Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 5, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 July 1890 — Page 3
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T: "I
BEATRICE.
Dante, eoie standing on tbe heavenward height. Beheld and heard one sayiojf: "Behold me *relt I am, I am Beatrice.** Heaves and bell Kept silence, and the inimitable light Of all the Mars was darkness fa his sight, "Whose eyes beheld her eyes again, and fell
Shame stricken. Since her soul took flight to dwell In heaven six bundral years have taken flight And now that hcavenliett port of earth whereon
Shines yet their shadow as once their presence shone. To her beans witness "r his sake. &« he For hers bare witness trfyia her face was gone
No slave, no hospice now for grief but free Front shore to mountain auJ from Alp to sea. —Algernon Chftfie* S*inlurn3 io Atlwjnanim.
THE CATACOMBS.
The 8th of November, 1878. must for ever remain memorable in tbe rword of my life. It was tbe last day on which visitors were permitted to descend into the ea-tactomlw of Paris, and had with great difficulty procured permission from the chief engineer for a small party, con sisting of three gentleman and three ladies all English), a professional guide and myself to make tbe subterranean pilgrimage. To my companions I have stated word for wonl what I am about to write, and they are ready, if my narrative is cimilenged, to verify those portions of which they are cognizant by affidavit or otherwise. 1 shall now proceed to relate what happened, without attempting any embellishment, letting the plain facta speak for themselves. And, first, it is necessary to dwell for one moment on a little incident which has an important bear ing. as will bo seen hereafter. A few days beforo 1 had seen a little old woman feeding the English sparrows in the Tuileries garden. She broke np a loaf of bread, threw the crumbs into the air, and the timid things caught them flying, as they do insects. They were so tame they would eat out of the good woman's hand. She was very poor, worked at somo place far away to the north of the Tuileries, and lodges far to the south yet she never fails to visit the gardens, and sparo a loaf of her daily broad to her feathered pets.
Now I had planned a visit to the gardens on Nov. 8 to try my hand at the birds, and had provided myself with two small loaves of bread, for which I gave ten centimes. I calculated that I should have time enough to do this before the carriages came to drive us to the Catacombs. Various matters, however, delayed me, and I had to give up this part of tho programme, but I kept the bread in tho pocket of my overcoat, meaning to bestow it on somo beggar instead of tho sparrows.
Wo started at 12:80 from tho Grand hotel, and drove rapidly to tho Barriere d'Enfer and alighted in a courtyard, whore we found two or threo hundred persons waiting for tho opening of the low browed door which gives access "to tho catacombs in that quarter of the. city. Thero are about seventy 1 v-hantL staircases **•*1w,mopwpewe scattered himself—and fluntr me from tnrougn Paris. Hero each person was provided with a candle fixed in tho end of a plno stick, with a small circle of cardboard to servo as a tray and catch tho drops of grease. Each guide formed his party into singlo file, and enjoined the mtmibers to keep together, and to be very careful of their footing as they went down into tho dark depths below.
Now hero occurred the first strange incident of this memorablo day. A man joined our party wearing tho dross of the Undertakers' company—that is, a cocked luit like tho first Napoleon's, a black coat trimmed with silver lace, high boots and a black overcoat with a large cope. He was very thin, and his clothes hung about him like a shroud on a skeleton.
I shall never forget his face as ho turned and looked at me. The skin was like parchment, tho cheeks hollow and the eyes luminousand deep set in cavernous orbits. Tho look ho gave me thrilled to the very marrow of ray bones, and when he saw the effect it produced he smiled, disclosing a set of yellow teeth, with an expression so sinister, so weird. so fatal, and yet so sad, that I could not help saying to myself, "This is Death!" 1 was so overcome that I could not challenge his assumed right of joining our party, in a word, ho had completely magnetized and paralysed me. What was strange, from nmo to time a lady of our party turned and chatted with mo, apparently unconscious of the black figure and terrible face intruded between us.
And again, when tho guide counted us aloud he called out five—tho ntluiber of our original party. \Hp» foo, then as unconscious of "the preseoceof the stranger as whom I have alluded. Was I mad? In this perturbed state of mind I began the desctnt Of. the catacombs." t- ill"!'
