Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 20 May 1880 — Page 2
GEN. MACAULEY.
Campaigning in tha Shenandoah «*. Valley Under SheridanwMw,*,
Th l^fciure ol" *fn. Ula-cauh-y Delivered atp
I lie 0|M r|i House .»
lis
The following lecture which is reproduced nearly entire was delivered in the Opera Mouse here in Terre Haute at at entertainment given by the Hager Vet erans of this city. Gen. Macauley was introduced by Col. McLean, and spoke a6 follows: and (JenCol. MoUlcan, .Comrades, Ladle tlooicn:
I am profoundly grateful for this very friendly and flattering introduction. Certainly with such a preface here in the home ol the gallant Bryon. my old comrade Dr. Thompson, the "boys" of companies "C and "D" of the Eleventh the7 lamented Scott and Mullen, and so many of my old companies of the camp, the inarch and the battle, I should feel -welcome and heart.ly glad I came Whether you will or not remains to be seen.
I heard once of a gentleman who met -with a latal accident down street and was conveyed home by a citizen under instructions to break the terrible tidings gently to the newly made widow. Arriving at the house he called out to the lady at the door, "Does Mr. Smith lire here?" "Ye6" she answered, "but he's not in just mow." Well, he soon will be," he said, "for I've got him here dead in the wagon!" Now the man was wrong he plunged into the .main body of his subject abruptly! and I shall avoid his pernicious example by stealing up to mine so softly and by 6uch slow and easy and pleasant stages, that you will naturally half regret it when get there.
I notice in the adve.rtisments a complimentary announcement ot my intended efforts before you this evening and I am thankful lor so much advanced credit given on pure faith alone, it is in tact so much clear profit to me not to be jeapardized bv any later mischance in the performance. Truly I thought' that old habit (.f presenting swords to officers just going out to their first smel! of villianous saltpetre had fallen into dUu*e. We can call to mind some such, who hurried back too soon, and a shrewd suspicion left its taste in our mouths thai the gift should have been a stuffed stick instead of a sword. Let us hope that my preliminary honor will have better luck to-night and that in the kindness of vour hearts reasonable satisfaction may be plucked out of the affair even by the ears. My contclenec it clear in any event, am a drafted man, I get no pay and the lecture ought to be worth at least that much.
I am given thirty minutes, more or less, in which to accomplish my purpose on you, and then get out of town, so the main question in so 6mall an entertainment must be tenderly approached and dealt with or it will perish in its own brevity. And .Indeed a small lecture is better than a large one, on the principle that a small cow-}«ll is preferable to a big one. You can hear it, when yo* hear it at all, so much nearer away. With a large one you wander further off and run so much more danger of getting lost. See?
The "boys" here can tell you that a small camp-fire is bett, for I've often heard them declare a large one was so !hct they couldn't get near enough to warm themselves. Of course I don't intend to give you all preamble and no story ihat would be worse than the man who rode two hundred miles on the cowcatcher and didn't catch the cow then!
It is- a little awkward to be so closely surrounded by my soldier friends on such an occasion, tor it Compels me to stick considerably nearer the truth than I had ptherw^e intended doing artd yet probably, if I divide the honors fairly with them, I may hope for their indorsement to any statement my civilffcH audience can't promptly contradict, Indeed they owe me this much, for did I not once unhesitatingly swallow and vigorously believe the following story told by one of them «ne night in the Virginia valley? True, he was un ier cover of the smoky side ot a campfire, and I couldn't study hi* countenance very closely as he talked, but there was an unblushing, veteran-like confidence in the tone of his 'Voice that drove conviction into my very taarrow! He said he knew of a soldier wtio was badly wounded in the leg and persuaded an Irish cavalryman to pull *him on his horse behind him anu take Ihim to the nearest surgeon. Riding telonp under & heavy fire, the wounded rnar. leaning against the other and holding on with his arms around him, a cantiion ball took off his head so clean that it •didn't disturb the rest of the body. Arriving at the field hospital the cavalryman said: "Doctor, won't you please see what you can do for this fellow?" /'Well, not a great deal, Mujk, with his «,ehad off!" he answered. "For the first ^•time Mick looked around. Well! well! .well!" he said "what an ai$ful liar! He '.said it was only his leg!' 4 Now, the story I shall attempt to tell jgto-night is easier to believe than that Jone, thmigh there are cannon balls and {broken neadt and legs mixed up in it. 'It relates to the common lot of the comr'mon soldier it is their story, ours, not s,mine! A It is an unpretentious recital of one of
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Under the Auspices of the Hager Veterans and at Their Entertain^nenl. /,.*
"If* S
An Amusing and tlirllllDg Narrative of Camp Life.
