Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 August 1878 — Page 4
gazette.
The DAILY GAZETTE is published, every afternoon except^ Stittday, and sold by the carrier at 30c. per fortnight, bymaiL $8.00 per yeiar $4.00 for six months, $2.00 for three months. THE WEEKLY OfAZETTE is issued every Thursday, and contains all the best matter of the6ix daily issites. THE WEEKLY GAZETTE is the largest paper printed in Terre Haute, au4 is 6qld for: On? copy per year $ 1.5 0 six month b, iBci three months. 40c. AD subscriptions must be paid in.! ftdvancef." ^PJo paper discontinued until all arrearagss are paid, unless at the option of the proprietor. A failure to notify a discontinuance at the end of the year will bs considered a new engagement.
Address ail letters, WM. C- BALL & CO. GAZETTE Terre Haute. Ind.
DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET.
For Criminal ml pre" THOMAS B. LONG. For Criminal Prosecutor, ALBERT J. KtLLBY.
For Auditor,
ANDREW GRIMES. For Treasurer.
,C:'\ KEW.TOH' KOGEKS. Fox Sheriff, LOCIS IIAY.
For Recorder.
JAMES '.PHILLIPS. For Coroner, HENRY EIIRENHARDT.
For CommisBiocers,
First Dietnet—JOHN W. WILSON* Second District—JNO. S. JORDO^T. For Representatives,
I.N. KK8TEK.
ROBERT VAN 1VALZAII. For Surveyor, TULLY SIMMONS.
JUDICIAL
For Proseeutor of tbo 14th Judicial Circuit, J. B. PATTEN, of Sullivan County.
CONGRESS. .it or. .Congress!.
A.J.
HOSTETLER, of Lawrence County.
DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET FOR 1878
For Sccrc-ary of State,
JOHN G. SHANKLIN,of Vanderburgh Co. For Auditor ot State, MAI1L0N D. ANSON, of Montgomery Co
For Treasurer of State,
WILLIAM FLEMING, of Allen Counfr. For Attorney-General, THOS.W. WOOLEN, of Johnson County.
For Superintendent of Public Instruction. JAMES H. SMART, of AUen County.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 15,1878.
SEPTEMBER is coming on apace and the prudent man is preparing to go into bankruptcy.
HON. B. W.»HANNA'S appointments in Vigo county will befoui} in this issue Of, the GAZETTE.
THE miners strike in the Shamokin district of Pennsylvania is
and lawful
4
1
8th !t.h 10th 11th Wih 13th
:dying
out.
Fron all present indications there will be no trouble this summer.
I&AH-XIXG, the bounding Banning as, hq has been called, failed to secure a renomination to Congress in the Cincinnati district, which he now represents. Banning has probably outlived his usefulness"""-
THE result of the Qivir .service* regula-. is t^|^fflce h&iderS may be aske| to'contribute Co campaign fund's,, but wiij not lose their places if they do not give. Practically there will be compulsion now as before. The man who does not give, will be spotted.
BUTLER and Kearney affect to like one another in public, but no one has' ever heard that they slept together in any other than the same political bed Neither would feel exactly comfortable •while asleep in the presence of the other, Something might be
missed
A sox of Fernando Wood has gone in,to bankruptcy and among his debts are a Curious lot of bills to tailors, livery men hotel keepers, saloons, cigar dealers and, other purveyors to gay and giddy youth. Fernando seems to have had a Wild ^oung man tor a son and also seem6 disposed to sit down on the young man now.
THE Boston Herald seems to have a proper appreciation of Kearney and says
1
When Kearney is president and Butler secretary of state,every quart pot will hold three pints, workingmen will employ capitalists, each man, woman and chHd will have'* bushel of money, -two and two will be rive, and water will run up hill all over the country.
'A MARSHALL man with plenty of leisure, a philosophical turn of mind and a fly' trap, occupied his time and improved, his wind by winding up the trap and •watching it for tea days. He found that during that time he caught jr,oox flies, or a bare fraction of a fly over 700 a day. But when he concluded
%his
labors there
we're no indications of a diminution the 6upply. Flies remained where there ere flies before.