The stoue staircase was spiral, cbmftg dovm like a petrified serpent, along walls slimy and humid. Wohad Ught«s.i our candle?, but the change from the glare of daylight to this envious fclbom prevented our sseittganytiur^,, aad we had to grope our perilous way^ "Suddenly an icy whisper, wafted on a ^Joistmous breath, entered n»y ear, like a p^niirdLK "Strange thing!? have happened In the catacombs* The dead wsfsnt intrusion on the last rasting place given them after the world has violated iheir firefc aan.tuary. Sometimes they insfeit on the living sharing their hanV/bed with them. Some men whd have come dot^ here have never «en the pleasant Hght of day again."*
Ml
believe, sir,** I replied, in as findiffewm a tone as I could assnmej "that owing' t^ the precautions of th» authorities no mch. accidents have ocetirred -M late years.'" "I am glad you think so," was tlie reply. followed by sneering. Mephistolaugh—what the Fradi call rijwniliHBt. r"? __
A dead sUeac* Ce8 upon WB»rty. We ittro times waaking oia too*® wax "**&>* }**.!**&*• "J?1
irfisrwtS-
lPglUW Cflllllg
•Observe," be said* bto^i, blaA' »t caapa.
stsiitBSi
line, with here and there a pointed arrow. That is the clew to the catacombs. So long as we follow that we are safe."
We soon came upon the relics of tbe dead. The galleries through which we passed, about nine feet in height, were walled on either side with human bones, piled up as regularly as bales in a wholesale draper's, and arranged with that artistic taste which the French display in all they do.
The walls of bones were surmounted by a ghastly cornice of grinniug^HkulIs. The mortal remains of millions of human beings were here gathered from the old cemeteries of Paris when necessity compelled the dead to give way to the living/*
The Cemetery of he Innocents, that of St. Medaro, of St. Laurent and oth ers have contributed their quota. Here the bone of prelate and prince, duke and peer, lay side by side with those of peasant and proletarian, thief and rag picker. Equality and fraternity! These words were fully realized in this gloomy mausoleum.
All the skulls and bones are of a dark mahogany color, for years and years have passed since they wero clothed"with flesh. J'
At intervals there are' marble tablets, with inscriptions in Latin, French, Greek, Norse and other languages, gathered from the works of preachers and poets, speaking of the vanity of human pursuits, the worthlessness of wealth, the certainty of death, the hope of immortality. At one point of our pilgrimage we came to a chapel, with the alcar surrounded by the silent but eloquent memorials of humanity Miles of the dead! How emphatic the lesson this spectacle conveyed!
To the right and left innumerable galleries,branched off, access being debarred by iron chains drawn across the entrances.
I had lingered a little behind my party to transcribe an inscription, the man in black keeping close to my side. He seemed to have taken me under his protection and patronage. "I can show you something these hireling gnides know nothing about," he said, "for I alone know the secrets of the Catacombs."
He lifted one of the chains which crossed tho mouth of aside gallery from the staples, and moving down the passage turned and said, "Follow me!"
I have said that this mysterious being had magnetized me. I was certain of it now, for though I was anxiously desirous of following my party I could not resist his command.
Holed me away down the passage, and thence into other siue passages, winding and turning. I lifted my torch to the ceiling, and saw to my dismay that there wero no black lines, no guiding arrows on the roof. In this crisis my will began to reassert itself.
Take me back to my party instantly." Instead of doing so the stranger exno Tight himself—and flung me from him with such violence that I stumbled and fell.
As I rose to my feet I heard his voice in the distance calling out,, "Strange things have happened in the Catacombs, sir. Find your way out of them if yon can. Good-night." "Stay!" I exclaimed in agony. "Do not leave mo hero to perish! Save me, if you have tho heart of a man!'
I never listen to prayer or appeal," he replied, with his hideous, sneering laugh. "I am pitiless as death."
And tho echoes gave back the awful word—death! till a more dreadful scene followed.
I was alone in darkness, abandoned to the most horrible fate the imagination can picture.
What was to be done? What could be done in snch a terrible crisis? My party would miss me, it is true, and a search would bo made for me but a reg-, iment of men might seek for days in this maze of labyrinthine galleries without success. I must try and help myself. I remembered that I had in my pocket two boxes of waxed matches, each one of whiqh would burn ten or twenty seconds. I lighted one, and'*by its feeble light ascertained where I was. I waa in one of tlvo galleries of the quarries, and just inside me yawned a black abyss of unknown depth, into which, a single \nnwary step might have precipitafcedme.
