,
Washington C. De Pauw,
OF FliOTD COUNTY.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19,1871.
Wliat is a Million Dollars! People say, "The steamer took away a million dollars," just as complacently as though a million dollars could be picked up like dirt. An anonymous writer remarks that but few people have any more idea what millions, billions and trillions are than they have of the brogans worn by the cobblers who in habit the moon. A million of silver dollars possesses a vastness that is rather startling to a man who has never faced such a pile. To count this sum at the rate of one thousand five hundred dollars an hour, and eight hours a day, would require a man nearly three months. If the said dollars were laid side by side, they would reach one hundred and thirty-six miles while their transportation would require fourteen wagons carrying two tons each. If millions thus become overpowering in their magnitude, what shall we do with larger sums? The seconds in six thousand years seem almost incalculable, and yet they amount to less than a trillion. A quadrillion of leaves paper, each the twohundredth part of an inch in thickness would form a pile the height of which would be three hundred and fifty times the moon's distance of the earth. A cannon ball flies swiftly but if one were fired at the moment that one of our Na tional Presidents takes his seat in the White House, and were it to continue with unabated velocity at twelve hundred feet a second during his whole term of office, it would not travel three millions of miles. We never, hear of the Wandering Jew, but we mentally in quire what was the sentence of his pun ishment. Perhaps he was told to walk the earth until he counted a trillion Suppose a man to count one in every second of time, day and night, without stopping to rest, eat, or sleep, it would take him thirty-two years to count a billion, and thirty thousand years to count a trillion, even as the French understand that term. As we said before, what a limited idea men have of the immensity of numbers.
LIFE is beset with unavoidable annoyances, vexatious cares, and harassing events. But we endure them—we strive to forget them—or, like the dust on our garments or the soil on our shoes, we brush them off, and, if possible, scracely bestow a thought on the trouble it requires. But when we have once been called upon to feel and undergo a great sorrow—to bend the back and to bow the head—to endure the yoke and to suffer the agony—to abide the pelting of the pitiless and unpitied storm of adversity and sorrow when few, perhaps none, sympathized with us, and we had been insensible to it if they had, oh these are the days of anguish and darkness—these the nights of desolation, despair and when they have once come upon us with their appalling weight—their remorseless power—we can never be beguiled into a forgetfulness of them. The memory of them will endure as long as life can last. We may forget them for a while—we may again be permitted to behold the beams of a cheerful sun, throwing a delusive coloring over the landscape around us, and our eyes may rest upon the lights, but they will dwell still more upon the shadows of the picture. We cannot be deceived and deluded again, for the heart has learnt its first and last lesson in the school of fortitude and experience.
DR. HOWE, of Boston, one of Grant's San Domingo bug-hunters, is going out to that paradise upon his own account, to devote his life to the amelioration of the unfortunate people who are going to tlie dogs because they are not cared for by this benign Government. This is the story which is given out,, but the whole thing looks like a put up job. Howe will be back in the course of a year or two, and then, if Grant happens to be in the Presidential chair, he will make au unbiased personal report in favor of aiftiex^ ation, and Grant will pay him for it. Wo trust that Mr. Howe will take Julia Ward. H. along with him. Theirconcurrent testimony would have great weight.
A WORK of a noveF and higly interesting character is in press of the Appletons—a "Cyclopaedia of Dickens," which will be to the works of that novelist what the Concordance is to Shakspeare and Tennyson, and supply the means of reference in a moment to any passage that Dickens ev$r wrote. It has been the painstaking labor of some years of Mr. De Fontaine, of the Charleston press, a gentleman well known for his literary taste and culture, and au intelligent student of Dickens beyond most admirers* of that great novelist.
AT Concord, New Hampshire, the other day the Labor Reform State Committee met and passed the following resolution:
Resolved, That political events show the need of anew party that the New York Tammany frauds find a parallel in the New York Custom-house that while we do not indorse the record of Butler, we thank him in behalf of the laboring classes for his truthful statements of facts iu tho late Massachusetts canvass that we invite the co-operation of all, irrespective of past political belief, to a convention to be held in December.
A
new organization is in the wind.
