Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Volume 8, Number 33, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 March 1877 — Page 4
§he WeeMg
THURSBAY, HARCH 8, 877.
WM. C. BA LC & CO., Prop's. WM. Of BiT I, ,„,B?EKCIB P« BALL.
Office, No. am Smith Filth St
The DAILY 4^ AAISTTK is put. ished every afternoon except flu«»day,an 1 sold by the carriers at 30 lor tortmagi*. By •sell# 8.-
OO per year for »u mor.thfl??2.00 for8 mo«th#, The WKKdtLV Gajubttk Is issued every Thursday, a*dcontiaii»8 all the liest matter of the 0TX daily isenes. The WEEKLY GAZETTE I* THE lar^WRT paper printed in Terrc Haute. uidMBoldlor Oneeopyper year, $2, fcix moutits, $1, three months, 50c. All subscriptions must lie /paid for in lulvaace. No p*4»cr discontinued until all the *ur!*a«i«sw» are paid, «aless at the option *f the proprietor a failure to no-tiJy discontinuance at theeori «f the year will be considered anew engagement. Address all letters.
WM. (J.BALL &<X)., *AZJvTTK, Term Haute, 1ml.
MURAT HALSTEAO and the truiy good Richard Smith, are both at Washington advising with President Hayes about his appointments. Neither would refuse to assist him sailing the shjp of
State, iflcudly called.
THE GAZETTE is inclined to rgree with Sammy Cox that the .army .ti&. a fraud and should be abolished. As targets for Mr. Lo they are expensive
Their political labors in the South have 4 been a scandal ana a shame. As Grant said, the people will tolerate that sort of injustice no longer.
-Tim talented Associated Press agen ., at .Washington, who invented the ^present system of dividing up easages for transmission over the wires, ought to wear blue glass in the crown of his hat,t© r. force fcis brain. By the bye, his brain pan is
a
.• .fact theA nature does not abhor a vacum.
TIIE "GAZETTE finds consolation for ,•. typhogEnphical errors in its columns by the v?oe6 of other people. The follow ,»ng story comes from France:
Dr. recently sent to press a papiphleton the causes, &c„ of insanity
PaiTlPaAat4JU LUC tdUBC.) Ofctjj iiiooiiivj
fined) and ithe Doctors work went forth
with this astounding recommemdation.
THE annual report of the trustees of the Astor library, lo the Legislature of New York has just been made. Some curious facts aite(Contained in it. An accurate account i^'fcept by the librarians in
attendance .of kt£e names of every book taken from the shelves. If the readers of the GAZETITE. should guess from now .till the craak .of.doom, they could not tell what books w.ee rr.ost used of all the
splendid assortment in this great library. (According!WD the librairian, the patent office reports -\were most called for. Could any body ihf-we believed it? It is very evident that nlrlue glass should be put, at once in .the .Wetor library. Rheu,.jnatism of the brain, has bewildered the
intellects of the Gotbamites.
•..JWE IYE returning ta the simplicity of
jtfiet.fathere. Eve vwpuld find hersel fashionably dressed .if *he would appear ,,onc8 more upon die-scenes. In proof of this,- 'an Englishman .writes from Paris i.tlpatj* new fashion in Indies' stockings is being introduced. The. stocking is of thickjfhite or.pink «ilk, the cloth being ..pf^olid but flexiblegpld,^something like
,an ordiv^ry. $nake-dutin*obQut as thick as,a rain's little finger, ani, ornamented with pearls. The price of ttfcose simple articles -dress,is only.fpo .francs a pair,
Xvvyhich.,^«'ns
'SQD
very pheaja. .With eigh
teen-button glove« at 20 ahilli^gs a pair ant} ball-A«sses which cost frfipi 120 to 300 guineac a piece, wtshallfPflB attain '^an Arcagfutn simplicity ctf tojle.t, and a man who Jus say £2,000 a,year,..will be jible to let.biis wife and one 4#ugttffr go f,io about otKOnce each during Uic ,«ea-
(QJt&NT GONE.
