Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 25, Number 12, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 September 1894 — Page 1

Vol. 25.—No. 12

ON THE QUI VIVE.

Poor old Indianapolis! Tbe center of the uni verse(in her mind) will have to go into mourning. Her questionable

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will now have to take aback seat, and Terre Haute, our ownest own, still bears tbe proud title of being the only 2:0l£ city on earth. We sympathize with the poor old town, located midway between "Jo Davis" and Brigbtwood, but she can't help it. She is naturally slow, and the boom that was given her on acoouut of her 2:02£ record was but fleeting.

An impromptu meeting of Terre Haute traveling men was held in the grand stand after Robert J.'a wonderful heat yesterday, and it was unanimously resolved that hereafter all Terre Haute traveling men iu registering should sign themselves as from "Terre Haute, 2:0134."

One of the sensations of the week was the announcement that one of the officers of the A. P. A. lodge here bxd furuiabed a list of the members of that society to "Colonel" Thos. W. Harper, who had the list copied for distribution among a coterie of friends. It is no secret that the friends of Secretary Arnold, of tbe B. L. F, through the B. L. F. attorney, Col. Harper, secured affidavits here to use against Arnold's opponent, McElroy B. Glenn, to tbe effect that Glenn is a member of the A. P. A. The list of members which Col. Harper is said to have secured was placed in the hands of the Democratic campaign committee, to be used a Democratic campaign document, the charge being made that all of the Republican county candidates were members of the organization that is so offensive to the Catholics. There was a great deal of talk immediately after the announcement that a list bad been secured, but for some unexplained reason it has died out, and the most persistent inquiry fails to disclose the whereabouts of such a list. It is said the Democratic managers— not the people who pose as such, but the real managers, are trying to create tbe impression that the list never had an existence, that it was simply one of Col. Harper's little practical jokes in which be likes to indulge between court terms.

Q. V. talked with a lawyer the other day about the legal aspect of the city attorney fight, and he expressed the somewhat surprising opinion that as far as the law goes, Peter M. Foley is still city attorney, and entitled to the emoluments of tbe office. He said, "You will find that this feature will develop in tbe case, and for this reason: To get rid of Mr. Foley the council abolished the office of city attorney, and then at the same meeting re-created it, and elected Mr. Piety to fill it, and right there is the rub. The office of city attorney is a statutory one and the city conncil can no more abolish it than they oan abolish capital punishment. The only way they could legally get rid of Mr. Foley would have been to deolare his office vacant. Without doing this, however, they 'abolished' an office they bad no right to abolish, created one tbey had no power to create, and then elected a man to 611 it. The result is that Mr. Foley has never legally been removed, nor has his term expired, for his successor has not been legally elected and qualified, and if Mr. Foley wanted to fight it out on this line—which I understand he doesn't—he could win on it in the higher court." This was another side of the muchly-muddled city attorney business that Q. V. hadn't run across before, and it remains to be seen whether it will be set out in the trial.

Senator Voorhees has borrowed a meat axe with which he will open the Democratic campaign here next Saturday night. Col. Nelson has the Republican campaign so wide open up in Vermillion county that you can run a snow plough through it, and before election day there ought to be a joint discussion between these champions. For Chester fieldian precision and grace, veiled sarcasms of tbe biting Kind, and a general good time these political enemies but personal friend*, could be relied upon. Why not have a joint debate,

The K. P.'s have oflered many reasons for their failing to get first prize at Washington recently, but the real reason was told Q. V. recently by one of the drill team, tinder the strictest secrecy. It seems that Frank Ball, tbe well-known undertaker, is a great believer in signs, omens, etc., and to bring good luok to the team, he secured tbe left bind foot of a rabbit, captured in a graveyard at the dead hour of night, which he had fastened in tbe helmet he Intended to wear in the drill. It was thought that nothing on earth could beat Terre Haute out of first prize with such a mascot. And according toQ. V.'s informant it probably would have landed the prize, but for—but that's another story. It seems that the first practice drill the boys had after they landed in Washington was so utterly bad that even the files left in disgust. Everybody was discouraged when camp was reached, and it sttuck the own(r of the rabbit foot that it must be a jonah rather than a mascot. He tore It from his helmet, where it was suspended, and calling attention it be threw it high in the air, and over several

do up meat iu preparing it for cooking.

rows of tents "You'd hardly believe it," said my Informant, "but that rabbit foot disappeared in the air as completely as ever the Flying Dutchman disappeared. Many of the boys kicked at losing the rabbit foot, and tried to find it. They searched over every foot of ground where it could have fallen, but without success—the rabbit foot had gone, vanished mysteriously into space-, And this," added Q. V.'s informant," is the reason Terre Haute didn't gat a better place at the Washington drill. She gave a nice drill, but didn't have auy luckthrew it away with the rabbit foot.''