numberless incidents of our lltes, participated in equally by privates and officers. There was no monopoly of slavery or glory in those days of danger, no shoulder-strapped royal road to adventure and renown. The follower and the leader cften changed placet in the hoi'r of trial, they weie baptised in the same
fire,
Mil i**»'.
hurt by the same means and
ennobled by the" same glorious success! Perhaps no two experienced exactly the same hazards though they did the tame number of them, and they were as thrilling in fact as were ever chronicled in the warlike records of gallant men.
I give you a soldier's story of a companion in the Shenandoah Valley, in 1864.
The situation had been as follows: On the 19th day of July of that year, one part of the army was in Algiers, Louisiana, just across the river from New Orleans, and were suddenly ordered on board the ocean steamer Cassandra with fifteen dajs rations and under sealed order to be opened when well Out in the Gulf of Mexico. On the next day the orders were opened and found to take us direct to Fortress Monroe, Virginia, which place we reached after a tiresome voyage of eight days, and were sent by Gen. Butler, without disembarking, on to Washington
During our days at sea important events had transpired. Washington had been attacked and nearly captured by the rebel general. Early. The dread ful battle of Monocacv had been fought by our raw recruits, and we were now thrown forwaid after one nights rest, to Shenandoah valley as the nucleus upon which Sheridan soon formed his famous army.
Just at the olitset of this organization 1 remember a peculiar circumstance illustrative of one distinguishing mark carried by our Western troops into the Eastern army. At the very beginning of the war, our fellows had acquired queer habit of enjoying under all possible conditions their evening yell. Every night, when that most beautiful 01 calls "Tattoo," sweet as Tennyson's bu gle, was sounded as the signal that work was done for the day and the limited en joymentsof camp life were now in order the "boys" would gather round their fires and wresk a happy hour from almost any circumstances.
Some quietly chatting, others sprawled upon the ground puffing the dreamy pipe and studying far-away faces in the fragrant clouds, an occasional game of cards with an old dog-eared pack, throughly wounded in every rcspect, others softly crooning to them selves fragments of a love song as clear as Bayard Taylor's "Annie Laurie" in the Crimea, when they iH a*U of $4mv'f
No one could explain it, it had always been so in our part of the army South and West, it was liable to break out at any fire or from any man directly after Tatto, sometimes in several places at once, but it was never lacking exccpt on those rare occaisions when prudence made it impossible. When we found ourselves in the different atmosphere of an eastern department and sandwiphed between regiments not yet inoculated with the strange complaint, our first vocal exercises were rudely interfered with by a staff-officer riding in hot haste from headquarters with orders to 6top that infernal yelling at once! It wasn't half turned on at the time, but of course we stopped it and it it almost incredible with what a strange result. The men, open-eyed and indignant, staring, and with lungs bursting with unused noise, retused to be comforted. "Whose baby is it, Colonel?'' asked one, "have we scared it?" One big joker comes tiptoeing to me with his shoes in his hand and says, "Oh, Colonel! Kin we slip aruund a little in our stockin' feet if we don't make no noise?" And then gravely instructs the drummers to wrap their drums in wet blankets and staff'em with hay for reveille next morning and so on with numberless tajreasms befitting the solemnity of the outrage. A FEW nights atter this, just after tattoo, the of' fending General rode up tQ my place for a little gossip and during the talk asked me what that frightful yelling was the other night. I explained that it was an old and harmless custom that didn't seem to hurt any one else and did them a pow er of good, that there was not a suspicion of insubordination or disrespect in it, and that they were feeling quite hurt at the deprivation of their little fun in which hey had been indulging nearly every night for ears. He w*s» astonished and promptly said, "All right, pitch in if that's the chape of let them blow their ears out if they want to, we didn't understand it," and away he rode. 1 walked over to the nearest fire and spoke to those standing quietly around it, "How goes it, boys One of the rascals tapped his throat mysteriously and in a loud stage whisper, said, "Pretty hard, Colonel, pretty hard the boys it all losia their voices havin, to whisper to much. Wont they never git that baby weaned?" Their pretense that there was a sick baby some where in the case was intensely funny. "Well, why dont you yell out then, the good old way?"* He looked at mc for an instant and seeing full consent in the nod I gave him, he- said with an expression I cant haK imitate, "Ohl I guess not!" and I started back to enjoy the fun. The unprecedented turr of that attack I think must have brought the whole army to their gunr. and peace
foldedher wings fn We happy ow camp once more. The permission wa* never agaih rescinded, or neglected.
