Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 3, Number 40, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 18 July 1872 — Page 1
VOL. 3.
'fie Evening gazette
CITY POST OFFICE.
CLOSE. DAILY MAILS. OFEH. 6:00 a. East Through...7:30and 11 15 a, 3:00 p. 5:15 p. fl:00a. "Way...l2:30 and 5:15 p. rt:00 a. m...Cincinnati & Washington... 5:15 p. 3:00 p. in .... 7:30 a. 3:00 p. Chicago 4:30 p. 6:00 a. 7:00 a.
St. Louis and West.
10:30 a. m..Via Alton Railroad 4:30 P* 12:00 noon...Via Vandalia Railroad 4:30 p. 3:40 p. Evansville and way 4:30 p. 6:00 a. Through :30 a. 3:40 p. Rockville and way 11:00 a. 6:00 a. E. T. H. & C. Railroad 4:30 p.
SEMI-WEEKLY MAILS.
Graysville via Prairieton, Prairie Creek and Thurman's Creek— Closes Tuesdays and Fridays at..... a. Opens Mondays and Thursdays at.. p. Nelson—Closes Tuesdays & Saturdays at 11 a.
Opens Tuesdays & Saturdays at 10 a. WEEKLY MAILS.
JasonvllleviaRiley. Cookerly,Lewis, Coffee and Hewesville—Closes Saturdays at 6 a. m. Opens Fridays at 4 p. m. Ashboro via Christy's Prairie—
ClosesSaturdaysat 1 p. Opens Saturdays at 12
General Delivery and Call Boxes open from 7 a. m, to 7:30 p. m. Lock Boxes and Stamp Office open from 7 m. to 9 p.m.
Money Order and Register Office open from 7:39 a. m. to 7 p.m. Office open on Sundays from 8 to 9 a. m.
No money order business transacted on Snn days. L* A. BURNETT, P. M.
Announcements.
We are authorized to announce JAMES M. SANKEY as a candidate for re-election to the office of County Treasurer, subject to the decision of the Democratic Conveiation.
We are authorized to announce JOHN C. BRIGGS as a candidate for re-election as Circuit Court Prosecutor, subject to the decision of the Democratic Convention.
We are authorized to announce the name of MARTIN HOLLINGER as a candidate for reelection to the office of County Clerk, subject to the decision of the Democratic County Convention.
THUBSDAY, JULY 18, 1872.
Hon. D. W.Voorhees' Speech. To the exclusion of almost everything else, we lay before the readers of the GAZETTE, to-day, the speech of Mr. Voorhees, delivered before -the Congressional Convention at Spencer, this afternoon. Of course it will command the careful attention of every reader.
WE understand that our old friend, N. F. Cunningham, is favorably spoken of for the nomination of Township Trustee. No better selection could be made, for no more competent and efficient officer could be elected.
IT
is astonishing how much Administration newspapers know about Democrats now-a-days. It is next to impossible to open one and not find in it from one to a dozen paragraphs certifying that hundreds of Democrats will either abstain from voting in November or will vote tor Grant. These newspapers that know so much, a fortnight ago were unable to find a Liberal Republican within the radius of their several circulations. They seem in fact to know less about the Liberals, and more about the Democrats than they know ol the condition of their own party.—oi». (Commercial.
These poor political snipes have a great concern for the consistency of the Democrats. They appeal to them on all occasions. With tears in their eyes they beg (heir neighbors not to vote for Greeley, for it would be so inconsistent! One of this class accosted a friend of ours, a few days sgo, with the interrogatory: "How can von vote for Greeley He has never given a Democjatic vote in his life." "That is t'rue," said our friend, "but how can you vote for Grant? He never cast a Republican vote in his life, and the last one he-did cast was for James Buchannan. He seems to answer your party now, and you stick to him like a lick in a dog's hide. Greeley will suit me if Grant fills your Radical notions. Our man has brains, intelligence, capacity, honesty and integrity. How about Grant's qualifications?" The Grant man declared that he did not care to enter into a political discussion," and passed on There are many of this class sympathizing with Democrat?.
Political Brevities.
A paper called the Irish Republican has been started in New York, by the Administration "Ring." Its editors are Custom House officers, aided by a few corner street-loafers, whom they hire. There is notau Irishman connected with it. It is one of the shams which Grantism is so fond of creating. "That cock won't fight."