By keeping close to the wall I could avoid this and similar pitfalls. So I groped my way along. The passage wonnd and turned. The horror of darkness was so great that sacrificed another match* but it would not do to be so lavish. To describe my sensations would be utterly impossible. My brain reeled, and ,1 was on the very verge of madness, if inti past it, ^heiij *?alized SJTSrt thiifel Was l*k ito Catacombs,"..
But a'ffe*^ttfStshide I was in the full enjoyment of health and 5ife,- Sharing the gayeties of Paris, anticipating no evil, and now to die of starvation in fchib horrible cavern!
S
I thought of home and its
dear onea. my comfortable house inBed-
graphic apparatus. WW did tbe soirii of adventure tempt n^away from Providence vouchsafed to me, to wander in foreign lands? Theft my whole life pauapl ia .review before me. with its
garden. 1 took one of tbeaanall loaves Sd ^wallowed a few mouthfuK The er *ffll be surprised learn that after
Ifeltsleepy. wi»wtonfched my
mt toted Chat 1 was nodding. So 1 spread my thick floor, and a it was soonfast
MTSmnoi tiA boflr long my thxmber lasted, I woke, however, to renew my I lit T**»*r*k after
march, and called aloud for help, till my voice was utterly exhausted. Surely must have been missed, and a search must be going on for me? Alas! alas! no one responded to my calL No footsteps but my own echoed through those dismal galleries.
But now a new craving assailed me— thirst, more cruel than hunger. Lack of water kills quicker than lack of food, no longer thought of escaping from my living grave. My only cry was for water, water! But this want was soon supplied The sacrifice of a few more matches revealed to me a little stream exuding from the walls. I glued my lips to it, and though the flavor was nauseous, yet never in the heat of summer had a goblet of iced champagne been more deli cious to my palate!
How long a time I passed in my dismal prison house it is impossible to say. Days, nights—who can measure them under such circumstances? Finally I had exhausted my last crumb, and starvation stared me in my face. How could I now sustain life? Oddly enough I just then remembered the legend of the Beau manoir arms.
Beaumanoir was a gallant French character of the olden time, who, single handed, contended with a score of En glish knights. Covered with wounds, he asked his squire for water, but water was not to be had. "Drink thy blood Beaumanoir!" was the reply of the squire, and "Boire ton sang, Beaumanoir,'1 became afterward the motto of the family. Before I died I could open a vein with my knife, and imitate the example of the gallant Paladin.
But first I would make a desperate attempt to find an outlet. Every match had now been burned, and I had to work in utter darkness. Frenzied and desperate, I rushed from gallery to gallery, leaping the chains where .they impeded my progress. At last I thought I encoun tered a current of fresh air. I seized what I conjectured to be a thigh bone projecting from a pile of them and gave it a wrench.
In an instant a mass of bones and skulls gave way, and rolled down on me in a thundering avalanche, while a voice exclaimed, "The intruder who invades the sanctuary of the dead shall perish by the dead!"
The horror of the catastrophe overwhelmed me, and I lost my consciousness. When I recovered I was lying in my bed in the Grand hotel, with the sun shining on the glass gallery opposite my window. There was a tap at my door. I sprang up, opened it and admitted my traveling companion. "Well, old fellow," said he, "how did you sleep after our visit, to the Catacombs yesterday?" "•Yesterday?" I echoed. "Yes. I had the nightmare." "But how did I escape?" I asked. "Escape? What do you mean by escaping? You rode home in the carriage with me and the ladies." "But that undertaker who thrust h|m-"Tnenr-wim «v~-uiiiaerwia«tt, You must have been dreaming."
Not at all, unless I was dreaming wide awake." People sometimes do that."
Yon did not observe anything queer about me in the Catacombs?' Not at all. I thought you were unusually lively and wide awake."
