Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 November 1885 — Page 2
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& THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12,1885.
The appointment of the widow of General Custer to be pension agent at Detroit is desired by Michigan pensioners. t- «v*
11.
P&vi-
Thin People.
"Wells' Health Renewer" restores «-alth and vigor, cures Dyspepsia, Imotenoe, Sexual Debility. f- f,
It is rumored that Senator Wade Hampton, of South Carolina, is soon to marry an attractive young widow of Washington. *ff -"T It.
*1.4/ I
A, Mothers. -i-•-*»" If you are failing broken, worn out and nervous, use "Wells' Health Renewer." $1. Druggists. »r% j, 'V '..
Peddling buuehes of autumn leaves is now as much of a business and industry on the fashionabie throughfares of New York as selling flowers.
Purify your blood, tone up the system, and regulate the digestive organs by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. Sold byall druggists.
... THE Waynetown Press says Charley Roberts' whereabouts are known and he will soon be arrested. Well, hurry up!
It's about time.
Special Delivery at Chicago. CHICAGO, Nov. 5.—Ninety-seven special delivery messenger boys delivered 8,379 letters under the new system last month and returned 352 to the office, being unable to find the persons ad.dressed. The boys made 7,032 trips of "18 minutes average duration. The sales of special delivery stamps aggregated $1,092, of which 8738.48 was paid to the youthful carriers. 1 he average pay of each messenger was $7.61. ...
pretty'women. ",.r
Ladies who would retain freshness and vivacity. Don't fail to try "Wells' Health Renewer."
Pictures for Cincinnati.
NEW YORK, Nov. 5.—Mr. Henry Mosler has been invited by the Art Association of Cincinnati, through Gen. A. T. Goshorn, to exhibit his paintings in the art museum of that city and they are now being packed for that purpose. The collection has attracted such marked attention as to invite requests for its exhibition in othnr cities, but Mr. Mosler has not decided whether to go elsewhere. He contemplates a study of Indian life before returning to Paris.
LIFE PRESERVED
If you are losing your grip on life, try "Wells' Health Renewer." Goes direct to weak spots
MURDERER SENTENCED,
But Only For Twenty-One Yeais DECATUR, HI., Nov. 6.—Charles Durbin was yesterday found guilty of murder and sentenced to the penitentiary for 21 years. The jury was out twentyfour hours. The usual motion for a new trial was made, but withdrawn and sentence was at once given by the judge. The murder was a brutal one. Durbin had seduced a Miss Dunn in Payette county, near his home and sent her here. She remained some months when he appeared under pretense of giving the child away to be raised. On March 7th last he apcompanied the child and its mother to the river, and it is believed struck the child's head upon the beams of the railroad bridge and threw it into the water. The body was not discovered for three weeks. In the meantime he married the mother. Circumstances pointed to him at the inquest and the chain of evidence was so woven that it left no doubt aB to his guilt. The verdict gives very general satisfaction. The grand jury" ftuled to indict the mother for complicity.
Miss Katie Jacob is visiting in Lafayette. Charles Stout, formerly bookkeeper at Hobergs. has gone to Tennessee.
Mrs. Rutlege, of Pennfield, Ilia, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Chuikshank. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Crawford, of St. Louis, have been in the city visiting their relatives A. J. and Jim Crawford.
The Gas company have abandoned its case against the city. Lev. Breeden, pastor of the Christian, church, has resigned to take charge of a church at Des Moines, Iowa.
Mr. Breeden, suggests Dr. Good, of Normal, His., to succeed him the first of December.
Geo. Samuels, of N. K. Elliot's office, has taken a position in B. Woolsey's office.
Mrs. Waters died on the first at her home on south First. Jesse Robertson commenced on his contract on the new High school building on the second.
There were 62 special delivery deposited for local delivery during October. Mrs. M. O'Neal and her "grand son Walter Cory, have retmrned from an,extended visit in Illinois.
Wm. F. Pidgeon, died at Vin&mnes om the third of typhoid fever. Mr. Pidgeon was well known in Terre Haute.
Francis M. Martin wants a divorce from Alvilda V. Martin. Hoberg Root & Co., have been awarded the contract for furnishing the sheets and pillow cases for the fire, department. |f-':
The Western. Union Telegraph company have reduced their rates at Terre Haute.
A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Mc Kibbin on the 1st. R.G. Hervey was in the city this week.
Mrs. Lucy Goodwin is home from New York. Daniel Doyle had his knee cap knocked out of place at the I. & St. L. freight depot on the 31st.
Carson Hamill has commenced his duties as night distributing clerk at the postoffice.
Henry Tate colored janitor of the city buildings died on the 2nd. Fred Fisher, an employe of the Vandalia boiler shop, was struck in the eye on the 2nd by a steel chip. He will probably lose the eye.
