Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 2, Number 262, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 April 1872 — Page 2
ventm
Pt
HUDSON & ROSE, Proprietors. I,. M. BOSK. R. N. HTTDSON.
Office: North Fifth St., near Main.
The
DAILY
ss?&
mztvk is PUBLISHED gaiter-
,iay, anrt coni.ui.* «THE
sold
ear:
WEEKLY
GAZETTE IS
?hV1nrffPst uaper printed in Terre Haute, and is
for xjne copy, per year, 82.00 three conies per year, 85.00 five copies, per year, as oo: ten copies, one year, and one to getter up"Of Club, 815.00 one copy, six months 81 OO one copy, three months 50c. All subscriptions must be paid for in advance. The paper will, invariabl be discontinued at expiration or time. For Advertising Rates see third page. The GAZETTE establishment is the best equipped in point of Presses and Types in this section, andorders for any kind of Type Printing solicited, to which prompt attention win oe given
Address all letters, ilUDSON & ROSE, GAZETTE, Terre Haute, Ind.
REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET.
For Governor,
GEN THOMAS M. BROW NE, Of Randolph county. For Lieutenant Governor,
LEON DAS M. SEXTON, Of Rush county. For Congressman at Large,
GODLOVE S. ORTH, Of Tippecanoe county. For Secretary of State,
W. W. CURRY, Of Vigo county. For Auditor of State, COL. JAMES A. WILDMAN
Of Howard county. For Treasurer of State, MAJOR JOHN D. GLOVER,
Of Lawrence county.
For Reporter of Supreme Court, COL. JAMES B. BLACK, of Marion county.
For Clerk of Supreme Court, CHARLES SCHOLL, Of Clark county.
or
Superintendent of Public Instruction, BENJAMIN W. SMITH, Of Marion county.
For Attorney General, JAMES P. DENNY, Of Knox county.
FRIDAY, APRIL 5,1872.
Common Sense.
The Washington Transcript, an able Radical paper, in referring to the call of the Liberal Republicans of New York to attend and support the Cincinnati Convention, gives the following good, common sense advice in relation to the Republican party
Every person whose judgment is entitled to respect must regard this as a most important document, evidencing a movement which threatens the utter defeat and overthrow of the administration wing of the Republican party. Of itself it might not be deemed of so much moment, but it is a most damaging item of cumulative testimony against the administration. Similar movements were previously inaugurated in several of the States. The greatest State of the Union nowcomingin with some of its most eminent citizens to inaugurate the campaign so plainly manifests peril that they are willfully or stupidly blind who do not see it, and most unjust to the party and country not to do all in their power to ward off the danger.
We therefore do most earnestly entreat the President to look this grave situation bravely in the face, and to do all in his power as the head of the nation and the most powerful man in the party, to bring us safely out. It will not do to call these men "bolters." Are we to lose all the cream and call the skim-milk the Republican party As we have over and orer again said these men are not unreasonably belligerent. They could have been conciliated a month ago with little difficulty. The task will be more difficult now, but it is not yet too late for friendship, statesmanship, reform to do a perfect work of reconciliation, and make the Cincinnati Convention altogether unnecessary. What is necessary and would be most proper for the President to do we have over and over again pointed out. And we now have to say most emphatically that it is within the powor of the administration to at once inaugurate reforms and politics upon which the Republican party can be harmonized and the nation and the cause of political morality saved. Our readers can all bear testimony to the fact that we have constantly spoken kindly of the President, constantly asseverated our preference for him as the party's candidate. We have as constantly warned him of the danger which now must be known to be imminent by every one whose opinion is entitled to be heard. We MUST now have reform in party management and in the conduct of affairs. Otherwise, it will be the plain duty of the Philadelphia Convention to uncermoniously thrown President Grant overboard and nominate some one who will not surely lead the party into defeat and the nation into unspeakable disaster.
