Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 19, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 November 1895 — Page 8
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I A TAPER
FOR THE
HBPZ' BUX4XiE5TX3Sr-
Monday, Nov. 4th, One Day Only.
AAA RAAk'Q "Library Edition," half bound DUUlW ith imitation leather (imitation being made of silk cloth) marble sides and top, good paper, clear type, each book in a box, in the following titles
1 Adam Bede by George Eliot. 2 iEeop's Fables. 3 Alhambrat, The, by Washington It* vlng. 4 Andersen's Fairy Tales by Hans
Christian Andersen. 6 Arabian Nights Entertainments. 6 Brownlng'sPoeticalWorksbyEllsa* beth B. Browning. 7 Browning's Poetical Works by Rob* en Browning. 8 Burns' Poetical Works by Robert
9 Byron's Poetical Works by Lord Byron. 10 Charles O'Malley by Charles Lever. 11 Children of the Abbey by Reglna
Marie Roche.
12 Countless tilseia, The, by E. Marlltt. 18 Cranford by Mrs. Gaske'l. 14 Daniel Boone by F. M. Norton. 15 David Copperfleld by Charles Dickens. 16 Deemster, The, by Hall Caine. 17 Deerslayer, The, by J. Fenlmore
Cooper.
18 Dickons'Child's History of England by Charles Dickens. 10 Donovau by Edna L^all. 30 Don Quixote de la Ma
Charlotte M.
2t Dors Thome by Braeme. 22 Duke's Becret, The, by Charlotte M.
Braeme.
23 East Lynne by Mrs. Henry Wood. 24 Egyptian Prlnoess, An, by Qeorg
25 Familiar Quotations. 26 First Violin, by Jessie Fotherglll. 27 Foul Play by Charles Reade. US Uems from the Poets, Chaucer to
Tennyson.
29 Gold Elsi* by E. Marlltt. Goldsmith'M Poetlsal Works by Oil ver. Goldsmith. 31 Good Luck by E. Werner. 32 Grimm's Fairy Tales by the Brothers Grimm. US Gulliver's Travels by Dean Swift. 34 Handy Andy by Samuel Lover. 86 Hardy Norseman by Edna Lyall. 86 Harry Lorrequer by^Charles Lever. 87 Herlot's Choice by Rosa N. Carey. 88 Hypatla by Charles Kinesley. 89 Ingelow's Poetical Works by Jean ingelow. 40 In the Golden Dayu by Edna Lyall. 41 Irvine's Bketch Book by Washington Irving,
42 Ivan hoe by Sir Walter Scott. 43 Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte. 44 John Halifax by Miss Mulock. 46 Kenilworth by Hlr Walter Scott. 46 knight Errant by Edna Lyall. 47 La»t Days of Pompeii by Bulwer
Lytton.
48 Lastof the Mohicans by J.Fenlmore Cooper. 49 Life of Kit Carson by Edward S.
Ellis.
60 Life's Remorse by The Duchess. 51 Longfellow'B Earlier Poems by Henry W. Longfellow. 62 Lorna Doone by K. D. Biaokmore. 53 Luclle by Owen Meredith. 64 Micah Clarke by A. Conan Boyle.
PEOPLE.
PERSONAL MP SOCIAL.
James Soules has returned from Chicago. A. J. Crawford is very ill with typhoid fever.
Bert Howard will spend Sunday In Sullivan. E. D. Harvey will spend the winter In the south.
Mrs. Marie St, Clairspent Thursday at Flainfleld. Dr. James Cooper spent Thursday at St. Mary's.
Adolph Oagg has returned from French Lick. John Shryer, of Effingham, was In the city this week.
Mrs. Dr. Long leaves soon for the Atlanta exposition, Mrs. Patrick Roach has recovered from the grippe.
W. R. MoKeen spent the week in New York on business. Mrs. Kllen Modesitt, of Brazil, was in the oity this week.
Reed Hanna, of Crawfordsville, was in the oity this week. Miss Florence Sage has returned from visit in St. Louis.
Mrs. George F*rls has returned from a visit in Indianapolis. Mrs, C. C. Lucky is slowly recovering fi,m her recent illness.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. G. Davis have returned from St. Louis. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Belnl were In Indianapolis this week.
Curds Gliberl has returned to his borne In Franklin, Ind. Mrs. Nicholas Stein has returned from a visit at Indianapolis.
Miss Margaret Preston hst returned from a visit in Louisville.
55 Meredith's Poetical Works by Owen Meredith. 56 Milton's Poetical Works by John
Milton.
57 Moore's Poetical Works by Thomas Moore. 68 Oliver Twist by Charles Diokens. 69 Pair of Blue Eyes, A, by Thomas
Hardy.