Chas. P. Wolfe has been awarded the contract for painting the new High school building.
The repairs on Newhart & Son's hominy mill which have been in progress all summer are now completed.
Judge Carlton is home in Washington. Mrs. Smith died at St. [Mary's on the 28th, aged 83 years.
Twenty-nine interments have been made at Woodlawn cemetery during October.
Miss Katharine Smith, a daughter of Lyndon A. Smith formerly of this city, but now of St. Louis, was married to Mr. Henry Folsom, of (Jircleville, Ohio, on the 2nd. Immediately after Miss Smith's marriage her brother Lyndon A. Smith Jr., was married to Miss Rosalie Meagher, of St. Louis. Both bridal parties went to Chicago on a wedding trip.
Miss Clara Yesque was married to Mr. Albert Hebb on the 4th. Miss Mattie Yates is home from St. Louis.
James Collins and John Murphy have been visiting in Chicago. Harry Fisher, of the Union Pacific Tea Co., has resigned and accepted a position at Indianapolis.
Miss Stella Howard celebrated her seventeenth birthday with a party. Mrs. Mattie Wysong has gone to Big Springs, Texas, to join her husband.
Mrs. Dr. Young and mother, Mrs. Booper, are in New Harmony, Ind., spending a week.
Alice B. Brown has brought suit against Ralph A. Brown for divoree. Eldora Beaty wants a divorce from David Beaty.
Mrs. K. M. Lewis is visiting relatives in Lawrenceburg. S. C. Burton was called to Cleveland by the serious illness of his mother, on the 81st.
Michael Dolan, formerly with Fouts & Hunter, has gone to Texas where he owns a cattle ranche.
Mr. and Mrs. James Turner are boarding with Mrs. Wm. Durham on Sixth street.
Father Ryves has been visiting his parents at New Albany. Mr. Harry Graham has accepted a position in the^P. D. & E. general office stationed at Peoria,
Henry Becker, bottler at Christ Starke's, won the first prize in class I of the great bottler's contest for prizes offered by the National Bottler's Gazette.
Michael Garvey, engineer at the Blast Furnace, had his left hand caught in the main shaft this week and the middle finger was so mashed that it had to be amputated.
George Knoehr, died on Friday, Nov. 6th, of rheumatic palsey, aged 65 *years. Ed. Tetzel, the Ohio street gunsmith, has assigned to Henry Stuckwish,
The Periclesian Chautauqua circle met at Andrew Grimes on north Seventh street, Friday night, the 6th, and had a programme to celebrate Bryant's memory. The Bryant circle observed the day with special exercises appropriate to the occasion. A supper was spread and while at the t&ble quotations from Bryant's works were given.
A revival meeting is being held at the German Methodist church. Many are being converted.
John Sullivan had 340 stolen from him on the 5th. President Nippert and George W. Bement wanted Mayor Kolsem to swear in a number of special policemen to guard the Nail works so that feeders would not be afraid to go to work. The Mayor refused to do it, but said he would send policemen out there at the times men were coming to their work.
Father McMullen, formerly pastor of St. Patrick's church of this city, now of Richmond, was here this week.
Miss Mary Bevins, of St. Louis, who
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J. H. ZEILIW & Co.,
Sole Proprietors, Hiiladelphia. ito. Price, 11.00.
has been visiting Mrs. Laughead, has returned home. Chas. Rogers is doing night work for the American Express company at the Union depot.
Daniel Ohlenschlager, of the Vandalia round house, is laying off on account of trouble with his eyes. He will probably lose one of his eyes.
Hudnut's new boat is expected on the 11th. The Experiment and the Ida Lee arrived from the south on the 5th, the former loaded with walnut lumber and the latter with corn.
Proceedings to set aside the decision that Mrs. E. M. Delano is of unsound mind were dismissed in the Circuit Court on the 5th. Mrs. Delano was sent for but she refused to come unless a carriage be sent to take her to the court room. Mr. Geo. E. Pugh is her guardion.
Miss Olive Lakin of this city and Dr. J. R. Lowe, of Andubon, Iowa, were married on the 5th at the residence of the bride. Rev. Dr. Towne officiating. The newly married couple went east on a tour and will return here for a few days before going to Iowa their future home.
The following marriage licenses have been issued this week: James M. Whitesell and Susannah Whiteeell.
Albert W. Hebb and Clara Yesque. Morgan Morgan and Kate Kyle. Samuel P. Miller and Louie Myers. John R. Lowe and Olive Lakin. Stephen R, Keaton and Edna Ralf. Alfred Cobble and Sarah I. Wishard. Allen Heady and Cora Smock Wm. D. Davis and Clara B. Case.
