Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Volume 8, Number 49, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 July 1877 — Page 8

'JhJ

'cdity (gazette*

THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1877.

THE TWO SERPENTS.

An Oriental Fable.

fnrlema, the sultan, imtbis son IVith Sail), thewi«€ and, when the boy was

W*ith°8tu3ioui tasks, it was the teacher's way To weave tor him some moral tale eacn nay. OneeveniQfr when the hour had corne around, l'hls tale he told—in Persian annals found

"Once a magician, skilled in every art. Meeting King Lobaic,breathed npon his heart, •When from that Teflon,venomous and br ght, Two hideous serpents wriggled forth In sight.

lint he, uDdannted, answered Hack again: •These arc the tokens of yonr glorious reign, And, if you Wish taeneeforth,unboundea good, Jp'allnotto feed them well with human blood, Give them your sturdiest men in^sacrtflco for thier support—for this is just and wise. The king, at'llrst, grow pale when tnis was •aid" liut by degrees to Its result WAS leu. And scattered slaughter till tuimiltous fear Smote all h'satrickeo subjects lar and near. At length his people, seeing so ma»y aialn, Itc rotted at the king's bieouthirsty r-Jign, And locked him in a cavern far away, \Vhero to the serpents he hi j.self was prey-

O history hornoiel" tho young prtuce said. '•M'hat could have put *uch baseness in h.s heady

ow

tell another talo more fair, I pra\, Tiiatl with shudder ng may not end the tlfly »'Most willingly," said Salb, "and, when 'tis done, ... You will confess It Is a simple one

"Once on a time, a youngsultan was led To htedail things an artful courtier said, Who crammed him with delnsions that were

Withall the oignaaccs of sinful life— With dreams ol glory and Imagined joy, And tilings that dazzle only to annoy Pride and voiuptousness performed their

TiUthoy became joint rotors of his heart And, held by these, above his ueopie groan He walked, until they snatched him from the throne., Still, though he last h!s crown, Pleasure an

Pride

Clung,like two adders, port.hud upon 111?

TiU.sin'kinjrdo within theircoii'ng^n re, He died, at lengtn of sorrow ana ckd, uir.

Tiion said theprliit o, when Saibpuuael /or

4

Untrue or true, I ilkothis talcth6 best."

uAlas!"

said Haiti, whv do you thus ex claim? .„ Better or not—both stories are the same! —Joel Benton, in Appleton's Journal for

June.

HULMAN & FAIRBANKS are buying in a large number of heads of stock—about 2600 in all for the distillery feed.

THE Commercial Hotel served a most exoellent dinner yesterday, and it was enjoyed l»y a number ol guests.

THE preliminary trial of S. S. Whitehead for the murder of Jno Ryan will come off at Marshall on the 6th of the present month.

"A BABE in a house is a well spring ©f pleasure." If you want the pleasure increased three-fold, use in the nursery Terry's Salicylic Soap. It will do it.

THE man who stopped his paper because he could not offord it, lately sold a hundred bushels of wheat at twenty cents per bushel less lhan the maket price.

CHAPMAN'S Fourth street stand is the most largely patronized restaurant in Terre Haute. The success of Mr Chapman is a great credit to his business sagacity and energy.

NOBODY need go bareheaded or be seen wearing a shocking bad hat on our streets on the Fourth of July, with the cheap prices for nice stylish goods at Foley Bros, hat store.

BOSSOM & W1 LKES have secured the contract for painting and glazing at the new Polytechnic work shops. 1 hat is a father big contract and augers well for this enterprising firm.

DAVE BRONSON, who has opened the Exchange Hotel, corner Tenth and Chestnut streets, has one of the finest saloon and dining halls in the city. He has a large trade among the traveling men.''

THE Terre Haute Cement and Stone Pipe Compsny is doing a great deal of work and doing it very finely. When Mr, Farnharn, the superintendent under takes to do anything he does it well, and does it promptly.

4

EDWARD ROGERS of Florida who has been studying in the University of Heidelberg. Germany for the past three years, arrived in the city Saturday afternoon, and is 'he guest ot his relatives, the family ol Joseph S. Jenckes, Sr. —0—

YESTERDAY Mr. August Hoberg issued three passage tickets to Mr. Joseph Kaian, Martin Kalen and Marie Kalen,

for

Zurich Switzerland. They sail from Phila. on the steamer Vaterland of the Red Star Line which Mr. Hoberg is the agent for this city.

