Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 2, Number 125, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 October 1871 — Page 2
'he Riming
HUDSON & SO SB, proprietors. B. If. HITD60N. .—J.. M. BOS'-
Office: North Fifth St., near Main.
The DArtv OA^B |^dbl^f fthJ£££ ?5?iV S^^efweek By mail 810 per year ja^Svt®
GAZETTK
L^every Thun,-
Hav and contains all the best matter of the JSSJS .wA-^^sK'SSifKS.d
TOFdes per'year, ^5.00 five copies, per year, 98.00 ten copies, one year, and one to getter u» of Club, #15.00 one copy, six months 91.00 one copy, three months 50c. All subscriptions must be paid for in advance. The paper will, invariabl be discontinued at expiration of time. iTor Advertising Rates see third page. Tlie
establishment is the best equip^
in point of Presses and Tvoes in thissecuo
given. Address all
letter8jjUDSON R0
SE,
GAZETTE,Terre&
Haute, Ind.
FOR GOTEItSOR TX 1872,
Washington C. De Pauw,
OF
FLOY® COPSTY.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25,1871.
THE Pittsburg Post, in its able article, urging the nomination of Col. Tbos. A. Scott, as the only man who can carry the State of Pennsylvania against Gen. Grant, commences with the two following paragraphs: "In but little more than a year from this date the people of the United States will be called upon to perform one of the most important duties which pertain to citizenship—the selection of a Chief
Magistrate. In the cojnuion course of political events the time has now come beyond which a pertinent discussion of the subject can not be delayed. It stands in the immediate future and meets the people faco to face.
This proposition is true beyond all cavil, and c£n not be put aside by any set of party leaders, viz: that every interest of this great nation, every instinct that looks forward to the preservation and perpetuation of liberal Constitutional Government, every principle of public virtue and public honesty, and every hope for a reform of public abuses and a return to the earlier and better policy of administering the National Government, demands a change in the Administration—demands that the party in power be turned wholly out of the public offices. Seven-tenths of tho people of the United States are convinced of this proposition, and only await a proper opportunity to give it the seal of their approbation at the ballot-box."
As Colonel Scott is a Republican, this announcement comes with much force. That this Administration should be overthrown, in order to relieve the country of the political vultures who have fastened their ravenous claws on the public treasury, is beginning to strike the miudsof all honest men everywhere. If it can be done with a man so conspicuous as is Thomas A. Scott for ability and vnst energy, we bid it God speed. Almost anything, but another four years of present-taking Administration. Its corruption will debauch the entire country.
Facts for tlie People.
The Express seems to be excited in relation to the extent of our. circulation. The GAZETTE has been established a little over one year, and it is to-day read by more pert-ons than the Express, and the editor of that dirty trap knows it. Our office is less than two years old, and we would not to-day give one of our five power presses, for all the Express office put togethei', the two editors thrown in, and the proprietor thereof as an additional dead weight. We do more work every month than the Express office does in any six, and we dare them to an exhibition of their books to prove this assertion. More money passes over our counter any one day than is received in tho Express office in any one week, and this the editors know. We do more work, and better work, than is done anywhere else in the city, and we do it cheaper than any other office can afford to do it, on account of our superior facilities. While this is the fact, we feel justified in sayipg that the Express office Is the poorest and dirtiest establishment in this city, or out of it. As a printing office monstrosity it is decidedly a success, and as a wishy-washy, non-com* mittal penuy-a-linerit has an enviable reputation.
MR. THEODORE TILTON'S extraordinary biography of the fair lady who sits at night upon the ridge pole of her' '"stately mansion," communicating with ghosts, is attracting on the other side of the At lantic the notice which it richly merits. It is indeed a matter of no slight moment to the world that Demosthenes, after a silence of about 2,200 years, is speaking once more to mankind, even though it be through the medium of a woman's lips and a newspaper and we are not surprised that the London Daily News should devote to theTilton-Woodhull alliance and its curious fruit a most interesting leader from the pen of one of its editorial contributors well-known in New York literary society. Judicious persons will be pained to observe in the article a slight sub-flavor of incredulity, not to say sarcasm but if Mrs. Woodhull's utterances betray no internal evidence of the inspiration of Demosthenes, it should be remembered that the eloquent tougue of the Grecian orator has probably grown rusty after twenty-two centuries^ disuse.
