Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 February 1885 — Page 4
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5,1885.
OLD
Dick Oglesby was inaugurated
CfoTcrnor of Illinois yesterday. His inaugural &d<lr.s9 was short. For a whiie it iooked viry much as if the day of judgement would arrive betore he *rouldgta chance to deliver it. In fact he should have been inaugurated nearly am .nth ago and would have been *ut for the legislature's tying itself a liard knot. But now he is in and the •gony is'
A.
LOUISVILLE lady, as reported by the Courier-Journal ot that city, is in favor of reform. She claims that she has never yet succecded in finding a lawyer in his office. Sbe wants an amendment to the constitution making lawyers pay ior clients' time The lawyer never fails to charge for his own time, never thinking to deduct the valu1.1 of the time of the client. &
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„A
4.
AMEiTiNGnf Chicago dynamiters is e* ciltd w.la having denounced Senator Baya~d arid Congressman Cobb for their expressions ot honor at the late explosions in London. More than this they are said to have collected $7,000 to carry on the murderous style ot that they call warfare. Thf should have a care how far we go ia the face of public opinion ou this subj -el.
THE Indian* legislature has memoralized Coivrtss in favor of a bill pensioning alJ union ioidiers confined in confederate prisons during the war. This is a jusi measuie a should be made a law. ry great hardships were endured. No cl is more deserving and it is to bo hop. their claims to consideration will be recognized.
Two c' ur's ari: enough for Vigocoun•ty. Thoy can attend to all the business. Th»y haye only lately been organized. The people have only fairly become familiar with their working. It would be a calamity to change the sj a'cm or -add to it now, and this without regard to the cost. But it would cost and this ia not the time to increase expenses.
Wages, salaries, everything has been reduced. Let taxes follow suit and not increase.
IN the despatches from Egypt the word *Zareeba" or "Sereeba", as it is sometimes spelled, is an addition to the vocabulary made in the usual English iashion -of appropriating any word it wants and making it its own. A Zareeba is a ^breastwork composed of the prickly mimoea grubbed or dug out by the roots and piled up with the root end of the shrub inside the protected square and the outside towards the approaching enemy.
Ii is a sharp and prickly thing to HID ^against, especially when there are sharp .shooters on the other side firing ball
IF you haven't signed the protest against the establishment of a criminal couit do so at once. The bill has not yet been introduced but it is all written ready for presentation. It was hoped to push it through both houses simultaneously but that cannot be done. As soon as it is presented the GAZETTE vill send
A re a
there are about a thousand signatures here in the GAZETTE and perhaps as many more on others in various places about town. The country is yet to be heard from. There ought to be and will be four thousand names by the middle of next wet k. That will be a remonstrance, gotten up as it -ibeen »by a general running together of citizens as they would at the sound of fire bells, that cannot be ignored or overridden The will of the people is the supreme law of the land
HOME RULE.
If it is a goi thing to place our police management in the bands of a commission appointed by »be state officers at Indianapolis, why stop at that? Why not tihavethem appoint another commission jto regulate our fire department? Still ^another could selic* for us our mayor -and city clerk and treasurer and market master and engineer, tut why stop thtrt. A commission appointed by the state officers could save os a great deal of time md trouble and discussion .and writing and speaking, etc. etc., if (hey would select our council men If (he new theory of government by commission is a good thing in one matter it is good in all. Let us have commissions for everything and go over to Indianapolis to atk permission of the state officers if
W-may
perform any of the duties of
fllie. Let up quit bothering our foolish acd empty heads with .the management of our own affairs in ac
cordance with our own notions and hand a few evenings ago and he snubbed her.
