Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 January 1881 — Page 4
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RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION.
THtf DAILY GAZETTE.
ill be delivered by carriers to any part of city, or sent by mail, postage prepaid to bscribersin any part of the Union, on the llowlng termH: Dally, per week .15 cents Daily, per month 66 centH DaHy, three montns 82.00 Daily, six months 4.00 Dally,|per Vear 7
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THE JHATURDAY ^GAZETTE. On Batunlay the GAZETTE, In addition to the usual features of the dally paper, will contain full reviews of all local event* of the week. Dramatic, Keiigious, Hporting Literary. Musical, etc., making it essentially paper for the home uud family. St liSCI'.Il'TIO.NS TO THE SATUKOAY GAZETTE Hingle copies. 8 .05 One year 1.50
THE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
Eight page* published every Thursday morning. TKKMS 51.RX) HK'RJASSUM, POSTAGE FKEK.
Ail letters or telegraphic dispatches must be addressed to GAZETTE,
Nos. 2o and 25 South Fifth Street, Terre Ilaute.
Is is understood ia Wuehi'^ton that Justice Swnyno of the U. S. Supreme C' twill vesign this week and tha S.&ulcy Matthews will be appointed to hi* place.
TJIK House Committee on InterOceanic Canals is disposed to incorporate the Eads ship railway without, however, taking $50,000,000 of stock in it, as Eads proposed.
C. II. VAN WYCK, was elected Senator by the Nebraska Legislature Saturday He was a Brigadier General during the war, is a farmer now and is considered an auti-railroad man.
PENNSYLVANIA and Tennessee are still trying to elect a Senator and the Legisla tures of these States do little else but bal lot and adjourn. In the mean time, pre. sumably, important State interests are permitted to suffer.
JAY GOULD, it is reported, has purchased a considerable interest in the Keokuk Northern Line Packet Co. He has bought up all the railroads that were for sale and is now obliged to go into the river business to get rid of his surplus
Cash, ^mtmmamirmwmmnomm
TIIK storm in the East did great damage to the telegraph liueS. Saturday New York was practically closed to the outside world, pretty much all the wires being down. The icc forming on the wires broke them. An infinitude of trouble and delay was the resuli.
THE GAZETTE is pleased to know that Judge C. F. McNutt has consented to the request of a number ot his fellow citizens and that lie will on the first of February deliver a lecture on "Prison Reform." It ii a subject which he has exhaustively investigated and his views will, we know, be listened to with attention. It is one of the live questions of the day and deserves a wider consideration than has hitherto been accorded it.
LEI AND STANKOHJ), President of tlie Central Pacific railroad, and one of the lordliest railroad kings of the country, has published a three column card in the San Francisco papers in answer to the article of Judge Black. Mr Stanford denies in toto that the States or general government ought to have any restraining control of the railroad*.'
THE controversy between Mr. Clutter and the Express on the one hand and ]\[r. Debs on the other is none of the GAZETT'S fight, but we rise to remark that we did not expect to see our esteemed morning contemporary using the threadbare phrase of correspondents: "The attention of the writer has just been called to a communication of Mr. E V. Debs published in the GAZETTE sevejal days ago ect." Eschew that style of beginning Dear
Express.
In the
language of Senator Thurmaa, "It won't do".
THE New York Tribune ia inclined to be severe in its structures on ex-Secretary Thompson for saytag that the Monroe doctrine does not apply to the Panama Canal project and is not the settled policy of the government anyway. The
Tribune
thinks that the declarations of this doctrine in presidential messages, and particularly in the last one of President Ilayes, does constitute a fixed policy. To this the Cincinnati
Commercial
ad
mirably replies as follows: It is absolutely true that all those declarations do not amount to anything. Why should not Mr. Thompson believe it and tell the truth about it The people ot the United States, with unimportant exceptions, believe in De Lesseps, and would be glad to see his great project of connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans at the Isthmus of Darien carried out. The people of the United States Avill not allow any idiocy, however, labeled "Monroe Doctrine'' to interfere with that magnificent and beneficent enterprise, nor can the afford to champion with especial zeal any of the old canal schemes that have been reanimated by the genius and energy of De Lessops as manifested at Suez and Panama. The United States is too big to play little dog in the manger.