A GOOD lor nothing dog^ killed twenty ifchickeus in £h d.iy.s last week at the fresidence of Mr. W. Clift, corner Fourteenth stieet and Sycamore. He was liidint* in day time and at night sneaked into tne chicken house. Mr. Clilt shot the dog and killed him.

ON Saturday, Mr A. B. Stonerclosed his business services nt Mr T. H. Riddles where he has been engaged for the past Seven years, first as a book keeper, and then in charge of the wholesale^ department of that extensive establishment. He will hereafter be found at his hat store Oil Main street, that his within the past

year bui.t up a high and excellent reputation.

""••r'ihat

ir

CURIOSITIES OF LIFE. Lay your fir.ger on your pulse and know

at every stroke every immortal passes to his Maker some tellow-being crosses the river of Death and, if we think of it, vc may well wonder that it should bi so long before our turn comes. Half of all who live die before seventeen. Only one person in ten thousand live to be one hundred years old, and one in a hundred reaches sixty. The married live longer if it t' than the single. There is one soldier to every eight persons, and out of every thousand borne only ninety-five weddings take place. If you take a thousand ,pertons who have reached seventy yeare, there ai ot clergymen, orators and public speakers, forty-ty three soldiers, thirtyftwo lawyers, twenty-niue professors, twenty-seven doctors, twenty-tour.

JSJ* ,t

HOUSES OF GOD:

They are Fairly Attended Yesterday.

The Sunday Schools Make Only a Fair Showing, the Normal Students Being Away.

Rev. C. R. Henderson Preached a Good Sermon Last Night at Armory Hall.

His Text: "Ye, Therefore Beloved, Seeing Ye Know These Things Before, Beware Lest

Ye,

Also, Being Led Away With the Errors of the Wicked, Fall From

Your Own Steadfastness.

Sunday was a pleasant day and^ the churches were well attended accordingly- ...

REV HENDERSON.

Mr Henderson preached to a very fair audience last night at Armory Hall. Among the notices given out, he announced that there would be a Fourth of July praver meeting at the chapel Wednesday evening.

His text was taken from 11 Petsr, 111 17: '-Ye therefore, beloved, seeing ye know these thingB before, beware lest ye also, being led away with the error of the wicked, fall from your own steadfastness."

There is a warning in this instruction. Take care .est you fall. Stenrtfin'ness is of the very tn^htest. impoi#U»iv. The unsteadiness of ll.c American people Is proverbial atnong European nations. We are l.aturulij i:'a roving, changeable disposition. Steadfastness in this sense does not mean immoveabili'y Uiat we shall never change. That attribute belongs to God alone. Every young man should have a home. There are three reasons for this. First, his happiness depends upon it second, his business third, his habits. There is a. kind ol moss that is always floating about clinging now here, now there, never find ing a lasting foot-hold. There are a great many young men of just this character. There is a deep necessity also for establishing habits ot character1.

If a man comes into the comm unity with the purpose of remaining there steadfastly, he is just the kind of a man that everybody wants to employ. But it he savs he is going to stay two months, nobody wants him. It is one sign of a good domestic, that she has staid in one family for a long time, but who is going to employ a cook who offers as a recommendation, that she has served in one thousand different households? One of the best things you can do in early life,

U1C UC&l llliugo ... 'J 1 ,, is to make up vour mind to stay some 4 01 e4 4. one place until you were successful, andj then stay there. Whatever be your position in life, succeed in something. Corresponding to this, is the fact that if you want to succeed you must have some fixed moral principles.' "Be not lead away by the error of the wicked." It is a good thing not to have any wild oats to sow, for What ye sow, that shall ye reap if ye sow the wind,

YE SHALL REAP THE WHIRLWIND." It is just as true that virtue and honor have their it-ward as that the 6un will rise in the morning. Yes, even more true, for the time shall come on that last gieat dav, when the sun will rise no more. There are several reasons why this warning should be given to young men. Ar istotle, who lived three hundred years Hefore the birth of Christ, observed that youth was fickle ana unsteady.

