Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 16 July 1885 — Page 5

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A A# XUTCn —Ladles aod gentlemen to «kt. jjjf Mil I £Umlight, pleasant employment at

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own homes (distance no objection) work sent by mail to $6 a day can be quietly made no canvassing. Please address at nee GLOBE MFO. CO., Boston, Mass., box 6344.

No. 14024. State of Indiana, county of Vigo. in the Vigo Circuit Court, May term 1886 Martha A. Kennedy vs, John P. Kennedy,

Be it known, that on the 14th day of Ma* 1886, it was ordered by the Court that the Clerk notify by publication said' John P. Kennedy as non resident dofendant of this action against him. Said defendant is therefore hereby notified o| the pendency of said action against him and that the same will stand for trial the 10th day of July, the same being May term of said court in the year 1885.

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MKRBIL N. SMITH.

D. N. Taylor for Plft.

APPLICATION FOR LICENSE. Notice is hereby given that I will apply toi the Boaid of Commissioners of Vigo county at their next term for a license to

sell

intoxicating liquors

in a less quantity than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on the premises, for a period of one year. My place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be drank and sold is located at No. 13 north Third street between Main and Cherry.

JOSEPH ROUGIEB. I

Application for License

Notice is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of vigo county, Indiana, at tbeir August term, for a license to sell intoxicating liquors in a less quantity than a quart at a time, with the privilege of

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uowinc the same to be drank on my premises for one year. My place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank is located on lot 9 in Baylesa addition to the town of Macksville, Vigo countv, Indiana.

DAVID W. BATLESS.

Application for License.

Notice is hereby given that we -will apply to the Board of Commissioners of igo county, Indiana at their next special session, for a license to sell intoxicating liquors in a less quantity than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the Bame to be drank on our premises for a period of one year. Our place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank are looated at No. 615 Main street, on apart of outlot No 5o, in the city of Terre Haute, Harrison township, Vigo county, state of Indiana.

JOHN S. PETERS, HABVEY L. BOSTON.

Application for License.

Notice is hereby given that we will apply tc the Board of Commissioners of Vigo countv Indiana, at their next term, for a license l« sell intoxicating liquors in a less quantity than a quart at a time, with the privilege or allowing the same to be drank on my premises for a period of one year. Our place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank is located at No. 300 south Fourth street. Terre Haute, Harrison township, Vigo county, Indiana.

JOHN C. BROWN, BEVERLY W. BBQWN.

Application for License.

Notice is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo county, Indiana, at their next term, for a license to sell intoxicating liquOre in a less quantity han a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises for a period of one year. My place or business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank is located at 48 feet east end of original lots 65 and 66 of the town, now city of Terre Haute, at «M9, .331 Ohio street.

THOMAS W. KINSEB.

Application for License.

Notice is hereby gtfven that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo county, Indiana, at their June term, for a license to sell intoxicating liquors in a less quantity than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my prem- I ises for one year. My place of business and the premises whereon Baid liquors are to be sold and drank is located on the northwest corner of Eighth and Poplar streets, in the Second ward, in Terre Haute, Harrison township, Vigo county, Indiana.

C., KUHLMAN.

HtfRIFF'SALE.

By virtue of an order of sale on attachment Issued from the Vigo Superior court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of William Prevo and William Morris and against Henry Miller Jr. defendant's undivided one fifth (1-5) interest in and to the following decribed real estate situated in Vigo county, Indiana, to wit:

Lots numbered three (3) and four (4) of fractional section thirty-five (36) township ten [10] north, range eleven [11] west, containing one hundred and fifty-four one hundredths (100 54100] aores in said county and state and on

SATURDAY, the 1st DAY OF AUGUST 1886, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. K. and 4 o'clock p. M. of said day, at the Court House door In Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the atJKve described Real Estate, together with nil privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cosh, and upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said order of sole and costs, I will then and there offer the fee simple in and to said Real Estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same.

This 9th day of July, 1886. JOHN CLEABY, Sheriff. Stimson & Stimson, Atty. Printer's fee, 16.60.

S

HERIFF'S SALE

By virtue of an execution on transcript issued from the Vigo Circuit Court, to me directed and delivered in favor of Samuel Stone, and against John J. Mayer, I have levied upon the following described real estate situated in Vigo county, Indiana, to wit:

Lot number one [1] in John J. Mayer's subdivision of lot number fifteen [15] in Preston's subdivision of the west half [i4 of the northeast quarter [l4]of section twenty-seven [27] township twelve [12] north, range nine [9] west, in said county and state, and on

SATURDAY THE 25TH DAY OF JULY, 1886, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day, at the Court House door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said execution and costs, I will then and there offer the fee simple in and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same.