Do
YOUR
iP
own thinking. Yes, that is
the idea. Think for yourself. It is well to listeu to the expressed thoughts of others, and it is an agreeable pastime to give expression to your thoughts. But when alone weigh whafr you have heard and traverse what you have said. It is well for you to do this, it will assist iu curihg youof false notions, and of eradicating unprofitable and vicious ideas, and in time make you better men and women. What you will thus gain from surroundings you will unwillingly transmit to the rising generation, and the result will be that you •will do your share in the glorious work of elevating the human family. Do your own thinking.
F. L. ROCKWELL,through the Chicago Tribune, claims the credit of having saved from the fire Rothermel's picture of the Battle of Gettysburg. It was, he says, carried from the burning Academy of Design to the lake shore, where he "guarded it at the peril of his life." The drapery wrapped around it to protect it was entirely consumed by falling cinders, but the picture received no injury. After this "baptism of fire*' the work of art Will be doubly celebrated.
S+-
IN view of the well-established fact that the great fires only occur in seasons of extreme drouth, a writer in the Toronto Telegraph suggests as a preventive "that responsible scientific men be charged with the duty of reporting to City, Province, or State Governments, whenever the hygrometic condition of the atmosphere becomes, or is about to become, a source of probable extensive danger—the authorities thereupon to enforce, at whatever may be the necessary cost, such extra precautions as experience has indicated." The suggestion is a good one, and although, as the writer points out, it might be difficult to prevent the vast fires that sweep prairie and forest, there could surely be no difficulty in adopting such precautions in a city like Chicago.
THE Cincinnati Enquirer has the following: "The charge, as an offset for Grant's appointment of so many relatives, that 'General Lewis Cass foisted his son into the diplomatic service and allowed him to disgrace the country in it,' is not true. Major Cass was appointed by an Administration of which his father was not a membir. He was continued as Minister to Rome by General Taylor, who deemed it indecorous, as he was a political opponent, to remove the son of the rival candidate for President. We never heard he disgraced his country while in Rome before."
THE Board of Arbitrators, to sit at Geneva, is now complete, the appointment left to the Emperor of Brazil being the last made. The members are Charles Francis Adams on behalf of the United States Lord Chief-Justice Sir Alexander Cockburn for Great Britain Jacques Stsempfli of Switzerland, Count Selopsis of Italy, and Baron de Itajuba of Brazii.
LIEUTENANT-COMMANDER James M. Pritchett, U. S. N., died at the residence of his father, Doctor John Pritchett, at Centerville,in this State, yesterday morning, after a brief illness. He was in his 35th year, and entered the Naval School at Annapolis in 1853, since which time he has been in the service of his country.
Dissolving Democracy.
It is nearly twenty years since the Whig party put in its last appearance as a national organization. It was routed horse, foot and dragoons in the Presidential campaign of 1852, and went to pieces immediately afterwards. Some spasmodic efforts, mostly local, were made to resuscitate it by men who had grown gray in its service, and who wept overits fall, but they did little more than to forcibly remind themselves that they had survived an idol whose broken limbs no skill in political pottery could ever reunite.
Such dissolution awaits the Democratic party a year hence, if defeated in the next Presidential campaign. It will not thereafter appear again as a national organization. It is doubtful, indeed, whether it ean do it now in any comprehensive sense. It is without any distinct leadership, it has no well defined policy, and those who affect to speak for it have as many voices as Orator Puff. Its views range all along from those of Alexander H. Stephens to those of Wil~ liam S. Groesbeck. It shades into secessionism at one end and into Republicanism at the other. It is as much at variance with itself as with the party in power.