THE Democracy. of Delaware in State convention, the!other "day, adopted the following sound resolution on the finance question: "In accordance with the time' honored and constitutional faith of the Democratic party, we hold that the only honest
money of the people of the
United Stat^sisgold and 6ilver coin, antf 4»WSr 3»rrencjr cpnvertiblgsJnto^|uch coin at the. will of the holder.''
IN spite of tue fact that our people are, or at least ate said to be naked and starv ing, horseless and houseless wanderer on the 'wrinkled face of a barren earth, Barnum will be able to turn enough honest pennies from other peoples packets to his own "to-day,*'to clear, in net cash, not less than $5)000. Suppose we all admit for once jthat this is a.preity fair 9I4 worldlafter all, fcnd ithiP'i person, if* he jS net dyspeptic, can have a tolerably
ice time.
So tar as the nominations have }*et been made, the following table gives the Democratic and Republican nominees for Congress in Indianajr-f
DEMOCRATS:'
•REPPMilC.toSifc William Ileilman,
1st Die. Thos. E. Garvin. 2.1 31 4th oth 6th 7th
Thos. K. Cobb. G. A. Bicfcnell. Jcptha D.,New.
Leonidas Sexton. Thos. M. Browne. William Grose. John ilanna. Morton C. Hunter. Godlove 5. Orth. ,Wm. H. Calkins. Calvin Cowgill,.
Win. R. Myers.
A. 'f. Hosteler. John R. Coffroth. Morgan M. Weir D. J. Dykeraaa. W.G. Colarick.
!BOB JN'GERSOLL wi'l deliver three new leptures this winter. One will be entitled "Robert Burns." He is now in Scotland studying some points of geographical interest in connection with the subject of his Bketch., It will be purely literary. His second lccture will be on
Tramps" and is political in its natureHis third will be entitled "Some mistakes of Moses" and will be, as caa well be understood, a furious .Onslaught on the Mosaic account of creation.
WM. FLEMING, of Fort Wayne, is in the city a guest of his son-in-law Dr. L. J. Willien. Mr. Fleming has been over the State considerably during the past month, in the interests of his candidacy for Treasurer of State, on the Democratic ticket. He reports the prospect as being excellent for the election of the entire Democratic .ticket, by a handsome major'.He. will be in the city fcir t^o or three days. Mr. Fleming is a quiet, unassuming business man, who inspires confidence in his reliability by his ytry presence. In hini Indiana will have a Treasurer who will keep faithful guard over her interests daring his term of office. 7 'i /.
A SUMMER rambler up in the mounnsofj'lew Hampshire, lately visited triie grave yard in, which the remains of Nathaniel Hauthorne. the sweetest and weirdest novelist whom America has produced, now repose in their long, Ids4 slfeep. He describes this grave as mark-' e3 by "a simple^ granite stone, worn \$th the weather, its edges softened by tl^e clinging lichen, and bearing only the njime, 'Hawthorne.' It is not more ttian one foot and a half in height, and seems peculiarly appropriate to a nature s^sensithe, so reticent as his. The mound is covered with the sweet while clover, mingled with the pine needles shed by the majestic trees, whose branches swaying in the breeze 6igh and moan an endless requiem for the illustrious dead."
YOUNG Louis Napoleon l8 about to to make what might be called at flrsttsr match. The Princess Thyra: of Denmark, to whom he is betrothed, id a member of one of the "first families of Europe." Princess Dagmar, wife of the heir to the throne of Russia, is her next older sister. Her brother is King George of Grecce, 'and her el Jest sister is the wife of the Prince of Wales. She is twenty-five* years old and her future husband only twentythree. A marriage into such distinguished family would seem to'argue that the present and prospective iovereigns of Europe anticipate that Louis will live to mount the throne of France Gambetta will probably nbt be invited to thewedding.
THE man for the Republicans to nom' inate for President in 1S80, is John Sherman, present Secretary of the Treasury. He is an able man, and he represents ah idea on a leading issue. He would not be elected, to be sure, because the next President tHll be a democrat, but be would poll the futtgirote of the Republican party, which Grant, for oney could not do. When 1SS0 comes Secretary Sherman may. have accomplished, some things inr» the way Of refunding the public debtj "tfhich will not be discreditable to him as they would not be to any man. The fiat folly will have expended its strength long before that time, and the pnly financial questions before the people then will bj upon the abolition of the National banks and the taxing of greenbacks. Th.4 Democratic party will favor the abolition of the banks and the taxing of' the greenbacks.