THE
M' BOSG.
cheerful man is a double blessing
—a blessing to himself and to the world around him. In his own character good nature Is the Ijlear blute sky of his own fajgart 05Q wpiicti
eyery
itar fcf talent
shines out more "Clearly. To offiers he carries an atmosphere of joy and hope and encouragement wherever he moves. His own cheerfulnessbecoifceslnfectipus, and his associat^s lose tlieir moroaauftWL and their gloom in the amber-colored light of the benevolence he casts around him.
EXTRAORDINARY SUICIDE.
How a Man Dies of Folgyii—A Cui'Apijs Study. ",n The following are the most singular notes of death, we reeolleet of ever reading. They will repay a oaretul perusal. We take them from the Paris correspondent of the New York World
A corpse was found lying in the yard of an unfinished house inHue Marignan. It was a mau's body. He had committed suicide swallowing some narcotic, and as death hadadvanced he had noted on the leaves of a memorandum book how life had receded. Here are some of he no 1 1 10 P. M:—There must be an end. I have scaled the raising of an unfinished house to end all here in an obscure cor ner. A clock is striking 10. 10:05—Here lam in my corner, well rapped in my cloak. The air is cold and wet. 'Tis strange I am going to die, and I fear the cold. I take pencil and paper tQ record my sensations. A dying man's whim. The light of the gas-lamp reaches here and enables me to see. What though I write illegible who'll read these lines? 10:10—All is ready. I hold the vial in my hand. To think a few drops of liquid have power to separate instantly my soul from my body. 'Tis passing strange. What are we, after all? 10:12—I cannot help still thinking of
No, let there be no thought of that. Ill luck, fatality have wrought it all. Dreams of happiness, dreams of the future times—dead leaves, withered leaves under foot with them. Come, drink! 10:15—The deed is done. I have drunk the vial's contents and thrown the glass away. What takes place within me? Nothing. I do but feel the astonishment of a new situation—mere curiosity. Wait. 10:18—No change yet. A breath of air came over me, bringing with it strains of song and music. They come from the musical cafes in the Champs Elysees. There are people yonder making merry, while I— 10:20—An acute, penetrating, atrocious pang rans through all my marrow and disorders my ideas. It is the first effect of the poison. My hair must have stood on end. 'Tis past. Thoughts return to me. I one more catch those strains. 'Tis melancholy at a distance. One of Alsred de Vigney's lines occurs to my mind 'tis a sad line, composed entirely of monosyllables Oh que la mon du cor est triste au fond des bois That pang again 1 It feels like burning. The stomach is in insurrection. Yield it must. 10:40—Pain has ceased. I enjoy a relative calmness. The world seems to recede from me, to dwindle, to grow misshapen. I saw my whole-life iu oneiustant, as through a mist—incidents of my infancy which I bad forgotten—all! Poor mother! Oh! the anguish your child endures! 10:45—How many things in life left undone, lost, trampled under foot. All is groping. If we could but see—could but know! Yet I regret nothing. So help me God, I would not for the world retrace my steps. Seen from here life seems to me ugly, cold, laden with weariness. I'll none of it! 10:50—Acuter pains. Blood throbs in my head. I am obliged to stop. 11—A sort of swoon. Death's van courier. 'Tis not so painful as they say. When consciousness returned it seemed to me an entirely new existence was mine. My body, grown light and imponderable, floated through walls and in mid-air—all life in one minute. How quickly ideas fly 11:05—Paris calm. Sleep. Stiffness begins. 'Tis the beginning of the ehd, 11:08—No disagreeable sensation. No fear. The extremities cold. I cannot budge my lower limbs. I believe th€Qr are already dead. What becomes of the soul Goes it from globe to globe in new bodies visiting billions of worlds through billions of ages What care I I entered life without thinking thereoh. my exit is no care of mine. 11:15—What say they? Cries? No. Nothing. My thoughts were momentarily confused. The skein grows entangled. My abdomen grows cold. I feel the cold rising. A difficulty of living. Better where lam. Head heavy. 'Tis nothing. Ah that black curtainyonder. Oh! there is something behind it. I saw, as 'twere, the whitening dawn. Oh! shall know. Blood in*the head—in the eyes. How the boat rocks! The sea is boisterous. Light.
The words which followed (covering nearly a page) were absolutely illegible. LEONE LEONI.