Ex-Mayor Coddington, the Hon. William Henry Gale and Joel Wilson, President of the Savings Bank of Railway, are among the many Greeley Republicans in Jersey City.
Ex-Governor Myron H. Clark, of Canandaigua, New York,heretofore a prominent Republican, has signed a call for a Greeley and Brown meeting. Ontario county, it is reported, will go for Greeley.
Sanguine Liberals down in Rhode Island claim that the State will go for Greeley and Brown. The State goes pretty much as Sprague says, and Salmou P. Chase is his father-in-law.
The St. Louis Times estimates that there 5S,000 non-voting citizens of Missouri, in 1870, who are now enfranchised, and three-fourths of whom will vote for Greeley, thus insuring a gain of 35,000 on the Liberal majority of 1870, even allowing that the entire negro vote goes the other way.
All the daily Democratic papers of Alabama have hoisted the Greeley ticket, and there is little doubt that the weeklies will do so at the earliest possible date. The white people are satisfied with the work of the Baltimore Convention. The negroes are dissatisfied.
A New York Herald correspondent has interviewed Mosby, the guerrilla leader. Although he supports Grant, he concludes that Greeley will sweep the South, and that his and others of his like opposition will no more check the Greeley tide thau do the pebbles on the shore of the Atlantic Ocean.
Governor John M. Palmer, of Illinois, says: "We are going to elect old Horace Greeley to the Presidency. I am not for 'anybody to beat Grant.' I am for anybody to elect Greeley and in that spirit I give my hand to the strongest pemocrat
The Chicago Tribune says: "Our re ports from Kansas are of the most grati fying nature. A gentleman whose name if we felt at liberty to give it, would be recognized at once as the very best authority, assures us that the Liberal party is organized in every county, that in a good many places it will fairly divide the Republican vote with Grant, and that he has no doubt that the electoral vote of the State will be cast by a fair majority for Greeley and Brown."
Remarking upon the enthusiasm which is exhibited in all parts of the country for Greeley, the New York Tele grain says "The truth is, the name of Greeley,no matter how it may bederided, has taken a hold on the popular heart such as has never before been witnessed. Grant's popularity is not to be compared with Greeley's. The old farmer has an individuality of character and a number of such charming points—eccentricities, if you please—that he stands to-day the best beloved man in the nation. The more he is caricatured the more the people cling to him.
Dr. Greeley's Generosity. It is refreshing to notice the suggestions made by the Grant orators and newspapers as reasons why Dr. Greeley should not be President. One is that he is an easy nature, a kind heart, and is too easily imposed upon by bad men. "He has kindly impulses," quote they, "but, egad! he lacks judgment. He opens his purse string3 and gives, but he gives without discretion."
It is a fact widely known as Dr. Greeley himself that benevolence is one of the marked characteristics of the man. His heart has always beaten in sympathy for the sufferings of any class of mankind and the more unfortunate the class the greater his efforts to uphold them and denounce their oppressors. He has boldly dared to strike for the right when his revilers were limping or bold apologists for the wrong. That the attribute of a broad philanthropy should disqualify a man to be President is about as absurd as to suggest that because a man believes in the Christian religion he is unfitted to be at the head of a church.
But if Dr. Greeley has given, and given largely, of his hard-earned means, be has given his own money and not the money of others. Does anybody for a moment suppose that he, as the executor of a will or the trustee of an estate, would pay out a dollar without proper authority and a full and explicit voucher He is a man who has a just sense of the magnitude of his responsibilities in any sphere of usefulness in which he may move. As the trustee of a great nation he will guard every avenue against wrong, and if stewards be found unfaithful they will be discharged without warning.
Again, Dr. Greeley has not an itching desire for a second term. One term as President as the culmination of a useful career he thinks is glory enough for one life and his one term will probably be characterized by such moderation, probity, and wisdom, that peace and good will to men will be the sentiment of our people, and once more we will be a united nation. At the close of Dr. Greeley's one term there will be ranged in approval of his administration the morality, the intelligence, the industry, the wealth, and the decency of the nation against it only will be found the robbers and plunderers who shall have been hurled from place and power.