1
it over to commissions appointed at that shining center of statescra/t—Indianapolis. And While we are running over there to consult with the state officers about our affaiis it would be a good thing to boy at that place what is wan'td in the way of clothing, dry goods, etc., etc., for certainly it must be a better place to buy than Terre Haute if the people there are so much wiser than ourselves that they know more about running the affiirs of a city eeventythree miles distant than do the people who live in the city and pay the taxes. Let us make an end of oar separate corporate existence and give ®ver the entire management of our affairs to commissioners appointed by the state officeis at Indianapolis. It would be a little rough on our city and take business away from here to the center of the state, but it would save us all a great deal ol trouble in thinking about our own af. tairs. For after all to shirk ity is the great aim and object ol life
Our revolutionary forefathers were a set of old grannies. They should have fought to keep England in control of American affairs, not to shake off the shackles. In the old colonial days they were exempt from all responsibility. They did not have to bother their brains about what articles should be taxed and how much". England attended to that all they had to do was to pay the taxes. No Congressional elections worried them fortheiewas no Congress. England's parliament made their laws. There were non partiz*n governors, at least EO far as American politics^ was concerned, for they were 6ent over from England. They were entirely untroubled in the matter of selecting their governors for they had no voice in the matter. All they had to do was to obey them and to pay them. And of couise things went smoothly for, according to this doctrine of centralizing power, the farther away from the people to be governed the authority is placed the wiser the government will be. Only those who are re* mote from a given point and personally unconcerned in affairs can tell what ought to be done and how.
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In these matters it is as at a dance. It is the fellows at a dance who don Jwant to darics and don't know how to dance and who havn't contributed and don't expect to contribute to the pay ot the orch( s:ra who should dictate the tunes and the dances. That always makes a party go off pleasantly. But this is a digression.
Our revolutionary forefathers, with a fatuity which seems incredible as viewed by the new light that has shone in cn mankind from the blszing eloquence of the Senator from Vigo—our revolutionary forefathers actually went to war to win the right of local self-government and home rule. And here are their degenerate grandchildren actually talking about frittering away those rights and substituting in their stead a government by commission. Let us cease celebrating the 4th of July and the22od of February let us melt down and run into sewer piping the old liberty bell which, garlanded and greeted by thousands, has just concluded a triumphal journey from the Atlantic to the Gulf let us cease to honor the revolutionary heroes and rate tbem at their real worth as a set of deluded old fanatics who fought to secure something not worth having and which it is our greatest concern to be rid of as quickly as possible. Down with George Washington aud up with the Senator from Vigo.
WE are led to suppose that A. J. Kelly, secietary of the State Senate, poses in the role a great man at Indianapolis and is considered there as one of the leading representatives of public opinion in Terre Haute. Perhaps he will kindly con sin to act as one of the police commissioners if he succeeds in securing the passage ofthe metropolitan police bill. That they are so m:ch better able at Indianapolis to pick out the real leaders ot opinion ii. Terre Haute than our own people is one of the beauties of L-e proposed legislative metropolitan police bill.
O'DYNAMITE ROSSA came perilously near being, so to speak, hoist by his own petard. While conferring with a woman •bout measures for dynamite explosions the woman turned upon him and lodged some lead in bis carcase. That this thing should happen does not seem strange. What is strange is that the relatives of some of his victims have not betore this dosed with his own medicine a monster who gloats over the indiscriminate killing ot women and children.
THB whirlagig of time brings all things even. When Mr. Walker Blaine, who has the distinction cf being the son of his father, had to vacate the second place in the state department upon the advent of the Arthur house to the good clothes of the executive mansion, a certain Mr. John Davis succeeded the junior Blaine. There has been bad blood between the Blaine and Davis families ever since. LJd to add to the intensity of the feud President Arthur appointed Davis to a position on the court of claims, a place that Walker was seeking. But it is all right now. Walker Blaine met Mrs. John Davis, the wife of his successful political rival, at a dancing club
He did, by Jove! It is the greatest vic-
tory the Blaines have gained since the last National Republican convention.
A TOUGH'S FUNERAL,
Now Mrs. Owney Beophegan Rode First After Her Husband's Corpse.
