Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 October 1877 — Page 5
GHOST
slept
STdltlES,
*The event# which I record in this paper iave taken place either in my own family or in the families ot intimate friends, or are from the narration of persons of strict veracity. I begin with one told me very lately by a pious and useful minister of the Church of England. I give this anecdote of his boyish days as much as possible in his own words. "I was brought up by my grandfather and grandmother, who resided in 4he old family mansiorf on the banks of the Derwent, in Derbyshire. This venerable place, which had belonged to our family from the time of the Norman Conquest, had a wide reputation lor being haunted, and indeed the straitge neises which wdre heard and the strange tricks which were played, for which nothing rational could account, made the belief of general acceptance.
From
r'ven,tandpinr
A year betore we had lost an aunt to whom we were deeply attached, and her bereaved husband was at the present time inhabiting one wing of our old family mansion. It was the 19th of December, 185-, that, after carefully packing my box for the journey and laying quite at the bottom ot the box, a» it stood in a corner of my room, some articles of black crape which 1 had worn at my
aunt's*funeral,
I cannot guess, but I found myself sitting uj in bed intently watching the door of my room, which was wide open, and the door ©I the haunted room, which was also open, and which I could see distinctly across the corridor as the moonlight tell upon it. From this room came a figure which I watchcd across the passage, and which, on approaching my bed, I at once recognized as the aunt I had lost the year before, dressed in the same clethes I had last seen her in. She had a most fond and tender expression on
her
face, but It changed into an angry frown when, stretching over the side of the bed. I tried to embrace her, exclaiming, 'Oh, dear aunt, is that your I felt that I clasped the empty air, the figure vanishing in an instant from my sight. I thought I had been dreaming, and lay down again, to wake up a short time afterward and see again the figure of my
aunt,
but now differently dressed, advancing from the haunted room into mine, this time not coming to the bed but going to the box I had packed and placed in the corner ready for the next day. This
she
appeared to rummage over, displacing the contents and then tossing the things back again. I watched her with the greatest astonishment, and saw her go slowly out of my door into the door of the haunted room. I don't know whether I slept again or not, but a third time I was sitting up in bed, a third time mv aunt came in, this time close up to the bed, in long, flowing white clothes —a dress in which I had never seen her. I almott gasped out, «De«r aunt, why do you come?' to which she replied verv clearly and distinctly,
but
with something of effort/I come to make an important communication, but it is all comprised in these words: Poor Lizzie! But don't grieve Lizzie is quite happy!' As 6he finished these words started from the bed with outstretched arms, but she had vanished, and I fell heavilv to the floor where she had stood I suppose that after getting back to bed I slept until morning, but as soon as I saw my grandmother I told her all tne circumstances and made her look at iny box, which was in the greatest disorder, and all the articles ot mourning which had placed at the bottom of the box found at the top. My grandmother looked grave but 6aid nothing. I still persisted in thinking it but a curious dream, and Vrc started on our journey that very morning. I was quite in my usual spirits when we arrived at the last railway station. From here we had still along walk to where my parents lived.
and, as
generation to gener
ation no death had occured in our family without some supernatural warning being
what 1 am about tojgll you
as he so visited for this purpose. When I Was about 17 years of age, it was rather suddenly agreed that I should go with 'granny,' as 1 called her, to pay a visit of a few days to my parents, who lived in the suburbs of Manchester. During the past summer my youngest sister, Lizzie, with whom I had been very little acquainted before, had paid us a visit at the time of haymaking, and I remember thinking that she was the most beautiful child I had ever seen. Always in white, with lovely auburn hair floating in long curls over her shoulders, and playfully darting in and out among the hay-makers,shc appeared to me something angelic, end when her visit was ended I quite grieved over her departure. I was therefore much pleased when granny asked me to accompany her to Manchester, as I should see my dear little sister again.