And how is it with Grant He surely is not open to the accusation of giving— except offices to hungry relatives, camp cronies, and those who give to him. His charity is of that quality whichi begins at home and—remains there. Hi3 maxim is, "'lis more blessed to receive than to give Grant never feels so generous as when he is giving away other people's money. Like master, like man, the members of his Cabinet emulate his example, and one—Ilobesou by namegives from the national treasury $30,000 to a grasping contractor who had already oeen paid in full, but who had the discretion to make a handsome Christmas present to a lady. *Dr. Greeley making gifts and Grant taking gifts present a contrast so marked that no man, except his vison be obscured by the cobwebs of a Custom House or Postoffice window, can fail to discern the difference between them.
The Press on the nomination. The manner in which Mr. Greeley's nomination at Baltimore is received by the press throughout the country is of the most encouraging character.
All the Democratic journals which had favored his acceptance by their party either directly or impliedly previous to the assembling of the Convention endorse it warmly, while those which had argued against it, and even such as had declared that they would never support it, now yield to the judgment of the Convention, and place the names of Greeley and Brown at the head of their columns. Perhaps there are three or four Democratic journals of some influence who still hesitate to openly pronounce for the Baltimore ticket but their comments upon the nomination clearly show that they will soon yield it their support.
The tone of the Liberal Republican and .ndependent journals is equally gratifying to the friends of reform. They look with favor upon the proceedings at Baltimore, and predict the success in November of the grand movement initiated under their auspices at Cincinnati in May.
The course of the Grant journals is not less significant. The laugh which they affected to raise over the proceedings at Cincinnati is turned into a geuuine bowl of rage over the doings at Baltimore. No wonder they gnash their teeth at Dr. Greeley and spit out their venom at his supporters, for in the writing on the wall they read the doom of Grant and his minions.—N. Y.
OTTR admirably managed State Department has received another shock. It turns out that Baron Gerolt's recall from the position of German Minister at Washington was the result of a petty intrigue which would have done discredit to a village coterie of gossips. This has been more than suspected heretofore, but is now specifically charged. It seems that the German Minister remonstrating against the lax manner with which our Government managed its neutral obligations during the FrancoGerman war, was cruelly snubbed by Mr. Bancroft Davis. When explanations were asked of Secretary Fish, that gentleman blandly told Baron Gerolt, in substance, that Mr. Davis was a nobody, and not worth notice but the little unpleasantness which then arose was sent to Berlin by the State Department. Baron Gerolt was reprimanded for unfriendliness to the Grant Administration by Bismarck, and, after serving his country in the United States for many years, resigned aqd went home under a cloud. The "mere trifle" which Mr. Fish had pooh-poohed, has sent away the most popular foreign representative ever in Washington. The fact was that our efficient State Department found Baron Gerolt in the way of the French arms business so an intrigue was set on foot to get rid of him. Can anybody point to any branch of our foreign relations which has not been disreputably managed ¥Tri
&c„
House of
-•~rr
The Yery Latest News
(UP TO 3 O'CLOCK P. M. TO-DAY.)
By the Pacific and Atlantic Telegraph
Stanley and Livingstone En Route for England.
Arrival of President Guardin, of Costa Rica, at New York.
Madame Leutner's Second York Concert.
&C.9
the
There was a much larger audience at the Academy of Music last evening, on the occasion of the second appearance of Madame Peschka Leutner in New York. Her singing was very brilliant and received several encores. The audience was very enthusiastic, and fully appreciated her qualities as a vocalist. She sails for Europe Saturday, and her last appearance takes place Friday evening.
SARATOGA, July 18.—First race, hurdle race. Purse, six hundred dollars. Six horses ran. Dochiel, won Astronomer, second Tammany, third. Time, foui minutes and three quarter seconds. John Harper, in the pool room, last night, said he would be able in a week or ten days to tell whether Longfellow's injuries will be permanent. He entertains the hope they may prove temporary, and Longfellow again grace the turf.
AVASHINGTON, July 18.—The Treasury Department to-day remitted to the Collector of Customs at Chicago $1,200,000 for the payment of the site of the new Custom House.
,'v.—^wn}
New
Spain Expresses Confidence in Minister Sickles.
&c.
'LONDON, July 18.—A Suez dispatch says that Stanley and Livingstone's son leftJ3uez to-day for England.
