Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 29, Number 4, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 23 July 1898 — Page 4
4
THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
A. C. DUDDLESTON, Editor and Proprietor.
Publication Office, No. 50154 Ohio Street. Telephone 469.
The Mall is sold In the city by newsboys and all newsdealers, or will be delivered to any address, by mail, at the rate of £2 a year, 21 for six months, or 50 cents for three months. Entered at the Postoffice at Torre Hante, lnd as second-class matter.
SPAI.V is like a great many persons in this queer world that don't know when they have enough.
BI'TCHKR Wkvlkr is no doubt con vinced by this time that the sword mightier even than the type-writer.
MA.VY a boarding house keeper read with a shudder this week the news that came from Camp Alger, of flfty-five soldiers be ing poisoned by eating bush.
IT is possible that Colonel William Jen nings 6ryan would make a better com maruliug officer in such a responsible position if he would devote his time to the study of the United States Infantry Iiegu lations in place of talking so much.
CAN Cuba, Porto Kico and the Phillipines be called a portion of the "markets of the world" that some of our friends have been clamoring for us to enter for so many years? If so, the chances look quite bright for our being able to enter them as a "favored nation."
TIIE traveling men are trying to raise a regiment composed exclusively of drummers for the war with Spain! If the average drummer could have a half hour's seance with the Spanish ministers he would have no trouble in talking them into sueing for peace, even on the most abject terms.
NOT being allowed to have things his own way in the conduct of Santiago since its fall at the hands of the United States soldiers, General Garcia, the Cuban leader, has "taken his doll rags and gone home," refusing to have anything more to do with General Shatter's forces. He refuses to co-operate with them, and will fight independently. It becomes more evident every day that in the end the majority of the insurgents Svill have to be whipped into seeing that they have a good thing.
Oun pension list is likely to take a goodsized jump as a result of the present war. Though the loss of life has been trifling, as compared with that of the civil war, the three hundred dead and the fourteen or fifteen hundred wounded since May 1st must be paid for, so to speak. A good many widows and orphans have been made who will be entitled to pensions, and the serious wounds inflicted by the Mauser rifles have crippled many of the soldiers for life, incapacitating them for work. Probably not. less than $750,000 will be added to the pension list by tho casualties thus far. This will furnish a great deal of ammunition to the dilletante who have declared that the war is "inhuman" and "inglorious," and wo will hear a great deal of their talk before the fall elections. Fortunately this class of camp skulkers do not form a very large proportion of our population.
THK fall of the city of Santiago is greater in its moral than in its material efTect. The commercial importance of the city is slight, and it. has very little strategic value, for Key West is a safer and more convenient naval base of attack against Havana. The surrender of the city carries with it no debatable territory, for in all eastern Cuba the Spaniards, in fact, held "only the ground their army stood on*" as Senator Proctor expressed it. The city could not be made the base of a land attack against Havana for the same reason that prevented Blanco from going to Toral's aid. Its surrender is a triumph for our army, and gives an intimation to the world at large that our soldiers cannot ho beaten, even with the odds greatly against them, as they were in this instance. Military authorities are united in the opinion that our soldiers behind the fortifications of Santiago could never have been forced to surrender. The victory's greatest effect is in the weakening of Spain's reputation as a military power among the nations of Europe. ________________
IT will be a long time before the work* Ings of the new revenue law are fully understood, as the law department of the revenue bureau is daily called upon to construe certain sections of the law, which is in many places obscure as to the meaning intended. Any information that can be given to the public will no doubt be read with interest. Here are some recent decisions of the departments A personal bond, issued iu connection with a trust deed must be stamped certificates of acknowledgments of deeds and mortgages must be stamped a policy of insurance in any form, reinsurance or otherwise, must be stamped a permit indorsed on the policy for the removal of the insured property must be stamped checks issued by a city or county officer upon the official deposit-" of the corporation need not be stamped. Generally all official documents signal by a state* county or city official are exempt when a draft is accepted it must be stamped.although it was Stamped wheu issued railroad compauies need stamp only the original aud one duplicate of a bill of lading, If other copies are wanted those desiring them must pay for the stamp: liquors bottled for sale must be stamped at the tito* of bottling, irrespective of tbe fact that they may be kept la stock to be "aired" before sale: a check,
draft, or money order upon anybody must be stamped. The law is not restricted to the operations of banks.