Correspondence Cincinnati CommeVcial. "Mack's" Losses by the Chicago Fire. Mr. J. B. McGullagh ("Mack") lost $25,000 invested ill the Republican, and $15,000 cash in the Traders' Bank. The office was insured for $45,000, but how much of any of these sums will be recovered remains to be seen. The con tents of their safe—ledgers, subscription lists and insurance policies—were charred to indistinguishable cinders. Mr. Henry Reed had a tin box in the safe, contain ing some silverware and several hundred dollars in gold coin, all of which was completely melted and run together. Mr. Ke&d has determined to leave Chicago permanently. "Mack" is undecided as to bis futuie course, as his partners seem to be discouraged on the subject of further investments. He says he worked up the Republican to a paying point, tile edition that was burnt containing nearly a thousand dollars' worthof c|ty advertising. The city owes the Republican ix thousand dollars aud the owners|had, receutly sold their job room lor twentytwo thousand five hundred dollars.' The mail who bought it last all in the fire, an 1, like his sureties, can't pay a pent arid the,notes be gave are burnl \ip Anyhow. The Traders' Bank," in which Mack had fifteen thousand dollars cash, loiAied its capital to Chicago merchants, and they are bankruptel^5L,hisr,ijuI,1a sample of the accumulative losses that have overtaken so many thousands of the industrious and enterprising business men of Chicago, .literally compelling them to return to the point where a living is made by one's wit. Mack lost his large and choice private library, which he had insured for fifteen, hundred dollars, Ke tells of one filial individual who carried the coffined remains oi his father, re* cently deceased, to the lake, where he anchored them securely until after the fire. And he also points out the difference between Theodore Thomas' fugacious fiddlers and Nero, by explaining that one fiddled while Rome burned, and the others roame^ jyijile they^ fiddles burned.
THE action of a "railroad
Acoddudtof
a
few days since draws attention to a common popular error. The train struck a
him to be dead, the conductor, without removing the body, started the train back to a way state#*. tPhe b^y Was sfcj&etf to the ground by the motion of the en- i™" gine, and it was found that life still reattained. HacLhebee^ takeu off the accident" fiwt occurred there have been a chance of his recovery conductor, whin? tsked why the
was® not at once taken up, replied that he supposed he had no right to remove a ^ody until a Coroner had seen it. Singular as this reason may appear, it nevertheless expresses a superstition that exists almost univerrfy throughout -the country among all classes. At what period or in what maclf ner this absurd belief originated we cannot say, It may have grown out of a statute of Edward I., which rendered it uiperaUve that the jury should hold their deliberations
l'super
visum corporis"—
Within sight of the body—a custom which has at the presently also become obsolete, as it is considered^ufficient for the jnry merely to view the body—although they may not set for several weeks afterward. In whatever manner the idea expressed or acted on by the conductor driginated, it is time it should cease to exist. The neglect to give immediate aid to a person found apparently dead, from lightning or other causes, may frequently lead to death.
CHANSE.
A CHAHtiE!
O. F.FROEB
Successor to'
W E I S S
au6d3m.
LIVEBY STABLES.
PRAIRIE CITY
Livery Stable Co.,
FOUTS, HUNTER & THOMPSON,
proprietors.
Three First-class Establishments,
Located and Managed as follows:
O E A S A E
Corner of Main and Eighth Streets,
W. B. HUNTER, Manager.
THE FOUTS 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 Fonts, 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'EIiFEKSH. J. BARNARD. iT
Phoenix Foundry
AND
MACHINE SHOP
McElfresl* & Barnard,
Cor. of Ninth and Eagle Streets,
(Near the Passenger Depot,)
TERRE HAUTE, IND
MANUFACTURE
Steam Engines, Mill Ma
chinery, House Fronts, Fire Fronts, Circu lar Saw Mills, and all kinds of
IRON AND BRASS CASTINGS!
E A I I N O N E O
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. 21fdwly McELFRESH & BARNARD.
MEDICAL.
s£lOOO REWARD,
T?oirifl.hy case of Blind, Bleeding, Itching, or Jh Ulcerated Piles that l»e llLngs'a Pile Remedy fails to cure. It is prepared expressly to cure the Piles and nothing else, and has cured
iy fails to cure. It is prepared expressly to xscured Sold by
etses of over twenty years' standing, all Druggists. .".'VIA IFTJGS-A.
De Bing's'Via Fuga is the pure juice of Herbs, Roots, and Berries, CONSUMPTION.