NEWYOKK, July 18.—The Sir Walter Scott monument in Central Park is nearly completed, and can be dedicated in a month or two. Mr. Steele, of Edinburgh, Scotland, has cast the statue from an original sculpture, which represents
novelist seated, dressed in plaid, with his favorite dog at his- feet. The base will be polished granite, and its cost is esmated at fifteen thousand dollars, which has been subscribed by Scotch residents of this city.
Application will soon be made to admit Thomas and Patrick Hart and John Redmond,
as
witnesses in Stokes' case, who,
nnQr„
NEW YORK,
mono, as wiLues»t ill ..—, .—T
much so that it is a disputed question
From the Sunday World.
Red-Line Romance.
Hundreds of newspapers have quoted the doleful Indian romance of the former Miss Barber, Treasury-clerk at Washington, who having married a Sioux chieftain during his visit to the National Capital and returned with liim to his tribe as a wife and a missionary, now comes back to civilization in a lonely and dismal plight, with such a tale of drudgery, abuse, and savage ignominy as reflects anything but honor upon the chivalry of the forest. The pitiful story is not without aptness as a commentary npon the vanity and self-delusion of young women who yearn to do extraordinary things and fancy themselves possessed of intellectual fitness for relations and adventure from which the wiser and more modest members of their sex shrink appalled but there is still an offset to it in a not
.. could not be sold at over [email protected]. and fancy themselves possessed of intel- BULK MEATS—Quiet but firmly held lectual fitness for relations and adventure shoulders nominally 5@5J4 clear sides fmm whinh the wiser and more modest 7^.
Ollb IOcid io a tin au vuoti. tv iv xjvsv v/8
leghany Valley and the uplands of Carlina, Georgia, and Alabama so vividly impressed the imagination of Miss Ayres, a cultivated aud wealthy lady of the Quaker City, that she adopted the idea of casting her future lot with the remnant of the old heroic tribe and devoting her life and fortune to their welfare. Kindred and friends remonstrated, of course but the lady was not to be
shaken
mission. Establishing a home in the
religious and educational interests of the
aimnla-hparted
in her resolution, and departed for In- TeiTe Haute SaYHlgS liilllK. diau Territory on her suddenly chosen
micsiuu. jjamuiwuuig xTotice ishereby given
beautiful Cherokee village of falequah, J\j
her immediate activity in furthering the ^ared»^m^
Deoole around her was
TERRE HAUTE, IND.: THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 18, 1872,
in the state. Colonel Downing's son, bright and handsome boy named Lewis, whose Indian mother had little capacity to rear him appreciatively, she adopted as her particular care, and lias since watched over his training and education as though he were her own. Not more than a year ago she presented him on his birthday with an elegant cottage overlooking the village, furnishing it, as for a young prince, with every adornment of artistic taste. It was at about the time of the presentation of this choice sift that the Indian wife of Colonel Downing died,' and in a few month thereafter, or not far from the present time, the chief rendered anew homage to the Lady Bountiful of his people, am* she did not disdain to accept it loyally Hence the former Philadelphia heiress is now
Queen
of the Cherokees, and as
proud and happy as any Governer's lady in the laud. Her story is in stroiia contrast with poor Miss Barber's, though beginning in nearly the same way but then it must be borne in mind that there is a vast difference between the savage, brute Sioux and the gentle^ Cherokees. The latter are civilized, with schools, churches, and an organized system of government, and the ehief comes of an ancestry honorable for eminent military service to the United States in the war of 1812, when their prowess received hearty praise in the dispatches of General Jackson. As a general thing, however, the romance of Indian life for American women does not exist outside of novels, and those who seek to find it in reality are far more likely to suffer with Miss Barber than to prosper with Miss Ayres.
From the Spirit of the Times.
Grant Men Preferring Monarchy. In special personal conversations with six different Grant men during the present week, the editor of this paper alluded to the dangers of the re-elective principle, and asked of each what was his
i„a- v,„vp been in the opinion on the subject. "Oh, the one-
since January las .. term principle is all humbug," was the
Detention. common answer. "Grant did not think A dispatch from Saratoga states that
so
it is not vet certainly known whether joinder. "Perhaps not," was the reply i- UUtif /snA rvAAl tan rvi Longfellow is entirely crippled or not.
Longfellow is entirely crippieu or au„.