Readers of "Fausi" will remember how Faust, when he was wearied with study, was tempted by Mephistophles to go out into the world in search ot pleasure how when he had tried every means of securing happiness, which so many had tried betore, and had wrought the downfall of Marguerite, he exclaimed, "would that I had never been born.' This has been the crv of many a young man, who, after he had exhausted every pleasure, found his life worse than wasted.-

We need the experience of those who have tried life before us. Many a mine has been suuk for coal in vain, where a geologist, if he had been called in, would ha've showed that no coal existed.

There are some deeds in life that once done can never be undone. Do not i,:ake a bargain with the devil until you have had God's bid put in.

A man going out into life meets witlj scenes very different from those in his own h:.me. We were shocked at the first oath, the first lie we heard, but we soon become accustomed to it. We learn first to pity, then to embrace the evils we once shunned. The truths of the bible, which we once thought undeniable, w« will find discussed by seemingly upright and virtuous men.

Unless our feet are on the solid rock. there will come a timo when the very earth seems shaken under our feet, and our old faith totteis. ready to fall into hopeless unbelief.

Huxley savs that if every violation of the moral i'aw was followed by two months of toothache, it would be obeyed mneh more strictly. That is not God's kind of morality. He wants to train us by love, knowledge, •odjtruth.

The consequences of vice do not immediately folio*?. Men live in sin and if they do not suffer they «ay, "where is now vour God.". But punishment will come"at last. God does not reap his harvest every June or July.

A few ©tactical hints:—A man who directly or indirectly puts around your path motives for wrong doing, is not your friend. There are no vacations in morali-

ty. Franklin used to say that a conscience that would not bend a little was a very inconvenient thing. The Greeks had a proverb which said, "do nght, though the heavens fall." Do what your conscience tells you on every occasion, and God will protect you.

A man who tries to under-mme vour religion is stabingyou to the heart. Hux­

ley,

although he has no belief in the existence Of God, says that faith in God always helpful to man. Ha\e some moral principals. Establish your character. You will find the need of Christ, who will love YOU, protect you. and hurt no' bouy who" really tries to live rightly.

~M .* KICEKTEIARY. J|

Collection

ex is

As a blind sculptor feeling a broken statue, could say, "this arm held a shield, these broken fingers grasped a spear at last when you grope blindly for so

so

some-

THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

thing to lean upon," you will find that arm that you do not now recognize. God grant that you may find it to-night

Rev. Mr. Darwood preached to a good house in the morning from the text: Whatsoever a man

soweth

Officers Teachers Advanced scholars Intermediate Infant Visitors Total

that shall he

also reap. The following is the report of the Sunday school: ATTEKDANCB.

11 -7 37

194 I23 25

417

$3*47

CHRISTIAN.

Rev. Mr. Peale took the hot weather into consideration yesterday and preached on water. It was a cooling subject.

The Sunday School report is as follows: Attendance Chapters read. Visitors Contribution

144 277

19

$3.74

ASBURY CHAPEL.

The attendance at this school yesterdap was quite fair and the services very interesting. The number present were Officers 5 Teachers Scholass

Officers Teachers Scholars Collections

125

Visitors .. r. 9 Collections $«34 ONGREGATIONAL. 6 19 198 ., $2,38

BAPTIST.

Officers Teachers Scholar* Collections

7

2t

208

*3.i6

UN\VKRSALIST.

This school had a lighter attendance than usual. The report is: 5 12 68 $2.25

Officers Teachers Scholars Collections

COURT HOUSE ECHOES*

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.

Eli G. Runnels to Julia A. Hughes Middletown, in-lots

$3,000.

33, 34, 39, 40, 41,42

Robert Buckell to Tulia B. Hosford, Terre Haute, out-lot

67

in Grover's sub­

division. Li D. Ross to Frank H. Palmer, lots 1.2,3,4,5,12, 13, 14. 15, 16,17,19,20, 21, of 8 and part of $4,

112,

9. $2,250.

20.

Frank H. Palmer to Arthur H. Wait, same,

$850.

John H. Engle to Orren N. Allen,

8 4

Five acres off wsofn ^ofn 10. 35-100 acres of cor sw^ofsw M,«3,r 13. 8. $,5,000.

Milton Burgess to Amanda B. Clough,in lot

24

Dunnigan's subdivision.

$150.

