Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 18 December 1884 — Page 4
§i*%
W. C. SAIL & COMPANY.
InUred at the Poatoffioe at Ttrrt ECHOC, Ind., $ Second-olass mail matter.
RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Dully 15 centu per weels to cente per month J7.S0 per year. Weekly
*1.50
25 South Fifth Street, West Side.
THURSDAY. DECEMBER 18,1884.
BEN BOILKB is tyiug knots io his handkerchief to remind him tbat he ran for the Presidency last summer.
YlOli PliKilDEUT-ELECT HBHDI'.ICKS and wjfe wijl go to New Orleans during the holidays, aod return via Florida.
IF Mr. Halstead is invited to the New •Orleans Exposition he will doubtless wear a bomb-proof shirt of mail.
THE Chicago socialists are howlin loud for War. These socialists have a funny way cf enjeying themselves.
THB dynamite outrages in England ought to be stopped. They certainly MB do no good tor Ireland's cause.
THAT good old Cincinnati philanthropist, Reuben R. Springer, will not be forfoiltn soon by the people of Cincinnati. a————————a
PHOF. J. C. RIDPATH, of DePanw, HAB voder consideration the acceptance of the presidency of the State University. The hoard of trustees ot tho latter institution meet to-morrow lor the purpose of fiaak iag an election.
IT is said that Mr. Blaine will entertain gorgeously at Washington this winMr. But it is suspected that very few mugwumps will stretch their legs jender h« mahogany.
CITIZEN of honest toil wants to know ^faat is to hinder Walker Blaina and Fred Grant from going out and working for a living as people with lower chances in life^areobliged to.
Hobtimer Ntk as messenger has delivered Indiana's electoral vote safely at Washington. On the way he fell in 'With the messenger from Connecticut, and together they made the journey.
A REVISION of the mayoralty vote in Boston, at Tuvaday'a election, develops the remarkable coincidence that Mr. O'Brien receives precisely the same number of votes that elected Mayor Martin one year ago—27,494.
THE Prohibitionists of Portland, Me., have assumed the aggressive. Their organ, the Portland Herald, announces ii will b^ willing to pay for information by Whiah they can send rumsellersto jail. They once more threaten ihe hotels.
OHIO Democrats are studying the situation in regard to local federal offices with deep earnestness and touching solic, itude. They can make up the Democratic column easy enough, but they can't tell thich end oi the procession will move first.
TEB amendment to the Maine Constitution prohibiting the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors,cider excepted goes into effect the first Wednesday in January, 1885. The amendment abolishing Ncal Dow was not adopted but it should have been.
OHE Otto Kochlitzky, of Maiden, Mo., declared that Bob Ingersoll's lecture on the "Mistakes of Moses" was pirated from a work written years ago by an Englishman named flittell. Thereupon Bob offers $1,000 reward for any book published before his lecture was delivered in which the lecture can be found.
NEW YORK is fast approaching a reasonably high plane of civilization. A correspondent writes to the Sun ot that city, denouncing a man who toos off hi6 boot9 in a theater and put his stockinged feet on the chair in front of him. A lit tie agitation of this subject will compel all New York theater goers to keep their boots on during the performance.
Now it is said President Cleveland wilj follow President Lincoln's example and make up his Cabinet from the list of his competitors for the Presidential nomination. If he does this he will have a strong Cabinet. Bayard, Thuiman and Randall will be in it. But one don't see how Thurman and Hoadly can both get in, and we must insist upon drawing the line at Ben Butler.
THE New York World grows ciuel with it'e large increa»e of circulation and it's general prosperity. Reeently it said
,lGeneral
Butler doesn't know how in the
world that silver-mouuted goblet of Go ornor Wise's, stolen during the war, ever should have been at last discovered among his own effects at Lowell. Some of our Senptural esteemed contemporaries might account for it by recalling the story cf Joseph snd hi? trathren espc•ially the cap tLa was found in Benjajmiu'e "jack."
s?
yt
a year.
75 cents for 6 ^months or 50 cents for 4 months. Now is the time to subscribe.
THE NEW Orleans Exposition opened to-day. Now if anybody could bore a little common senEe into Field Marshal
Murat Halstead'fl he&d, everybody would J0J. quitting and allaying all irritation be happy.
