Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 25, Number 12, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 September 1894 — Page 2
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1
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1
PEOPLE THAT LIE.
BAB
m?
GOES DIRECTLY INTO THE HEART OF FALSEHOOD.
Strangely Enough^
is
iH»About
he Flrat Thought
it In a Railroad Train—Feminine
liw of Every Sort—A Hearty Scoring of This Vat tie* of Social Sinn—The Lie of •'Blue Blood"—The Woman Who Claim* She Hug "Alice*tors." [Copyright, 1894.1 Somebody has just said that "Truth is mighty and will prevail." I was in a very good poaitioo for thinking. I waa whizzing through the country, looking out from the car window and wondering if trains would ever go so smoothly that one wouldn't be conscious of their moving. Is truth mighty? Or is a lie mightier? Haven't you seen the lie that was expressed by the curve of the lip? The He that said your gown is unbecoming, the scenery is tiresome, the food is not tit to eat, and everything is disagreeable? This is the lie oftenest used by people who themselves have bad'lnothing, but when once they taste of the good things of life believe that the proper thing to do is to »e«tn to acorn them rather than to appreciate them for, they argue, by doing so it will be believed that they have always been used to much better. This is a particularly -unpleasant lie, but it is one quickly seen through. That is, if you can talk for a few minutes with the person who acts this lie, you will quickly discover ex actly what she is and from what she came.
A VERY FREQUENT LIE.
Another lie met with very often during the summer months, is the lie of blue blood. Some one who, having nothing else to recommend her, begins to tell a story about her ancestors she dilates on their greatness, on their richness, on their superiority to every one «lse, and, without absolutely saying so, she seemsin her heart of hearts to thank heaven that her blood is not exactly like other people's. The teller of this lie forgets that ever present person, the woman with the good memory, who is very quick to tell after the departure of the liar exactly who these ancestors were, of their slight importance, and ho*v, as the family of to-day amounts to so little, it becomes necessary for them to be regarded as is a potato—and the credit for the best to be given to that which is underground.
The liar who tells of her fine clothes which she didn't bring, of her carriages which she thought out of place in the country, of her yacht which was unsuited to the watery nearest, and of her rich friends in every State but the one in which she happens to be, this sort of a liar is common and of everyday life. I She is usually a bore, and nobody accepts her statements for one moment,
except extremely young men or school
I THE FINANCIAL MAONATE. I A very common liar to be met with -usually at the smart summer places is the embryo stock broker. You watch
with
interest how he manages his
•clothes, so that he always looks dashing, I though he seldom has the appearance of gentleman. He spenJ^as little 4r .ey
I as possible, but he manages to be among .people who are geuerous with it and then, he dilates about his investments tells how everything be touches turns to gold, speaks of the magnates of Wall street as if he knew them intimately, 1 and really manages to convince some I people that he is a person of great imI portance. He is ready to take advantage I of any little scheme that will make him g. more conspicuous, and he doesu't hesitate at getting women to chip in to get up an entertainment which he will manage, and afterwards they will read in a society paper about the "Fine breakfast .given by Mr. Swell Dash to a number of ladles at Newport.'' Of course, it never -cost him a cent, but he has all the glory,
I and if these women are angry and cut him, he is enough of a liar to give some other reason for it, and to start an intimacy with those who do not speak to the others.
Someday Mr. Swell Dash will OO VP LIKE A BUBBLP, llbut in the meantime it is surprising to see how many people believe his lies, and bow, oftentimes, some young, pretty, and innocent girl will give her heart to him, her own people believing that he is a young man of great talent. /They hear the tinkling bells, and they pay no attention to anything else.
Another liar prevalent at the rather quiet places is the woman who knows It all.
She
is as superficial as possible,
ttbe always reminds meof what is known as French Jewelry, which never deceives an expert when it is worn, but is really quite attractive when seen in a shop window. The last new book that came out has been judged by her that is, she has read some of the reviews, and she quotes them.