Then I told him my story as I have related it. 1
1
He shook is he ad I "Queer things have happened in the Catacombs, sir," he said, "to quote the words of your mysterious friend^ philosopher and guide. But I wouldn't advise you to let your fancies run away with you, for there1 is a place near Paris called Charenton a madhouse—and when a fellow gets too queer in. his upper story his friends feel obliged to pack him in a sfcraitjacket, ..aud .send him down there for medical treatment. Don't imposo the unpleasant task on pae. And now come and breakfast with us aft the Cafe Anglais." ,L
This is the Way tri which* tfie strabgest occurrences of life are treated by our matter-of-fact friends. For my part I shall always insist that my visit to the Catacombs was one of the ^Mysteries of Paris," whatever others may say about my laboring under an ht41uciii$tion New York World.
rn*- Writing with Both Hand*. Owing to the popularity of typewriters penmanship is becoming a loit accomplishment among business men but one gentleman of this city*writes letters with both hands at once. He is E. C. Cockegv oftheWestem' Union,building, and he consented to show a reporter how to make a manifold machine of himself. "After endless practice," be said, at last found that I was capably of writ1%' with both hands at once/ and in this way I have done considerable writing of a business nature. Of late years, however, all my writing has been done by
4i^^»to«slenograpl»E.n^
a-
tor$d«iMi taftcaae tome with the smfles and tears of tbe oJd*o timk After hours of fruitless wandering sal down exhausted andhopekwR. I was almost surprised to find myself hungry. Then I remembeared the bread I had pro-
Mr. Cockey drew a pad from a orawer in his desk, and taking h&d ucil in each hand he wrote the reporter's
hand. "This is one way erf writfca$ said Mr. Cockey, "but perhaps yon would like tb it vnrfttett 6|is way," and he wrote the name upside down witfc both faaktd&t Finally he wn»t# long sentence simultaneously with both bands,— New YorkWorld.
The Champion Onion Eat*r-
•*'t&K#ftert tark, is very fond of onions, and would rather hftve en mk*i #ny time Vbtln orange
He recently ate thirty large onions in tutfn ImA ate neither silt nor pepper with them, tot did he abed tear over them. Mr. Thompson thinks that his capacity for onions wostfd be about sixty,—New Yosk Journal.
Om(
barber in a little town in Waiwoowarty, Pa. In personal appearance to to act mxllke his di^iiigaished uncle. Hettiinlo Qonc6 might adso have beeowo great barber if be had not got switched ofl ia aootber diiectton when be W»
If
it
TITKDAY IJVENING MATT,
That Dajr.
How terrible they are—some days that eat into tho brain and stamp themselves on t&e membry for all mortal time! We csn forget weeks of placid living, but nerer the pain that comes with one day of grief.
A poor little faded woman had been brought into court as witness in a disagreeable «ue involving very serious issues. The entire case depended on the fact that a paper had been signed on a certain day, and this the forlorn little woman was prepared to prove. "You saw the paper signed?" asked the opposing' counsel in cross examination., "Yes. sir." "You take your oath that it was the 30th of August?" "I know it was, sir."^
The lawyer, who thought another date could be proved, assumed an exasperating smile and repeated her words. "You know it was! And now be so good 1:3 to tell us just how you know it."
The poor .little creature looked f.- one cDuntenance to another with wide, ,uw ful eyes, as if she sought understanding and sympathy. Then her gaze rested on the face of the kindly judge. "I know," she said, as if speaking to him alone, "because that was the day the baby died."—Youth's Companion.
Substitute "for Beef Tea.
Dr. Ris, of Kloten, emphatically recommends pea soup as a most serviceable substitute for beef tea in the case of invalid^ convalescents, and more especially for patients suffering from cancer of the stomach or diabetes mellitus. The method head vises is: Take peas, water and a sufficient amount of some soup vegetables, add' per cent, of carbonate of soda, boiling the whole until the peas are completely disintegrated, the soup to stand until sedimentation is complete, and finally decant the fairly clear, thin fluid above the deposit. The product is stated to resemble a good meat soup in its taste, to be at least equally digestible, and at the same time to surpass the very best meat soup in nutritve value In regard to the latter claim Dr. Bis states in explanation that peas as well as beans or lentils, either of which may be used instead of peas, contain a considerable proportion of legumen, that is, a vegetable albumen, easily soluble in a faintly alkaline water, not coagulated by heat, readily absorbed, and equal to the albumen of egg in nutritiousness.—Exchange.