Oh the 6th of August we were fairly organized and advanced to Halltown, and from that time until September 19th, forty-four days, was one continual footrace and savage snarling quarrel up and down the valley, losing many a gallant fellows Hfe and limb as our ppposing forces locked horns and crowded ench other unceasingly with desperate pertinacity. If the evening made a determined effort to bring on a battle and risk all their fate at once, we declined and fell back fighting as we went, then we halted, dug rifle pits, fought a little more and in turn pressed their retreating army too closely to permit it its withdrawal to be used against Grano at Ricnmond.
For six long weeks this style of Don neybrook pic-nic was mantajned until we could almost sleep and snore standing up in line of battle under fire
A night alarm occurred once during this time which struck me a6 showing how remarkably the sense of danger stood guard in every man's brain while all his other faculties were wrapped in slumber, insensible to ordinary or accustomed sounds. We were near Perryville and carrying on the usual discussion with the enemy, jammed close against him and ready to resist attack or make it. was one of those glorious moonlight nightf, rare and radiant even in the favored land of flowers. The pickets were far out to the front holding murder by the thraat while we lay peacefully in camp. Our men slept, as it was tech nicaily called, "On Arms," that is, in their clothing and accoutrements along the guns stacked in line of battle, ready to spring up at a second's warning and do all that men dafie do. It was especially a quiet and beautiful scene, the moon growing brighter as the hours advanced, paling the smouldering fires of a silent army and casting shadows black as night. ^The slowly
fines
y«-v/|
Sang of love aud not of fame!
Forgot was martial glory, Each heart recalled a different name. But all sang Annie Laurie!" Suddenly, andjwithout apparent motive some lonesome, big-lunged' fellow would throw his head back as if to bay the moon, begin a series of short cheery yelps, continuous! and closely strung together. I can't give you an idea of it here—the city license hardly covers such an experiment. It seemed to at tract no special attention, hardly his own but in an inBtant a companion would raise yelp No. 2, then another and another till every one of the pack at that fire would be engage in it with all the gravity of demeanor of a Muezzin calling the faithful to prayer. It would spread to the next fire, the next, Com pany after company until the clear piercing yell was surging up and down the entire regiment, gathering torce and wildness, till like a tidal wave, it broke all barriers and overwhelmed an army of thousands! And as suddenly would it cease, leaving its perpetrators plunged in vocal darkness, apparently unconscious by word or look of having even heard it.
taring sentinels at intervals along the and the distant challenge or remote sounds of relieving guard marked by their contrast the supreme calmness of the town. Far and faintly could be seen in different directions the glistening lines of the stacks of bayonets and the dark fringe of tired humanity along their base—true children of men reposing on the loving bosom of their mother earth—at rest and peace for the moment with all the world! "The neighing steed and flashing blade
The trumpet's stirring blast-— The charge! The dreadful cannonade! Their din and shout were past!"
We had constructed a rude shelter for regimental headquarters, and I, fortunes pampered favorite,• had a spring mat-trass—so-called—consisting of a plank nearly as wide as my body, set up. on four stakes dtiven into the ground, and on which a soldier with good health and a blanket, and with strong imaginative powers, could dream himself into a firstclass hotel with all the modern improvements. Our chapjain, until then a man of good habits, was lying on the fiat of his broad back on the ground, and had begun to profane the lovely night by a snoring which must have been, like Dogberry's writing, a gift of nature, for it could never have been acquired. I rose on my elbow to look in wonderment on this wasteful labor, and I could recognize at once the correctness of the child's definition of «noring as "letting off sleep!" There would be along reverberating indraft of noise, suggestive of great physical strength, the mouth then closing On it like a trap—then silence and a pause as all nature rallied and expelled the intruder through a Corner of the mouth, prefering an empty house to a bad tenant.