SHE WRITES TO SENATORS
asking for their speeches, and ignorant 1 people who see the franked envelope be flieve that she is a woman of great importance politically, and think that these men write to her for assistance in formulating their ideas. She knows laomethlng about medicine—at least she {claims to—and she does not hesitate to I give her opinion as to people's 111 health,
Ifor she seldom says anything if one is well, but seetns to take positive pleaaure in making those who are ill feel worse. She is a very bad combination that of a liar and a bore. An intelligent woman can read her in half an hour, but it is extremely curious to see how many people accept her brass as real gold.
Another type of liar is THE HISTRIONIC ONE.
I
She is most interesting, and seldom does anybody any harm. Her dramatic in stinct is so stroogly developed in her
that, rather than be unable to tell something dramatic, the will iuvent a situation. Curiously enough, after she has told of this situation several times, she begins to believe it, and one is tempted to wouder If, as her lie hurts uo one, after all there is any harm In It. The moral hartu everybody understands, but it seems to do no harm to the general public, and ao it is often forgiven. The walk that seems simple to you or me. the drive or the boating that was without incident, are described by her as full of the most melo dramatic situation*, and you, who were with her, think that you must have gone to sleep a
id not known of it because you didn't seea!l these wonderful things. The complimentary liar is at least comfortable, but a little bit like a continual diet of sweets. According to her everything you wear is beautiful, the ugliest girl is a Venus, the worstbehaved child is a genius, and, indeed, whatever anybody does becomes perfect. She is a little suggestive, is this liar, of xkim milk, which, when it does turn sour, Is very, very acid. But, after all, truth prevails even over these people,
for
there are always some who can read them like open books. Yet the people who find them out are not the ones to suffer from them. Sometimes I wonder how it begins. How women deliberately lose their own dignity, throw away all sense of morality for the sake of seeming what they are not. There is so much good in everybody that it seems a shame that it should not be brought out, instead of their appearing before the world with a mask of falsehood continually worn over their real faces.
THIS DOESN'T GO.
Oue kind of lie is invariably fcund out, that is, the lie which claims the acquaintance of celebrities, or the possession of great luxury, for the world is a very little one, and in time the people always meet who can say, "That is not true they are not acquainted and they do not roll in wealth, or ride in chaises." This claiming to have more than really belongs tone always seems to me such a mean kind of lie. Somebody once said, "We can judge God's opinion of wealth when we see the sort of people He gives it to." Then, why should people boast of riches? Respectable poverty is honorable, and it is what we do, and not what we have, that counts in this world, and in the next, too. To sit in calico and dilate of silks that are home to hirearowboat and tell of the glory of a steam yacht lent to a friend to go on foot and give glowing accounts of horses that are resting—these are lies chat even a child does not swallow, and which makes the teller seem silly and •itamp her as that frightful combination of 'ool aud a liar.
MASCULINE LIES
When men lie I think they tell more dangerous ones than women do. They •eem to have less fear and to be more willing to take upon themselves the re ponsibility of great sins. The young ones indulgejin lies of braggadocio, the eWer ones, as they fancy, in lies that would seem to advance them, or in those that are told purely from malice*
Long ago it was said that all men were liars but I don't quite believe this. I think there are men end women who would not soil their lips with a lie of any kind, who would despise themselves if, 'or some petty reason, they said what was not true, and who yet do not force upon you the disagreeable truth. Sometiires it is wise to be careful and not tell too much of the truth, but to learn to keep quiet and guard the lips.
THE TRUTH CAN HURT.
But there is a wide difference to be made between the person who deliberately lies and the one who hurts you or me, or somebody else, by forcing upon us some unhappy truth Jwbich we need not know. Silence is a wonderful weapon. There IB nothing to equal It. No words are as powerful iu expressit% either approbation or blame, and one always can keep quiet—even if one is a woman.
The cars have stopped. The announcement is made that we are at home, and tny thought after all seems to have summed itaelt up in the keen apprecia tion of the value of silence. Surely if it Is hard to cultivate, it is a great virtue to possess. BAB.
Pretty Table Manner*.
It is good form to break off morsels of bread, toast, biscuits and cafeo. It is vulgar to bite into a slice. It is good form to train the left hand to use the fork. A gentleman does not lay down his knife and take tho fork in his right hand when the course consists of meat and a salad. It Is good form to eat slowly and quietly. Only vulgar people are noisy. It is good form to sit erect, to keep the arms off the table, to look pleasant and to keep room in tho mouth for a laugh. People who eat like cattle should bo Induced to take meals in sheds or vacant lots. Babies and men and women in their second childhood oun be excused for slobboring at table.
