Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 14, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 September 1896 — Page 2
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A CHILD ASLEEP.
How "be sleepethi Having dmnken Weary childhood's uandr&^ore,
i: From his pretty eyes have sunken Pleasures to make room (or more Bleeping iiear the withered noaegay which be palled the day before.
itosegaysl Leave them for the waking. Throw them earthward where they grew. Dim are rocb betide the breaking
Amaranths he looks'as to.
Voided eyes see brighter colors than the open ever do. JW,\ MB.
Heaven flowers, rayed by shadows golden From the pal in* they spraug beneath. Now perhaps divinely holden,
Swing against him in a wreath. We may think from the quickening of his
*•.:—* tfWfl'Hfttlli "f"."" nitto ytslon calleth While the young child dreameth on.'"-
Fair, OtJreamer, thee befalleth With the glory thoo ba&t won. Darker wert thou in the garden jester morn by summer son.
We should see the spirits ringing Boaud thee were the clouds away. 'Tix the child heart drawa them, singing
In the slont M*ming clay.
Singing? Stars that seem the mutest go in music all the way.
As the moths around a taper. As the tyee nround a rose, As in sunset many a vapor, 80 the spirits group and close Bound about a holy childhood, as if drinking its repose. —New York Ledger.
A DETECTIVE'S ELSE.
Cholmondely is very old friend of mine. To the world he poses successfully as asocial star. He rons a flat in Mayfair which would knock the staffing oat of an earl. His country hoase is situated in one of the best parts of Hertfordshire. Any day you would pick his yacht out of the swaggerest batch at Oowes, and his horses and wine are beyond all reproach.
But he hasn't a friend saving myself who knows where his money oomee from.
As a matter of fact, Cholmondely is a sort of society Sherlock Holmes. There are a good many affairs of international importance which require the most subtle investigation and diplomacy cf a high order.
And then there are many society cases affecting people of high standing which require the most delicate handling. Such matters are placed entirely in the hands of men of Cholmondely's stamp. He makes quite $50,000 a year.
I was more agreeably surprised than otherwise when one day last week the following wire arrived from him: *1
4
'Can you see me before 12? Important matter. Urgent" There wa? nothing of the blase man of the worid air which Gholmondely •fleets in society as he greeted me this morning. Instead he got to business at once.
Hie first action was to cross the room to a little box which was fitted against the walL I had seen it scores of times before. It was what he called his peeping machine—an arrangement of pipes and mirrors—by means of whioh he is able to see from the study what is going on in his drawiug room and dining room. "See anything?" ,, "Yea There's a man there." *'Keoognize him?"
I started back in surprise. The visitor was none other than a prominent member of the government
Cholmondely said nothing, but simply turned a small lever and told me to look again. This time I saw into the dining room.
Seated at the tablo was a gentlemanly man of about 40. He was studying a notebook. "Think he looks the desperate criminal of fiction?" "Couldn't say boo to a goose," I replied. "Well, anyway, he's our man, and we've got to catch him." "But, my dear chap, he's here. You oould sprinkle salt on his tail." "Steady, my friend, steady. This is not a common or garden case. It's a matter involving the theft of government secret. "Our client is Lord whom you •aw in the drawing room just now. •boat 0 o'clock last night he left the foreign office with dispatches of the most important description. Were they in thohundsof the government to whom they are addressed nothing could avert a great European war. Ho had orders to cross to the oontinent with them the first thing in the morning. "To cut along story short, they were stolen on his way home, and half an hour later be reoelved urgent instructions to return them at onoe, as in view of fresh complications they most not be delivered at any cost. "Now, the case hadn't been In my hands for more than an hour before I discovered who wtre the guilty gentlemen in the affair. I had been there before, so to speak. As a matter of fact, I know within an aoo where those dispatches are now, but there are one or two difficulties in the path. In the first place* it is impossible by the nature of the oase to arrest the men. "Now these gentlemen offer the usual alternatives. Either we must pay them a huge ransom for the papers—you see now why they stole them—-or they will akip across the channel and deliver tti*m, in which case there will be the to pay. "The man you saw in the dining ic-n is one cf the two gentlemen eonoe^sd to the theft Knowing he Is safe fWMtt arrest, he has called to negotiate vith me on the question of eo «usa* tioa. It*» blackmail in E~„ii*h. "Of my clients are willing t© tsarannbuig to get the papers back, that isn't Oholmoudely'* way of marking. We'** got to get those pai*9« paying for them, and if yo«*re the JLU I tak# yoo ft* we can manage Ala "The otlbwr man's "at a W«U known -oath 0«»* PM* waitin*
