Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 19, Number 15, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 September 1888 — Page 8
1 HE MAIL.
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
PERSONAL MENTION.
W. II. Softie went to Hutchinson, Kan., Tuesday. Mrs. C. A. Insley went to Hutchinson, j£an.{ Tuesday,
Mias Mamie Slaughter has returned from Louisville. Miss Mattie Surrell baa returned from Frankfort, Ind.
Joseph Strong has returned from a trip to Nejr York. W. A. Hamilton returned on Thursday from the East.
Mr. and Mrs. Jos H. Briggs visited Cincinnati this week. Miss Kate Hulman returned last Monday from Cincinnati.
Charles Baur was among the visitors to Cincinnati this week. Mrs. Charles Wheatf}eld,of Springfield, Mo., is visiting in the city.
Miss Lou Spears, of Paris, 111., is visiting on north Ninth street. Mrs. Wm. M. Slaughter is visiting her daughter in Martinsville, Mo.
Miss Nellie Brown, of Shelbyville, 111., Is visiting at Judge Eggleston's. Charles Carleton arrived in the city last Tuesday from Salt Lake City.
MM. G. W. Farts and daughter left Tuesday to visit friends in Chicago. Joe C. Lewis left Monday afternoon for Win Held, Kas., where ho is now located.
Mrs. C. M. Daggett has been quite ill at hor home on Chestnut street this week.
Mrs. May Kenworthy, of Salt Lake City, is visiting her mother, Mrs. McEwaii.
R. A. Tlernan and daughter, Grace, have roturnod from au eastern trip of five weeks.
Miss Maria Smith has gone to Morristown, N. JM to spend the winter with relatives.
George Armstrong, formerly of the city engineer's corps, is in the city from Galesburg, 111.
Will and Sam Edmunds, with their wives, will be home next month from Washington.
L. 8. Briggs and daughter Mayme will soon loave for Montana, where they will visit relatives.
Mrs. Anna Patterson Is in Cincinnati. She accompanied her sister, Mrs. D. J. Mm koy, of Evansvllle.
Miss Lixxie Meisel and mother and MiHS Emma Kraft spent Sunday in Vincennes, visiting relatives.
Miss Hamilton started Monday for South Hutchinson, Kansas, to join her parents, who now reside there.
Tho Rov. Mr. Buckles returned Monday, to his home In Hutchinson, Kansas, after a visit among his many friends.
Julius Brittlebank and Frank Armstrong are in San Francisco. They will go from there to Oregon and thenco home by "vuy of St. Paul.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Armstrong arrived In tho olty on Thursday. Mrs. Armstrong will visit her paronts, Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Woolsoy#
Miss Mattie Matthews returned to
recti
castle Tuesday afternoon after a pleasant visit with Mr. and Mrs. Garrett, of south Seventh street.
Tho representative of D. Appleton & Co., of New York, Robert L. Panneberg, is a guest of Miss Ida Gerhardt, of south Thirteenth street.
Miss Isabelle Oakey Is attending May Wright SewelPs classical school at Indlanafiolls. Mrs. C. C. Oakey returned from Indianapolis Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry IIandIek,of Tenth and Poplar streets, have returned from a pleasant visit to Germany. They were gone about three months.
Miss 'Rene Tolbert, of south Fourth mreel, and Miss Evelyn Feltus, of north Third street, have returned from the West, where they have been spending a few weeks.
George P. Smith, who travels for G. C. Pearson, of Indianapolis, has purchased property on the corner of Ninth and Mack street* and will occupy it In the near future.
Miss Nellie Sbeeks, of Greencastle, Is In the city visiting Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Kills, and selling the live® of Cleveland and Harrison. She has met with considerable suocoas.
I»rofessor Robert Healer, assistant in the chemical department of the State Univo.-sUy, at Blooralngton, spent Sunday In thts city accompanied by his alitor who has entered the Normal school.
Wesley Glover returned Monday from Aritonla where he has been in the drag business. He Is on bis way to Pennsylvania where he will locate. He was with J. K. Some* before he left for the West.
Patterson left on Monday after* noon for the West, accompanied by his mother. He will go to his home in Fort Scott, Kansas and after remaining them a short time he will visit Salt Lake City and Yellowstone Park. He will then return to Fort Scott, and engage in the jewt*lry business.
