Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 37, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 March 1896 — Page 3
WHEN AUTUMN PASSETH BY. Where purple elderberries viei^A* With sumac's crimson stain,
A flood of mellow minstrelsy O'er/lows the winding lane. A myriad Insect voices finte
v"
And rival throats reply. *-v No tree, no tuft of grass is mate
v.
When autumn passeth by. A perfume rare of ripening leaves On zephyr pinions floats. And oft the scent of browning sheaves
Blends with the cricket's notes Each hanging bough a censer swings Beneath the dreamful sky, And at her feet rich fragrance flings,
When autumn passeth by. The spiders thrid their gossamer With Jewels for her head, The thirties strew their down for h•*,
That softly she may tread The brooklet stills its summer glee Whene'er her feet draw nigh, And gently drones the yellow bee
When autumn passeth by. Strange sorceries the spirit bind And work a haunting spell Weird voices echo on the wind
And whisper beauty's knell.
a
At eventide a lonely star Gomes forth to mourn on high And shedc its quivering light afar
When autumn passeth by. The sweetest song that ever flows Hath sorrow in its strain. The keenest joy that mortal knows
Is always half a pain. 80 life and death oombine their art To charm the ear and eye, And lovely pathos wins the heart
When autumn passeth by. —Samuel in turn Peck.
MY PATIENT.
At the commencement of my medical career I was lucky enough to have as Sponsor the oelebrated Dr. Atkins, who, Slaving an extensive practice in Mayfair, was often able to put a few guineas in my pocket.
One August I was left in obarge of bis bouse and practioe, and immensely proud I was, I remember. Nothing of interest bad oocurred, however, until about a week afterward, when, looking out from the breakfast room,
i.
Jrst,
noticed a superb car
riage draw up at the door. In a few moments a lady got out and asked to see Dr. Atkins. Summoning all my scanty 6tock Of assuranoo, I made my appearanoe, only to be chilled by her first words: "I beg your pardon. I askod for Dr. Atkins." "I'm awfully sorry." I impulsively said (I never oould be professional long), "but the doctor is away for another three weeks. He lias known me from a ohlld, and so he asked me to look after things during bis absence. Won't you let me help you? I'll do the best I can."
I had come near her as I spoke, and she took my arm and looked, it seonied to me, right down into n^ysoul. Evidently what •be saw reassured her, for sho sat down and said:
Woll, doctor, I'll trust you. I may tell you that I b'ive boon married five years and am my husbund's second wife. His first wife, who was, I believe, a very obarming woman, got up during tho night, and, for some reason or another,
110
doubt intense fright, jumped out of the window. My husband was ill for a'long time afterward. I mot and married him, atad no man oould be kinder—no man oould be a better husband. No trouble is too groat for blm to take for mo, and yet I am mortally afraid of him. "For tho last iew months he has been oouduoting a parliamentary oandldature and has boon mitoh "overworked in ocrti&e-
uence. He sent me away to ffranoe at but I insisted on ooming back to bolp bim, as was my duty. One Friday night after we had gone to bed I was aroused by a movement at my side. To my horror I saw my husband got out of bed and Itegin to move softly round the room. Creeping on tiptoe boh lnd a chair, he brought his fist down on the baok of it with great force and then returned quietly to bed. Every Friday night since ho has done tho same thing until I dread the night's approach. What oan I do, doctor? I love him as few women love their husbands, but I dread to speak to him even. It's killing me by indies. I dread the fate of the other poor woman."
She buried her faoe In ber hands and aobbod as if her heart would broak, while 1 felt utterly helpless. Half an hour before I would liavo ohoerfully offered to give any one advioe and now—well, I am moro modest now and slow to Interfere in other folks' affairs. What oould I say? I was evidently faoe to faoe with one of those subtle forms of epilepsy which are so puzsllug tho physician. ''My dear madam, do not give up hope. Bond your husband to me and lot me have a talk with him. Who knows—I may be ablu to suggest some treatment whioh may be of service."
With an effort that evidently ooet her much sho thanked mo and went to her oarriago.
After she had gone I gazed at the card, "Mrs. Ernost Trenarth, Park lane, London."