Tired waiting for him to die in some unusually rapturous convulsion I fell asleep at last, and was aroused by the clutch of a strong hand on my breast and the startling whisper "Quick, Colonel we're attacked!" and as I sprang out into the brilliant moonlight the memory of distant firing in a dangerous direction while I slept seemed to linger in my mind. Yet even in that flash of time an instructive caution siezed me, it was the dread of creating a fake alarm, which next to being actually caught napping by the enemy is the most fatally predicament in which a soldier can be placed.
With this impression awakened [as I jumped I called to the men in a loud whisper, "Fall in
The piercing of every brain by lightning could not have been more instantaneous There rose up as if by magic, swiftly and silently a solid line of men, in place, touching elbows, the stacks of guns melting away into brave and willing hands, not a word spoken nor another movement made, but there they stood, terrible as death and as implacable as fate! Most of these men would have slept soundly through a reveille of fifes and drums rattling beside theqi, and heavy firing on the picket line would have hardly disturbed them and yet, a whisper had raised them as if from the dead on Ressurrection Day.
A sense of secret danger pervaded the air and we listened intently and motionless as statues. We could tee that other regiments were up and ready, and now mounted officers, Sheridan and others, rode along the lines, asking what was wrong. The cause, a queer one,, was soon developed., Renewed firing, far to the left and rear, soon disclosed the fact that our darkey Cooks had discovered we were in what George Harding calls the "coon belt," and they had secretly convened and organized against that loath so hie animal.
It' might have been a more serious matter, at the offenders had time to reflect, tied as they were to seperate trees throughout the camp all next day.
One day, September 17, the rumor that Gen. Grant had stolen away from his attriy of the James and was spending a few days in our camp with Sheridan, gave us the shrewd suspicion that perhaps the time to run had passed and that cur quarrelsome armies might now engage in what each seemed eager for, a trial of actual strength. True enough, on the next day we advanced carefully Skirmishing for position, and on the 19 won the great battle of Opequau Creek, sometimes called "Sheridan's. battle of Winchester." During ibis battle we were endeavoring to force our way across an open field in the face of a murderous Aire in the woodsbeyond/ As I rode along our line was ^stopped by the gesticulations of a couple of our men, calling: my attention in the frightful noise to one
V\
I
1!
Of our offiqwi -jusLthct and lying back in their arm*.* The top of hit head was toward me and with a leap of the heart I thought I recognized in the face upside down, my brother! Shot through the forehead, there was still a gasp or two of lile-—a pause—and they laid him down, dead! It was young Lieutenant Mullen of Terre Haute, only a boy but as brave a fighter as ever fell in battle. "if*
sf
Pursuing the retreating enemy at once we brought it to bay again on the ensuing day, ready to give us battle in the strongest position in the Shenandoah valley, Fisher's Hill. During that day and the next we closed in on them for a death grip, ciisputng viciously every foot of ground. The brigade which I had the honor to command held the left of our entire army durin these days, and in our immediate front was the main road passing forward and winding up to the height occupied by the enemy some quarter of a mile distant. The position is well described by the New York Tnb une report of that date, of which I sh 1 make some little use. It says: "The rebel force was massed on a high hill immediately in Urover's front in an almost inaccessible position from the fact that "Tumbling Run", a considerable stream ran around the Pike and between our forces and the enemy.
Not only this, but the sides of this hill were almost perpendicular and covered with a thick underbrush of Scrub Oak and the top lined with a formidable abatis filled with the enemy's sharp shooters.
The piks crossed a naraow Stone bridge at the base of this hill, and following the bank of Tumbling Run for some distance, finaly wound up a wooded revine to the top of the hill, where it was completely commanded by the rebel batteries."