His ankle is very badly swollen-so
was
if tonHnns fire broken or not, or the nire" was our reply "perhaps if the tendons are broken or not, or the pire," was our reply ii ^ni.fcwniion fmm the effects of would have no objection to giving your ankle is only swollen from the eflects or
the severe strain. Cooling liniments are yrant
July 18.—A special Wash- -^HAT
It
gives assurance that
Commissioner Douglass leaves Washington next week for the White Mountains, where he hopes to leave the ague and chills with which he has been suffering much during a year past. He will be absent about a.year.
President Guardin, of Costa Rica, arrived at this place, yesterday, from Aspinwall, on a visit to President Grant. He is accompanied by H. M. Keith, contractor for the Costa Rica Railroad, who intends
to
completing
purchase materials for
that road. After visiting
Grant, His Excellency will take a trip to Europe before returning to Costa Rica. NEW YORK, July 18.—During the week ending at noon, yesterday, the number of deaths in this city reached 1056. Being a decrease of 513 from previous week, and an excess of one hundred and ninety-nine over the corresponding week of 1871.
tln.u
before he was elected," was the re-
"but one good term deserves another,
and we thj-k that thepresidential terms
shou]d be terms of teu years."
wni
ington dispatch to the Times says that gheets? has been a puzzling question for the government of Spain has expressed years. A year's file of an ordinary four to this government" its confidence in cent daily is a serious obstruction in a fc moderately-sized house without a barn Minister Sickles.
attacjjed
he is the most acceptable representative ]atjy and gentleman were recently of the United States at that court, and is robbed in Judea by Arabs who took all Hiat thereDortsin the their clothing. They begged their capgratified to leain that the reports in return them a conv of the Londoi newspapers of his intended resignation are without foundation.
"That
L0Ujg Napoleon's first step to
MonarJhy„
being constantly applied, and the hope justance, "we think Monarchy is a betis expressed that he will be able to run ter system of government than the way things go on here now." again.
.««
men
Wellf„ sa
id
unhesitatingly in every
we do with the bjanlket-
The conundrum is answered.
tors to return them a copy of the London Times. The Arabs yielded to their request, and the pair, the gentleman attired in the regular issue, and the lady in the supplement, returned to Jerusalem. In the warm weather of the early summer the costume must have been at once light, airy, and pleasantly suggestive of home associations. Might not the blanket-sheets which subscribers throw away after glancing at the first page, be sent as clothing to the naked Feejeeans and Hotentots Let the good work at once be begun. Here is a new mission for the blanket-sheet press.
HERE is a piece of information which will rejoice the hearts of not only Mr. Bergh and his followers, but also of the pigeon shooters. The Denver Tribune has been shown ah artificial pigeon, so constructed as to soar like a thing of life. The wings are so arranged as to receive a violent motion from a spring compressed within a pedestal upon which the pigeon is placed and the thing is raired in the air by the pulling of a trigger. The specimen seen by the Tribune flew about 200 yards. This is a French invention, and will give sportsmen a chance to show their skill without making a massacre of the innocents.
A NUMBER of women in San Francisco have just started the Woman's Pacific Publishing Company, and had it duly incorporated with a capital of $25,000, all of which is distributed by the gentler sex. Its officers, superintendent and business agents are all women, its typesetting is done by women, and in fact all the work of the establishment, with a fee necessary exceptions is performed by lovely women.
TI1K MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. Chicago Market. CHICAGO, July 18. FLOUR—Fair local demand at §4.50@ 4.85 for spring extras.
WHEAT—Fair request No. 2 held at [email protected]. CORN—Dull and weak at 40)4@4l%c for No. 2.
OATS—Quiet at 27@28c for No. 2. RYE—Dull at 55@56c. BARLEY—Quiet and unchanged. HIGHWINES—Active and firmer at 88c. PORK—Yery quiet at $13.75, cash. LARD—Dull and nominal at 9£c. CATTLE—Dull and prices but little better than nominal.
HOGS—Active and 5c higher sales at [email protected] for medium to choice.
St. Louis Market. ST. LOUIS, July 18.
FLOUR—Quiet and firm for choice brands unchanged. WHEAT—Firmj?old, soarce No. 2 red, in elevator, nominally at [email protected]}£ new white, on levee in sacks, about $1.55@ 1.65.
CORN—Dull and easier No. 2 mixed, nominally at 40c in elevator white 49@ 50c.