What Goes With What.
Some cooks never know just what to serve with different moats as relish. Following is a table of things considered tho proper capor: With roast beef, grated horse radish roast mutton, currant jelly boiled mutton, capcr sauoe roast pork, apple sauce boiled chicken, bread sauce roast lamb, mint sauce roast turkey, oyster gauce venison or wild duck, black cur rant jelly, broiled fresh mackerel, sauce of stewed gooseberries boiled blueflsb, white cream sauce broiled shad, boiled rice and salad compote of pigeons, mushroom sauce fresh salmon, green peas with cream sauce roast goose, apple sauce.
Important Fact*.
If you havo dull and heavy pain across forehead and about the eyes if the noa trtlsare frequently stopped upandfol lowed by a disagreeable discharge if soreness !n tho nose and bleeding from trie nostrils is often experienced if you are very sensitive to cold in the head acCompanied with headache then you may be sure vou have catarrh and should (immediately) resort to Ely's Ore Am Balm for a cure. The remedy will give instant relief.
THE BIRDS HAVE TOLD,
The birds, my love, have heard lt{ They sang it out today— The joy we thought a *fcret
And meant to keep alway.
The roses blushed In hearing, It was so sweet a song. And breathed out all their fragrance
To waft the sound along.
The noisy brook went babbling This song the livelong day. Through shadow and through sunshine,
Afar on winding way.
Tho trees bent low to listen Through all their leafy shade, sdThen far they fluug the music ggj On winds the boughs had made.
In earth and air and heaven, And In my own glad heart This rapturous strain is ringing—
AVe two shall never part. —Mae D. Frazer in Now York Ledger.
THE LONE COKYET.
"Poor Ted! Poor Tedl I'd give my commission to see him again." Captain Richard Debney of the British navy, commander of the man-of-war Cormorant, was entertaining some friends in tho harbor oi San Francisco, antl tho talk turned upon Ted Debney, his brother, who had resigned from tho navy several years before because he had chivalrously prevented a French cruller from boring holes In a wretched opium smuggling craft. Tod was impulsive, brave, daring and loved aliko by his superiors and his men. "Have you ever got on the track of Ted?" "Once I thought I had at Singapore, but nothing came of it. No doubt he changed his name. He nover askod for, nor got, tho legacy which my poor father left him."
An hour later they were aboard the Cormorant diniug with a nurobor of men askod to oorne and say goodby to Mostyn, who was starting for Englaud the second day following, after a pleasant cruise and visit with Debney
1
Meanwhile, from far beyond that yellow lane of light running out from Golden Gate there came a vessel, sailing straight for harbor. She was a large, old fashioned cruiser, carrying guns, and when she passed anothe" vessel she hoisted tho British ensign. She looked like a half obsolete corvot, spruced up, mado modern by every possible device, and all her appointments were shapely and in order, She was clearly a British man-of-war, as shown in her trim ilrcpsed sailors, her good handful of marines, but her second and third lieutenants seemed little like Englishmen, and Indeed one w« an American and one was a Hollander. There were gun drill and cutlass drill every day, and, what was also singular, there was boat drill twioo a day, so that the crew of this man-of-war, as they saw Golden Gate ahead of them, were perhaps more export at boat drill than any boat that sailed. They could lower and raise a boat with wonderful expertness in a bad sea, and they rowed with clocklike precision and machinelike force.
Their general discipline did credit to the British navy. But they were not given to understand that by their commander, Captain Shewell, who had an eye like a spot of steel and a tongue like aloes or honey as the mood was on him.