NKW YORK, Jan. 31.—Owney Geoghegan, pugilist, dive-keeper and tough, was buried to-day in Calvary Cemetery. The funeral was the greatest event in the history of East Side Eociety since a similar event in which Jim Elliott was the corpse. For three days and nights the body of Geoghegan lay in a magnificent rosewood oasket in a stuffy little parlor in a Pike street tenement, the home of Mrs. McGinuey, one of the two named sisters of the dead man. A dove was suspended above the casket and half wilted flowers were strewn about the floor near it, leaving very little of the rag carpet exposed to receive the drippings from twelve tallow candles. The room was crowded at noon with a lot of old women, weeping and wailing and sceaming so lhat they were heard a block distant. The time for the funeral drew near, and the last procession of friends formed and passed up to the oasket. There were pugilists, ward politicians, dive keepers, gamblers, bar keepers, song and dance men, and toughs, and each one had some remark te make as he left the casket. Then the undertaker motioned for the six pall bearers to approach, and he called their names as they stood by the dead. Dan Connors, politician, was the first, followed by Mike O'Brien, a porter, Rody Geoghegon, a contractor Reddy McManus, once floor manager in Owney's dive dance house, Jack McNulty, a D.-pnty She iff, Jim Geoghegah, a Sixth Wurd politician.
NEYEB DID SIX MEN T/OOK PROUDER than they, and the assembled friends were lavish in praise of their fine appearance. With a Blam bane, the representative undertaker of Mulberry Bend shut down the casket lid, remarking that it wai almost a pity to put $850 worth of coffin int" the mud of Long Island. It was 2 o'clock when the funeial started, and five policemen and ten hack drivers were kept busv making an aisle through the crowd in the street to let the corpse pass by. The hetrse was gorgeous. Twelve black plumes nodded from its top, while tour prancing black horses were kept in the traces by a red-faced man smoking a short clay pipe. Thousands of people crowded Pike street. The casket was placed in the hearse and the tour horses pranced off down the street. Meanwhile a fight was brewing. The alleged Mrs. Geoghegan aud her little daughter were it a close carriage at the door, determined to follow their husband and father to t.he grave despite the remonstrance of ihe lucGinneys. The order came from the house to put Mrs. Geoghegan out of the procession. Bat she was bapked by Jack Fly mi, and a gang of Bowery men, whom no sane person would care to molest. The
CROWD CHEERED MUS GX GHEGAN, and told her she was no woman if she didn't ride next to the corpse. "Cockeye" Malone wa9 the driver of Mrs. Geoghegan'scarrijge, and iu response to frequent calls, he stond up in the and assured the crowd that his hack would be number oue in the procession, aud that the man didn't know his mother, who thought different. Frank White and his gang of toughs came running up Pike street to stand by the McGiuueys, but it only needed a glacce at Jack Flynn and his followers and another at "Cockeye," who kept one hand under bis blanket, to understand that 'it meant death to any man who attempt* to change the programme of the funeral. At last the carriages were filled and the procession started lor the cemetery. The carriage immediately following the bearse contained Mrs. Geoghegan and her child, and, as it wheeled into line, "Cockeye" yelled out: ".No bloody bum can down me." The second carriage contained the sisters of Owney, and the hundred of other carriages had their occupants, graded in accordance with the ad miration they expressed tor Owney. From the house in Pike 6treet to the cemetery, five miles away, there was
AN ALMOST UNCEASING FIGHT
kept up between the hack-drivers and the mourners and all were thoroughly tired out when the grave was reached. At the cemetery chapel, a priest read the Catholic burial service, and ten minutes later Owney Geoghegan was at rest under six feet of Longs Island soil. The homeward course of the mourners was comparatively quiet, but in Jack Flyun's Bowery dive the story of''Coski ye" and his triumDh was told last night many times over.
BLOOD AT BOWLING GREEN.
Wm Tolbert Shoots Geo. Sinders Over a Drink
•f Another unprovoked murder has been added to the list. Lastnight about eight o'clock Wm. Tolbert. a wild young man about twenty-six years old, living at Bowling Green, and a son of Dr. Tolbert, went into Gcorga Sinders' saloon on the west side oi the public square. He was in a very bad state of intoxication and Sinders refused to let him have another drink, whereupon he went out swearing that he would get even with him." To this Sinders paid no attention, as the utterance of a drunken man, but soon afterward Tolbert returned and poking a shot gun through the wiodow, blazed away and killed Sinders instantly. He was arrested and is now in jail.
