Terre Haute Evening Gazette, Volume 3, Number 142, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 November 1872 — Page 1
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YOL. 3.—NO. 142.
CITY POST OFFICE.
0I.08S. DAILY MAILS. OPK*. 0:00 a. East Through...7:30and 11 15 a. na 3:00 p. 6:00 a. Way ...12:30 and 5:15 p. 6:00 a. m...Cincinnati & Washington... 5:15p. 8:00 p. 3:00 p. Chicago 6:00 a.
SEMI-WEEKLY MAILS.
Graysville via Prairieton, Prairie Creek and Thurman's Creek— Closes Tuesdays and Fridays at "m Opens Mondays and Thursdays at 6 p. Nelson—Closes Tuesdays & Saturdays at 11 a.
WANTED.
WPoplar
ANTED—A girl to do general housework. Apply at the southeast corner of Sixth and streets. 4dtf
FOE BENT.
1^
CLOTHIMfl.
7OR RENT—The Stewart House. For sale— several good Bargains in real estate. GRIMES & ROYSE, 12dtf No 2 South Fifth street.
FOR SALE.
FORand
SALE—LOTS—The undersigned offers for sale a number ol lots fronting on South Third Fourth streets. This property em braces some of the most desirable lots in Terre Haute for residences. For further particulars call at the GAZETTB office, North Fifth, near Main street. WM. J. BALL. 13d tf
FOR
SALE-SMALL DWELLING HOUSEOn Oak street, near the canal. For terms inquire at the GAZETTE office. lldtf
ERJLANG-ER Sc CO.,
HEADQUARTERS FOR CLOTHING!
READY HADE OR MADE TO ORDER!
FOB A.1S ELEGANT LINE OF
O E S I S I O O S Including the Best Shirt in the Market, go to EBL.ANGEB & CO.'S.
7:30 a.m 4:30 p. 7:00 a.m.
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 7:30 a. 9:00 p. L., C. ft S. W. R. 1:00 p. 9:00 a. E. T. H. A C. Railroad 4:30 p.
Opens Tuesdays A Saturdays at 10 a. WEEKLY MAILS.
asonvllie via Riley, Uookerly,Lewis, Coffee and Hewesvllle—Closes Saturdays at 6 a. m. Opens Fridays at 4 p. m. Ashboro via Christy's Prairie—
ClosesSaturdays at 1 p.m Opens Saturdays at 12
Genera] Delivery ana Call Boxes open from a. m, to 7:30 p. m. Lock Boxes and Stamp Office open from 7 a. 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 Sundays. A. BURNETT, P. M.
DON'T FORGET THE FACT
THAT THE
GAZETTE JOB OFFICE
HAS A
BOOK BINDERY, The only office in the city that has one.
ADVERTISEMENTS in this column will be 5 cts. per line for each insertion. No advertisement inserted for less than 25 cts.
Evening ffazette
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14,1872.
Editorial Notes.
Miss Laura Ream is a candidate for the office of State Librarian. Would it not be a practical endorsement of that very thin plank of the Philadelphia platform, wherein women were saluted with "yours truly," to elect this worthy lady to the position to which she aspires
As will be seen, by a perusal of our columns, a most lamentable tragedy occurred at Logansport, this State, yesterday. It appears that when Major Moreau entered upon the discharge of the editorial duties on the Sun of that city, he followed the beaten path of his predecessor and commenced an attack upon the private character of a number of old citizens, among others, that of Judge Dykeman. While the Judge was absent, Moreau took occasion to publish a most offensive article about him. Returning, the Judge was handed the article which he read and was at once put upon his nxetal.
Meeting the Major, he drew his pistol and opened fire, bringing down his game at the first shot. However great the provocation, lovers of law and order will, with one accord, regret the rashness of the punishment inflicted though through a mere accident, Moreau escapes with his life. We hope he will now retire from the profession which he but entered to disgrace, and go back into his native element of mud-politics as practiced on the stump.