There was obviously some dark secret which Trenarth had hidden in his past, ^ho strange movements at night, the mysious death of bis first wife, told a talo of arinio, All that day the story haunted uieJl I road up all tho authorities on the subject, but without any success, and deoidefl at last to trust to chance in the managttfiumt of my future patient. 5?ho next morning at about 11 o'elook a bearing Tronarth's name was given me, and I hurried into, the consulting room.
H« was a tall, massive man with a itrongly marked face—not by any means a good looking man, but with a face that seemed somehow to Invite scrutiny. "Well, dootor," be said in a singularly sweet voioe, "bore I am, but what I am hor^for is beyond me. My wife insists tharc am ill, and, as her will is law, I am 00me to consult you. Don't give nte very nasty physio."
Somehow the words did not, ring true. He was til at ease and wished to laugh it off. Without a moment's thought and acting upon an Impulse due, I suppose, to the deep consideration 1 had given to his oase, I said, leaning forward: "What made you kill hifuf"
The effect was electrical. He sprang from his seat as if he had been shot, and his faoe beoaine white as a sheet. His breath came fast and panticgly, and for a momont I thought he was going to strike me. I muaiued by an effort of will sitting down, while he paced the long room like an angry animal. Finally he threw himself Into his chair, and, wiping bis paleface, aaid, mora to himself than to mo: "Well, doctor, it will be a relief to me to get it off my mind. For 20 years secret has lain heavy on my soul, o: .I there have been times when I felt I was going mad." "Don't warty," said I. "Take your own time and tell me everything. I want to do you good if 1 can." "ThanksI If your skill Is as great as
TERRE IT
Uminseparable.
A
your prntw of reading thoughts, you ought to be able to do so." The poor fellow was quite unconscious that be bad betrrfyed himself during bis Bight walks, and in a duil way went on: "In the old days I was a mining student ai Pentcastle, living in lodgings. There was one there who was my dearest friend, and as he was my age and my workmate we were Together we dreamed of
ambition of all miners—namely,
to find a rich lode of ore. Together we made long excursions and were called David and Jonathan. All went well until We began to court the same girl, our Cap'en's daughter. Somehow then we drifted a little apart, and this was a great grief to me. I would spend hours on the beath above the mine, Wheal Mary Ann— fool that I was!—In trying to make up my mind to give up the girl to him. One Sunday afternoon, when all work stops at the nine, I went out, hoping to meet Puke by the eld Druid's stone, as we often had done before. But he was not there, •and I felt I must decide between friendship and love. "I left the stone and sfcrock into a tiny faeak near the common and idly enough began digging my stick Into the ground. 'To my astonishment my stiok sank In, and the ground cracked under my feet. Down I went, frantically clutching at the aground to save myself. in a few seoonds I stopped and found that I had slid down •a disused airsbaft, fortunately a sloping one. There was no sign of light exoept dimly far above me where I had fallen, and I knew I oould not .get back that way. Before me was inky darkness, which might hide a deep shaft. Striking a match, I found I was in aa old level, which stretched away far ahead. I cautiously went on, feeling In front of me with my stick, until I had gone over 300 yards. Again I lit a match and saw below me another level, about Id feet down. It was neck or nothing, so I let myself drop and found solid bottom again. Feeling the sides of this new level, I was struok by their greasiness. With my heart leaping in my breast I struok a match, and there, 'Unworked no doubt since the Phoenicians' time, was asplendid lode of silver lead ore. The wall seemed to fee nearly solid ore, •and I sat down quite faint with exoitement. "I still went on until the ground began •to rise again and I saw light. Still feeling cautiously, at length I stood in the bottom of what we youngsters knew as 'the Britons' well.' This was a disused pit about 16 feet deep and was in a small copse. The sides wero rooky enough to allow me to clamber out, and I onoe .more stood above ground. "Then I imparted the secret to my friend. I thought, boyishly enough, that we might be friends again if onoe we were rich. Fuke was overjoyed, and we decided to buy the piece of ground and start on our fortunes. He pressed me to show blm the spot, and the next night, armed with lanterns and ropes, wo met on the heath, and I let myself down the hole. He followed, and in a few minutes we stood awed by the mineral wealth before us. After exploring for some time we oame to a deep looking shaft on our left, and I was warning Fuke not to go too olose when he struok me a violent blow on the head and pushed mo over the edge. Fortunately the shaft was only 30 feet deep, with amass of soft earth at the bottom. Doctor, the shook nearly killed me. That my own familiar friend, to whom I had given half my fortune, should try to murder me made mo mad with rage. I lay perfectly still and hoard Fuke mutter, so great was the sllenoe: 'There, poor, weak Idiot I Now the money will be mine and Carrie's.' "I shivered with rage, and as he walked away got to my feet and felt for the level I was sure would branoh from the shaft. Creeping softly along for some distance, I noticed that the floor of the level was rising, so that I had great difficulty in olimbing up. Soon, as I suspected, I was olose to the lovol from which Fuke had, as he supposed, hurled mo hundreds of feet deep. Then a glimmer of light shone ahead, and I beard a sound of a pick being used. Creeping on, with a heavy stone in my hand, I oame upon my enemy—my would be murderer—and oame to my full senses to find him lying on the ground, dead, before me. Ab I hope for forgiveness, dootor, I was not oonsoious that I had killed him. God kuows I have suffered enough from that moment. How I burled his body aud eventually got home I don't know, but I did, and, although wealth beyond tho dreams of avarioe Is mine, still Fuke's pale faoe is always before me."