This 2nd day of July, 1885. JOHN CLKABT Sheriff. W. W. Rumsey, Atty. Printers Fee $5.80.

S

HERIFF'S SALE.

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By virtue of an execution issued from the Vigb Circuit Court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of Emaline L. Armstrong for use of William H. Stewart, and aga net Austin Bell, I have levied upon defendant's undivided interest in and to the following described real estate situated in Vigo county, Indiana, to wit:

The southeast quarter [iy of section ten [10] and the southeast quarter pi] of the northeast quarter [K] of section ten

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Notice of Appointment.

Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed administrator of the estate of Thomas Thompson, deceased,late of Riley Town ship, Vigo County,Indiana. The estate is probably solvent All parties holding just claims against the estate are requested to ftle them with the clerk of the Circuit Court.

Stimson &• Stimson, Attorneys Office 3'20i OMo street. DAVID M. WAIABCK,

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HERIFF'S SALE.

Admininist rator.

By virtue of nn execution on transcript issued from the Vigo Circuit court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of Sunuel Stone and against John J. Mayer, I have levied upon the following described real estate situated in Vigo county, In dianla to wit:

Lot number two (2) in John J. Mayer's subdivision of lot number fifteen (16) in Preston's sub-division of the west half (V4) of the north east quarter (li) of section twenty-sevon (27) township twelve (12) north range nine (9) west in said county and state and on

SATURDAY, the 25th day of JULY, 1886, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M. and 4 o.'clock p. M. of said day, at the court house door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceedlug seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said execution and costs, I will then and there offer the fee simple in'and to said real estate to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same.

Tills 'iniday of July, 1885. JOHN CLEABY, Sheriff. W. W. Ruxnsey, Attorney. Printers fee, $6.00.

S

HERIFF'S SALE.

By virtue of an execution issued from the Vigo Superior court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of State of Indiana, ex. rel. Andrew Grimes, Auditor of Vigo county, Indiana, and against Newton Rogers, Hemsley Simmons, John Fuller, Jacob Orth, Henry C. Robinson, William W. Watkins, Ebenezer 0. Edmunds, Ransom Rogers, Peter Lyon, George A. Payne, Ebenezer Paddock, John M. Watson, Isaac Cottrell, Theory A. Clearwater, Henry Miller, Fleury F. Keith, Hugh M. Brown, William Bell, Martin Hollinger, William R. Mercer, William E. McLean, Patrick Shannon, Eilert Harmes, John S. Beach and George D. Wood, I have levied upon the following described real estate situated in Vigo county, Indiana, to wit:

The south quarter of the northeast quarter [J4] and the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter [H] in section twelve [12] township thirteen [13] north, range nine [9] west, in said county and state, and on

SATURDAY THE 18TH DAY OF JULY 1885, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. in. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day, at the Court House door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said execution and costs, I will then and there offer the_ fee simple in and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same,

This 25th day of Jane, 1886. JOHN CLXART Sheriff. McNutt & McNutt, Attys. Printer's Fee (7.60.

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HERIFF'S SALE.

By virtue of an order of sale issued from the Vigo Superior court, to me directed and delivered in favor of Elizabeth Kuehu and against Louise Schickedauz, William Pahmeyer, the unknown heirs of Emile Fuster, Sophia Brand, Henry Brand, Amelia Rottman, Emma Packer, Charles Packer, Joseph Rottman, William Rottman. Mary Rumbley, George Rumbley, Edward Roach and Mary Roach, I am ordered to sell the following real estate situated in Vigo county, Indiana, to

Lot number thirty-five [36] in the sub-division of all that part of the west half [Vil of the north half [V»] of the south east quarter pi] of section twenty seven [27] in township twelve [12] north of range nine [9] west, which lies west of the Wabash and Erie canal according to the recorded plat made by Algy Dean in Vigo county, Indiana, and on

SATURDAY, the 18th DAY OF JULY, 1886, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. X, and 4 o'clock p. M. of said day, at the court House door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said order of sale and costs, I will then and there offer the fee simple in and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same. •This 25th day of June, 1S85.

11}20

JOHN CIJCABY, Sheriff.

KLXISER & KLEISEB, attorneys. Printers fee $7:20.