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AN extrordinary boom in real estate has struck New York and Brooklyn. Next spring it will be bounding over the •west whsre real estate just now is valued much below its real \rorth. But at the present the commercial metropolis of the country is the center of this activity. In the lower part of the City of New York there have been some very important transactions in improved property which has scarcely attracted any attention outside of the circle immediately concerned. A day or two since $250,000 was paid for some property in Park Row, on behalf of bankers in Amsterdam $800,000 has -since been refused for a brick building, corner of Broadway and Rector streets, occupied by the Union Trust Company John Jacob Astor purchased 8 and 10 Wall street, on which he intends to erect one of the handsomest buildings on that street. William Astor is in treaty for a property close by having offered $350,000 for it $700,000 has been offered for GO, 71, and !•', Broadway, owned by the Charter Oak insurance Company a p!oi, 120x100, onGSth street, has been sold to Mr. Marquard for $150,000. Unimproved property in the upper part of the city' on the North Riverside, has appreciated at least 25 per cent since the selection of the location for the Fair at Inwood.
TIIE past year has been a fruitful one for locomotive builders, and the demands upon them both for home consumption and for export have been greater tlum ever before. The Baldwin Locomotive Works of Philadelphia have turned out 515 locomotives, and have orders on their books to run them at their full capacity for more than twelve months to come. Notable among their productions is that of a single driver locomotive, No. 5,000, the live .thousandth of their, build, which was originally intended for the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company, to run on the Bound Brook route, be tween Philadelphia and New York. It has made the 89.4 miles in S)S minutes, being at the rate of 54 miles an hour. It was finally sold to Mr. F. W. Eames, of the Eames Vacuum Brake Company, to be taken to England for experimental purposes. This is the first locomotive with but a single pair ol driving wheels that has of late years been built in the United States., The Baldwin Works are also employed in making, after the designs of E. A. L. Roberts, of Titusville, Pa., his patent-fitted piston and cylinder locomotives, which he claims to be able to run eighty miles per hours with perfect ease.
ONE of the most noteworthy of the re ports made to Congress by the heads of departments in the Government service is that of Hon. W. B. Thompson, the General Superintendent of the Railway Mail Service. This marvelous organization is peculiarly an American institution, and one of which the United States may well be proud. It embraces sixty nine lines of railway postotfice, some of them longer than necessary to reach across a whole European kingdom. Including steamboat routes, the annual service foots up 102,166,001 miles, on which mails are constantly being re. ceived, distributed and delivered, with a saving in time over the old method, upon each letter or package handled, of from twelve to twenty-four hours, and in one year the employes in the Railway Mail Service distributed 2,658,483,320 letters and pieces of mail matter.
THE PROPOSED APPORTIONMENT
Under the apportionment bill which fixes the number of Representatives in Congress at 311, the various States will be provided for as follows:
Alabama, 8 Arkansas, 5 California, 5 Colorado, 1 Connecticut, 4 Delaware' 1 Florida, 2 Georgia, 10 Illinois, 19 Indiana, 13 Iowa, 10 Kansas, 6 Kentucky, 10 Louisiana, 6 Maine, 4 Maryland 6 Massachusetts, 11 Michigan, 10 Minnesota, 5 Mississippi, 7 Missouri, 14 Nebraska, 3 Nevada, 1 New Hampshire, 2 New Jersey, 7 New York, 32 North Carolina, 9 Ohio, 20 Oregon, 1 Pennsylvania, 27 Rhode Island, 2 South Carolina, 6 Tennessee, 10 Texas, 10 Vermont, 2 Virginia, 10 West Virginia 4 Wisconsin, 8.
•THE Supreme Court has rendered a decision in the case of Hallett Kilbourn vs John G. Thompson et al. Kilbourn refused to testify before a Housefinvestigat, ing committee in reference to the Washington real estate pool. He was confined by order of the House for contempt and after 45 days released on a writ ofjhabeas corpus. Heued, Thompson, the Sergeant-at-arms of the House, the speaker and others. He demurred to the pleas of the defendants and they were overruled by the Supreme Court of the District of Colum bia. The case was appealed to the Su premc Court of the United States. It has just reversed the decision of the lower court and remanded the case back for trial:
THE total subscription lor new undertakings in London during 1880 were $611,000,600, against only $282,500,000 last year, and only $216,000,000 in 1876, when every thing was so seriously depressed- Of the amount for 1880, $349560,000 was wholly subscribed in Great Britain, and $261,000,000 partly subscribed on the continent of Europe.