80 Pathfinder, The, by J. Fenlmore Cooper. tl Pilgrim's Progress, The, by John
Bunyan.
62 Pioneers, The, by J. Fenlmore Cooper. 68 Prairie, The, by J. Fenlmore Cooper. 64 Procter's Poetical Works by Adelaide A. Procter. 05 Put Yourself In His Place by Charles
Reade.
ancha by Cer-
66 RoblBson Crusoe by Bunlel De Foe. 67 Romola by George Eliot. 68 Rory O'More by Hamuel Lover. 69 Hacred Gems from the Poets, Chancer to Tennyson. 70 Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne. 71 Soottlsh Chiefs by Jane Porter. 72 Scott's Poetical Works by
Scott.
Sir Walter
73 Self Help by Samuel Smiles. 74 Shakespeare's Works, Vol. 1, by William Shakespeare. 75 Shakespeare's Works, Vol. 2, by
Wllljam Shakespeare. py, 77 Star of
76 Spy, The^ b^J. Fenlmore_Cooper. Ellis.
la, The, by Edward B.
78 Swiss Family Robinson by J. Wyss etc. 79 Tale of Two Cities, A, by Charles
Dickens.
80 Tennyson's Poetical Works by Lord Alfred Tennyson. 81 Terrible Temptation, A, by Charles
Reade.
82 Thaddeus of Warsaw by Jane Porter 83 Tollers of the Sea, The, by "V lctor Hugo. 84 Tom Brown at Oxford by Thomas
Hughes.
86 Tom Brown'8 8ohool Days by Thos. Hughes. 86 Tour of the World In 80 Days by
JUIGS VorD6»
87 Treasurers from Fairyland by Grace HfAAnifffWl ot/l 88 a,000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules verne. 89 Twice Told Tales by Nathaniel
Hawthorne.
90 TJarda by Georg Eben. 91 Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher 3towe. 92 Under Two Flags by Oulda. 93 Vanity Fair by Wm. M. Thackeray. 94 Vicar of Wakefield by Oliver Goldsmith 95 Wa^ .rly by Sir Walter Scott. 96 wo by Edna Lyall. 97 Whittier's Earlier Poems by John
Greenleaf Whjttier. 98 Willy Reilly ty Wm. Carleton. 99 Woman Hater, A, by Charles Reade 100 Wreck of the Grosvenor by W.
Clark Russell.
Each Book Worth $1.00 Monday, One Day Only, 46c.
Miss Anna Fitzpatrick has returned from a visit in Dayton, O. Mrs. Dr. Hollingsworth leaves soon for the Atlanta exposition..
Miss Kate Ward, of Indianapolis, is visiting Mrs. John Beasley. Mrs. James Edwards, of south Tenth street, is visiting in Chioago.
Mrs. Chas. Warren, of Chicago, is visiting relatives in the city. Mrs. Sam Royse and Miss Martha have returned from a visit in Paris.
Irving Herkimer, of Mattoon. visited relatives in the city this week. Mr. Wiley, of Bloomlngton, Ind., is visiting Judge Taylor's family.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bronson have returned from their wedding trip. Henry Hudson has accepted a position in Goldsmith's wholesale house.
Born, to Prof, and Mrs. C. S. Brown, Wednesday, October 30th, a son. Miss Gertrude Whalen has resigned her position in the Express office.
The students of Co a tea College, gave a Phantom party Thursday evening. Mrs. Ma* Blumberg, of south Fifth street, has recovered from the grippe.
Mrs. E. M. Walmsley and Miss Madge have returned from a visit in the eaM. Miss Viola and Luella McCoy, of south Fifth street, visited in Paris this week.
Mrs. O, D. Bell entertained a few friends at euchre Thursday afternoon. Mrs, Ward, of Newport, Ind., spent the week with her sister, Mrs. Joshua Jump.
Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Watson moved this week from Cherry street* to north Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Boland have moved Into their new home on north Sixth street.
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Mrs. Florence Oonnerly, of Denver1 Co!,, is in the city, visitinst relatives at.d friends.
Mrx. Carrie Wood left Thursday for New Orleans, where she will spend the winter.
Highest of all in Leavening Power*—Latest U.S. Govt Report
Mrs. A. N. Leitnaker and daughter, of
Powder
iUOWTEEir PURE
Austin, Texas, are visiting Mrs. O. Luokey and daughter, on north Eighth re I
Mrs. D. S, Howard, of Rookvllle,.vislt ing her daughter, Mrs. Thos. J. Grigson, this week.
Ed, Walsh visited bis hepheW. James Burke, at the school at Teutopolls, Ills, this week. I
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ptepenbrink, of 516 south Seoond street, October 10th, a daughter,
Mrs. Samuel Reeves, of Elwood, Ind., is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Will May, of north Eighth street.