KEARNEY made a speech the other day at Lynn, Massachusetts. The GAZETTE proposes to give this truculent truckman plenty of the rope of publication wherewith to hang himself. He is reported as saying he, wanted the workingmen of Lynn to take up a new battle cry. Ia the Atlantic States the lecher-
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THE TERRE HAtJTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
ous bsndholder and mortgage smashes must go. The battle cry of the Pacific is, thesJChinese must go, and we want, he 6aids the missing link to be forged by the workingmen. The'country belongs .to jrou, workingmen. The balcony from which I address you was built by workingmen, but the blood-sucking, lecherous thieves look upon the workingmen as beneath their notice., But they will rue the day they trampled on the workingmen, on the rights of American citizens. There is no such thing as freedom here The bird of-liberty isti dung hill rooster Freedom is a fraud. This is a nice state of aTairs in Massachusetts."
Strange is it not that if American freedom is such a fraud he does not go somewhere else to find a better article?
Ox E of the strong points in Kearney's Boston speech was his denunciation of capitalists. In his estimation they were thieves. By stealing they had acquired their money. Kearney abhors theft and despises a thief. It now transpires that a certain portion of his speech, glorifying Butler, wa3 stolen bodily from a speech of Tom Fitch, of Neyada, The extracts are as follows:'
L["'"
(From spccoh of Dennis Kearney,In Hoston. August 5,1878.)
(From Speech of Tom Fitch, of Nevada, June 21, 1876.)
In order to beat responsive to the popular will anil expression that v.'eatup from this meeting to-night, when a certain man's name was mentioned, SBRU of I feel like bringing directing' message of greeting and love to the man who is lessor than Macbeth,- yet greater to that Jlt-ry and incomparable Kuport of debate—(Voice, ''Good boy!")—to that chivalrous and wtiite-
Let tne give a brief utterance to the feeling of the hearts of in any thousand earnest Bepuhlicnai, etc., etc., "and send moslovo and to him w.10 Is 'lesser than Mae beth, yet greater.' Fiery, yet unconquerable the Rupert of deWate, chivalrous, white-plumed Kayarrc of the platform sagacious statosman, great-hearted leader
plumed Navarro ofigifted, gallant, gloriof the rostrum—gal-ons Blaine."' l.ant, jcifced, glorfotis iSutler. (Groat applause and cries, "Say Ft again!") ...
A good thing will bear repeating, perhaps!
JorLix, MISSOURI enjovs all the weird, wild beauty of vigorous and picturesque journalism. Only the other day a political convention was held there and, anticipating the arrival of the delegates, the Herald, which leads the opposition, heralded their coming with the following words of welcome: "With two or three exceptions those who are crawling in the mud for a petty office, are blunders on creation, scabs on the body politic, bubbles floating in the sink -hole of corruption, warts tin stering mass of iniqjitv, evidences of Heaven's mistake, carbuncles on apologies for men, the fag-ends of humanity but-cuts of original sin, swabs, ga.oots yahoos, sausage-wrappers, stinkers] snObzers, bummers, sycophants, thugs and the out-croppings of rascality, and Off-scourings of public misconception, Yes, that sweet scented mob of blisters will be at Carthage to-day, asking, begging, praying and lying for office. They will all be there everyone of therri, from the boss corruptionist down to the one horse Iraud. We venture the assertion, which can be substantiated, that never, in the annals of history, modern or ancient, has there e^er been collected such a lot of hard-looking and degenerated mass as will be seen at the county seat to-day."