THE CRIMINAL COURT

was in session this morning, Judge Long on the bench. The case of the state vs. Lewis Busche for grand larcency was called up. A plea of guilty was entered and a sentence of two years in the penitentiary passed.

State of Indiana vs. John Savorce for grand larceny is on trial this afternoon. At the time ofgoing to press the case it still being tried.

THE GRANDJUFTY

met this

morning

and,on account

01

the

harvest adjourned until next Monday. ADMITTED TO THE BAR. The many friends of Edward J. Barry will be delighted to learn that this morning, in the Criminal Court, that gentleman was admitted to practice law in all its branches.

Mr. Barry is a promising young man, and possesses fine legal attainments, and we have no hesitancy in

saying

that Mr.

B. has a bright future before him. Mr. Barry has been reading law about four years. One year was spent in the law office of Richard Dunnij»an, Esq.. anti the balance of the time in the office of A J. Kelley. M:\ Barry will at once commence practice, having alreauy accepted the position of Deputy Prosecutor under Prosecutor Kelley.

"GOOD WILL" LODGE.

NO. 520, KNIGHTS OF HONOR. Elected their officers for the ensuiDg term, viz:

Dictator, J. B. Lyne Vice-Dic'ator, J. B. Shirk Ass't Dictator, J. D. Wilson Reporter. W: J. Grief Financial Reporter, I.N. Ash Treasurer, J. C. Kelley Guide. A. P. Lee Chaplain. H. J. Treat Guardian, S. Owens Sentinel, *. $ Joel Surber 'frustie, *C*. M. Smith

STATION REPORT.

The following is the report of the station hcuse for the month »f June: Keeping house of ill fame Larceny, and Drunk,Wandering prostitutes, Suspicion, Asosciating, Carrying concealed weapons, Vagrancy, Disturbing the peace, —,••• Transient, ri Assault and battery, Disorderly, Resisting an officer, Family disturbance, Inmates house of ill-fame, Fighting,

Total, I*8

A SCIENTIFIC writer says that death by lightning-stroke is the most painless death in the world. We don't know about that. We never talked with a man who was struck by lightning but a man whose wife once caught him kissing the hired girl told us in confidence that he would never believe that a man could fcuifer as much in a thousand years as he did in twenty seconds.

IN A MAD HOUSE.

A Letter From the Insane Asylun.

Luther Benson, tho Temperance Lecturer, Writes About his Experience in the Place.

INDIANA HOSPITAL FOR THE INSANE,) TUNE

MANTLE OF GLOOM

over the brightest and happiest facc, and touch the hardest heart with an almost more than human pity. I was not sent here I certainly did not come for pleasure, but to escape by this beneficifent means from a curse which has enshrouded in starless midnight all the days of my life. I would gain the strength here that would enable me to stand forth in the future before the world a man to fini&h the remainder of my life in something of repose, though it be like that which follows the wreck strewn coast of the sea when its waves have sub$ided, atter the tempest has become stilled I would escape the lash of the fiend, the fell spirit of alcohol. I would be free from tne malediction of man which has filled to overflowing the cup of my existence with agonies darker hued thaa I trust ever came to another mortal man, since the birth of human forms and souls. Rather than again endure the pain6 and disappointments, the sorrows and shames of the hopeless jast that come trooping about me, this morning, thicker than the firy legions of lost souls encamped upon hell's parched and blazing plains, I would remain a lite time barred and bolted in this

THE MANAGEMENT

ol the institution is all that could be desired. Dr. OrpheusE varts, the Superind ent, for once in the woilds history, is the right man in the right place. This I believe is the honest opinion of every body, without regard to politics, creeds or color, none of which shonld ever be considered in connection with institutions ofcharity. There sre now in the asylum about

5

t~'.sr

25, 1S77.