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HERIFF'S SALE.

By virtue of an order of sale Issued from the Vigo Circuit Court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of Eve Ann Stakeman and against Louise Schickedang, Sophia Brand, Henry Brand, Joseph Rottman, William Rottman, Emma Packer, Charles Packer, Mary Rumbley, George Rumbley, Amelia Rottman, William Pahmeyer, Emile Fuster, Edward Roach and Mary Roach, I am ordered to sell the following described real estate situated in Vigo county, Indiana, to wit:

Lot number thirty-six [86] in the subdivision of all that part of the west half ['/J] of the north half [V4J of the southeast quarter [34] of section twenty-seven [27] township twelve [12] north,

range nine [9] west, which lies west of the Wabash and Erie canal, according to the recorded plat made by Algy Dean in said county and state, and on SATURDAY, THE 18TH DAY OF JULY, 1885, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M. and 4 o'clock p. x. of said day, at the Court House door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described Real Estate, together with all privileges and appurtences to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said order of sale and costs, I will then and there offer the fee simple in and to said Real Estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the samo.

This 25th day of June, 1886. JOSH CLEABY, Sheriff. A. M. Black Atty. Printer's fee. $7.00.

gHERIFF'S SALE.

and the west half

[H] of the northwest quarter [i4] of section fourteen [14], all in township thirteen [13] north, range eight [8] west, in said county, and state, and on

SATURDAY, THE 25th DAY OF JULY, 1886, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M. and 4 o'clock JF. M. of said day, at the Court House door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described Real Estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said execution and costs, I will then and there offer the fee simple in and to said Real Estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same.

This 2d day of *uly, 1885. JOHN CLEABY, Sheriff. L. D. Thomas, Atty. Printer's fee, 16.20.

D. S. Danaldson is slowly recovering from his long sickness.

By virtue of a Venditioni Exponas Execution issued from the Vigo Circuit court to me directed and delivered in favor of Crawford Fairbanks and against Louis Smyser, John Milton and Matthew Bridenthal I am ordered to sell the following described real estate situated in Vigo county, Indiana, to wit:

The west half of the south west quarter of section thirteen (13) and the south east quarter ()4) of the south east quarter (4) of section fourteen (14) and the undivided one fourth (14) of the east half ($4) of the south east quarter (H) of section twenty-two (22) all in township thirteen (13) north, of range eight (8) west in said county and state and on

SATURDAY, the 1st day of AUGUST, 1886. between the hours of 10 o'clock A. X. and 4 o'clock p. x. of said day, at the court house door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said execution and costs, I will then and there offer the fee simple in and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same.

This 9th day of July, 188(i. JOHN CLKABT, Sheriff. Hendrick & Williams, Attys. Printer's fee, 16.60.

APPLICATION FOB LICENSB. Notioe is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo county, at their June term for a license to sell intoxicating liquors in a less quantity than a quart at a time with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises for a period of one year. My place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank is .ocated commencing thirty degrees south of west sixty rods five feet and eight inches from the northeast corner of the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section eight (8) in township number thirteen (13) north of range seven (7) west. Thence, running thirty degrees south of west sixty-five feet, thence thirty degrees west of north one hundred and twenty Jest thence, due east sixty feet thence thirty degrees east ot south one hundred and twenty feet to the face of beginning containing one fourth of an aore of land be the same more or lead. In Coal Bluff, Nevlns township, Vigo county, Indiana.

J. H. Hum.

THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE,

Notice of Sale of Real Estate. Notioe is hereby given that by virtue of an order of the Yigo Circuit Court, made in cause No. 13,060, William H. Crowder, et al., against John Banholzer, et. al., the undersigned receiver hereto* fore appointed in said cause, will offer for sale, on the premises to be sold, between the hours of 9 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m. of the 17TH DAY OF AUGUST, 1885, the following real estate situated in the county of Sullivan in the state of Indiana, to wit: The northwest quarter of the southeast quarter and the north ha]f of the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of sec tion 30, township 9 north, range 8 west, containing sixty acres. Also, two an one-half acres, beginning 6 chains and 8 links east and 6 chains and 31inks south of the northwest corner of the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section 34, township 9 north, range 9 west, and running thence south 11^° west 6 chains parallel with the railroad and 40 feet east of the center thereof thence east

south 5 chains thence north

11%° east 6 chains, and thence west llj| north 5 chains to the place of beginning. Said two and one-half acre tract will be first offered for sals, and if the same shall sell for a sum sufficient to pay the amount which the same is ordered sold to pay, including the oosts of sale, then the said sixty acres will not be sold.