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THE TEREE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE?
THE Congressional committee which is investigating the alleged abuses of the franking privilege has discovered gross carelessness on the part of the Congressional campaign committees of both parties, and it is intimated that their forthcoming report will recommend the total abolition of the franking privilege. This will lie bad news for Senator Logan who, only the other day, presented a bill in the Senate to restore the privilege to its old proportions when it was possible lor a Congressman to send home his soiled lineii to be laundried.
HAYES' POLICY.
President Hayes is, as his wife said, a, very determined man. He bore the attacks of Conkling aud the Grant gang for a good while with meekness, but he is getting in his perfect work on them now in a way which must make them despise themselves. He is'filling all the ofuces he possibly can before he leaves f.e White House and there will be few taves and fishes left for them. Yesterday he sent to the Senate the following nominations:
Edward C. Billings, of Louisiana, for United States Circuit judge for the Fifth circuit John F. Drover, Surveyor of Customs at Pittsburg George W. Atkinson, United States Marshal for West Virginia Major David G. Swayne, of the corps of Judge Advocates, to be Judge Advocate General Lieutenant Colonel Geo. L. Febieer, Deputy Paymaster General, to be Assistant Paymaster General, with the rank of Colonel Charles Henry Whipple and Wm. II. Comegys, to be Pnymas'erswitli the rank of Major Lieutenant Col onel Samuel B. Ilolabird, Deputy Quartermaster General, to be Assisstant, Quartermaster General, with the rf-nk of Colonel Major William Myers, Quarter master, to be Deputy Quartermaster General, with rank of Lieutenant Colonel Captain James Tilliss, Assisstant Quartermaster, to be Quartermaster, with rank of Major Lieutenant Colonel Charles II. Thornpkins, Deputy Quartermaster General, to be Assisstant Quartermaster General, with rank of Colonel Major Charles G, Sawtell, Quartermaster, to be Deputy Quartermaster General, with rank of Lieutenant Colonel Captain Theodore J. Ecker. son, Assistant Quartermaster General, to be Quartermaster with rank ot Major, First Lieutenants Chas, R. Barnet, Fifth artillery, and Charles A. H. McAuley, Third cavalry, to be Assistant Quartermasters with a rank of Captain.
Postmasters— Thomas D. Campbell, at Ottawa, O. Geo. F. Wliiteman, at Lacon, Ill. Thos. J. Ross, Nevada, Iowa Benj. Emmons, at St. charlcs, Mo. And gyes terday the Senate confirmed Joseph W. Burke, as collector of Customs at Mobile, Ala. John W. Finnell, Collector of Internal Bcvenue for the Sixth District of Kentucky Nicholas H. Owings, Secretary of Washington Territory Edmund P. Smith of Indiana, Consular Agent at Carthage.
THE London bank Clearings to Dec. 22 this year have been £5,647,361,000. as against £4,863,140,000 last year. This would be $28,236.805,000 for Loudon, ainst §38,614,448.000 for New York, making the latter over §10,000,000 ahead of London. It is evident that John Bull has not vet felt the full force of the speculative boom which started on the resumption of specie payments in the United States. His day has yet to come.
A CONTROVERSY is in progress between the auditor of the Pacific railroad accounts and the railroad authorities, which promises interesting developements. Auditor French charges that the company is about to dispose of certain property in violation of the Thurman act and to declare a dividend which it has no right to under the law. He proposes to see that they obey the law, and they of course won't do it if they can find any means of escape. ,'v.......
A PHILADELPHIA dispatch announces that William Westervelt, who was sentenced to seven years' imprisonment on October 9, 1875, on the charge Of conspiracy to kidnap and imprison uharlie Ross, and extort a ransom from his family, was released to-day, having received fifteen months' commutation for good behavior. Westervelt was a brother-in-law of William Masher, who with Joseph Douglass, was killed at Bay Ridge, Long Island while attempting to rob the house of Judge Van Brunt. Before Douglass died he confessed they were the abductors of Charlie Ross. Westervelt was induced to come to thfc city and tell what he knew about the case, and was arrested and imprisoned He stated that he does not think the child is ead, and believes that it will be restored to it,s parents. He intends to follow up a clue that has never been worked, and says if he has time he certain of success.
