Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 1, Number 10, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 11 June 1870 — Page 1
YOL. 1.
mt
SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 1870.
Republican State Ticket.
SECRETARY OF STATE.
MAX F. A. HOFFMAN. AUDITOR OF STATE, JOHN D. EVANS.
TREASURER OF STATE,
ROBERT H.
MILRQY.'
JUDGES OF SUPREME COURT,
JEHIF T. E. ELLIOTT, R. C.GREGORY. CHARLES A. RAY, ANDREW L. OSBORNE.
ATTORNEY GENERAL,
NELSON TRUSSLER.
SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION,
BARNABAS C. HOBBS.
NEWS SUMMARY.
The West Point examinations were in progress yesterday. President Grant is expected on the 14th.
The Democratic members of the New Hampshire Legislature have nominated Henry Bingham for United States Senator.
The libel suit of Benson Smith against Brick Pomeroy, has been transferred from Steuben county, New York, to New York city.
The constitutional convention of Vermont voted 118 to 115 in favor of biennial sessions of the Legislature. A consideration was moved.
The Little Kock Gazette has the crop reports of the principal counties in Arkansas, which represent that cotton and corn are unusually good.
The Oriental Club, anew association of New York Democrats, opened their club rooms, No. 235 East Broadway, Thursday evening, with a pleasant gathering.
The weather has been remarkably favorable in the neighborhood of Memphis. The cold weather for the past few days has produced lice in the cotton fields.
A letter from Sherman Thurston to the St. Louis Times charges Tom Allen with throwing off the fight with Mace, and cites various events which occurred on the ground, and remarks made before and after the mill, to prove his statements.
There has been considerable excitement among the proprietor of grain elevators at Buffalo for the past 48 hours, in anticipation of a riot among the shovelers, who are on a strike. The good sense of the men, however, prevailed over passion, and all is quiet.
Mr. Vanderbilt day before yesterday reduced his rates on cattle from Buffalo to Albany and New York, via the Central and Hudson River lines, frgm $120 to $40. The Erie people will probably make a similar reduction. It is reported that the Commodore has recently sold a large amount of his stock, and it is asserted in^certaiii quarters that his rival, Fisk, has been purchasing.
The Republicans in the Third District Convention in North Carolina after a stormy session and the withdrawal of a number of delegates, renominated Dockery for Congress. The split is owing to to the refusal of Dockery to endorse Holden's administration. Bolter will be nominated as the independent candidate of the Conservatives.
The Master Car Builders' Association of the United States has been holding a secret business session at the St. Nicholas Hotel, New York, since Tuesday, and yesterday the merchants of the city gave them an excursion around the Bay, and also a banquet at the St. Nicholas in the evening. This evening the party will visit the Olympic Theatre, by invitation of James Walton, dealer in car builders' material.
The corporation of London, England, have invited Canadians to join the English volunteers at the annual Wimbledon shoot.
Paris police have discovered
on
18
more
bombs and made more arrests of conspirators. •Senor Livares, Deputy from Porto Rico in the Cortes, advocates the abolition of slavery in the Spanish colouies.
The London Times says of the introduction of the Grand Rapids Railroad bonds into the English market, that Erie experiences inculcate distrust of all such securities.
The Kansas City Journal says George H. Smith and a pretended partner in the wholesale liquor business absconded Tuesday night. It is said that Smith has recently purchased largely of Eastern houses on credit, and sold to country dealers for cash. It is supposed he took some $75,000, besides leaving a number of Kansas City creditors in t|ie lurch..
INDIANA. NEWS— A *v
.n-
The Johnsou County Fair commences the 20th of Sepember. The Board of Directors are determined to make itone of the finest ever held if the county, and if their efforts are seconded by the citizens of the county it cannot fail to a splendid success.
"7
At Fort Wayne, on the 8th, Charles Anderson was sentenced to eight years imprisonment in the penitentiary for committing an assault and battery with intent to murder. His victim, James Graham, an engineer, has slowly recovered, but it was for a while thought he would die from the injuries inflicted.