To the Editor of the Indianapolis Sent.11c SIR—It is only fair to suppose that you are not crowded with communications from this quarter, for as yet no bureau of co»Tespondence has been established here. Thinking that a letter might be

01

some interest to your readers

I centure to send you one. I have been here about on© month, and am happy to report myself very much improved, both mentally and -physically. I can rectlll no time in the past three years when my general health was as good as now. The government of this institution is so well adapted to the restoration of exhausted nature that I must at the outset express the univer*al satisfaction entertained regarding it. By this I by no means wish to convey the impression that it is a pleasant summer resort—far from it. It is what it is called, an asylum for the inaane, and as such is the stage of sights and scenes daily and nightly which would throw a

8

by

10

fooi

room, through whose one \viiJow I can see afar the shining heavens, and on whose bare floor and walls no pioture ever falls but my own shadow ves, and die here unattended and alone—die and be buried, as the custom is, at the dead of night when no weeping eye could look into the grave. All these, I solemnly repeat, rather than again fall into the hands of my merciless and destroying enemy, whiskey. 1

650

patients. Comparatively lew of this num berare hnown as' raving maniacs." Manof them—indeed mobt—are rather quiet and peasab'.y disposed. The most

WRECHED AND PITIABLE

Cases are those giver, over to a blank, silent, motionless, hideously calm despair, where ihe only discoverable evidences of humanity are the form and features, and the only marks of life, unconcious breathing and unobserving sight. Their faces are so many vacancies. Their but empty glassy wind'ows to the dark thought deserted chambers' once lighted by the Promethean fire of intellect and inhabited by ever moving restless thought. They are these despairs personified take no note of time, placc, or circumstance, or people. They are utterly dead to their friends as if they were mingled with the grave clods of the valley of death. Other patients are lively, good humored, fierce, pugilistic, merry or sad, as they fancy, laboring under all sorts of hallncinations. living in worlds peopled with the creatures and the accidents of distorted minds but the former are the same monotonous, horse fly, quiet representatives of human shaped nothingness. Better the wailintts, the snrieks, the groans and contortions of others than their eternal blankness. Among the causes which underlie most of the world's insanity the principal are religious excitement, drinking ardent spirits to excess, overwork, badly cooked food, and, among females, the derangements common to the change of life. The men are usually mo.'e quite than the women, but I suppose this last fact^ is quite as true outside the asylum as inside. Manv of the patients appear as little out of balance to the casual observer as the same order of persons at home. Every grade of society is represented, from the highest to the lowest, but there are.few Hamlea and Ophelias here. TUfe impression that one gets on entering the asylum, consciously for the first time is much more unpleasant in most respects, less so in a few, than after they have become familiar with the drama and farce of madness. There always rises, always predominates in vision the living pictures, the reality ~f SHATTERED REASON'S SORROWFUL

HOMES

and broken hearts. Insanity is a terrible thing, but that vary many people labor more or less under its many charactered spells without suspecting or being suspected of it, I have no doubt. I recall business men and professional men of the highest rank, who are clearly insane in one way or another, and no more accountable for such of their actions as come under it than than the inmates here would be. It will be difficult to judge just now how sane or insane men are until we have what we now have not —a standard of insanity. Great genius, it has been observed, is closely allied with madness and there can scarcely be no doubt that men like Byron. Pope, and others stood, at times, within the wierd world of the unnatural. There is no more sad or painful sight on which the human eye ever gazed than a nalnd in ruins, a reason dethroned. We touch very nigh Deity when we stand on the summit ot intellectual vigor, la a little.

hollow globe, bounded by, a skull, with a dome no Ilrger thtn a tortoise shell, duel's that nameless and immortal power which w« call mind. Out from underneath this dome have gone in gloomy rr shining procession all thoughts that men ever thought. Within this wonderful chamber all melodies that men have ever penned upon the listening air have first sounded. From this land-locked harbor all ships whose prows searched for new land and discovered seas have sailed. Within this shop all curious inventions have been wrought out. Here poetry has strung her tuneful lyre, and history with whitened head, labored patiently at her accumulating scroll. Here religion has found her alter, and piety a place to kneel. And finest of all, and most to be wondered at, within these chambcn, which The mind calls home, dwells imagination—she of the daring eye and audacious foot, and sees with unainching orbs the gloriei of the far off realms, where flesh has never entered, and men walk, as if by rights divine, the crystal pavement and the golden street.

LUTHER BENSON.

SELECTED PARAGRAPHS.

How often, oh, how often we find a m*n who will pay eleven dollars for a box of cigars without a question or a moment's hesitation, who will contract his brows and start back in speechless horror and stare for ten straight minutes at the item, "to one piece of dress braid, ten cents," in a drv goods bill that his trembling wile hands him.