He paused, and, exhausted by his emotion, closed his eyes. To my amaaement, he slowly got up, with fixed eye, and stealthily cropt round the room, rehearsing with his tired brain the dreadful act he had committed. As his wife had described, be struok a obalr violently, and then, with a cry, collapsed Into a lifeless heap.
Sheer fright kept me immovable for a few ficoonds. Then my courage returned, and I ran to his assistance, only to find it too late. Earnest Trenarth had carried his crushing load of misery before a higher and Juster judge than any worldly one could over bo, and I could not feel it in my heart to wish bim any other fate.— Lady.
The Land of Pagoda*.
Burma Is the land of pagodas. From the summit of every mountain, of every hill or blllook, from above the cliffs and rooks, and from among the woods of the islands of the broad Irawadl, rise tho graceful forms and gilded plnnaclos of numberless pagodas. Often they are orovned by a golden htee, or umbrella.
Pagodas are rarely temples In the true sense. They are usually solid, tapering buildings placed over real or Imitation relics. Close by, among groves of palms and bananas, are generally to be seen the oarved and seven storied roofs of the kloungs, or Buddhist monasteries. Gay and light hearted as are the Bormans, they realise another and future existenoe as vividly as they do the present life,' and the teachings of the great Buddha are ever present to their minds and influence them profoundly. In the Buddhist religion there Is no God and no priesthood, but all men aro given the opportunity of following the great example, by retiring from the world into monasteries, renouncing the temptations of the flesh and the devil and living an austere, self denying life, engaged in contemplation, devotion and teaching.—Exchange. j*
Facing the ICwle,
Yeast—I believe In battle the musicians always go to the rear* Crimson beak—Yea, and that is the reason so many would be soldiers think jkbey would be willing to faoe the music.—Yon kers Statesman.
"Ebwyt'ldg am all right in its plaoe," laid Uncle Ktwn. "Er sba'p raxxer metal
st
man a good bah ber one minute and a tor'bls tough dtisen de next.''—Washington^
Vir
V?.~. ..fjf
Wordsworth and Burns.
A friend writes us from England: We visited the simple- tomb 01 William Wordsworth in Grasmere churchyard. The old church stood near it, among the anoient trees. The rapid Rotha passed the graves and the grand hills lifted their green domes in the cloudless sky.
There, under the grand trees liftin their solemn tops to the sun, our frien repeated a single verse from W worth'8 poem on the death of Burns:
I mourned with thousands, but ae one More deeply grieved, for he was gone Whose light I hailed when first it shone
And showed my youth Bow verse may build, a princely throne On humble truth. —Youth's Companion.
Papaw Vines For Luck.
"The Rev. T. D. Witherspoon in a sermon at Paducah related an amusing story of his experience while evangelizing in the mountains. One day while passing a Cornfield in Leslie county be was surprised to see long strings of papaw bark knotted together and tied to stumps. He asked his guide what it meant and was informed that it was "to bring luck." "And does such a foolish superstition exist all over this community?" asked the minister. "Oh, no,"' said the mountaineer "the old proacher over iu the settlement yonder says papaw vines don't do no good." "An intelligent man," interrupted Mr. Witherspoon. "I'm glad to find one man who isn't lost in ignorance." vf"Yassir,1"' the native continued, "he 'lows that yarn strings beats papaw strings all .hollow when it comes to bringin luck. Fact is, he don't use nothin but yarn strings."—Louisville Courier-Jonrnal.