That is the best possible-advice that a Republican journalist could give the Republican party in this great trying time of its existence. And we have
110
Their
doubt
but the advice would be heeded, were it not for the army of office-holders who are now making a desperate effort to secure a continuance of their suck of the Government pap. They will have the pap or they will overthrow the Republican party. They can not keep their arms into Uncle Sam's crib, unless they keep General Grant in office, and they have determined to keep him there, or be forever overthrown with him. The advice of the able Republican editor of the Transcript will produce no effect on such fellows.
convention will meet
at Philadelphia, and
Ihey
will nominate
their candidate, and then it remains for the "rest of mankind to see to it whether he is elected. ,»r.
WE were told that the young blan Leet was to be deprived of the general order business in New York, but of eleven steamship lines running oue hundred and twenty-eight vessels, eight are compelled to send their business to him. Aud tbis is the sort of reform the administrationists give us.
From the Springfield Republican.
The Pirot of a Century's Politics. The wind which raises the white caps, and may yet stir up the great deeps, sets in the quarter of Cincinnati. This name is just now ou all lips, friendly aud hostile alike. As thereseeuis to be a misapprehension on the subjept, it may be well to have it understood all arouud that the call just issued by the Reuniou :vnd lie form Association does not refer to the Cinciuuati Convention proper—the {fathering which has acquired a vested lisfhtinihis titie. But wheu we find the uame of Horace Greeley among the signatures to a paper which expresses cordial acquiescence in the programme of the Missouri Liberals, it would seem that this difficulty was not so very formidable after all. Whatever the Convention does or forbears to do, no one will be bound by its actions or outgivings who does not choose to be bound. It may prove, as some predict aud as certainly seems not improbable at the present time, the pivot upon which the politics of the year—aud of the decade, for that matter—are to turn. It may prove something very different. But this one thing is certain, that it will be a power and a success in precisely the proportion that its doings commend themselves to the hardest sense and the best instincts of the American people. The National Convention called by the Liberal Republicans of Missouri will meet at the ajfc
ointed place and on the appointed day. will be a Republican Convention in fact as in name. And it will be a large Convention, embracing men who
are well and favorably known to the country. This much is now evident, as certain as anything in the near future can be. What the Convention-wiH do or leave undone, what it will undertake to do, whether it will construct a platform, or a ticket, or both, or neither,.! all these are questions which only the: event can answer. There are difficulties what human undertaking was ever free from them Perhaps the greatest is the wide difference of opinion araons earnest reformers on the subject of the tariff. The anxiety of the Reunion and Reform Association and of some few Democrats to have their say about what shall be done has its root in a fear that the Convention may give an uncertain sound on this subject.
From the Louisville Ledger.
Rip Tan Winkle at Louisville. The audience which greeted Mr. Jefferson last night, after his absence of two yeara, crowded Masonic Temple to excess, and was as enthusiastic as though the moment was its first acquaintance with the great cojnedian. It is stranger than at first sight appears, this conservation of the influence which Mr. Jefferson finds no difficulty in establishing, but which he of the few actors we know is able to retain in all its pristine force, if not increased with each suceeding knowledge of him. An audieuce with him is as clay under the sculptor's hands he fashions it as he wills it takes shape and glows with life under theiuagicof his genius, and thus he leaves it. Years may elapse aud that city has assumed a thousand shapes under the molding power of other hands. But he returns, and again the plastic clay grows into its olden form again he fashions it to the likeness of its first self—it is the same figure as it came fresh from the abundant treasury of his brain, not marred by the other shapes it has assumed, but perfected by aud instinct with the experience which the passing years have brought. An audience which Mr. Jeflersou has once knewn and moved, which lias once laughed with the worthless vagabond and wept with the friendless old man of Mr. Jefferson's creation, laughs with him and weeps with him again and again, although the lapse of years has brought other tears and joys in its train, •enough to have effaced the ancient image. The story of Rip
Van
Winkle
heard again is not a twice told tale, wearying in the repetition—it is as the history of a sad life handed down from the.lips of one generation to another, never tiring the new listener, but added to and more affecting still by the incidents which the passing years have brought. His genius is as Fortunatas' purse, exhaustless and ever giving new stores to the searching discoverer.