An extraordinary trial is about to take place before a Parisian tribunal. A jealous husband in the village of Carrieres fell upon a no/el mode of punishing his wife for her flirtations by compelling her to 8wallow a live spider every Monday morning. After submitting for a time, she informed the police, and the husband was arrested and put in prison.

Miss Helen Taylor, the step-d.iughter, literary assistant and executor of the late John Stuart Mill, and a member of the London School Board, has a pleasant brunette face, lighted by calm, intelligent eyes, and framed with smooth bands of very black hair. Her manner in publiui speaking is somewhat monotonous, but her voice is agreeable. And she dresses in good taste.

Ethelinda (fre*h from a boarding school romance): "Oh, darling, 'twere bliss to see that inanly brow guerdoned with helm and plume—and to behold you, as you rode forth on your snowy charger, and waving falchion," flashing eve and head erect." George: "Until a ball from a Krupp five miles off knocke.1 it (veryn-.uch) intoacocked hat." (Collapse.)—Funny Folks.

Princess Demidoff, a young Russian lady wearing the full uniform of a hussar and mounted on a magnificent charger, rode at the head of a splendid regiment of cavalry through the outskirts of Bucharest not long ago. She is the daughter of the honorary colonel and proprietor of *he regiment, who is reported as spending 150,000 a year upon it. No Russian cavalry is so well mounted, the horses averaging 16 hands, comprising chestnut, whites, browns, and bays respectively.

An Austin gentleman who served through the war of the rebellion, told his wife that the

30th

of this month would

be decoration day. "I hope then," she said, "that you will decorate me with a new bonnet." "My dear," he replied, "this is a year of compromises I'll compromise on ten yards of calico. The spirit in which this offer was met has Convinced him that the era of good feeling has not yet arrived, and he thinks he will adopt a policy of reconciliation.—Austin Reveille.

«WE PASSED THAT.

Its one thing to have an object in life is is quite another thing to know when we are aiming at it. Many begin well, but after a time get off the course then their life is more likely to grow wrong than right. The following incident has its moral for all who ure aiming to no right:

During a beautiful Summer's night, on one of our%reat lakes, the master of a boat thought he might take a tew hours rest and infrustet? the rudder to the hands ofhisbovas somewhat simple minded lad. Do you see that star straight bet:ra us he said to him, pointing to the Polar star. "Yes."

Well, try to keep the boat straighc in that direction.', "I understand."

The captain fell asleep. The boy did the same. The wind changed the boat turned out of its course mere and more, till at last it had made a semi-circle. The boy awoke he was astonished to see back the star which had just now been straight bafore him. but he did not the less continue with a firm hand to steer the boat toward the South, from whence it had first come.

Two hours after the master in his turn awoke. He cast one glar.ce upor. the sky and another upon the boy. "Well, stupid what are you doing?" "I am still keeping-always straight before me, as you told me." "Ah. indeed! and the Polar star?" "Oh! the Polar star! Why, we passed that long ago!"

"You couldn't," shouted our irrepressible, as a bachelor visitor finished ceulogium on cremation by an expressed wish that, rather than be "coffined, cribbed, confined," he might become the subject •f a Hindoo suttee "you couldn't, you haven't got any wife!" "That's no matter." growled the Colonel as he beat a hasty retreat (the Colonel io also not connubial), "that's no matter. Plenty of men would be glad to lend me theirs lor the occasion." The Colonel has no card for our suburban kettle drum next week —Boston Advertiser.

HE was an inquisitive boy and he said: "Ma, will al the heathens turn np all right when it comes resurrection times? "Yes, my son." "And them missionaries those will turnup?" "Ceitainly, my son." "Well, when them Cannibal heathen what's been feed in' on missionaries gets resurrected, and them missionaries what's been eat comes around and want to get resurrected, things is going to be worse mixed up than the Presidential election, hey, ma?h "It is time you were in bed my son."

McCalister a boarder *t the State Prison south, sent from this county, was discharged on Friday bis sentonce having expired.

BISHOP PALAIS.

The Funeral Services Over Dead Bishop*

th

Crowds in Attendance—A!Solem and Impressive Ceremony.