•inflamation of the .Lungs ail aver Kidney and Bladder diseases, organic Weakness, Female Afflictions,,General Debility, and all complaints of the Urinary organs, in Male and Female,
EirobsyandSciotula,which
roduciug Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Gravel most generally term, inate in Consumptive Decline. It purifies and enriches the Blood, the Billiary, Glandular and Secretive systfem corrects and strengthens the nervous and muscular forces. It acts like a charm on weak nerves, debiliated females, both yAung and old. None should be without it, Sold everywhere.
Laboratory—142 Franklin Street, Baltimore j|4|- TO THEtADIES.^ BALTIMOBE, February 17,1870.
I have been a suflerer from Kidney Complaint producing Gravel and those afflictions peculiar to women, prostrating my physical and nervous systems, with a tendency to Consumptive Decline. I, was dispondent and gloomy. I tried all "Standard Medicines" with no relief, until I took De Bing's wonderful Remedy. I have taken six bottles, and am now free from that Combination of n&melee&oomplaints. How thankful I am to be well.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
8 O I O 4w A MONTH.—Horse and carriage fur-tJpO-w'J nished expenses jaid samples free.
li
Barks
MKS. LAVINA C. LBAMINQ,
W lo-, Oxford Street,
STEAM EAKfiRT.
Union Steam Bakery.
J*
FRANK HEINIG & BR0.,
Manufacturers of all kinds of i. I
ackers, Cakes, re ad M»,
j**.
4
AND 1 V-v.'.S-f*
A N
Dealers in
"t
Foreign and Domestic
.wM Frnlts,
FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES, LA FAYETTE STREET, ta If Between the two Railroads.
I88d Tem HmIc,Minis.
4 .*** BELTING. U.V WfcEt
JOSIAH OATI&{ & SOJTS,
Manufactured 6t
Oak Tanned Leather Belting Hose.
Lace Leather of Superior Quality, and dealera in an kinds ot
MANUFACTURERS'
Fire Department Supplies,
NOB. 4 A 6 DUTTON STREET, Lriwell. Massachusetts
HI
•£&m.
ises paid, SHAW, Alfred, Me.
H.
UfrQ QH For first-class Pianos—sent on trial— tjp&ij'J no agents. Address, U. S. PIANO CO., 645 Broadway, New York, jy!4-4w
RIFLES, SHOT-GUNS, KEYOLYERS. Gun materials of every kind. "Write for Price List, to Great Western Gun Works, Pittsburgh, Pa. Army guns and Revolvers bought or traded lor. Agents wanted. 4w
AGENTS. LOOK 83 to 812 daily easily made. Profitable and respectable business. A little novelty wanted by everybody, success sure. Send stamp for circulars to CHURCHILL 6 TEMPLETON, Manufacturers, 615 Broadway, New York. 4w
ASK TOUR GROCER FOR
CRUMS of COMFORT.
$10 from 50s
12 SAMPLESsent(postage paid) for Fifty Cento,jUufc retail easily for Ten Dollars. R. L. WOLCOTT.N.Y.
FREE Three Months on TRIAL.
A first-class quarto journal, 54 columns, illustrated. Or one year for 60 cents, with two bound lectures, by James McCosh, D. D., L. L. D., and E. O. Haven, D. D., L. L. D., as premiums. Send name and address to PEOPLE'S JOURNAL, Cincinnati, Ohio. 4w
THEA-NECTAR
IS A PURE BLACK TEA, with the Green Tea Flavor. Warranted to suit all tastes. For sale everywhere in our "trade mark" pound and half pound packages ONLY. 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. 06
WANTED—AGENTS
(820 per day) to sell
the celebrated HOME SHUTTLE SEW ING MACHINE. Hastbeundw-/eed, makestne "lock stitch" (alike on both sides,) and is fully licensed. The best and cheapest family Sewing Machine in the market. Address, JOHNSON, CLARK & CO., Boston, Mass. Pittsburgh, Fa. Chicago, 111., or St. Louis Mo. 4w
RUPTURE
Relieved and Cared by Dr. Sherman's Patent Appliance and Compound. (Jfficc, 697 Broadway, N. 7. Send 10c. for book with photographic likenesses of cases before and after cure, with the Henry Ward Beecher case, letters and portrait. Beware of traveling importers, who pretend to have been assistants of Dr. SKERKAK. He has no Agents.