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SECRETARY SIIERMYN was before the Senate finance Committee yesterday. He wants the House funding bill amended making the proposed issue ot bonds re deemable after five years and payable in twenty years from the date of issue and the rate of interest to be fixed in the discretion of the Secretary ot the Treasury, but not to exceed 3
y*
per cent. Ho
thinks the proposed funding certificates are all right. His views will probably be adopted.
THE jury before which the Land Leaguers were being tried, at Dublin, disagreed late yesterday evening1 and was discharged the news created tremendous excitement-in Dublin, and through-
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out Ireland and England. The nexij move of the British government will be. awaited with interest. Affairs cannot, drift along in their present, shape much11 longer.
THE Cincinnati Commercial has no faith in Eads' intcr-oceanic railroad, which, by-the-bye, is just now extensively advertising its stocks and bonds for sale in the New York papers. The Commercial wants Eads to tell about the sudden shoaling of his channel of thirty feet at the jelties. "His idea," it says, "of a railroad on which ships may be snaked over the mountains on rail ?, is a symptom of softening of the braih. A Congressman who listens five minutes seriously to such stuff, should undergo the penitentiary discipline of spanking with a board."
fiANDFORD ITtMS.
The quarterly meeting is in progress here.
W. W. Fuqua is seriously ill with typhoid fever Chas. Hicks, tax collector for Elbridge township, makes his headquarters at Pierce's store on Saturdays.
Mr. J. IT. Hussong has about $10,000 worth of saw logs ricked up near his saw mill and stave factory.
Mr. F. Kibler is running his mill steady and giving good satisfaction in his flour.
The marriage of Mr. Ed. Safford and Miss Hattie Hunsaker occurred Tuesday evening, Jan. 18th, at the residence of the briae's parents, at Bloomtown.
Railroads-
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 25.—The counsel for Robert McCalmont and others to-day filed a bill in equity contesting the legality of the issue of the deferred income bonds and the binding of the indebtedness. The Philadelphia & Reading railroad in connection with the equity suit made the following motions: First, for the revocation of the courts the order of Nov. 16th, referring to deferred bonds. Second, that the masters be directed to report the evidence taken upon the petition of McCalmont and others for the revocation of the order of Nov. 16th. The judge ordered that the argument upon the motion to suspend the order of Nov. 16th be heard Thursday next, and the argument on the motion of the revocation and application for the injunction will be heard February 7th.
The Postoffice Fighf.
There has not been a political contest in this city for }rears that has been waged with more vigor than the present one for Postmaster Filbcck's shoes. There was a lull in the fight for a time, but whem Mr. Filbeck. announced his determination of shieing his castor into the ring it opened up with increased fury. Every man has his petition and every petition is signed by almost the same persons. In answer to an inquiry this morning a prominent professional man said he signed not less than half a dozen petitions for the postoflicc. "How can I help," said he, "they come -v.'ith their papers and if* I show the least hesitancy they put the pen in my hand and almost force me to sign it. I tell them I have already signed one or two but it makes no difference. Resistance is useless."
Musical Festival
CINCINNANTI Jan., 25.—Thesaleof choice of season tickets at the opera festival to be given in February by the College of Music begins to-morrow. This festival is conducted much after the manner of the musical festivals heretofore given. There are to be seven performances for which season tickets are sold at twelve dollars each. It is expected that large premiums will be bid for the choice of seats. Music Hall is to be fitted with elaborate and massive stage appliances and the massive company which produces the operas is to be supplemented by a large orchestra and a Cincinnati Choir of three or four hundred. The event is expected to make a stirjunong'musical people.
Balloingfora Tennesse eenat er. NASHVILLE, Jan. 25.—Senator Bailey's name withdrawn. The twenty-seventh ballot W3S: Maynard, 41 R.L.Taylor, 31 Bright, 5 E. A. James, 2 Samuel Watson 2 I. M.Jones, 2 Nathan Branon, 1 Rose, 3 Judge R. L. Caruthers, 1 W. M. Randolph, 1 Jordan Stokes, 1 W. C. Whitthorne, 1 East, 1 Etheridge, 1. It having been announced that Senator James E. Bailey was now for the first time within the bar of the House, the House look recess for five minutes to give him a cordial greeting, which was done. The convention recessed until 3 P. M.