A Woman's Lovely Manner. The value of a beautiful manner is a topic of never ending charm, just as the beautiful manner itself is in life. A lovely character expresses itself in no more delightful way. One who is always thoughtful of others in a self forgetting way, who has kindness and calm, has invariably a charm of manner which is helpful and inspiring to all who see it. A lady came to Boston on an important errand a while ago. She had three men to see for signatures in a matter of artistic importance. She gave herself two days to see them, but she went about her business with so much of quiet directness that, although they were strangers whom she must see, the matter was attended to, she was ready to leave Boston and found herself with time upon her hands, all within twenty-four hours. "That woman ought to achieve w^t jshaJiriwutriAfc^in iny office three minutes, yet she didn't fuss or hurry. She has.a lovely calm."—Boston
Transcript.
I Taste for Scrap Books. Take equal parts bf gum Arabic and gum tragacanth and-' dissolve with enough warm water so that it will be like thick gloss starch. If on trial you find the paste too thick to spread, nicely with a small brush, thin with more warm water, stirring until it is smooth again. A small amount of gum inakes a lot" of pastes Kefep in a jaVg& mouthed bottle'that can be covered 'tightly and it will keep for months: yes, a year or more.
dries down hard or thick, soak it
with
Novelties In Perfnmea.
To"the making of scents there is no end. Mr. Piesse, of the Bond street laboratory, told.me that he introduces about four new scents every year. White lilac and crab apple WosSOtn are in season just now. But theuse bfscent, owing tothe introduction of-sprays and the like, increased every year,. A curious novelty is apiece of flannel or thin leather saturated with an odor called Peau d'Espagnjp. It is sewed into a womrn's dress and lasts for along time. In it ia almost permanent. Or asmall piece of it is also used
Teaeh the Children to Save. Twich the children to give away from their own pennies, and not come to papa's pocket every Sunday .morning. True gem erc«ity can. easily begin then, Stimulate them 0 save by offering to double every dollar eArnod If it goe^ in the bfthk or for some approved purpose.A child enjoys tte freedom e* ever so small an amount, and adding the knowledge that he Jias really earned it makes him feel a hundred fold more manly than he whose wishes are gratified befort theyare spokf^—Good
U,
up
more warm water. A bottle of
this
stuff is very handy during fruit season for pasting labels on fruit cans or jars.
1
In malting sciyip books the slips of paper or piijtui& W|ould be arranged, on the page before fcotnmfencirig*to paste any,'' as they will stick.so quickly and so tightly that it is not easy to make changes.
{)j*
A little experience with this paste "will soon give you a scrap hook that will look much prettier than the ones carrying the marks of flour paste all through the leaves. —Hall's Journal of Health. .1
I-
Parlor Sprinkler.
A novel little artdngemcn tin the way of a, watering pot /or lws» m» 4ft just out. In the place of the usual spout a rubber tube is attached, to t^e can and provided with a glass thotithpieCe. "B pressing tbe hand npon tbe rubbcr tube the plants can be watered itt snch a way tbafc not more than the necessary quantity escape besides this, 110 water is liable to be spilled. After w^ering the plants the mouthpiece «n placed back in the ssatrz Exchange.
Halfateaspoonfal of sugar will nearly *l««y»revivi»aidyLn|? fire^ and, unlike the lew drops otooal oll which servanta are fondof uring and whlch hat# ®o many sad momenta, is perfectly srfe
Soar milk should he fetoored from a tin tresaei as soon as possible, as it is nevar well to permit an acid to remain in a toeta* receiver. For this reason many poop®# to canning fruits in Una.
air Waiter Hfiliig*' found in his wife ail
iwriil' him twrfrayww tnpclaoooCberowaaecocd.
CATARRH
Catarrhal A Xew
Deafness—Hay Fever. Home Treatment,
Sufferers are not generally aware that these diseases are contagions, or that they are due to the presence of living parasites in the Using membrane of the nose and eustachian tubes. Microscopic research, however, has proved this to be a fact, and the result of this discovery Is that a simple remedy has beeu formulated whereby catarrh, catarrhal deafness and hay fever are permanently cured In from one to three simple applications made at home by the patient once in two weeks.
N. B.—This treatment is not a snuff or an ointment: both have been discarded by reputable physicians as injurious. A phamphlet explaining this new treatment Is Bent free on receipt of a stamp to pa^ postage, by A. H. Dixon & Son, 8S7 and 889 West King street, Toronto, Canada.—Chrlatlan Advocate.