Open Car Windows.
A correspondent writing of open car windows and the disagreeable draft from the same suggests that soreeu9 similar to those used in Bleeping cars be provided for ooach windows, and that only trainmen be allowed to place or remove them. A lady writing to the same paper suggests original taotics by the person annoyed: "Simply raise your umbrella or parasol in front of you, so that the wind, cinders, dust and smoke blow from your umbrella on the baok of the neck of the person who sits by the window in front of you. A very few minutes suffice to oonvince this person that the wind is blowing harder than he thought and is very disagreeable and uncomfortable So down goes the window, and also the umbrella, with a quiet smile of gratitude and content, with the result of self protection. "—New York Tribune.
A Sponge Statue.
Sponge is oertainly one of the ,ost original and unlikely materials in the world for a statue but, for all that, one of Germany's great men is modeled in this unpromising substance.
In the Friedrichsstrasse, Berlin, is a shop whioh contains a statue in sponge of Mr. Withorst. He is represented lifesize, seated in an armchair and holding his notes for a speech in bis hand.
Every one acknowledges that the likeness is an excellent one, and the manner in which the statesman's frock coat and gold speotaoles are represented is a subject
tar
universal admiration.
The Whole World at War.
war of armies or fleets, but none the less war. Capital contends against labor, labor against capital capitalist fights capitalist in trade competition work man fights against workman in ways which have nothing to do with mere 00mpetition. There be men who deplore the facte, who denounce the existenoe of this warfare, as though nothing good could be said of it, and yet it is far from dear that without it the world would make any progress. —Engineer.
In Um Wltk the Bwioe—.
"He's one of those self acting clerks," •aid the proprietor of the little gunshop da speaking of the young man who had quit his employ. "How is that?** asked the patnm. "He cBsGbarges himself. "—Chicago
PokL
it
It Depend*.
Aotlion.
Autbon may be divided roughly Into three groups, the good, the bad and the popular. The first make fame, the Koood make books, and the third make noney.—New York Evening Son.
S
TTTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL MARCH 7,1896.
An Extraordinary Wager.
We had ridden past the poet tuned lairaa of Windermere and Grasmere, with memories of Coleridge, De Quinoey, Christopher North, Mrs. Hemans end Harriet Martineau, and had rested by Rydal Water in the shadows of Rydal Mount. "Wordsworth," said one of our par- de la Chapelle, where the operation ty, calling to mind the author of the "Excursion," "seems to be tho soul of all these scenes. He made himself the ever prevailing spirit of the ^English lakes." '*Burns was his teacher," said anothor* $ "How was that?" we -asked.
The series of bravado bets which have been so frequent in Paris reached a climax when a shop assistant, named Alexander, laid a wager of 500 francs that he would swallow a yard of galvanized iron stove piping. The bet was accepted and witnesses and referee appointed. Alexander and one of the witnesses went to buy the piping, which was about one-sixteenth of an inch in thickness and five inches in diameter. Alexander took it to a whitesmith and requested him to file it down into a powder in the presence of the witness, who subsequently carried it to a cafe in the
*w swallowing the filings was carried opt. Quite 100 persons attended as spectators. Alexander divided the filings ^uto five portions, placed them in five glasses of beer and tossed them off at intervals of ten minutes. He played rds during the process of drinking, £&d when the last glass of beer and its
Vietallio addition had been consumed i^ je bet was declared won and the 500 5ncs handed over to him. He stated
Tsrward that he felt no inconvenience fefrtiufttever from the feat. —Paris Letter.
m-t Mr. Vernon's Perpetual Punter.
jvThat pointer of mine is a great cf flared Howard Vernon as he petted $1,000 dog Glenbeigh. "I canal Afcjws depend on him. When he makes put, I know that he has soented a bird,
I knovv that he will not move a Sjjuscle while I have a chance at it. "I was hunting quail up at Point «ys when I lost Glenbeigh. I knew he
vj\st
be pointing in the brush somepre, but I looked everywhere for him .4 could not find him. The next day Presumed the search, with no better success, but on the third day I found him in a dense thicket standing per fectly rigid, with his tail sticking straight out behind and one foot up. A quail had run into a hollow tree, and the dog stood at the opening pointing. The quail dared not come out, and the dog, true to his training, wouldn't move. He ha been standing in that position, without so much as moving a foot, for 65 hours, and when I tried to lead him away he oould not walk. San Francisco Post ||f!§S|| ...