Ojjce uppn a |ime, there was A 'te«n6ter, who was initte habit of coaunftntig&
uponrthe accidents that befell feim in phrajie more forciWe than polite. He obtaipqtl a r^putatjfpn after a while, *aad when his jn^r^cvatiops began, the aoaajl ,ioys wortW -gather #1|Dut to hear Wtn .On one occasion, hic^ragon became aljnost hqptjS^ssly fiiir^d, and to-add lo (the depth oCthe misfortune one tis ^•wheels cameQ^- Whee this was leans, ^ed the villagat? turned «put en m«se
With such a -magnificent text it wa6. jthought he .wQidd .surpass himself and .evolve .damnatory oratory of majestic
jpower. To their-oirprise*he was dumb The occasion was. greater-than the manjHe was speechless in the presence of hi crpost superb opportunity. He :fclt -that ^e.co.yld not do the subject justice
AX*-
Ulysses has ceased to he J^esi-
th.
Chandler, Blaine, Morton, Edmonds and
their hell born political confricrs, contemplate an empire: Whether thev can carry Hayes along with thetra, remains to be seen. He has not shown himself a Joseph in the grasp of temptation so far. We cont think any of them will make much head way in their coretons desires. The people are not in a mood for any
greatly extended further usurpations. The domination of military power over the domestic affairs of single states whether Ihev are northern, southern,
eastern or western states, can not proceed much farther. The growl of the people on that score is universal, and it will be respected from this time on. That is our guess now. Even bold, stolid, stupid Grant, the late President, with Mizzer Chandler buzzing in his patient ear, saw that, and one of his last official declarations was to say so to the country. Mr. Morton in his serenade speech last Saturday night at the Ebbitt House, seems not to have been impressed by the situation as it really is. He still contin ucs to utter forth his coarse, cruel, menaces towards the South—but then Morton when left to himself only talks. The strong arms of desparation, which
has heretofore supported him, is new withdrawn. The coming century will
not probably supply its place. Norton Blaine & Co. will soon find themselves in the attitude of all brutal bullies, deserted in the face of danger, with their knees smiting together. The future is advancing upon them. They will allbejugated and dragged by the same chariot, over the same jagged stones, to the same miserable political death. The rumbling ot
the coming chariot wheels may be heard
place.
practical demonstration of the
At the end of the last sheet he noted: "11'™ the Southern_ situation He announ
faut guillesaeter les alineas" (attend paragraphs,), which the unfortunate prin ter changed into "II faut guillotiner le6 alienes,'(.ailaiai people should be guillo
anenes i.anaiajipeopic 6""
A NEW APOSTLE.
President Hayes' inaugural addressj the full text of which was published in the GAZETTE ot yesterday, was in very many respects an admirable document With many of the positions taken, Democrats will most cordiallv agree. Indeed it reads like a panegyric of that organi
nation. T*ke for example his utterances Report Of the ConTBSt Of the Ca86 ci'hifltinn. HP announ- in u/Kinh ihfft filarfiatilfft nf thft
1T
•oes, in plain and unmistakable terms, the doctrine for which the Democratic party has been contending during the past ten years. If the Democrats were counted
after had e]ected tl)dr candi
M,
.fnr«„n t,
date, it is at lea6t some satisfaction to know that they have conyerted to their
.theories the presidential candidate of the opposition. That his conversion occurred in the interval between^ the election and -his inauguration, may seem remarkable,ibut it is in no respect more strange 4han the sudden change in Sand of Tarsus from a persecutoe of the Christians, to the zealous apostl of the'true faith. We now see no reason to dfiubt that Rutherford B. Hayes wouldhavev voted for Samuel J. Tilden for President, had the -election occured yesteiiday, and he himself been only a private .oitizen, desirous of voting for his
principles. His Southern policy, as now announced,: has been the Democratic policy far the past decade. .Reconciliation between the victims, .and local self-government for the SAstes of the South as well as the North, ha.ve .been Democratic watchwords, and»constituted the Democratic