ASK a Notional how the election went in Louisville last week, and he will hang his diminished head. Aboat a year ago, on personal issues, Blanton Duncan's so-called Notional party polled a large vote, and elected several members of the City Council. Notional papers went wild over it. It was about that time that the GAZETTE'S convulsive morning contemporary went into hysterics. Kearney at about that time had massed his California hoodlums, and elected some city officers. Then it was our delirious contemporary, "cut loose, cut loose," as the end man in the minstrel show calls it, and fulminated its famous head lines' "The Notionals again astonish the natives with unexpected strength,
And scoop things out on the Pacific coast." With the grand success Kearney is meeting, in the East, our readers are familiar.. We trust our contemporary enjoys the reception its hero is meeting with there. But what the GAZETTE wished to refer to was that in Louis le where "the Notionals astonished the natives with unexpected strength" less than a year ago, they rcc^jved ^hardly any votes at ,all! the other day. Like ^.^all.*.*. fungus growths this toad-stool of a party dies as rapidly as it grows. It sprang into being in the shade of midnight caucuses, and a little sunlight and exposure to fhe air ha« wilted it down a^ain. 1 1 si
I HERE in the east Kearney is a curlHis measure lias not yet been taken. It may facilitate the process ot arriving at an und erstandi of the sor of man he is to learn the opinion entertained of him at his home by sober and reliable authorities. And this is perhaps desirable bccause he is prominently mentioned as a candidate for vicePre6ident on the Notional ticket, with Ben Butler at the head. This ticket appeals to the imagination of people from the geographical location of the candidates. and suggests a union between the Atlantic and Pacific.
IISTFILT
ST V"
''--h .f
.w^rrrrrr '..ITM1
In a recent issue the Virginia City (Nevada) Enterprise paid its compliments Kearney in the following fash* ion
VWe wonder when the people of the United States will learn to appreciate Dennis Kearney at his real worth. He appears the champion of the workingmen, and from the funds furnished by the hard hands of toilers makes a continental trip in a palace car, carrying with him no evidence of being a toiler save the dirt that has clung to him 6ince the old days when he drove a dray. He commenced last winter to harangue the idle men of San Francisco, and the result of his work has been to them only increasing distress through a reduction of wages. So far he has 6hown no evidence of possessing a brave soul or a sympathizing heart. He is grossly ignorant, and so arrant a fraud that he will stand up and deliver a stolen speech as his own. If he has ever performed a noble and disinterested act in his life, the records fail to reveal it. If anything can be judged of the natnre of man though,his words and acis, Kearney has as Jselfish a nature as ever levied an assessment upon the prejudices and base passions oi the lawless elements of a community. He stands forth a self-convict-ed incendiary, as one who defies and. despises law, as an alien incapable of appreciating or ev 1 comprehending the blessings which this land, when he came here as a stranger, were heaped jpon him. There seems to be .a disposiiion on this coast to grovel at the feet of gnorance a veneration approaching worship for a dii ty shirt a fascination which cannot be resisted for a demagogue who out of the mire would beslobber a crowd with the story of the fancied wrongs which the multitude suher. And such as this is the blatherskite, Dennis Kenrnev."
THK late election Louisville, is a sore subject to the Notionals. They do not like it at all. When»they secured a large vote there a year ago, there was great glorification over it and people were toid in bombastic phrase that the Notionals would divide the solid 60uth.
From the election the other day it is only reasonable to infer that Notionalism [duplicity of which every Englishman is not a permanent thing in that quarter? should be ashamed, an act of dubut a mere temporary disease like the|P''c'ty which has not been surmeasles or whooping cough. Take good care of the patient while he is afflicted and he is pretty sure to recover.
In the New York Tribune of Saturday appeared an Interview, had with ex-Con-gressman Standiford, in which he refers to politics in Kentucky. We commend it to the prayerful perusal of our Notional friends. The interview is as follows':
r"
"What is the political situation in Kentucky Dr. Standiford was'askeii.