Il QUEER TRANSACTION.
Philosopher Hunter Talks of the iWay Hie-Him-Hence Howard "Did Him Up
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A
GAZETTE readers are familiar with the way Howard, the livery man who rented Fouts & Hunter's livery stable last spring, escaped payment of a debt by driving all the stock into Hlinois. Col. Bob Hunter has got over his mad spell and talks good naturedly enough about it now. "The gallatin street gang" says he "commenced hiring rigs about half past five o'clock in the afternoon to go to a dance. We set right here and saw 'em go out. Of course we didn't do nothing couldn't do nothing, don't ye know. They'd aright to hire out their rigs and beside, we didn't suspeet nothing." "How many 'rigs' did they get out that way?" "Between twelve and fourteen. I left for supper about half past six and about half the outfits were gone then. They were to be back at midnight and as they didn't come, the hostler he come to my house and he waked me and he says I guess they've skipped, I came down to the stable and staid the rest of the night but they didn't come back." "Did they take everything?" "Yes everything but the safe and a little feed. They drove to Marshall, transferred to another man and skipped to St. Louis." •'Can't you get anything?" "No the firm owed us nothing. The rent was all paid up. The claim was one individually against Howard, don't you understand, ten years old. He used to buy for us and owes us about 31,000."
I see he is around town yet." "Yes he came in here the next day as big as life." "What did he say?"
laughed the Colonel he said "I
did you up pretty well, didn't I?" The Colonel said Howard was now trying to get away bis household goods but added that he had attached them.
JUDS0N.
Heavy Rains—An Old-Fashioned Barn, at. Raising—An Amputation, r. JUDSON, Ind., Nov. 7.—[GAZETTE special.]—Rain has fallen here continuously for forty-eight hours, rendering the creek unfordable, making the roads bad and causing a general slack in busies.
Despite the rain a goodly number of grangers assembled on the farm of Robert Demaree, Thursday, and had an old fashioned barn raising.
Perminter Noel, of Andapolis, was in town Friday. The GAZETTE IS the only Terre Haute daily paper coming to Judson.
Harrison Collings, a farmer living near here, has been afflicted with a cancer on the right hand for over a year. After trying numerous remedies and consulting with doctors in Indianapolis, Crawfordsville and other places, it has been decided to amputate the arm.
aplfi-
Vivid Account of the i)e|tlriule -From Here on the Wabash and Erie Canal.
1 JT NO. •.£,
The following is another installment from the book of Richard Beste Esq., published in London in 1855, giving an account of his visit to Terre Haute in 1851. The younger generation knows noticing of the tedium and inconvenience of travel in those days before the Vandalia system was thought of.—[Ess. GAZ.] V. j.v. it
Tuesday, 12th August—At five o'clock in the afternoon we stepped from the little quay at Terre Haute on board the Indiana canal boat. Three horses were harnessed to a rope, about fifty yards ahead of the boat they started at a moderate trot, and the town where we had tarried so long, was soon lost to our sight, No other'passengers were on board and we wandered over the vessel well nleased with the promise it gave us of a tolerable accommodation. The oaptain, who was very civil and attentive to our wants, told us that tea would be served at seven o'clock which there on that day was precise the hour of sunset. The construction of the canal boat was in miniature, much the same as that of lake and river steamers. There was no hold or under deck, but on the1 deck at the stern were raised the kitchen, steward's room and offices in the centre of the boat was a large saloon. The sitting-room of all by day, the sleeping room of male passengers by night adjoining it was the ladies saloon beyond whioh again, was a small cabin containing only four berths. THIS CABIN WAS SEPARATED BY A DOOR
WAY
and curtains from the ladies saloon and on the other side opened into the bow of the vessel. In it was a looking glass, a hand basin, two towels, a comb and brush for the use of the ladies. It was a rule in the boats that no gentlemen should go into the ladies saloon without express invitation from the ladies consequently the little room was sacred to the female sex unless entered from the bow, in which case the male occupant would cut off the ladies from their washhouse. Dr. Read had, however, declared that it was necessary that I should have this small room, that I might be secure from the night air that might be let into the men's saloon at night, and the canal boat agents at Terre Haute had contracted to secure the same for me throughotit the passage. Dr. Read had particularly insisted on this, fearing that the slightest chiU WOULD PRODUCE A RETURN OF THE ILL-
NESS
4
from which, in truth, I was scarcely convalescent. A flat roof spread over the whole of the saloons and on it was piled all the luggage, and here passengers walked up and down or sat to enjoy the view. The view as yet, however, "was nought," the banks were low and thick woods in which were only partial clearings, shut us in on both sides. I have omitted to say that the climate of Terre Haute of late had been rendered much more salubrious th*n it formerly was by the flooding of a large wood. Somewhere about here, there had been a marshy valley covered with magnificent timber, but seeking also, with a miasma that poisoned all around. By the advice of Dr. Read the waters of the Wabash had been let into the hollow and the whole valley turned into a 'lake flooding the timber as it stood.