The City of Vincennes in Mourn ,* s* 'n9- p'k.%14,

Special Correspondence Gazette. VtNCENNES, July 3.—Upon arrivin here at 10 o'clock this morning, Vin cennes was found literally crowded wit people from all parts ol the country do honor to the distinguished dead. Th procession was formed at the Bishop's residence, and marched out Chuh: street to Fourth, out Fourth to Broadway, Broadway to Second street, down Second to the Cathedral. The follow ing was the order of procession:

Marshall, Ringgold band from Terr Haute. St Francis 'Benevoleut society, Terre Haute.

Hibernian society "of Evansvlfte. St. Vincent society of Vincennes. St Johns BenttVolenJUwcWty Vincennes. 0**

Hibernian Benevolent society of Vin cennes. Holy Angel Society of Vincennes.

Clergy Charity. Cab containing Arch-Bishop Purcel and other Bishops.

Hearse, containing the body of Bisho Palais. Sisterb.

St. Rose boarding school children. Orphan boys from Highlands.Citizen ladies on foot. Hundreds upon hundreds were unabl to gain admittance to the vast structur and stood upon the outside during th entire time of the lcag ceremonies with

The Cathedral was lighted up with th hundreds of tapers and as the mellov glow but dimly lighted the holy place the scene was one that can never be for gotten.

The remains were placed within th altar at about halt-past eleven o'clock when the holy mass wan celebrated. Over the altar were the inscription "The i' ather of the Fatherless',' and "Ou Father."

The following was the ORDER OF EXERCISES IN THE CATHEDRAL.

His Grace Archbishop Pur-cell, Cincinnati, Celebrant Assistant, Ver Rev. Father Benoit, Vicar-General, Fort Wayne. ',

Deacon, Very Rev.'Xv Bessonies SubDeacon, Very Rev. J. Guegen. Masters of Ceremonies, Revs. Mougin and Missi.

Chanters, Fathers"Chasse and Petit. Choristers, Fatherrs Merz, Dudenhausen, Seegmiller, Klein, AUerding and Sandermann.

Censor-Bearers^ ^fathers Fathers and Fleischmann. Acolytes, Fathers Merkle and John Doyle,

Bearers, Fathers Seibmann, Ewers, Kintrup. Scibertz, Dickmann and Deistl.

Chaplain to His Lordship, the Bishop of Fort Wayne, Rev. E. Audran. Chaplain to His Lordship, the Bishop of Alton, Father McDermott.

Orator, His Lord9hip, Bishop Dwenger, of Fort. Wayne. The office of the dead was chanted by the entire clergy from half past ten until alter eleven o'clock, after which the re-' quiem mass was said.

Bishop Dwenger of Fort Wayne, preached the funeral services which was a complete review of the good man's life, and one of the most eloquent disquisition ever delivered on an occasion of this kind.

Orch Bishop Purcell of Cincinnati pronounced the absolution and the body was lowered .into the vault under the Altar, in the Chapel of St. Francis Xavier. Rev. Aug. Bessonies of Indianapolis will probably succeed the vacant place.

TI1E SAVINGS BANK,. he Terre Haute Savings Bank announces, through its Secretary Mr. Jno S. Beach a semi-annual dividend to depositors of

4,%

on ail sums over

duty

$2.o»

which have been on deposit for six months and a proportionate sum of such amounts as have been in the bank for three months. It again becomes the pleasant

of the GAZETTE to congrat­

ulate the citizens of Terre Haute on such a bank. It is as solid as the everlasting hills. jts directors are the most »ubstantial men in Terre Haute and its immediate managers are men of undoubted business sagaaty. The GAZETTE urges parents to see to it that their children start a deposit there. It will do a great deal to cultivate in them habits of economy.

There area number of men in town who owe all they have to the fact that this bank took care of their early earnings.

THIS morning Mr. Perdue saw a fellow who gave his name as Robert Gordon driving a

fine

Alderney cow in town.

Mr. Perdue asked if he wanted to sell it and he said he would and set a price of $33,00. As the cow was certainly worth $100,00 this 1 yw price aroused Mr. Perdues suspicion and he finaly had the fellow arrested on suspicion, and the cow left to go its way home with a fellow employed to follow and see where it went.

IN the advertising columns of the GAZETTE will be found an notice of administrators sale of the effects of the late Geo. Wolfe, by Marcos Shoemehl, the 33rd. of this faonth. The especial attention of the butchers and others is called to this as it interests them more articularly than any other class.