The first train of the Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad passed over the division from Fort Wayne to Sturgis on the 9th inst.
The Board of directors of the Southern State Prison have just held a meeting and they report that the affairs of the institution are in a satisfactory coudition. There are now confined 388 prisoners, of which 14 are women. The repairs of damages from the late fire are nearly completed, and embrace many improvements, especially by extensive enlargements of the water supply, as a precaution against similar accidents. The entire expense will not vary much ifrom $8,500. Five applicaiions for pardon Were submitted to them, of which they recommended one for Executive clemency.
Governor Baker and several of the State officers will go upon the Conners ville excursion to-day.
Nine hundred dollars worth of stamps was required on the documents transfer ring the Indianapolis Journal office to W. Hasselman.
It is expected to put the Evansville, Carmi and Paducah Railroad under tract within the next30 days. Hon. Jno. A. Rietz, of Evansville, lias been elected President of the road.
The Bedford News says: We learn from some of our best farmers that the wheat crop will not be near so good as was expected a few weeks ago. The fly has been making ravages to such an extent, in many parts of the country, that it is feared hardly an average crop will be harvested
The Vevay Hevielle says: A farmer living about seven miles from Vevay, made his appearance in our office last Saturday clothed in linen coat, shirt and pantaloons, the material of which was raised on his farm. His hat was also made of straw raised on his farm. With the exception of his shoes all his apparel was of home manufacture.
The application of Lieutenant Dauglierty to be released on a writ of habeas corpus, from the charge of murder in the first degree and to be admitted to bail, came up before Judge Garver, of the Common Pleas Court, Thursday afternoon. The examination of witnesses goes along slowly. The State is represented by Col. Richmond, Col. Murray, J. W. Kern and C. N. Pollard, of Kokomo and the defendent, Lieutenant Daugherty, by Hon. Thomas A. Hendricks, Major J. W. Gordon, of Indianapolis, and Judge Green, of Tipton.
For the Gazette.
Decay of Ancient Art.
Every year, travelers, exploring old countries, report the disappearance of many long1 famed works of art, and the ruined condition of those remaining. Art journals, letters and papers say but little, now, about them, except giving catalogues of auction sales, where fabulous prices are given, all going into the pockets of picture gamblers, who know nor care a jot about art, farther than it can be made a speculation to their own advantage. And little do those who buy them know, that the artists, whose genius produced them, died of hunger, exposure and neglect, in garrets and cellars, where those great pictures and statues are made. A German artist, a sculptor, wrote me, after a visit home, to his native land, concerning this matter, and said he sawone artist living in a ruined stable, where eveu rats would not stay saw his children nearly naked, and himself looking like a skeleton, as he bent over a picture on which he had been working three years, and no sale for it. Ruskin, in his Modern Painters, like Peale before him, in his Notes on Italy, gives minute and graphic instances of the decay and destruction now prevalent in Italy. quote a note from an Art JournrJ, showing how ignorant worshipers of the dead are swindled, in buying old masters, while our own artists at home are starving: 'Many wealthy Americans are dipping freely into questionable 'originals,' or bad copies of them. Several invoices of this character have lately been sent to fill the mansions of their owners in New York. Business men love to be told that they are judges, and in spite of wisdom are, for vanity's sake, most terribly taken in. Several persons of great wealth, who have not been known to buy of a native artist, have come to Europe to purchase thousands of dollars worth of worthless trash. At the well known auction room on the Rue Drouet, very keen preparations are made for this class of buyers. They are treated with great attention there, are called on at their hotels, and fondly believe themselves to be sharp in throwing |their louis,' for daubs. Imprimis to this, to this I s,aw in the mansion of a gentleman here, a collection bought in Europe, during the recent war. Among them were two fine pictures, the rest insignificant one of them the n'lacr clonHai*
vilest*slander on art I have yet seen from abroad, and I have seen hundreds of them. Ancient art is giving way to modern works, and American artists are more noticed now, in Europe, than are the old pets of the past. A|few years ago sixty-five pictures came to a German merchant from the old family gallery, as his share. Four of them he put in frames. The rest he stowed away in the loft of his store as not fit to frame. When Americans sustain their own native artists, art works of the highest order will be produced not till then except the few that are executed privately, and taken to Europe, where a paying market off ers, This fact of foreign people preferring the works of our artists to their own, and thus leaving their own to starve, gives force to my protest. Must we do wrong because they do Must we starve our artists to feed theirs? Will their sin atone for ours Eight hundred artists were in London at one time, for some festal purpose to the profession. One of them, whom I met afterwards, located in Illinois, said that not over fifty of them had attained financial success. He and a few others came to America, and prospered. John Ruskin, the ablest of all who ever wrote a book on art, himself aji artist, in an amateur way, as masterly a judge and critic as will ev«r be known, gave American artists, in landscape the highest rank for power and truth in their delineation of nature.