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:v Ship Collision.
HALLIFAX, Jan.*25.—The steamer Wed dington from New Orleans for Hambur whicn put in for bunker coal had been supplied and was proceeding to sea when she was run into by the steadier Canima entering from N. The Wediington ran for the wharf where she now lies covered with water. The Canima had the stern and some bowplates injured. The cargo of the Weddington is 65,000 bushels of corn and 750 bales of cotton.
Extensive Arrangements Have just been completed, by which we are enabled to supply the "Compound Oxygen" for home use to any extent, and to all parts of the country, giving at the same time the right of free consultation by letter during the whole time a patient may be using the treatment.
Every case submitted to us will be, as we have said, carefully considered. If we see a reasonable ground for anticipating the favorable action of "Compound Oxygea" we will encourage the patient to give it a trial but if we think the matter at all doubtful we will frankly say so. Write for our Treatise on "Com-
SIrs.
ound Oxygen." It will be sent free. Starkey Palen, 1109 and 1111 Girard street, Philadelphia, Pa. ...
Means
& SOB.
PROPRIETORS St Clair House invite all the traveling public to stop at their house Nice,'clean rooms, low rates and careful attention
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FEB. 15.=
There are no less than IS TO prizes, am'nting Together to $SO,SOO. 1st
JPrize,$15,(MM.
2nd Prize, $5jQOO. 3rd Prize, $2,500. And Whole Tickets Only $1. Address all orders to
G. UPlNCTOMi
Or
M.
M.
509 Broadway, Sew York,
HAir
UN FERMENTED
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Grives JEverybodg a Chance to Make Something out of his Investment in the Drawing of
RICHMOND,
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VERY EASILY MANAGED, ECONOMICAL-IN FUEL,
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Hive h:ki Salisfacticn Sverywhere.
Fbitt^
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TRADE MARK
MALT AND HOPS
(CONSUMPTION"—To
sweats, to ease the cough, and arrest emancipation and decline, no other form of malt or medicine can possibly equal Malt Bitters. This nutrient and tonic is rich in nourishment and utrength. It tides the patient over the most critical stages of disease digest1!and assimilates food, enriches and urifles the blood. It builds up the system _y stimulating into new life the entire process of digestion, by which new blood is made and the progress of disease and debility arrested.
Malt Bitters are prepared without fermentation from Canadian barley malt and hops and commend themselves to consumptives and those of consumptive tendency, to delicate females and Jsickly children, to the aged and to the nervous andtothementally and physically prostrated, as the purest safest and most powerful restorative yet discovered in medioina. ,,
Ask for Malt Bitters, prepared by the Malt Bitters Company, and see that every bottle bears the trade mark label, duly signed and enclosed in wave lines as seen In cut.
Malt Bitters mio lor sale by all Druggists
XECUTOBS'BALK OF REAL ESTATJB
E
The riders! ignea,. of Chauncty Rose a
ed, Executors of the last will eee&sed, will on th»2ttth.
day of February, 1881, at the offic« of M, S. Durham, No. 5u7% Ohio str»«t, in the city o! TerreHtite, sail at private sale the followiag describe* Real C*tate in the city of Terro Haute, Vigo county and state of Indiana, to witj
Lots numbered forty-one (4i) and forty-six (-46) in Chauncey Rose's subdivision of that part of section twenty-trwo, (12), township twelve (12) north, of range nine west, which lies between Chestnut and the canal and between Eighth street and the canal.
Terms of Sale: Lot No. forty-one, (41), onefourth of purchase money in two year*, onefouith in thre« years, one-fourth in four ears and one-fourth in five years, the notes earing Beven per cent interest fr*m date, payable annually. Lot No. forty-six, (46), one- third in cne year, one-third in two years one-third in three years, the notes beating •even per cent interest from date, payable annually.
FlBHIN NIPPEBT,) TTXMntor. JOSKTHUS COLL*TT,
Terre Haute, Jan. 27th, 1881.
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CLOSE AND CLOTHES.
The two words sound alike, close and clothes, yet what different ideas they convey. Wo close our eyes when we go to sleep, and the orator clothes his{ideas in language. The storekeepers close up at the close of the dav, also on Sunday when they put on their best clothes, attend church close by and study the clothes of their neighbors until the close of the sermon, when the minister remarks that they will close with the doxology. Few people, however, soon as they draw towards the close of life, like to wear old clothes which leads us to remark that the place to go when you wish to habilitate yourself in new and fashionable clothes'(and. lius we close our remarks) id Owen, Pixey & Co,'s clothing store.