The audieuce of last night was of course made-up, in part, of many who had known Mr. Jefferson in this character, not once, alone, but perhaps many times. In these, we dare say, lie found his best and most enthusiastic listeners. The eyes which had glistened with tears, and the lips which had laughed their till at the pathos aud the humor of Hip of the first acquaintance, laughed and wept with him again last night with a heartfelt sympathy and a more abundant laughter because of the knowledge of hisjoys and sorrows before. But we are led into an endless mazeof figures and of words, in expressing this simple fact. Mr. Jefferson never loses his hold upon the affections'of his friends—for sure all that have known him in the part
But we are led by the abuudant material of the subject further than there is any need. His audience has been of the country, and we can not add to the treasury of the impressions he has stored in the minds of the people. With the announcement of his further presence for to-night, and the next, and the next, our task is done.
CARROLL SANBORN, the renowned "gentleman burglar," is dead. He breathed his last recently in the jail at Lawrence, Massachusetts. Early in October, Sanborn got a mortal wound in a tight with a coustable named Donovan. The latter was beuton arresting his man, and succeeded with this result. It is said that Sap born made friends of all who approached him while in jail, and that he pave up freely all the properly he had stolen. He seems altogether to have been a singular character. In all respects, except his mania for burglary, he lived a pure and exemplary life. He touched no intoxicating drink or tobacco. He was scrupulously faithfal to his1 .wife, and tenderly attached to liia family. His clergyman and physicion concur in extolling his amiable aud attractive disposition aud gentlemanly maimers. They say that he really did not care to accumulate wealth, and had none but kiudly feelings to his fellow men. His sole fault was'his inextinguishable passion for midnight burglary, a form of colossal kleptomania which, strive as he might, he oould not control. The unhappy man escaped the lastdisgrace of being doomed to the State prison. He pleaded guilty to the charges against him iu the superior Court but he died iu the arms of his wife before the Bench had time to projioucce the sentence,
GENTLEMAN of high standing in St. Joseph county, Indiana, lost one of his sleeve-buttons.
It was found in the
heel of a young lady's stocking. Hose to
blame?
3'ears.
are
his friends—but binds them closer to him with each succeeding visit, until they feel a fellowship in the creation of his genius which obliges them per force to laugh and cry as his story is joyful or is sad.
It is useless, we have said, to multiply our words in speaking of the performance of last night. So long and so pronounced has been Mr. Jefferson's success in the part so many and so various have been the audience to which he hasappealed so uniform and universal have been the im-. pressions which he has created, that all has been said aud written and published which vvq could print or say. The voice has been but of praise this can be noth iug more. Only we have said that there is something marvelous in the preservation intact of the impression which he first made but it is perhaps not more majvellbus than any of the results of genius. The story of Hector and An dromache is as affecting to-day as when first told to the sandalled Greeks by the blind Homer the return of the crusader Guido to the wife, faithful through the lotig aud weary years of his captivity, moves us of today as it moved the rapt readers of the black-letter Gesta Romanorum nay, the story of Rip Van Winkle will be as sad to our maturer age and to our chil dren aud our children's children, as it was in the first eager perusal of the pages of Washington Irving. This whole story both of Irving and Mr. Jefferfcon is 'made up, to us, much more of saduess than of any 1 laughter. Barring the, first sceues of the first act, the further life of the outcast father until reunited to his little daughter, grown to womanhood, .has uo room except for tearful sympathy. The memory of the parting scene at the door of his home survives through the interview in the mountain glen—the broken comments of the awakening —the dazed questionings in the changed village. The broken English is no longer amusing the oftenforfeited pledge takes on a novel pathos, .•and the comedy of the first act is merged into a tragedy, only softened by the h'appy close of the wholly sad story. There is not an incident in the last two hours of the play that gives occasion for aught but rapt attention jealous of any interruption. We can laugh With the irresistible laugh of Mf. Jefferson in the first act, as we "can" laugh at the Miss Kilmansegg of poor Tom Hood but there is nothing in the Bridge of Sighs that less would create a smile than in the final passages of Mr. Jefferson's story.
OF
HOIJS&IfOUtt FiiMITURE
FOR SALE OB LEASE
VALUABLE REAL ESTATE FOR )SALE
-IN
Hudson & Ross' Subdivision of Out-lot No. 38.