THK appointment by the president of Fitzbugh Lee and Joseph Wheeler major generalships in the United States Volunteers did more to wipe out the sec tional lines between the North and South than anything that could have been done, and it is already bearing fruit. One day this week representatives of G- A. R. posts, Sons of Veterans, and regimental organizations of Pennsylvania went to Richmond, Va., to invite the survivors of Picketts' famous division, the daredevils who made the desperate charge at Gettys burg, to become their guests at a week's encampment in Philadelphia. This war is worth all that it has or can cost in the prospect of a restoration of good feeling between the two sections.
"Ox to Porto Rico" is and now the cry before many days the flag that "never knew defeat" will be flying over that erstwhile Spanish possession, and her power in the West Indies will be practically wiped out of existence, for, while we have gained but a slight foothold in Cuba, it is but a stepping stone to its entire occupation by our troops. The campaign against Porto Eico is to be brief and vigorous, and is to profit by the experience gained from the campaign at Santiago. No very stubborn resistance is expected, but a sufficient force is being taken to overcome even greater obstacles than confronted General Shafter. There will also be a better equipment, comparatively, in artillery and in the means of landing and forwarding supplies—the two weak spots in the wellarranged disembarkation at Baiquiri. The advantage of continuous action is also recognized in the fact that General Miles, with a detachment of seasoned troops from Santiago, is already under way and other troops have left Charleston and Tampa to take part in the campaign. The naval force will go direct from the coast of Cuba—if it is not already under way—and news of the bombardment may be expected in a very few days.
$100 Reward, 9100
The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tbe system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, 75c.
"The Brave Boys of Our Country" is full of stiring patriotic sentiment. Get a copy' at Paige's. 25 cents.
To-day you will again canvas the town for Infant, Children and Misses' One Strap Slippers, unless you learn of Mr. T. J. Griffith's trip to Chicago, especially for you. Call at the Griffith Palace Shoe Store and get all the latest styles and colors now made. 420 Main street.
A fine picture of Company is on the title of the "Brave Boys of our Country," for sale at Paige's, 25 cents.
Self-sharpening Lawn Mowers, only sold by A. G. Austin & Co. _____
For Your Sunday Dinner.
Spring Lamb, Steer Beef, Sweet Breads, Pig Pork, Tenderloins, Spare Ribs,
Beef Tenderloins.
C. H. EHRMANN. Fourth and Ohio. Cleau Meat Market. Telephone 220.
The highest standard in every particular is maintained at Baur's Soda Fountain. The ad in at re a re us he it an it Syrups. The finest Ice Cream made from Cream. All the popular drinks and prompt and efficient service. Call at Baur's and get the best glass of Soda you ever tasted.
FOR SALE OR TRADE-A high Organ for Buggy or Light Wagon.
top
Hot, Ain't It
Why, yes, but it always is in# summer yet not near so warm as a bargain that we have on two pieces of property on Ohio street.
The time to enter any market when its commodities are dull. This Council is bound to open Ohio street to Deming Park, and then you will beg us for property at 50 per cent, advance on our present price. Why not come in now while the opportunity offers and make a nice profit.
IS
If you want to Borrow Money, or Loan Honey, Buy Property, Rent Property, or need Fire, Cyclone, Life or Accident Insurance, come and see us.
H. C. ROYSE CO. 517 OHIO ST.
liisi
OtJE CUBAN LETTEB.
[COXTIN'CED FROM FIRST PAGE.]
dipped. After being allowed to harden the process is repeated again and again until the required thickness is attained. Then the outer coating is sand-papered to a brilliant polish, headed, feruled and is ready for market. It has the appearance of solid tortoise-shell and readily s«,ls for five dollars and upward.