creed. Repentance, it is said, is better late than never, ,&ud we have the authority of Dr. Watts for the statement that, '•While tihelamp holds out to burn,
The vilest-sinner may return." Nevertheless, we could have wished
that Mr. Hades' ^conversion had come sooner. He might have saved much heart burning, and. if there were lives lost during the canvass in the South, he mjght have saved some of them, by an earlier announce
ment of the doctiiacs to which he has at thi9 late day gives in#his adherence. An earlier statement from iim of this latter faith, would have relegated the "bloodv shirt" to the rear, as the dirty, disreputable, rotten rag it was, and which he now practically affirms that.he believes it to have been. He had ample opportunity to make such a declaration. He might
have 6aid it in an open letter to the late lien. Kiloatrick in reply to his note declaring that the way to .carjy Indiana :for Harrison and Hayes was by bloody shirt campaign with mon$v.",
He might have whispered it tp the world „vyfcetv Blaine and Morton and (Ingersoll yr roaming over the lfiftd fbreathing
thrflffienings and slaughter against the people of the sou Ji, whom he now assertsrhe wishes to reconcile.! He might JUaye.EpeJien it out loud, whsn the ,infadnousc*h*l composed of Grant,(.ChandJer And.Cameron, and Taft, sent aemies .into the southern states without color of law andyi for political purposes, as-Grant, admitted QP Friday last in telcew" rb Parlcard, •be
that "hereafter soldiers would not .be
a
false basis, sho^inc the dragon's
a 1
That'he has already permitted himself to bound an
be the tool of the very worst conspiracy denounce. We shaH gen
JRAINT OUT AND HAYES IN. of bitterness, *nd fo^ce and fraud, whUe Appreciated when heard. He said "one
Pr.,,'H.nev of the *"avore^ r^concilifriion, peace, and these little Atlantic seaboard gentleThef»pe of the Presidency of toe
nmeat for
United States is an accomplished fact. S" soueht tfie Presi- majority, as well as a very decided maGr#nt has been in a sufferable as a eunuch «hal» not met^ds Wfc' 1, jontvia the electoral college for the Grant has been in a sufferable as a eunuch
8mul
Wl,« hi. incotuons ,.,c«..or will prov, ty which ,n ™Went of Unitrf to be is yet a subject of speculation only, the open hght
tqf
5. '. asuDject hrnrnd as an honest mai to bodilr and carried off and thrown mto a to bodilr and carried off and thrown in to a political sbsckade called an eleeto^jflfombe the tool of the very worst conspiracy
A.1 1. ^.11 4L
UC"UU1,V-C-
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZlSTTJS.
and Ingersoll in the theory of l.ate that he favored with Grant and Chandler and Cameron, the doctrine that soldiers could be used in States for political purposes that he agreed with Wells that a Returning Board was aright and proper instrument farp controlling elections, and that his conversion to the Democratic faith occurred in the .-interval between the election
and his inauguration. Those were long day6, and there were many of them, and we see no reason why his anxious
thought might not have been fructified byconversion to the Democratic fr.ith as were the thoughts of many another Republican, who fought in November last under a banner that he will never fight under again. Weihold it bad manners to lodk a gift horse in the mouth. hold it bad Christianity to too often in a new convert's face the enor mity of his past offenses, and it is posi
tively devilish to doubt, too soon tire sincerity of his conversion. We shal' preserve onr manners and our Chris ianity. Mr. Hayes has said he favor 'the eperminent pacification ofthecoun try,', that he will try to reserve to
"theunestimable blessings of more hones' and peaceful local self government," that he will try to obliterate the "color line. Let him devote honest and intelligen
effort to that end, and God -speed, promising] to forget the bit terness of his campaign crusade again tall
and to remember him only as the zealous
apostle of a creed to which, though the chiefest of sinners, he has at last been converted. Let him now bid Grant'
already. The big drag will certainly take Chandler, Cameron, Wells, Blaine', .C yl
O
avmIa
nil
A
(T I
Morton and Satan—devils all,—to gel behind him and his fair promises wil1 have ripened into as plendid fruitage.