THE GREAT RACE MEETING.

AU I'reriotH KevwnlH Broken at This Week** Moetiutc. The happiest lot of men in the country to-day are tbe officers and directors of the Terte Haute Trotting Association, whose meeting this week has broken all racing records. Tbe attendance has not been what it should, but the shortage in funds is more than atoned tor by the new records made for the peerless traob. Here is tbe list of this week's record breaking:

The fastest mile ever gone by a horse iu harness, Robert 2:01 )4

The mile of Alix in 2:04 The world's record for 4 year old ill lies made by Fantasy in 2:06

The fastest 6 heat race ever gone by a 3 year old, Expressive's great race of Thursday.

Whirligig's 3 year old pacing record of 2:10, The stallion pacing record 61 2:06% by John Gentry, and the stallion record of 2:04 by Joe Patchen.

The marvelous mile by a 2 year old pacer, Carbonate, in 2 09, and his previous record of 2:10 tied by Directly.

LOCAL AND STATE POLITICS.

The Hon. Thomas H. Nelson will speak at Clay City, Sept. 17th. Congressman Brookshire is at home in Crawfordsville getting ready for his canvass.

The Parke County Democrats have endorsed the Populist candidates for representative and auditor and the Prohibition candidates for sheriff and coroner.

The report from Washington is that John E. Lamb has prevailed upon Senator Voorhees to defy the physicians and enter the campaign and that he will deliver a speech here Sept. 20th.

In the Third and Eighth wards of this city tbe number of voting precincts has been increased from three to four, the change being due to the increase of the number of voters to a precinct to more than 250 the maximum number under the law.

Senator Turpie told an Indianapolis reporter that he did not know that Democratic prospects were "dark?' and said the party had just as good chance as ever to carry the state. The senator may not be fully informed as to political matters but it must be remembered that he can speak seven languages.

PROVERB8.

It is tbe bad advice that won't keep. Education supplies intellect with wings.

The devil kneels when a hypocrite prays. Toleration is a pretty good creed in itself.

Only Bublime courage can face invisible danger. The man that thinks for himself thinks for many.

The man that knows it all has everything to learn. The live merchant hurrahs loudest in hard times.

Pretty faces are apt to be masks for vacant minds. Our market value is fixed by tbe estimate of others.

O fashion, how many suicides are committed in thy name! There is more genuine sentment in 1 cent than in 100 songs.

Foolish women find that many stings go with the wasp's waist. To a just cause a com promise Is more damaging than a defeat.

Tt is only in tbe fable that the tortoise always outruns the bare.

MISPLACED MODESTY. A short time ago a young lady wes troubled with a boil on her knee, which grew so bad that she thought it necessary to call in a physician. She had formed a dislike for tbe family physician, so her father suggested several others, and finally said that he would call in a pbysioian with the homeopathic case, who passed the house every day. They kept a sharp lookout for him, and when be came along he was called In. The young lady modestly showed him tbe disabled member. The little man looked at it and said: "Why, that's pretty bad." "Well," she said, "what must 1 dot" "If I were you," he answered, "I would send for a physician. I am a piano tuner."—[Louisville Courier Journal.]

Last month 150,525 persons patronized the pnblio baths in Philadelphia.

in'uw "uiuivai, OUU MM iiitlU

who has $50,000,000 wants the earth."

PEOPLE AND THINGS.

Car fare i«atf cents in Chemnitz Garmany. A banana peel on a sidewalk Is a sign of an early fall.

Durham, N. O, turns out $30),000,000 oigarettea a year. A 17-months old Philadelphia bftby weighs 70 pounds. jgk

A rare copy of "OlWetTwlsC" recently sold for $90 in London. Men living without women, by themselves, become savage and sinful.

The oldest guide at Niagara Falls de dares that women are moie couragfl^Ui than mem

ra

There is scarcely a hamlet iri'Hfwtb Africa not now connected viith the Jam and telegraph.