uIt
is very easy to describe," he replied. "We are a conservative people. We believe in paying our debts and in honest work, and in preserving the public credit. As to parties, the Democrats, on a full vote, have upward of 50,000 majority in the State, while the Republicans are a very respectable body, numbering about three-tenths of the population." "What of fhe Nationals
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"That is a question they themselves are asking. They are nothing. This last election just held has wiped them out. Perhaps half of the population of Louisville consists of workingmen. A year ago their movement was at its height. During the excitement they elected five out of the seven Assemblymen chosen in Louisville. At the local election just held, they put a strong ticket in the field. Their candidates were among the best men they have,, and they have been overwhelmingly defeated. W. Scott Gresham, who they elected last year to the Assembly, ^vas candidate for Clerk of the Chy Court. He received 1,-7:7 votes, while his opponent had upward of 14,000 votes. In his own ward he received only 464 votss out of 14000 William Johnson, their candidate for sheriff, received 500 votes in the city, against 14.000 for his opponent. Charles Reid, the National candidate for what is considered the important office of Jailer, received 391 votes, and fiis opponent about 15.000. Their candidates as a rule were men of brains and abil'ty, and they made a most energetic canvass. The Republicans and Democrats did not make caucus nominations. It is a common thing in Kentucky for the parties not to make nominations. A mart who knows or thinks he can command the support of his fellow citizens announces that he is a candidate for such and such an office, and enters the contest."
DISRAELI AND GLADSTONE. Our readers will remember that shortly after his return from the Berlin Congress, Disraeli, departing from the formal courtesy which has heretofore been supposed to mark English statesmen, referred to Gladstone, his parliamentary antagonist of many years, as being a reckless leader, "inebriated with the exuberance of his own verbosity, etc." Gladstone was aroused by this personality, and brought the matter up in Parliment during the debate on the Berlin treaty. What we have known inthis country of this controversy has of course been very meagre, confined as it has been to brief cablegrams giving bare outline of the discussion* la the London papers we find a letter addressed to Disraeli by Gladstone making some inquiries ia reference to his offensive remarks and the reply of the former. It should be stated, for the better understanding of the affair that the let ter of Gladstone was read by him in Parliament and made apart of his speech criticising the Government for its con-, duct assuming a protectorate over Cy-
prus. Hi& letter is as follows it $£ July 30.
DBAR t-ORI» BEACONSFIELD I find you are reported ia the Times of to-day to have made last night a reference to a speech delivered by me at Oxford, in which you stated that I described you as
-*_
a dangerous and even a devilish charac-1 of Market Master tor the faithful dis-
ter. I should be obliged by your informing me upon what words of mine you found this statement, You are likewise reported to have said that during the controversy on the Eastern question I had indulged in criticisms reflecting with the most offensive epithets on your conduct and in the description of your character. Will you have the goodness to supply me with a list or a selection of the offensive epithets applied, not merely to your measures, but to your personal character, and wit a note of the times and places at which they have been used If you have been inaccurately reported I ask your pardon for having troubled you.With this letter, which I need hardly say Is of a public nature.
To this Disraeli made answer ough the pre?9 as follows:
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"Lord Beaconsfield presents his compliments to Mr. Gladstone, and has the honor to acknowledge the receipt of his letter of this day's date, referring to some remarks made by Lord Beaconsfield last night in the House of Lords, and requesting to be supplied with 'a list of offensive epithets applkd, not merely to Lord Beaconsfield'a measures, but to his person and character, and with a note of the times and places at which they were used.' As this wbuld require a research over a peripd of two years and a half, during which Mr. Gladstone, to use his own expressions at Oxford, has been counterworking 'by day and by night, week by week, and month bv month,' the purpose of Lord Beaconsfield, who is at this moment much pressed with affairs, is obliged to request tho6e gentlemen who are kind enough to assist him in the conduct of public business to undertake the necessary researches, which probably may require some little time but that Lord Beaconsfield by such delay in replying to Mr. Gladstone may not appear wanting in becoming courtesy he must observe with reference to the Oxford speech referred to in the House of Lords, which was one long invective against the Government, that Mr. Gladstone then remarked that when he spoke of the Goyernment he meant Lord Beaconsfield, who was alone responsible, and by whom the great name of England had been degraded and debased. In the same spirit a few days back at Southwark, Lord Beaconsfield was charged with 'an act of
passed, and,' Mr. Gladstone believed, has been rarely equalled in the history of nations.' Such an act, however, might be expected from a Minister who, according to Mr. Gladstone, had 'sold the Greeks.' With regard to the epithet 'devilish,' which Lord Beaconsfield used in the House of Lords, he is informed that it was not Mr. Gladstone at Hawarden who compared Lord Beaconsfield to Mephistopheles. but only one of Mr. Gladstona's friends kindly inquiring of Mr. Gladstone how tiiey were to get rid of this Mr Mephistopheles but as Mr. Gladstone proceeded to explain the mode—probably the Birminghan caucus Lord Beaconsfield may perhaps be excused for assuming that Mr. Gladstone sanctioned the propriety of the scarcely complimentary apppellation.