This was most noticeable when he was shut away from the others in his cabin. Then his wl ole body seemed to change. The eye became softer and yet full of a sort of geni-J deviltry, the body had a careless alertness and elasticity, the whole rrmn had the athletic grace of a wild animal, and his face had a hearty sort of humor which the slightly lifting lip in its bizarre disd^n could not greatly modify. He certainly seemed well- pleased with himself, and more than once, as he sat alone, he laughed outright, and once he said aloud, as his fingers ran up and down a schedule—not a man-of-viar's schedule —laughing softly: '•Poor old Farquhar, if he could see me now!" Then to himself: "Well, as I told him, I was violently tossed like a ball into the large country, and I've had a lot of adventure and sport. But here's something more—the biggest game ever played between nations by a private person—with $500,000 as the end thereof, if all goes well with my lone corvetl"
The next evening, just before dusk, after having idled about out of sight of the.signal station nearly all day, Captain Shewell entered Golden Gate with the Hornet of no squadron. But the officers at the signal station did not know that and simply telegraphed to the harbor in reply to the signals from the corvet that a British man-of-war was arriving. She came leisurely up the bay, with Captain Shewell on the bridge. He gave a low whistle as he saw the Cormorant in the distance. He knew the harbor well, and he saw that tho Cormorant bad gone to a new anchoragc, not the same as British men-of-war took formerly. Ho drew away to the old anchorage. He need not be supposed to know that a change was expected. Besides, and this was important to Captain Shewell, the old anchorngo was nearer the docks, and it was clear, save for one little lifeboat and a schooner which was making out as he came up.
As he came to anchor the Cormorant saluted her, and she replied instantly. Customs officers who were watching tho craft from tho shore or from their boats gave up hope of any excitement when they saw and heard tho salutes. But two went out to the Hornet, were received graciously by Captain Shewell, who, over a glu«R of wine in his cabin—appropriately hung with pictures of Nelson and Collingwood— said that he was proceeding to Alaska to rescuo a crev shipwrecked on an island, and that he was leaving tho next day as aoon as he could get some coal, though he feared it would be difficult coaling up that night. Still, ho did not need a great deal, ho said—which was indeed the case—but, ho did need some, and he knew that for his own safety and the Hornet's he must have it. After this, with cheerful compliments and the perfunctory declaration on his part that there was nothing dutlablo on board.the officers left him, greatly pleased with his courtesy, saluted as they left the ship's sldo by the marines and sailors standing at the gangway. The offioers did not notice that one of these sailors winked an eye at another, aud that both then grinned and were promptly or: dered aft by tbo second lieutenant.
As soon as it was very dark two or three boats pushed out from tho Hornet and rowed swlftlv to shore, -passing' a customs boat as they went, which was saluted by tho officers in command. After tills, boats kept passing back and forth for a long time between the Hornet and the shore, which was natural, seeing that a first night In port is a sort of holiday for officers and men. If these sailors had been watched closely, however, it would have been seen that they visited but few saloons on shore and drnnk little, and then evidently as a blind. Close watching would also have discovered the fact that there were a few people on shore who were glnd to see the safe arrival of tho Hornet, and
Who about 1 o'clock }L.
I.,IJ
morning, al
most feu on the neck of Captain Shewell as they bade him goodby. Then for the rest of the night coal was carried out to tho Hornet in boats instead of her coming to dock to load.
By daybreak hercoal was aboard cleaning up then came, and preparations to depart. Captain Shewell's eye was now much on tho Cormorant. He had escaped one danger—he had landed $500,000 worth of opium in the night, under the very noso of the law, and whil^ customs boats were patrolling the bay, but there was another danger—the inqulsitiveness of the Cormorant. It was etiquette for him to call upon the captain of the Cormorant, end he ought to have done so the eyening before, but he dared not run the risk, nor could he run it this morning. And yet if the Cormorant discovered that the Hornet was not a British man-of-war, but a bold and splendid imposture, made possible by a daring cx-officer of the British navy, she might open fire, and be could make but a sorry fight, for he was equipped for show rather than for deadly action. He had get this ex-British mqn-of-war two years before, purchased in Brazil by two adventurous spirits in San Francisco, had eoleoted his crow carefully, many of them deserters from tho British navy, drilled them, and at last made this bold venture under the teeth of a fortress, and at the mouth of a warshipja guns.