The Indiana Legislature after both sides had duly caucussed and nominated officers, met in special session yesterday, and the Republicans being in the majority iu both Houses, elected their caucus nominees without difficulty. But as proceedings are reported in our columns we will not detail them here. The Body has some work before it that, if carried out according to the wishes of the people of Indiana, will be of vast benefit to the best interests of the State. Our schools need looking after, especially the Normal, needs an appropriation. Though there are other, and in the minds of politicians, much more urgent objects, in convening the Legislature of our State in special session, there are none BO important to the general interests as the public schools. %0f^The Governor's message, which will
be delivered to-day, will more fully set forth the objects of the called session. Having made arrangements with Mr. W. H. Drapier, the official reporter of the Legislature, we will receive from his skillful pen the report of the proceedings of the forenoon session, by the P. & A. Telegraph Co., each day, so as to fur nish them fresh to our readers on the same day as the business is transacted.
By Telegraph to the Ind. Sentinel.
A LOGANSPORT SENSATION.
Hooting a Journalist—Rencontre in Logansport—A Pisgracetul End of a Disgraceful Business—A Man Shot iu the
Open Street by an ex-Judge. LOGANSPORT, IND., November 13.— A shooting affair took place in this city, this morning, between Judge D. D. Dykeman, one of our most prominent citizens and the editor of one of our lo cal papers, called the Sun, by the name of Moreau. The immediate provocation of the shooting was an outrageous and brutal attack made upon Judge Dykeman, in the Sun, by Moreau, last Thursday, and during the absence of the former from the city. Last evening he returned home and was made acquainted with the thing, and to-day, meeting Moreau upon the street, fired one shot at him, slightly wounding him in the cheek. At the time of the shooting Moreau was armed with three revolvers and a coat of mail. He has been making loud threats for some days. For the past year the Sun has continued the most abusive personal attacks upon Judge Dykeman and others, which have been passed unheeded, until the article in the last issue, which was so unjustifiable, in allrespects, as to excite the most intense excitement among our citizens not only against the paper, but the individuals who control it, and the result is that it has for the present culminated in a street affray. The feeling is one of justification of Dykeman's conduct. The matter has gone so far that h.e was compelled, in self defence and self respect, to take notice of the article and its author. A preliminary examination is going on before the Mayor, and the entire facts in the matter will be fully investigated. The indignation against the paper is not more intense than against Moreau, who comes into this community a stranger, and singles out one of our most prominent citizens to attack in a most indecent and offensive manner.
THE CAUSE OF THE DIFFICULTY. LOGANSPORT, NOV. 13.—The immediate cause of the shooting of Moreau, by Judge Dyckeman, to-day, was the publication, in the Logansport Sun of the 7th instant, of an alleged grossly slanderous article upon the Judge, from which the following is an extract: "In his mother's womb, Omniscience knew the vile imposition that was assuming shape knew the unbounded liar, the base panderer, the licentious lecher, theunstiuted thief, embodied in the human form, developing there, and in His infinite pity for humanity, sent h'm forth so marked by deformity, that the world should know the villain, and be on its guard." The above is but a short excerpt from a column article, equally abusive, thaf was published during the absence of Judge Dykeman, at home, and although there has long been a feeling of great indignation againt the Sun, this last article aroused a very intense feeling in the community against Moreau. His sudden departure from the city on the day the paper appeared, and his absence until Saturday evening, saved him from the coat of tar and feathers with which it seems he was threatened. The Judge returned home last evening, and so soon as he was made acquainted with the character of Moreau's article, he determined to punish him, as he had plainly informed him that he would, if the personal attacks regularly made upon him in the Sun did not cease. Outsiders had been advised to disarm Moreau, who had prepared himself and was a complete walking arsenal, and then to warn him to leave the city at once—but this plan failing, Judge Dykeman resolved to personally punish him.
About 10 o'clock this morning Moreau was coming down Broadway, when Dykemap observing him from the opposite side of the street, immediately advanced towards him and drew his revolver. At the time, Moreau was heavily armed and, it is said, wore a coat of mail. So soon as he saw Dykeman, he halted and threw up his arms, when the Judge fired, the ball parsing through a heavy overcoat and undercoat and striking on the cheek, slightly abrasing the skin. Moreau fell and cried out that he was killed. He was at once picked up and carried into an adjoining surgeon, who examined him, but found no wound except the one referred to.