To us it appeared unassailable, in fact unapproachable by any direct advance possible to us, and when, at 4 p. m.
minutes
florious
on
the 22d, we suddenly threw forward a regiment from each brigade, and with a rapid charge took possession of their advanced rifle pits, about half way between our position and the base of the hill, we couldn't help wondering what use they were to uk,
commanded as they were by
the rebel batteriet and sharpshooters, who coald hurt us almost unmolested. But when, a few moments later, we were ordered to jump over the slight earthwork we had made with our remaining regiments and charge that enemy on the (Jibraltar-like hill, 1 admit that to say we were amazed is to speak with grave moderation.
Of course, however, we laughed cheer» fully, as if this movement were the only particular thing on earth we most desired to make.' Neither we nor the enemy knew then that an entire corps of ours had been taken by Sheridan far around to our extreme right and front, to flank their stronghold, and so well had the masterly General timed the movement that our charge just ordered and intended to be simultaneous with that of the flanking corps miles away, was not more than five minutes ahead of it! But Heavens! what a five
it was! .-'•/*
Over we went, and rushing forward to the slight 6helter of the rifle pits just captured, we were forced to halt under'n savage fire from the exultant er.emy just before us on the hill. During that anxious momentary delay a startling war picture burst from the woods just a little to our right and rear. Those who happened to see it will never forget the electric effect it presented. It was the sudden appearance of Sheridan and his dare-devil staff, racing on horses as crazy as themselves, all the way from t*e flanking corps, to hurl us forward on the enemy. At they dashed from the woods, Sheridan with sword drawn high above his head and evidently under great ex citement, his staff in one close bunch around and behind him, a shell burst in the very heart of the group! There was an instant's pause, a brief and thrilling tableau, as their horses seemed to swerve and lean motionless away from the- fatal center! It looked like certain destruction, and we who saw it forgot for the moment our own danger in the awful storm, and watched with beating hearts and bated breath to see whose deaths would follow. Glory! not a man was touched! and recovering, on they came like a whirlwind along our line, Sheridan screaming even above the roar of battle: "charge, men! charge! we've got
THEIR ARMY, THEIB GUNS, everything! charge!" Language cannot describe the astounding effect of this wild order of the magnetic Sheridan!
With insane yellings the whole line darted forward for the enemy's positioncommands separated, regiments struggling almost fighting for the lead, and yet, as far as any of tis could know or see, in the face of a dreadful impossibility. The blow of the flanking corps had not yet reached the part of the foe we were trying to strike, but as we crowded forward under a storm of shot and shell, lessening the distance between us and the bridge at the foot of the hill, we saw signs of confusion among them—distressexcitement! cessation of firing! panic! flight! and in another moment by a supreme and mighty effort we were over the bridge and through the water, clambering the hili sides, swarming up the road
cheer*, the hurrahs, and the
ecstacy of delight of men in the moment
Oi
such an achievement are so ex
travagantly emotional as to be iades cibable. And now a few words as to our condition. We nad been skirmishing, n.arching, digging and fighting almo»t iiht and day for six weeks, too seriously nccupicd to pay much attention to the iittle food or clothing absolutely necessary to existence, no baggage or trans portation most ot' the time, thousands of soldiers barefooted or with feet tied np in rags and for the past few days especially worn and exhausted by the superhuman labor* put upon them of trench work, battle and pursuit. I know how beautifully the old wood tuts and pictures used
togive
these warlike scenes befoie their
occurrence. Everything in, West Point
order,
officers in gorgeoue array careering about on elegant circus horses and long, straight linea of men all stepping out with the left foot and behaving with ail the exactness of a grand review before the crowned headsti$But it really waan quite so, and if 1 were to describe, «ub rosa and above board, the dresi of a
Gou
1
&k. maaagmBks
young and handsome brigade commander whom I knew in that campaign and whose name wild horses couldn't drag from me, it would dispel some of those bright and picturesque illusions! His pantaloons had became a thing of shreds and patches, and he was compelled 10 get i'rom the Government Quartermaster a pair ot the kind worn by the private soldiers. They were made in regular ifl&s And numbers but by what remarkable freak of nature this particular pair was devised, has never appeared, though it was ganerally conceded to be a huge joke of some army con tractor. They were the only ones long enoiftgh for the officer, but I do not exaggerate when I say they were lartee enough around the waist for a man of four hundred pounds weight. Properly geared up there was nothing especially noticeable in a front view—they sagged back, so to speak, and concealed their amplitude of skirt under shelter of the riendly bluuse, but when their monstrous dimensions were known and had begun to excite the envy and admiration of his associate officers, life was made a burthen to him by their insatiable curiosity. The officers who failed to persuade the wearer of this trophy, when innocently off his guard, to exhibit t'.eir enormous possibilities by holding them forward by the waistband at actual arms length to 6how how much room he had in which to grow, was generally considered as lacking influence at headquarters. This garment and a wornuut woolen only shirt, ragged blouse, battered cap and brooken boots, swotd and belt completed the romantic picture of the gentle brigadier! The men were not so well dressed. We hoped that with this
andthe
When war
its
rr
AND FISHER'S HILL WAS OUR's! MThe
Soldi*r's all the cry!