The planters in the grassy plains beyond Holguin raise many cattle, and usually while waiting in Gibara bay for the taking-on of cargo, you are treated to a spectacle which rivals the Spanish bullfight in cruelty. It is the Cuban method of loading animals. A lighter, filled with cattle, comes alongside the steamer and makes fast a rope is thrown down, one end of which is attached to the steamer's hoisting-winch, and at the other is a running noose. The noose is thrown over the horns of an unfortunate animal, the winch is started to tighten the knot, and then with a sudden jerk goes ahead at full speed, hoisting the unhappy beast high in the air. Sometimes there are two animals in the same noose, frantically pawing each other, and the tortures they undergo can only be dimly imagined, as the cruel rope tightens around their horns and cuts into the flesh by the terrible strain of their weight. Often the horns are actually pulled from their sockets, and the poor beast drops into the sea. Otherwise, hoisted to a sufficient height, they are swung up over the deck, spinning round and round like huge tops, until dropped heavily upon the deck,'where they lie awhile, stunned and motionless. Though so ghastly a spectacle, it is characteristic of the native taste that women and children lean over the taffrail in high glee, enjoying every detail, as at the bull-fight.
A few hours after the headlands of Gibara had faded from sight, we came into the historic bay of Nuevitas. Its entrance is through a river with high banks, like a winding canon, four or five miles long, which widens out in its course into two bays. The first bay is named Mayanabo the second Nuevitas and into each, two rivers empty. What a glorious morning it was, when we awoke to find our ship swinging at anchor in the superb inner bay! It was the very perfection of Spring weather, but such an April day as Northern eyes have seldom seen, with the wonderful blue of the sky, the brightness of the verdure, the purity of the atmosphere, the clearness of the waters. Speaking of this place, Irving says that "Columbus was struok with the grandeur of its features, its high mountains, which reminded him of Sicily, its fertile valleys and long sweeping plains, watered by noble rivers its stately forests and bold promontorios and stretching headlands, which melted away into remotest distances." -j,,
The inner bay is no less than fifty-seven square miles in extent, and therefore the discover named it Puerto Principe (principal port), not dreaming that there were several grander ones along the coast of Cuba. He set up a cross upon the neighboring height in token of possession, and in 1518 Diego Valezquez founded a town, which he named Santa Maria, where Nuevitas now stands, tbe sad-looking port at the extreme southern end of the immense sheet of water. Afterwards, owing the savages of a local calentura, the Spaniards moved on to the Indian village Caonao, and later to Canaguey, now Puerto Principe, forty-five miles inland. The original Santa Maria, however, was never quite deserted, though in course of time it took on several aliases, and is now known as San Fernando de Nuevitas. Seen from afar, its white-walled houses shining in the sun against the gentle slope of a palm-crowned hill, it looks like the city of a dream. But like others in neglected Cuba, 'Tis distance lends enchantment," and a nearer view discloses abounding filth and poverty. Its population numbers perhaps 6,000, and its only importance is the port of entry for Puerto Principe and the place of shipment for large quantities of hides, sugar and molasses. A railway connects the two places, when roving bands of patriots do not tear it up, as they have done a dozen times within the last three years. Puerto Principe, capital of the province of the same name, is .in the heart of the cattle field—one of the richest and most interesting cities of Cuba, as well as the quaiutest and farthest behind the times. Within it, old Tempus seems to have forgotten his fugiting and been standing still since Columbus' day. With a population of sixty thousand or more, it has never boasted of a hotel—nothing better than posadas, as poor as that in which Joseph and Mary found refuge. However, the Cubans are so hospitably inclined that they never allow a friend to put up at a publio house, and even strangers may be sure of entertainment. The narrow, crooked streets are mostly unpaved, and the low houses of antiquated architecture are shabby In the extreme.
There are several oldchurcheS. a fiuniber of convents, a theater, a bull-ring, and a group of more modern buildings for government offices: but on the whole, you are inclined to think that its high-sounding title—Santa Maria del Puerto Principeis rather a misfit, being too large for the place.
Immediately west of Nuevitas bay the cays begin—570 of them, by actual count stretching all the way between Nuevitas and Havana. Uniformly long and narrow, their glistening silver sands fringed with cocoa-palms and mangrove bufehes, they are of all sixes, from a few yards to miles In extent. The largest is Cay Roman —a second "Long Island,'* containing 173 aqo*R miles, but as yet unoccupied and entirely unused. Cayo del Sal, the next iu slse, supplies half Cuba with its primitive salt-works, A few of tbe Islets have an excellent anchorage, white others are surrounded by inaccessible reefs.
