Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 March 1878 — Page 6
i.
1
I
§fw §[cekli! §azcttc.
THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1878
ICH DIEN.
Tain oyes lo weep for n.e.
4,I
But since tbypleaswe ki no kn-gh' With clastrng arms his faith to proVJ, B»-I*:ve in swuut as reliant quite,
In during thu» to love.
True knights nor be'ir their arms aHv^v, Vor levers ay(? 'heir fumy's wiu^* The liriiveH he wko smi to-day
Wbato'er to-morrow biiut #.
II. L. W.
MARGARET. From the Templo Bar.
A corridor at the end of one wing of a Urge rambling house in the north of England, a barred window and a clocet door. In the passage a (air-haired girl with the light of indescribable pity in her dove-like eyes, kneeling upon the board*, and pushing biscuits and sweetmeats •nder the ill fitting door, which disappeared as Inst as they were put there, Showing that there were human hands to seize tlx on the other side. Within, another girl as young as the first—not twenty, certainly—groveling on the floor like a wild beast, with dark, disheveled hair, almost hiding the spark oj insanity that desecrated her glorious eyes, and devouring the precious morsels that her visitant placed within he." reach, with the aridity of a hungry child. The room in which she chrouched was not comfortless, but had evidently been preuared for the reception of such inmates, and the carefully guarded window and cushioned walls showed that the mansion in which it was situated was occupied by one who made it the business of his life to receive such unfortunates into his professional rare, in plain word?, a private lunatic asylum. "My poor Leah," whiip.-red the fairhaired girl outside, "do you know that I am here and that I love you? '1 he soft clear voice was not unheard, for I -eoh raised her head for a u.oment and suid listening, with the dark cloud of tangled hair thrown back from the low forehead and deeply-shaded eyebrows. But the look of attention paesed away almost as suddenly as it had come, and in another moment her head was down again on the floor, and the sof.lv lips that seemed made only to shape love's whispers murmured stupidly iuvl hungrily, More, more!"' "I am going now,'' said the soft voice again, but 1 will come and see you this evening, with the nur e. Do you hear? Do vou understand? -There was nothing but cn inarticulate onutmur in reply, though she listened in •aid. and the fair-haired girl rose with a sigh from her knees and passed Irom the desolate cofidor into the more habitable and chi eiful part cf the house in which the physician and his f.inily lived, having learned from habit, to look lightly on the enpty human shrike* of reason that were sheltered beneath the same roof. "She is so beautiful," said the girl to lacrself us she went down trie staircase.
hope that God doe* no let her know vthat she is now, or »he would die, as should e." "My i?ear M.irgjre*," s:«id In mother, looking ui as her dest chi entered the room, "i do hop: vou have no' »een a*iong the patients again?" "I have only been to see .or Leah," said Margeret Fenwick, in the s.im^ tsoft voice which is one »-f her greatest charms. "I must do that, u»u know, if it makes htr less unhappy."
Let the child alone said Dr. Feriwick. "She will do herself no ham, if she does nobody else any uood. But jrou did not work upon joker feelings ta give vou the k« v, I hope Madge? The dcor was 1. c^ed, ot course?" "I ta'lstd lu her through, the door, that was all,'' answered Margaret simply. "Pupil, i'o )ou think she will ever be like otiier people again? It was only last week s!:e was sitting here with us all, and 1 was teaching her to play the accompanirnen' to lur song6?" *1 know all that," said the physician, "but she is suffering Irom an acute attack •fdemcntia now. she is very young, iatid may get completely over i«, but ther. she will be always li b!e to a reiapse. A sudden trouble would do it at any time." 4At she ha9 money, too," sighed Mrs. Fen wick, half enviously, as if it was ,a fin that so much good material for (tuippiue!-!) should be wasted. "Didn't j«u sav she had money "Thirty thousand pounds, 1 believe." said lur husband dryly "but I think ihire sre thirty thousand good reasons why nobody should envy her."