0. &
The Contest Over the Receivorship.
in which the Gladiators of the Western Bar Appear.
From the Ileport of the St. Louis Times. Springfield 111. March 2—The long and heated argument in the matter of the receivershio of the Ohio and Miss. Railroad Company, was concluded here at noon to-day before Judge Drummond, sitting with Judges Gresham and Treat, the district judge? for Indiana and 111. It is said on all hands that the argument in this case has been one of the most notable forensic combats e»ver witnessed here. A bill in equity was filed on the 17th of Nov. 18,76, in which William King, John W. Garrett & Sons and James .Ross were complainants, and the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad Company, Allen Campbell trustee, and the Farmers' Loan and Trust Company were made defendants. The bill represented the road to be in a deplorable state, its rolling stock and .motive power all run down, the October interest on the bonded indebtness unpaid, with a floating indebtedness of more than $1,000,000, and asked that two receivers be appointed to take charge of the property, and that the mortgages be foreclosed. This course as appeared by intervening peti-
ley, of Cincinnati WT McClintick, at-
torney for the Marietta and Cincinnati railroad Gen. Ben. Harrison, of Indiana
URIOUb FIRE.
TOWN DESTROYED.
mc
above serfs in condition. :lass are Spaniards, who conj, the mines, the commerce, rernment. A small army is keeping the Indians in order, are welcomed, and to them ralaoads and other improveue. The agricultural interest going backward. The farmers ished by heavy taxation, and eteriorating in quality, owing •al of the forests and the conjning of rain. Mr. Rumbold regrets that the native wine poor.
Ia., March 7.—An incendi01 ,ansing last night laid the city in ashes, including the JIB el, one church, several large ooe^griSUis
and
,1 r® presidential election.. could only be
hon?®V ma\
of this pcnhiry leaves but slight hope, throt'g and where I thinlt he will suroly .die. that he will not go to any extreme, the zealous believer in the "bloody «iurt Had my friend GOT. Palmer over -there,
that he will not go to any extreme, tne zealous Deuever iu u* Had my iriena\»ov. raimer uver •«.!««, jad man who groom him, may suggest, that he believed with Mortpo |-,r judge Davis, or Gw. Jamea C,
rtbe States. We men lately received 350^* of a popular
T. jorltvio the electoral college for the
fas mau^nu he is States. And yetie fos bee. fteked up
ul „.l miscion, where he
ce,n.
.. ij. 1 ,, exactly the type of^nanhood relished out rnask .to prevent blows in the face. seat-to the-soutfc/or political purposes. ^eie
as
teeth
We shall oot ,be oingenerous enough to the (trustees of ttieir pB»perty." Mr. Han-| Vicksburg Herald: The great bulk 01 assert that he,let the canvass proceed .on na.caesed a scene of ^ie wildest merri-
ment when he imde aUusion to the late
is
now languishing,
inson, or any one else of the many giants who inhabit the prairies of this coming empire state of all the states, been elected president by a majority of 250,000 white votes in this country, you would have heard thunder before this miserable thing could have transpired."
At the close of a long and sharp summing up of Mr. Torrence's intrigue to discredit the property of the O. &. Railroad, in order to force a foreclosure and to bring about the sell out of the entire stockholding interest of the company his misrepresentations in his annual reparts,and his concealments of the true condition of affairs M/ Hanna said: ,'it is not the firs't instance in history where the perpetration of an infamous-deed was preceded by falsehood and fraud. Cain, •Annanias and Judas are notable instances of the same character. I have always thought, vour honoi s, that Judas was tne worst of the three, for he it was that first betrayed our majestic Lord with a kiss, We and then sold htm for thirty pieces ofsilfljnfT ver. Judas went off and hung himself. -.i
I hope Daniel Toirence will not that, for if he did it would prevent him from getting a Christian burial."