Just as he was lifting anchor to got away he saw a ^oat shoot out from tho side of tho Cormorant. Captain Debney, indignant at the lack of etiquetto and a little suspicious also—for there was no Hornet in tho Pacific squadron, though there was a Hornet, ho knew, In the China squadron—was coming to see tho discourteous oommandor. He was received according to cust*n and was greeted at once by Captain Showell. As the eyes of the two men mot both started, but Captain Debney most. Ho turned white and put his hand to tho boatside to steady himself. But Captain Shewell hold tho hand that had been put out, shook it, pressed it. He tried to press Captain Debney forward, but tho other drew back to the gangway. "Pull.yourself together, Dick, or there will bo a mess," said Shewell softly. "My God, how could you do It!" replied his brother, aghast.
Meanwhile the anohor had been raised and the Hornet was moving toward the harbor mouth. "You have ruined us both," said Richard Debney. "Noither, Dickl I'll save your bacon." Ho mado a sign, tho gangway was closed, he gave tho word for full steam ahead, and the Hornet began to race through the water before Captain Debney guessed his purposes. "What do you mean to do?" he asked sternly as he saw his gig falling astern. "To make it hard for you to blow me to pleccs: You've got to do it, of course, If you ciin,'but I must get a start." "How far do you intend taking me?" "As far as the Farilone3 perhaps."
Richard Debney's face had a sick look. "Take me to your cabin," he whispered. What was said behind the closed door no man In this world knows, and it is as well not to listen too closely to those who part, knowing that they will never meet again. They had been children in the one mother's arms. There was nothing in common between them now except the old love.
Nearlng' the Farilones Captain Debney was put off in an open boat. Standing there alone, he was once more a naval officer, and he called out sternly, ''Sir, I hope to sink you and your smuggling craft within four and twenty hours!"
Captain Shewell spoke no word, but saluted slowly, deliberately, and watched his brother's boat recede till it was a speck upon the sea as it moved toward Golden Gate. "Good old Dick!" he said at last as he turned, away toward the bridge, ''and he'll do it if he can.".
But he never did, for as the Cormorant cleared the harbdr that evening there came an accident to her machinery, and with two dnys' start the Hornet was on her way to bo sold again to a South American republic.
And Edward Debney, onoe her captain? What does it matter? His mother believes him dead. Let us do the same.—Gilbert Parker in Westminster Budget
When money Was Hidden.
It must have beon difficult in the middle ages for a man of limited means to take care of his savings. There were, it is true, the Lombard and Genoese bankers, who dealt with princes, nobles, bishops and the abbots of the greater monasteries, and as time went on there arose the Slen-neso-Roman firm of Chlgi, with its hundred branches, which in later times supplied a pontiff to the holy see who bore the hame of Alexander VII, but of what service were these great luxury loving people to the peddler, the yeoman or tho small shopkeeper, whose gains came not in by pounds, angels or marks, but in penny driblets, with perhaps an odd groat of proQt on a very successful venture? How was. their money stored? *'In some cases we suspoct that the churchwardens took care of it in tho parish chest, thOQgh if put to tho proof of What we say we should not bo very ready with an an-' swer, but it Is quite certain that as years rolled on and guilds sprang up in every village, they aotod as bankers for tho guildmen. But there must have been many persons who belonged to no guild, some because they were of loose life aud such as no guild would enroll, others because they were not on good terms with the aldermen or becauso they wore landless folk who had no settled plaoe of abode. It was dangerous to carry specie on the person in those days.
There were many Robin Hoods abroad, who had no scruples as to robbing the poor as well as the rich. To the weak tho only course that was open, if they could not deposit their coin in the hands of some trustworthy neighbor was to bury it iu tlie earth. This is the explanation of tho numerous hoards of coin which have turn ed up from time to time from the thirteenth century to the present day.—Athentuuin. yy
Beans la Boiton.
nne one has figured out that In 40 y^ars the proprietor of the Parker House, fibston, hog paid to Faneull Hall market i], 188,006 for provisions. Of this princely
It is said that not over $100,000 went f^r beans. This will surprise many people ^ho have an idea that beans IB the prlncl1^1 article of food In Boston.—Philadeilia Press.