Mrs. Dr. Holllnssworrh has miui«d from a trip to Niagara and Townentirely recovered from her recent lines*, and is enthusiastic ovtsr bet dohtful visit. She was at Lord Stanley** pUon in Toronto, and say* Canada tlrrd of BHOali rate, and they eonfi„tly hope that it will not be loos nntbey area part of thla republic. She ,y* thin was thft expression of every aen ah« talked to, even white she, w«rt bowing to royalty.
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Mrs. Hndnutand her daughters,Misses Mayme and Kate, visited Cincinnati this week.
Mrs. E. H. Bindley baa been visiting Mrs. Innis, on Price's Hill, Cincinnati, this week.
Joseph H. Blake, Ben G. Hudnntand R. J. Smith will probably go from this ciiy to the annual meeting of the American Street Railway Association in Washington the 17th of October.
Mrs. Crawford Fairbanks and daughter and Miss Carrie Fairbanks have been in Cincinnati this week where they met the latter's sister, Mrs. Pauline Montagnier, just returned from Europe.
P. J. Breinig has decided to remain here as he is getting quite a large class, teaching the violin. He has had a good offer to travel as musical director with the MacCollin and Wilbur Opera Company.
PERSONAL AND PECULIAR.
A Kentucky negro who found a kettle containing,$400 in silver bought 930 worth of canned pears as a starter towards solid comfort.
A Chinaman last week broke a faro bank at Duluth. The Chinaman is versatile and industrious in catching onto the ways of the world.
Rubenstein has accepted an offer of $20,000 to come to this country. This sum would give forty county preachers a good living for a year.
Benjamin F. Butler says bo does not support any particular candidate, but he is going to make political speeches. Some men must talk, if only for the pleasure of hearing their own voioes.
A dweller in the country has observed that a good file is now apart of the outfit of the professional tramp. He finds It very useful when there is a barbed wire fence between him and something desirable.
Adam Forepaugh is out for Cleveland. It is unnecessary to state that Mr. Phineas T. Barnum is out for Harrison. It's the old circus spirit of rivalry. Each claims to have the greatest show on ehrth.
1
A Pittsburg gentleman, seeing a little tot wandering along the street, and knowing her family, asked her where she was going. "I'm going to hell," she said. She was toddling after a man whom she had heard another tell to hunt up the hot place.
Two esteemed contemporaries at Kansas City are at loggerheads over the correctness of the sentence: "Let you and I take a drink." Tho phrase is ungrammatical, but It seems to be conceeded that it gets the drink in Kansas City, just the same.
Cornelius Vanderbilt aud Elliot F. Shepard, of New York, allow each of their six children a certain amouut of pocket money each month, and tbey are nil required to keep oash accounts and present them to their papas the first of each month.
A funny election bet has been entered Into between a Democrat and a Republican in Washburn, Aroostook oounty. Whoevor loses in the pending Presidential canvass by the defeat of his candidate, must take, at one dose, two ounces ofoestoroil!
An English woman is responsible for for the suggestion that along with other Improvements to theatre seats there be an arrangement by which they can be sunk through a trap in the, floor into a saloon below, so that men can go out between the aots and see a man without treading on the toes of all the women seated near them.
Judge Thurman detests a cigarette smoker with all his emphatlo soul. On his trips strangers sometimes enter his car with a cigarette. The Judge can smell one, he says. An inveterate smoker of the blackest cigars himself, he abominates a cigarette, and doen't hesitate to say so. The odor of the burning paper Is almost nauseous to him.
FRiim OYSTERS.
E. W. Johnson intends this season as for many years past, to lead the oyster trade art! make his establishment headquarters for the ilneat New York and Baltimore Oysters. He received this morning a choice lot.
Bulbs fbr Fail Planting1,
Tulips, Hyacinth, Crocus, etc. at JOHN O. HKINL'S, Cor. 8th and Cherry street.
C. W. Merring, No. 22 north Fourth street has a large lot of Engravings, Artotypes and Pastel Pictures which be is closing out at prices below cost to make room for Christmas goods.
The Night School
At the Terro Haute Commercial College will open the first Monday in October.
CALIFORNIA and DOMESTIC FRUITS, Fresh Candies, New Novelties, etc., at RISERS.