He told Torrence to go back to his home at '.he east and get on some Returning Board there and make his living by swindling his neighbor*, and cosne no more to vex and annoy the good people ot the West. Torrence will never for-
them get Mr. Hanna's atiack on him. Judge Hoadlev ho followed, struck back some bloody blows, but his Hoosier opponent seemed to have carried the listening aud ience with him, including the court, so far as that thing could be guessed. The argument all through was intensely in-
we shall bid him (cresting. George C. Campbell, of Chicago, closed with an address of great power in favor of the removal of the re-
the6e doctrines, as the followers ot Christ ceivers. At the close, after a few hours ce„.,i „r Tores deliberation, the court dismissed Daniel forget1the persecutions of Saul of Tarsus,
Torrence and made John King,
receiver_
BRIEF MENTION.
Blaine has made a bad beginning.
It seems that Chandler lied. Well?
The nartv of moral ideas is irretrievable split.
It is hardly worth while to bid farewell to Logan
Garfield will do Morton's dirty work in the house
Blain voted against the bill because Conkling was for it.
McDonald is pardoned. Let no guilty man remain in jail.
It is hinted thai Spain is ready to give up the fight in Cuba.
The president of the Yale navy is lecturing on finan-shell questions.
A Mr. Forbes, of Boston, is said to be the handsomest man in the world.
Governor Kirkwood, of Iowa, is placing the state militia on a "war footing."
The fate of the nation depends upon what Thomas H. Benton used to call a '•coy and bashful blank."
New York Graphic: The grass-'oppera season has begun again in Kansas. Many new scores have appeared.
St. Louis Republican: If Senator Sherman had as much logic as bad temper his arguments would be irresistable.
It may be taken for granted that Ferry is opposed to a plan which would deprive him ot the title and office of king-maker.
COUI6C a! uppcaicu try unci vcuuig fvn- ijjivoiao, vv» tions brought into court by Mr. Manice. all been presidents of Mexico more or
ofNew York, and Emorv .& Sons, of Cincinnati, large holders of preferred capital stock, was inaugurated at a secret meeting ot seven of the thirteen directors of the company. The bill was confessed by
J* VT 1?M*•» CR CAIM /%R LITRN NT*A NAUT ANOTT TN PIKTFLOTP 1T1PNtft
Iglesias, Cortina and Lerdo, who have
to
less, are now open to engagements to lecture.
The Western Union company must burn operators as well as its dispatches it
wantg to
Mr. Beecher, the company solicitor, and ,it the court aopointed John King, Jr. vicepresident of the Baltimore and Ohio a ucrinan mc weuiauwwuipwi ^miRailroad, and Daniel Torrence, late pres- ed Dei Lebensversicherunggs esellschaft ident of the Ohio and Mississippi Rail- complains of the irregularity of the road the receivers prayed for in complain- mails. ants bill. Arguments canoe up on a mo-
now
completely shield radical ras-
A German life insurance company call-
Baltimore Gazette.
turn to discharge the receivers The re- Senator-elect Hoar that he apceivers were represented by Judge Hoad- .,
now?
raiiroaa uen. xen. narraou, ui muia.uu iju&iun rosi- Gail Hamilton's unscru Henry Crawford, of Chicago Robinson, pulousne»s about railroad passes is probKnapp & Shutt -and Hay, Green ably due to her being a protege of Mr. _r 1
and of this Little, the proceedings for their discharge wer "*y1''MS'11Pt are probably part Indian, for
George W. Curtis
Who care for Nag^
Boston Post-
Courier-Journal: The ferry-man of
iui more republican conspirators will not use er this soars for the Hayesian Caesar and his number rtunes.
two yean Generai Kilpatrlck sayes Senator Boutand, indee n's friends mismanaged his case. The House wa
untry OWes
those friends a vote of
the breaki new quest becoming Dr. Deem says that it is as easy for a day
mor
man to enter into the kingdom of
uses for iven as it is for a needle to go through word or tv eye of a camel.
this is the Times: Just now Illinois is will consu
thout
and see he
representation in the United
ateg senate,
bill it seen jt jg ju8^
but, under the circumstan-
a8
tate on th cent on tl St. Louis Times Considering how aud two ten Morton has seen fit to invert his man is ay, perhaps he is a proper person to you supp lk about a vertebra.