Oue advantage of taking Acer's Sarsa pari 1 la. to purify the blood is that you netd tjot infringe upon your hours of labor uor deny yourself any food that agrees with you. In a word, you are not compelled to starve or loaf, while taking it. These are recoirmendations worth considering.
Driving Acrotts the Country. State Senator Eugene Ives of Now York, the author of the Ives pool bill, is emulating Novelist Black's "Strange Adventures of a Phaeton" by driving across the country in a surrey. Mr. Ives started on this trip from his home on the Hudson, 80 miles above New York, on Aug. 2, driving a span of high bred roadsters and accompanied by his wife and their 15-months-old baby. Traveling at an average rate of 40 miles a day, Mr. Ives and bis companions covered the distance as far as York, Pa., over the battlefield of Gettysburg, along the Shenandoah valley, across the mountains and into Virginia without going a mile by rail. He will drive home the samo way he came. His only guide is an ordinary map of the United States, supplemented by a bicycle guide. —-New York Herald.
Making Use or Their Experience. Small wort—I wouder what the Chinese government are calling home their men in America for? They surely have' enough men at home.
Mrs. Smallwort—I guess they want the lanudrymen as scouts to scour tho countrr.—Cincinnati Tribune.
For Nervousness and Dyspepsia Use Horsfbrd's Acid Phosphate. Dr. O. GRAHAM, Chicago, ill., nays: "I have used it for years in cases of nervous exhaustion, insomnia and certain kinds of dyspepsia, and would be at a loss to find in the whole materia mediea anything which would take its place and give as satisfactory results in tbe above mentioned disorders.''
Joseph Is All Right
Since he took Hood's Sarsaparilla, and I thin! Hood's Sarsaparilla is the Creates! lIZediciiM •n Karth. My boj had Catarrh in the
A
STREET
Head so badly he lost hla hearing, and medical treatment failed to help him. Then I was advised to try Hood's Sarsaparilla, and before he had taken all of one bottle, he began to break out with bolls all over his back and neck. They were not very large, but they discharged freely. Slowly his hearing began to come back and
Joseph £. Zuber, Bed 0*k, Iowa.
by the HTTIA the third bottle had been taken, the
1-1 ood'
Sarsaparilla
ures
boils had all disappeared and his skin was as slear as a baby's whereas before It was dull »nd yellow and dark under the eyes. He can QOW hear well and is taking his fifth bottle." MRS. M. J. ZTJBEK, Bed Oak, Iowa. Hood's Pills cure Constipation by restoring the peristaltic action of tbe alimentary canaL
IMPROVEMENT FINAL ESTIMATE.
Notice is hereby given that the final estimate report of the cost of the improvement of Second avenue from Thirteenth street, to Nineteenth street was on the 21st day of August, 1894, referred to the committee on ttreets and alleys, and any person aggrieved by such estimate may appear before said committee, on the 17 day of September, 1894. at the office of the city civil engineer In said city, and make objections thereto, which objections will be reported by said committee to the common council of the city of Terre Hsute at the next regular meeting of said council after tbe said committee shall conclude the hearing upon said objections, at which time objectors and all persons interested may be beard in reference to such objections before the council. CHAS. H. GOOD WIN,
NOTICE
1
Classes of British Colonies, ho British colonies are of three classes: Crown colonies, controlled directly by the hoiie government colonies having repro sentative institutions, the crown retaining the veto power and the coutrol of public officers,and Vmi-Independent colonies that goiprn themselves, though the crown appojiits a governor aud retains a veto on legislation.
iLi
City Clerk.
rp CONTRACTORS AND OWNERS.
PROPERTY
Notice is hereby given, that on the 4th day of September, 1894, the common council of the city of Terre Haute adopted a resolution declaring an existing necessity for the improve ment of Sycamore street from Fourteenth Twentieth street by grading and paving tl same the full width thereof the sidewalks to be ten (10) feet wide and paved with gra\ el screenings or cinders next to the propeitv: line the width of six (6) feet, and curbed with white oak plank the roa iway to be thlity (80)feet wide and paved with screenedxrav* 1 the said improvement to be made in alt espects In accordance with ihe general pU.n of Improvement of saldnlty and according to the plans and specifications on file in the office of the city clerk the cost to be assessed to the abutting property owners and become due and collectible Immediately on approval of the final estimate, unless the property owner shall have previously agreed in wriiing, to be filed with said plane, to waive all irregularity and Illegality of the proceedings and pay his assessment* when due.