For a few minutes the excitement was intense, but this evening all things are tranquil again. Public opiuion is somewhat divided, but by far the larger portion seem to approve of the conduct of Dykeman. For a year the Sun has pursued him with the most malignant vindictiveness, and he has taken no notice, holding the editor to be insane and not responsible. Four weeks ago Moreau came here and tcok charge of the paper, and since that time has had control of it. He has followed up the course of his predecessor, wantonly attacking the Judge in every issue. Every week two or three columns have been set aside for the personal abuse of a few of our prominent men. The thing had become so offensive and unbearable that further forbearance was out of the question, and especially from a man of Moreau's known character. Why an entire stranger in the city should make such persistent attacks upon a most prominent
"ESS1 A?
C- ^v^Rfc-^ssr
citizen could not be understood by the community. There seemed no other way to prevent a continuance of these outrages than for those assailed to take the law into their, own hands, and personally punish the author of the libels. Moreau's bragadocio manner and theatrical antics, compared with the craven spirit he displayed when confronted with his victim, was most ludicrous to those who witnessed the shooting. Moreau displayed the white feather incontinently, and has given out that he was a duelist who bad killed three or four men, and was terrible in battle. If so, he must have displayed different metal from that exhibited toa
The Yery Latest News
(UP TO 3 O'CLOCK P. M. TO-DAY.) By tl»e Pacific ami Atlantic Tel raph
THE INDIANA LEGISLATURE.
Full Text of Governor Message.
More Trouble in New Orleans.
War moth Trying to Pinchbeck.
JChe^ Governor jdeltvered sage to the Legislature at 2 o'clock this afternoon, in which he gave a reason for calling this extra session that the rapidly developing interests of the Commonwealth renders it impracticable for the Legislature to transact the necessary business in the sixty days to which the sessions are restricted by the Constitution. He commends the subject of the Wabash & Erie Canal to the immediate consideration of the General Assembly, and recommends that the joint resolution of the last session, proposing a constitutional amendment in relation to the canal debt, be promptly adopted. He condemns the practice'of destroyiug the original manuscripts of the Legislative Journals as soon as the jripter has read the proof, and suggests that they be bound and preserved.
He pays a tribute of respect to the memory of Col. Norman Eddy, late Secretary of State, and expresses a grateful appreciation of the conduct of the present Secretary, Colonel Farquhar, in generously allowing all the fees of the office to go to Colonel Eddy's family.
The fee and salary bill had better be repealed, his Excellency declares, if one of unquestionable Constitutionality can not be passed at the present session. He renews his recommendation that another Judge be added to the Supreme Bench. He recommends a salery for the Governor of $8,000, or $5,000 and furnished with a dwelling.
He recommends the calling of a Constitutional Convention, assigning among the many reasons that under the Consti tution as it now is, it is impossible to have an election law that will be efficient in preventing fraudulent voting, fle recommends an appropriation of $50,000 for the Insane Asylum, a sum sufficient to make accommodations for one hundred more patients, and that two additional insane hospitals be erected one near the center of the Northern anci the other near the ceuter of the Southern District of the State, as there would be still over 1,000 insane persons in the State that ought to have the benefit of an asylum.
He recommends a compliance with the Constitutional requirement for the per manent enclosure and preservation of the Tippecanoe battle ground. In compliance with the agreements of the United States in the treaty of Washington. He urges) upon the State government the use to Her Britauic Magesty of the State canals connected with the navigation of the lakes and rivers traversed by or con tiguous to the boundary line between the two countries.
He recommends the purchase of more land adjoining the Soldiers' Home. He asks an appropriation of $26,881 for the House of Refuge, to clear it of debt and carry it to the end of the fiscal year.
The enlargement of the Blind Asylum is also recommended, as well as the completion of the Reformatory Institute for the women and girls. He recommends the abandonment of the State Prison at Jeffersonville, and that there be graded prisons established .and a classification of the prisoners.
He commends the proposition to erect a soldiers'monument in the Governor's circle, to the favorable consideration of the Legislature, and finally he trusts that the session will be characterized by perfect harmony, and be fruitful of good legislation.
From New York.
NEW YORK, NOV. 14.—Matters tne insurance offices regarding the Boston fire have settled down into their accustomed quietness, and the work of estimating the losses still proceeds. The more fortunate companies are receiving an ex
¥rrx-- r-«j
/-i
Outcount
Evarts to be Tendered the Secreta ry of Stateship.