to mm
S in**otiations faiL I think it is more than likely he has got the papers. Now, yon have got to «oJo*n ttenTaad keep him -in visw while I
dilly dally with the business manager of the show and keep him waiting here for a day or two till I hit on a good scheme "If he has got the papers and there's a chance, get 'em at any cost, old man. It won't oost you more than $10 to knock him down if neoeasary. But for heaven's sake don't make a soene. Wire me every hour* but don't take any risk of making a mess of it"
I found him in the billiard room. From my friend's description I recognized him at onoe. A tall, aristocratic fellow, who gave me the idea of a clever ne'er do welL Now, I know something about billiards, and as there was no one else in the room I ventured to suggest a game.
-X
"Aw, just as you please," he drawled. "I'm not much of a-hand at the game." We played a 50. I didn't shine. You can't play any billiards to speak of with one eye, and the other was on my man. Meanwhile I was trying to form some definite line of action. I determined to get these papers single handed without any advisory assistance from Cholmondely.
At the end of the game we bad a whisky and soda together. He was not half a bad fellow and was no stranger about the world.
Suddenly a brilliant idea struck me. It was a sort of neat little inspiration, and unless be carried the papers on his person I decided it ought to work.
It was 9 o'clock when I finished a moat comfortable dinner. My quondam friend had strolled into the cardxoom, and I followed. If Cholmondely had been present he would have noticed that I no longer wore my diamond ring.
I proposed a quiet game of cards. We played for about a quarter of an hour, when I thought it about time to open the plot, which I did by turning to my adversary and deliberately aoousing him of cheating.
In a moment the room was in an uproar. The proprietor appeared on the scene, followed by the guests from the other rooms. To the former I repeated my accusation. While my victim violently protested against the insult offered him, I quietly approaoh^d the landlord.
1
"I would be much obliged if you would send for the police. I have lost a valuable ring, and have reason to believe that tbis man is not only a professional card sharper—be is also a thief."
My victim was completely staggered, and, as I imagined he would be, indi nant at the accusation. Conscious of his innooenoe in this matter at least, he bore out my request that the police should be sent fpr and his character cleared. He accompanied the inspector to the station, and I followed.
What my victim felt when my diamond ring was found in bis pocket I leave you to imagine. I did not oonsider it advisable to tell him that I had placed it there daring that quiet game of oards. "It's a lie! Afoul lie!" he shouted. "It's a conspiracy! The man is trying to ruin me. I am a man of position, 1 tell you! It is a plot" "You will have an opportunity of explaining that to the magistrate tomorrow morning," replied the inspector. "In the meantime I am afraid I must detain you."
Now oame the oritical part of the plot Calling the inspector aside, I informed him of my suspicions that the prisoner had stolen other artioles of mine which doubtless were oonoealed in his baggage. A judicious tip impelled the sloven arms of the law with such effect that that same night a search warrant was obtained, and aooompanied by the officer I returned to the hotel, where we went through the arrested man'B traps.
In a corner of his portmanteau was a bundle of papers stamped with an important looking seal. It was that described to me by Cholmondely.
As the inspector was engaged in searching the prisoner's dressing ease I dipped by hand in the bag and abstracted the dispatches
That night they went under registered cover to my London friend, and the same train that brought the prisoner's confederate to his aid in the morning in response to his urgent telegrams numbered Cholmondely among its passengers.