There are sagacious men who see this, but who do not see how it is to be compacted. unified and made homogeneous. The political cant about the unchangeablcness of its principles and its timehonored doctrines lmsceased to be valuable even for popular exhortation. The Democrat who can get up before an intelligent audience and indulge in such fanfaronade without smiling has the facial solemnity of a grindstone. He knows better. The party has shifted its ground, and must continue to shift, like nomads who see the peril of starvation if they remain, and seek fresh pasturage. Just now the most far-sighted are not certain in what direction to move. The indications are unsatisfactory.
In this condition of things comes the suggestion of the St. Louis Republican to do nothing, or at least remain inactive till it is seen what the Republicans will do. This policy has had the happy result in Missouri of electing a moderate Republican Governor of the State, and sending to the United States Senate one of the equal liberal views, aud a war Democrat with revolutionary and reactive tendencies. The experiment has been tried elsewhere with fair success. Why not employ the same strategy in the Presidential canvass of 1872? Let the Republicans renominate Grant, and put him on a Radical platform. The Democrats can count upon a schism. The liberal Republicans—the revenue reformers, the anti-tariff men, thegeneral amnesty philanthropists, and all those who do not indorse the present Administration—will be ready for a new combination, aud if the Democracy stand ready to back them, will take up one of their own number—say Gratz Brown, or Senator Trumbull, or one of a half-dozen other mentionable leadera—and put him before the people as their candidate for the presidency.
This is, briefly, the scheme which attracts a good deal of attention at this time. It proceeds upon the assumption that the Democracy, do what they will, can not elect. They are bound to be defeated. Why enter a bootless canvass and wage a hopeless war? Anybody rather than Grant, anything rather than four years more of radical rule. Such is the St. Louis RepvMioari's view of the situatiou and the course the Democracy ought to pursue.
But are the Democrats prepared, to go into bankruptcy and wind up business as a distinctive party Will they not prefer to try for an extension, with a hope of coming out right after all, and putting themselves into shape to do a natioual business It is all very well for a party to allow a local election to go hy default, or to fuse with the dissatisfied elemeuts of another party, and lose distinctive political character. So long us the national organization remains intact, it is possible to resume shape when the temporary or local object has been gained: but let it once give up its natioual form aud disappear from the surface of political affairs, and there is as small hope of reviving it as there is of a body snatched from the water after the breath has gone out of it and the heart stopped beating. If Democrats are ready for this, the policy of the Republican is one that should recommend itsself to them. The odds would be in their favor. They might defeat Radicalism by voting in moderate Republicanism. It is more than doubtful whether they could so Democratize it that it should have more than a remote flavor of the old party. We doubt whether the Democrats are ready for this.—Cincinnati Commercial.
A BUstrfct. of -wheat contains 660,000 grains. If this quantity should be spread equally over an acre of ground, it would give nearly ten square inches of space for each plant eaoh plant would be a little mere than three inches of space from the next, and there would be fifteen plants to each square foot, If the seed were sown in drills nixie inches apart plant to each inch in the drill. It to wall known that in broad-
were sown there would be a
~c~-.
i,
cast sowing much of the seed is covt rad too deeply, and some not sufficiently,and thus possible a half of the seed sown is wasted. In drill sowing a much greater proportion of the seed produces returns, because of its even covering and more regular germination. If each seed should produce but one perfect ear, the yield would be over thirty fold, but it is safe to say that every healthy wheat plant will produce at least three stalks, so that, should the whole of the seed sown mature, a crop of ninety bushels would be the result. There is no doubt but drill-sowii will produce a betteryield than broadcast sowing, as much more of the seed will successfully germinate and the expense of drill-sowing being less than handsowing and harrowing afterward, we would advise all those who can buy or hire a drill, to abandon broadcast sowing.
CHANGE.
A CHASTOfi!
O. F.FROEB
Successor to
Gr "W EISS. au6d3m.