The terms of sale are cash. THOMAS B. EATON. Receiver.

Drainage.

RDKB TO PAT ASSKSSMXNTS.

All persons having lands assessed with benefits (including the trustoM of.Prairieton and Prairie Creek Township, assessed for benefits to highways therein) for the construction of the Greenfield Bayou Levee and Ditches,situated in Prairie Creek and Prairieton township, Vigo County, Indiana, are hereby notified that on the 16th day of November, 1884,1 made a ratable assessment of fifteen per cent, of said assessed benefits, and on the 10th day of May, 1886,1 made a ratable assessment of ten per cent, of said asseesed|bene fits, and on July 7th, 1886, 1 made a further ratable assessment often per cent, of said assessed benefits, and that all such persons, SD assessed with benefits (who have not paid all of said three ratable assessments) are hereby required to pay me the same, at the office of W. W. Rumsey, 309Vi Ohio street, Terre Haute, Indiana, all of said three ratable assessments of said assessed benefits, on, or before the 11th day of August, 1886,the same being neoess try for the construction of said Levee and Ditches by me as ordered by the Vigo Superior Court. The state provides for Attorneys fees when suit is brought.

July 8th, 1886.

S

,' JoHN«Ainm*.

Drainage Commissioner.

HERIFF'S SALE.

Bj virtue of an execution issued from the Vigo Superior court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of Hippolyte Pierrard and against John McCabe I have levied upon the following described real estate situated in Vigo county, Indiana, to wit:

Lots numbered twenty-eight [28] twenty-nine [29] and six [6] feet off the east side of lot number twenty-seven [27] in Eshman and Ohm's sub-

SATURDAT, THE 8th DAY OF AUGUST, 1886, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M.and 4 o'clock p. u. of said day, at the court house door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said execution and costs, I will then and there offer the fee simple in and to said real estate, tn the highest bidder for ca«h to satisfy the same.

This 16th day of July, 1885. u"t JOHN CUEABT, Sheriff. Halliday & Byrd, Attys. Printer's fee, $6 00.

^HERIFF'S SALE.

By virtue of an order of sale issued from the Vigo Circuit court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of Benjamin F. Swafford and against Thomas Vessels I «m ordered to sell the following described real estate situated in Vigo county, Indiana, to wit:

The south end of the northwest fractional quarter [&] section four [4] township twelve [12] north, range ten [10] west, containing fifty-seven [67] acres more or less, In Sugar Creek township, said county and state, and on SATURDAY, THE 8th DAY OF AUGUST, 1886, between the hours of 10 o'clock •. M. and 4 o'clock p. M. of said day, at the Court House door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize the sum sufficient to satisfy said order of sale and costs, I will then and there offer the fee simple in and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same.

This 16th day of July, 1886. JOHN CUEABT, Sheriff. H. D. Roquet, Atty. Printer's fee, (6.60.

S

HERIFF'S SALE.

By virtue of an order of sale on attachment issued from the Vigo Circuit court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of Margaret Reeves tnd against Sarah Slavens I am ordered to sell defendant's undivided one-fifth [1-6] interest in and to the following described real estate situated in Vigo county, Indiana, to wit:

The southeast quarter [H of the northeast quarter [U] of section twenty-nine [29] township twelve [12] north, of range eight [8] west, in said county and btate, and on

SATURDAY, the 8th day of AUGUST, 1885, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. X. and 4 o'clock p. x. o* said day, at the Court House door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described Real Estate, together with aljl privileges and appurtenances to the same belong ing, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, tnd upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said order of sale and costs, I will then and there offer the fee simple in and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same.

This 16th day of July, 1885. JOHN CUABI, Sheriff: S. C. Stimson, Atty. Printer's fee, $5.60.

THE MARKETS.

ASSOCIATED nns TUBOBAMB.

N*w YORK July 15—WHEAT Beoeipts, 166,600, opened lower, later recovered from decline and advanced leading to more activity No 1 white nominal sales 496,000 No 2 red Aug. 995£ §11 00X 872,000. do Sept. 1 01%gl 02% 296,000 do Oct. 103%gl 04£ 16,000, do xay 114ft.

CORN—Receipts 106,70t, J4@ft lower, more active mixed western spot 49@64c future 62ft@54c sales, 960,000.