Nothing more delightful can be imagined khan a cruise among tbem. Not a ripple disturbs the mirrot-like surface of the sea, and through the crystal water tbe bottom, with farrows made by currents on tbe
sand, can be distinctly Looking
over the bow, the boat seems to be suspended, as by magic, above the pellucid fluid, the sea-garden below illuminated by sunbeams in prismatic colors. And the living creatures in the vast gardens—the conchs, with their cleft-openings upwards, extending long feelers to catch the passing prey fish of various forms and colors, startled by the boat from their repose among tufts of weeds, and sometimes an overgrown turtle, aroused from his napping, paddling away amid a milky cloud of coral sand. There are star fish, too, a foot in diameter, lying motionless on the bottom sponges with concave tops, like big bowls coral in globe-like forms, with myriad branches and their world of zoophytes, interspersed amid a thousand marine growths, standing erect on the ocean floor. What is called the Boca (mouth) de Sagua is four leagues distant from the real mouth of the river, strewn thick with islets. On some of them are fishermen's huts, with their nets drying on long poles in the sun and their boats at anchor near the beach. The channel through the shoal water is intricate and marked by stakes, the most important of the latter surmounted with a broken bottle or a fluttering rag tied to it. Finally the "Boca" proper is reached, amid a dense mangrove swamp a dangerous bar is passed and you emerge into what seems a continuous cane-field, far as the eye can see, with the narrow river running through.
Sagua is the best place I know of in which to study the prospects of Cuba. It has a prosperous past, a depressed present and unbounded possibilities for the future. Before the w$r Sagua, with its 20,000 inhabitants, was called the most progressive town on the island. Its streets are wider and better paved, its buildings fresher, and there is less the air of decay than in other Cuban cities.
Most of the sugar raised in Santa Clara province was exported from the port at the mouth of the river, twelve miles distant. Time was, not so long ago, when this was the stronghold of ultra-loyal Spanish sentiment—when its citizens declared that they would rather see the red and yellow standard of Castile and Arragon floating over an ash-heap than have the island given over to independence. Americans were frequently insulted here, and at times the consulate barely escaped mobbing. But all this is changed now. The flowers of many Sagua families are in the insurgent army, and if loyalists re main they have the good sense to keep quiet. FANNIE B. WARD.
A Popular Institution
The Terre Haute Trust Company is handling its loaning business in a manner very satisfactory to its customers. Its method of doing such business is a great convenience both to lender and borrower. In making mortgage loans, the mortgage is made to the Triut Company as trustees for the holders of the bonds secured thereby, in whatsoever hands they may be. Instead of taking notes, the company takes bonds payable to the Terre Haute Trust Company, Trustee, or bearer, so that they are negotiable by delivery, the same as city bonds, and are in every way just as convenient to the investor, and, in fa&t, just as safe as a good city bond. By this means the borrower who wants a given sum, say $10,000, an amount rarely found idle in any one individual's hands, may be accommodated, for the loan would then be divided up into ten
teen bonds of $500 or $1,000 each, and disposed of to several different investors, in amounts to suit each. Thus the borrower is enabled to get the exact amount he wants, and each investor is enabled to loan the exact amount he has on hand. The mortgage, abstract, insur ance policy, and other papers pertaining to the loan remain in the custody of the Trust Company, and as the Trust Company is named in the mortgage as "trustee," for the holders of the bonds, there is no need for any assignment of the mortgage. All the holders of the bonds have to do is to take their "coupons" to the Trust Company, as they mature and get their money, the Trust Company taking upon itself to notify the borrowers of the maturity of interest and collect the same, and pay it over its counter to the lender on presentation of the coupons. Nothing could be more convenient and desirable to persons having money to invest. It is especially so to ladies' who are not supposed to want the worry of looking after thedetails of such business. However, many very successful business men in other lines are unfamilar with the requirements of safe mortgage lending, and will be glad to avail themselves of such an agency to do this work for them. Then the Trust Company is made responsible by its char* ter for the "validity, regularity, quality, value and genuineness of all such investments and securities." That is worth a good deal to the investor, whether man or woman, and whatever the parties, business qualifications.
Two Days Sale.
Ladies' Tan Cloth Top Lace Shoes, former price $1.65, Saturday and Monday at
AisS:!
99c Spot Cash.
i§|8
sum
its
Misses' and*,? Children's Tan and Black? ^Sandals, tegular price 85c and 90c, for Saturday and Monday at
r-1-pn
49 Cents.
BOEGEHAN'S 104 S. Fourth.