LIVEPwY STABLES.
PRAIRIE CITY
Livery Stable Co.,
FOUTS, HUNTER & THOMPSON,
Proprietors.
Three First-class Establishment's,
Located and Managed as follows:
O E A 8 I A I E
Comer of Main and Eighth Streets,
W. R. HUNTER, Hnnager.
E O S S A E
Second Street, bet. Main and cherry
A. B. FOBTS, Manager.
THE THOMPSON STABLL,
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.
REPAIRING DONE PROMPTLT
All parties connected with this establishment being practical mechanics of several years'experience, we feel safein sayingthat wecan render satisfaction to oar customers, both in point of Workmanship and Price. 211dwlv McELFRESH & BARNARD.
MEDICAL.
#XOOO REWARD,
FUlceratedcure.
or any case of Blind, Bleeding, Itching, Piles that We Kings's Pile Remedy fails to It is prepared expressly to cure the Piles and nothing else, and has cured cases of over twenty years' standing. Sold by all Druggists. s»
VIA. FUGA
DeBing'sVia Fuga is the pure juice of Barks Herbs, Roots, and Berries,
CONSUMPTION.
Inflamation of the Livings an aver Kidney and Bladder diseases, organic Weakness,Fem'ale afflictions, General Debility .and all complaints of the Urinary organs, in Male and Female
Consumptive Decline. It purifies
enriches the Blood, the Billiary, Glandular and Secretive system corrects and strengthens the nervous and muscular forces. It acts like a charm on weak nerves, debiliated females, both young and old. None should be without it. Sold everywhere.
Laboratory—142 Franklin Street. Baltimore
4w
FOUTS, HUNTER & THOMPSON
augl4clwtf
FOUNDRY.
F.H. M'ELFRESH. J.BARNARD.
Phoenix Foundry
AND
A I N E S O
McElfresli & Barnard,
Cor. of Ninth and Eagle Streets,
(Near the Passenger Depot,)
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
MSaw
ANUFACTURE Steam Engines, Mill Machinery. House Fronts, Fiie Fronts, Circu lar Mills, and all kinds of
IRON AND BRASS CASTING^
TO THE LADIES BALTIMORE,February 17.1870.
I have be( a suflerer from Kianey complaint producing Gravel and those afflictions peculiar to women, prostrating my physical and nervous systems, with a tendency to Consumptive Declino. 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 tree from that combination of nameless complaints. Hon thankful I am to be well.
MBS. LAVTNA C. LKAMtsd
iM Oxford Street.
STEAM BAEEEY.
Union Steam Bakery.
*i.FRANK HEINIG & BRO.,
u: r|r ,* Manufacturers of all kinds ol. H' I1"*.
Crackers, Ca^es, Bread
-f,, AKO*"
A N
Deal5r8
in
k*
Foreign and Domestic Fruits,
FANCY AND STAPHS GROCERIES,
."Jl If A FAYETTESTREET,^
Between the two Railroads. ISSd T«vre Haute, Indian*.
BRASS WORKS.
BRUW A EDWARDS, Manufacturers of
PLUMBERS' BRASS WORK Of every description, and superior CAST ALE PUMPS
And dealer In
PLUMBERS' MATERIALS,
avCorporations and Gas Companies supplied dly WARK.N. J.
AGRICULTURAL.
HALL, MOORE & BURKHARDT, Manufacturers of AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS,
__ #fpr^ t*n'jL»-^,4"^~
SKi mrnm
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
8 O O
4W
A MONTH.—Horse and carriage furnished exueases paid, samples free. H. B. SHAW,Alfred, Me.
CfcOQAFor first-class Pianos—sent on trial— no agents. Add less, U. 8. P1ANO CO., 615 Broadway, New York. jy!4-4w
RIFLES, SHOT-GUNS, EEYOLYERS. Gun materials of »very 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! S3 to 812 daily easily made. Profitable and respectable business. A little novelty wanted by everybody, sneceu sure. Send stamp for circulars to CHURCHILL & TEMPLETON, Manufacturers, 615 Broadway, New York. 4w
4 ASK TOUE GROCER FOR
CRUMS of COMFORT.