OATS—Beoeipts 99,000, a shade lower western. 37 @42 sales, 160,OOC ',

BEEF—8teady new extra 11 Oo. PORK—Firm: new mess 11 26^1160. LARD—Higher and firm steam rendered, 6 86. BUTTER—Firm, fair demand for ohoice western 96$19.

SUGAR—Steady crushed, 7 powdered, 6%@ H".granulated6i4. MOLASSES—Dull and weak.

EGGS—Western, 18H@14^.

TOUCDO, July 15—WHEAT Dull and firmer No 2 red cash or July, 92%c Aug., 93*0 osked Sept. 94V4c: Oct., 96c No 2 soft, 9b@l 00.

CORN—Dull No 2 cash or July 49 Aug., 49Kc Sept. 49&c. OATS-Quiet No 2 cash 33tf Aug. 27 bid Sept 36Hc bid.

LIVE 8TOCK MARKET.

CHICAGO July 14-HOGS Receipts 18,000, market active and strong 10«3l5c higher: light, 4 35@4 65: p°i^425@?fj)4

255 HEAVY

P«*ing and ship-

CATTLE—Receipts, 6,200 market slow: natives 4 70@6 00 butohera, 200&4 60 stackers2 90@4 30 Texans 2 00@4 00.

SHEEP—Receipts 2,000 market steady, common 1 75@2 75 good 3 00@4 25.

CINCINNATI July 16—FLOUR Firmer family, 4 20©4 50 fancy, 4 65@4 90. WHEAT—Strong No 2 red 97® 100.

CORN—Quiet No 2 mixed, 48 .. OATS—Easier: No 2 mixed, 86.

1

BYE—Firm No 2, 61c. PROVISIONS—Firmer with an advancing ten' dency.

WHISKEY—Steady tl 18-

'i4

CHICAGO, July 16—All the markets closed excited and higher, owing to the warlike character of the foreign news 88H. cash 897?, Aug 92c, Sept.

CORN— 46*c, cash 48ft, Aug 46«4c, Sept. OATS— SIX, cash 26ft, Aug. 25ft@25» Sept. BYE— 58c. FLAXSEED— 1 26. PORK- 10 40, cash 10 42V( Aug. 10 50@10 52V&. Sept.

LARii— 6 66, cash 6 70, Aug. 6 77V4, Sept. WHISKEY— 116. WILMINGTON TURPENTINE MARKET. WrLxiNOTON. DEL. July 15— TURPENTINE— Quiet 36c.

THE 1ERRE HAUTE MARKETS GAZETTE OFFICE, July

15

The following are the paying prices corrected to-day: ,,

WHEAT—Fultz, 85c Mixed, 86c Med., 95c. CORN—White. 46c per bu mixed, 43c per bu. OATS—35c. BUTTER—Choice selections, 8c. 1 EGGS-8C. POULTRY Chickens, 7c per lb h«ns, 7c per lb.

FEATHERS—Live goose, 40c. iff,» RAGS—11.10 per 100 lbs. HAY—$9.00 per ton. OLD IRON—wrought, 45c: heavy cast 35c light cast. 26c.

HIDES, green trim'd, 6VJ: green salted, 8c: dry flint, 12c: dry salt, 10c: kip salt, 8c: calf salt, 10c. TALLOW, 5c. 5

SHEEP PELTS, 15@75c. V.I 4 WCHEESE, 6@13c. WOOL, medium assorted, lOglSc: extra 164$18: cut, 20@26c coarse and medium combing 17@20c cotted and burry 10@15.

TERBE HAULL: LIVE STOCK MARKET DAVIS STOCK YARDS July 16 Supply light market dull. GcKd to choice shipper $ 4 80A6 26 Fair to medium 4 OOff 4 0 Good to choice butcher 4 2604 50 Fair to medium 3 25f§4 00 Common .. 2 5663 U0 Bulls 2 75@3 26 Cows and calves or Springers 36 00645 00 Veal calves 6 00«6 00 Hogs 3 8064 00 Sheep 3 00@8 26

T. .a

Indianapolis Market.

t"J"

I IHDIAMAPOUS July 15 CATTLE—Receipts, 400 shipments, 300. Hardly enough local here to make a market. Prices unchanged. Few common grades, left over. Good to choice shippers 96 30@5 76 Fair to medium shippers 4 75@5 10 Common shippers 4 2t§4 fl Stackers 3 00@4 00 Good to choice cows and heifers 3 60&4 60 Fair to medium cows and heifers.... 3 00@3 40 Common cows and heifers 2 00A2 75 Bulls common to good 2 60@3 60 Veals, common to good 4 00@6 00 Milkers, common to good 20 00@46 00 •HOGS—Receipts, 4,200head shipments, 1,600. Quality good market active closing firm All sold. Select light 4 60C4 66 Select common light 4 35@4 46 Pigs common light 4 00@4 36 Heavy roughs 3 50@4 00