THE DESIRABLE PROPERTY KNOWN AS THE
"LINTON BLOCK," SITUATED ON OHIO AND SIXTH STREETS,
will be placed on the market for sale on and after the first day of June. It will be sold on
REASONABLE TERMS, AX1 L«\(J TIME
if desired by the purchaser. Below is a plat of the property. Those lots on Sixth street are very desirable for small dwellings, and those fronting on Ohio street are the most valuable of any iu the city off Main street. The large and commodious dwelling house, with an avenue fifty feet front, will be put in good repair and leased for a term of
OHIO STREET.
Dwelling.
AUCTION MERCHANTS. HAYWARD & SCOTT,
Auction & Commission
.MERCHANTS,
Fourth St., bet. Ohio fc Walnut,
TERRE HAUTE, INI).
HAVING
associated ourselves for the par-
pose of carrying OH the Auction and Coinmission business, we will be found ready at all times to receive consignments of merchandise, which we will sell at private sale or at auction. Having been connected with the auction business for the past fouiteen years, we feel conndent that our transactions will be satisfactory to oufc patrons. 7, -J .,: ,,
Regular Sales Every Saturday
Willi also attendtd ap|y Sales in'tlie city, vicinity p'n.reafeotLaqle terms. leblo
-and vici
,„ST §AM BAjpra?'
Union Steam Bakery.
eiifui
FBA9TK UEOIG & BR©.,
A Manufacturers of all kinds of
Crackers, Cakes, Bread
AJfDCAOY!
Dealers in!
BRILLIANT SALOON,
(Late "Red Light,")
Second Street, bt twecn Main aud Cherry. Regular Lunch at,tfie3riUiaut f.otn.9 to 11 A. M. every day. At this heat, comfortable, establishment, Hoosler gentlemen can take 'whisky straight," but when thie Wabash gets low, '•Suckers" will pat themselvesoptside of mint juleps by the aid of a straw,.
«i.bo.
h'w-i 1
1
Foreign and Domestic Fruits,
FANCY AN® STAPLE GROCERIES,
LAFAYETTE STREET\ O v.''
Between the two Railroads. -, Terre Haute, Indiana.
SALOON.
OBAJrp OPEJTOO!
rr" 'v:i THE- A
JOHN F. YOUNG, Proprietor,
mhlldlm Late of Edgar Co., 111.
NOTICE.
Change of Firm.
THE
Drug House of 'W.-C. Buntih & Co. will continue the business from this date under the Aim name of Buntln A Armstrong,fm. H.
Terre,Haute,Iud., March 1,1872. 22d«w,
$5 to $10PE8
and GIRLS who engage- iri onr Jiew bnsiness make from *5 te per day lfi their own loFull particulars and instroctidns Bent
Those in need of permanent, proGEORGE
call ties. free by mail. Trhoee in need of permanent, fltable work, should address at once. STINSON A CO., Portland, Maine. 85w8m
,v
"JVfrti-rr
21' 6"xlW
14' MR. OAKEY'S.
Should persons desire leasing any of these lots, an arrangement to that effect can be made, with the privelege of purchasing at the expiration of the lease. The undersigned direct public attention to this desirable property, and will be glad to confer with any one wishing to purchase or lease any portion the xv. JN xl DoOJN
FRED. A. BOSS,
MEDICAL.
:IJ
WARNER'S PILE REMEDY.
W(net
ARNER'S Pile Remedy has never failed eveii in one case to cure the very worst cases of Blind, Itching or Bleeding Piles Those who are afflicted should immediately call on the druggist and get it, for for it will, with the flrstapplication, instantly afford complete relief, and a few following applications are only required to effect a jpermant cure without any trouble inconvenience to use.
Warner's Pile Pemedy is expressly for the Piles, and is not recommended to cure any other disease. It has cured cases of over tliirtj years standing. Price $1.00. For sale by druggists everywhere.
1VO MORE
WEAK. SERVES..