The report that the murdered man was related to Mr. Eiefner, of the Filbeck bouse, is a mistake. k,
Use Howard's Skin Cure, "Dead Shot on Itch.' For sale by Buntin & Armstrong and other druggists.
CATCH A'TARTAB,
And when caught scrub well with SOZODONT. Don't spare It. Brush for dear life. If you destroy it all tbe better for you and your teeth. It will destroy the health of the month, its beauty and your sweet breath.
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
mm ML
Text oi the Bill Introduced in the Indiana Senate by Senator Schloss,
To Establish a Criminal Court Here in Yigo County,
A Bill Not Discussed In the Canvass nor Petitioned for by the pie.
Below is given the text of the bill in. troduced in the state senate by Senator Schlossot Yigo county, establishina a criminal court in this county. An old and a good rule of legislation used to be that legislative measures always covered such issues only as the people had given expression to their opinions about or for which a strong petition bad been prepared. But that is antiquated. The new way is for anyone who wishes and knows how to write to prepare a bill and then the people must show by a pretest that they are opposed to it. The new way is an iDfernal bad way. This bill is as follows
Senate Bill No. 246.
An act establishing the Criminal Court ot Yigo county, providing tor the election of a judge and criminal prosecutor thereof, creating criminal prosecutors for certain criminal courts, aud fixing the compensation thereof and fixing the compensation of ju-lges of criminal courts declaring vacancies in tbe offices of jud^e and crimiual prosecutor of the said Criminal Couit of Vi 0 count?, and denialmg an emergency
Be it euooted by vhe General Assembly of the Stale ot Indiana. That a criminal oourt is hereby established in tbe county of Vigo. Said court snail com. mence its terms ou the first Mefndays ol March and September of each year, and each term shall continue six months if the business thereof shall require it, and said court shall at all timet* he open lor criminal trials and proceedings.
Sue. 2. That in all criminal courts that may have been or are hereby or may beieatter be established tue ftalary of the judges thereof shall be twenty-live hundred dollars per annum.
Sue. 3. In all crimiual courts which shall have bf en since tbe nineteenth day of September, eighteen hundred and eighty-one, or which shall by this act be or which may hereafter be established, there shall be and ia hereby created a criminal prosecutor, wbose term of office shall be two years and who shall hold the same until his successor is elected and qualified, and wbo shall receive tbe same salary as that now allowed by law to prosecuting altMrueys of circuit courts, and wbo shall prosecute alt tne criminal pleaB and cases in the county in which he shall bold hi* office, and shall be allowed the same es therefor as are now by law alb-wed to prosecuting attorneys of circuit courts.
SEC 4
SEC. 6. IT
rt
The salary ot all criminal pros
tecut.e shall be paid quarterly out of the eaeaor-y of tbe ouuties in which they tavfiurold tbeir
i-ffioe.
SEC. 5. At the next general election hmtr the pnunage oi th act theie uhail re electcd bv tue qualified voters of tbe county of Vigo a judge and criminal mosecutor tor the said Criminal Court of Vigo county, '•ho shall be commissioned and qualified in tbe manner now provided hy law tor tte commissioning and qualifying of judge* ai.d prosecuting attorneys of circ. it o'urts.
is declared that on the tak
ing elfect of this act vacancies exist in the offices of judge and criminal prosecutor of said Criminal Court of Yigo county, and that the Governor of the state shall fill said vacancies under tbe provisions the constitution and existing lawa of tbe state.
SEC 7.
All lawa and parts of laws in
conflict th tbe provisions of this act are hereby repealed.
SEC. 8
It is hereby declared that an
emergency exists for tbe immediate taking effect of this act, and that it shall be in force from and after its passage.
VIGO'S GUiST.