SHEEP—Receipts, 400 shipments, 3 60. But few here. Quality only fair market slow and unchanged. Good to choice $ 3 1063 60, Common to medium 2 25@2 86 Spring lambs, common to good 3 5o«4 60 Bucks per head 2 00@3 00

'Application for License

Notioe is hereby given that I wuij apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo county, Indiana, at their next term, for, a license to sell intoxicating liquors in a less quantity than a quart at & time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on our premises for one year. My place of business and the premises whereon

Baid

liquors are to be sola and drank is located on 548 north Fourth street in the Fourth ward, in Terre Haute, Harrison Township, Yigo County,,

DANIEL MCCARTHY.

f/« §azette.

THURSDAY, JULY 16,1885.-

THE

board of equalization will con­

clude its labors this week.

1656.—John J. Ferref vs S. W. O'Brien et al., on note. A. M. Black.

THE WAK CLOUD.

The Cause of Its Ominous Appearance. LONDON, July 15.—The downward tendency in the stock market today was accelerated by rumors that the government had received news confirming the report received by the Times of a Russian advance on Zulficar pass. The news of this hostile demonstration on the part of the Russians together with Lord Randolph Churchill's assertion in the House of Commons last evening that England would assist the Ameer if he asked for assistance, has created much excitement.

THE PALL MALL GAZETTE.

The Investigation of Its Proofs Begun. LONDON, July 15.—The Lord Mayor, in accordance with the government decision as announced by the Home Secretary in Parliament yesterday not to prosecute the Fall Mall Gazette, has discharged the large number of newsboys who have been under arrest for several days awaiting trial on a charge of selling alleged obscene literature. The

Right Hon. and Most Rev. Edward White Benson, Archbishop of Canterbury and Primate of England, the Right Rev. Frederick Temple, D. D., Bishop of London His Eminence Henry Edward, Cardinal Manning, Archbishop of Westminister, and the Hon. Samuel Morley, Member of Parliament for Bristol, met this afternoon at the Mansion House and began their work of special private inauiry into the evidence upon which the Pall Mall Gazette bases its charges of iniquity in London.

The Lord Mayor and the City

Recorder were by invitation present at the meeting. The Globe this afternoon says it fears that purveyors of objectionable literature may now (That the government has decided not to prosecute the Pall Mall Gazette) reckon on impunity. "Unless" observes the Globe, "there were technical reasons to allow the authors of the late gigantic outrage to escape, it is hard to see how any like offense can be punished hereafter, if, the publishers profess to be animated by a burning seal for public morality.

SENATOR YOORHIES.

Peroration of His Great Speech at Greenville, Tennessee,

jf**' "3"

In Defense of Captain Johnson, on Trial for Murder There.