I went to pay a farewell
visit to my uncle in his part of the house. After I had sat with him lor some time the hall clock struck 4, and just at that moment I felt a deadly chill and shivering all over me, exactly as if I had been 8uddenlv plunged into cold water. I bebecameidsadly pale, and my uncle in an alarmed tone asked what was the matter with me. I said I did not know, but that I had never felt such a strange sensation before. My uncle imagined that I must have taken cold and recommended my going early to bed, as I was to travel ihe lollowing day. 'Slaving quite recovered from my unpleasant eelings, I 6pent the evening as usual, and retired to bed at the accustomed tim .. Nc\w, my bedroom was at the end of a long, narrow corridor, and exactly opposite the door by which I entered was the door of a room said to he haunted, which was always kept closed, and which no servant in the house could be persuaded to enter in deed, they very unanimously avoided going into the corridor itself after dark though it opened into many bedrooms besides my own. I had two or three times, while a boy, been in the haunted room with my grandfather I saw nothing remarkable about it but a good deal of moldy, old-fashioned furnituie, and an immense, funeral-looking bed at one end, with hangings which Jiad once been 5 splendid but were now dropping to 5 piecefe froin age and neglect. The bed in my room stood exactly tacing th&door by which I entered and the door of the haunted room across the passage. Another door on the same side of the room was blocked up by my box. which -Nstood against it. I cannot distinctly remember whether or not in entering for the night I closed my bedroom door, but think it almost certain that I did so, for it was December and the weather very cold. I went to be full of my tomorrow's journey, and not giving a sin gle thought to either ghosts or haunted rooms went fast to sleep. How long
we were not expected^ I pleased
myself by thinking how surprised they would all be. We arrived, and just as I laid my hand on the latch of the garden gate to open it for granny, I felt exactly the same deathly chill and shivering which had come over me while sitting with my uncle the evening before. When I had recovered and we were going up the long gravel walk, I said to my randmother, 'How strange the house ooks, granny! All the windows are draped with white, and I never remember my mother's room having white curtains betore.' Granny made no answer, and as we knocked at the door my mother opened it, led us into the hall, and received us most affectionately, but spoke in a hushed, 6ubdued tone which frightened me. Her first words were, 'How glad I am you are come! we looked tor you some hours ago.' 'How can that be, we replied, 'when we meant to surprise you, and did not write that'we were coming
But did you not,' said she, 'get my two letters?—the cfoe which I wrote of dear Lizzie's dangerous illness from scarlet fever a week ago, and one to tell you of her death at 4 o'clock yesterday, which last ought to have reached you before you started this morning? This was a dreadful blow to us, for, as we told my mother, we had received neither lettei. When we were little recovered trom the shock, my mocher told us that, the day before, Lizzie knew she was dying and said 6he felt quite
happy
"she took leave of all
the family the* at home and referring to me said,'I should have liked to say good-bv to dear Tom—poor Tom! Give my love to Tom!' As she 6aid these last words she fell back and passed away just at that moment the clock struck 4. She died, then, exactly at the time when felt the deathly chill while sitting with my uncle. "•'After mv grandfather's death I was placed till l" was five-and-twenty iij business with a master who proved be jrofessed atheist. Finding me to be an ntelligent lad and more than usually well grounded in the scriptures, he made it his daily business, by specious argument and covert ridicule, to undermine my Christian belief, and often flattered himselt that he was dn the pojnt of succeeding. He certainly would have done so but for my remembrance of my aunt's appearance in my bedroom at the time of Lizzie's death. Whenever I had time for reflection and thought of that, I felt assured that there was not only a state of being after death, but a directing power by whose agendjy even a disembodied spirit could return to the scene of its earthly pilgrimage."