OATS—Dull and drooping nominally, at 29c for No. 2, mixed in elevator. RYE—Quiet and unchanged. jn
BARLEY—Quiet and unchanged. HIGHWINES—87M@89. PORK—Dull job lots $13.00 round lots
BACON—Firmly held shoulders 6}4® clear rib 8% clear sides 8% hams
9
tfioi
remote page of our social history which 13%@14. embalms the much pleasanter aboriginal romance of that accomplished lady who 9%@10in^kegs^rrefined^ not long ago became the wife of the present chief of the Cherokees. Several years since when Col. Downing, the chieftain just mentioned, was speaking __ 1_ in LlVi rvV» -5 flio for his people in Philadelphia, the story he told of the former red lords of the Al-
LARD—Quiet at 8)£@9 in tierces and
DIVIDEND NOTICES.
Terre Hante & Indianapolis
RAILROAD CO.
SECRETARY'S OFFICE, TERSE HAUTE, July 8,1872.
riiHE Board of Directors have declared a dividend of six (0) per cent., free from Government tax, payable to Stockholders registered on the books of the Company on the 3lst day ol
MWestern
dividends payable at the office of
the Treasurer, in Terre liaute. on and alter July 15th. 1872. Bv order of the Board. W. H. BUCKINGHAM, Secretary.
m__ tJ itttpw fnlw luf 1 ft"/*?
TERRE HATTTE July 1st, 1872.
otice is herebygivenjttat the ^eesof the Bank have this day o! three per
Xerre Haute savings Bank l*
on
tain she attained a cousequence and In- interest from July Jst,~ fluence making her a beuificeut power*
an smns
productive of immeasurable good, and months k^EdfnSt under the friendship of the grateful chief-
CHINA AMD OLASSWABE.
GRATE STBARGAINS!
IN
CHINA, GLASS
AND
(lUEEXSWARE,
AT
THEO. STAHL'8, 15 Sou Hi Fourth St.
I h:ivo ju.--!. !vc:'ive.l a full line of Hope A Caller's cele'brateii
IltON STOHfE CHISfA Also, Havre-Shape Stone China,
Equaling fine China in appearance, A beaul stock of
Parian Lara and Bohemian Goods!
Also, a splendid stock of Goblets ahd Fruit Stands, Lamps, etc.: best quality of Silverplated andBritania Ware, Table Cutlery, Tea Trays, &c., which I now offer at greatly reduced prices. The public are respectfully invited to call and examine my new goods and very low prices before purchasing elsewhere.
THEO. STAHUL,
raar26dwly 15 Sontti Fonrtli Street.
FOUNDRY.
F. H. M'ELFRESH. J. BARNARD.
Phoenix Foundry
AND
MACHIJTE (SHOP!
McElfrcsli & Barnard,
Cor. of Ninth and Eagle Streets,
(Near the Passenger Depot,)
TERRE HAUTE, IND.,
MANUFACTURE
STEAM ENGINES,
Mill Machinery, House Fronts, Circ lar Saw Mills,
COAL SHAFT MACHINERY,
And all kinds of
IRON AXI BRASS CASTINGS,
Boilers, Smoke Stacks,
Breechings and all kinds of Sheet Iron Work. E A I I O
STEAM BAKERY.
Union Steam Bakery,
FRANK IIEOIG & BRO.,
Manufacturers of all kinds of
Crackers, Cakes, Bread AN1D CANDY!
Dealers in
Foreign and Domestic Fruits, FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES,
LA FA YETTE STREET,
Between the two Railroads. Terre Hattte, Indlnnnl
RAILROAD.
Take the New and Reliable Route
TO CHICAGO.
Tlie Indianapolis, Peru and Chicago Kailway Co.
Are now running Two Through Express Trains Daily to Chicago via Michigan City,
change of cars,
A? Michigan City for Niles, Saginaw, Kalamazoo, Lansing, Holland, Grand Rapids, Muskegan, and all points in Michigan.
At Laporte for Elkhart, South Bend and Goshcn^ru
fQr Fort
Wayne, Toledo and Detroit.
At Bunkerhill for Marion and Points Ea^tAt Kokomo for Logansport and points West. Bus-All Night Trains are provided with the new improved and luxurious Woodruff Parlor and Rotunda Sleeping Coaches. ear Baggage checked through to all points. p. p. WADE, Gen'l Ticket Agent.