A MEETING of prominent Pennsylvania Republicans was helJ at Pittsburg last Saturday to discuss the advisability of opposing Don Cameron's proposition to succeed himself* in the United States Senate.
OHIO people are circulating a petition to the legislature to submit a constitutional amendment abolishing tbe October election. This move will meet with determined opposition, because voting is one of the principal industries of that state.
THE ccming Presidential electionin France bids fair to be about as exciting as the one which has just been passed through in the UDited States. M. Grevy is constitutionally eligible for re-election and is more than willing to have a second term, but there are obstacles in the wsy, and a strong anti-Grevy campaign has already been organized in Paris.
WIDOW BUTLER, the horny handed champion of the working man, has sold his three houses on Capitol bill in Washington. The old gentleman probably begins to recognize the fact, that his future cruising ground in America is up Salt river and that a residence in Washington will l-o as unnecessary in the future to him, as the traditional fifth wheel to the traditional coach.
WAGES have been reduced from 15 to 20 per cent, at John Roach's ship-yard at Chester, Pa. Ho expects no jobs oai the present Congress, or the next one, &nd he certainly will get none. WuU is needed is free ships.—[Terre HaiUe Gazette. s.,
The nail-works at Tene Haute and the Wabash Rolling-mill, at the same city, have both shut down indefinitely What is needed is free staue.- [IcdiREap olis Journal.
Taese ate times el Protection.
BY common consent it has always beta admitted that Roscoe Cockling possessed much more than average intelligence. And yet it is doubtful if there was ao_ other man in the whole country, Piatt excepted, so idiotic as to jump out cf tbe United States Senate in order to make a spectacle of himself trying to crawl back. Mr. Blaine's dismiesed libel suit shows how another man could be g' il(y of tolly which even a fool would have sense enough to avoid. The tacts being a? they were and as Blaine knew them to be hi? suit was a colossal mistake.
The GAZETrE is in reccipt of a two page leaflet being, as it states in tiil* ype, the "Last Message to tho House ci Israel or Advent Church." With frequent scriptual quotation, a vast amount of figuring and with the greatest circumstantiality announcement is made that the wcrld is positively coming to an end on the 4th day ci next January. Men and brethren, this is a close call. May we venture to remark that it is simply scpndalous fc: the Advcntists, whom we more than euspcct of standing in with the lale James Gould Blaine, to be smashing the world up just BS the Democrats have come into their Inheritance. It is "dog-gone" mean—thats what it is.
WHEN he was beaten at the polls Blaine went out of hie way in his Augusta speech to slander and malign the people of the south. A stranger to Bla ne and his methods, reading his speech, would hare supposed the south guiity of some great crime and that the country was in the throes of dissolution. But nothing has happened t'j justify the incendiary clamor of this plucked knight. As for the people of tlis south they have forgotten Biaine, who is to them no more cow than any other of the m.^ny meu who have failed to rsalizs all thair ambitious hepes. Politics is for the present quite out of their miarl. They have turned their attention to business ana particularly to the great cotton acd industrial exposition at New Orleans, which to them and the whole world, for it has assumed international proportions js a much more pleaoant spectacle for contemplation tian the ravings of a disappointed politician who almost sold his soul for office, through a long period of bartering, and sow makes mouths at mankind from amid the ashes of his ambition.
Having abused the south in a speech because it preferred eoue one else for president, he now abases the people of a great majority party in the state of Indiana because a newspaper which h© sued for libel preferred fighting to surrendering. When James G. Blaina sayo six Democrats could not be found in the state of Indiana who woold be willing to do justice to hkn as jurors oa their oaths, he is guilty of an accusation which is simply infamous, though it is so broad aDd sweeping and so man fee My and monstrously false a? to hurt no one except its author. The ma te.- with Jwnes G. Biaine is that he doesn't want justice in fact, he is afraid of justice and thus he erartls out cf his suit like tho craven thatheis. If the Sentinel should now turn on him and bring suit for malicious prosecution he might be forced to give up
."!' .. .- •„,
Vital Questions!!!!,.