FANCY SUCH A WASTE OF TIMBER in the old country within a short distance of water carriage! There it stood, rotting away and it was asserted that the pestilential vapor no longer rose from this "drained bog," as an Irish emigrant described it to me. Our children had wondered where they were to sleep, as there were no visible berths amid the red moreen curtains that hung around the ladies' saloon, to give it an air of comfort this August weather they dreaded to have to pass four nights on the floor, as they had done at Mrs. Long's hotel but they said they were more used to hardships than they then were and they drew comparative comfort from seeing a hand wash basin, and two towels, instead of that amiable American woman's small tin pie dish. The steward soon solved their, doubts by hooking up some
SHELVES TO THE WALL
and laying some mattresses and sheets on them. Wewer* summoned to tea but after the good living at the Prairie House all complained bitterly of the poor coffee and tea, of the heavy hot corn bread and the raw beef steaks. I then produced my brandy bottle. Dr.. Read had advised me to give a tablespoonful to each one of my children every night and morning, in the hope of keeping off the ague and fever of the canal administered his prescription regularly as long as we were in the boats. The youngest two-year-old boy had, indeed, been ill for some time and by a teaspoonful of the same medicine, sweetened with sugar, had been cured, much to his own dissatisfaction he declared he liked to be ill the physic was so nice. Those who think that the religious principle cannot maintain itself in a country, where every other kind of properly is doubled and trebled every year or two, would imply that religion has no real capital on which and by which to establish itself. Believers in the truth of religion assert that it has that real capital and that unless hampered by protective laws, it will be profitably worked by
1
a
ch one conscious of the wants and of
them and to be almost heathens. In our own country they wpuld have been TAXED AND COAXED TO BUILD A CHURCH and ten per cent of the product in their fields,.would have fee^n fUottfd to port a religious teachfer. Wotild thishrfve -tended to make MMHIJOW hiftdootrinea? I think not. But although no such system could be attempted here they were not deserted. An itinerant preacher happened to pasi through the neighborhood and observing the dearth of religion, set about converting the people in good earnest. His success was poor. Not more than halt a dozen could be gotten together at his Sunday meetings. Did he forsake them on that account? Not a bit of it. Determined to create an interest, he had hand bills printed and posted in every conspicuous place in the district to the following effect:
RELIGIOUS NOTICE—"The Rev. Mr. Blaney will preach next Sunday. in Dempsey's grove, at ten o'clock A. M. and at four p. M. Providence permitting. Between the services the preacher will trot his sorrel mare, Julia, against any nag that can be trotted in this region for a purse of one hundred dollars. This had tne desired effect. People flocked from all quarters and the anxiety to see the singular preacher was even greater than the interest excited by the challenge." a#
FREDERICK H. WINSTON,
Of Illinois, Appointed United States Min^isterto Persia, The American representative alt the court of Persia resides in Teheran, and as a matter of course with an honored foreigner at an Oriental capital, supports a good deal of "style." As the salary of the appointment is only a modest five thousand a year, and the expense of it is pretty sure largely to exceed this sum, the average officeseekers does not hunger and thirst after the mission to Persia. But as we have in this country men of wealth, culture and leisure, to whom the appointment to Teheran would be very grateful, the administration finds no difficulty in filling it. President Arthur found S. G. W. Benjamin, of New York, an appreciative victim and, in his turn, President Cleveland discovers the right man in Frederick H, Winston, of Chicago.
Mr. Winston is about fifty years of age. He is a wealthy member of the Iroquois Club, and a well-seasoned travell er.During the last three years he has been wandering in Europe. In personal appearance Mr. Winston is distinguiehed. He is tall, broad-shoulder-ed and stout. His face is high-colored and strong in its outlines and features A draggling, waxed, brown gray mustache ornaments his otharwise smoothshaven face. He is cultured and apt to learn, a wonderful talker, and, like Jacques in the play, "full of matter." There is no doubt of his being the right kind of a man to appreciate the henor just conferred upon him.
He has made up his mind to support the dignity and importance of his Government while living in Oriental pomp in the far East. Speaking of Persia, he says the importance of that country has been over looked. Russia and England are contending for supremacy in the East: one is approaching from the East and the other from the West, and Persia may be the central point. The interests of the United States must be kept in the foreground^ and American capitalists encouraged to assist in development of the'new and progressive Persia which will succeed the present one, when projected railroads and other improvements, near and within her territory, shall have regenerated that country.
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I O O S E A E N
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A-