It is five ears since Margaret Fenwick knelt at the corridor door, whispering soft words of love and sympathy to the unhnpv t»irl insi Se. She is living in London witu her mother now, for Dr Femviik has been dead some time, and the establishment at Horewood is broken Wp. The gentle charm of her lovelmess .H still in its first flower, and, as she lingjen over the Ltter which is in her hand, -ifce clear light of happiness is irradiating Iter brow and laugh ng back from the
TJTTTTWV^^ tungmg—over 4r that night, Ion JJ before the "cock did daw, or the day d.iw,:' their mouths were ftill of water and mud, and not ttye"barley
"'To know their f.ita needed but a glance it the rtiiserible, shattered, gutted frag nentof the inn that stood. There wa«s a himnev, a triangular piece of roof, a
CM
It
Uarter of thi in.i le of one second-floo
oli.
think By a as wel .,psn, a pale a
^i.huvlC
d-tbi
words to express their anxiety and receive you as a daughter, Write and say How soon you can come.
to see
We are very quiet here, but there are loae or two new people in the village. A Mrs. Fourier has tuken the White Jkouse, and her daughter is a regular M^uisition. The old lady is not much, fcut Leah Fourier piays and sings divinely, and is unusually good looking in
Ae bargain. The girls are mad about ta*r. You can see how hard up I am for
anything to tell you when I- am forced
tailing you that I 1 ve you but I have
vary
few other ideas in my head just now at an_v one tira *. Besides, isn't it OMch better to tell it with your dear h»ad in mine Your own,
people recollcct anything that has passed when they'are well"? That would be the most wretchcu partcfit all?"
Leah FomrSer is singing "Si tu Savais" and Arthur Ashton is leaning over the piano, looking into her magical eyes with 1 an expression—well, which would mean a good deai with souie men, but which
1
From the Cincinnati Coir mer hi. Ttooudaarest, if I might but pr vo By til mt det.ds my love fur thee Ho# sweet lo 11. —could I but MOVO
is a graceful courtesy, Margaret tried to leiieve, with Arthur Ashton. She has been at Llw^
n-\ -maw\
a fortnight now,
and ha» found Leah Fourier almost a» constant an inrr.ate of the house as herself. But then, a» Arthur said, the girls are mad tbout her, and there certainly is an enchantment somewhere in her glowing face, before which few are able to stand. "Bien sur tu m'aimtrals!" bhe sings, and Margaret knows tha# the words would found cold and passionless from her own lips in comparison. Is it wonderful that there should be a response in Anhur Ashton's eyes?
The so Uended, and Margaret Fen wick fi.mce ttrolls after the singer into the conservatory. "If I wcre^ou, Margaret, I should go after them, really," says Aithur's eldest sister, half laughing. "Lvah would flirt with the footman, I belit ve, if there was nobody elsi in the way. It was just th same when poor Charlie was at home.
Margaret tries to smile and keep her witful eyes turned away from the conservatory ddor, but she cannot help speculating a little as to the difference between "poor Charlie" and his brother. As to Leah, herself, she can hardly form a calm, rational opinion, so different is this Leah from the girl with the wild eyes, whose, poo", uncertain fingers ih had helped to find their old familiar places on the piano at Horewood five years ago. She feels rather than knows that the past is not all a blank in Miss Fourier's brain, but no word of recognition has passed between the girls, and it is plain at any rate that nothing cf that dreadful epitode in Leah's life is suspected by the Ashtons. To Margaret, her self, as she looks on the other's proud, imperious beauty, it s.»ems as if her remembrance could be nothing but a dream, and yet it is almost a pain to her to think that so much of her pity those begone days was wasted.
Ten minutes—a quarter of an hour goes slowly by, and Leah saunters back into the drawing-room, with a spray of maidenhair in her hands, and the passion of her song still half-slumbering in those deep mvstcrious eyes. "Mr. Ashton Is going tobi kind enough to see me home." she remarks generally for everybody's information, and Margartt feels the sudden chill that had come her the night before for the first time, when her lover had undertaken the same surely unneccessarv duty. It is almost a relief to her to remember that this is her last evening with the Ashtons, and that the next day Arthur is to take her back to London. i.eah Fourier may take all the footmen in Wales into the conservatory with her then, if she chooses.