A young English lady nearly connected .with our iamily married, while visiting in Germany, a gentleman of rank and fortune, with whose mother, who lived at a distance of about forty miles away, she became a great favorite. At the birth of her first baby she was much distressed that her kind mother-in-law, the Frau von was not present, nor did her husband venture to tell he* that illness—not, however, supposed to be dangerous—was the cause. All went well in the sick-room, and five days afterby ward Madame her baby boy her side, was sleeping soundly, with he^ through an arched door-way into a curtains drawn, just as darkness had [corridor, with bedrooms on each
A sister of this young Madams B—— was staying at Brighton, with the family of a young friend, in a deplorable state of health, but who was gradually getting better under the care of a doctor, clever and zealous, who visited her daily, and took the greatest interest in her case. He was a tail, slender man, with long, thin fingers, most remarkably white, and a countenance which seem to bear the impress of all the woes and troubles of his numerous patience, so deep was the sympathy he felt for thofe who suffered. One day there was much sorrow in the family the kind physician, on whose visits they so much depended, died suddenly none of them dared to tell the invalid, and, for a few days, nothing was said, but the family noticed that poor Minnie S looked very pensive and grave. At length her mother thought it best to tell her, when she quietly replied, "I have known it from the first he came and told me himself, and comes to see me every night!' A few nights after this for* some reason or another, the invalid went to sleep, in a different room, and the young friend staying-on a visit took her place in the vacated bed. Toward midnight the family who kept late hours, retired for the night, and Georgy D—— took possession of ner friend's bed, quite ignorant of the doctor's nightly visits. In about an hour loud shrieks were heard from the room, and the young girl was found on the side of "the bed, yale, trembling, and almost convulsed with terror. She said that, having undressed and gone to bed, first shutting and locking the bedrooit door, she went fast to sleep, leaving her curtains undrawn, and the .lamp on the dresaing-tablf alight. She was awakened by a rustling noise beside her bed, and, starting up. saw the doctor, dressed just as he was in life, standing there. He then sat down on the side ot the bed and laid his long, pale hand on her arm, but the moment he saw that the occupant of the bed was changed he got up, and vanished from her sight before reaching the door Strange to say, that very* instant he went to the room where Min
nie
THR VKWRE HAUTE WEEKLY
befon the return of M» regiment, whose term of service in India had nearly expired. He left many friends behind him, but none from whom he more deeply regreted to part than Mr. the British collector at Madura, with whom he had been for years on terms of most familiar intimacy. The very first night of his landing in England after an absence which dated from boyhood, he lay long awake in his bed at the hotel where he had taken up his quarters.( He felt very restless, and thought over all he had gone through in India, and the friends he had left, to see, probably, no more. Among these he thought of his friend It waa past midnight, and he was still meditating, when he heard some one in the room, though he had locked the door before undressing. He looked te the side from which the sound came, and distinctly saw his friend not far from the bed, gazing at him very mournfully. Astonished beyond measure, he prepared to step out of bed, exclaiming, "Why, 1 Whatever brings you here? His friend waved his hand as if to keep him off. shook his head sadly, and, gliding toward the door, suddenly disappeared. K—— remained awake nearly the whole night, quite unable to account for what had happened. Iw due course of time the mails from India brought word that had died of cholera at Madura, af ter a few hours' illness, on the very night in ^hich he appeared to Lieut.
Sometime alter my dear mothers death, 1 was sitting with my father, Col. in his dressing-room, and we were mutually deploring our dreadful misfortune, and going over, as we were too prone to do, many of the circumstances attending her last illness. I remarked to him, among other things, that her illness was in the beginning 60 slight that I should not have felt the least fear as to the result had I not been extremely discouraged by the sadness and preoccupation of mind manifested by himself at that time. My father, after some*hesitation, related to me the occurrence which had occassioned his unwonted depression of spirits, which I can truly say 1 listened to in dumb astonishment, so unlikely a person did he appear to have experienced anything of the sort.