Mrs. Wilson, who has been visiting Mrs. Helen Allen, returned to her hooae in Logansport yesterday.
Tom Kinser will move this montht into bis elegant new home on the corner of Ninth and Ohio Btreets.
Mrs. George Probst was called to Dayton, O., Tuesday, by the illness of her daughter, Mattie Dunkinson.
Wm. Shryer has returned from Bloomington, Ind., where, he visited his son, who is attending rollege there. 1^, g|
Canton Dixon, who is attending school in the oity, h«s returned from a week's visit at his home in Marshall.
Mrs. J. Gibson, who has been visitlpg friends on south Fifth street, hra .returned to her home in Mattoon.
Dr. W. R. Mattox has been laid ^p this week with a sprained ankle, received in a fall from his bicycle.
Miss Frances Potter left Thursday for Wateitown, N. Y., called there by thi death of her brother-in-law, Mr. Besot)
Wm. Munday, of Louisville, Ky., anpl a former student of the Polytechnic, visited, his Jriends in .the' oity this week.
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Mr. and Mrs. Robert Beneheld, of south Third street, celebrated the first anniversary of their marriage Thursday night.
Mrs. Allen G. Thurman, of north Tenth street, is seriously ill. Her sister, Mrs. Mary Outland, of Parsons, Kas., is at her bedside. 'J.
Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Bledsoe entertained Miss Bledsoe, of Fort Wayne, this week, she being a delegate to the Baptist convention.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Haberly attended the wedding of Mrs. Haberly's sister, Miss Kate Keasey, in Brazil, Wednesday evening.
Mrs. J. E. Thixton, of Jeffersonville, Ind., and Miss Ella Larkin, of Franklin, Ind., are visiting Mrs. Murphy, of north Eighth street.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Putnam have moved from M. W. Stack's house on south Seventh to the Douglass residence on north Center. ,* #.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Button entertained a party of friends Wednesday evening, which was the twenty-third anniversary of their wedding. 'H**'.
Mrs. Wm. Durham has moved from the corner of Seventh and Ohio streets to Mrs. George Whedon's house on north Eighth street.
Cards were issued this week announcing the wedding of Miss May Wernzand Fred Yung, next Wednesday evening at St. Benedict's church,
Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Crawford and Mrs. M. W. Johnson, of Danville, Ind., are visiting the family of John L. Crawford, on north Center street.
Mrs. Joseph Strong and Miss Henrietta Blake have returned from a six weeks' trip through the East, visiting Baltimore, Boston and New York. "^4^
S. G. Butler, of the Buntln Drog Co., left Friday for Shelby ville, Tenn where he will be married Wednesday afternoon to Miss Sara Shapard.
Mrs. Hensel and daughters, Misses Lizzie and Nellie, have returned from Marshall, where they attended the funeral of the former's mother.
Fred Barnes, physical directo^ Of tho Y. M. C. A., his mother, and brother, Mack, have taken rooms with Mrs, H. Hebb, on north Fifth street.
The young ladies of Edwards Rebekah lodge will give a Japanese social Tuesday evening, November 5th, at thfir hail, cornet of Seventh and Main streets.
Miss Margaret J, Shu It*, for many years a popular employee of Her*'* Bazar, was married Thursday evening to Harry M. Jacksw,a, cotter fur tij« Stahl-Urban Co.
Miss Mattie Lyons entertained a num ber of her friends Thursday evening with a Hallowe'en party. Among the guests were Miss Rc»se Gainer and John, Cannon, of Gt^encastle.
Mi** Lulu Mills and Earl D. Stunt were married Wednesday evening by the Rev. F. A. Morgan, pastor of the Central Christian church, in Mr. Mor gan'* rooms on sooth Seventh strteet. Mr. Stout is a clerk at Levi's, and the bride is the daughter of Mir. and Sirs. George H. Mills. They have taken rooms at Mr. Stoat's father'*, on Swan street.
Prof. Edmondson the Optician, will remain atiM another week at Bigwood's, 607 Wabash Avenue. If yon want your eyee perfectly fitted, call on him next week.
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, NOVEMBER 2, 1395.
Mrs. Lissie Richardson, of Gilbert ave nue, is visiting her sister, Mrs, Blind5* In Louisville. J*"
7
Slgnor Giovanni Ferrari, of New Yojk, is visiting Miss Florence Sage, of south Center street.
Miss Amelia Patrick, of Sullivan, will spend Sunday with friend". Oh north Eighth street.
Miss Nellie Roberts Is visiting friends in Wichita, Kan., and is very much im proved in health.
Ernest Moore, formerly of the Havens & Geddes Co., has aooepted a position with T. J. Griffith.
