Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 January 1885 — Page 4

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TH JRSDAY, JANUARY I, 1885.

A W LSIIINGTON correspondent gives a cutii ua illustiation showing not only what a colossal humbug the congressional record lias becorna but what sweet seen toil daffodils some Ohio ct ngressuien are. The exposure in question came about iiirough asp eoii of oenator Vest i8feriiigt» the fact that the appendix to

tbe tt.obe for 'he Thirty-seventh Congress contains the .samt speech printed twice, and purporting lo have been delivered by two members of the House. It canifc ubout in this way: A certain n-cmb'ir of that Congress contracted with member of the "literary lobby" for a speech. The price to be paid was $75. When the speech was turned over to the statesman he accepted it as saiisl&ctory, but ri fused to pay more than $50. He •gave his literary friend that amount and took the speech away, little dreaming that the author nad kept a copy but the enterprising member cf the "literary lobby" had kept a cc.py, and he sold it for $fjO to another statesman, who obtained leave to print it April 24, while .•talesman No. 2 obtained leave to print .May 26. But the speech in neither case made its appearance until presented in the appendix, win re it appears in two places, word tor word.

The speech purchased was on the subject ot confiscation of reb:l properly. The distinguished Ohio representatives who purchased it were Hon. William Allen and Hon. R. H. Mungc-n, Mi. Allen's effort appears on page 119 of the appendix to thtt Congressional Globe for the geo«uid t-e&eion of the Thirty-seventh Congress, find :Vtr. Mun^en's argument, in the identical language, OP page 839 oi the same volume. 1

Congressman-elect James T. Johnston must be careful when he purchase? a speech i'rom "them literary fellers' at Washington, tor use iu the Record and for the consumption of his constituents, that he secures *he sole right to use it.

A BKPOUT is current in Washington to the tiffct that Samuel J. Tilden haa en gaged rooms at the hotel in that city and will be there for two weeks followingthe first of March. Shouid bis health permit his doing so the Democrats of the whole •ountry would be gratified, if he would spend a very great deal of h!s time in that city. In the wisdom and patriotism of no living man has the great Democrat" ic party BO pro! ound confluence' as they have in the Sage of Grammeroy Park and no Democrat in power cculd fail to profit by his counsel on public, affairs. Prest* Cleveland will no doubt avail himself ot he rich stores of knowledge on public men acd-measures gathered by this wond^fulold statesman in his long and useful career.

DR. MAKY WALKER callcd on Cleveland ot day last week but. by adroit manipulation on the part of some of the clerks was kept out of the mDer room to which the Governor retrtated. She was persistent and belligerent but finally depaited, after along wait, on being told that, the Governor had left the building. Dr. Mary should be abated as a nuiaauce, which she undoubtedly is.

YOUNG ULY?KS 8. GRANT Jr., who was the senior member of the swindling firm of Grant & Ward, testified in court Saturday in reference th of the broken firm. He attempted to throw all tbe blame on Ward, but by bis own showing he seems to have made a pretty strong effort to pay his father-in-law Oheffte, all the firm owed him at the expense of any and all the other creditors. Both men.btrs ot the thm shou:d be in jail.

A BI CENTENARY

of

a curions kind,

says the Pall Mall Gazette. ba3 recently been celebrated at Amsterdam, being no less thao^tlie celebration ot the invention cf the thimble. It is just two centuries since las', October that the first European thimble was made by Nicholas van BenjSchoten, a young goldstn th, who devised be article for the pro'.ection of the fiagir of his hdy-love, Mine. Van Rensselaer, lor thimbles, like in-my greater thini ?, owe their origin to Cupid. The Fnghsh were the first to make thimbles on a large sc.ile: but lot before either Dutch or Eng i-h thought of thimblts, «Chinc-£e ladies were thimbled when they "worked at their tzrand embroidery. The Chinese thimblts boie—and bear to this day—the form of a lovely lotus flower. There is no such poetry of shape in tbe western ringer-hat.

PHINEAS T. BAUNUM has gotten him self into troupe over that bluff of h:s just before the election to the effect that in the event ot Cleveland's election he would Bell his properly at per cent discount on a fair appraisement ot its value. Then like an old fool, for there no fool so foolish a3 an old fool, he pro ceeded to have his properiy appraised. Singularly enough this valuation of his appeared to be just 8bout fifty per cent above what he had sworn to as its value for purposes of taxation. And now the authorities ot Bridgeport and taken the old humbug at his latest estimate and jlalced him on the tax duplicate for

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double what he has been there before. Besides this they have placed hie "greatest show on eanb," hitherto untaxed, on the duplicate at his valuation of a quarter of a million. Verily it was a costly joke of his—that little bluff game for election purposes. __ i/