He was sitting one evening alter dinner with my mother, conversing on various subjects. The wine and dessert having been placed on the table, they drew their chairs up to each corner ot a blazing fire, the evenings being chilly, though it was only the early autumn. After a time my mother appeared to be dozing in her chair, and my father drew out his ppeketbook te make a note of some visit he had to pay the next day. He found, however, thnt the pencil-case he alwa carried in his pocliet, and much valued as the gift of an old friend, was not there, and, concluding that he had left it on his diessing-table before dinner, quietly left the room to fetch it. The staircase went up from the hall, and at the first landing branched off into two smaller staircases, the one to the lett leading to my mother's apartments, a bedroom and dressing-room fronting the lawn, with a wide landing-place and window between the two rooms the one to the right, long side,
settled down at the close of a winter's!and aback staircase at the end. My day. Contrary to her usual custom the nurse, seeing the lady 60 fast asleep, had left the room te get something necessary for the night. Madame —awokf on feeling the pressure of an icy-cola hand on her arm, and, looking up hastily, 6aw by the light of the lamp her moth-er-in-law hanging over her and the baby with a very sad expression on her face, which was ashy pale. Raising herself in the bed, the young mother exclaimed, "O dearest mother when did you come? I am so glad!" The mother-in-law sighed deeply, and replied, '*1 am only come, dear Alice, to say farewell forever you will never see me more on earth!'' She instantly vanished out of bight, and the nurse, returning, found her lady in states ot great excitement and alarm, calling for her mother-in-law and saying that she must be in the house, having just lett her bed-side. The poor lady was ill for many days, and it was long before she waS told that her husband's mother had died at her own castle, forty miles away, at the very moment when she stood beside her.
father's dressing-room was in the middle of the corridor. Having found his pencil-case, he was coming out of the arched door-way before mentioned,when he saw my mother before him on the small flight of stairs leading to her own
rg?JPl$,v
iS^fs'tifift^fiKir&nsi^/e peopfcf "li
•you and I set out for Raby Hall alone, fire shall lose our way again, and perish, 'to a ceitainty. But 1 think Mr. Little must know the way to Raby Hall.' 'Oh, then,' said Coventry, catching at her idea, 'perhaps Mr. Little would add to the great obligation, under which he thas laid us both, by going to Raby Hall hind sending assistance hither,' 'I can't do that,' said Henry, roughly.
And that is not at all what I was go3ng to propose," said Grace, quietly.
VW.I Bi»time delirous, but on the last mormpg, a few hours betore death, he was perfectly lucid, and said to me. "I shall soon leave you, my child your dear mother has come to fetch me!" Then,seeing, dpuhjh less, my look Sf awed asfohishmeovne added,«YM,.«ydfe£|![ife#lM»ilaa by my side all night .,f Inad never left his bedside, but had neither 6een rtor .heard anything unusual,'except that .during the night he seemed, at intervals, to be talk ing fondly to some one near him.—H. B. K., in Atlantic Monthly for Ocleber.
1
A gentleman who, came down from Lexington on Saturday was asked how times were in that sectiorf. He said: "About all I have heard of lately is a joke on an editor, who, going away, left his paper in charge of a minister. During the minister's stay in the sanctum the following letter cam^ from a mountain subscriber: "You know well I p^td my subscription to your paper the last time I was in Lexington. If I get any more such letters from you a« I received this week, I will come down to Lexington and maul h—1 out of you
The minister answered: have been trying to maul that thing
out
of the editor for ten years past: and if you will will really come down and maul rt out of him, then, my dear sir I
have
was sleeping, and held his cus
tomary conversation with her, quite unseen and unheard oy Annie younger sister of the one to whom he had just been so plainly visible. After a time his visits ceased.
At the close of th« Burmese war, Lieut
a
a
twenty members of my chinch I will also get yoii to operate on.
CATCHING A TAR—TAR. Boston Traveller. "When an Arab or a camper-out comes to a desirable halting place, where
fore
does he pitch his tent?" asked Soci tes of the crowd who thronged around to catch the pearly words of wisdom which fell from his inspired Hps. "Sos to make it stick," suggested Alcibiades. '•You've got the idea/ rejoined the sage, "but say, rather, to make it tar-ry.' Arid he smiled paternally on toe assembled Athenian youth and took anotHer chunk of bologna from the plate on the bar,
Mark Twain's story about that mysterious schooner, the Jonas Smith, being an "ocean tramp," is knocked in the head by the prosaic discovery that she has ar
rived
It instantly Relieves
CHOLERA MORBUS,
1 ,,
New York long ago, and has
since been to Boston, and was on her way to Savannah when seen ofjt, the North Carolina coast last week.