ORDINANCE.
AN ORDINANCE TO ESTABLISH AND REGULATE MARKETS IN THE CITY OF TERRE HAUTE, AND PROVIDING FOR
THE APPOINTMENT MASTER.
OF A MARKET
SEC. 1. Be it ordained by the Common Council of the city of Terre Haute, that the Market House, at the intersection of Fourth and Walnut streets, in s?id city, is hereby especially dedicated as the public Market House of said city.
SEC. 2 There shall be appointed by the Common Council a suitable person for Market Master, to hold the office during the pleasure of. the council, and untii his successor shall be appointed and qualified, who shall, before entering upon the duties of his office, take and subscribe an oath faithfully to discharge the duties of the same, and file with the Clerk a bond with sufficient sureties, in such penal sum as the Common Council may require, for the faithful performance cf the duties of his office, and shall make weekly reports and pay into the city treasury ail moneys which he may receive during the week, while in the discharge of duties as such Market Master, or that may come into his hands belonging to said city.
SEC. 3. That it shall be the duty of said Market Master to keep the Market Hous^ premises and grounds clean, and to cause all wagons and o.her vehicles to be so arranged and placed at the Market House as best to suit the convenience of buyers and sellers and it shall be the duty of said Market Master to keep for said Market House, one pair of large scales, one pair of small scales, one quarter peck measure, one half peck measure, one peck measure, and one halt bushel measure, which shall be used as the standard of weights and measures for said market.
SEC. 4. The Market Master shall, in connection with the Market Committee, on the first Monday ol Aprii, or as soon possible thereafter, in each and every year, between the hours of 9 o'clock A. M. and 12 o'clock M., of said day, after giving ten day's notice in some city paper, sell, or offer for sale, the use for one year of the several stalls and side benches in said Market House, and the stalls and benches on the o::tside of said Market House, at rati oe fixed by said Committee and Market Master, payable quarterly in advance, and said Market Master shall, upon said sale, execute to each purchaser, upon the receipt of the first quarterly payment, a certificate of purchase, setting put the amount paid and the date and expiration of such lease, and shall keep a copy of such certificate in a book .provided for that purpose. t»u
Provided, That not more than one stall shall be sold to the same person or persons, unless stalls are unoccupied or 'vacant. T'l
Provided, That any person failing" f6 pay the rent on any ot said stalls, according to the contract, he shall forfeit all right to occupy the same, and said stalls shall be resold by said Master and Committee.
SEC. 5. The Market Master shall, in case of sickness or unavoidable absence, appoint a deputy for the time being, who, on oath, shall discharge the duties
a
mm m•:
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-if-'.-'
charge of whose duty, said Market Mas- j. ter and his bondsmen are made responsible.
Src. 6. The Market Master shall be provided with a bell, and it shall be his fduty, either in person or by deputy, to open and close the market of said "Market House by ringing such bell, and in closing such market the bell shall also be sounded ten minutes before the hour of closing.
SEC. 7. Markets shall be held at said Market House, on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday mornings of" each week, opening at 4 A. M. and closing at 0 A. M. during the months of April, May, June,} July, Augu^t'and September, and opening at 5 A. M. and closing at 9 A. M., during the months of October, November, December, January, February and March. There shall also be held at said Market House, on every Saturday evening, between the hours of 2 p. M. and S p. M., a market.
SEC. 8. The Market Master shall have pow~r to preserve order during market hours, to prevent and remove all obstructions and nuisances, (in or about the market place), to remove all vagrants and disorderly persons (from loitering in and about said market place during market hours), and to cause all offences against the provisions of this ordinance to be prosecuted and to enable him to do so, he is hereby constituted a police officer in this behalf, for and within said city.