GEN. WIMFIELD BOOTT HANCOCK is to be invited to act as grand marshal of the inauguration parade. By the-by it ought to be whispered in the ears ot the committee which h&B been making itself officious in the matter of an inauguration pageant that the American people are more than willing that the ceremonial on that occasion should be of the sevuest and simplest sort. A return to the simplicity and honesty of the fathers of the Republic is what is wanted. \T

SAMCBL J. RANDALL, Pennsylvania's apostle ol protection, and who only lost his state at the recent election by between two and three times its usual Republican majority, is ontn electioneering tour for himself and protection through the south. Yesterday be was at Louisville and made a speech before the board of trane and another at Liederkranz hall. Curiosity drew large crowds to see him. Not one Kentuckian in ten believes in a protective tariff.

GOVERNOR Cleveland's letter in answer to the address of the civil service reform league, of which Geo. W. Curtis is prtsi dent and the membership ot which is about equally divided tween the two parties, was printed in substance in the GAZETTE of yesterday. In it he defines his position on civil seruice reform. His administration will be thoroughly Democratic, in accordance with the will of the people who elected him, but he believes in civil service reform and will enforce the provision's of the Pendleton bill. No official covered by the provissions of that act will be interierred with, but, as he say?, "many now holding tuch positions have forfaited all jU3t claims to retention b-'OMise they have used their places for pfu:y purposes in disregard of their duty to the people, or because, instead of be decent public tervtsnts they have proved themselves offensive partisans and unscrupulous manipulators of local party management."

ONCE more the country is being bur dened with the financial difficulties ol U. S. Grant, who, aa a sort of silent Dart ner and stool pigeon ia the swindling firm of Grant & Ward, of which his son was senior partner, after plucking many others waa finally pluckc-d himself. He seems to be in an awful way. His farm at St. L^uis, property at Galena, cottage at Long Branch, house nt Washington and various pieces ot desirable property belonging to this gorgeous mendicant, have had to be sold to pay his debts. Hundreds of people up and down the country are having their property sold every day to pa^ their debts, though it is not usually as extensive in amount and as well scattered over tbe country as that ot Grant's, and no fuss is being made over it. Grant if said to feel very badly over losing his property, just as if that was a new experience in he world's history or there was anything surprising bis finding ic impossible, just as other and better people than he have found before him, that when one eats his cake he can not also keep his oake. Now they are proposing to pass around' the bat in his behalf. It also seems his virtuous declination of the proposed pension wao because fce wants to be placed on the retired list, it being possible by that scheme to gouge the government for twice the amount that could be made away with by the pension arrangement. In the meantime this persistent mendicant is really in a dis treistul financial condition His only revenue i3 the interest at 6 per cent on $250,000 a salarytof some sort, believed to fce $10,000 per annum, in the proposed Nicaraguan swindle and anolhex salary as a figurehead in a Mexican railroad enterprise. And then there are the Grant boys does the country realize that they may really have ^o work for a living unless something is done right quick, f.

SABASTIAN BECK, an old German resident of St. Louis, who left that city ten year3 ago to go to Dakota, has returned and giv-8 a contribution to history- relative- to the Custer massacre oomewhat different from those heretofore made public. Beek cl-iima to have been a enptiv-j in the Indian camp on the Little Big Horn, and to have witnessed the entiie fight. He says the Indians saw Custer's column approaching and expected aa interview, but were evidently fired upon. Hnftenir out of rangu they proceeded to their c&mp and made their 600 prkosers build fires in aid around the bark tents to deceive the enemy, and then marched in Custer's rear to await da) light. Next morning when the troops attacked the camp Sitting Bull laid in ambush, and when the soldiers discovered thdr mistake and returned to the canyon the Indians swooped down upon'them from all sides. Having ex ptnded nearly all their ammunition the troops were in a comparatively defenseless condition and every avenue of escape being cut off were easily massacred. Custer was slain by Chief Rain-in-the-Face and was one of the last men«killed Rain-in-thoFace reached Custer's side

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THE THREE HAUTB WEEKLY GA2ETT®.