A6k. the Most Eminent Physician Of any school, what Is tb8 best thlrg in tho
or tbe nervesand curing ail formsot nervou
complaints, giving natural, childlike re-
freshing sleep always? Ami tuey will tell will tell yon unhesitatingly "Some form oi Hops!!!"
Ask the same physicians "What ia the moet reliable and snrast enre for all liver diseases or dyspepsia constipation, indigestion, biliousness, malaria, feyer, ugue, &c.," knd tbey will teli you: t.
Mandrake! or Dandelioa!!!" Hence, when thes remedies are combined with others equally valuable,
And eompound'-d into Hop Bitter*, iuch a wonderful ai'd mysterious curative power is developed, which is so vartd in ito operas tions that no disease or ill health oan possibly exist or resist its its power, and yet it is
Harmless tbe roost fra'l wo-naa, weak en tnTttlid or bmallest child to use. •, CHAPTER II.
Nature ta heir to
terre HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
1
CHAPTER I.
AtK any all of the most eminent pfcysini&ns: "What is tbe b«t and only rewcdytliat c^n he relivd on to euro nil dueaswj or of ttic Sidneys and urinary organs* such ns ii?ht'd disease, diabetes, retention or inability to ictairi urine, and all tha diseases peculiar to omeii"— "And they will fell you explicitly and emphatically "Bachu!!!" ,"v
1
"Patients
"Almost dead or Dearly dying For yeara, ?jnd Riven up by pbysiciiane of Brigin'd ai.d oih-r kidney
OJJ-C.I
CS-". bver
complaints, severtt cough*,c&l!td coxikiumption, bave been cured. Women gone nearly creay!!!
From agny of neu-«lgiii, nervon^nesp, wahel uliichs, Had various disease peccliar lo Women.
Pri ple drawn oat of shspe fTom ercriciatiujr pangs) of rhi»umali*.m, inflammatory and onrcnic, or suffering from sciolula.
Erysipelas! jyi, Salt rheurr,', blond i-otoonlng. dvfipfipsla irid:i esutu, iunl faot aliuoat aii aisentet :''h
7 1
JfKve hff.'i cured by Hop Btitere, root oi l»e*u betouj'cl evury neighborhood a tlis known world.
fitg^Nono genuine •without a bnnch nf Of.n Hop? on the wh te label, bhun all tbe vii«. poinmoub stuff with "Hop" or "Hops" :n (heir name.
so-! of the money he made by crooked wr ys while in Congress. A suit of that kiad ought lo be brought by the Sentinel if for no other reason than to force him to display his moral turpitude.
AN effort ia being made to get piiy for the losses ct personal property by the sinking oi Tallapoosa on Squash Meadow Flat in collision with a sailing: vessel. This is likely to lead to an investigalion touching on the cause of the accident and the cener&l question of tbe use the govern, rneut vessels fur pleasure trips. Indeed it is even hinted that the awful question is about to be asked a3 to the nature of the Tallapoosa's busineea when the sank Ibis is a leading question.