Modern landscape painters have looked at nature with totally different eyes seeking, not tor what is easiest to imitate, but for what is most important to tell rejecting all bona-fide imitations, they think only of conveying the impression of nature into the mind of the spectator, and tnere is, in. consequence, a greater sum of valuable, essential and impressive truth in the works of two or three of our leading modern landscape painters, thsyi in those of all the old masters put together and with truth too nearly unmixed with definite or avoidable falsehood, while the unimportant and feeble truths of the old masters are choked with a mass of perpetual defiance of the most authoritative laws of nature. Each nation ought to sustain its own artists, and no others. ar J" a
A BILL has been introduced to give to the Union Pacific Railroad Company all coal lands on the line of their road at the Government price of $1 25 per acre. Such lands are especially withheld from actual settlers. Why should the Government extend any more favors to this pampered corporation Let them pay a fair price for tn ncU.
ieir coal fields.—Ind. Jour?
The House Reconstruction Committee has decided not to interfere in Tennessee affairs during the present session. Now give us a brief, simple, and liberal bill for Georgia, have done with reconstruction, and give the South time to recuperate and become quiet.—N. Y. Tribune
LATEST NEWS.
Charles Dickens Dead!
The New Army Bill.
A Reduction of 30,000, and yets Abolished.
Bre
Particulars of Railroad Disaster in Vermont.
Disastrous Fire in Montreal.
Senators Talk Softly of Abolishing the Franking Privilege.
Soldiers'Artificial Limb Bill Passed
Time to Claim Additional Bounty Extended.
Mr. Fitch Setting Himself Right Again.
A New York Reporter Arrested
And Made to "Show Cause" before the House.
Pat Woods alias Wat Dooley Assaults an F. F. Y. Congressman.
&c., &c., &c.
LONDON.
Dcatli or Cluirlcs Dickens.
.LONDON, June 10, 3 A. M.—Charles Dickens died at 20
minutes past
evening, of paralysis. LONDON, June 9—10 p.
6
last
M.—The
Lon
don Globe, in its last edition, this evening startled the community with the announcement that Charles Dickens had been seized with paralysis, and was lying insensible at his residence at Gladshill, near Rochester, in Kent. The news spread rapidly and created the most profound regret, but the worst was still to come. Telegrams have since been received announcing the death of the great novelist at# quarter past 6 this evening. Mr. Dickens was at dinner Wednesday when he was seized with a fit,' Dr. Steel, of the village of Stroud, who was Mr. Dickens family physician, was inimedidiately called' in and remained until nearly midnight. The condition of the patient becoming wore and worse it was deemed advisable to summon physicians from London. Telegraphs were promptly dispatched, and this morning several London physicians arrived at Gladshill. A consultation was held and the case was pronounced hopeless. The patient sunk gradually and died at 15 minutes past 6 this evening. Mr. Dickens has been ill for several days but not scrously. He had even visited Rochester and other points during the past week.
WASHINGTON.