A. B. SOUTH ABO, Ass't Gen'l Supt. G. D. HAND, Passenger Agent. feDiw-iy
WINES.
O. EPPELEf,
DEALER IN
Fine Wines and Liquocs!
Kfo. 13 Soutli Fourth St., jelldly 1 iii »TERRE HAUTE. IND
CLOTHINQ.
"XeSang-ER
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
MENS', YOUTHS' AND BOYS' CLOTHING, And Gents' Furnishing Goods,,,
»1 OPERA MOUSE, /v'
*_ Terre Haute, Indiana.
FEED ST0BE.
J. A. BURGAN, Dealer in Flour, FOCHI, Baled Hay, Corn Oats, and all kinds 01 Seeds,
NORTH THIRD ST., NEAR MAIN Li TBRRR ITATTTE, IND.
FEEDdelivered
charge
pas(. Ux
of two dollars and upwards
_A.4f.ij shall' ha^e been on dep osit for three
olUwni ^credited
22,i?t
in 'wrong
and:bear
-usurer.
in all parts of the city tree
ld6m
gAS HTTSB.
GA3 AND STEAM FITTER,
1— OHIO STREET, feayL Bet. 5tb and 9th,
JOB PRINTING.
JUiSRCAWTS'
AND
BANKERS'
O I N I N
And Blank Books.
E
DAILY GAZETTE
JOB OFFICE
Ii prepared to print everything pertaining to
your wants in this line, such as
Bill Heads, Letter Heads,
Dray Tickets, Note Heads,
Bills of Lading, Receipts,
Blank Checks, Drafts,
Bills of Exchange, Notes,
Business Cards, Envelopes, etc.
Having made large additions to our stock ot
Poster Type, we do not hesitate to say that we
have the
DONE PKOJIP n.T
BEST POSTER OFFICE
in the Stale. "We can do ai.yt.hing from tlifi
S A E S O W E
TO THE BEST
Thrco «Slioet Poster!
AND WILL DUPLICATE
St. Louis, Cincinnati or Indianapolis Prices.
A LSO, ALL STYLES OF' f|
BLANK BOOKS!
Ruled to order of plain and intricate pat
i.
i"-
terns.
Journals,
Ledgers,
untftou
making close connections:
At Chicago for Milwaukee. Janesville, Madison, LaCrosse, St. Paul, Rockford, Dunleith, Dubuque, Peoria, Galesburg, Quincy, Burlington, Rock Island, Des Moines, Omeha, and San
Day Books,
Cash Books,
.... vi
Bill Books,
Note Books,
Certificates of Stock Books, 'V,
AND ALL OTHER
Books intheCountingHouse.
OIJB books
Are made of the very best materials, from a
large and varied stock procured from the first
mills in the country, and no pains will be
spared to give entire satisfaction to our cus
tomers. Orders from Merchants or Bankers at a dis
tance will receive prompt attention, and will
be executed as soon as ii superintended in per
son.
LATHES. ETC.
WOOVi MOM-*' CO.,
Manufacturers of
IT*.TVQIIVE LATHESj From 161° 100 inch Swing, and from 6 to 3ru-* feet long. ..
GUN
Terre Hante, Inrt.
PLANEIIS- .J
To Plkne from 4 to 30 feet long, fron'*^/'to inches wide.
NASMYTH'S STEAM HAMMERS.
MACHINERY. Mill Wojk, Shafting and Hangers, Patent Self-oiling Box. Warehouse, 107 Liberty street, New York City. Manufactory, Junction Shop, Worce&fceJ ®fasacbusette.
«8§f|8
NO. 40.
REAL ESTATE COLUMN.
Wharton & Keeler.
FOB SALE!
DWELLINGS, CUT-LOTS!
AND
l^I.-83'ISS!
MEl'MAJIICS—Secure for yourselves homes. You can do it with the money that you fire paying out annually for rent. Call and see us.
YOUNG MEN—A small sum paid down aud the balance as you can save it from your earnings, will secure for you a lot in almost any part of the city. You will not miss tjje money, and in a few years your lot will sell for double its cost price.
FARMERS—Till your own land. If you are industrious you can buy on good terms. See special inducements below
200 acre Farm at 820 per acre.