Warner's Dyspepsia Tonic is .prepaied ex pressly for Dyspeptics and those suffering from weak'nerves with habitual constipation. There are very few who have not employed physi cianS for yeafs to remedy what this preparation will do in a few weeks, by strengthening the nerves, enriching, the circulation, restoring dl gestion, giving strength mentally and physi cally, enabling those who may have be in con fined for ^esars to their rooi"s as invalids to again resume their occupations in all their duties ol life. One trial is all we &t>k to enable this remedy to recommend itself to the most skeptical. It is a slightly stimulating tonic and a splendid appetizer, it strengthens the stomach and restores the generative organs and digestion to a norma! and healthy state. Weak,nervousand dyspeptic persons should use Warner's Dyspeptic Tonic. For sale py druggists. Price
NO
£H£ZBttS£ES£S£S3a.
hi. COSJOH NO MOKE.
Warner's Cough Balsam is healing,softening and expectorating.. The extraordinary power it possesses' in immediately relieving, and eventually curing the most obstinate cases ol Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Influenza, Hoarseness, Asthma and Consumption is almost incredible. So prompt is the relief and certain its effects in all the above cases, or any affection of the throat and lungs, that thousands of physicians are daily prescribing for it and one and all say that is the most healing and expectorating medicine known. One dose always affords relief, and in most cases one bottle aftectsacure. Sold by druggist in large bottles. Price S1.00., It. is your own fault if you still cough acid duffer The Balsam will cure.
WOE OF LIFE.
The Great Blood Purifier and Delicious DrinkWainer's VJnum Vitse, or Wine of Life, is free from any poisonous drugs or impurities being prepared-for. those who require a stimulant. It Is a splendid appetizer and a tonic, and the finest thing in the world for purifying the blood. It is the most pleasant and delicious article ever offered to the public, far superior to brandy, whisky, wine, bitters, or any ether article. It is more healthy and cheaper. Both male and female, young or old, take the Wine of Life. It is. in fact a life preserver. Those who wish to enjoy a. good health and a free, flow of lively spirits, will do well to take the Wine of Life. It is different from any thing ever before in use. It is sold by druggists. Price tfl.OO,, in quart
EMMOAGOGm
Warner's Emmenagogne 18the.only article known to cure the Whites, (it will cure in every case.) Where is the female in which this important medicine is not wanted Mothers, this is thegreatest blessing ever offered you, and you should immediately procure it. It is also a sure cure for Female Irregularities, and may be depended upon in every case where the monthly flow has been obstructed through cold or disease. Sold by druggists. Price $1.00, or sent by mail on recteipt of $1.25: Addreiw 619 Strtte Street. Ohicagoi Illinois. dly.
TOBACCOS, ETC.
BRASHEARS, BROWN & TITUS/
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
Wholesale Dealers in
AGENTSfor^Christian
Mtr—
age of this community. The senior partnefr having spent the past winter in Philadelphia obtaining a knowledge of all the latest developments In the profession of Pharmacy, and having now secured the services of Mr. J. H. Brlnghurst, Jr., of Philadelphia, a thorough and practical Pharmaceutist and Chemist, they feel assured they can manufacture and compound everything in their line to the entiresatisfaction of all who may call upon them: -ii'- WU. C. BUNTIN, ,r WM. H. ARMKrrfoiTG.
h'jJt-»
Groceries and Manufactured Tobaccos
R. J. Christian & Co.'s celebrated
brands of Comfort," Bright May Pine Apple Black Navy %, and Cherry Brand Black Navy %, and other fine brands,
32 AND 34 MAIN STREET mvsa si
dl£
Best Oak Tanned Stretched Leather
.8 i.itii ,.r iv
Worcester, Mass.
BELTING.
CRAFTON SC KNIGHT,
"•t® tit-ym Manufacturers of Li?
Belts
,AhOj Page1* Patertt LaQvng\miUiy(
Front St., Harding's Block, Worcester Mass
LOWEST PRICES.
Elegant Display
DB7 GOODS.
ANOTHER STEP FORWARD!
"New Occasions Teacli New Duties!"
*. .jt
THEORIES OF BCBlSESS, ALIKE WITH THEORIES OF GOVERNMENT, MUST CHANGE WITH THE DEMANDS OF THE HOUR.
The Nineteenth Century is by Nature Keyolutionary.
THE TOMBSTONES 0FJ)UR FATHERS ARE NOT WHITE ENOUGH FOR THE DEAD OF 1872.
WE TAKE NO TIMID COUNSEL.