Sparks From Prairie Creek: EWTOK GAZKTTK:—"It 6nows' cries tbe school boy, Hurrah!"' Ivy ReeO ia trappiDg coons in the bottoms Am Stout is building a new sleigh. Now, tbut Prairie girl may expect a ride Jain?s Shattuck has the roof on his large bain, and is puehiug the work rapidly toward completion. Mr, Shattuck, however is suffering much fr$m an mjury which he received a few weeks ago John L. Watson has a felon on bis thumb, and having had it lanced, is unable to work T. V. Stout cantemplates a trip to Kansup. as enon an he oan dispose of Lite crop of oorn The debate at the Watson school house is flourishing under the efficient management of its present president, Mr. Crawford Dowel. The society now numbers thirtj'five members, and has soue of tbe best young talent there i3 in the country Mr. Frank Davenport, the veteran ditcher, has entered upwn the job of opening a ditch Irnm the month of the Oxjdine liaynu (o tbe Stone Pond. He 13 to receive $3,000 for the work, and this is not a cent too muob, as any one will realize who contemplates th* giant 'jydertaking.., Middletown was toe scene of a very destructive fire on last Wednesday nieht, the store and its contents belonging to TruebJond & Hunt, being entirely destroyed. It is thought the store was burglarized and then "fired, as no trace of many cf ^ie goods can be found. Another thing tbat adds'weight to this belief is the series of burglaries in the surrounding towns. Thpre was comparatively no insurance, and another distressing thought is tbH br.th men nre poor, and the store coDstitJted almost their entire earthly possessions Saturday last, will long be remembered by tbe teachers of Prairie Creek township, as one of the rniny enjovable times they have spent together Upon the invitation of B. F. Watson, tbe Institute was not held at tbe usual place, but convened at No. 4. The following subjec were trected in a very tpirited manner, which showed that our teachers are wide awake and interested in tbeir work. Orthography was discussed by the secretary, Mii« Elsie Drake: Object lessons by Sliss Sarah Drake History, Miss Rosa Grossc'.ass Geography, Mr. Harris Recitation, Mrs. Harris Arithmetic. B. F. Watson ai.d Mr. Mow. .. But the raost interesting 6u? ject your correspondent took observation uron, was the dinner, which the patrons of the district, with their characteristic energy, notwithstanding the snow and cold, brought to appease tbe appetites of the care-worn and hungry teachers. Your humble scribe being out ot practice, sampled six or sevsn kinds of cake, some fioe boney and apiece of pie, with-l cut making an attack on tbe rest of the pies, meats, tarts, jelling &nd other good things too numerous to mention. The patrons "did themselves pjoud," and they deserved tbe vote of thanks which the Institute gnva them Trustee Ho!-1-iwav wm on hand usual, thowin? toat ti H-.-S Va-i S-""! ncsoolH heait, Ui in evidenced by tlic* fact that he has just presented «ciCh school with a 6et of primary reading chart?. Owing to his good judgment, tbe township has the best corps of teachers that she has had for several years. The attendance is larger in all the schools than for vears past, and the enrollment correspondingly large.
C. U. LATHB.
EXPOSED AGAIN:
The Gas Turned the Wrong Way at
a Seance Last Night, Causing an Exposure of Mrs.^1
Walling,.^..
The Affairas Belated by One Who was There-
Prom Saturday's Datly.
Mrs. Walling,formerly Mrs. Stewart the noted spiritualist and medium, fresh from h^r Battle Creek, Mich,, experience, was again exposed last night. A seance? was held at a room over 824 Maia street and one of the gentlemen in attendance was a Mr. John Stranger, a bank note expert, now stopping at (he National House This gentleman eays he is aD ardent beiLv.jr in spiritualism, but emphatically declares that
A
''MRS. STEWjfttT 18 A FRAUD." A GAZETTE reporter interviewed him thia morning at his rooms, and he gave a iull account of his experiences:
About a dozen ot the faiihiul were assembled. Mrs.. Walling entered the cabiu t, the iight9 }n the room being very !o«», and soon afterward a form clothed in white appeared. The door or the cabinet stcod open, and in a cbair inside was a form supposed to be Mrs. Stewart's. The Bpirit in white was intervkwed by one of the company, who renounced, ./ "THIS IS MY WIFE."
A second time she appeared, and the venerable Jas. O'Hook, after a hurried consultation in whispered tones, an. nounced that the spirit was "his" wife. The third time Mr. Stranger was told to go forward. Clasping the spirit's" hand fn his, Mr. Stranger says he found it to be a big fat nand,1arger than his own, and seemingly quite animate. This aroused his suspicion?, and getting a firmer grasp be held her tight, and in* quired who she was. The supposed spirit uttered not a word, and some uue in the audience cautioned him to treat her more carefully, and that she couldn't speak. The latter remark was followed by an emphatic, «, ^/-v "LBTGO," from the spirit. Mr. Stranger relused to let go, but held all the tighter. A rush was made for the two, and some one, attempting to put out the light, turned it up the wrong way, the room was .made light as day.
MRS. "WALLING WAS DISCOVERED dressed in a shacowy night gown, instead of the eupprsed spirit. In the cabinet, a few old clothes were seen thrown on the back of the chair, to impersonate the medium. The light was almost in stantly turned out, but not until the visitor had Been all there was to see. The eeaace immediately broke up in contus'on.