Prospective Changes in Other De partnients.
Destructive Fire at Pana, 111.
&C.J
&c. &c.
From Indianapolis,
[Special to the Evening GAZETTE.]
INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 14.—The House agreed to spend, not exceeding ten min utes each morning in prayer. i.
Bills were introduced providing that all general elections shall be held on the Tuesday next following the first Monday in November also to repeal the drainage acts of 1869 and 1871 also to extend the exemption law from $300 to $500.
,*
TERRE HAUTE, INDTTHURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 14.1872
Baiter's
jfc™ •V
tra amount of business. The effects of the fire are beginning to be felt in the various branches of trade. The leather and wool markets were active yesterday, with higher prices.
The horse disorder is reported still on the increase. Horses which were best nursed and tended during the prevalence of the late disease, are now in good health, while those animals that were neglected and overworked, are nearly all affected. A number of deaths have occurred.
The Times'special from New Orleans of the 13th, states that Governor Warmoth has surrounded Mechanics' Institute with a body of armed police, where the votes are being changed by the removal of Pinchbeck, Anderson and General Herron, Secretary of State, Wharton, Hatch and Daponta being substituted. The Times claims that this was done by Warmouth with the intention of counting in the fusion ticket. General Emo has been requested to send troops to the scene. The city is tfl'Ofl 1
A Herald's special frojn Washington says the friends of the Administration, without professing to speak by authority, have good reason to believe that the portfolio of the State Department will be at the service of Mr. Evarts, of New York, after the 4th of March, if he is willing to endure the pecuniary sacrifice for the honor of the place. Social Washington is anxious -that the successor of Mr. Fish should equal the latter in the means and disposition for display, as society takes its tone from the Secretary of State, and on these grounds the distinguished advocate of Geneva would be wholly acceptable.
The Internal Revenue and Patent Bureaus are named among the offices of the second grade that are likely to become vacant by voluntary retirement of the present incumbents who have other views for the future.
It is probable that Judge Settle, of North Carolina, will succeed Justice Nelson of the Supreme Court, who is about to retire on account of old age. The South has no representative on the Supreme Bench since the death of Jus tice Wayne.
NEW YORK NOV. 14.—Tweed's case is set down for the second Tussday in December and will come on then under any circumstances.
Hon. Charles Francis Adams arriyed from Europe yesterday by the steamer Russia.
It is reported that a commitee of seventy is hard at work at the new charter, though many suppose they will simply press the passage of the charter defeated by Governor Hoffman's veto last year.
FrWir^ostoh.
BOSTON, NOV. 14.—All the theater managers have tendered benefits to aid the sufferers by the recent fire.
The various police stations of the city are filled with property recovered from thieves. At Station One, Captain Emerson delivered over $6,000 worth of goods, and at Station Two, $10,000 worth. About $30,000 worth remain at the stations.
Gas was turned on last evening, the city having been two nights in darkness.
From Chicago,
CHICAGO, NOV. 14.—Contributions for the Boston sufferers continue to come in It is thought all is subscribed that will be needed from this city.
Insurance men have recovered their confidence and it is the general opinion in moneyed circles that the fire will not produce any trouble.
From Minnesota.
ST. PAUL, NOV. 14.—In the United States District Court, Judge Nebor rendered a decision in the case of the Trustees vs. the Southern Minnesota Rail road. The Trustees, for the bondholders, alleged acts of bankruptcy in the failure of the road to* meet the interest on its bonds. Judge Nebor sustained the allegation and ordered the appointment of a receiver. This decision takes the management from Clark M. Thompson, President. The trustees are S. B. Ruggles and A. P. Mann, of New York.
From Illinois.
PANA, NOV. 14.—A fire yesterday in U. P. Churches' tobacco store destroyed it and its contents, and the stores of Orr Brothers, groceries R. D. Murray, clothers A. J. Keeney, jeweler Taylor Brothers, books and music, and the barber shop of Pat Smith. Most of the goods were saved. The loss is principally that of the buildings, amounting to about $15,000, the insurance of them being in the companies seriously afflicted by the Boston tire.
During the fire James Tunison, station baggage master of the Indianapolis & St. Louis Railroad, fell through a sky light, a distance of fifteen feet, fracturing his skull and injuring him otherwise. His life is dispaired of. The fire was incendiary.