EXPANSION AND PROGRESS THE MOTTO.
We are Now Opening our Sixth Store at Grand Rapids, Mich.
And us this will increase our combined business about two hundred thousand dollars a year, we shall be able to buy and sell goods still cheaper this Spring than ever before. We are olten asked, do we intend ultimately to monopolize all the principal points of Indiana and Michigan. Our answer is always in the spirit that
MAN KN0WETH HIS DESTINY.
In this young and growing country a firm that is true that the interests of the jjeople, aud breaks loose from the old damaging Western custom of "High Prices and Big Profits," and throwing itself upon the bosom of the loving, earnest, wideawake people of the West, distributes its merchandise fairly, honestly and cheaply we say any firm thus pushing forward, cannot tell where such a great mercantile reformation will carry it. Its members must only be true to every duty of the present, have faith in the times in which they live, and leave the rest to the development of a people and a nation that cannot be matched the broad world over.
The More Stores we Have the Cheaper we Can Buy and Sell Our Goods.
Large Arrivals of New Goods!
For the next sixty days we shall be constantly and almost daily receiving large lots of new Spring Goods. As fast as they are put upon the market every novelty of the season will be at once bought by our New York partners and added to our stock here.
OUR SALES OF DRESS GOODS EXORjMOUS!
OUR STOCK THE MOST ATTRACTIVE IN TOWS!
PRETTIEST GOODS.
French woven Corsets, 50c. Good common Corsets, 25c.
LARGEST ASSORTMENT.
A.I1 our best Merrimack, Sprague, Cocheco and other best makes of Prints, 10c a yard. Common Prints, 6c.' Fast Colored Prints, 8c.
Immense stocks of Tickings, Denims, Striped Shirtings, Checks, Table Linens, Cassimeres, Balmoral and Boulevard Skirts, Fancy Goods, &c. Coats' Cotton, 5c. Clark's Cotton, same price. .Dexter's Tidy Cotton, 5c.a ball.
DOLLY YARDEN" Goods in Different Materials.
In Wool,
Cloth, Paisley
O S E O E S
Great New* York Dry Goods Store,
NORTH STDE OF MAIN STREET. TERRE ELAUTE. INIV
CARPETS.
HIGH-PRICED CARPET MEN,
BUY YOUR TICKETS FOR SALT LAK]^
We are bound to do the Carpet Trade. :n We can undersell you 20 per cent. We have large capital and the very best credit. We are buying five pieces of carpets to your one. It costs us nothing to sell carpets. It costs you 20 per cent.
r. li
You stand no chance at all of competing with its. You must bow to the inevitable and give to us the lead.
and HrocUo
During the past year and nine months we have bent our energies chiefly to the
development of ow Dry Goods business. Having put that beyond the.reach of all
competitors, we now turn our attention to the Carpet Trades, and we start outiWith the
assertion that in a very short time we shall be selling a larger amount of carpets than
is sold by any retail firm in the State of Indiana. When we propose to do a thing that
settles it. Everybody knows it will be done, and
just been received and placed on sale.
LOWEST PRICES!
We do Propose to do tlie Carpet Trade
Our Carpet Room is over our Dry Goods Store, and so costs us nothing for rent
It is twenty feet wide and one hundred feet long, and is crowded with a magnificent
stock of goods. Thousands of yards and thousands of dollars worth of new CAR
PETS, OIL CLOTHS, MATTINGS, fcC., in elegant styles, for the Spring trade, har
/'NEWEST STYLES! -.
Lot of good yard-wide Carpet at 17c. .'Lot of better yard-wide Carpet at 20c, 25c and 28e. ci i5,000 yards of Very heavy yard-wide Carpets at 30c and 35o. asOne lot of yardrwide Ingrain Carpets at 50c. 1
All-wool Ingrains at 60c, 65c, 70c and 75c. j/, Joiner qualities of all-wool Ingrains at 90c, $1.00 and 1.15. Celebrated niakes of "Extra-Super" Ingrains at 1.20, 1.25 and 1.30. qualities or ^"Stiper-Extra Supers" at 1.25 and 1.30. /(Imperial'three-ply* Tapestry Ingrains at 1.35.