Nevertheless/the dull comes back to her heart more unmistakablyi than ever next night, for Leah Fourier, and the convert-atory, and Arthur Ashton, are al! left behind. He tound that he cuuld take another week's holiday, ht told her, and she could not be selfish enough to propose iliat he should frpend two davs in traveling, merely for the sake of taking her home. So their good-by was given at the little Welsh railway station, but something fell out ot his pocket as he was taking her ticket, and she could not help seeing that it was a bit of maiden-fern. It was a pity that it should be crushed under a a stranger's foot before he could recover it—but 'hen there was mare in the conversatory.
Fo'-r, five days without a letter, iring which time the chill never leaves her 'heart, and then comes what she has been looking for. He asks her if she is good enough, unselfish enough to forgive him, and adds, of course, that he never can forgive himself. Margaret knows now what answer he made to Leah's song, and wonders if there is anything left for her in the wcrld, or if it is all made up of such question* and such replies. Then she remembers that her lather had said that there were thirty thousand reasons why no one should envy Leath Fourier.
Well, Leah is his, body and soul, reasons and all, if he chooses to take her and Margaret wonders whether the first will umke up to him for all the others. Would he. choose if he knagp of the corridor at Horewood, and had seen the lips he loved cloying themselves with sweetmeats that soft, compassionate hands thrust by stealth within their reach? She nuts uway the thought from her with a shudder, calling upjn §od not to tempt her to come between him and his happi ness. If it can all be hidden from him it would be a sin in her, of all wom^n in the world, to say a word which might dash the cup from his lips. She would drink her own cup instead, and try to sweeten it by the thought that the man she loved was happy with the girl for whom she had once felt so divine a pity.
The months go quickly enough by, now that Margaret no longer counts how many there are between the seed and the blossom of her happiness, and she knows that Arthur Ashton must have brought his bride back with him by this time to his London home. Does she sing "Si tu savais" to him now, Margaret wonders, or does each know the intensity of the other's love by hfeartand find it sufficiently. Margartt shudders as she remembers that there is still a secret hidden from Arthur Asluon in Leah's mysterious eves—a secret which she alone can
reJy^"ami %vouid
u:
"Ye
give half her life to be
able to forget. Would it ever happen The that he should come to her and cur»e her him upffor having hidden it from him to revenge herself?
That she is revenged, God knows ho unwillingly, Margaret Sce the fir-.t
time she holds Arthur Ashton hand in
hers again. He has written to ask her'
wen
ft* write abv,ut strangers. I suppose you leaving the cold corriaor and the locked ould get tired of it if 1 were to keep on
It goes to Margaret's heart Vo seethe wistful look with which he awaits fo" her answer, striving to put away from his thoughis the awful le. which she knows has already overshadowed his life* "I think she was always nervous," she answers, wishing that she dared say something to comfort him, it she could do so without a lie. "But, of course, now that 6he is happy, there is nothing to be anxious about in that.."
She does not offer to visit the bride herself, knowing what the sight of her must recall in Leah's mind, and not in truth believing that her presence would be welcome, whatever Mrs. Ashton might say to her husband. 'Tell her how glad I shall be it she likes to come," she says earnestly when Arthur Ashton takes her hand in his agpin to say good-bye.
Yes, I will tell her," he'answered, buf all the unreal cheerfullness has died out trom his voice. "It wi.l do her good to have a friend like you—some woman to whom she can talk."
Margaret does not answer, for the tears ar.e filling her eyes but it needs no words to tell Artiur Ashton' that the heart he has thrown away is large enough for what he asks of it.