The
yodng officer who had been se
verely wounded in one of the actions and subsequently attacked by fever, was sent home on
sick certificate some months
seventeen-year-old daughter of
Mr. Reiche, a Hoboken millionaire, a nrettv and accomplished girl, has eloped with aNew York clerk to whom she had been secretly engaged
GAZETTE
SANDFORIFS
JAMAICA GINGER.
The Quintessence of Jamaica Ginger, Choiee Aromatic* and French Brandy.
A preparation so elegantly flavored and medicinally effective as to utterly surpass all previous preparations ot crude ginger and householl remedies for the relief and cure 01 diseases and ailments incidental to the Summer and Winte seasons, and to sadden changes of temperature.
DIARRHEA,
S E N E
CRAMPS ft PAINS,
SEASICKNESS,
COLDS ft CHILLS,
CHILLS ft FEVER,
FEVERISH
S O S
NEURALGIC
!au electric-galvanic, Vith the Celebrated
T,-i
AN INDIGNANT SUBSCRIBER.
Louisville Courier-Journal.
fJ,
r?
The substitution of brandy for all co, the use of true Jamaica Ginger, of their own selection and importation, its combination with choice aromatics, as devised and originated DV Dr, Sandford, placed this preparation in actual merit so far ahead of anything before compounded that notwithstanding the most bitter opposition from the trade, its sales in New England now exceed that of the others comoined. The second year of its manufacture its sate exceeded the previous year by oyer fifty thousand bott es. It is manufactured on a scale
simply enormous. Two tnousandgallons are always kept made long in advance of consumption, by which it acquires a delicious flavor and brlllUnt transparency. Every improvement in. labor saving apparatus is adopted, so as to permit the use of costly materials and yet retain a profit.
AND
RHEUMATIC
S MP 0 N
S,
DYSPEPSIA,
INDIGESTION,
A E N
The bottling machine is alone able to fill two thousand four hundre 1 bottles
RISING
O O
0
N 6 E E A
I
A E S a
I E W A E
HARMLESS,
IS GOOD
O A A E S
pei tnii
(1500 reward will be paid for a bottle any other extract or essence of Jamaica Ginger if found to equal it in fine flavor, purity and prompt medical effect. Sold by all wholesale ana retail druggists, grocers, and dealers in medicine. Price, SO cents. Samples free. Dealers should purchaseorigrinal packages of one dozen to obtain the trial bottles for free distribution. Weeks ft Potter, General Agents and Wholesale Druggists, Boston..
COLLINS' Voltaic Plasters.
battery combined Medicated Porous
'trengthening Plaster, forming the best Master lor pains and aches In the World of ledicine. and utterly surpassing all other Masters heretofore in use. They accomplish nore in one week than the old Plaste* jn a whole year. They do not paliate, they PUSB. jMi) ('•.
COLLINS' Voltaic Plasters.
For local pains, lameness, soreness, weakness, numbness, and inflamatiou of the ln»gs, liver, kidneys, spleen, bowels, bladder, beart, and muscles, are equal to an army ot doctots, and acres ot plants and shrubs.
Price SB cents. Sold by all druggists. Mailed on receipt of price, 23 cents for one, $1.25 for six, or ?2.23 for twelve, carefully warranted, by WEEKS POTTER, Proprietors, Boston, Mass.
OILOGRAPHS-
Specimen Copy FrCe.
The Am. OUograph pany propose tc listribnte to subacrib of this paper, pimited number of Speeimen pictures Fan, aa an advertisSment of Oilograph*. Send your name, and those of ten other person! to whom we may mail cfrculari
with 25 cents to pay package ana forward ing charges, and we will mail you prepaid, nperb Ebony Cabinet Oilagraph of Flowone of four equi ito matched picture5 which retail at *2,50 per pair These chief d'aeures of Flower Faint iNg measure 10x13 inches and are eopies ol celebrated works of art at the Luxembourg, reproduced bv our new process.