$5
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A CHARTER OAK
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MADE ONLY BY
ST. LOII8, MO.
IMPOBTEB3 JtND DEALERS IN
TIN-PLATS, WIRE, SHEET mosr
—-A-srx)—
ETERY CLASS OF GOODS USED OS SOLD B*
TIN AND STOVE DEALERS. SEND FOB PRICE LISTS, JE. JL. PROBST,
Outfit sent free, to those who wish to engage lu the most pleasnt ntul profitable business known. Everything new. Capital not required. We will turnish you everything. $10 a day nnd upwards is easily made without staying away from home over night. No risk whatever. Many new worltars wanted at. once. Many are making fortunes at the business. Ladies make as much as men, and young boys and pne who is wily. &o girls make great pay. lug to work fails to make more money every day than can be made in a week at any ordinary employment. Those who engape at once will find a short road to fortune Address H."
JIALI.ETT, ft
Maine.
Co., Portlands
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE. Notice Is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo County, Indiana attheir Januarv term for a license to sell iutoxicnting liquors in Jess quantity than a quart at a time with tha privilege of allowing the Fame to be drank on my premises for one year. My place of business, and the premises whereon said liquors arc to be sold and drank are located on lot No 21 sub division of four acres and two nxte East side of the west half of section 22 in Township 12 norih, in range0 west on Maiu between Twelfth and Thirteenth, streets in the city of Terro Haute, Vigo Countv, Indiana.
CHAKLES W. STAKI.EY.
No. i2.835, State of Indiana, Vigo cou nty Nove..'.berterm in Vigo Circuit Court 1SS0. Nathan Beauchamp vs Addison Ciendennln & Co., to quiet title, Be it known that on the loth day of November 18tS0. it was ordered by the Court that the Clerk notify by publication said Addison Clemlennin & Co., as non-defend-ant—of the pendency of this action against them. Haicl defendants are hereby notified of the pendency of said action against them and and that the same will stand for trial at the first day of the next term of Said court in the year of l!Si.
ASA M. BLACK, Attor. for Plaintiff. ft MFBEIT,J.N. SMITH, Cierk
Lea38 of Land by Administrator Notice is here by givc that Nicholas Yeager, administrator of the estate of "William R. Gardner deceased has filed his petition to lease for three years or less the real estate of the deceased hi3 personal estate being insufficient to pay his debts. Said petition will be heard at the February Term of the Vigo Circuit Court.
Witness my.hand this 10th day of December 1880. MERRILL N. Sumr. HORACE B. JONES, Clerk.
Attorney.
DONTRENT
BUY A HOME IN MICHIGAN. »S TO $10 PER ACRE!
Strong Soil*! Snre Crops! Knilroad throngh Center of land*. Ilonlthy Cllmnto Schools and Cbarehca. Intelligent Population. HICHEST REWARD TO FARMERS. These
IJITHJS
area long distance E»»*t of thn
Mississippi River. Large amount saved in travel ana transportation of crops. Descriptive pamphlet in English anrt German.
Address W. O. HL Commissioner, Grand Rapids, Michigan.
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DMINISTRATIX SAI.E.
Notice Is hereby given that the im rj"-, signed Administratix of the estate or Michael JLanahau, deceased, will e8®" at public auction, at her re.tid nee No. 1840 north First street, on Thursday, Jan uary 13,1861, all the personal property boongingtosald decedent. Two Horses, one Express Wagon, Lumber, Household Goods n»l other articles.
TERMS OF SALE—A credit of six months be given on all sums over $5.00 the purchaser giving note with approved ecurity. Under five dollars cash.
MRS. JOHN BARRETT, Administratrix
Notice of Dissolution
Notice is hereby given that the partner' ship between James P. Leinberger and J. C. Stark, under the firm name of Loinberger and Stark, is this day dissolved by mutual consent. Mr. Stark retires and. the business will be continued by Mr.^ James P. Leinberger who will pay all debts and collect all accounts.
JAMFS P. LETNltEHHER C. |g
Terre Haute Jan., 22,1881.
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