Mr. Stranger is at the National Hou&c, where be can be found by any ne doubting the veracity ot the above account.
HEAVY SENTENCES
judge Mack Gives Dudlay and Patterson Seven Years Each on Pleas of Guilty.
Late yesterday afternoon Frank Dudley and Wm. Patterson, the two local crooks who confessed to going through Kennett's store at Pimento, were taken from the county jail to the Circuit Court and arraigned before Judge Mack. Both pleaded guilty, and said they had been promised only two years if they would Dlead guilty. Judge Mack said be would be a party to no auch contract, and told the prisoners they could withdraw their pleas of guilty if they wanted to, but the pleas were not withdrawn. The court said that he would be as lenient as possible. He had intended to sentence eacb ot the prisoners for eleven years, but he would make it seven, 'x'be fHiurt then sentenced tbe prisoners. To Patterson he said it was a painful duty to him, as he knew his mother, who was a honest, baid-working woman, and he knew sue had dons all sLa could lo keep him on the right path.
Subsequently Mrs. Patterson, accompanied by her daughter, both of whom had been weeping, made a personal appeal to Judge MacK to shorten the sentence on her 6on. Judge Mack told Mrs. Patterson, w: om he has known well for year?, thatifgo^d reports we {received irom berhe wonM use his ic Caeuce to get the term shortened.
Chief of Police Vandever, who worked up the case on the two prisoners and worried tde confession out of them, is to be congratulated on the success that has attended his efforts in ridding the city o! tb^ presence of two Buch noted eriminal*.
State-Horticultural Society. The financial statement of the Indiana Horticultural Society, lor the fiscal year tnding Ootobsr 31,1884, was preeented to he Governor yesterday. It shows a b«lacceou hand October 31, 1883, of $752:15: membership feesleceived. $71 tot*J, $S23:l'i expenditures, $421,28 bnlance on hand, $401 87. The sum of $130 00 isBdue the secretary lor salary ind offlce^expenses. The annual meeting at Winchester was laigely attended and otherwise successful.
The Attempt on the Londoa Bridge. LOOTWS, Dec. 12.—Amotion will he made in the City Council on Thursday to offer a reward ot £5,000 for the dis corery of the persons wbo commited 'he dymanite outrage at London Bridge, cn Saturday. Great conius.on exists among cfiiuals ca account of authority over the bridge being divjded into three divisions, Damely, the city p1 lice, the metropolitan police and the water police. Inability ti fix the precise spot where tbe explosion occurred prevents any one depat tment assuming charge of the whole inquiry. ,n $ **,•
Police Paragraphs.
Hcsford's Acid Phosphate In Impaire Nerve Function. Dr.C. A. Fernald, Boston Mass.,savs: "I havo used it in cases ol impaired nerve function, with beneficial results, especially in cases where the system is effected by the toxic action of tabacco.' udopt the idea.—[Indianapolis Journal.
In Tefre Haute the wonderful discovery has been made that better police service can be obtained with the city divided into fifteen districts, with one patrolman in each, than in eight, with two in each. This is a brilliant discaverv, and in a few years Icdianaoolis may be induced to
SUICIDE.
Mrs Jno- Daniel, aa Insane Woman, r, Hangs Herself- r-
»Vr v' From Tuesday's Datly.
ft
1
THIS afternoon the remains of
Mr?.
John Daniels, sister of 2Jarcus Conover of 718 north Seventh 6treet, were found in an upper Dhall where she had bung herself by throwing a rope over a stepladder leading to the attic. She had been insane two years and last night when she went to bed asked the family cot to disturb her. fto one else slept up stairs aud gcinc up thi# afternoon she iras lound dead.
The importance of these requests will bs apparent when it is remembered thai we sometimes hive ra many as five funerals a week and that the new cemetery is at a great distance from the city. This is the custom in other cities. I'
infants
it
FUNERALS.
1
Several of the City Ministers Unite In Requests to the Public in Regard to Funeral Reform.