Provisions of the New Army Bill. WASHINGTON, June 9.—The majority of the Conference Committee on the.army bill agreed to report, recommending its passage, a bill the main features of which are as follows: The number of rank and file is reduced to 30,000. Brevet rank abolished. Logan's original section-pro-viding a schedule of pay for officers is retained unaltered. Promotion and appointments in all staff corps are still prohibited. Retired list increased to 300. All officers who are not to be assigned by the 1st of January, 1871, to be mustered out. Discretion, as heretofore, allowed to the President to furlough on half pay unassigned officers. Withdrawn officers resigning before the first of next October, to receive only one year's pay and allowances.
Aboard is to be convened, to examine all officers whose discharge have been recommended by division or department commanders of chiefs of staffs. Officers so reported can appear before the board for defense and such officers as shall be mustered out by the action of this board shall receive one year's pay.
Proper officers of any grade who are unassigned on January 1, may be elected to be assigned as second lieutenants, by forfeiting their present rank.
RUTLAND.
sugar
Terrible
Further Particulars of the Kailroad Disaster.. RUTLAND, June 10.—The accident on the Rutland Railroad is worse than at first reported, only one man out of 25 having escaped injury. Three were killed outright, as previously reported, and two of the wounded, Douglas Flint, of New York City, President of the Boston, Saratoga and Western Railroad, and A. R. Field, of Greenfield, Massachusetts, Civil Engineer of the Greenfield and Hoosac Tunnel Railroad, have since died. W. H. Emerson, of the Cambridge, Massachusetts, Canal Line, arid several others are horribly scalded, the flesh on their hands being literally cooked to the bone and failing off*. 4v
MONTREAL.
Fipe-is
MoNTREAii, June 10.—A large fire occurred this morning in the Montreal Ware House Company's building. Over 10,000 barrels of flour, 300,000 bushels of grain mostly wheat, and a large quantity of
and merchandise destroyed. The
loss is believed to be covered by insurance. The company have $75,000 insurance on the buildings Company.
in the Royal Insurance
CONGRESSIONAL.
WASHINGTON, June 10. SENATE.
The bill relative to the Central Branch Union Pacific Railroad for a land subsidy was taken up.
Mr. Howard offered an amendment agreed upon by both parties, and which would not grant the Central branch any lands within the limits of Nebraska, but all such lands would be given to the other branch company.
Mr. Sherman objected to giving the company the even sections of Tand.( The bill was then recommitted.
The Senate resumed tl^p consideration of the franking bitl. Mr. Morrill, of Vermont, advocated his amendment continuing the franking privilege to the Executive and Agricultural departments, and to persons upon
TERRE HAUTE, IND., SATURDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 11, 1870.
whom it had been specially conferred by law also to the public documents of the present and previous Congress, and that all petitions be sent free, and free news paper circulation be continued
Mr. Sumner spoke in opposition to the bill, as one to abolish an old and time honored system, and not an attempt to provide any means for attaining the original object of the system.
Mr. Sumner also advocated his proposition for the one cent postage. Mr. Trumbull attributed the cause of the complaint of the franking privilege to its abuse, and believed that the only remedy was its entire abolition.
Mr. Howard was in favor of abolition as an experiment, the Postmaster General having represented the revenue of the department to be affected by it to the amount of $5,000,000 per annum.
Senate took a recess. EVENING SESSION. Mr. Morrill, of Maine, from the Committee on Appropriations, in response to a communication from the Secretary of the Interior, reported a joint resolution to pay the expenses of the delegations of Indians visiting Washington during 1870, and appropriating $50,000 for the purpose) which includes the purchase of presents.
The report of the Conference Committee on the bill to provide artificial
limb3
for disabled soldiers, was adopted. The calendar was then proceeded with. A number of bills were objected to, and the Senate resolution granting right of way to the Memphis, El Paso & Pacific Railway was indefinitely postponed. Bills were passed for the sale of lands in Kansas which were ceded to the United States in trust by the Cherokee Indians making uniform salaries of Chief Justice and Associate Justices in Territories, and limiting time to 6 months after passage of this act for presentation of claims for additional bounty.
The Senate then adjourned.' HOUSE, I Mr. Kerr reported adversely, a bill to create a new judicial district in Kentucky. Tabled.