HOW'S THIS I
We offisrOne Hundred Dollar* Reward for any i*. a cun-iot he cured by tukuii: li ur^Cfcurrh *_ ,.m.
F. S. CHENEY A COn Prop* Toledo, Ohio. Wft, the undersigned, H«v© known F. J. Cheney for the »»t 1£ snd bell him fcon '"•.•• binjatm tnwL^i-UJos, able to carry out any obi -r iUons made bv rVrH^-rv -v Tr Whol—de Draggiste, To-
Wilding. ft—V* Wfaotenla, i: B. H. it Cfc er .:•!* N»-
•er -WM ik--, iternally torn* maces
I •n.U IV,
HatlV u-i-'ii .rv I-. r.opon it*
be «wtw
bout*.
ifill
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Sold by all Dmggtsta.
Ir iSMi
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V,
John Anderson, my jo John, When first I was your wife. On every washing day, John,
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL
2
JOHN ANDERSON, MY JO.
I wearied of my life. It made you cross to see, John, Your shirts not white as snow, I washed them with our home-made soap,
John Anderson, my jo.
Copyright 1886, by Procter & Gamble.
I've bin thlnkin' purtv serious fur several days past o' makin' a artist out of myself. Not a panted or a'whitewash artist, di ye understand, but a real artist that signs an' covarts roun' on the stage of a theater. The way it cum about was thus: One mornin* I was a singln' Ole Hundred while was sweepin' off the front ate js, an' a real nice looking feller cum along an* stopped to listen to me a
warblin'. He said I had the most wonderful voice he ever heasd, an' that if I would cultivate It, it would make me notorious or sutbin' o' that kind. He said I orter go to a preservatory of music an' study for the upperatic stage. He was in dead earnest, too. I tole him, though, that it kep' me purty signin' the praises o' my friend fid. It. Wright—him as keeps the big White Frunt grocery, who has to-day everything that can be had.fur the table, as New Honey,Cantelopes, Grapes,Peaches, Pears, Celery, Dressed Chickens, Caulillower, Watermelons, Egg Plant, Tomatoes, Sweet Potatoes, Bananas, Lemons, New Maple Syrup, Cucumbers, Beets, Cabbage, Parsley, Dressed Turkeys, Choice Mackerel, Choice Creamery and Country Butter, Dried Fruit, Canned Fruit and Vegetables at reduced prices. Afresh arrivalof White Label Wines.
Make Arrangements
Boys and Girls to attend the Night School at the Terre Haute Commercial College which opons the first Monday in October.
Money to Loan..
MONEY-TO
LOAN-In large or small
amount* on easy terms. J. D. BIUBrxW, Opera House.
For Rent.
J^OR
RENT—STORE ROOM—A peiwoh desiring a location for a number one grocery will hear something to their advantage by applying to Foulkes A Greiner, 415 Ohio street, or !. Kusaner. 828 Main.
Wanted.
A \TANTED—LADIES—A lady agent Is wanted
in
very city
and
village also
Indies tn travel and solicit orders for MAD-
W aists, Tamplca Forms Hose Supporters, -ieei Protectors, Ladles' Friend, etc. Agents ara making from Twenty to Fifty Dollars a
Hen'd for circulars and price-list to I. K. Wood, 54 South HaUna *trw»t Svracwc. N. Y.
Amusements.
ISJAYLOR'S OPERA HOUSE J_N Wilson Nay lor. Manager. J,
Monday, Oct. 1st.
Bpeelal Engagement.
James C. Roach,
Coder the im-UMtement of Mr. J.
M.
Hill, In
his Irish American plsy
DAN DARCY.
by -v.
.ted by
!*n Beit*. '.hew I*:
«ft i?h ist. ..
VTAYLOr/S OP.1 tA HOUSE. JJN Witam
Tuesday, Oct." 2nd./
TernBMU^I I^avv.VTjsiI?^
JOHNSON & SLAVIN MINSTRELS
A-
SWIlif *-r* Sactt
a.. 5
a.u A# mmt* «IH Monday awutat at
W-
Ah! many a quarrel then, John, Had you and I thegither, But now all that is changed, John,
We'll never have anither For washed with IVORY SOAP, John, Your shirts ARE white as snow, And now I smile on washing day,
John Anderson, my jo.
A WORD OF WARNING.
There are many white soaps, each represented to be "just as good as the 'Ivory' they ARE NOT, but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for Ivory" Soap and insist upon getting it.