A Clay County Murderer Sojourning Here for a While. --'j Wm. Talbott, wbo killed George Sinders, the Bowling Green saloon keeper, Friday night, is in jail in this city. He was brought here Saturday night by Sheriff Stearly, of Clay county, the jail at Brazil not being secure. A GAZETTE reporter saw Talbott this morning. He is 38 years old, unmarried, of small stat ure, and has a sandy beard. He said that for four years off and on ne had worked as hostler at the Filbeck House in this city, George Kietner at that time being proprietor. He has a brother running a drug store at Clay City. He looks like a man of intelligence and good family. He said he committed tue dead while crazed with liquor. He hsd an anxious
expression
j?
on bis face and said
he had yet secured no lawyer. 10 ,4 A great many people disregard Dyspeptic Symptoms and assume that they will soon disappear ot themselves but this is not the fact, and the only eafe remedy for them is Nicbols Bark ft Irot:.
A Legislator Down on Monopolies. Wall Street News. "Yes, my friends, yes 1" he thundered, as he waved his arms around and grew red in the lace. "Iheee railroads are the leeches of the land 1 It elected to the Legislature my first and last and greatest effort shall be directed to putting the harness on this rampant racer of monopoly 1" He was elected. He started for the Capital the other day, and a orowd was at tne depot to cheer him off. "Yes, my friends, we will humble this monopoly 1" he said from a rear platform, and then taking ais seat in the car In got his railroad pss ready to show to the conductor.
Senator Voorhees.
Senator Yoorhees left this afternoon for Washington. He has been in the. city for nearly two days and during his gtay has seen a number of friends who called upon him to extend their congratulations at his election with a unanimity and enthusiasm and by a majority unprecedented in the history of the state. All Indianians, and particnlcrly all Terre Hauteans have reason to teel proud cf Mm vi, 0ir 4 sfU"W
"Kr
IMS'
ZyL
%-a:
mvny
in
CASTORIA
for
Infants
recommend Kaa superior to any prescription ttoaie." IL A. AacHaa, V. D.,
and
la so well adapted tochOdroa that
JU8*fefcc«St,Brakfr»,K.Y.
[None Genuine'wfUiOut .uiDXr«*«e MarBj are gaining one.
50
Messrs. Nortbcut.and Johnson, merchants at Ac~"t'rtli. sav: We know Mr.*. Elizabeth Bnber personally we are familliar with her case- She is highly esteemed in this communis ..v-- & )a~
Rheamatiam Twenty Years., I have Leen a sufferer from rheumatism for wentv years, at ti nes with almost insolerablw Vain 1 had the best medical treatment, and took all sort of remedies, but without relief. Being reduced almost
Children.
W E N I S A
3 I MEAN WHAT I SAY AHD SA1 WHAT IMBAN. •i'
to
a
skeleton, and not be ng able to walk evfcn wito crutct^s I was induced to try Swift's Specific, aid it acted like a charm, and I am to-day entirely relieved. Have thrown away my ''.ra.chcs. and am in excllent health. I beiieve Swift's Specific will cure the worst cases of 'heumatism. 4
MRS. EZRA MBSKHON, Macon, Ga., Aug. 4, *84.
I L, 1 V*
,J"*'
1
Communication.
WETUMPKA, Ala., Sepf. 28, 1884—Abot sixyears ag I became afflicted^ with a ver disagreeable ski a disease, with large, di sore* and
crusted iimt)lefcon noy face,
hands and shoulder. Th« sore on my shoulder eat out a hole neatly an inch ieep, and the cancer JUS arpearance of one of the sores nefcr my eye alarmed me very mnch. 1 tr*ed all kinds of treatment, but found nothing thai seemed to attect the disease. I finally decided to try 9. S. S. on advice of a phvsiciai', and in a short time the scabs drooped from thes-ores and left my "kfn smooth and 11. I consider S. S. S. the greatest blood n«edic:ne made, and the only thing that will cure the ditease with which I was efflieted. I ti'ink my trouble was the result of a terrible attack ot malarial fever, contracted while farming in the Tallap osa river swamp, I can be found at Tiy office in the court nouse at Wetumpke. You can refer to me. 1 Ij- ELMORB,
Dep. Sheriff Elmore Oo., Ala.
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mail IHE SWIFT SPECIFICCo.. Prawer 3,
Atlanta, Ga.