ib
o'er and damage righted—
oriiGod is forgot !—the Koldier slighted
Hon. Frank Hurd, in his speech before the Democratic Convention of Ohio, said:
The old watchwords and battle cries ot the party 1 must be heard again. The maintainance of the right of sovereignty of the States inviolate as the surest guarantee of the perpetuity of the Union no consolidation of power in the Federal Government an idestructible union of indestructible States opposition tc monopolies death to the National banking system a currency as good as gold or silver and based upon them and issued under constitutional authority the utmost liberty to the private citizen consistent with the public safety no sumptuary laws the removal of embarassing restrictions of trade tarriff for revenue only, with the ultimate view of tree trade with all the world the most for the man, the least lor the government the uplifting the exalting of the individual the limiting, the restraining of governmental power—these were the battle cries of the Democratic party from 1798! They are hallowed by the immortal lips which uttered them! They were incarnated in the administration of the Federal Government by the Democratic party for nearly a century! They were hushed in the thunder of the civil strife, and stifled in
smoke they were silenced in the despotism of the reconstruction era. Let them be revived in 18S0. Let them" be shouted on every hillside and valley in the land until in the trumpet tones of triumph they are declared in November next to be as of yore the sentiments of the
American people. Sure enough the skirmishers are engaged. We like the roar of the Democratic guns. There will be fighting an ilwn thense |na few crats ot Indiana, get ready.
Alexander Bayr,
Usul-tiude
Boots and Shoes. Lsliesboot*
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DONTRENT
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fWisti
sms*
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M6 Broadway, ?.
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE/ Notice ia hereby given that I will ap*^ ply to the board of commissionet-s of Vigo"" county, Indiana, at their June term, for a license to tell intoxicating liquors in a less quantity than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank an my premises, for one year. My place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank are located 20 feet and 7 inched off the west end of in-lots 71 and 72 of the town, now city of Terre Haute,
Indiana.
ending of the desperate day at
i6her's Hill would come rest and reorganization, but not so! Sheridan, tireless as perpetual motion and flushed with victory never rested when there was anything near enough to strike.
Gen. Macauley here gave an exceed ingly interesting account of the all-night march succeeding this battle, which they undertook at the imperative command of Sheridan, Weary to exhaustion they found themselves in Woodstock to which driven the enemy by a cession of'skirmishes. follows:
the morning at place they had continued sueHe concluded as
It has been haishly said that "familiar ity breeds contempt." So is it in these great achievements in which the actors ar^ with you Andof you in daily walk and conversation Sharp and terrible at they were when your hearts were thrill ed and often chilled by their brief tele graphic recitals from day to day, they seem subdut^d enough now when seen through- the* darkening tj'ass of years. But mellowed as they are by the soften ing touch of time, we have faith that the daring deeds performed with manly courage ard patriotic fidelity by these cftiten soldifrs for Lp beiity and
Union
will never be forgotten and that they Will receive their full need of your grateful remembrance through all time to come
Let it neve be true while the least one among them i«r alive, that in this country "When war is rife and danger's nigh
on
No. 318 Main street between Third and Fourth in the Fourth ward of the city of Terre Haute, Harrison townehy). Vigof county, Indiana. -fw lf iitj
Charles Monnikgkr.