Senator Yoorhees speech in defense of Captain Johnson on trial at Greenville, Tenn., for killing Henry has at last be published in pamphlet form. It is by many considered the greatest speech before a jury ever made by the Senator. The peroration was a wonderful piece of oratory. It is printed herewith: "Gentlemen, when you render your verdict, as you soon will, it will ring joyously through the world. I have not a doubt what it will be. For the last 200 years, since the dissolute and debauched reign of Charles II. of. England, no man freeborn and vested with the rights of citizenship has ever been punished in an English-speaking nation for slaying in good faith the seducer of his wife, daughter or sister. After the restoration in 1660 and during the reign which followed, it is matter ot history that female virtue was a mockery and a jest. The wife, the sister, the daughter were open to the approach and solicitation of the adulterer and the seducer. A carnival of immorality, a banquet of lust succeeded, during which the injured husband was the sport of sarcasm, the jest of the clown, while the successful seduoer and the lady of licentious pleasure constituted the hero and heroine of •ublic and private life, of the parlor, the all-room and the stage. The Counts followed their King and the fashion he made for the times. If a manly husband slew a privileged and presumptuous scoundrel for dishonoring the bed made sacred by marriage vows, he was punished. "But since that degraded, bawdy reign, both in England and America, the husband who fights an honest battle for the purity of home has been sheltered in safety, not only by the common law of England as molded by custom, but by tne common law of mankind as written in the verdicts of juries and derived from the inspiration of the Most High. "Home is of divine sanction and origin, and he who kills the destroyer of a home has an especial protection, both human and divinfe. There is not a verdict of an American jury in our 100 years as an organized people wherein or whereby a husband who, in good faith, slew the man who has defiled his wife ha^een punished. The father who slays the seducer of his daughter has some protection. The brother who kills the seducer of his sister can never be punished. The voice that comes down from the ancient days of Israel is ringing now just as freshly over the world as when Jacob rebuked his hot-headed sons, Simeon and Levi, for slaying the abductor and seduoer of their sister Dinah. Jacob was old, and in his fear he said: "Xe have troubled me to make me stink among the inhabitants of the land, among the Canaanites and Peruzzites and I being few in number, they shall gal her themselves together against me and I shall be destroyed, I and my house.' Notwithstanding, however, the alarming picture he drew before his sons, fresh and bloody from the slaughter of the seducer of their sister, they answered, doubtless with their hands on their swords: 'Should he deal with our sister as a harlot?' Then, as if God was pleased with what had happened, Jacob journeyed from that country in safety to another, and the fear of God fell on his war-like enemies not one lifted his finger agafnst him or his. The sons of Jacob smote the adulterer, the seducer of their sister and the daughter of their aged father, and then went in safety. God's power and influence falling upon the surrounding troops, already for assault and holding them while Israel went their way. "Should he deal with our sister as with a harlot?" How just and powerful that expression! It has survived the chasm of the ages, and stirs your hearts this moment as it did the hearts of men in the remote and illimitable past. It embodies an eternal truth,that the home shall be pure and protected it contains the primary and vital element of civilization it was the key-note utterances in behalf of human nappiness, elevation, culture, refinement and Christian purification. It was the same old cry, with the antiquity and authority of God upon it, on which Captain Johnson spoke and acted. The one burning, throbbing, incessant, uuappeaseable cry of the heart was: "Shall he treat my wife in life and in death as a harlot?" I have known the father to bathe the upturned face of his daughter still in death with his tears, plant evergreens on her grave, and then call her betrayer and murderer to deadly account with the stern and awful question: "Shall he deal with my daughter as with a harlot?" "This question comes down from the days when Jehovah dwelt faoe to face with his people when he declared the adulterer should die that the sentence was eternal, and there was no reversal. The blood-stained earth, from the plains of Judea, where Jacob fed his cattle, down to the country of Greene, in East Tennessee, all speak the same voice, and God is here the same, yesterday, today and forever. "xou can but render one of two verdicts in this case. If Capt. Johnson is guilty of anything he is guilty of murder in the first degree, and should suffer death. If you should reach that conclusion, I pray you when you go home tell your wives and children, as they cluster around you in love and happiness and ask you all about the great trial, what was said and what was done, what the truth was and what' it was all about—tell them this defendant was feeble and sick, hardly able to appear in court, and could not hear much of what was said if he was here that his wife, whom he loved with tender, deep devotion, had-been ruined and defiled by his pretended friend his whole life had been laid waste his idolized son put to shame and in all this he was without fault and had done no unmanly thing, yet you have decided he shall

le on the gibbet. Tell them all, and they will be filled with wonder and horror at such a verdict. "But I turn away from such a hideous!thought and picture. There is no Tmhf fate in store in your minds and hearts for this manly man, this kind husband^ this loving father, this good citizen with a life record free from stain or blemish.Soon you will perform a far different duty. You will not render this fair-faoec& boy fatherless as well as motherless. 1W: one of his letters to his wife the defend# ant said: 1 cannot forget that you ar the mother of a hero and an angeL' One boy on earth and one in heaven. The hero is here in oourt, looking on with rigid lines in his young faoe, sustaining his feeble father, as he has from the beginning, and waiting to lead him forth" once more to liberty and to a life perhaps beyond the region or the reach of whipss and scorns by which he has been so cruelly scourged. How often a father, pleads for a son! The scene is here reversed. The son of only sixteen pleada^ for his father of only forty-three. They* are both young, and they are all the* world to each other. By your verdict they will be reunited and walk the worlds. together. "My task is done. I drop this sorrow-^ ful theme, knowing by the universal^ law of the human heart that there is.-, light just ahead. With my earnest*! thanks for your interest and attention^ I surrender this great issue of life ordeath into your hands. May he who marks the sparrow's fall have you His keeping, and direct your thoughts*'

an

ffCOURT HOUSE ECHOES.