$10 from 50s retail easily for Ten 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., L. L. D., as premiums. Send name and address to PEOPLE'S JOURNAL, Cincinnati, Ohio. 4w
THEA-NECTAR IS A PtJBK BLACK TEA, •vith- the Green Tea Flavor. Warranted to suit all tastes. For sale everywhere in our "trade mark" pound half pound packages
ONLY.and
And for
sale wholesale only by the Great Atlantic A Pacific Tea Co., 8 Church St., New
York. P. O. Box 5S06. Send for Thea-Nectar Circular.
WANTED-AGENTS
tho ToHet cf every or tlmnain.
ETSD Jentv
(820 per l»y) to sell
tlie celebrated HOME SHUTTLE SEWING MACHINE. Hasiheunder-feed, 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, Pa. Chicago, 111., or St. Louis Mo. 4w
E
Relieved and Cured by Dr. Sherman's Patent Appliance and Compouud. Office. Cy7 Broadway, N. Y. Send 10c. for book with photograph i? likenesgas of cases before and after ru re, with the Henry Ward Beeohcr case, letter! and portrait. Beware of traveling Impostors, who pretend to have been assistants ofBr. •HIRMAN. Be has no Agents.
AGKNTS WANTED FOR IJ1 YJ] AR All 4 rrrrT A History of theFranUF IJilL 1 JL-Liflin, co-German War and
THE RGU REBELLION IN PARIS, Accurate, reliable and complete, in English and German. 40,000 Copies already sold. Price £2.50. Address, J. GOi'DSPEED'S Empire Book, Map anu Picture House, Chicago or St. Louis. o5
i- littrt 1-iO .i ii.. vi
"sa
POPERY. THE FOE OF THE CHURCH
AND REPUBLIC. What it has done. What itis doing and what it means to do. Its power, despotism, infallibility, frauds, relicts, miracles, idolatry, persecutions, startling crimes, and NEW YORK RIOTS. Send for circular. Address, PEOPLE'S PUBLISHING CO., 129 Race St., Cincln nati, Ohio. o5
Reduction of Prices -j TO CONFORM TO REDUCTION OF DUTIES.' GREAT SATING TO CONSUMERS
BY GETTING UP fLUBS.
8®"S»-nd for our New Ptiee
1
List and a club
lorm will accompany it, containing full direction—making a large saving to consumers and remunerati veto club organizers.
THE GREAT AMERICAN TEA CO
31 AND 33 VESEY STREET, P. O. Box 5643. NEW YORK.
©lA An fkA Made In 6 MONTHS by one «1P lU,"U,"u agent, cat vafesiiig foi'_ "Til E GUIDE TO BOARD." Bv Dr.- WV-W. Etai 1, Agents Wanted. H. N, McKINNEY & CO., 10 North 7tli street, Phila delphia, Pa. c"
AGENTS WAITED FOR THE- $ esj t:
W A I E O E
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. Agent* are meeting with unprecedented success, selling from StO to 40 copies per day, and is published in both Englssh and German.
A TT WTrffclU Inferior histories are being ci culated. See that the book you buy contains 150 fine engravings and 8l0 pages. Send for circulars and see our terms, HT/.d a lull description of the work. Address, NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., Chicago, 111., Cincinnati, Ohio, or St. Louis, Mo. 06
00K AGENTS WANTED
FOR TWO NEW AND POPULAR WORKS. KNOTS UNTIED
Or, The Hidden Life of American Detectivesshowing how the perpetrators of mischief and outrage are brought to justice, and disclosing the whole Detective system. 20,000 copies sola inSOdays. A WOMAN'S PILGRIMAGE To the Hdly Land, by Mrs. S. M. Griswold. The latest work of this popular authoress, Is an interesting narrative of her experiences duiing a tour through Europe and tne 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 & CO., Hartford, Conn. 08
4
Wagon Material, of every variety, JSFFEBSONYILLB, IND
LIVER, DROPSY,
4 BLWGISH C1R* 1 GVLATION OF THE BLOOD, ABSCESSES, TUMORS. A UN DICE, SCROF
ULA, DXSPEPSIA, AGUEANEFEVER, OR THEIR CONCOMITANTS.