Bud uegged him to surrender. Custer rif-otMJtf. Rain-in-the-Paoe, pointing to Cuoitr dead comrades, Baid: "See your men lying there all killed. You must surrender or die give me your arms." Custer, Beck says, drew his sword with a sudden flaBb, hissine between his teeth: "I will never surrender to such a—as you."

the general rai-pu Jus weapon to strike a ball from Ruin-in-thc-Face's revolver crushed through bus forehead and ho fell dead. This reads rather thrillingly, but if Beck was a captive he would hardly have been sufficiently near this tragic event to have heard the conversation between the chief and the gallant general But posBibly the chief may have eat down after the battle and told Beck all about it. •'$*"$/ if r-

A'COLORED woman at Beatrice^ Nebraska, is flying square in the face of the passage of scripture. which announces the twin impossibility ot an Ethiopian changing her color or a leopard his spots. She is said to be do'.ng this very scriptural impossible thing and in a poky sort ot way, beginning with ..her hands and extending by jumps up over her arms and thenoe to her body, is actually turning white. It is regarded as quite a remarkable cate and yet plenty of people in this city can remember a child born right here iq I*erre Haute about twenty five years ago one half of whose body, on one side of a line running from head to foot, one side of wheue face and body, one arm and one leg, were as white as that of any child.

FHIS little town of Northville, L. I., is all torn up over the return of Deacon Terry and the wife of Rev. Mr. Downs who eloped together a few weeks ago. As is usual tbe small boy iB most aggreivod at the shocking lapse from the proprieties exhibited in a deacon running away with the wife of the preacher and is giving discordant utterance to his disapproval of their conduct by playing night ly on the loud-resounding tin pan—the favorite musical instrument with the small boy from time immemorial. And now the iron is entering the Deacon'tj SOUL. .VI F,

THE Marquis eie Leuville claims that the New York World made a blot upon his escutcheon by asserting that all the drawing masters and dancing masters of London and all the Olivers of France had as much right to a title as he had, and wants $25,000 damages from the paper for the alleged libel. Aa the marquis is understood to be betrothed to Mrs. Frank Leslie, the well-known Publisher, he doubtless calculates the ,000 which he will of course receive IK-:U the World, will just meet the bridal expenses. The World ohould not be mean in delaying payment of the paltry sum.

DURING the year which enels to-day a great number of distinguished people have given up theii places at the feast ot life. A list of tbem iB published. It probably doesn't hurt a distinguished individual any more to die than it does a plain and unpretentious and humble person, but if certainly does leave a bigger vacuum in the ranks of the living. Now there is Ben Butler, for example. When he oome to die, which has not happened in 1884 except in a political way, he will leave a vacancy that will resemble the largest size man-hole to a sewer and one can fancy the old sinne? floating off into eternity with all the other noisome and ill smelling garbage from tne purlieus of the'world.

A BURGLAR arrested in Rochester for plying his profession in several smaller places in the vicinity of that city committed suicide by shooting himeelf wnen taken to the police station, having previously confessed to his own crimes and given the names of his confederates. The example of this burglar can not too highly commended to all genllemen following the profession ot burglary. A coroner's inquest is so much cheaper and easier than a jury trial.

The Lightning Cash-Boy. Chicago News. A white and tottering old man leaned against the 5 cent counter in a Christmas tcy-siore.

A middle-aged msD, streaked with gray, approached him. "Ah," said the old man, extending his wrinkled hand, "it seems to me I have seen ybur face somewhere before."

Ate yop the spruce young man who bought 27 cants' worth of goods here and had 8 cents change ooming to you?" "I am he who was the spruce young mao," replied the white old man "I thought so,"said tbe middle-aged man. "Here is your ehange. I am the cash-boy." "Ah, I did not- expect you back so soon," and the old man hobbled out.

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QDE PAUW, the New Albany glass mon opolist, has obtained the contract for furnishing the glass for the Cincinnati custom housi and pestoffice, the price being $23,972.,

A GRAND lodge of sorrow was held with imposing ceremonial in the New York academy of music last night by the Scottish Rite MasonB of that city.

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TIE DOSS AT KAIT1LLE

Two Freight Trains Indulge in a Collision.

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C- Hill tlie Only Man Dangerously Hurt. T^

of Marshall, his mo r, an aged Jady, and his si&ter, Mrs. Bradley, were on ti.e train. The Dactor could have jumped, he said, but did not want to leave bie mother. His legs were caught in the telescoping and pretty badly bruised. His mother was also painfully hurt. The other passengers and all. the tram crews escaped injury. Six of the Ringgolds, Gus Wetneke, P. J- Breinig, Franfc Breinig, A. Wane and Clay Lambert were returniug from Marshall where they had played for adancc last night. They were not hurt but Brtinig's basej viol splintered.

The loss to the road was not serious in property, neither the engine of 18 extra nor tbe passenger coaches being thrown from tbe trask, East bound Vandaha passenger No. 6 *as able to pas3 with only fortyfive minutes delay, much less than at first expected but there being no telegraph at Maxville, news was harder to get and came in to headquarters latethan if the place had been a hundre miles distant.

THBiftrcmtfs.