The months go by, but Leah Ashton still talks of coming to see the girl whose place in life she has taken from her so that Christmas comes around again without Margaret having seen her rival, since the evening on which Lenh came out of the conservatory with the spray of maidenhair in her hand. There is a reason why Mrs. Ashton should stay in her own house now, and Margaret is not surprised to see in the paper one day that Arthur Ashton has another rea on for being "very happy." She ha® almost persuaded herself that he may be so by this time, and writes to tell him of her hope, with her dear love to his wife. She did not think that such a letter requited immediate acknowledgement, and opens his reply a little anxiously, hearing that it ha~. been brought by a special inessenger. "Come, if you can, at once she is asking for vou. God have mercy upon me! A. A."
He is waiting for her at. the door as she drives up, and even in the gaslight she can see upou his brow an awful dread that his prayer will not be heard.
You are not afraid to see her?" Margaret puts her hand in his by way of reply, and her very touch seems to give liim courage.
She is not quiet herself, you know— not sensible, I mean— but the doctors say that is common. And )Our name has been on her lips all day. She will be calmer when she sees you, will she not. "Yes, yes," tavs Margaret, choking back her tears. Only take me to her at once."
She kneels at the bedside, disregarding the prcsince of the doctor and nurse, and her soft arm steals lovingly around Leah's neck, as in the old day. .. "Dear Leah. I am her," she wmspers
The heavy lids oprn.and the dark mysteryofthe wonderfjl eyes burned and scorched with lurid fire that Margaret re membered so well, is turned full upon her.
4
Dor.'t go away," Leah whisper?, in a hcar.-e, exhausted voice. "They are shutting me up alone again."
Her husband is standing at th: foot the bed, with horror stricken, wondering face, but she has no eyes for him. "It is so dark and miserable, Ma garet, but I will be quiet, if you stay. Make them let you stay, do you hear?""
The voice was raised almost toa cream, and Margaret tried to sooth it. "Yes, dear Leah, I am Margaret. Leah, you kno^ that I love you! Oh, my pojr darling, yoa know that I lo/e .jou!'
The surgeon who is standing opposite Margaret shakes his head solmnly as she rise* her eyes to meet his, and the shadow of death begins already to sieal over the room. Even the lips are chill and pallid as Margaret touches them with her own. and the- feverish grasp of the poor weak hand dies into impotency in her warm fingers. The dark tangled hair falls over the shapely brow aud thick curved
eve
dead enough in her heart fjr her to be ^shton
able to tell him "yes." She has evea1 ceased to wonder at the dreariness of her own life, and is vaguely conscious, as he takes her hand, ot' the same great pity far hitn and the woman who had sup planted her, that filled her heart as she
tdown the staircase at Horewood,
door
ARTHUR ASMTONT.
"Leah Fo rierl" peated Margaret to iMrseif, dre.iti)ily "I hope she won't reHMH^bcr ine. I wonder whether mad!
^j, her
"You have found out how little I was worth your regret?" he says forcing an uneasy laugh, as he sees that the old quiver he ictnembers in her lips is there no longei "JJo, not that.' answers Marga-et simply, ''but it is quite true that I regret nothing nothing at ieast tiiat—" She
brows, just as it used to do, and Mar
garet does not know, until she is told,
if he may come to her and satistv him- j8 vailing the face of the dead. And' self of her forgiveness, and her love is
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
him now what she does regret, and what she tries to persuade herself she is mistaken in regretting. "You must be happy—you are happy, are you not?" she asks "anxiously. "How long do you expect a »legroom's happiness to last?'' he asks in reply,with an affectation of levity that tells Margaret she has been sacrificed in vain. Leah has been talking of coming to see you for the last m:nlh, do you know '4 "She is very beautiful," said Margaret, irrelevantly. 'Is she quite veil?" "Well? Of course sheMs," he answered in not so even a voice. "Why should she no* be well?"