Settled proposals will be received for t.l construction of said Improvement, at the office of the city clerk, on the 2nd day of October, 1894. Each proposal,must be accompanied by a bond with good freehold sureties orequlvalentsecurlty. Iu thesumof two hundred dollars liquidated damages, conditioned that ihe bidder shall duly enter into contract aud give bond within five days after the acceptance of his bid, for the performance of the work. The city reserves tbe right to reject any and all bid*.
Any property owuerobjectlng to the necessity of such Improvement may tile such objections In writing, at r-be office of the city clerk on the 1st day of October, 1884, aud be heard with reference thereto at the next regular meeting of tho common council thereafter.
CHAS. II. GOODWIN, City Clerk.
TO GAS FITTERS AND PLUM BERS.
Notice is hereby given that sealed proposals will be received by the common council of tbe city of Terre Haute, Indiana at a regular meeting to be held on September, 18, ltw, for repairing the furnace In the city building, located on Fourth and Walnut streets.
By order of the «ity council, CHAS H. GOOBWIN, CltyCletk.
Whltuker & DUYAII, Attorneys for IMalntltt" Jsq-OTICE TO NON-RESIDENT.
The State of Indiana, Vigo County. In the Vigo Circuit Court. No. 17,569. LIr.Jite Johnson vs. John J. Johnson. In divorce.
Be It known that on the 10th day of Sept., 1894, said plaintiff filed an affidavit In due
form, showing non-resident of
DR
a
that said defendant is a tbe state of Indiana-
Said non-resident defendant Is hereby notified of the pendency of said action against hlra, andthatthe same will stand for trial Nov. 7tb. 1894, tbe same being at the Pept*mber term of said court In the year taw, [SEAL] HUGH D. ROQUET, Clerk.
C. MEDCRAFT,
tDrEHSTTIST.
Office—McKeen's Block, northwest comer Seventh street aud Wabash avenue.'
Railroad Time Tables.
Trains marked thus(P) have Par'or Trains marked thns (S) have .sleeping Cars. Trains marled thus (B) have Buffet Car. Trti'ns marked thus (V) have Vestibule Oars. Trains marked (D) have Dining Car. Trains marked thus (t) run Suudays only. Trains marked thus run daily. Ail other ua is run daily, Sundays tfd.
LizrsriE-
MAIN LINE.
LEAVK KOK THE WEST,
No. 7 Western Ex* (VSS) 1.40 am No. 5 St. Louis Mail ..... .10.11 am No. 1 Fast Line* (P) 2.20 pm No. 21 St. Louis Ex* (DVdkS) .... 3.10 No. 13 Eli". Acc t.ud No. 11 Fast Mail 9:01 pin
AKKIVE FROM THK WE8T.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (8) l.2u a in No. 6 New York Express (V48). 2.10 a N 1 4 E in a A a No. 20 Atlantic Express (DPVAS) 12.42 No. 8 Fast Line 2.05 No. 2 Indianapolis Acc 5.00
LEAVE FOR THJJ KAST.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (8) l.3uano No. New York Express (V&8). 2.20a as No. 4 Mail and Accommodation 7.16 DO No. 20 Atlantic Express (DPVSS) 12.17 pui No. 8 Fast Line 2.20 jNo. 2 Indianapolis Acc S.0S IK
ARK1VK FKOM THJt BAST.
No. 7 Western Express {V&B). 1.J0 a. No. 5 St. Louis Mail* 10.06 an No. 1 Fast Line*(P). ... 2.0opm No. 21 St. Louis Ex" (DV&S/ 3.G5 No. 8 Mail and Accommodation 0.13 No. 11 Fast Mail 9.*
MICHIGAN DIVISION.
LEAVE FOR THi. NORTH.
No. 52 St. Joseph Mall. .... 8.20 in No. £6St. Joseph Express* 1.00 ui No. 54BU Jo?eph Express' 4.uu »u
AKKIVK FKOM THK NORTH.