THE TEAR
AGENTS WANTED FOR
OF BATTLES,
THE RED REBELLION IN PARIS, Accurate, reliable and complete, in English and German. 40,0Q0 Copies already sold. Price $2.50. Address, J. GOODSPEED'S Empire Book, Map and Picture House, Chicago or St. Louis. o5
^It has the delicate and refreshing vOr/vsv®,|,*n"1(!®of genuine Farina OA IrnVjCiiloriie Water, and -^^lndiupcnutthlo to
every Lady or Gen-^—. tlemaa. Sold by •nd Dealer* In PEKFtlMERY
POPERY.
THE FOE OF THE CHURCH AND REPUBLIC. What it has done. What it is doing and what it means to do. Its power, despotism, infallibil ity, frauds, relicts, miracles, idolatry, persecu tions, startling crimes, and SEW YORK KIOTS. SSid for circular. Address, PEOPLE'S PUBLISHING CO., 189 Race St., Cincin nati, Ohio. o5
Reduction of Prices
TO CONFORM TO
REDUCTION OF DUTIES. GREAT SAVING TO CONSUMERS
BY GETTING VP CLUBS.
fi®"Send for our New Price List and a club lorm will accompany it, containing full direction—making a large saving to consumers and remunerative to club organizers. THE GREAT AMERICAN TEA CO., 31 AND 33 VESET STREET,
P. O. Box 5643. NEW YORK.
©in nn nn Made in 6 MONTHS by one ([PlUjVFU.vU agent, canvassing for "THE GUIDE TO BOARD." By Dr. W. W. Hall. Agents Wanted. H. N. McKINNEY & CO., 10 North 7th street, Philadelphia, Pa. o5
AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
mm if
WAR IN EUROPE
It contains over 150 fine engravings of Battle Scenes and incidents in the War, and is the only FULL, AUTHENTIC and OFFICIAL history of that great conflict. Agents are meeting with unprecedented success, selling from 20 to 40 copies per day, and is published in both Englssh and German. a TIT* WtfkHkT Inferior histories are be•J vii ing circulated. See that the book you .buy contains 150 fine engravings and 8C0 pages'. Send for circulars and see our terms, a*d a lull description of the work. Address, NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., Chicago, 111., Cincinnati, Ohio, or St. Louis, Mo. 06
OOK AGENTS WANTED FOB TWO NEW AND POPULAR WOBKS.
KNOTS UNTIED
Or, The Hidden Life of American Detectivesshowing how the perpetrators of mischief and outrage are brought to justice, and disclosing the wnole Detective system. 20,000 copies sold in 30 days.
A WOMAN'S PILGRIMAGE
To the Holy Land, by Mrs. 8. M. Griswold. The latest work of this popular authoress, is an interesting narrative of her experiences during a tour through Europe and the East, In company with "Mark Twain" and the "Quaker City" party. A handsome volume, fully illustrated. we offer extra terms and premiums to Agents. Send for Circulars. J. B. BURR, HYDE & GO., Hartford, Conn. ofl
E A
Is a South American plant that.has been used for many years by the medical faculty of those countries with wonderful efficacy, ana is a Sure and Perfect Remedy for all Diseases of the LIVER AND SPLEEN. ENhARQEMJENmOB,
OBSTRUCTION OF INTESTINES, URINin ART, UTERINE, OR ABDOMINAL ORGANS, BOVERTY OR A WANT
OF BLOOD, INTERMITTENT »«»-. OR REMfTTENT FEVEBSt .j INFAMATION OF THE ....
IV E O S
!. SLUGGISH CIRi CJJLATION OF
ABSCESSES, TUMORS, A XjkDICE, SCROFULA, DYSPEPSIA, AGUEANE FEVER, OR THEIR CONCOMITANTS. Dr
Well's Extract of Juruheba,
Is a most perfect Alterative, and is offered to
going complaints DR. WELL'S EXTRACT JURUBEB A Is confidently recommended to every family as household remeOJ^nd should be freely tafcen In all derangements of the 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.
S smM JOHN Q. KELLOGG, -J. 18 Piatt street. New York, Sole Agent for the United States. Price One Dollar per Bottle. Send for Circular. 4w
A RARE CHANCE FOR AGENTS.