The Senate bill to regulate credits to prisoners for good behavior, was passed. Mr. Beaman introduced a bill donating four pieces of condemned uannon to the Soldiers' Monumunt.'Association of Adrian, Michigan.
Mr. Finkelburg reported a bill to create St. Joseph, Mo., a port of delivery to be attached to the collection district of New Orleans. Passed.
Mr. Davis reported a bill amendatory of the acts for the removal of causes in certain cases, from State to Federal Courts, by extending their application to cases of ejectment where parties. in interest are citizens of different States. Passed.
Mr. Fitch, as a question of privilege, called attention to a statement of a correspondent of the New York Post, that General Butler had said to him there was no direct evidence against Fitch,but there was indirect testimony. He called on Butler to state whether that was true or not. Mr. Butler replied that it was not correct, and said he was not yet able to report, because the Judiciary Committee was too much pressed with business to reach the subject, but hoped to do so by Monday next. There had been some gentleman named in the testimony before a sub-committee, but there was nothing in any case which impugned the honor or probity of action of any member of the House.
In reference to this correspondent he had simply been asked a question by him, not as he understood affecting the gentleman from Nevada, and any inference from what lie said affecting, or supposed to affect, the gentleman from Nevada was wholly incorrect.
In reply to a question by Mr. McCormick, Mr. Butler made a similar statement. e-
Mr. Fitch offered the following^ Resolved, That W. Scott Smith, the reporter of the New York Evening Post, be brought to the bar of the House to show cause, if he can, why he should not be expelled from the Reporter's Gallery, for libelous statements, reflecting on the integrity of members of the House.
A discussion ensued, attended by a good deal of confusion and excitement, Messrs. Dawes, Garfield and Butler taking the position that the proper course to be pursued was to refer the matter to a committee, a proposition that was strenuously opposed by Messrs. Sargent and Wood
ward, who thought the resolution ought to embrace all the reporters by Mr. Eldridge, who thought it better to take them one at a time by Messrs. Farnsworth and Scofield, who expressed the opinion cynically, that the correspondents of the New York papers particularly, and some of the Philadelphia, and Western papers, were very truthful and careful as to what they said affecting men's reputations and by Mr. Bingham, who recalled similar scenes in both Houses.
Finally the resolution was adopted without a division. The Speaker submitted, as a question of privilege, a letter from Charles A. Porter, Representative from Virginia, relating the circumstances of an assault recently made upon him, with murderous intent, in Richmond Virginia, by a person named Patrick Woods, alias Wat Dooley. The letter having been read, Mr. Ward offered a resolution directing the Speaker to issue a warrant to the Sergeaftt-at-Arms for the arrest of Woods, alias Dooley, and his detention subject to the further order of the House. Adopted, 126 to 40.
The naturalization bill came up as unfinished business. The vote tabling it was reconsidered, 94 to 83, and the bill was recommitted to the Judiciary Committee.
At half past 1 o'clock the Doorkeeper and an Assistant Sergeant-at-Arms appeared at the bar of the House, having in custody W. Scott Smith, reporter of the New York Evening Post.
Mr. Smith having been placed in the area immediately fronting the Speaker's chair, the Clerk read the resolution under which the arrest was made, and the communication and dispatch complained of
The Speaker said: Mr. Smith, the House has adopted a resolution requiring you to appear at the bar and show cause why you should not be expelled from the privilege you now enjoy as one of the reporters in the reporters' gallery, for those alleged libels on members of the House. You are at liberty to speak.