PREMIUM EXTRA
To place on exhibition specimens of mort elaborate work, and thereby cncouragt clubs, the names of applicants for the above pictures will be registered in the order ceived, and TO EVEBY TENTH we will ward, free, a copy of our beautiful IS OUograph Spring Beauties. This pieturc meaa ures 12x18 inches and is an exact fao-similt of an oilpainting by Mary Spencer, wortb 1160. Aadress
AM. OILOGKAPHCO.. 188 Walnut rtrcet. Cincinnat
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed Administrator of the estate of David N. Moore, late of Vigo County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent.
GEO. C.
LEM^
Administrator.
Attention, Owners of Horses!
The line collar pad is the only reliable pad for sore-necked horses, and to prevent galling, ever produced and has been greatly mproved. Being of met a', always retains
its medicinal virtue lhls no other paa has. Over a million in use. For sale by harness makers in sixes and warranted to fit. Manufactured l»y Zmc Collar Pad Co., Buchanan, ifAsk your "harness maker for tnem.
SKBUL
1
CASH STORE!
FAIRLY UNDER WAY!
Just Received. Cloaks,Cloaks,Cloaks,
Chinchilla Beavers, Plain Beavers. S4.0O to All at POPULAR PRICES.
Colored Cashmeres!
Dark and Seal Browns, Navy Blues, Myrtle Greens, etc.
Black Cashmeres
Black Aipacas and Mohairs! We call especial attention to the above goods. For weight and color they are unequalled.
NOVELTIES IN
Fancy Dress Goods! Bally to the Biidkejfi. W. S. RYCE & CO.
We will
hour. From brief statement it will be seen that Messrs. Weeks A Potter have entered upon the manufacture of Sandford's Jamaica Ginger in a manner that must in time se cure lor them the enormous trade in this article. It's elegant flavor, great merit, and low price should be tested once by those in need of a family iredicine before allowing themselves to be Induced, by misrepresenta tion, to buy others. Insist upon having what you call for— Sandford's Jamaica Uinger.
This is a
QQLMft 0«8KCT
Amethyst settings, inlaid with
Aaoaasa
Jll8t
Cloakings, Cloaking*!
Chinchilla Beavers, Plain Beavers. Blacks, Browns, Navy Blues,
ALL AT POPULAR PRICES.
DOMESTICSi
FLANNELS. JEAWS, "-2' BLEACHED
AND
8
STUDEBAKER FARM WAGONS
The Smith Farm and Spring wagons, Farmer's Friend Wheat Drills, Superiojr Wheat drills, the Celebrated SMITH Cast Steel Plow, and Farm Implements at all kinds, which will be sold v«ry low. Special inducements for cash.*
Iowa, California, and Korthwest
—OR—»
Kansas, Texas, and .Southwest,
TAKE THE
I: B. DB
Trains Dally,
lifiaVe Danville Junction as follows:
tlli-iO A. M.
ncct'on via, Bloom ington for pfil
Jacksonville, 111.. Louisiw* and Mexico io., Kansas City, Atdttaon. St. Joseph Denver, and all points oftfie ^Missouri river, via Hannibal with M. T, By., for Moberly, Ft. Scott and Parsous, and via B'oomington fer El Paso. Medota, Dubuque and points in Northon*. Illinois and Iowa. Through Sleeper and Coach from Bloomington and Quincy to Kansas City, and Bloom ington to Dubuque.
9SO P.
10:45 next evening, bat one bight out, Ten hours in advance of iny ether line. This train makes direct connection via Des Moines, Marshalltown, Cedar Rapids and other points in Iowa and the Northwest.