From Saturday's daily. v, TNEW SUITS—SUPERIOR OOUBTT

1.649—John L. Patterson vs John D..' Hartley and John Maynes, on note.p Anderson & Patterson. & 1.650—Hamilton Elliott vs John B. Kerrick, on note. H. C. Nevitt 1.651—John W. Howard vs Deeter, on note and account. Foley.

RICHMOND,

tiff

Arthur1 P. M.

From Monday's daily, .cj. MARRIAGE IJCENSE8. ,'r

Titus Burkebyle and Mary Tuell,

s|,: From Tuesday's daily. NEW

SUITS—OlBOUrr OOURT.

14,075.—Terre Haute Elevator Comany vs. Springfield Fire and Marine^ $ surance Company and Jno. Hager,? garnishee. Havens and Williams.

pai Ini

Havens and Williams.

NEW SUITS—SUPERIOR OOURT.

1654.—Terre Haute Savings Bank vs^ Margaret E. Higgins et. aL, on note. 1655.—George W. Hyler vs Brile Inks^? and Charles T. Smith, on note. W. A. Young.

MARRIAGE LICENSES.

Mm. J. Quillman and Martha E. Fo£v Peter Seiffel and Emma Dora Shu- ,I mard.

BEAII ESTATE TRANSFERS.

Sheriff of Vi^o county to De-

Frederick W. Herring and wife to Margaret Fox, lot 5, in Annie E. Patterson's subdivision for Rose Orphan" Home to Josephus Collett part lot 59,20 feet off north side for Jacob J. Farley to Mary-

Jirti

Roach, south half lot 1, Harrison Blood's sub. for

Collett, 20 feet off the west ''r- side of in-lot 59, for Sarah Scott to Leslie D. Thomas, all interest in lots 29 and 30 in sub. of sec. 16, for Frederick E. Erke to Sebastine

$3,206F7":

1,500*

From Wednesday's daily. SEAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.

Ernest Ohm and wife to Frances V. Bischowsky, 22 feet off the- $ no 1 2 of the east end) of lot 20 in

Blake's sub. of out-lot 49, for $6,000 Mary C. Magennis to Peter C. Pearce, 30 feet front on Fifth, street, in lot 8 of Naylor's sur., for 1,600 Rose Orphan Home to Josephus

3,200*

500

Miller, lot 12 in Rose's sub. of 44 acres and 2 rods, for William Horsely and wife to Richard Dunnigan, 29.72 acres in sec. 10, Honey Creek township, for Jacob J. Farley and wife to Mary

2,500*

3,000

Roach, south half of lot 1, Harmon Blood's sub., for Jeremiah O'Sullivan to Ellen Sullivan, quit claim deed to 44 feet and 1 inch off the north side of lot 1, Sibley's add., for 1,500 William Alder and wife to Lorenzo D. Gordon, 1 foot off the south side of 31 feet off the north side lot 24,

1,500

-Grover's

sub., for,..

Sheriff to Harvey C. Genung, lots, ., 10 and 11, Genung's sub. of. Spencer's sub., for John G. Barnard and wife to Jane

SPECIAL AGENT LAY,

I

Hanlon."

20

101

Dawson, part of lots 50 and 51, John Sibley's add., for

850

Mahone's Minions.

Va., July 15.—The Re­

publican state convention met here today in the Richmond Theatre, about 650 delegates and alternates being present. Of these nearly 200 were colored. At 12:20 o'clock Gen. Mahone made his appearance on the stage and was received with tumultuous applausei. When quiet was restored, he addressed the convention acknowledging the honor bestowed upon him and expressing his appreciation of the continued confidence so warmly manifested. He did not oourt the trust reposed in him because of the tireless anxiety it imposed and would rejoice when the time came wheh he would give it up. Then he, as chairman of the state committee, convention to order and introduced Hon. Mr. Lamb, of Norfolk, as temporary chairman, Mr. Lamb addressed the convention briefly and then called for business. Resolutions were adopted empowering tb» chair to appoint committees on credentials, permanent organization and wso-, lutions. J,

of the Internal

Revenue department, is here superior tending the transfer office from Major Carter .A.

I ij- if'!& fa

JS&

t-K* 4

Si13A

.i

-rW

:^i!

SKiSS

:-«v

li

MS

I6tp

11

Vv«

loss W. Minshall, tract in ,, .. section 12, Otter Creek township, for $ 7,134 49P

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