Mr. Smith, in response, jjtfes^nted the following communication: To the Speaker of the Home of Representatives
In regard to my first dispatch in the New York Evvning Post of Monday, June 6,1870, the statements contained therein were based upon official documents, and the names set forth in this dispatch were identical with those contained in said documents, and they were used there in the same connection as used in the dis-
Eeing
atch. Second, upon these statements denied byi7Mr. Fitch in the House of Representatives, I called upon General B. F. Butler mid cenversed with him upon the subject. I asked him whether he intended to state in the House that there was evidence before his committee directly or indirectly implicating Mr. Fitch. General Butler said this was not the exact meaning, but that Mr. Fitch's name appeared in the affidavit of Mr. N. B. Taylor as having been approached, and a copy of the affidavit was among the papers before the Investigating Committee. But he did not consider this as directly implicating Mr. Fitch, as it did not
appear that he had in any way responded to the approaches alluded to by Mr. Taylor.
In reply to a question, General Butler further said, that the names of all members mentioned in my dispatch appeared in the affidavit of Mr. Taylor, as having been appointed by him to secure their aid for the Cuban cause. [Signed]
W. SCOTT SMITH.
Mr. Fitch thought the Speaker asked what was the character of the official documents, and who exhibited them
To this answer was made, that the papers referred to were affidavits of N. B. Taylor and others before the grand jury, but that they were shown to him in confidence, and he could not disclose the name of the informant, as it would be in violation of good faith.
Several resolutions were offered to compel the witness to disclose from whence the information came, to expel him from the reporters' gallery, to lay the whole subject on the table, etc. Much excitement prevailed. Finally a resolution to appoint a special committee of five to investigate the matter, with power to send for persons and papers, was adopted.
Mr. Smith was discharged from the custody of the House. Subsequently Mr. Sargent sent to the Clerk's desk a dispatch from N. B. Taylor, dated Montreal, denying that he ever had any conversation with either Fitch, McCormick, Butler or Gollady, on the subject of Cuban recognition.
The Senate amendments to the legislative appropriation bill, numbering 256, were nearly all added to the appropriation.
Mr. Davis said that the Committee on Appropriations opposed all the amendments increasing salaries, and also those for the new State Department and the enlargement of the capitol grounds, though the committee was unanimous for the retention of the capitol at Washington, and also that excluding a person who participated in the rebellion, from the Court of Claims.
The report of the committee recommending the concurrence or the non-con-currence, was agreed to without question, except where separate votes were demanded for the Senate amendments excluding from the Court of Claims persons who participated in the rebellion.
A substitute was adopted, that no pardon or amnesty be admitted in cases before that Court, except when granted during the continuation of active operations of the rebellion, under the proclamation of President Lincoln.
For the Senate amendment, making the compensation of females in the departments the same as males, a substitute was offered, simply throwing open all classes of clerkships to competent women.
Before it was disposed of, the Speaker announced the following select committee in the case of the correspondent of the Evening Post:
Messrs. Poland, Dickey, Finkelburg, Potter and Holman. The House then adjourned.
THE MARKETS.
TERRE-HAUTE.^ •, $1'] TEKBE HAUTE, JUNK 10
Flour, per barrel 85 50 Wheat, per bushel 90@1 10 Corn, do ,,90 Oats, do .' 50@60 Potatoes, per peck 10 Corn Meal 1 liO Butter, per pound 20@25 Eggs,.per dozen 1 @16% Chickens, per dozen 3 00@3 50 Hay, per ton S!2@14 Coffee, per pound 20(828 do 1 50@2
Tea, Sugar, do Salt, per barrel Maple Sugar, per lb Maple Molasses, per gaUon Hams, per pound, sugar cured.. Shoulders per pound
WHEAT—Strong and wanted ?1
RYE-Quiet closed at 85@86 for No. 2.
CINCINNATI. CINCINNATI,
New Silks.
New Notions.
00
I5@20
2 o0@2 75 £0 1 00@1 40 20321 $ 10(31H
NEW YORK. NEW YORK, June 10.
f31,Jld^for
prime Milwaukee No. 2 spring. CORN—Firm and quiet. 4 OATS—Quiet and s.rong.
PROVISIONS—Pork dull at 830 75cash. LARD—Dull and unchanged. WHISKY-Wanted at SI 05.
CHICAGO. A .. CHICAGO,
June 10.
and Arm spring extras
June 10.