Milkmen look hopefully foi wprd, to better times. A ohalk deposit has been d'scovered in Iowa.

Some Chinese and many Africans use the ear as a pocket to carry coins and other small a .t'.clei. 7

The Queen of Slam has the"smftllest foot of any titled person iu the world. She wears VA In boots.

It is said that Ru,dy»rd Kipliog ^ro posed to six giris before he found pue who would accept him.

Australia has more places of public worship in proportion to population than any other country.

There are 3,000,000,000 cigarettes nie ie in this^ountry in a year, but ho *eti:d is kept of the deaths from tbelr»u8e.

The baliet g!rls have formed a union, and the first thing they will kick against, it is said, will be thebald-hejfled ro^

An Atchison county (Kansas) sew'lrg society has saved $300 from its earnings, and has built a church with the money.

Punctuation was first used in literature in the year 1520. Beforethatjime wordsandsenjenceswereputtogether like this.. -Ij

A Chinaman refers to his wife as jthe "thorn in my ribs" and a Chinese 8|ldior receives one dollar a month *tnd finds his own rations.

A band having many lines crossing and recrossing in different directions shows a nervous temperament, much disturbed by anxieties.

A horse fell dead while Coxey was Iradressing a gathering of Coxeyites at Alliance, Ohio, this week. The' horge was hitched and could not get away

Burton C. Cook, who had the hon^ of nominating Abraham Lincoln for -the presidency the first time, at the Chicago convention in 1860, died last week in Evanston, 111.

Tbe following advertisement appeared recently in a Chicago paper: "For sale, a bull terrier dog two years old. ^ill eat janything very fond Apply at this offloe."

TERRE HAUTE, IND., SATURDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 15,1894.

of en.

The Olympian games are to be! revived in their o)d home—Greece—in 1886. A site in Athens is to he chosen for the athletic displays, while nautioal spArts will be carried on at the Piraeus.

A lad of fifteen years has been before aNew York police court, oharged with stabbing his father, beating nis mother and sister and deserting when atfjUi?* prentice from the sohoolship Rlcbmpd.

Six members of the notorious Bifat# rino band of brigands, which has Veen guilty of atrocious oruelty in Siolly, were caught napping by an equal numblr of peasants, whom they had robbed^hnd shot down. $

Since 1873, six Japanese young jben have been graduated from the Utroed States naval academy at Annapolis. Md. They are all members of families ox the nobility, and were permlujld to enter tbe academy at the request of their government whioh paid their expenses. Several other Japanese young men Jjiave studied at the academy without hating completed the course,

It is a remarkable tidt that tbe derpest parts of the sea are In all oases very hear tbe land. The deepest sounding known, 4,065 fathoms, or 27,980 feet, was obtained 110 miles from thd Kurlle Islands the next deepest, 4,581 fathoms, was found 70 miles north of Porto ftloo. With a few exceptions like tbe&$ the depth of the oceans as far as now ktiown does not reach 4,000 fathoms, or foi|r sea miles. The North Pacific has a |iean depth of 2,500 fathoms, tbe South Psolfle of 2,400, the India A Ocean of 2,0001 and the Atlantic, by far roe best Investigated ocean, has a mean depth of |3,200 fathoms.

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Here's a sample of a wedding ttbtlce ten years hence, as foreseen bff tbe Atchison Globe: "The bride lookedWry well In a traveling dress, but ail efea were centered on the groom. Etajwlre a dark suit that fitted perfectly kin manly form, a large bouquet dectfradad his coat lapel and in his daintily gffcw jd band he carried a bouquet of AmgjrUnn beauties. His hair was cut and a delicate odor of babs(a oil floated down tbe aisle is parsed. The young people wUt mist hi now that be la married, He is lov^d all for his many accomplishment#, h| lender graoes and his winning way The bride commands a good salary

•uo yiwjcut unvtti prugrUiuixie iu United States Is $550.

book-keeper in Mt, Joseph and tbe groom will mlsa none of the luxuries to which he bad been accustomed. A crowd of pretty young men saw tbem off at tbe depot."

ABOUT WOMEN. J?

Mr. and Mrs. George J. Gould and family, according to tbe latest advices, expect to return to New York early in Ootober.

Di\ Margaret Abigail Cleaves, of New York, is the second woman in the world to occupy the position of physician in a publio Insane anylam«p|

Olga France* Mary HardincoUft, superintendent of the Tiffany Glass asld Decorating oompany, is a French woman, eduoatod in an Austrian convent.