At the ministers' meeting this morning the following was adopted: "We, the undersigned, ministers ot Terre Haute, make the following requests to the public: I* (1) When absolutely'nccessary for us to go to either ceinstery we are williDg to do so, but we do most earnestly request tbat tbe services be concluded at house or the church. (2) When interment takes plaoe at eilber cemetery, we request that the procession always move in a trot (3) We do moet earnestly protest against Sunday funerala when it is possible to arrange for them on some other day. (4) We also request that whenever convenient we oe consulted before the time for the funeral is fixed in crder to prevent conflicting engagements.
1
ALFRED KUMMKB,. SAMUEL BECK, /", J. K. WHEELER, H. O. BREEDRN, W. F. HORSTMSTKK,
1
GEO. R. PIERCE,
5
•v J. W. SKINNER, H. KATT.
Rev. Cbarles Stock hows, of the German Evangelical, agrees to all except the third request.
A union New Year's service was talked of in the meeting but no definite arrangement reached.
THE WATERMELON SNOOTING.
Judge ack Finds Farmer Littletoa Not GuiKy. Tbe case against Ellas Littleton, the white haired old farmer wbo shot the boy Oscar Caldwell in his watermelon patch, was tried to-day before Judge Mack. Judge McNutt was Littleton's counsel. The boy testified that he and other boys bad gone into Littletoa's field to steal watermelons tbat be had not been there before, but the other boys told him tbey bad been getting them before. He said he was squatted in some weeds in the edge of tbe corn looking to Bee if there was unyone watching. There were three other boys with him. He was bit by two bandred and two No. 8 shot. Forty have been taken out and thereat are in yet. Chief Vandever testified that tbe next day be went to see Farmer Littlaton to arrest him and that Littleton said be didn't see tbe boy ne shot, but he shot to uuo-ther boy he saw in tbe pateb.
Farmer Littleton testified that tbe boys bad nearly destroyed bis melons and he had to watch them night and day from the time they were balfgrown. He saw a boy in the patch and he shot between him and the corn to scare him He didn't see tbe boy he bit and didn't know there was a boy there.
During tbe trial Jud^e Mack ordered the Caldwell boy ta appear this afternoon before the grand jury to testify as to what be knew about boys stealing melons. The boy was told he would not be prosecuted himself.
Judge McNutt, in the course cf bia argument, dealared it as creat a wronz to steal a man's ineion* from bis patch as to steal the money for then from bia pocket.
Tbe court sail it was a rep!oocb to the courts for men to come iG and say they had to expend so much time and money to prevent, these trespasses, and he believed if tbe people would help uim this court would bring tucb olfeudtrs tu justice.
Tbe court found Farmer Littleton not guitv.
Krs- Stewart—Walling.
Referring to the latest exposure of Mrs Stewart Walling, the Indianapolis Tnnts says: S i/ ,vr
Sentenced for Adultery-
Chas Powell received 0 sentence of t*n days in tbe county jail and fine of $1 and coet* in tbe Circuit Court yesterday for living in adultery with Mrs. James Uneell, his sister-in-law.
Swfff^O
and
Children1
M£fttont_MbrghlnG_jor_Nar£®tlii£l
What gives our Children rosy cheeks. What cures their fevers, makes them sleep
When Babies fret, and cry by turns, What cures their colio, kills their worms. BjatCastorffe What quickly cures Constipation,, Sour Stomach, Colds, Indigestion:
BotteRtmia,
Farewell then to Morphine Syrups, Castor Oil and Paregoric, and Hall Ciutarla.
Centaur Liniment.— •olute cure for Rhenmatiamf Sprains, Boras, Galls, &e., and ai instantaneous Pain-reliever. .J./
FOR LADIES' EYES. BURKHARDTSB00K NOW READY.
A superb epitome of fashien in Ladle*' and Misses' Cleaki and W reps of l'ur, (sealskin, 811k, Matellasse, Plush, Cloth aid all the newest fancies In labri-*s for the winter of 1884 i. Ever7 lady wanting winter wrap should write for the JBurkhardt Cutv oene whose handsome Illustrations convey to the eye the exact appcarauco »f every tain# ia Cioatsand Wr* Mailed ftee to prospective customers on application.
A. G. BUHKHARDT A OO
113 WeBt Fourth street, Cincinnati.
THE NEWSPAPERS.