Christopher C. Hill, the man bally ic jured in the .wrick, is 38 years old and lives in Sullivan county middleway between Fairbanks and Bbelburn. lie got on the train at Marshall, where he was oa a visit to a brother, and was on his way home. He is unmarried and is a farmer. He has a sister, the wife of James Romi&e, living a short distance south ot the city on the Prairieton road

The injured man wa3 removed Si Anthony's Hoipita1. He was taken down on the T. H. & S. E. rOad to First and College and from there he was carried on a stretcher by half a dozen persons, mostly train men, to the hospital. He moaned piteously as he was carried along. The slush and water interfered very greatly with his removal. He was pat on the elevator and hoisted up to the second story, and was given the room in which Walls, the tuicide, died after cutting his throat. Drs. J. E. Link and G. W. Crapo accompai. ied the injured jnan to the hospital. The examination they made of him revealed the fact tbat his injuries were gret 'y beyond what they had imagined an .nat nothing could be done for him, as his case was hopeless.

Both legs were broken and mangled in a sickening manner. The lelt arm waa also broken. On the right leg there was a hole made that would nearly admit a man's fist. The injured man was fomla and Pacific Slope. New.

Dr. Link told Hill his condition was very bad and the woist might be expected." He asked him is he had any word to leave l©r any one. Hill replied that lie had not. He would like to have sieter visit him. He knew she would come if she knew it. Some one was sent after her. The doctor asked the injured man if he had any property and if he wanted any word left regardide it. Hill replied that he wanted his debts paid.

Drs. Link and Crapo then weDt into another room to see another patient. While they were gone Hill eent one of the sisters after Dr. Crapo. Hill told the doctor to frankly tell him this condition and asked him if there was any chance of getting over it. The doctor responded that it was very doubtful. To one oi the Bisters, who asked him if he belonged to and church, Hill said he used to belong to the Christian church. When fsked his full name by the reporter, he replied that it was Christopher Columbu? Hill.

Mrs. Romine and her husband visited the hospital this afternoon and are with the injured man. Tne doctors have no hope of Hill'* recovery. Hill is still conscious.

THE FAULT.

Mr. Elliott, master of transportation, stated this afternoon that he had not yet ocated the blame for the collision. Railroading this weather is done under considerable difficulty. .. ...

The Kokomo Dispatch.

The Christmas number of the Koko mo Dispatch has been received. It i9 a real beautv. It appears with sixteen, pages printed on elegantly tinted pt.

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•VhiLo.nin6»t10o'clockZJ&Z. Infants and Children. or Lcn Lee'a mixed lrieght and passenger train No. 18 was pulling into a side track at Maxville, No, 18 extra, engineer Jim Dodeon, struck the rear passenger coach. The train waa run in two sec tions as is triqueotly the case. Lee's train was a little late and .the conductor ot the extra suya he ^thought it was out of the way. The track was wet Jand covered with ice and the grade a down one so that it was impossible to etop Thore is a difference ol op nion as to tLe speed at which the lollow'ng train was going, some say so slow they thought it would surely stop beiore striking and others claim that :t came down at a high rate. Certain it is that the Miller platforms on the fassenger coaches were telescoped. Gus Werneke, one of the passengers, says the brake man came jn and said: "Jump lor your lives, jump!' Whereupon the passengers, about a dozen ^n number, six of them Ringgold band men, made a rueh for the platiorm and Beveral jampod. Conductor Lee called out keep your seats and you won't get hurt." C. Hill started to go back when the crash conic and he was wedged in next the brake and both legs broken. His mjuri- are elsewhere described. The stove set the d- bris on fire near him ano the poor felluw's cries tor help were heartrending. He was wedged in so tight that it was twenty minuleB before he could be extricated. Dr. Campbell,

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A. J. Crousiey was takee from the I. & St. L., passenger depot to police headquarters. He refused to answer any questions. He is in jail.

There was an dance at Tnrner^ Hall last night. At one o'olock John Yeager, an employe of tha distillery, and Wm. Weaver, of Nineteenth and Chestnut streets, got if to a fight. Weaver was arrested by officcr JBrentcn, but the officer was overpowered aod Weaver taken away by his friends who are unknown to the officer.

The father o( Ed. Qaigley, the young man who got to troubi over the two overcoats and bam. arrived in town .ast night from JanesviUe, O. He is trying to settle the matter.

A case of destitution is reported in the rear of the northeast corner ot First and Oak. "ROUGH ON PAIN" PLASTER.

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the Indianapolis Sentinel, contributes a v.«. fcoo onmo long Christmas article, and Reuben Andrus, ex-presideut of Asbury UDiversity, writes in three columns a "Non-Par-tisan Answer" to the questions engendered by the late political struggle. Kokomo is to be congratulated on the possession of such a good paper as the Dispatch. ..

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BLOOD POI 'ONSKG.

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