VIargarct's heart turns sick with the horrible apprehension that he has already learned to suspect the reason why. "1 only m?.-«nt that I should be very glad to see'her," she answers in what she strives to he her natural voice. "Will vou tell her so from me?" "You k-iew her bfefore the time .vou came to live with us, did you not?" he asks, looking at her with a ke^n inquiring glance. "Why di.i you never tell me of that?"
that is, I m^t her vears ago,"
answered Margaret, hesitatingly. "I did not think she remembered me but I knew her again as soon as I saw her." "Did }0u ever auarrel?" the bridegroom ask', a little puzzled at her manner. "Oh, no," replic9 Margaret with a shudder, thinking of the crouching figure and the greed clutch'ng h?.nds that she had stolen up the long corridor to soothe into content. "But she was alwavs a strange girl and I never understood her quite," she added rather tamely. "Yes—strange—that is the word. 19 it not?1' he said igerl v. "She is nervous and depressed (-ometiines, you know, but that is nothing. She u*ed to be that— that is what you irsjan, is it not?"
her to pity Leah
lhere is no need for
any more
A Catholic priest was asked the difference between Romanists and Ritualists"Tht difference," replied the priest*" is that the former are 'Papists' and tne latter are 'Apeists.' "—London Truth.
QUERY: "Why will men smoke com mon tobacco, when they can buy Marburg Bros.' 'Seal of North Carolina' at the same price 2-*7-
A gentleman named More proposed by letter to a younjr lady, who answered htm with a glowing de cription of a great party, emphasizing the l«9t line of her
MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS
Vegetine
Purifies tho Blood, Renovates and luvigorates the Wr.olff System.
Its Medical Properties are
Alterative, Tonic, Solvent, Diuretic.
Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine
MR. 11. R. STXTK^S: Dear Sir—I will most cheerfully add my testimony to tho groat number you bar a'ready received it tnvor of vonr prent and good medlrlne, VEfJeiTINK, for 1 do not think enough can bo sa rt 'n its praise for I wns troubled over thirty years wtlh that dreadful disonse. ('afrrrh,
Vefletinel""l
5,
h»d
smh bad couphlnff
soells that tt wonM seem as
if .• 'though I ne*er ci-il limHthn Vegeiineiany more, and Vngfttlno ha« cured mo ard I do feel to thank Vonpfino,0''^
a1'
the time that tl«*rc so
igft'^d a medieitie as Vcgetin«\
i# .. |and I nlso think it one of
Vegetine,bcst medicines for cough*, nnil |we.ik sinking feeling at tho stomach, and advhe everybody to take Hie Veg jtinc, for "I can assnro them is oue of tho best medicinc3 tint eve wni.
Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vdgatine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetint Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine Vegetine
MRS. L. GOHK,
Cor.
Magtz:iifl
and Wi-lnHt 8t.
Cam bridge, Mass.
Gives Health, Strength, and Appetite.
Mv (tausrhtir has rocolrod creak bonellt from tho nso of Vegetine. Her deolinlntr ho-lth was a sourec of great at xioi to all her friends. A few bottle* of Vegetine rostorwl her health strength, and a»netitc.
N. H. TILDBN,
[nsurnnoc A Real Eestato Agt No. 49 Sears Bu'l l"g. Itoston, Mass
CANNOT BE EXCELLED.
(JnAiti-KS'iowN, MASS.
II.R STEVKNS: Djar S r—This i3 to certify that I havo used nr lood t'ro-'iaration" in mv family for sovo'Bl years, and think thut fr Scrofula or Cankerous Ituraotc, or Rheumatic Affec tions. It. cannot bo excelled and is a blood purifier or spr ng med'tlse, It is the host, thing I have ever used, and 1 havo used almost everything. I can cheerfully recommend it to any out! In need of Mich a mediclnc.
Yon respoctf illv, 4 MRS. A. A. DtNsitoit*, No. 19 ltussel St.
I
Valuable
Yours re-pc.vfully, *4 I MM. MU«KOE PAKKKR, 8tf Athens St.
VEGETINE-
»stS^T
H. R. Stevens, Boston, Mass
Vegetine is sold bv ail Druggists
Canada Southern Railway
UHXnBSS.-'
Theouly route through Canada under Anieri«k Ipan Munajjeiiiojit'w :,'. .ts* KVrk
Fa:ls with New York Cen'ral and Erie Rulwaya.