Any one (3Jncinnati Enquirer: A man named _ti recently in Salt Lake City.
whiskey,
Laugh
.. ... only be They are trying to bulldoze the Bonepoughto be wjlderTwesteni' ceurt, and niines by dosing them with water to strike ofee of our juries dumb with I thought the bulls of Uie stock mar11—' hottom .amazement" The speaker then went j*et are at the hie ,on to describe "the little fellows who live
u« 10 ueotrifc wjc iimc toe catcner ot the Harvard ball nine stating along the shire of our Eastern seaboard,
hat's the man they have been trying so
rd to"raise"in
Louisiana.
of it
The catcher of the Harvard
wjj|
be a queer looking fellow on the ball
who livechiefi.von bluej fish, as_not!ground,as he has invented a brass wire
the gutrdiaas of our people and! ,,
the tramps that are now feeding from the charity of the south are northern men which is a rather sad commentary on that section.
Tremeaduous reverer.ee for the constitution has suddenly broken out in quarters where Andy Johnson's attachment for that fundamental instrument was laughed to soorn.
Norratown Herald: When Dr. Mary Walker w»s in Salt Lake. Brigtiam Young wanted to make her the morning star of his harem. He said he wanted •ne wife whose old clothes could be cut down and made over for his boys.
Markets To-day.
Chicago, March 7 12:40 r. M.
RYE—Dull, lower, 63 bid February or march.65 April. OATS—Quiet 33% cash Mch.
April, 36^ May. CORN—Easier 41%®?+ March WHEAT—Steady moderately active 125^ April 128 May.
PORK—Dull. 14 4° »4 42K April 1462)^® '4-^5 May. LARD—Dull, 9-47-MJ @95°
5tco-
jr., sole
Mr King has had large expe
receiver.
0
rience in railroad management and will doubtless, fill his trust with great ability. So now we may feel that the Baltimore and Ohio, the great rival of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, has at last reached St Louis.
APril»
9S7h May. BARLEY—Quiet, 32 April no. 31)2 45 May.
WHISKEY—Dull, non.ii.ally 1 05 CAR LOTS—Wheat 47 corn42S oats 69. rye 21, barley 9.
MEATS—Boiled quiet, nomily 5^ average, 9^4, if average, green hams @16 average, SR loose easier sales about 1,000, bii7)i@820 March 835® S April S15 May S meats Hoxed Ouiet. higher, shoulders LC 7% SR Si® S CSJs.LC and S
7%.
HOGS—Official week, receipts 70,476, shirments 8,595. NEW YORK
New York. March 7.
PETROLEUM—Crude 10 refined resales i7»a. COAL—Dull.
LEATHER—Steady. WOOL—Firm. COTTON—Quiet, 13^3 for uplands. FI OUR—Duil. receipts 7.000, sales
VI HEAT—Quiet, No. 2 Chicago 40 No 2 Mil. ,41 receipts 4,000 110 sales.
YE—Quiet. CORN—Dull, receipts 102,000 sales 35,000. 55^@57)a, new western mixed 56@5S old do.
BARLEY—Dull, receipts 1,000. OATS—Dull, receipts 35,01 o, sales iS,ooo, 3S@52 mixea *cs.ei and ftate 42 @55 white do.
PORK—Easier, 15.50090 new mefs. BEEF—Dull, MEATS-Quiel. LARD—Lower,10. steam. WHISKEY—io(. SUGAR—Dull,.
CINCINNATI. Cincinnati, March 7.
FLOUR—Quiet, firm, weile i^o@i6o. WHEAT-Steady,. CORN—Quiet,, 40(^43. OATS—Dull, unchanged. WHISKEY—Quiet $1:05. PROVISIONS—Entirely nominal, no demand
PORK, Nominal, 1525(81550. LARD—Dull unchanged. BULK Meats—Steady, 6, S^@8^ sales short ribs 8^4 buyer Mch S£ buyer April.