Sufferers from Catarrhal troubles should carefully read the above. & ^5
The Old Made Young.
Dr. Brown-Sequard's elixir of youth may bo an importont discovery, but everyone knows that Dr. Franklin Miles' New Heart Cure certainly is. It has given thousands afflicted with serious heart disease anew lease of life. Druggists who can observe its effects on many customers everywhere speak very highly of It. Mr. John "Weaver, of Knights town, Ind,, says: "I have sold much of Dr. Miles' New Cure and have received many good reports. I sold some to one of the lead lng Masonic state officers and it did him a great deal of good.'' Sold and guaranted by J. &• C. iiaur. (6)
Specimen Cases.
S. H. Clifford, New Cassel, Wis., was troubled with Neuralgia and Rheumatism, his stomach was disordered, his Liver was aftected to an alarming degree, his appetite fell away, and he wa terribly reduced in flesh and strength. Three bottles of Electrio Bitters cured him.
Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, III., had a running sore on his leg of eight ears' standing. Used three oottles of
Hectric Bitters and seven boxes of Buck len's Arnioa Salve, and his leg is sound and well. John Speaker, Catawba, O., had five large fever sores on his leg, doctors said he was incuiable. One hot tie Electrio Bitters and one box Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured him entirely. Sold by J. «k C. Baur's drug store. 3
Ask Tour Friends About It, Your distressing cough can be cured. vVe know it because Kemp's Balsam within the past few years has cured so many coughs and colds in this community. Its remarkable dale has been won entirely by its genuine merit. Ask Bome friend who has used it what he thinks of Kemp's Balsam. There is no medicine so pure, none
PO
effective. Large^bottles
50c and $1 at all druggists'. Sample bottle free.
Bueklen's Arnica Salve,
The Best Salve in theworld for Outa,Brulsesi Sores. Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Bores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Qorns, and all skin eruptions, and positively cures Piles,
It is guaranteed to glv* '»d. 260. E. Cor.
(Ut OJWiU Vi Uj/WVUSl f»J
or no pay required, perfect, satisfaction, or money refunded, box. For 8«.le by J. fc"C. Baur, b. venth and Wabash Avenue.^. ,14
To Cure Kidney Troubles iv
comptVTOtecl*caies. °Price "80c, ancT_ Pamphlet Free. Binghampton, N. Y. Sold, recommended aud guaranteed by J. & C. Baur.
WhoValm a Refined Complwloti
MUST USE
POZZONI'S
MEDICATED
COMPLEXION
POWDER.
.t (t if
•hhh
,i
I
It Impart* brtUlaat tranapareacy to tht •kin. Kmovw nil pl«n»l«a. dlacoloratlona, andmaken ly aofl and bcaittinit. II contnlni •»»«**. white lead or araeale. In three •aaaeai pink or lesh, white nnd brucette. poH SALettY Ul lrititiU ud taq Into Oalen ererjw»t:t
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
~F0!t AU—
HEADACHE
USE HOFFMAN'S HARMLC:? "AOACHE POMOttS. ere a Sixclflfa r«atalnl» aliln
or
HOmMU DRUG CO.
55 RsiffS^ 8s8Ue.fl.Y4 and BHd^Osfc
xal
/SWAMP
ROOTJ& BLABBER CtJRE. Bead Symptoms and Conditions
arfets speetflo will BelieTo tsd Cure.
lfYoa
HTobSS£^!SS3S!&^
HToa Yffl £»2ffifc'S» 2?BSKSS-
... wnm tmB 4iom 9um*
S9BMH IIHIIIW aa
font aoo^
MOORE'S
Thoy ost In tho Blood,
Slightly laxative
Pilules
Absolutely Sure
For Malaria, Chills* A Impure Blood They expel disease germs, and Purify the System Druggists, 4 Dr. C. Moore, 78 Cortland St. N.¥
They Positively Cure.
Uaiversity of Virginia,
CHARLOTTESVILLE. VA ixty.E0TPnth session begins Oct. Ut. Conrsw inl liOitersand Scicnco. Law, Modicinc iuil 1'harmncy.l Civil, Sniillary, Minlic nnd Mechanical Kncmccr inp. l.nlxirutory work in Ch«mi8trT. I'liyolca. Hi-I olosy, Aimiomy. llictology, Patholosy, Moi-h«nics. I IviiKiiwrinc and Axxaviiijf. For catnlo»:nc», «dilr'«(vl as ubovo. Wui. M. Thornton, Chairmau of Faculty. I
FIEST CLASS WOEK.