FLOUR—Firm but quiet family at $5 50@6, 5. extra-. 5 50@5'
WHEAT—Firm: red fl 20@1 25. CORN—Dull and Nominal at U2c. OATS—Dull and lc lower mixed, 55@y8: white 61c.
RYE—Quoted at 97@98c.
,tuJ ST. LOUIS. •.. -I,: gT- LOUIS, June
10.
TOBACCO—Steady and unchanged. COTTON—Nominal at 21c. HEMP—In good demand at 81 40@185 for undressed.
HUNTING.
GAZETTE
STEAM
Job Printing Office,
NORTH FIFTH ST., NEAR MAIN, TERRK HAUTE, IND.,
The GAZETTE ESTABLISHMENT has^een thoroughly refitted, and supplied with Hew material, and is in better trim than ever before. for the
a
PROMPT, ACCURATE and ARTISTIC rinting. We mm&-
execution of oyery description have tt
FIVE
•'tt
STEAM -v
PRESSES^
And oUr ^election of Types embraces all the new a a a a a to I
300 «. »tit "fif
I DIFFERENT STYLES,
To which we are constantly adding. In every respect, our Establishment is well-fitted and appointed, and our rule is to permit no Job to leave the office unless it will compare favorably with first class Printing from ANY other office in the State. ...
Reference is made to atiy Job bearing onr Imprint
stK.i-
1
IM
5.
E
Gazette Bindery*
Has also been enlarged and refitted, enabling,as to furnish
BLANK BOOKSg
of every description of as good workmanship as the largest city establishment*. Orders solicited.
WOLD BOOKS REBOUND in a superior manner. A
I
Real British Hose and Half Hose.
White Goods and Laces.
Wishes to announce to the sick and those who stand in need of his services that he has removed his office from the Buntin House to his rooms on
OHIO STREET,
Nearly Opposite the New Conrt House, Teire-Haute,Indiana, Where he will continue to treat all diseases, whether of an acute, chronic or private nature. The success which hivs followed his treatment of all diseases in this place as in others, will speak for his ability, as his estimonials will show. Do not fail to call on him if you are sick or sunejing. He is frank and honest in his opinion and will not undertake your case if he thinks it hopeless, consequently lie guarantees all cases he takes for
Calls answered day and niglit. Consultation free.
BETAH DBY POOPS.
TUELL, RIPLEY & DEMING's EMPORIUM.
O W N A A I N
French Ginghams, Japan Poplins,
Crape
Marets,
WILL BE OFFERED
AT BED1CEI) PRICES!
SILKS, SWISS AND ORGANDIES,
CHEAPER THAN AT ANY OTHER HOUSE.
COVENTRY RUFFLING MD EMBROIDERIES
PARTAKE
New Dress Goods.
New Parasols.
OF
THE
Llama Lace Points and Rotunds. Jeans,
Ecrue Linen for Suits.
LOW
Ecrue Percales in patterns. CclSsilllGrcs.
Lolro AS WE HAVE
TN
THE HOUSE!
7d
RESTAURANT.
OPERA EXCHANGE, Main St., bet. Fourth and Fifth, (OPERA HOUSE BLOCK,)
TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.
CHAS. M. HIRZEL, Proprietor. d83m
PROFESSIONAL.
T~)R. W. 11. MAllF, AN,
at
FLOUR-Quiet 84 75(3:5. WHEAT—Firm and 4@4Vc higher sales of No. 2 at $110%, closing at 8111%111% cash.
CORN—Opened dull at 83% advanced to 85c closed at 84@84)4. OATS—Quiet closed at 49@50c, closing inside.
'.{» MAGNETIC, ECLETIO AND
Clairvoyant Physician,
51-3m.
DR. II- J. TREAT, OFFICE, OHIO STREET, I'i
7
BETWEEN THIRD & FOURTH.
RESIDENCE—137 North 4th Street. Idly
E. P. BEAUCHAMP, ATTORNEY AT LAW, 141 MAIN STREET,
1
W
r- Terre Haute, Indiana.