St. Mary's Sittings.
Mrs. Hedges is seriously ill with typhoid fever A prominent fruit grower informs us that tbe peach crop will be a failure this year. The buds being killed by the reoent eold weather. ....Mrs. Hugh Butler, who has been very low with consumption, is not any better There is to be a dance at Mr. Dan Sullivan's this week. A very pleasant time is anticipated Some of the teachers of Fayette township are taking advantage of the present tnow and are taking their pupils sleigh riding and visitiog other schools Mr. Ma lachi Curley, who has been dangerously ill with heart disease, is recovering— Will some one please inform us of wbo the hellish fiends were that smashed down alt the tomb stones in the old graveyard here? We want to give tbem an introduction to the grand jury.* .v TOTO AND FKDKLLK. lr k'* If CONSUMPTION CURED.
An old physician, retired from active practice having had placed in his hands by aa East India Missionary tbe formula of a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure of Consumption, Branchitis, Catarrh, Asthma, and all Throat and Lung affections, also a positive and radical cure for general Debility and all nervous complaints, after having thoroughly tested its wonderful curative powers in thousands of cases, feels it his duty to make it known to his suffering fellows. The recipe will be sent free of charge, to all who desire it, with full directions for preparing and ucoessfully using. Address with stamp. »rc tg*Mc**ier Pawokl
'Vi *S« r\.Y£
cures Oolic, Constipation,
Bow Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation, I Kills Worms, give* sleep, and promflSse dh *«rilon, injurious msdicattoa I
CBITACB OOKTANT, 182 Fulton Street, N. T.
I W I I N S E O O S
THB OXI/Y SCIENTIFIC WINE KEMEBYIN DR. JOS- HAAS' HOG AND POULTRY REMEDY. gold by all respectable Druggists and General Store-keepers.
.'i1
WHAT IHE REMEDY WILL DOIt will rutvour hogs in fine condition, It will increase their appetite. It will expel tbe poison from their system. It the only remedy that relieves a hog whensmni. It will stop congb among yonr bog*. [poisoned. It regntatcH the bowels. It tvill arrest disease In every instance. :••••••&
Tuotte getting.it (whether diseased or not) will gain more than doable the pounds ol pork while others
Beware of Imitation* claiming to be the same as Huns' Remfdies, enclosed In wrappers of same coloi, size, ana directions ol
my well known Remedies.
WHAT THE REMEDY HAS D0HE.
1 have nsed Dr. Jos. Hans' Hog Rem'dy, an 1 can recomu.cr it as a sure cure for Hog hoipra I l' »t eight hundred do lais (*800) worth of ho :s last spring out of a herd of over Jwloo hnmirprt heart I begat) feeding the Remeiy while THF.YWEKK DYING AT THB RATE 5/M™ «*5S?DI:«tgndfrom the fiwt day of feeding the HAAS'REMEDY, I HAVE %OTW8™ HOG, in fact, they havMmproved ht along, and it Has on lycoBt me»27.50,
nd I am sure It has eaved me from $800 to $1000. jjkask Lt£&. pmrFu
eta 81.35 afld 92.SO per box, according to size, 25 lb. can, SIS 5®. JOS. HAAS* V. S«, Indianapolis, Tnd, A. FOoTK, Seed Merchant, 317 Main street, Terre Haute, Kid., Agent for WesterIndiana and Eastern IllluoK
SCROFULA.
Vandcrbilt's Honey Coald'nt Buy It The Acworth News and Farmer of this week says: Mrs Elizabeth Baker, living within three miies ot Aswortb, remarked thatVandcrbilt's fortune could not buy from her what six bottles of Swift's Specific has done for her. Her statement is as follows: Kor thirfy-one years I have suffered almost death from that horrible disease, scrofula. For years I was unable to do anything in keeping up my domestic affairs. Last Octooer I was induced to try 8wif's Specific, and nsed two bottles, and was su much benefitted by 1' that I pure1- a?ed four moie from Messra. Northcut & Johoson, which has almoat en'1 rely relieved ne. I feel like new person, and can do all inv own housework. Be-fore I took the S. S. fJ, my lifo was a burden, as my entire person wis covered with sotea and in tbts miserable condition I did not rare to live. I had tried every Known remedy, and my case was generaliv regarded as incurable I had been treated by the best physicians to no aVHi). I. most heartily rt commecd swift's Specific to the afflicted.