The magistrate said it was a most flagrant case of theft Under the ciroumstanoes, however, he didn't think a month's hard labor too muoh for the prisoner. 'I wish you oould have been in court at the moment when the prisoner and his friend properly appreciated the fact that the prosecutor was a bosom friend of Cholmondely.
I oan see their faces now as the trick dawned upon them.—Answers.
-.3.
gfcalia of F»pler Ma«h
In making animals' skins into fur rags and in the manufacture of various articles made of fur imitation skulls are often used in plaoe cf the natural skull. The imitation skulls are made at papier mache, the inside of the mouth and the tongue being wax ooated the teeth are of celluloid. When mounted, the animals are supplied with artificial eyed. The imitation skulls are modeled from natural skulls, and they are strikingly characteristic in appearance. They are made in great variety as substitutes for the skulls of many animals.—New York Sun.
Stroek Bon*.
The festivities at the coming of1 age of Uk
present Lard Hopetoun included
8 at the parish ohurch, which wa$ filled with members of the great Hope family and also with members of the E cJ Tv feelings of the con-gregsu-Jtt t_-a :ioeed can be imagined when the mr. iter began his discourse with the words, "My brethren, the world is full of blasted hopes.
Crwta Oost 75*^
To display a crest on stationery and {date in England costs each family a tax of a guinea a year. A boot 40,000
-1* "V ASS. SkJte* "M
4%:.i
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING- MAIL, SEPTEMBER 26, 1896.
Waddiag OwmoetM.
The usage by whioh the priest, joining the hands of the man and woman after their consent to the marriage, with such words as "fit ego vos contango," etc., laid the ends of his stole upon the fastis so Joined is ancient, but was not universally followed. It is ordeTed in8ome wlyBoman Bacerdotalia, but disappeared from the Boman ritual at or before the revision of Paul V. It was, however, retained in the local books of many continental dioceses.
At Liege Our hands were iwund together with the ends of the stole, and the practioe was very possibly the same elsewhere, though I cannot at this moment give another instanoe of tbis particular detail. But it would seem that the usage was not followed in England. I am not aware of any trace of it in any ancient English service book. Indeed the ceremony with whioh it is connected is absent from most English books, probably because in the JSnglish forms of the service the joining of hands took plaoe at the time when the man and woman gave their troth to one another. The later joining of their hands by the priest after the delivery of the ring was in trod need into England in 1540. It is a ceremony analogous to but distinct from that with which the action with the stole is sometimes conjoined. Hence it would appear that the use of that action in the marriage service of the Ohurch of England is of the nature of innovation rather than of restoration, and that the innovation is founded on a mistake.—Notes and Queries.
Bossettt and His Impossible Women.
It is said that Bossetti never learned to draw. The same is said of many painters, and the French say it of all Englishmen. It is oertain that the want of close study as a young man hampered him all his life, and that he was never sure of perspective, distances, eta We are not going to quarrel with Rossetti's birds and butterflies and flowers, because none such sang or flew or bloomed anywhere but in paradise. If be had mastered technical difficulties with preRapbaelite "sincerity," they would have been as beautiful and less unreal. But in painting flesh and hair and drapery, in oombining brilliancy of color like that of Memling with depth and gradation like that of Leonardo, no English painter ever excelled him.
Exception is taken to the monotony of Bossetti'8 women, drawn from two or three types. The fault must be shared with almost all painters. There is the Raphaelesqne type of faoe, the Oorreggieeque, the Titianesque, and so on. What the objectors mean is probably that they do not like the type. It is so entirely voulu that criticism would be impertinent, and we oan only say, without expressing a judgment, that to our eye the lips, the throats, the fingers, of Rossetti's beauties have something in them whioh is not quite human, but is like the flesh of sirens, houris or lamisB, those magioal beings who capture the passions of men, but not their hearts.—Quarterly Review.