Dr. Well's Extract of Jurubeba,
Is a most perfect Alterative, and is Vtffered to public as a greatluvigorator and Remedy for all Impurities of the Blood, or tor Organic Weakness with their attendant evils. For the foregoing Complaints
J) 11. WELL'S EXTRACT JURUBEBA Is confidently recomme ded to every family as household remedy, and should ,be freely taken 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 ail the vital forces, and animates and fortifies all weak and lymphatic temperaments. vfTi JOHN Q,. KELLOGG, ,18 Piatt street. New York)'
4
I
Ht
E A
Is a South American plant that has been used for many years by tho medical faculty ot those countries with Wonderful efflCaby, and is a Sure and Perfect Remedy for all Diseases of the LIViSIt AND SPLEEN, ENLARGEMENT OJt
OBS'J'Ji UCT.ION OF INTESTINES, URINARY, UTERINE. OR ABDOMINAL OROANS, POVERTY OJt A WANT
OF BLOOD, INTERMITTENT OR REMITTENT FEVERS, INFAMATION OF THE 'fl
Sole Agent for the United States.
Price One Dollar per Bottle. Send for Circular. 4W
A BABE CHANCE FOB AGENTS.
Agents, we will pay you $40 per week in Cash If on will engage with us at once. Everything furnished and expenses paid. Addrtss, F. A. ELLS & CO., Charlotte, Mich. 06
HURRICANE PATENT A E N
COMPANY,
Office, 14 Barday Street, New York. (Up Stairs.) Offer to the public a Lant«rn ccmbining safety and economy with elegance and' usefulness. It cannot explode tgives a good lights and consumes less oil than any other: it is not disturbed by the highest wjnd, and If ft glass is broken it Is easilj replaced by means oi the screw. They are universally liked where they have been tried.
CIW OE1VTS wil pay foV the WKEATH— the best magazine for old and yonag-*-rvC# for three months on trial. Address,
THE WBBATH, Badlord, Ind.
,^
J/1
-^i**^ i^w^r%&'". -V *l%Zi
DRY GOODS.
l.
}i t* tfj-C
I Hfijjf 'u*
ti.
I 1 Lrl
"Gone Where the Woodbine Twineth."
7' ..(] I I» .1 i! II .1
A WARNING TO PETER FUNKS!
ASTD CHICAGO WHOLESALE MERCHANTS.
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 J30IVE IT!
Within forty-eight hours after we opened our batteries upon them, their lines began to waTer within a week or ten days their auctions were a COMPLETE and LAUGHARLE FAILURE, and the Nondescripts could be seen jumping around upon theif counters, yelling away at the top of their voices and knocking down goods to empty store stools in the yain 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. Rut even in this they lamentably failed, as the other merchants dared not buy their stocL 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 thp 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!
S
-JTKO 'i- -:8! ?•&>•
u,: ,'Jlk -KfXH •i'.-u i,'-i "Aws a
IT IS, THAT THESE EXISTS IN THIS PLACE AT LEAST ONE FIRM THAT PROPOSES TO ALLOW AO INTERFERENCE OF OUTSIDERS WITH THE DESTINY OF THE RETAIL DRT eOOi.S TRADE OF TERMS HAUTE.^- ',i.
If Ibere are any ether trareling concerns hovering around, we tell them that if they land here under limilar ^reum^tanees, they a re at
sfotfu iv I?t 1« th-o Jfcft*. "r. ji I i. Si
THE GREAT SALE TO CONTINUE!