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE Notice it hereby given that I will ap«\ ply to the Board of Committioners of Vigo county, Indiana, at their June termj^" for a license to sell "intoxicating liquors" in a less quantity than a quart at a timef with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises, for one year. My place of business and the premises, whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank are located on lot 8 Rose's addition on the north-west corner of Eight and Poplar streets in the Second ward, in the city of Terre Haute, itv Harrison township,
in
Vigo county.^
C. Kuhlman.
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE Notice is hereby given that I will apply to the board of commissioners of Vigo county, Indiana, at their June term, for license to sell intoxicating liquors in a less quantity than a quart at a time, with the priUlege of allowing the same to be' drank on my premises, for one 3 ear. My place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to. be sold and. drank are located lot No. 6 in S. C4** Scott's sub-division of in-lot 97, southed side Ohio street near Third street inc. Terre Haute, in Harrison township, in Vigo county, Indiana.
Grorgb A. Schaal.
as-
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE/' Notice Is hereby given that I will ap-» ply to the board of commissioners ofVigotj county, Indiana, at their June term, for ar license to sell intoxicating liquors in ar less quantity than a quart at a time, with, the privilege of allowing the same to be, drank on ray premises, for one year., ily place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be *old and^* drank are located lot No. 30, WiWon's sub-division* No. $39 south First street^ in the city of Terre Haute, in Harrison*' township, in Vigo county, Indiana.
Wm. H. Sattlrr.
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE^ Notice it hereby given that I will ap-p? to the Board of Commissioners ofy igo county, Indiana, at their June term,! for a license td sell ''intoxicating liquors" in a less quantity than a quart at a time with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises, for ona year. My place of business and the. premisesw^hereon said liquors are to-, betsold and drank are located on lot No. 66? in Rose's addition to the city of Terre Haute on the south side of Main street), in Terre Haute, in Harrison township! in Vigo county, Indiana.
Patrick Hogan.
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE Notice it hereby given that I will apply to the Board" of Commissioners of Vigo county, Indiana, at their June term for a license to sell "intoxicating liquors" in a lest quantity than a quart at a time/ with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on ray premises, for one year My place of business and the premises whereon taid liquort are to be sold and diank are locata! on lot 63 in Rose's, tub-division of 47 32-100 acres on the«| we6t tide of Twelfth ttreet between Syco more street and the Railroad track in the| Fifth ward, in the city of Terre Haute, in? Harrison township, in Vigo county Indiana.
4
3T
L. Eckrrwan.
APP L1CATION FOR LICENSENotice is hereby given that I will apto the Board of Commissioners o%igo county, Indiana, at their June term# or a license to sell "intoxicating liquors'*th a less quantity than a quart at a time,* with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises, for one year. My place of business and the premises whereon said liquor* are to beg sold and ^rank are located lot 89 Rose's sub-divisionyOf 47 32100 -acre* on north side of Atam street between Eleventh and Twelfth, No. niz in Fifth ward, in the city of Terre Haute, in Harrison township, In Vigo county, Indiana.
ply Vie
Geo. Meyer.
APPLICATION FORMLlCENbE Notice is hereby given that I will apply to the board of commissioners of Vigo county, Indiana, at their June term for a license to sell intoxicating liquors in a less quantity4^an a quart at a time with the piivUegrof allowing the same f,o be?" drank on^y premises for one year. Myl ic«eC business and the prc«»ses wh«e-i on swjp|iqi|0rs are to be sold and drapk are iMfit«T%est side of 38 feft off de eastfi^aik| 197 of the original in fct. southtide ofpltiniStreet between FFrst and Secoflfe the Third ward Of the city of Terre Haute, Harrisbn township, Vigo county, Indiana. iriikU •. ?-. Hkhry HAHN.
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE!
Notice is hereby given that I will ap~ to the Board of Commissiorers of
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HcalOv
igo county, Indiana, at their June term,L for a license to sell "intoxicating liquots'l in a lets quantity than a quart at a time/ with the privilege ot allowing the same to be drank on my premises, for oner year. My place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be: sold and drank are located on twenty feet' off the east end of lots No. 93 and 94 ot the town, now city, of Terre Haute, Vigol county, state of Indiana, in the buildingr1 known as 313, south tide of Main.
THORLETtFCO
C. F. Froeb.
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