Judge Mack Finds Fault With the Way Tbey Have Been Helping Indicted Persons.
Judge Mark has made up his mind to stop the newspapers from giving information to criminals that enable them to get away before the authorities can execute the warrants placed in their bands and to-day a Gazette writer was summoned before the court and questioned as to how bt obtained possession of the pieee oi news published in the court column yesterday which said that Georga Sidell had been indicted for arson. It appears that Sidell saw the publication before the sheriff could arrest him, and he has, in consequence thereof, made himself so scarce tbat the authorities cannot find him. Considerable trouble and (xpense were indulged in to return iho indictment, afid Judge Mack and Criminal Prosecutor Henry were greatly annoyed at the turn things had taken. The court cautioned the employes in the county clerk's office about allowing such information to be made public, and tbe reporter was enjoined to be more careful hereafter. Thu court read the la* which made it contempt for any person to give such information, and said the publication of the character of the indictments, tven umit ing tbe names, was often in the nature oi a notification to persons who may be expecting to be indicied.
So far as the GAZETTE is concerned it may be stated that this paper has always tried to be careful in this regard, a^d has irequentiv omitted publica icnB when it was thought they would oi value to criminals, and it will continue to do so, as it believes the best inttresis of the people will be subserved by »nch action. In thi9 particular intUnce, 11 ere the indictcd person *a.° assisted in getting away by the publication mentioned, it ia Imilly necessary to say that had it been known that the defendant was not under arrest the publication would fit have been made. The GAZKTTEhas no doubt that this opinion is snu.ed by all (he ci*y newspapers.
THE ROGERS uONDCASl
It Will be /Irgusd Before the Supreme Court on Wednesday. The Newton Kogers bond case will be argued before tbe Supreme Court at Inuianapolis on Wednesday by Judge McNutt, who represents tbe county, and Col. W. E. McLean, who repreqer.ta the bondholders. Thl3 Ss the sui'. agniust tt first bondsmen. The Supreme Couit decided against tuo county on the appeal, but the county obtained a re-hear-ing, and the case will now be tri as if it had never come up before. There will be no decision on Wednesday. Uioii'h the argument w:-il certainly be concluded on tbat day. Tbe decision will decide tbe qtiestiou for good.
Jno, P.
1-1.1
"Notwithstanding the repeated exposures of these frauds, peoplo will go to their seances, sit in the dark and believe tnat spirits are dancing all around them. But the people like to be bumbngged."
Phillips,
Of Lo?t Creek lowu«li*p has routed tfee Kester stable on south fourth sirem between Ohio and Waicut acd can i'u:nish the best occomcau^ations tor fmmois' hcrses. Prices lew.
Jno. P. Phillips, ot Lost Creek township it as rented the propexty known as the Kester stable on south Fouitb street, and is prepared lo furnish accommodations for home? and asks the p'itnr.iage ot his 1 armer iriendb in tht ci..y.
Dr. .7. A. SHERMAN, of2."l Brradway, New York, famous fcrthep.ibt So years 'or tat successful method of curing rapture without surgical operation, is now at Ms oflice, St. Louis. Mo, where be will remain to treat parents till the 30th of Dcrember. During reatment patients can labor without interfering with tbe care, and with safety from str&nrogted mptnr?. His book, with likenesses of bad eases before and after curc, ia mailed aulO cents. Remember, in St. Louis, offices 404 Ma ket street.
A I E N a A E 8 O O IS E A S E S A an am el should use only th3 "/cm and Hnnvnsrbrand brand Soda and Saleratus is used with great (or Cleaning and Keeping Kiik Pans Srcssl and success for the prevention and cureof HOG
Clean. It Is the 5esi Icr all? CHOLERA and other diseases.' S Kix with the animal's food. Household Purposes.
"APJt&HAMimBRMS"!
To insure obtaining only tha "Arm Hatr.mer" brasd Rod-, or SaleraiUK, buy it in pound or half pound" cartoons which
bear our name and tra'le-iaark, as inferior goods aro sometimes substituted for tho "Arm & Badr' mer brand when bought iabuli. Ask for the "Arm & Hammer" brand SALS0DA (Washing SodaV