I It "-1"' t'
ivgwruj
The following goods were bought by onr storesTii Itfew York before ihe recent great advance, and they are I«ow sending them to DS in New and Handsome Styles almost daily. These prices cannot jx u&n ,UH
MW)
»w «t 1
jpetanxrm hu* -t tm -iaFttPM liUfitoa n*
Entire stock of best Sprague Prints selling at 9 and 10c All our Gloucester, Garner and Oriental Prints at 9 and 10c ALL makes of our best Prints selling at J.ii. 1.....1..
These Prints are now worth ll^c at wholesale, in Ne.w York City, as any Dry Goods Merchant will tell you.-: Also, yard-wide White Muslin, nearly as good as Lonsdale, at 12Jc i, This Muslin is now worth 14c wholesale. Also, one of the heaviest yard-wide Unbleached Muslins made, at 10c
This Mualiti is vorth at wholesale 11 jo. ""T 1 Our very best and finest and heaviest Unbleached Muslin, 12£c now worth at wholesale 13*c. A I if*.
1,
Elegant Dress Goods 12£c, 15c, 20c and 25c Factory Jeans 25c, 30c, 40c, 50c and 60c Beautiful White Blankets...'. ..,..$3.50, 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, Silk§, Poplins, Camlet Cloths, Alpacas, &c., at half the prices, of country stores. Carpets ~25c and 30c Fine Ingrain Carpets „60c, 76c, 90c and $1.00 Best Brussels Carpets .25$i
7i
-l»
1
v- bi!.-, -.li-. .iili: ii-'iy-' .•( i: J*. 'Vti-i (i.i. i': PILES OF OTHER GOODS EQUALLY CHEAP!
ar ie'it'" so thebs'
0 a N S
,t»-
&*.'
vr*-. •.- jr-iftifr'tf
gprr ELECTRIC OIL.
i*
.9 and 10c
.*
1
.ii
NORTH SIDE OF MAIN STREET,
rrEifcifcE liAtTE, nsiyuLJXjL.
DR. SMITH'S
Genuine^ "Electric" Oil.
JTEW COMBINATION. NERVE POWER WITHOUT PHOSPHORUS A REAL Sedative without (toium or Reaction! INNOCENT ev€»m the mouth of Infants. Twentj
Drops is the LARGEST Dose. Cures Sick Headache' in about twenty minutes on rational principles.
DB. G. B. SMITH—Dear Sir: My mother sea ed her foot so badly she could not walk, which alarmingly swelled. My little boy had lumps on his throat and very stiff neck. I got up in the night and bathed his throat and chest and gave him twenty drops of your Oil. They are now both wel 1. JOHN TOOMEY
TRY IT FOR YOURSELF.
SALT RHKUM 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 ALBUEGER'S
CELEBRATED
E A N
HERB STOMACH BITTERS
The Great Bloo«l Purifier and
A
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 curefor Hi? p'1 Liver Compiaint, Dyspepsia, Jaundice, Chrom or Nervous Debility, Chronic Diarrhoea, Diseases of the kidneys, Costiveness, Pain the Head, Vertigo, Hermorrhoids ifeiiiale Weakness, Loss oj Appetite, Intermittent and Remittent Fevers, Flatulence
Constipation, Inwarr Piles, Fullness of Blood in the
Head,
,, v.-- Acidity of the Stomach, N a us a, Heartburn, Disgust of j. Food, Fullness or Weight in the Stomach .Sour Erucattions,
Sinking or Fluttering at the Pit of the Stomach, Hurried or Difficult Breathing, Fluttering of tlie 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„ Ac., Sudden
Flushes of Heat, Burning in the Flesh, Constant
t:w
CINCINNATI,June17,1870.
Express Office. 67 West Fourth street.