From Wisconsin.
MADISON, NOV. 14.—The Journal gives the official votes from twelve counties, and reports and estimates from the remainder, figure 19,000 for Grant in this State. The Republicans will have 37 or 38 majority for United States Senator on joint ballot.
&
From Tennessee,
MEMPHIS, NOV. 14.—The steamer St. Mary's which left here last night with two hundred and thirty-six bales of cotton, 150 bales of rags, and ten passengers for Cincinnati, struck a stump one mile below Morris' Landing, last night at half-past nine, tearing a hole between the wheel and stern, which caused her to sink in less than ten minutes in eighteen feet of water, that coming to within a few inches of the boiler deck. When she struck she was headed for the bar opposite and ran upon it, but her bow swung around and she floated off down the river nearly a mile to the head of Brandywine Bar, upon the head of which she now lies straight in eighteen feet of water.
So far as known no lives were lost, the passengers having been carried safely to the bar and shore in the life boat and yawl^ and but one fireman is missingand it is presumed that he didn't go with the boat*from here. Jlhe City of Chester
r-y-y."
-V
Cash Assets,.— Boston Losses.
Cash Assets Boston Losses.
Cash Assets
Losses
Cash Assets
S/'
."
passed soon after she settled on the bar, taking some of the passengers to Cairo and putting others on shore. The St. Mary's was valued at $33,000, and is insured in five offices in Cincinnati for $8,000. She can, it is thought, be raised.
From Cincinnati.
CINCINNATI, NOV. 12.—Business is at a standstill, and all but a very few horses are down with the disease. The mules, a large number of which were brought here from abroad, are suffering to a greater extent even than the horses. No business is being transacted on 'Change. Freights to Memphis and New Orleans are reduced on the lower classes, 10 cents per hundred, and on whisky, 75 cents to Memphis and 60 cents to New Orleans.
A special dispatch to the Enquirer, from Washington, says: Thomas A. Scott, of the Pennsylvania Central, will be a contestant against Simon Cameron for the United States Senatorship.
INSURANCE AGENTS.
Office of HAVENS & FARIS,
A New York special to the Commercial says there is a movement on foot to corner wool, but no details have reached the public.
INSUBAWCJB AGENTS,
O I O S E E
BETW£EI THIED AWD FOURTH, TERRE HAUTE.
We represent Companies that were in theJJ1^ pay Every Dollar of their Losses, and are yet as goon as ine »esi Companies in tlie World!
Nortli British and Mercantile, of London and Edinburg,
PHCEXIX, OF HARTFORD,
Connecticut Fire, of Hartford,
St. Paul Fire and Marine, St. Paul, Minn.,
Losses We do a Legitimate Business, and Pay our Losses, Great and Small, Promptly, at tnis Agency.
From the Evansville Courisr.
A PALACE ON WHEELS.
Luxury, Comfort, Elegance and Ease to a Parlor Sleeping Coach. On yesterday the splendid new sleeping coach, manufactured for the Woodruff Sleeping and Parlor Coach Conipany, of Philadelphia, by Jackson & Sharp, of Wilmington, Delaware, and brought here for the use of the Evansville & Crawfordsville Railroad, arriyed in the city. We canuot recall anything more elegant of its kind that we ever saw. It isa very great improvement in sleeping coaches, and is supplied with all the modern Improvements, such as Baker's heaters, and the Miller platform and coupling. The interior of the coach is most superbly fitted up, carpeted with elegant IJrussels material, furnished with silver-plated curtain rods and lamps, decorated wich French plate mirrors, and huug with heavy rep curtains. The seats are cozy and beautiful, trimmed with crimson velvet, and the couches so arranged as to be not only out of the way, but verv attractive. At each end of the car there is a rotunda or sitting room, and near by, water closets and wash-stands, all excellently finished. It cogt between $18,000 and $20,000, and is said to be about six or seven thousand pounds lighter than any similar structure. We regret that our space this morning will not allow us to further describe.
It is intended to run this car in connection with another between this point and Chicago, and we are satisfied tne E. & C. R. R. management have done a wise thing in procuring them.
From the Vincennea Sun.
Masonic Lecture.