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The widow of Senator Hearst, of Callfornia, is said to be tbe most heavily insured woman in this country. She has policies amounting to $300,000 on her life.

The Lady Margaret Grosvenor, whose engagement is announced to tbe young Prince of Teck, a brother of tbe Duohess of York, is a daughter of the richest Duke in England.

Joe Jeflerson's niece, Miss Josephine Jefferson, has recently b« come engaged to C. J. Rolfe, son of Dr. W.

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Rolfe, the

Shakespearean editor, of Cambridge. Mr. Rolfe is at present a guest of the Jeffersons at Buzzard's Bay.

Mrs. Amelia Bloomer has lived to see tbe triumph of the sensible dress she devised and wore foiiy years ago. All that wrs needed tocon\lnce tbe world was a pretty girl on a bicycle built for one and a fashionable send-off in Paris.

Tbe earliest known photograph of Sarah Bernhardt was t^ken in 1867, when she was playing at the OJeon. Her dress had a crinoline, and ber fere is innocent and cbildis'h. Since then one photographer alone has taken her in 1,007 different attitudes.

Mrs. Mary E. Harrie, pf Roxbuiy, Mass., has had for thirty years the hobby of collecting buttons, until now her oolleotion numbers 12,000 ditferentkinds.

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hirty years ago she made a wager that were more than 999 different kinds of buttons she reached the thousand mark inside of a year, but onoe started in the fascination of "collecting" her pursuit was kept up.

Mile. Rosa. Bonneur is -no longer the Only woman astlati^ho wears the cross of the Legion of Honor. Mine. Virginia Demont-Breton, the daughter of Jnles Breton and the wife of an artist named Adrien Demont, has for the last dozen years exhibitad a successful series of marine piotures in the salon, and finally has received the cross. She is a little woman who usually works on very big can?i$iies. 1*116 young Duke of Marlborough has recertify paid a visit to Danesfield, France^ And gossip is rife in London and Paris *9 to the possibility of a marriage being arrange between him and the eldest Miss Vanderbilt, daughter of the Vanderbilts who have had a row, who Is now a very pretty girl of nearly eighteen. It is well known that the Duke will not be able to keep up Blenheim unless his present income is very largely inoreased by marriage or otherwise. It had been ^intended, to introduce Miss Vanderbilt Into sooiety daring the oomlng winter in either London or Paris, but whether or aofciibere is a reconciliation it is very prohftbte that Mrs. Vanderbilt will shoar$)y return to A merica.

A tEW FACTS AND FIGURES.

There are 9,000,000 foreign-born people in the United States. '4 By the oeususof 1890 the population of Indiana was 2,192,404.

China has but 200 mllds of railway. The United States has 176,461. The annual taxes of the world aggregate the enormous sum of 14,850,000,000.

The tax collectors at Indianapolis say that there are but three millionaires in that city—Allen M. Fletcher, W. H, English and E. F. Claypool.

Last year the money loss by fire In this country was $167,000,000, against 9151,000,000 in th« year preceding. The total number of fires was 86,188, against 29,882 in 1892, an increase of 5,856. The total loss to insurance companies in 1893 was 1105,994,577.

Fastest trips across the ocean: Campania, eastward, five days, ten hours and forty-seven minutes, last week. The same weak her sister ship, the Lucania, arrived la New Yg£ making the record for westbound in five days, eight hours and twenty-five minutes.

The municipal receipts of Indianapolis for tbe year ending August 31st, were $2,069,800,97. Of this $574,028.04 were from taxes, $116,365 from liquor license, $28,411 from vehicle license, $4,855 from huckster license, $9,000 from Brewer's lloense, $5,105 from dog license, $16,642,96 from market leases, $2,659.90 from rent of Tomlinson hall, $5,642.50 from revenue of the electric light company, and $260,000 from temporary loans.

Oorbett appeared in a revised version of "Gentleman Jack," this week, in New York.

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Deino A Co. o«pt No. 6, Columbus

NEWS OF THE CITY.

Kinser A Sons, the Ninth street contractors, have gone to lyork on that thoroughfare.

Mrs. Bridget O'Donnell, relict of tbe late John O'Donnell, died at her home, 115 Elm street, Thursday, aged sixty-one years. She wss tbe mother of nine children, all of whom survive her.