The Load of a Dust Storm.4"'
Blown dust is a general and familiar nuisanoe to housekeepers over the entire west A minimum estimate, verified by direot observation, for the quantity of dust settling on floors during such storms is about a fourteenth of entrance of dust on a surfaoe of a square yard in half a day. A maximum estimate made on the basis of the above newspaper accounts would |?e at least five pounds tc a square yard of surface for a storm lasting 84 hours. If we then suppose that a bouse that is 24 feet wide and 82 feet long has open crevices, whioh aver age ft sixteenth of an inch in width and have a running length in windows anc* doors of 160 feet, the wind may be supposed to enter half of these orevioes with a velocity of five miles per hour for the time the storm lasts, orfor S4 hours. The dust may be supposed to settle on not less than So square yards of surfaoe, including floor space and horizontal surfaoesof furniture, 'the minimum efitimate, based on these figares, gives ns 225 tons of dust to the cubic mile of air. The maximum estimate would be 196,000 tons.—Popular Scienoe Monthly. m.' jr A Rhapsody on a Mutton Chop, ft s^When a primitive man wants breakfast, he takes a sheep, kneels upon it, holds it betwoen his legs, and outs its throat He skins it, and, taking a slice oat of it^fries it on the ooals for break-
fkWe also Jemiifd not less imperatively outlets for our breakfast, hut we manage it another way. We procure an individual some way off to kill the beast, and another out of our sight to 000k it We have a paper frill put round the bone to disguise it, and set a pot of flowers straight before ns to look at While we eat it—but to the sheep—to, the sheep—-it can make little difference Whioh way it is eaten! We still do our andean work, bat we do it by proxy. Ami it may be-questioned whether what we gain in refinement we have not lost in sinoerity.—Fortnightly Review.
A Mat* Diary.
1
"Tbere are but two biographers who oan toll the story of a man's or a woman's life," writes Oliver Wendell Holmes. "One is the person himself or herself the other is the recording angel I should like to see any man's biography with corrections and emendations by his ghost We don't know each other's secrets quite so well as we flatter ourselves we do." The biographer who Is practically possible would not tell his story. A very wise and good man, who filled a great earthly place, said to me more than once or tww-. "1 pal no secrets into rny diaiy."—Cits&tle* men's Magazine.
The first fire bricks made in this country wwe manufactured in Baltimore in 1837. They were manufactured far the backs of the old fashioned fireplaces, the limestone proving too friable.
The fineness of our gold coins is about 90oeroent
Hw Early Anahaptlita.
Xhe tailor's trade was only permitted so far as it was necessary for clothing, but so far as it or any other trade ministered to luxury, pride and arrogance it was abjured as "rootless work." Thus they oould not be goldsmiths, silversmiths or jewelers. Nor make amy weapon of war.
The trades chiefly pursued Moravian Anabaptists were clothmaking, cutlery, millkeeping and shoemakingjf In the fields and in the woods imd in the vineyarfte many found healthy and happy occupation. Others worked as oarpenters, joiners, cabinet makers, masons, blacksmiths, cartwrights, tanners, saddlers, potters—there was, in fact, hardly a useful trade the communities did not practioe. Strange to say, nothing is said of printing. Probably they feared to attract the notioe of their imperial persecutors. The Moravian Anabaptists, very different from those who all over the German empire and elsewhere oommenced the movement followed the model held up in the words, "He shall not cry, nor lift up, or cause his voice to be heard in the streets." They spoke of themselves as "the quiet in the land."
In clothmakipg and cutlery they obtained such repute tyat at their final expulsion the authorities made special efforts to infuse some kind of energy into "the Christians," who hitherto had not been able to compete with the Anabaptist cloth workers. It was even proposed to invite Dutch cloth workers into the country. But it was by "good work" and the overcoming of adverse conditions that the Anabaptist communities had attained their eminence.— Contemporary Review.
W»M|BS.