This train also makes direct connection Via Galesburg to Quiiicy, Kansas city, Atchison, St. Joseph. Leavenworth and all intermediate points, and via Hannibal for Sedalia, Fort Scott. Parsdas, Dennison, Houston, iialvcston and all points in Tens. a -*/r Train reaches 2:25 A* M* Galeaburg, Quincv. Burlington. Ottumwa^ Bock Island and JUavenport at noon, in advanfle of any other. This train also connccta vJaBurlimrton and Uonk Island for all points in IOWA, »i!«BBASKA^ and CAOFOIINIA. This train makes dircct connection via Bloom ington for El Paso, Medota, Dfibuque, Sioux Uty Yankton, and all points ih northern llilnsuit
Rooms and
ing
Agentswantetf.
MB-
•••a ultimate* Particulars ft«e»
woanaoo^siLMfa.idl
WILLIAM F. WALMSLEY,
321 north Fourth street, between Eaflle and Chestnut, north tidt
TERRE HAUTE,IND-
OLD-FASHIONED
Square bar Soap is the most economical to use. Pr—lag sad wrapping are of 00 powibls hs—itJi Soap, but ax* done to make it look attractive and salable, frofter flswWi Original lM0 Oermmn Soap, is made of JM
FOR M-F
through coachcs are ran on the
9 50 P. M. train to Galeaburg and connect
direct with through Sleeper to All points west and from \Omaha to San Snecialattention is called to the superior aivMitages of the I.B.4W. Boute, for the Black Hills and San Juan gold fields,
Trains on the B. T. H. 8t C. Kail road from Terre Haute connect at Danville with thel. B. *W.
MJOWN
MUSLINS.
BlMchtd aad Brown Caataa FlaMJte
Jobs in C*a ton Flannels*
S1-3C, 81.3c, 81-3C, S1-3C, 81-3c,
Jobs in Percales! Fancies and Solids I
8l-3c, 8i'3c, 8l-3c, 8I-3C-STAND&RD PRINTS, ETC, ALL AT POPULAR PRICES.
Rally to the Buckeye. W. S. RYCE & CO.
A GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY!!!
will iell the largest stock Jewelry of a^bankrapt ftrm, at oao-teath of the manufacturing co* golden harvest for Agents and private individuals.
OUH ONE DOLLAR GOLDEN
GASKET.
Qwrtaftts one elegantly engraved taiy's end SaP DPOOCa ith Pearls one beautiful Out Cameo R(r«g{ one fine pair of KRCTavev grand spiral Amethyst ttttdt, inlaid with HPcaris one improved Qe(la#v
.1<p></p>ATTENTION!
The undersigned has constantly on hand a large stock of the celebrated
one beautiful chiscd
(R! one pair (a) elegant engraved SfMelets, All jS jed in a beautiful white, pink-lined casket. Illustiatdl It casket. On receipt of QH OelMlF we will sead QM .or OMfcet* on receipt off*. 80. F. 8TOOKMAN. 27 Bond Street, New YOf*»
Oil, the best material known for producing a hard, ssrviessMe mm'
effective Soap. It is cut in one-pouad bars, of convenient and economical shape, and not vn The style in which this Soap is cut aQd peeked saves all useless expense, enabling us to sell a so] Soap at much leu p*r pound than yo« are now paying for an interior article. Every bar of the stamped "PROCTBR & OAMBU^MOTTUtDOXEMAN." Take no other. Bold
Springfield
*npi.
Be Beimel
into buying articles ot no real valve though thej* may be advertised as Sil» verwear, but go at once to
St. Louis, Mo.
Corner Seventh and Olive Street®.
Ouadrupled Silver*Plated Ice Pitchers $10, formerly sold at $15. Ouadrupled Plated Tea Sets"
$40,
for
merly sold at $60. Ouadrupled Plated Castors $6.00. Ouadrupled Plated Cake-Baskots,j$5.
THE LARGEST STOCK OF
STERLING S1LTEB
IN THE WEST.
Seventh and Olive.
Hi CorrfeipMdingly Low Price*.