BACON—Dull, 7@9%@9 HOGS—Fair demand, packing grades 560(81580. receipts, 1100.
COTTON—St:ady ST. LOUIS St Louis, March 7.
FLOU R—U nchaaged. WHEAT—Quiet,2 fall 43 cash 3 do 29(^40 cash 42)0 @434 April.
CORN—Lower 36 cash 35% bid March. OATS—Higher, 34®%.
RYE—Lower, 62y2 WHISKEY—Quiet 6. PORK—Lower. 14% bid cash sales 15 @15.10 April 15% May.
BULK Meats—Dull, nomily unchanged. BACON—Shade firmer 6}^@99.^.
LAKD—Dull, 9% May.
Terre Haute Market.
Thursday, February 8, 1S77.
FLOUR.—The market is quiet and price8firm good demand for best grades low grades nominal for want of stocks. We quote: New process, $8@8-5o city fancy, $7-25@7-75 city and country family, |6-75@7 extra, $([email protected] super, $5.-25@5-5° tow grades, $4@5-
WHEAT.—Still in good demand. Best grades scarce. We quote red, $I.2O@I 37 white and amber, $1.30(31.40 rejected, $1 @1.1
CORN.—Market dull and prices nom inally unchanged. Mixed corn, quoted at 39 4»c.
OATS,—Dull 32 at 39c, according to grade sold bv sample. RYE.—Steady at 70^ @7I^C »°r No. 2.
PROVISIONS.
BULK MEATS.—Market firm, but quiet. Demand light. We quote clear rib •ides at 8£@8%c cleac sides at S%@S% shoulders, 6 6^c: sweet pickled hams, 10 ne according to weight and brand. Mess pork. $17.50. Jobbing quotations—Clear pork, $19.50 mess pork, $18.60. Bacon shoulders, packed, 8)£c sugar-cured shoulders, canvassed, packed, 9^c bacon clear sides, packed, 10)^ @iic breakfast bacon, canvassed packde i2^c.
LARD.—Kettle, N}£@N££C. Jobbing quotations Steam lard, tierces, 12c kettle, tierces, do. half-barrels, 13c do kegs, 13c.
BUTTER.—There is a fair demand for butter at nominal prices. We quote choice table butter at 20c 25c.
EGGS—Are becoming more plenty and are selling at FRUITS AND VEGETABLES.— The market remains dull. Eastern apples, $2 $2.50 per barrel. Cranberries very scarce per bushel, $3 50 4 per arrel, $8 12. Potatoes in good de band at $T I.IO, .Onions, very scarc m4@ 4:50.
NO.86S2. STATE OF INDIANA COUNTY OF VIGO, IN THE I O I I O
SAMUEL CONNER VS. LOUISIANA NEWSOM, AND JOHN S. NEWSOM, IN FORECLOSURE. Be it known that on the 3rd day of March 1877, it was ordered by the Court that the Clerk notify by publication said Louisiana Newsom and John S. Newsom as non-resident defendants of the pendency of this action against them. Said defendants are therefore hereby notifiend of the pendency cf said against them and that the same will stand for trial at the April Term of said Court in the year 1877.