N
OTICE TO SELL REAL ESTATE.
Probate Cause No. 1429. Katharine L. Johns and Henry C. Miller, Administrators of Estate of Thomas B. Johns, deceased, vs. Oscar H. Johns, Rlc.hnrd L. Johns, Mattie R. Johns, Charles Johns, et al.
In the Circuit Court of Vigo county, Indiana, November Term, 1888. To Oscar li. Johns, Richard L. Johns, Mattie R. Johns, Char lea D. Johns, Daisy L. Johns, Thomas B. Johns, Lezetta M. Johns, Harrold W Johns and Katharine L. Johns.
You are severally hereby notified that the above named petitioner as administrators of the estate aforesaid,Jhas filed in the Circuit Court of Vigo Couuty, Indiana, a petition making yon defendants thereto, and praying therein for an order and decree of said court authorizing the sale of certain Real Estate belonging to the estate of said decedent, and In said petition described, to make assets for the payment of the debts and liabilities of said estate and that said petition, so tiled and pending, Is set for hearing in Raid Circuit Court at the Court House In Terre Haute, Indiana, on the First Judicial day of the November Term, 1888 of said Court, the same "Wing the 26th day of November 1868.
Witness the Clerk and Seal of said Court, this 28th day of September, 1888. MERRILL N. SMITH, Clerk.
JJOTEL GLEN HAM, FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, Bet. 21st and 22d sts., near Madison Square.
New and perfect plumbing, according the latest solentlflc principles.
Dr. aider's
eleplione Is No. 186.
IP
fl»-: r.-'tn, oi» LwnMd
N
EUROPEAN PLAN. N. B. BARRY, Proprietor,
Si
In politics THE DAILY NEWS is always independent, never neutral. While its editoral expression is sometimes vi~^rous to the degree of severity, there is always in its utterances of opinion f.o manifest a purpose to be impartial and fair to nil opposing unrests, that it rarely loses the confidence of the rea :r, however much it may (ail to bring* him to an acceptancc of its own view concerning the matter in hand. "As a newspaper proper, THE DAILY NEWS has earned a re atation for enter rising* newsn| cond to none in the United States. is 1":: 0' !/c!i :ap aper in the West that is a "jnmSar of ihc Associated Press. It gives its *-'n\-ukrs r*U the news v. rth HvinT and gives rt for crr*m:' flsnff it c.xs it for ic ceni a day,)
A dz front its oY/n deserving merits as a
,* .*:-.wi
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OTICE TO NON-RESIDENT.
HEKZ', [BULLETIN.
CLOAKS and SHAWLS.
You will see in our window to-day a small) extract of novelties from our Cloak and Shawl department. Come up stairs and we will shovs/ you the banner Cloak and Shawl stock of city. Our prices will be found as low as th lowest, and the selling price is written on every^ garment in plain figures. One price to all and everybody.
Among the arrival of new goods, a magnify icent line of Upholstering Fringes and Fancy Cords. Additional novelties of Dress Trim-^ mings which must be seen to be appreciated.
Buy your Hosiery, Gloves, Underwear, Corsets, Knit Goods, Trimmings, etc., from us and you will get correct goods and correct prices.
HERZ' BAZAR. A Lecture on Economy!
The Boys are at School, Father's mind is on business, Mother's busy at home, "Out of sight, out of mind."
The Boys wardrobe need replenishing at this season of the year. The one needs a heavier suit the other a pair of little Irousers to help wear out the old jacket The third one may need an overcoat. Take your pencil and figure out the cost We'll warrant it will run into the twenties to fit out the boys. Our little lecture is on economy. We propose to save you money. If you'll como here and select the articles needed, we pledge you a saving of 30 per cent on the dollar. That means just six dollars saved on twenty dollars. With every Child's Suit we give you a Watch and Chain.
IV. W. Kl'MSKY, Attorney. Oltlce—Ohio street.
MYERS BROS.
Leading One Price Clothiers. 4th & Main.
State of Indiana, County of Vl», In the Vigo Circuit Court, September Term 1888. No. 15146. Mary E. Hopewell et al, vs. William F. Hopewell, in partition.
Be It known, that on tho 20th day of Sept 1888, It was ordered by the Court, that tho Clerk notify by publication said William F. Hopewell as non-resident Defendant of the pendoncy of this action against him.