No. 51 South Bend Express 11.45 am No. 53 St. Joseph Mail .... 7.mo No. 55 Southern Ex^tP) 9:45 pm
PEORIA DIVISION.
LEAVE FOR NORTHWEST.
No. 75 Peoria Mail ... 7.05 a no No. 77 Decatur Accommodation 3.55 on AKKIVK FKOM NORTHWEST. No. 78 Decatur Accommodation .11.00 am No. 76 Peoria Mall 7.00
ZED.
&c
rr.
IHI.
NASHVILLE LINE.
LKAVK FOR SOUTH-
No. 3 Ch & Ev Ex* (SAP) 5.25 a u» N 1 Ev. & Iud. Mali* ..••••.. 3.15
uo
No. 5ChAN JJIII* V4S l«.05 No. 7 Ev. Accommodation .10.2jam ARRIVE FROM SOUTH. No. 6 C. & Nash Lim* (V£S) 4.45 a No. 2 T. II. & East Ex* 11.15 am No. 4 Ch & ind Ex" (S & P) U.lu No. SOMiied Accommodation 4.45
E- Sc I-
LEAVE FOR SOOTH.
No. 33 Mall & Ex 8.50 a UB No. 49 Worth'n Mixed 8.30 no ARRIVE FROM SOUTH. No. 48 Mixed 10.15 a no No. 32 Mail & Ex 4.20 pm
C. &c IE. X.
LEAVE FOR NORTH.
No. 6 & N Llm*(DV4S). ... 5.0) M' No. 2 & Cb Ex IU5 aDO No. 8 Local Paspenirer. ..... p" No. 4 Ev Ex»0«) 11:20
ARRIVE KKOM NORTH.
No. 3 Ch Ev Ex*!-*) 5:20 am No. 7 Locai Passe ugt ,.93uau. No. 1 Ch & Ev |i,x 2 45 pin No. 5 fe N Lim*{DV«£S). U.«0
O. CI. C. 3e I.—BIG *a=.
ROING EAST
No. 10 Cincinnati Wash Ex'SP. .• 1.82 a No. 2 Indianapolis A Cincinnati 7.10 am No. 18 Kouthwestern Llnuuri' SDPV.12.58 no No. 8 Day Express & Mail H.42 No.4 arrives from Mattoon 9.30am
GOING WEST.
1
No. 7 St- Louis Flyer SI* 1.32 am No. 9 Day Express & Mall* 10.i* a to No. 17 South western Llniited*SDPV. 1.43 pro No. 5 Mattoon Kxpress fl.00 No. 3 arrives from Indianapolis 8.15 piu
THE BEST LINE TO CINCINNATI AND THE SOUTH. THE DIRECT LINE TO [MICHIGAN RESORTS.
CH&D
4TRAINS
EVERY DAY TO
MICHI8AN RESORTS.
LOW RATE ROUND-TRIP TICKETS TO
Mackinaw, Petoskey, Omena, Bay Port* Alt. Clemens, Alma, Huronla Beach, Sault St. Marie,
St. Clair Springs, The Mettawas. ALSO TO Niagara Falls, Montreal, Toronto,
Thousand Islands.
For full Information call on any C. H. & D. Agent
D. C. EDWARDS,
General Passenger Agent, Ctrev Billdinft Cincinnati. O.
DR. R. \V. VAN VALZAII,
ZDZEIsTTIST
Office, No. 5 South Fifth Street.
A NTS BET.
UNDERTAKER,
29 NORTH FOURTH STREET, All calls will receive the most careful intention. Open day and night.
JAMES* L.PRH K, JAMESH. CALPW Attorney at Law and I Collector and Notary Public. Real F-state Broker.
PBICE& CALDWELL,
Room 2 Pattern's Block,
408 Ohio St., Terre Haufce, Ind.
R. GEO. MARBACH,
HBOtKH FI.00K DFNTA1- PARL0K& 124 Honth Sixth Street.
BI CHLORIDE OF GOLD CURE For LinuoR, OPICW and TOBACCO Habits at 106 south Tenth and-a-half slreels A. H. Brown,solicitor,and IT J. T. LAUOHEAI'. 5 Medical Director