FORT PLAIN,July 12. more Oil ana more cir
Dr. Smith Send me more
culars. It is going like '"hot cakes." Send some circulars also to Sutllfl & Co., Che Cherry Vaf1 ley, as they sent in for a supply of the 0»* ase send by first express, and oblige,
Yours truly, D. E. BECKE Druggist
Not a Failure! Not One! (Erom Canada* NEW HAMBURG, ONT.,July 12. Dr. Smith, Phila: I have sold the Oil for Deat ness. Sickness, Neuralgia, Ac., and in every case it has given satisfaction. I can procure quite a numberof letters. We want more of the large size, &c., Ac.,
Yours respectfully, FRED. H. McCALLUM, druggist.
Sure on Deaftiess, Salt Rheum, &c.
Cures dhenmatlsm. Gnrea Salt Kheam Cares Erysipelas. Ctares Paralysis. Cures Swellings. Cures Chilblains. Cures Headache. .. Cures Burns and Frosts. Cures Piles,' Scald Head Felons, Car Bunckles, Mumps, Croup, biptheria, Neuralgia, Gout, Wounds, Swelled Glands, Stiff Joints, Canker, ToothAche, Cramps, Bloody Flux, £e., Ac.
1
Imagining of Bvll and Ore Spi
ng(
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 proproperties, and cannot be equalled by any other preparation.
Prepared only at
Dr. Alhtirger's Laboratory, Philadelphia, proprietor of the celebrated Y/orm Sirup, Infant (Ruminative and Pulmonic Sirup.
M^Principal 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
WAflON YARD.
DANIEL IILLEK'Hi
•iW
NEW WieOir YAB®
AK»
BOARDING HOUSE
Corner Fourth and Eagle Streets, HAUTE, IND. &]!
rformingTERREfriends
ZE Undersigned takes great pleasure in l».j his old and customers, and"' mnfilin aonarollv that ha hail avnlrt tftlrfilUn I takenlx 1 and, .r that lie, will be found ready and prompt to accommodate all in the best and most acceptable manner. His boarding house has been greatly en-' larged and thoroughly refitted. His wagon Yard ... is not excelled for accommodations anywhere1 in the city. p--Boarders taken by the Day, Week
or
Month, and Prices Reasonabte. N, B.—The Boarding House and Wagon Ya will be nnder the entire supervision of myse) and family. [68dAwtfJ DAWIEL MILLER.
TOBACCOS, ETC.
BBASHEABS, BROWN & TITUS,
COSHOSfillOl 3IERCHMT8
Wholesale Dealers ln#f
ail
"uts
Groceries and' Hanafactnre^t" Tobaccos GENTS for R. J. Christian ACo.'s celebrated fes. brands of ''Christian Comfort," Bright May HVWne Apple Black Navy %, and Cherry Brand Black Navy %, and other fine brands, ff 82 AND 84 MAIN STREET jli Worcester,Ma—.
WIEE
Ut, nr
NEW JERSEY WIRE MILL& ,{^ HESBT ROBERTS,
Manufacturer or
BIEFINED
Market and Stone Wire,
„i
IRON WIRE,
RIOHT and Annealed Telegraph Wire, Cop-1 red Pail Bail, Rivet, Screw, Buckle. Urn- sffit
TRI 1# p6lCU
WL JHU1, A1VCK, OWEN, AIUK/OLO. HI- «J
brella, Sprl^ Bridge, Fence, Broom, Brush, aad
I Wire Mill, Newark, New Jersey?
VABNISEES. h" -Ha
ESTABLISHED, 1836.
JOHIf D. Fliz-GEBAJLD,
3&SO-iA
(Late D. Price & Fitz-Gerald,) M-Ji Mannlactorerso
IMFR0TED COPAL YARNTSHE&
ldy •. NEWARK N
CARDS.
1 ARBS of every description, for Business, Visit ftig, Weddlng^r Funeral purtjoses, in any, numbesftvm 100 to 100,000, ezpeditfonsly, neatly and cheaplyprinted at the GAZETTE STEAJ? f-J©BOFFICE, Filth street. Wekeep thelar*frt awortment of card stock In thcoitT—bdngti di» net from EMUnMllU