MARTIN HOLLINGER, Clerk. Dunnigan & Stimson, Pl'flPs Att'ys. Mch 3~w3t
1 1 1 1 re Pa in
UrlUIfc
SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of adecree ani .-r Jer 01" sale issued from the Vigo circuit court, to ir.e directed and delivered, in favor of Terre Haute Building Loan Fund and Savings Association No. 2, and against Herman Schweitzer, Bertha Schweitzer, William S. Rvce and Eve Ann Stakcman, I am ordered to sell the following described real estate, situated ir. Vigocountv, Indiana, to-wit:
Part of lots seven (7) and eight (8), in Ann Baums subdivision of out-lot number thirty-three (33) of the original out-lots of the town, now city of Terre Haute, bounded as follows. Commencing at a point on the east side of Fourth street, one hundred and four (104) feet south of the corner of Fourth and Oak streets, thence running south forty (4c) feet, thence east one hundred and forty one (141) feet to an alley, thence north forty (40) feet, and thence west to the place of begining, situated in Vigo county. State of Indiana, and on SATURDAY, MARCH 24th, 1877 within the legal hours of said day, at the Court House door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above de scribed real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding sewn 3'ears, to the highest bidder for cash, an upon failure to rea ize a sum sufficient '.o satisfy said order ot sale and costs, I will then and there offer the fee-simpi? i.~ and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same.
This 27th day of February. 1877. GEO. W. CARICO. Sheriff. Prfee$n.oo.
SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of a decree and order of sale issued from the Vigo circuit court to me, directed and delivered, in favor of William Clark and against Francis M. Bil by, Delilah Bilby, Helena Ehrenhardt, Henry Ehrenhardt. Terre Haute Building Loan Fund and Savings Association No. 1, Frederick Fischer, 1 am ordered to sell the following described real estate, situated in Vigo County, Indiana, to-wit-
Lot number one hundred and thirteen (113), in Jewett's addition to the city of Terre Haute north of the National road and east of Fifteenth street, in Vigo County, Inditna, and on SATURDAY, the 24th of March, 1877, within the legal hours ot said day, at the Couit 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 vears, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy the said order of sale and eosts, 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 271I1 day of February, 1877.
GEO. W. CARICO, Sheriff.
Pr fee $8.25.
SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of a decree and order of sale issued from the Vigo circuit court, lo me directed and delivered, in favor of Daniel C. List, and against Virginia E. White I am ordered to sell the following described real estate, situated in Vigo county, Indiana, to-wit:
Two lots or parcels of land numbered (17) and (18) seventeen and eighteen, on the plat of Andrew White's subdivis ion of the south part of the northwest quarter of section thirty-four (34), townshiptw lve [12], north, range nine [9], vv«»st, situated in Vigo County, in the State of Indiana which plat is recorded in the recorder's office of said junty, in plat book vol. 1 page 52, which subdivision numbered [17] seventeen, contains seven acres and fifty-nine [59-100], and subdivision numbered eighteen [18], six acres and sixty-four hundredths [6 64-100], together with all and singular the hereditaments and appurtenances to the said subdivisions or either of them belonging or in any wise appertaining, and on
SATURDAY, the 24th, of March 1877 within the legal hours of said day, at the Court House dooi* 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 27th day of February 1877. George W. Carico, Sheriff. Printers fee $ 11.00.
Commissioner's Sale.
Notice is hereby given that by the order of the Vigo Circuit Court, I will offer for sale on the premises, the following real estate, situated in Vigo County, and State of Indiana, to wit:
The southeast quarter of the southeast quarter also the west half of the northeast quarter all in section twenty-one (21), township thirteen (13),north, lange eight (8) west.
The said lands belonging to the estate of Jordan Roberts, deceased. Sale to take place March 23rd 1877, between ten o'clock A, M. and four o'clock p. M. of said dav.
Terms of sale: One quarter tash in hand. Balarce in six (6) and twelve (12) months. Purchaoer giving notes for unpaid balance with good freehold security,waiving valuation and appraisement laws, drawing ten (10) per cent interest from day of sale. Feb. 2131,1877.
JOHN BOYD, Commissioner. Feb. 22-w 4t.
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATOR 'SI,A POINTMENT. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed Administrator of the estate of Andaline Cassady, deceased, late of Vigo County, deceased. The estate is probably solvent.
SYDNEY B. DAVIS. Administrator.
Febri-w^t^^
Administrator's Appointment.
Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned has been appointed Administrator
of the
estate of John Funkhouser, late of Vigo County, deceased. The estate is probably solvent.
JACOB H. SHANK,
Feb. 28, 1877. Administrator. Mch 1 W-3C