380 acre Farm at #15 per acre—prairie and timber.
10 acres near town at $80 per acre.
30 Improved Farms at from 825 to 8100 per acre.
21 Farms to trade for City Property.
BARGAIN.—House and Lot on North Fifth street—six rooms. Price, #1,100.
FOR SALE.—New House and Half Lot. Price, 5750. ELEGANT new 1% story House, with six rooms. Best bargain in the city. One block from Main on
Seventh street. Price, 83,000.
HOUSE AND LOT—On Eagle, between Sixth and Seventh streets. Eight rooms, well, cistern and stable. Cheap at 83,500.
LOTS, LOTS, LOTS!
FOR SALE—Lots in Jones' Addition, on South Sixth and Seventh streets. Prices very low. Terms to suit purchasers.
FOR SALE—Lots in Jewett's Addition. Terms 10 per cent, down, balance on long ime Very few left.
EARLY'S ADDITION—A limited number oi Lots in Early's Addition are now offered at great inducements. Apply at once.
OUT-LOTS—In all parts of the city.
LOST—Hundreds of dollars, by those who purchase property before calling on WHARTON & KEELER.
Opera Stock For Sale!
N. B.—Through our "EMPIRE REAL ESTATE AGENCY" (being a co-operative system of Agencies throughout Indiana, IUinoies, Missouri and Kansas) we can sell or trade you lands in all parts Of the West, or give information free of cost.
Fire Insurance Companies.,
UNDERWRITERS, NEW YORK. Assets $4,000,000. ANDES, CINCINNATI. Assets 2,800,000.
IMPERIAL., LONDON.
Assets (Gold) 8,000,000.
Life Insurance Companies.
MUTUAL LIFE, NEW YORK. Assets f50,000,000 TRAVELERS' LIFE AND ACCIDENT,
HARTFORD.
Assets 2,000,000. WHARTON & KEELER, Agents.
MEDICAL.
.The Great World Tonic
AND
System Renovator!
What the Public Should Know.
WABASHThese
:r
BITTERS BlttefB are a purely vegetable Tonic, the component
Drugs having been selected with
the greatest care as to their medicinal Properties. They are no cheap compound prepared with common whisky.
ABASH BITTERS Just the thing for morning lassitude and depression of spirits caused by late hours or over-
work.
ABASH BITTERS Are an infallible remedy for Dyspepsia, Heart Burn, Ac., imparting tone and impulse to the di« gestive organs, by their healthy action on the Stomach, Liver and Kidneys.
WABASH
BITTERS Taken
and a cheerful and contented disposition.
ITf ABASH BITTERS if Take it if want pure, rich, electrical blood—blood that invigorates your system, and gives the glow of health to your cheek.
ABASH BITTERS Are a sure Preventative of a Chil and Intermitent Fevers.
ABASH BITTERS Cannot be excelled as a morning Appetizer, Promoting good Digestion, and are infallible for all the manifold diseases arising from a deranged and debilitated stomach.
WABASHAre
BITTERS the best Bitters in theworld for purifying the Blood, cleans ing~the Stomach, gently stimu
lating the Kidneys and acting as a mild cathartic.
»R.
ARNAUD, Sole Propric of WABASH BITTERS, south-
I A X/j Sole Proprietor and Manufacturer
east corner of Ohio and Fifth Sts.
Terre flfaute, Ind. aug26tf3
OMNIBUS
Omnibus and
W
Transfer
"W\G CKEJ IiR,
And
Paring,
itUy
Co,
GRIFFITH ¥ilST5 Propr's. OFFICE—]Vo* 143 Main Street*
will attend to all calls left in call-boxes, promptly) for Depots, Balls or Pic-Nics,
convey
passengers to any part of the city
aF reasonable rates. Also, baggage promptly rolled tor, and delivered to any part of the city. Teams furnished for heavy hauling, on short notice. Please give us a call. aprfdtf GRIFFITH & GIST.
WBSNCEES.
A. G. COES &
Successors to L. dE A. O. Goes,)
A S S
Hi" Manufacturers of the Genuine COES SCREW With A G. Coes' Patent Lock Fender
Established in 1832.
j). if. WMITTKMORE ii'a £$ Manufacturer of
f|
FABERf
Coring A Slicing Machinc.. Worcester, Massachue"