ESTERN Land Broker, Loans Negotiated and Estates managed. Particular attention given to collections?Correspondence solicited from non-residents. Id3m
BlHOLMES,
Notary Public, Real Estate Agent,
AND
CONVEYANCER, Jt
OFFICE, Second Floor, No. 115 Main St., ldy Terre Haute, Ind.
8ANT C. DAVIS. SYD. B. DAVTS.
DAVIS & DAYIS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, OFFICE, NO. 80 MAIN STREET,
Between 3rd & 4th Streets,
ld6m Terre Haute, Ind.
NOTES.
LANK NOTES, of approved form, for sale at the DAILY GAZETTE Office, North 5th st. 2D
TOBACCOS, ETC.
BRASHEARS, BROWN A TITUS,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
iii, "Wholesale Dealers in
Groceries and Mantoflwtnred
Tobaccos
I GENTS for R. J. Christian ^^X^ijIfMay
A
brands of "Christian Comfortj.Bright May gnftne Apple Black Nftvy%,and Cherry urana Hack Navy %, and other fine brands,
32 AND 34 MAIN STREET.
IdftB CINCINNATI, OHIO.
W//-P. pBINTINCK
•gUfffpy Business Man needs something in the
wa
of Job Printing. Never do np a packof goods, or send from your shop an article ot roar handicraft, without advertising your business. The plaoe in Terre Haute for good printing the GAZETTE STEAM JOB OFFtCE, Hulman's Block, Filth Btreetf
NO. 10.
Grenadines and Poplins,
PRICES.
WE ARE RECEIVING,
Pure & Wool Poplins.
Irish Linen and Uarnsley Damask.
Gros Grain and Real Komain Ribbons.
Courvoisier's Kid Gloves, the best in the World.
Alexandres' Kid Gloves.
TrefoilSSe Kid Gloves.
Cottoil Y&rilS.
WE WILL 3TOT RE UNDERSOLD, AS
A
YARD OF GOODS
TUELL, RIPLEY & DEMING.
HOUSE FUBNISHINCh NEW FIRM
WITH
NEW GOODS
PANIC PRICES!
I have associated with me In the gen
HOUSE FURNISHING BUSINESS, DAVID C. EAST,
who has long been head salesman in my Store, and as our entire Stock has been purchased within the last thirty days, during the
Panic in Eastern Cities,
enables us to sell Goods at lower rates than was ever sold in this market, and we are determined to do business on the plan of
"QUICK SALES AND SMALL PROFITS."
In the future do not think of Purchasing elsewhere any Crockery, Glassware, Knives, Forks, Spoons, Wood \nd Willow Ware, Gold Band and White China, and House Furnishing Goods generally, until you call and see our Mammoth Stock of the latest styles and patterns at Reduc©d Priccs ldfcw2m HUDSON & EAST.
LUMBER.
J. L. LINDSEY,
COMMISSION LUMBER DEALER,
Office, No. 482 West Front Street,
CINCINNATI, OHIO.
MORTGAGES^
BLANK
MORTGAGES, in any quanity, sin gly or by the quire, for sale at the DAILY GA ZETTE Oflice, North 5tli street. 2d
FEED STOBE.
.1. A. BURGAN,
Dealer in
FEED
all
Flour, Feed, Baled Hay, Corn Oats, and kinds of Seeds, NORTH THIRD ST., NEAR MAIN
TERRE JIAUTE, IND.
delivered in all parts of the city free of charge. Id6m
GUNSMITH.
JOIB.V ARMSTRONG,
Gunsmith. Stencil Cutter,
'pj
i*
"Vi#/
'1,r-
if &*}<?£.
SAW FILER AND LOCKSMITH,
,oi tiff. IT
Third street North of Main, Terre Haute, Ind.
tar All work done on short notice. Idly
PAQTTEBS.
MANNING & MAGWIRE,
HOUSE & SIGN PAINTERS,
If
.Jitt
OHIO STREET, Between 4thA 5th streets.
BILL BEADS.
-r»ILL HEADS and STATEMENTS,
Fifth street.
on any