Mrs. Caroline Born, wife of John Born, died at ber home at Ninth and College, Wednesday evening, after suffering a long time with cancer. She wes a native of Germany, and had been a resident of this city for tweuty-two years. Her husband and three children survive her.

At tbe Northwest Indiana M. E. conference, at Lafayette this week, Re*". S. V. Leech was continued at Centenary, Rev. W. H. Hickman, at Asbury, while Rev. J. S. Hoaglaud was placed in charge of the Maple avenue chureb, Rev. F. W. Gee, of Mattox obapel, and Rev. C. B. Stanforth of Montrose*

Mrs. Emma G. Bell has been granted a divorce from James W. Bell, formerly deputy city treasurer, and at present assistant to C. R. Peddle, Vandalla purchasingagent, on the ground of desertion and cruel and inhuman treatment. She was given the right to resume ber maiden name, Emma Gaston.

George J. Hammcrstein, for many years connected with the Wabash Iron Co., will open a queensware store in the room recently occupied by H. S. Richardson,'who *akes charge of the crockery department of the Havens fc Geddes Co. A modern front will be put in the building, and tbe stock will be replenished.

The heading factory of the W. H. Coleman Co., at Twelfth and Locust streets, was destroyed by fire Wednesday morning about 4:30 o'clock, causing a loss of $S,0C0, fully covered by insurance. Sonce eighty men and boys were thrown ont of work by the fire. It is not known yet whether the plant will be rebuilt or not.

Francis Fuerstenberger, an old and well known citizen, died Tuesday afternoon, at his home on south Third street. He was sixty-eight years old, and had spent 40 years of

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life In this city, and

during all that time had occupied the one house, 521 south Third, where

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death occurred. Four sons and four daughters sjirvive died four years ago

The Honter Laundering and Dyeing Co.v always in the lead in advertising novelties, has ina^grijtsd a series of missing word contests that is likely to prove popular. In their advertisements in Saturday's Gazette and Sunday's Express a word is omitted, and they offer a prize of $^to the first person sending the rorreot word to their office. Last week's word was not guossed, and this week they offer $10 to the one giving the correct word.

John Heidenreich, an old and highly respected oilisen, died at his home on north Thirteenth street, Tuesday, aged eighty years. He was a native of Ger

faute

any, and had been a resident of Terre since 1857. He was one of the oldest employes of the Vandalia. His wife and five children survive him the children all being residents of this oity, as follows: Edward, John, and Jacob F. Heidenreich, Mrs. Barbara Jerald and Mrs. Charlotte Illing.

The Vigo Agricultural Society will hold its a&nual fair at the fair grounds four days in the first week in October, beginning Tuesday, Ootober 2d. Premiumb and purses amounting to $i,5C0 will be offered, and some extra attractions will be secured. The premium list will be ready shortly. The admission fee this year will be but 25o, with no charge for vehioles, and it is thought by reducing the price that a large attendance can be secured, and thus avoid the defioit that has occurred in former yea*s.

After lingering five days after attempting suicide Mrs. Julia M. Hunt, widow of the late Myron A. Hunt, died last Monday morning, at the family re« Idence, on Fruit Ridge avenue. She was a woman of beautiful character, an earnest and sincere christian, and, until recent misfortunes visited her, her life bad been a happy and contented one. Three daughters, Mrs. W. Robert Paige and Misses Fannie and Sarah Hunt, and two sons, George and Charles Hunt, survive her. Her remains, with those of her husband, will be taken for interment to Sunderland, Mass., their early home,

The new Washington avenue Presbyterian church is to be dedicated to morrow. with impressive ceremonies. Rev. J. R. Rondthaler, of Indianapolis, will preach tbe dedicatory sermon, in the morning, and in the evening there will be a popular platform meeting, in which a number of local speakers will give brief addresses. Rev, Tbos. Parry, formerly of the Central church, and for a short time pastor of the new church, will give an historical sketch. Mrs. Ames, a wellknown EvansvlUe singer, and a double quartette consisting of Mrs. Fouls ton, Mrs. Weatfall, the Misses Weinstein and Messrs. Alder, Cooper, Hazeldine and Aydelotte will furnish the music for th* occasion. ,v-:

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AMUSEMENTS.

MARIE JANSEN.