Managua seems to have been made the capital of Nicaragua because the two principal cities, Leon and Granada, were always fighting for the honor. Leon approaches the most olosely to the true metropolitan character. It oovers a wide extent of country. Its public buildings are admittedly the finest in Central America, and, besides showing a greater variety of race in its inhabitants, it is the abode of the old aristocracy. Then it has gone in for progress and education, and though it strikes one as a trifle incongruous to see even a railway station in a plaoe like this, to say nothing of the other adjunots of civilisation, there is no blinking the fact that these same adjunots are there, and that they represent an advance. And the oathedral of cut stone is a magnificent structure, oovt* ng an entire square, and fronting the whole width of the grand plaza.
From the roof I saw the wide Paoifio Shining like a thin rim of silver on the western horizon, while stretohing away to the northeast I followed without shifting my eyes the line of Los Marabios, which are nine volcanoes, Bome 6t them as perfectly tapered as an Egyptian pyramid. Managua has a oertain advantage in being situated on the lemfm colored Jake of the same name and in being the seat of government— Good Words.
A Story of Ole Boll.
A curious tale of Ole Bull is told in a recent book on violins and violinists. It seems that in 1831, being then 21 years of age, the famous violinist wandered to Paris. The cholera was raging and Malibran singing. He went to hear her, and his landlord decamped with his possessions, inoluding his violin He was speedily reduced to extremity. During the last dinner that he was able to pay for he made the acquaintance of a remarakble man. To this stranger Ole Bull oonfided his miseries. At the conclusion the stranger said abruptly,
Well, I will do something for yon if you have courage and 6 francs." "I have both," said Bull. "Then go to Frascati's tonight at 10 o'clock, pass through the first room, go into the second, where they play rouge et noir, and when a new taille begins, put your 5 francs on rouge and leave it there." Bull did as directed, and when his 6 francs had beoome 400 took them up after an episode with a woman who attempted to take them. Red continued to win, and had he left his money longer he would have won an independent sum. The stranger, who was present at his elbow, was Vidooq, the French detective, already a European oelebrity. V/
Jonas Hamvar* I
In Westminster abbey, in the west aisle, between the monuments q(f those two great men Warren Hastings and Richard Oobden, is one of Jonas Hanway, whose chief olaim to fame is that he was the first man in England who carried an umbrella. It is not probable, though, that this is the reason why was buried in the abbey, since he was also in his day as a traveler and a philanthropist He journeyed much in the east, and wrote a most interesting account of his life there. Afterward he oame home, and, making a tour of England, wrote so dull .a book about it that it drew from the celebrated Dr. Johnson the characteristic remark that "Jonas acquired some reputation by traveling abroad and lost it all by traveling at home. "—Max Bennett Thrasher in St Nicholas.
Reseated.
"I will hunt him to the—figurativeends of the earth," said the Boston man in most earnest tones. "Pshaw!" said the other. "You are not tiie first man who has been held up and robbed of $3 or #4." "I care not for the paltry money," said the Bostonian, "but when he pointed the firearm at me the beast said, 'Stand right where yon are atP
And a shudder ran through bis tiA —Indianapolis JoornaL
Doe* Away With Biota*.
An ingenious Frenchman has dene away with the need of bluing in laundering. He makes a soap in which he incorporates a solution of aniline green in strong acetic acid. The alkali of the soap converts the green to Woe, «nd
FtoytUs Cap and the Knout.' The French republic, thanks to the alliance between the Phrygian cap and the knout, has done its best to make its soil insecure for those who fled from the tyranny of czardom. Among Russian exiles living- at Zurich, Geneva, and Lausanne spies have latterly been introduced, even to the guise of alleged lady students' of the same nationality. In Eqghmd alone proscribed' Russians are free, and in England, partly to consequence of their contact with the quiet operation of parliamentary instifeutions, partly on account of a change of feeling amnnff the cultured classes of their own country, men like Stepniak, the author of "Underground Russia" and kindred works, who onoe had a hand in the fierce active fight against autocracy by all available means of irregular warfare, have gradually ceased to be connected with the organization of so called terroristic attempts. Their London monthly organ, Free Russia, shows how much they have moderated their demands.