Rev. Dr. Austin, of Oney, rector, of St. James Episcopal church, in this city, will, at no distant day, deliver a Masonic lecture, the subject being Solomon's Temple. The reverend gentleman will deliver the lecture at New Albany, Evansviile, Terre Haute, Vincennes and other points. It will be remembered that a few weeks since the residence# of Dr. Austin was burned, and his library, the finest in the West, was destroyed, and be takes this method of raising funds to replace it. This is a project which should commend itself to all, especially the members of the craft in the cities mentioned above. We bespeak for Dr. A. a liberal patronage whenne makes his appearance in our city, and hope the Masonic fraternity will exert themselves in his behalf.
THJ5 MARKETS B¥ TELEGRAPH.
New York Market. NEW YORK, November 14.
WHEAT—Red [email protected]. OATS—At 44@50c. CORN—Quiet 64@64}£c. PORK—$15.75.
1
LARD—8&@8%o. WHISKY—Unsettled at95Xc. LINSEED OIL—82@83c. GROCERIES—Steady.'
Liverpool Mark LIVERPOOL, November 14.
^November 14.
WINTER WHEAT—lis 4d^ Milwaukee lls@lls lOd Club, 13s@13s 3d California white, 12s 6d.
CORN—28s 3d. FLOUR—29s 6d.
-**.\ '«**$* tt IV-^av.siW
1-^
PRICE 3 CENTS.
.$13,500,000. 600,000.
.$1,831,406.85. 450.000.
#540,772.79.
...Small.
...* $613,000.
PORK—55s. ... BEEF—64s. BACON—34s 6d. LARD—39s. TALLOW—44s 3d.
"m...small.
AMUSEMENTS.
0
E A O S E
TWO NIGHTS ONLY.
Wednesday and Thursday Evenings, November 13th and 14tli.
The far-famed Comedian and Deliniator of the Pathetic and Comi'c Drama,
Mr. JOHN E. OWENS,
Supported by his own Dramatic Combination.
Wednesday Evening the performance will commence with Sterling Coyne'a celebrated Comedy, in 3 acts, entitled,
EVERYBODY'S FRIEND!
MAJOR DE BOOTS, the Swashbnckler, Mr. JOHN E. OWENS. To be followed by Mr. Owens' great specialty,
SOLON SHINGLE I SOLON SHINGLE Mr. JOHN E. OWENS. As performed by him throughout the entire
English world upwards of 2000 nights.
Thursday Evening the performance will commence with Colman, the younger's, immortal Comedy, in 3 acts, entitled,
THE POOR GENTLEMAN!
DR. OLL APOD, of the "Galen's Head," Mr. JOHN E, OWENS. To conclude with Mr. Owens' popular Farce of
40 WINKS
Prices of Admission!
First Floor .31 00 Family Circle. £5 Gallery j»
No extra charge for Reserved cJeats. The sale of secured seats will commence on Monday morning, Nov. 11, at A. H. Dooley's Opera House Book Store, Main street.
E A O S E
THE EYEp OF THE SEASON!
Friday Evening, Nov. 15,
RICE'S MINSTRELS
AUTD BRASS BA3TD
15 Star Performers! 15
From their elegant Minstrel Hall, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Reserved Seats can be secured at the Box Office, or at the Book Store of Bartlett & Co., without extra charge.
Prices as Usual. ANDY McKAY, General Agent.
O W I N A
FESTIVAL
AND BALL.
Tuesday and Wednesday Evenings, Nov. 19th and 20th, .-i'l
E A I E S
OF ST. JOSEPH'S CATHOLIC CHURCH
gn
The Festival proper on Tuesday evening, and the Ballon Wednesday evening.
T1IE PROCEEDS WILL BE USED FOR CHURCH PURPOSES.
body.
Cincinnati Market. *1 CINCINNATI, November 14.
Markets dull, and few sales. WHISKY—Steady at 91c.
A cordial invitation is extended to every-
BOOK BOTDnro.
C. 1A. W1BKXB,
AND
& Blank Book Manufacturer,
SIXTH STREET, OPP. THE POSTOFFiCB. Terre Haute, Indiana.
ALL
kinds of Blank Books made to order on short notice. ic Books, &c., bound in a su some style, at reasonable ratee.
'eriodlcals, MuS' itialand hand novl2U6m