Marie Jansen, whose appearance is al ways a source of pleasure will be at the opera house on Tuesday evening in her new play "Miss Dynamite." While thepiece is purely a farce comedy it is on» of tbe best of its kind. Tt has a plot that Is easily traceable and much of tb&dialogue Is bright and witty. There is verylittle of the stufied club humor that characterizes so many elaborated farces. Tbe individual who gives the skit her name does not appear upon tbe stBge, but she becomes the means of getting a gay old boy who want* to marry a widow into no end of trouble.. There is a comic French detective who is always looking for anarchists and dynamite and always arresting the wrong persons and throwing everything in tbe form of a package out of tbe window for fear that it contains dynamite. Miss Jansen is vivacious and sprightly as ever, and she has that laugh with her that is peculiarly her own and that needs but to be heard to produce other laughsBut Miss Jensen is not the whole show, for she has surrounded herself with good people. Frederic Bond as the gay uncle and guardian, Charles B. Welles as the artist in love with tbe gay guardian's ward, William Norris as the musiciau*" with chronic inspirations and a bacflbi memory, Soldene Powell as the sporty marquis, Fred W. Peters as the dimenovel deteotive, Charles Mason as an artist who has got himself into anarchistic complications and Hope Ross as the sister of "Georgia Day," Miss Jansen, all have their share in tbe success of the production.

NOTES. J.

Harrigan will bring his "Keilly and the 400" to Chicago next week. Cbaunoey Olcott opened in Boston the other day with a new jgomedy dramam "The Irish Artist.",

Frederick Bond, of the Marie Janseor Co., will be remembered as tbe French count in "Aristocraoyf' last season

Charles Frohman is personally directing the rehearsels of ''The Baublo Shop'^ in which John Drew will appear Sept. 11-

Richard Mansfield will begin the season next week in New York with:* near fanciful oomi dy, •'Arms and the

Hagenbeck's show began an engage*, ment at the Madtaon Squsre Garden thife week at popular prieaa, 10 oents admiwaion. "m*

The Lfflipfftti^ bej|an a%iB» weeks** engagement at.the Fifth Avenue theater, this week, in "Humpty Dumpty up to Date"

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Rice's burlesque, "1492," has been playing to the capacity of the Garden Theater, New York, since the beginning Of the season.

Sir Arthur Sullivan is writing the incidental music intended for Mr. Irvlngfa production of "King Arthur" at the London Lyceum.

Roland Reed's new" play is "The Politician" which is a revised version of "For Congress' in which the late John T. Raymond made a hit.

Tony Pastor has been in Chicago this week. While he is on the road the Boston Howard Athenaeum Company is occupy ing his New York house.

Ella Proctor Otis and Katherihe Grey] will play the leading roles in "New Blood" whioh is to be produced at Pal-| mer's theater, New York, Sept 15

Mauricd Barrymore, Milton LackayeJ Couldook and Holland, are members of| the company which will play nothinf but American dramas at Palmer's, New] York.

DeWolf Hopper made his fifth annual appearance in New York Tuesday night] in "Dr. Syntax," a comic opera which a revised version of "Cinderella at| School."

Mr. and rs. Kendal will arrive in New] York next week. They will begin theii fifth American tour at Hooley's in Chi-j cago, Sept. 17tb, in "The Second MrsJ Thnqueray."

Among the unusual paraphernalia car-J rled with "Shaft No. 2" are several elecH trie motors which are used in producing realistic atmospheric effects in, the third| act of the play. "The New Boy" will have its firsl American hearing in this country at tb New York Standard theater next week, with W. J. Lemoyne and Frederic Robinson in the oast.

A manager of a Milwaukee theater bad sued "Samuel of Posen" Curtis becausel he broke his engagement. Curtis would not play in the theater because the mana-j ger refused to double the price of admls-L slon. I

Hereafter the sale of reserved seats at Naylor's will be held at the store ol the Buntln Drug Co., northeast corner ol Sixth and Main streets. Tbe location ie oentral and convenient, and will meet the wants of the patrons of Naylor's, foi whose pleasure Manager Hayman.. i1 constantly laboring. Jt

Senator Gordon has agreed to delive: bis popular lecture on "The Last Day of the Confederacy" in Pittsburg durin( the G. A. R. encampment. He wil speak under the auspices of the Prea Club of Pitteburg.

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I Special attention given to Hydraulic & Hand Power Elevator Repairs

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