Agents, we will pay you $40 per week in Cash if on will engage with us at once. Everything furnished and expenses paid. Address, F. A. ELLS & C0., Charlotte, Mich. 06
25
HURRICANE PATENT 1 S E coMPAjrr, Office, 14 Barclay Street, New York. (UpStalrs.) Ofier to the public a Lantern combining safety and economy with elegance and usefulness. It cannot explode it gives a good light, and consumes less oil than any other: it is not disturbed by the highest \Hnd, and if a glass is broken it 1b easily replaced by means ot the screw. They are universally liked where they have been tried.
»r tbe WREATH— Vilfrirr.Pg~
AHri
THE
DEY GOOES.
............ v.. -..".••j i!i
wholesale 13$c.'
Elegant Dress Goods... Factory Jeans
Beautiful White Blankets.. •...
il
THE WREATH, Bedford, lad.
Ml
"Gone Where the Woodbine Twineth."
A WARNING TO PETER FUNKS!
CHICAGO WHOLESALE MERCHMTS.
We said a few weeks ago that we would shut up or drive out of town a certain nondescript auction concern if it cost us a loss of five thousand dollars to do it.
WE HAVE DONE IT!
Within forty-eight hours after we opened our batteries upon them their lines began to waver 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 voices and knocking down goods to empty store stools in the vain attempt to entice into their store the crowds of people hastening to our great sale. Finding all their attempts at getting up a sale use less, 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 be lieves, to the effect 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 TN THIS PLACE AT LEAST OJft FIRM THAT PROPOSES TO ALLOW WO INTERFERENCE OF OUTSIDERS WITH THE DESTINY OF THE RETAIL DRY GOODS TRADE OF TERRE HAUTEf
If there are any ether traveling concerns hovering around, we tell them that if they land here under similar circumstances, they will get similar treatment.
THE GREAT SALE TO CONTINUE!
f"
.J
mzi
a
The fbllowing goods were bought by our stores in New York before the recent great advance, and they are now sending them to us in New and Handsome Styles almost daily. These prices cannot last much longer: -u-c'T ,} fil e*0'
EnUrfe stafek of best Sprague Prints selling at.....?... .. V..V...9 and 10c All our Gloucester, Garner and Oriental Prints at 9 and 10c ALL makes of our best Prints selling at 9 and 10c
These Prints are now worth 11 Jc at wholesale in New York City, as any Dry Goods Merchant will tell you. jo aw ....
Also, yard-wide White Muslin, nearly as good as Lonsdale, at.. litJ.0l2ls This Muslin is now^worth 14c wholesale^ Also, one at the heaviest yard-wide Unbleached Muslins made, at 10c rj This Muslin is worth at wholesale 11 £c. -..'J si tn« jssjr Onr very best and finest and heaviest Unbleached Muslin, i2$c now wortfi at
Shawls, all styles, $1.00, 1.50r 2.00, 2.50, 3.00 and up Goats' Cotton, also Clark's Cotton 5c a spool Dayton Carpet Warp .30c j) HI NF( a Good Grain Bags 26c
Fine Dress Goods, Silks, Poplins, Camlet Cloths, Alpacas, &c., at half the prices
of country stores. 7 'll5t ..,f *r rt Carpets 25eand30c
Fine Ingrain Carpets. ~...60cfj 75c, 90c and $1.00 Best Brussels Carpets
OSfi lT »"o TIIEKS'
Great New Xork Dry Goods Store,
•i
Iiin
&.
ra w.'tf
^...12ic, 15e, 20c and 25c
........25c, 30c, 40c, 60c and 60b
-j*
.i..$3.50,
Plaid Factory Flannels ..........25c, 30c, 40c and 50c
4.C"0, 5.00 and 6.00 per pair
np ffW)
4.A.4 ,W!.» jkS -fcssit.iSr ilillsiH'i.l
PILES OF OTHER GOODS EQUALLY CHEAP! m: ^0 -ul fr-naf&'Wiaa&pf JtU-
kd nl
NOBTH dflLABffetKkET, VEBBE HA^L'TE, INT.
•ELE0TSI0 OIL.
DR. SMITH'S
h,
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,June17,1S70.