Paid Defendant is therefore hereby notified of the pencency of said action against him and that tho same will stand fort rial November JWth. 18X8, the same same at November Term of said Court in the year 1888.
A Great Newspaper."
Under the above caption the New York Graphic, some three years ago, published a critical review of the growth of THE CHICAGO DAILY NEWS, which sets forth so clearly some of the ••fundamental principles underlying the development of one of the phenomenal successes of later car.s Lluit it will well repay a reading. To bring some of the Graphic's figures down to the present iaic, supplemental statements are parenthetically added by the present writer. "Tin: newspaper entitled to the distinction of hiving the largest daily circulation in America is THE'CHICAGO DAILY
NEWS. (Since this state
ment was made it is possible that the growth of •'.the New York World entitles it to first place.) ihe Graphic to-day devotes a page to sketches of scenes in and about its establishment The history of this paper is probably without a parallel in the annals of American journalism. It was founded December 20th, 1875, and was the first low-priccd daily successfully established in the West. At the end of its first year it had achieved a circulation of about 10,000. From that time on its growth has been remarkable. It now prints seven editions daily, comprising both morning nnd evening issues. Its statement of circulation for the year 1884 shows a daily average of 125,178 copies, unquestionably the largest daily circulation on the American continent (The sworn statement for I S/ shows a daily average of 165,376.)
corr ot and chap ncv. npcr, it isdoub If mn+rm hnrr^y yakte rwnent of merit could be framed in stronger terms than forc£ irrj an J\: an I yet hew much iter fs r. the achievement now that iTu a journal as r. DAJI
au
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much indebted for its remarkable growth in circulation to the persistent adherence on the part of the other Chicago dailies to the "blanketsheet style of journalism. Of all the people in America the average Chicagoan is most in a hurry and least inclined to wade through columns of verbiage and stuff. THE DAILY NEWS is the only Chicago daily that has the facilities for giving all the news, and at the same time the good sense to present it in concise form. The result of such a condition of affairs is that THE DAILY NEWS prints more papers than all the other Chicago dailies combined. "In considering all the causes which have entered into and produced so phenomenal a journalistic growth the most important one unquestionably has been the controlling conviction of its managers that the "cheap paper should be cheap only in price that its news should be as fresh and complete, its editorial discussion as able, and its general tone and character as pure and hcathfu! as its best and highest priced cotemporary. All this the "cheap paper" may easily be even at its reduced price.
The difference of revenue between the twocent paper (even more so when the price is one cent), and the higher-priced blanket-sheet," the latter throws away in useless,and unasked for size, that not only is of no worth to the reader, but is even an annoyance, in that it cofopels him to gleam what is of real news interest frorti amass of verb* je and worthless amplication.
It becausc it? manners have been wise cnottfh to practically reco :.ize these essential elcm ts of the best American journalism of today ih it THE DAILY NEWS is the best and most pooular general family newspaper published in Chicago or the West."
is ccd in every :^an' hands at th reduced price of OKI CENT A DAY.
The .'" Am*rua» fsuraa/it* tan *#rdfy0 farther. Ortaiaithikat'tm XAiVtNi.ws leadstktvon. IsTHE CBICMM ruttr Krw» is -»J I71B1) Or. Cet •ta
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the
OTICE OP FORECLOSURE.
N'
State of Indiana, Vigo County ofVlgo, In the Vigo Circuit. Court, Mop torn her Term, 1H88 Iiouls Duenweg, No. l(tli)7, foreclosure, Daniel Lundy,_et, al, (William I'. Lundy, im pleaded.) Be it known, that on the 16th day a Heptetnber,
IHhx,
W.
E.
MERRILL N. 8MITH, Clerk.
It was ordered by the
Court thnttho clerk notify by publication, said William P. Lundy, (impleaded with Daniel Lundy et. nl.)as uon-rcsident Defendant of the pendency of this action against him. Haiti Defendant Is therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action against him and that the same will stand for trial November 8.1HS8. the same being the (September term of said Court In tlie year 1K88.
MKRRILL N. HMJTH, Clerk.
HKNDHIOH,
Attorney.
DISHON sells paste In any qtianity.
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V.»02f, 3 -ct Tut Daily h'nrj.« icaoo.
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