Best English Brussels Carpets from 1.20 up.
"'Heavy yard-wide Oil Cloth,50c worth 65c. ,. 'Mattings, Kugs, A c., at equally low rates.
,'jve warn the public against shoddy makes of Carpets, pushed off on customers as
"Family Carpets", "Hand,-loom" Carpets, Ac. "Hand-loom" Carpets are rag carpets.
You could make a fine, smooth, pretty Ingrain or Brussels Carpet on a "hand-loom"
about as. easy as you could make a watch with a sledge hammer. "Hand-loom," when
applied to any other kind than rag carpet, simply means SHODDY^a carpet to which
no manufacturer will put his name. If you, wish only good "Power-loom Carpets, a
the lowest prices, buy them out of our New Stock.
-tvl ii
BEST A&SOKfiVlKNT!
1
1
O S E O E S
GREAT If. Y. CITY DRY GO0BS AND,CARPET STORE,
.idtfluJ b&qqts ivjut. isoi'lus
Nordi Side of Mala Street, Tern Hsn«e,In4tena.
-v
7/'
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
MONTH to sell our Universal Ce-
'-V.raent, Combination TunneJ, Button SACO NOVEI4w
Hole Cutter, and other articles. TYXO.", Saco, Me.
PSYCHOLOGICby
Fascination or Soul Charm
ing, 400 pages, Herbert Hamilton, B. A. How to use this power (which all possess) at will. Divination, 5?piricualism, Sorceries, Demonology, and a thousand other Wonders. Price by mail, $1.25, cloth p*paper covers, tl.OO. Copy free to agents only. 81,000 easily mode. Address, T. W. publisher, 4th street, Philadelphia, Pa.
»travelingwantMiverEVANS,monthly
GREAT CHANCE F0K AGENTS. lo you a situation as agent, local or with a chance to make #5 to fc2© per day selling our new 7 strand White Wire Clothes Lines* They last forever samples free, so there is uo risk. Addi'ess at once, Hudson Wite Works, cor. Water street and Maiden Lane, N Y., or 16 Dear born street, Chicago.,- 4w
I
S
AGEXTS WAXTED. The only complete life of
JAMES FISK,
Containing a full account of all his schemes, enterprises and assassination. Biographies cf Vanderbilt, Dre and other great Railroad and Financial magnates.
GBEAT
PER
iuuu
MONTH
9 9
FRAUDS of the
TAMMANY RING. Brilliant pen pictures in the LIGHTS AND SHADOWS of New York life. JOSIE MANSFIELD, the siren. How a beautflul woman captivated and ruined her victims. Life of EDWARD S. STOKES, il-lust-rated octavo of over 500 pages. Send $1.00 for outfit, and secure territory at once. Circulars free. UNION PUBLISHING CO., Philadelphia, Chicago or Cincinnati.
New Map of Indiana—1872.
EveryR. R.Station,Town, Village, &c.
1111
Large stock of popular Charts and
U.S. Maps for agents. E. C.. BRIDGMAN, No. 5 Barclay street, N. Y.
SaOO
REWARD is offered by
the proprietor of Dr. page's! Catarrh Remedy for a case of "Cold in Head," Catarrh, or Ozena,:which fee cannot euro. Sold by Druggists'at 50 cts
Well's Carbolic Tablets,
roe COUQHS, COLDS 4 H0ABSENESS. These Tablets present the Acid in Combination wi other efficient remedies, in a popular iorm 101 tne Core of all THROAT and LUNG Diseases. HOARSENESS and ULCERATION ol tbp THROAT are Immediately relieved, and statements are constantly being sent to the propi:?* -r of relief in cases of Throat difficulties of years standing.
A
TTflPT»"mT
Don't be deceived by worth-
A. A A"iX less imitations. Get onty Wei 1 's Carbolic Tablets. Price, 25 cents pel 3c x. JOHN Q. KELLOGG, 18 Piatt street, New York, Sole Agent for the United States. Send lor Circular.
O S O N S
WOELD-BENOWSBT PATENT
Glove-Fitting Corset!