Ladies' up-to-date Shoes, Dougola Vlci Kid, Chocolate Vici, and other kinds of leathers. Everything to please, ami we do tbe fitting. Come and be satisfied ever after. 430Main. T.J.GRIFFITH.
DOMESTICS:
eft
fif
We will give you your choice of either Hope, Lonsdale or Fruit of Loom Muslin for 5c.
Full yard wide bleached Muslin, soft finish, for S^c. Full yard wide bleached Muslin, soft finish, for 4£c. 18-inch twilled bleached Toweling at 3 cents.
All linen brown Toweling for 4}£. 18-inch all linen Crash for 5c.
PARASOLS.
There will be many hot days yet this season when the thermometer will range between 95 and 100, and you'll see the need of a parasol. We have marked the prices of ours so cheap that they are in the reach of every one.
A beautiful plain canopy top in many colors, trimmed with tucks, was $5.00, now $3.25.
Changeables, fancy stripes and other designs, in canopy tops, with fancy hemstitched borders, sold for $6.00, now $4.00.
The detachable—just the thing to take with you when you go awaybeautiful fancy stripe patterns, worth $6.50 to $7.00, now $5.00.
A beautiful assortment of small checks, with natural wood handles, handsomely trimmed, worth $2.50, $3.00. $4.00 and $6.00, now $f.75, $2.00, $8.00 and $4.00.
Ladies' fancy striped Umbrellas, straight wood sticks, Columbia tassels, very swell, worth $6.00, now $8.98.
LADIES' BELTS.
A beautiful Suede leather Belt, with fancy buckle, purse attached, was 69c, now 25c.
Fine cloth Belt, trimmed in leather, with leather lined purse, was 89c, now 89c.
Fine silk Belts, trimmed in leather, with leather lined purse, was 50, now 35c. 7
1
A few dozen black leather Belts, with military and naval ornaments and buckles, sold for 42c, now 80c.
Elegant assortment of velvet Belts, with fancy ornaments and buckles, at 45c, 50c, $1.29, and up to $5.50.
Red, white and blue Belts, only a few left, 25c and 50c. '7
ANNOUNCEMEN
JV^OTIOE.
fi#
The Purchasing "Power I
Of a dollar never was so great in our store as it is to-day Overstocks, well advanced season, and the determination not to carry over a dollar's worth of Summer merchandise, are some of the reasons why you can get such great values for your money. Remember, every day you delay your chances for the cream of these rich offerings grow less. You'll find a few of Monday's offerings below:
TS.
OFFICE OF BOARD OF HEALTH, 1 TERRE HACTB, IND., July 20, 1898. The Board of Health hereby calls the attention of the property owners of the city of Terre Haute to the following ordinance, which will be strictly enforced after publication "It shall be unlawful to allow the growth of weeds or rank vegetation upon or near any sidewalk, yard, alley, or unoccupied lot within the corporate limits. Tho owners of any sidewalk, yard, alley, or unoccupied lot covered with weeds shall cut- and destroy such weeds within three days after tbe publication of this notice, whereof take heed." "See' Section 22. Revised Ordinances, Health Department, and rule second of the Rules and Regulations of the Board Of Health, adopted April 18,1893."
The penalty for violation of this ordinance is from one to fifty dollars. S. M. RICE,
•^OTICEi
C. GER8TMEYER, L. J. WILLIEN, Sec'y, Board of Health.
Sealed proposals will be received by iho trustees of the Indiana State Normal School for supplying tbe Institution with coal for tbe year, beginning September 1,1898. Blank proposals may be bad by calling at tbe office of the Institution. LEWIS B. MARTIN,
Secretary.
OW WILL YOU LEAVE YOUR FAMILY? Not one business man in thirty-three leaves his family anywhere near money enough to continue tbe comforts be has educated tbem to need and expect.
This suggests, immediately, action on your part In tbe direction of life Insurance. Your life represents a money value to yonr family. That value should be protected by an equivalent amount of life Insurance.
Yourduty to yonr family does not end when yon die. Tbe Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York can protect your family fulty. Callon the general agent for particulars. W. A. HAMILTON.
General Agent.
No. 84 sooth Sixth St. Terre Haute, lnd.