1
A Polite Child. ,r
Professor Sully, in an artiole in The Popular Science Monthly, commenting on the jealous regard for ceremony and the proprieties of behavior as seen in the enforcement of rules of politeness by children, cites a delightful instance that fell under his own observation as he was walking on Hampstead heath. "It was a spring day, and the fat buds of the ohestnut were bursting into magnificent green plumes. Two well dressed 'misses,' aged, I should say, about 9 and 11, were taking their correct morning walk. The elder called the attention of the younger to one of the trees, pointing to it. The younger exclaimed in a highly shotted tone, 'Oh*,* Maud, you know you shouldn't point 1' The notiun of perpetrrtihg a rudeness on the chestnut tree was funny enough. But the '"noident is instructive as illustrating the ohildish tendency to stretch and generalize rules to the utmost."
Broke Up the Party.
"*y''At a oard party in the northwest a few eveDings ago across eyed man was posing as the man who knew it all, giv ing his positive opinions on every sub ject in a loud voice and otherwise making himself a general nuisance. A Boston girl was particularly annoyed at the lordly air he assumed and the attacks he had made on some of her pet theories. She made up ber mind to bowl him over if she ever got a chance.
It came sooner than expected. A few minutes later the Boston girl was the partner of the cross eyed man, who immediately proceeded to give elaborate instructions as to how certain cards should be olayed to insure them the game. He finished by saying, ''Now, go ahead, Miss Baok Bay, and remember I have my eye on you." She never I00Lup, but in thfi most iunocent wny imaginable, said, "Which, eye, Mr. Jones?" It broke up the party.—^Washington Post. 'J.
4\,
If persons wouldbringto bear the same amount of common sense, in buying a remedy for bronchitis, coughs, colds and croup, that they do in the purchase of their family supplies they would never fail to procure Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup.
Geographies to Blame.
Ask any hundred English men, women or children what is the name of the oapital of Russia, and every one of them will reply, "St. Petersburg." It may be a small matter, but in point of fact the proper name is "Petersburg." The English are the only folk who insist upon the "Saint." The city was founded by Peter the Great, and is named after him. It is quite true that Peter was one of the most extraordinary men that ever filled a throne, but no one would have been more astounded than himself at being dubbed a saint. He neither lived nor died in the odor of sanotity, and it is hard to find out how it became the English fashion to miscall the splendid town he founded.— Little Folks.
An Agricultural Peei^r
The Earl of Winchelsea is best known to the English publio by the great interest he takes in matters agricultural. His interest in birds has led him to make many expeditions, some of whioh have extended as far as Egypt, and to risk his life at the end of a rope many soores of times on the west ooast of Scotland. He has the finest oollection of eagles' eggs in England. The earl is also keenly interested in pet animals of different kinds, and he used to walk •bout the park at his ancestral Haverholme accompanied by a lioness.
i) Salvation Oil has the enviable distfne-
%on of being a synonym for cure of
The whole world is at war—odl thfc, [rheumatism, neuralgia, gout, and kindred affections, such as sciatica, Ucdouloureaux, etc. It ia growing more popular dally. The people will have
cta.i
it.
25
"There la Danger In Delay."
Sinoe 18611 have been a great auflbrer from catarrh. I tried Kly's Cream Balm and to all appearances am oared. Terrible headaches from which I had long suffered are gone.—W. J. Hitchcock, late Major U. 8. Vol. and A. A. Gen. Buffalo, N. Y.
Ely's Cream Balm has completely cured me of catarrh when everything else* failed. Many acquaintances have used it with excellent results.—Alfred W. Stevens, Caldwell, Ohio.
Kote of Warning.
Indigestion produces icflammattoa and ulceration of the stomach, and theae are the exciting cause of so many deaths from cancer of the stomach. Sooth Ajckrioajt Kami is the most momentous cure for atom* ach trouble* the world ever saw. There is no ease of Indigestion and stomach weakness which ft will not cam, A sound stomach is never affected by cancerous growths. Save yourself by usiuf this renowned cure which never disappoints. Sold by all druggists In Terre H&aie.