If you want themosi sat .ibfUctory, best fitting and the (cheapest Corset lor Its real value, you have ever worn, buy
THOMSON'S
GENUINE PATENT
GL0YE- FITTING.
No Corset ha$ ever attained such a reputation in this or any other coun
try. As now made in length and fullness of bust
IT CAItfKfOT BE IMPROVED.
Every Corset is stamped with the name THOMSON and the trade mark, a
by all first-class dealers.
Shawls!
.0
CJROWN.
Kept
THOMSON, LA5GDON & CO.,
Sole Owners of Patent*, 391 BROADWAY, HEW YORK.
THE PREMIUM
SAKFOBD CORBf!
Anew and distinct variety.. It has been tested in nearly every State the past season has taken the highest premiums.at State and County Fairs wherever exhibited. North, South, East and West testify to its superiority over all other varieties. With equal chance It has ripened from two to three weeks earlier and produced from one-third to double the quantity of other corn. These are facts. Every Farmer should send stamp for Circular, giving full descriptior, history and testimonials. No bought or Bogus testimony, No Humbug. 1 Quart by mail postpaid, 60c 2, $1.00. Peck by Express or Freight, 82. V2 bushel, 83 Bushel, 85. Address, S. R. FANNING, Jamespor., N. Y. m2dw4w
E A
It is NOT A PHYSIC—It is NOT what is popularly called a BUTERS^nor is it intended to be such. IT IS A SOUTH AMERICAN plant that has been used for many years by the medical faculty of those countries With wonderful efficacy as a POWERFUL ALTERATIVE and UNEQUALED PURIFIER OF THE BLOOD, 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, INF
AM A TION OF THE E O S SLUGGISH CIR-
CULATION OF THE BLOOD,
ABSCESSES, TUMORS. JAUNDIPE, SCRQfLA,DXSPEPSIA,AGUEANEFEVER, Off THEIR CONCOMITANTS.
Dr. Well's Extract of Jurubeba,
is offered to the public as a great invigorator and remedy for all impurities ol the blood, or for organic weakness with their attendant evils. For the foregoing complaints
JtTKUBMBA
Is confidently recommended to every family as a household remedy, and should be fr6ely taken in all derangements of the system. It gives health, vigor and tone to all vital forces, and animates and fortifies all weak and lymphatic temperament*. 18 Piatt street. New York,
T1HIS
Sole Agent for the United States.
Price One Dollar per Bottle. Send for Circular.
4w
IS NO HUMBUG By sending OCENTS, with age, height, color of eyes and hair, you will receive by return mail, a correct pdcture of your future husband or wite, with name and date or marriage. Address, W. FOX, P. O. Drawer No. 24, Fultonville, N.
Y. 4w
Profitable Employment.
TOTE desire to engage a few more Agents to sell the World Renowned Improved B1JCKETE SEWHTO MACHIiVB, at a liberal salary or on Commission. A Horse and Wagon given to Agents. Full Particulars furnished on.application. Address, W. A,
H-ENDERSON
JT
&
CO., General Agents, Cleveland, Ohio, and St. Louis, Mo.
4w
Whitney's If eats Toot Harness Soap* STEAM EEFINED.
Oils, Blacks, Polishes and soaps at the sahie time. Put up In large and small size boxep, also in 3 lb. Dars. Has been in use for years, and gives perfect satisfaction. Send
stamp for our WAVERLY. Address, G. WHITNEY & CO., 59 Milk St., Boston, Mass. nov6-6m
POUNDEY.
F. H. M'EUTBIESH. J. BARNABD.
Phfleiiix Fdiiftdr
AND
MACHIUESHOP!
McEllMh & Bariiard,
a
Cor. o^ Wiiiith and Eagle Streets,
(Near the Passenger Depot,)
TERRE HAUTE," I
MANUFACTURE
Steam Engines, Mill Ma-
chinery. House Fronts, Fi Fronts, Circular Saw
.nery.. Mills, and all kinds of
IRON AtfI) BRASS CASTINGS!
r.
i•'
BEPAIBII6 ITOHE PBdMPTLT
All partlei r-practi
connected with 1
of Worl Slldwly
establishment veral yearis' ex.we can renboth in point
and Price. cELFRESH A BARNARD,