HANNHUL, Mo., June 20, 188J.Bni
THE DAVIS SWING CHURN.
l%e Moat Popular Cham on tbe Market. Because it makes the most butter. Becanse no other Churn works go easy. Because It makes the best grained batter. Because It is the easiest cleaned. It has no floats or paddles
Inside. Also the Eureba Butter Worker, the Ncibltt Bnt-t'-r Sprinter, and a fall line of Butter Making Utensils for
Dairlefl and Factories. Send for Illustrated Circulars. VJSBMWf
Is a Tonic, appeti zer and Blood Puri fier for alllive stock The best Conditio! Powder in the work
25 CENTS.
W M. CIJIFF, J.. H. CLiFr,
C. N CLIFF
Terre Haute Boiler Works.
CLIFF & CO.,
Prop'rs
Manufacturers of Locomotive, Stationary and Marine Boiler*, (Tubular and Cylinder Iron Tanks, Jails, Smoke Stacks, Breeeliing and Sheet iron Work.
Shop on First street, between "Walnut and Poplar, Terre Haute, Ind. RVRepairing promptly attended to.
FOR.
IU VALUABLE
TO ALLI
Will be mailed to all applicants and to customers of last year iillustri
[10]
out
ations, prices,
ordering it. It contains iuuouavivuei |/t jvwj
dTm.ferry&co.osjkFlowerandVegetable
SHERIFF'SSALE.
lv.
_____
Bv virtue of »»n order of tale issued from the Vigo Superior Court to me directed aud delivered, in faror of Aetna Life Ins.urj^ce Company and agitinst Isaac Co'Ueil, Cynthia Ann Cottreli, Mary Shadiey, State of Indiana, ex. iel. Andrew Grim e, Auditor of Vigocouuty, Indlira, and thu Board oi Commissioners »f t,re tint of Vigo, James Dailey, Win. W. Watkins, James Koss and George O. Day, I am ordered to sell ihe following defcnbed real estat) situated in Yigo county, Indiana, to wit:
The south half I of the south half of the northeast quarter LKi
and
the n^rth
half \y2\ of the northwest quarter [Ml of the northeast quarter 1 4] *ad rne SOB.tu halt i^l of the southwest quarter and the northeast quarter 01 the north vest quarter in section eleven [111 township thirteen 1131 north, of range nine [91 west also nine anu ninety-eight [a 98-100| one hundredths acres off the south end of east fractional section tea
township thirteen [13J north, of
range nine i.9] weit, the same bomg in the southeast quarter of «outheast quarter [14] of said section, lying east of the river in Baid county and state, and on SATURDAY, the 21st Day FEBKUABY, 1885. between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m, ana o'clock p. m. ot said dav, at tbe Court flonde door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven yeare, to the highest bidJer for cash, and upon faiiture to realiM a pum sufficient to satisfy said order of sale and costs. I will then and there offer the fee simple, In and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same.
This 29th day of January, 1885. JOHN CLBABY, Shen ft*. A. M. Black, Atty. Prlnte?'» fee 19. O *4*
No. 13747. State of Indiana, County of Vigo, In the Vigo Circuit com Novemb Term 1884, Margaret Preneh vs. Milton French
Divorce. Be it known, that on the 29th day of Jannary 1885, it was ordered by the Court that the Clerk noti^ by publication said Milton French as non resident Defendant of the pendeney of Baid action gainst him and that the same will stand for trial March 28, 1885. the same being February Term of said Court in the year 1885.
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MKBBIX. N SMITH. Ulerk.
J. T. Pi°rce for PUT.
Election Notice.
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This is to certify that O. ?. Grange Ne. 1131 P. of H. will eleot two trustees on MarcH lis',1885, attheir Hall at their regular meet* lag*3"
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