A Famous French Duelist.
The late Marquis de 1'Angle-Beauma-noir was in his younger days famous as a duelist. One evening, meeting his cousin, the Marquis du Hallays, in the foyer of the Opera, he walked up to him and, in the course of conversation, remarked: "Isn't it odd, my dear fellow, that, quarrelsome as you and I are, we should never have fought with one another?" "That's true," aeplied Du Hallays, "but that can always be remedied."
And on the strength of that, the two cousins met in mortal combat on the following morning, the encounter resulting in the Marquis de l'Angle-Beau-manoir having his right hand pieroed by his adversary's rapier, which, while it rendered a continuance of the fight impossible, left the other hand free to grasp that of his oousin in undiminished friendship a moment afterward. On another occasion, when he was about to fight a duel in whioh he was entirely in the right and his adversary in the wrong, he suddenly discovered that his opponent was a perfect novice in swordsmanship, and that he would, therefore, have him completely at his meroy. So he strode up to him and," in the presence of 20 or 80 persons, presented the most courteous and full apology. Almost dumfounded the latter inquired why the marquis assumed such an extraordinary course. "Because,'" he returned, "it would really be too unfortunate if I were to fight with a mazette (greenhorn)." And with that he made a low bow and then turned his back upon him.—San Franoisoo Ar gonaut.
A Pahn'erston Bemlnlseenoe.
-^Lord Palmerston on one occasion took the chair at a meeting in connection with University college, London. He was not bo familiar, writes Mrs. S. E deMorgan in her reminiscences, with the sort of speech expected in such a place as he would have been at West minster, and meaning to adapt his rhet oric to the occasion began very appro priately, "It has been said that 'a lit tie learning is a dangerous thing,' but it is better than—better than—better than"— Here caine-a dead stop. Lord Brougham, who sat beside the speaker came to the rescue, speaking with his peculiar nasal twang, "Better than a great deal of ignorance." This of course brought dovn the house, and during a volley of laughter, cheers and KentiBh fire, Lord Palmerston recovered the lost thread of his speech, and finished it with his usual ease and fluency.
'V: Freezes Water In a Kite.
A Yankee farmer in Brazil who longed for ice water has utilized a kite for the purpose of obtaining ice. He fills a tin can with water and sends it to the height of three miles,where it is promptly frozen. After a suflioient interval the kite is rapidly hauled in and the cake of ice secured. The inventor is so pleased with his toy that it is said he now proposes to send up a kite 150 feet long by a steel wire cable. Under the kite will be suspended a pulley, over which runs an endless chain bearing cans attached to hooks. Thb cans will be filled with wat$r and the speed of the belt upon whioh they will run will be regulated bo that the topmost cans Will be converted into ice sufficiently hard to withitand the downward journey.\
J1
The glazing of pens, in some varieties considered an important operation, & done with lac dissolved in naphtha.
The Labor
I of getting
!l095 Meals
confronts some one in every home each year. Whoever the work devolves upon should I' SM know about
NONESUCH!
MltiCE MEAT
It's a labor-saver—a woman-sav-er. Without the long and wearying peeling, chopping, boiling, jeeaing and mixing, a woman can quickly make mince pie. fruit pudding, or fruit cake that will be the de-
A FEW FACTS tt®l!
IB
light of her household. Since None Such is sold everywhere there is no moreneedofmaklngyonrown mince meat than of making your own yeast.
Try one package—10 cents. Take no substitutes. ScDdToaraddrew, naming tbl« p»pCT, ft we will Knd yoa ftwabook, "Mr*. Popkioa' Th*nk»*lTlo!," bToncaftbcmoft popular bnmorra* writer* of the d»y. fi
MltltKBLlJWHn.lt
COt
Srnunue, H. f.
CRUSHED $4.50 ifetiveretf COARSE... $4.00
SampM order. 3 bushels to test, 25c. ICqual to Anthracite CoaL
Citizens' Fuel & GaK Co.,
507
ELY'S
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t£e°Naaai Passages,
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Those who contemplate a winter's trip'to this amiable climate wnl bear iu mind the
gg
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For full particulars call on agent "Big Four Route" or address «T
1
E. E. SOUTH, General Agent,
D. B. Martin, Gen. Pass. Tkt. Agt.
E. O. McCormick, Pass. Traffic Mgr.
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J" N. HICKMAN,
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SANT C. DAVIS. FRANK J. TURK,
DAVIS & TURK
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
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O
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no other. Rtftfe dangerout tubtlitutiont and imitation!.