Boucle Jackets, 26 inches long, cor-1 rect 2-Button Box Front, Ripple Back, new Storm Collar, elegant sleeve Boucle Jackets, made in the height of Style, Full Fancy Silk Lined Only Crepon Boucle Jackets, which are equal to any $15.00 Jacket sold any where else, at Elegant Plush Capes, Fancy Silk Linings, Dresden Effects Only
ilia
T.J. Griffith's
*||OeixtULi?3r
A
BE
A.UTY. In dress or for
winter wear—heavy sole—a beauty. T. Ladies' Cork Sole, Gents' Cork Sole, also new Narrow Square Toe—lace or button. All styles of the sea* &on with prices to suit every soul in our city. North side of Main, between 4th and 5th streets.
Griffith.
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Aud are prudent^', Borne 1
men don aud neglect buy-
ing
an Overcoat
UDtil
health
and comfort demands
ii
To-
daf we want to tel 1 yon about
our Brown Melton Overcoat
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1 i.k £r$8.50.
"This coat ha6 a)
wide velvet collar—is cut in!
(ft
the latest piyle—made and 1
1
trimmed first* class—just the
right weight for late fall and'
winter wear—a real dressy I
garment al a medium price
and has the appearanee'asd!
Pixley- & Co.
Strictly One Price But that Bight.
2TWJRZ' BTTIiI/ESTIISr
Great Second Floor.
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1
will wear equ«l to coals sold
by other houses at $12.00-—
our price Jfc8.5u.
our
Messrs. Herz and Bauer didn't go to New York for nothing. They went with the fixed determination to ransack the market for the most correct styles and the best values and bargains obtainable for the benefit of our many thousand friends and patrons. How well they succeeded is for you to judge. All we know is that we never, in the 36 years of our business career, have been so cram-jam full of new and desirable goods in the Cloak and Fur lines as we are now. We know that no house in the United States owns these goods for a penny less than we do, and we know further that we secured some special bargains which no other concern in America can duplicate.
We show, without exception, the best NOVELTY JACKETS for $3.98, $5.00, $6.00^7.50, J10 00, $12.50 $15.00 and up to $37.50 which money can buy. Our CLOTH CAPES for $1.98, $3.25, $2.48, $2.98, $3.48, $3.98, $4 98, $S 98. $7-5, $10.00, $12.50 up to $35.00 have no equal in any city. if
Our NOVELTY PLUSH and VELVET CAPES are right in it as to style',1 full sweep, quality and prices. We BEAT THE WORLD on FUR GARMENTS and are ready to prove it. Here is a list of
Special Bargains for Saturday and Monday: *5= $10 $10
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I In addition to the above we have just opened some elegant bargains in Electric Seal, Wool Seal, Black Marten, Astrakhan, Beaver, Alaska Seal and Mink Capes, all the latest shapes and primest furs, and way below regular prices. Our Misses' and Children's Cloak Department fairly shines with the nobbiest garments procurable and at very low prices.
Also 100 30-inch Black Freqch Coney Fur Capes, Full Sweep, At One Hundred 30-inch Baltic Seal Capes, worth $15.00, », At $7.50 and Fifty 30-inch Baltic Seal Capes Marten Collar and Edging, worth $20 For ,. One Hundred 30-inch Astrakhan Capes, worth $12.50,.. For
SilflSiS
4 -A
BANQUET
ilv
mps, Lamps.
This is the greatest sale of lamps ever made in this city. Lamps of all size* and decoratiowoffered at the lowest possible price. Banquet Lamps, Stand Lamps, Kitchen Lamps, Hanging Lamps and Lanterns Gold Lamps, Silver Lamps, Brass Lamps and Glass Lamps I will continue this sale of Lamps until my stock i?^ cut down to make room for my line of Holiday Goods. Remember the place.
G. Hammerstein.
J'
*10 *12 7
r'\ -V
B. F. BOLINGER
Invites you to inapect bis stock of
Builders' Hardware, Guns, Loaded SheJIs
Skates, Boys' Wagons, Coal Hods, Stove Pipe.
Holiday Goods is Cutlery sad other Seasonable Articles. 323 MAIN STREET.
ALBERT FTESS,
Has Just received a complete line of
Lap Robes and Blankets,
Trunks and Telesoopest
0SO 2&JLX2ST STIR. El JET.
3t7M,'°st-
Chrysanthemums Palms, Etc.
sti
Orsnd Annual Opening and Exhibition of
Our fourth annual Chrysanthemum Show and Exhibition of choice Palms, Winter Blooming and Decorative Plants, will open at our green house, corner Eighth and Cherry streets,
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Monday, Dec. II.
and continue for one week, day and evening, to which the flower loving public is cordially invited, Jno:LHeinl
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