If the young emperor would onl£ consent to the introduction of some kind of representative assembly, such as all European nations have and as even the sultan had adopted shortly before Turkey was beaten down by the armies of Alexander II, the reigning czar would rally around him many who are at present his adversaries in what is bolieved to be the camp of the most extreme party.—North Amerioan Review.
a
Waning Custom.
"Do you notice how much the praotioe of carrying the hands in the pocket has been given up by all classes of men within the last few years?" asked the literary man. "It was never good form, but still you would often see it I think the newsboys are responsible for the change. Put your hand in your pocket as you stand for an instant on the street some day and see if you don't agree with me. If you are anywhere in the lower or central portion of the city there will be from one to a dozen or more newsboys in
Bight
Returned to First Principles.
A. French writer has had a vision of the city of the future, Cyclopolis by name.
The city was full of wheels—bicycles, tricycles, monocytes, petroleum cars, autooars and there is no telling what else. But one day the inhabitants had a sensation. All the newspapers issued special bulletins. A man had been seen walking—yes, walking on his own lega
The Cyclopolitans could hardly believe their eyes, but so it was, and the wonderful stranger, we are assured, amassed a large fortune by giving lessons in walking, whioh soon became the fashionable sport
A Lie,
Tim Healy is beginning to acquire a reputation as *a story teller. An eminent queen'B oounsel, he said the other day, onoe gave the following recommendation to a gentleman who proposed to swear an affidavit after having already sworn an affidavit in exactly a contrary sense in the oourse of the suit 'Never,'' remarked the queen's counsel, "swear an affidavit when your previous affidavit to the contrary effect is in possession of the court Because, my young friend,"' he added, "that would be a ue." f___ 7
An Evening Toilet.
A charming model for an evening toilet, says a fashion writer, is a canarv colored silk batiste over a pink and yellow chameleon taffeta silk underskirt and bodice. On the front is a bolero jacket of point de venise lace, with a crush oollar and girdle of pale yellow satin held by buttons of pink pearls infermixed with tiny French brilliants. Between the front# of the laoe bolerc shows a full blouse of the shot satir veiled with pale yellow tulle and banded with pink pearl passementerie^
BBAVtl SPIRITS BB0KEN.
How often women wake up in the morning cheerful and happy, determined to do so much before the day ends, and yet:—
Before the tog is very old, the dreadful BACKACHE appears, the brave spirit sinks took in affright no matter how hard she struggles, the "dutch" is upon her, she falls upon the"- '*l couch, crying:—" Why should I suffer so? What can 1 do?"
Lydia fiL
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound" will ttop the torture and restore courage All such pains come from a deranged ntenaa. Trouble in the womb blots out the light of the sun at midday to a v*st number of women.
Bs advised—do aa many others have dove and are doing—procure Lydia E. PUkham's Vegetable Compound at osue, and commence without delay tc retlise the relief it is sure to bring you.
4.'
SalesproTei
the
N
Every one of theia
will notioe the motion of your hand in your pocket, and if one is looking in another direction he is attraoted by the rush of his fellows, and you are surrounded by a struggling mass of boys, and as many papers as there are urchins are thrust into your face. It is a dangerous thing to put your band to your pocket unless you are willing to have your progress delayed for a minute or twa"—New York Times. —,— 1
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^"OTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS.
1
State of Indiana, county of Vigo, in the Superior court of Vigo county, June term. 1896. No. 5,018. John Cheek vs. The unknown heirs of Hiram Shepherd, decea&ed. Quiet title.
Be it known, that on the 11th day of August, 189(5, it was ordered by the court that the clerk notify by publication said unknown heirs of Hiram Shepherd, deceased, as nonresident defendants of the pendency of this action against them.