MADE TO ORDEIV
First-work hand-sewed Tongue Boot. Morocco legs $7 50 All 1" rencn Calf Boots, hand sewed 7 00 Men's Fine Shoes, made to order, pesrged -1 00 Men's Fine Shoes, made to order, sewed 5 50 Men's Fine Boots, made to order, pegged 5 50 Men's Kangaroo Shoes 6 00 Men's lialf-solelng, pegged (to Men's half-solelng and heeling, pegged f!5 Men's half-soleing,8ewed 75 Men's half-solelng and heeling, sewed 1 00 Ladies'shoes half-soled
J.WALTERKELCHNER
nsro. 909,
Cor. 8tn & Chestnut Sis., Terre Haute.
Dr. JORDON,
Thewell known Throat and Lung Physician, of Indianapolis, Ind., No. 11H went Waabington Htreet, Has patients visit hiin from all parts of the* United States for treatment of Catarrh,. Throat and Lung Diseases. Dr. Jordon's* Lung Renovator, the great Lung Blood,Liver' and Kidney Remedy Is sold by all Arsl-class-" druggists throughout the United Stalest Enga, Germany and Canada. lane Germany and Canada^. AVholeaa^ed^--'Wholesaled Cook, Bell & Lowery, Terre Haute, Ind.
JJOTEL GLENHAM, FIFTH AVKNUE, NEW YORK, Bet. 21st and 22d its., near Madison Square,
Hi EUROPEAN PLAN, N. B. BARRY, Proprietor. New and perfect plumbing, according te the latest scientific principles.
DRUNKENNESS
Positively Car «d.
Or the Litaor Habt br Aamlnisterli Golden SpecJflo. lven In a cup Of coffee or te«v. of the person taking less, ana wilt effect a
•laterIna Br. Haines'
It can be given 111 a cup without the Knowledge of the It isabsolutol^harpal cure, whether the paledge and to-day belleyo of their own free will. IT The system once Impregnated with the hps*" lflc, It becomes an utter Impossibility for ths liquor appetite to exist. For sal* by %, JAS. E. SOMES, Druggist, :Cor. 6th and Ohio sts., Terre Haute, Ind.
mate's
lUltiar*
untqnaJud, tnd to introduce our toperlor iroodi w# wiU icndrssa tooas pssiotr In ueb loenlitr^ Mabor*. Oaly
HUM*who
writ*
touial enMMHflMkB nr* of th« ebinp*. All jrou h«r« to do l» ntofitUlO Ib««^ euri good* to thoH who call-your neighbor# «nd tbo«« urouitd jrob. Th« b»«^*usws»sas:
itop*. Tk« followlnc cot girt* th« mip.nri.iice of It reductdjo
ot tb« flfllttb part of It* biilk.lt la a ilbUWls'tlt* t«l»Mlannu i« «»r to eirry. W» will alio .how you ^ir^Sia to lOaday aU-ut, from «b. .Urt.wftb-rott.how •tpmlwea. B#tt»r writ* at onw.W»pa*»ll atprtM ebargM.
H. UALLKTT CO., Box S SO, rOaTLAKO, HAlMtU
To euro'Blllousncsfli 8ic|i llcadacliOj Conati- .. pation, Malaria, Liver Comolaintu, tako tho safo and ccrtnin remedy,
SMITH'S
BILE BEANS
Use the IMIAIX fH*o40liltlo Bennii l^ tho bottle). THKV AKB TtlK COMVBKIBKT.. Snit«bl« tor oil Ago*. Price Of either alae, 25f. per
vie6|He i4T.70»
1%IW I Im ISf«r
Tar«
•oUftl'Mtti. I
Ml It
Uj trmWa «r bj
nijl.
IPTtBEM Tilr.
*1
J.F.SMITH A CO.Maternof"Rli.lv BSaXB. St.llUIS MB.
ROUTS
EXPRESS mi«S DULY
MOM
d*-«.
CHICAGO
WHENCE OTOBCT OOWIfECTIOIfi Is mads to all points EAST, WEST^i NQRTHWE8'
AA te iJi (Mag# ImIm fflhrfi«. 1
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