DR.G. B. SMITH—Dear Sir: My mother sea ed her foot so badly she could not walk, whicli 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. JOHN TOOMEY
Express Office. 67 West Fourth street. FOKT 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, ana 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, 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.,
Yours respectfully, FRED. H. McCALLUM, Druggist.
Sore on Deafness, Salt Rheum, &c.
Cares Rheumatism. Cares Salt Rheum Cnres Erysipelas. Cures Paralysis. Cares Swellings. Cares Chilblains. Cares Headache. Cures Burns and Frosts. Cares Piles, Scald Head Felons, Car Bunckles, Mumps, Cronp, Diptheria, Neuralgia, Gout, Wounds, Swelled Glands, Stiff Joints, Canker, Tootfr Ache, Cramps, Bloody Flux, £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—s falls in Deafness or Rheumatism.
See Agents' name in Weekly. For sale by best Druggists.
-seldom
das
splody
MEDICAL.
DR ALBTTRGER'S
CELEBRATED
E A N
HEKB 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, Pain the Head, Vertigo, Hermorrhoids iTemale Weakness, Loss of Appetite, Intermittent and Remittent Fevers, Flatulence
Constipation, Inwari Piles, Fnllnes8 of Blood in the
Head,
Acidityofthe
Stomach, Nause 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 Befbre the
Sight, Dull Pain in,.the Head, Yellowness of the Skin, Pain the Bide, Back, Chest, &c., &c.. Sudden
Flushes of Heat, Burning. in the Flesh, Constant Imagining of Bvil and
Great Depress! on of Spirits. iifi i/i-
All ofwhich are indications of Liver Complaint, Dyspfepsia, or,di8eases 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 atj •. ...,
Dr. Alburger's Laboratory, Philadelphia, proprietor of the celebrated Worm Sirup, Infant Carminative and Pulmonic Sirup.
BfoPrlnclpal office, northeast corner of THIRD anoBRO WN Streets, Philadelphia. For sale by Johnson, Holloway & Cowden, 602 Arch Street, Philadelphia, and by Druggists and Dealers in medicines, 211dly
WACrQN YARD,
BAIIIX MILLER'S
ner. His boarding house
ri
MEW WA«OHr YARD
AND .R«
BOARDING HOUSE,
^Corner Fourth and Eagle Street*.
Luk
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
rpHE Undersigned takes great pleasure in in I forming his old friends and customers, and ,., the public generally, that he has again taken charge of nis well-known Wagon Yard and Boatraing House, located as a"bOve, and that he will be found ready and prompt to aceommodate all In the best and mo^t acceptable man. has been greatly enlarged and thoroughly refitted. His wagon Yard
is not excelled for accommodations anyvhere in the city. Boarders taken by the Day, Week or
Month, and Frices Reasonabte. N, B.—The Boarding House and Wagon Yar toil! be under the entire supervision ef mysel andfamily. [68d&wtf] DA MEL MILLER.
TOBACCOS, ETC.
BRASHEARS, BROWN & TITUS,--
COIDUSSIOir MEBCHMTS a a Wholesale Dealers In Groceries and Manufactured Tobaccos
AGENTSfor"ChHstiftn
R. J-Christian & Cou&celebrated
brandsbf Comfort, JBrlght May pine Apple Black Navy %, and Cherry Brand Black Navy and other fine brands,
32 AND-34 MAIN STREET
dU Worcester, MaWiK"'
WIRE.
NEW JERSEY WIRE MILLS. .Jt.^ •iii HEWRY ROBERTS,
Manufacturer oi
•REFINED IRON WIRE, Market and Stone Wire,
BRIGHT
and Annealed Telegraph Wire, Ckppered Pail Bail, Rivet, Screw, Buckle, Umbrella, Spring, Bridg6, Fence, Broom,.Brush, and TinnerefWire.
1
VAENIfiHES.^f
ESTABLISHED, 1836.
VI
Wire Mill, Newark, New Jersey. hi
sat
JOHN D. FITZ-CERALD,
{Late D. PricA & Mtz-Oerald,) .uijf ManulactUrerBo
IMPROYED COPAL TARNISHES,
My NEWARK N
CARDS.
/"JAR® ing,
RDS of every description for Business, Visit ng, Wedding or Foneral pmposes, In any
stock
mst from Eastern Mill*
in the city—bought dl-