WANTED:
PETER
STAFF, we want to know why so many men get out of shape and look so rfdleolou», and get such large stomachs, as they do nowadays,
Because they drink too much hominy grits beer. Come and 1 will explain It all tojrou. PETER N. STAFF.
fM
FOR BALE.
fJ»OB 8ALE-DRUG STORE—Ae evceptlocal opportunity to buy a paying drug store, tn tbe best town of Its sizeln Indiana 5.000 Inhabitants will be sold at Invoice nice no bonus no agent* stock asd fixin res will Invoice about 13,000: cash or negotiable paper. HURRAY WALTMAN.
Dunkirk, Ind.
SECOND FLOOR OFFERINGS.
Our sales on Shirt Waists the past week have been very large, yet we have a great many left.
All our colored Batiste, Madras and Percales that have been selling for 50c and 75c, now go at 25c.
All our $1.00 and $1.25 kinds now go at 50c. 7 All our fine Madras, Gingham and Batiste, worth $1.25 and $1.50, now go at 75c.
See our line of White Waists, piques, satin stripes, lace stripes aud tucked fronts, reduced to 7oc and 98c.
Ladies' Dressing Sacques, made from lawns, batistes and percales, handsomely trimmed in lace and embroidery, reduced from 68c, 75c and 88c to 39c.
All our Linen and White Pique Suits are now going at greatly reduced prices —$4.50, $6.00, $8.50—now $2.98, $3.50 ami $4.75.
LADIES' TIES.
A small lot of Ladies' Puff Ties in the correct style, for shirt waists, in white, pink and fancies, have been selling for 25c, 45c and 50c, will close them out for 15c, 19c, 25c and 29c.
Twenty-five dozen Ladies' Ties, beautiful assortment of colors, sold for 35c, will close them at 19c.
A few dozen Ladies' Bows that have readily sold for 85c, closing price 25c. Another lot of Ladies' ^Bows, extra fine quality, many dozens to select from, 5c.
PERFUMERY.
In this department you will find such celebrated brands as Woodworth's, Lubin's, Crown, Rodgers & Gallet's, Gelle, Freres', and many others.
Woodworth's odors, White Rose, Crab Apple, Golden Rod and others, per ounce, 19c.
Lubin's, a very fine perfume, with lasting qualities that cannot be excelled by any of them, per ounce, 25c.
Try our Rodgers & Gal let brand. One of the best perfumes on the market. A full assortment of odors. Sample bottle free.
jjjf* if" uA'Sb f-' 'A'
E B, ROOT CO.
I
Sponging and Pressing.
Coats..... Trousers Vests
..25c ...15c ,..,10c of Work
Highest Quality
Guaranteed.
HUNTER
ic?„ |&.
This 23d day of n!y,l«W. LOUIS Pf. 17.70.
8*
ORA D. DAVIS. Attorney for Plaintiff. gHEBIFF'8 SALE.
By virtue of an order of sale Issued from the Superior court of Vigo county. Indiana, to me directed and delivered. In favor of John Foulkes, executor of Sarah Thompson estate, and against Charles W. Giddlngs and Charles F. Giddlngs, I am ordered to sell the following described real estate, situated In Vigo county. Indiana, to-wtt:
Lot number five (ft) of the northwest quarter (H) of section number nine(9) in township twelve (12) north, range ten (10) west, In Vigo county, Indiana, containing twenty-four
acres more or less, according to tbe plat of tbe sub-division of William E. Arts estate, recorded In tbe recorder's office of Vigo county, Indiana, and on Saturday, tbe 13th day of August. 1HU8, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day. at the north door of tbe court house. In Terre Haute. I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all nrlvileges and appurtenances to tbe same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said judgment and costs, I will then and there offer the feesimple In and to said real estate, to tbe highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same.
P. 8EEBUBGEB, Sheriff.
Lovers of Cool Breezes, Crystal Waters and Good Boating ......
Should take advantage of the IX)W FARE EXCURSION to
Lake Maxinkuckee
SUNDAY. July 2Jtb.
ROUND TRIP *1 A A FARE ^leUU
Special train of elegant parlor cars aud coaches leaves Union Station at fiiSOa. m. For further Information apply at City Ticket Office, Wabash Avenue, telephone 37 or Union Station.
GEORGE E. FARKINGTON".
The Perfume of Violets
The parity of thellly, the clow of tbe rose, sod ibe flush of Hebe oomUM In Possoxi'a woodrotts Powder.
$44 y-