Said defendants are therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action against them and that tho same will stand for trial October 5th. 1896. the same being at the September term of said court in the year
185X1.
[SKAI/1 HUGH D. ROQUET, Clerk.
OTIOE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS. ETC.
In the matter of the estate of Sallle J. Danaldson, deceased. In the Vigo Circuit court, September term. 1806.
Notice is hereby given that Wm. H. Turner as Executor of tho estate of Sallle J. Danaldson. deceased,:has presented and filed his accounts and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that tho same will come up for the examination and action of said Circuit court, on tho 36th day of September, 1806, 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 account and vouchers should not be approved.
Witness, the clerk and seal of said Vigo Circuit court, at Terre Haute, Indiana, this 20thday of August. 1896. [SEAT:.] HUGH D. ROQUET, Clerk.
H. J. BAKER, Plaintiff's Attorney. OTIOE TO NON-RESIDENTS.
N'
The State of Indiana. Vigo County. In the Vigo circuit court, September term. 1896. No. 18,341. Mattle Iiallett vs. Benjamin F. Hallett. Divorce.
Be It known, that on the 12th day of September. 1896. said plaintiff filed an affidavit In due form, showing that said Benjamin 1*. iiallett Is a a non-resident of tho state of Indiana.
Said non-resident defendant is hereby notified of the pendency of said action against him, and that the same will stand for trial November 11th, 1896, the same being at tho September term of said court in the year 1896.
HUGH D. ROUQET.
[8EAn.1 Clerk.
LAMB & BEASCEV, Plaintiff's Attorneys. GHERIPP'S SALE. By virtue of an order of sale Issuod from the Vigo Superior court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of Sarah Eliza Taylor and against Charles E. Stewart and Jcmlraa Stewart, I am ordered to sell tho following described real estate, situated In Vigo county. Indiana, to-wit:
Commencing at Dhe southwest corner of the northwest quarter (W) of section eight (8), township twelve (IS) north of rango eight (8) west thence north thirty-two(82) rods thence east thirty-two (32) rods: thence north one hundred and twonty-olgnt (128) rods to the north line of said quarter section thence east' thirty (30) rods thence south one hunarod and sixty (160) rods to the south line of said quarter (M) section thence west sixty-two me) rods to the place of beginning, situated In Vigo county, Indiana, ana on SATURDAY, THE IOTH DAY OP
OCTOBER, 1890,
between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day, at the north door of. tho court house, in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents 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 high- *, est bidder for cash, and upon failure to.reallsee a sum sufficient to satisfy said Judgment and costs, I will then and there offer the fee-simple In and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy tho same.
Thto J«h d„, Printer's foe. 19.00. Sheriff.
CATARR
/NASAL
CATARRH
IS A
LOCAL DISEASE and is the result of colds and sudden climatic changes.
It can bo cured by a pleasant remedy which is applied directly Into the nostrils.
ELY'S
CREAM BALM _,
U_A_
COLD 'N HEAD
Allays Pain and Tnflummatlon, Heals and Protects the Membrane from Colds. Kostores the Senses of Taste and Smell. It Is quickly aborbed. Gives relief at oncc. Price SO cents( at Druggists or by mail samples 10c by mall.\ ELY BROTHERS. 66 Warren St., New York.
C. 8c B3. I. OEfc. JR. •04*
WILL »IU
Excursion
Round Trip or One Way to all
SUMMER RESORTS
In the North and Northwest,
Good Returning Until 31
For further information apply to U. U. Dfgges,ticket f.- ntanion J. R.« XNELLY.
"it.
WABASH AVK. Not
Sortb Side.
A*e,rt»
Tenth and W«tw»h v-
i."e ART
8 to
N.HICKMAN,
YV
Artists* Supplies, Flower Material. PJanreFi ir ling a* M:lalty.
TTUTJOSBTASZEB KB Main Strew, All calls will recelrs tbe most careful :rtenttOB. Open day ana night.
I
Terre Haute, Inti.