At DroggtMe, or iend««.
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OTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS.
N
City Clerk's Office, 1,1890.
Terke Haute, lnd., Feb. 17th,
To Jennie E. Chadwlck. Daniel E. Chopson, Mary B. Harris, Hiram P. Davis, Lydia Maxwell, Mary E. Piece, Ada M. Henry,
Qeorge E. Henry, William F. Hetzer. Robert Q. Weber, Rebecca ^etzer, Adah Chopson, Rosa Miller, Margaret Burns. LoulsF. Wag-
Boggs. You are hereby notified that the city commissioners of the city of Terre Haute, Indi» duly appointed by the Judge of the Civil iuit court of Vigo county, Indiana, will meet in the council chamber of the city of Terre Haute, Indiana, situated on the northwest corner of Fourth and Walnut street*, said city, on Tuesday, the 17th day of March, A. D. 1895, at 10 o'clock a. m., for the purpose of appraising and assessing the damages and benefits (If there be any) accruing to the owner or owners of the land or lots through which it is proposed to change the grade of Fifth street as follows: From Cherry street to Locust street, in the city of Terre Haute, lnd., as shown by a plat now on file in my office.
ana Circuit
By order of the Common Council. Witness my hand and seal of the city of Terre Haute, this 17th day of February, 1896. [SEAL.] CHAS. H. GOODWIN,
1
S
Ohio Street-^/
CATARRH
NASAL
CATARRH
Is the result of eoldo and sudden climatic change. It can be cured by a pleasant temedr whlch is applied directly Into the nostrils. Being quickly absorbed it gives relief at once.
or
renlf
COLD HEAD
city Clerk.
•jq"OTICE TO NON-RESIDENT.
State of Indiana, County of Vigo, in the Superior Court, Vigo County, in vacation. No. 4819. James vanse, Jr., et al. vs. Henry A. Sralthi On note and attachment.
Be it known that on the 28th day of February, 1890, said plaintiff filed an affidavit in due form, showing that said Henry A. Hmltb Is a non-resident of the state of Indiana.
Bald non-resident defendant is hereby notified of the pendency of said action against bim, and that the same will stand for trial April 21st, 1890, the same being at the Maroh term of said court In the year 1896. [seal] HUGH D. ROQUET, Clerk.
N
OTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS, ETC.
In the matter of the estate of Joseph H. nialrA In the Vigo Circuit Court, February term, 1896.
Notice Is hereby given that Mary C. Blake, as administratrix of the estate of Joseph H. Blake, deceased, has presented and filed ber account and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Circuit court, on the25th day of March, 1896, at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause, If any there be why said accounts and vouchers should not be approved.
MAST C. BLAKE,
Administratrix of Jos. H. Blake.
Witness the clerk and seal of said Vigo Circuit court, at Terre Haute, Indiana, this 28th day of February, 1898. [seal] HUGH D. ROQUET, Clerk.
HERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue' of an order of saie isaued from the Vigo Superior court to me directed and delivered, in favor of Lemuel Laughead. guardian of Sarah Laughead, a minor, and against Mary Vermillion, Samuel T. Jon and Brad'
on, Samuel T. Jones,
1
and Bradley" Hoi ton A Co. (a corporation), I am ordered to sell the following described real estate, situate! in Vigo county, Indiana,
am ordei
The northeast quarter 00 of the southeast quarter (AQ of section number twenty-six (361 township thirteen (13) north, of range ten (10) west, In Vigo county, Indiana, and on SATURDAY, THI£ 28th DAY OF MARCH, 1896, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m., and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day, at the north door of the court house, In Terre Haute, I will otter the
and profits of the above described
real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the higbbidder for easb, and upon failure to reala sum sufficient to satisfy said Judgment ""ertnefi and costs, 1 will then and there offer the feesimple In and to said real estate to the high est bidder for easb to satisfy the sam e.
This 2d day of March, 189C
malL ., New York.
arren
pf»7.10.
JOHN BUTLER,