SEC. 9. That any person who shall sell or offer for sale at said Market House, any article at a greater weight and measure, or by the lump, representing the article to be of greater weight or measure thnn it actually weighs or measures, according to '.he standard of weights and measures as herein established, shall forfeit to the city all such articles ot short measure or light weight, and the same shall be sold by the Market Master at public auction on the sj-ot, and the proceeds paid into the city treasury.
SEC. 10. That every person who shall sell or offer for sale at said market place, any unwholesome, damaged or spoiled vegetables or meats of any kind, shall, on conviction thereof, be fined in any sum not exceeding twenty-five dollars., 5^..
SEC. 11. That every peVson who shall throw or cause to be thrown any garbage, ofial, filth or rubbish in any part of said Market House or market place, oc shall throw any bones, feet, or decayedmeats in and around or upon the pavements or streets adjacent to said Market House, shall, on conviction, be fined in any sum not exceeding twenty-five dqU. 1 /. ,!«
SEC. 12. Any person who 6hall sell or Offer for sale from any stand or bench not rented from this city, or from a wagon or other vehicle, any pork, beefi mutton, or other meats, at any market in this city, in a less quantity than one quarter, shall pay to the Market Master, for every market at which such person sells or offers for sale as aforesaid, the sum of $1.00 and any person selling or offering for sale from any bench or stand, as aforesaid, or from any wagon or other vehicle at said market, any butter, eggs, fish, fowl, fruits, vegetables, or other article, shall pay to the said Master for each market at which he sells or offers for sale as aforesaid, the sum of ten cents, and any person refusing to comply with the provisions ot this section, after demand by the Market Master, shall, on conviction thereof, be fined in any sum not exceeding five dollars.
SEC. 13. That any owner or driver of any wagon or other vehicle who shall drive or place said vehicle within said market place during market hours, and who shall refuse or neglect to obey the directions of the Market Master, in relation to the position they are to occupy while at the market place, or who shall tie any animal to any of the postf, railings, or other fixtures of said Market House, or shall break, injure, or otherwise deface any part of said Market House, shall, on conviction thereof, be fined in any sum not exceeding ten dol-
lar!».
.Vr/i'iV.'
SEC. 14. Tnat any person who shall, during or before market hours, buy or cause to be bought, for the purpose of resale (or to sell again), any article of provision offered for sale at said market, or brought there tor sale, shall, on conviction thereof, be fined in any* sum not exceeding twenty dollars.
SEC. 15. Any person at 6aid Market House, who shall, during market hou~e, sell or contract to sell, directly or indirectly, to any other person, to be by them resold at market or elsewhere, any article of provision, or any person who shall sell, offer or expose for sale, any article of provision by him purchased at said market, in the city of Terre Haute, during market hours, ehall, on conviction* forfeit and pay to the city ofTerre Haute, for every such offense, any sum not exceeding twenty dollars.
SEC. 16. Any person or persons who shall paste, tack or post any bill or bills on any part of the Market House of the city, shall be fined not less than three nor more than ten dollars.
SEC. 17. It shall be unlawful for any person who has no legitimate business in market, to sit, lounge, stand, er lie in or about said market place, and any person so offending the Market Master, shall remove or cause to be removed, without delay.
SEC. 18. It shall be unlawful for any person to sell or offer for sale from any wagon or other vehicle or to peddleany article of provision within the corporate limits of said city during market hours—Saturday afternoons excepted. Any person violating the provisions of this section, shall, on conviction, be fined not exceeding twenty-five dollars.
SEC. 19. That all ordinances heretofore passed by the Common Council of said city, in relation to the appointment of a Market Master, prescribing his duties and regulating the markets of said city, be and the same are hereby repealed.
SEC. 20. Whereas, an immeigency exists for the immediate taking effect of this ordinance, the same shall be in force from and after its passage and publicav tion.
James M. Bolton, of Fayette Township, had 95 acres in wheat this year. He has just finished threshing and has 1,865 bushels, which makes an average of 19-6 bushels per acre. The wheat is of the best qaalitv. Last year his crop only averaged 14 bushels to the acre. This is a substantial increase.
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