Wagner Sleeping and Parlor Car
On nil Trains to Principal Points East. Tin* 'anada Southern is one of the best constructed and cqi-iped roarlwon tho continent, and its fast increasing business is evi•'en". tliac its snpertnrUvover its competitors is arJtnow edged and appreciated by the iriivel ng public.
Any information as to tickets, ronneotlons sleep ng ear accommodations, etc., cheerfully ftivou on aipli atlun 'o tr.o undersigned
Frank E. Snow,
Gen'l Pass, and T'ck't Ag(..Detroit.
SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of a decree and order of sale issued from the Vigo Circuit Court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of Edward B. Allen, executor of Thomas Dowling, deceased, and against Patrick Osborne and Bridget Francis Osborne, I am ordered to sell the following described real estate, situated in Vij county, Indiana, to-wit:
Lot number five
(5)
in Dowling's sub
division of part of lot fifty-one
section sixteen
(51)
(16),
township twelve (t2)
north, range nine
(9)
west, and en \S,j
SATURDAY, the
23rd
day of March
1878, I
within the legal hours of said day, at the court house door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges and apurtcnances to the 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 order of sale 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 the same. This 28th day of February,
1878.
GEO. W. CAR1co.
Pf$6 Sheriff.
^DMINI3rKATOR'3 APPOINTMENT.
Notice Is hereby given that the nnders'grted has been appointed administrator of tt» estate of Morgan Waldon. Said estate is probably s«lv nt. EDWIN W. BLACK.
•***?$•*"V'
and .5
LEGAL
SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of a decree and order ot sale issued from the Vigo Circuit Court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of Daniel C. Sist, for useof William P. Hubbard, administrator de bonis non of the Estate ot Andrew J. Pari.ell, deceased, and against Virginia E. White, I am ordered to selljthe following described real estate situated in VLo County Indiana to-wit:
Two
Reliable Evidence.
(2)
lots, or parcels of land, num
bered seventeen
(17)
and ei-^htree-i,
township twelve
(52),
f:ef,
rjr,
.tfe ^#YJ.
Jtf'V',} I f.-V si
in
(18)
On the plat of Andrew While's subdivision of the south part of the north-west quarter (j^) of section thirty-four
(34,}
(i2)north.range
nine
(9)
west, situated in Vigo Cour.ty, in the State of Indiana, which plat is recorded in the Recorder's office of said -ounty, in plat book record volume one (t), page fifty-two
which sulnlivision number
ed seventeen
(17),
contains seven
(7)
acres and fiftv-nine one-hundredths,
100,
:ihe
(59-
and subdiviMon number eighteen (iS) contains six (6) acres snd sixtvfour-onc-hunredths tf4-100), together with all and singular the hereditaments and appurtenances to the said subdivisions, or either ot them belonging, or in an) wisp appertaining, and on ,», SATURDAY, TUB 230 DAY OF
MARCH.
1S7S,
within the legal hours of said day, at the courthouse door i.i Terre Haute, 1 will offer the rent* and profits of the above described r.al estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon lilure to realize a sum sufficient to satifv said order of sale and costs, I will tli 'n and there offer the fee simple, in tmd to said real estate, to the highest bideer for cash to satisfy the same.
This
28th
day of February,
(37)
A
Remedy!
SOUTH BOSTON, Feb. 7,1870. MR. STEVENS: Dear si —Ih vc taken several bottles of vonr Vegetine, and am convinced it is a valuable remedy for dvspeps'n, kidney compr int, and ne*al debllltV of tho system. I can heartily rocsm nond It to all suffering from the abovo ro'm Hint.
1S78.
GEO. W. CARICO. Sheriff. Pr fee, |S.
SHERIFF'S SALE
By virtue of a decree and order of Bale issued Irom the Vigo circuit court on mechanic's lien
10
in Rose's addition to the city
of Terre Haute, Vigo count v. Indiana, together with the buildingj thereon situated. and oh SATURDAY, the
9th
day of Febru irv.
$6.00.
^HERlKP'3 9ALK.
it if"
RKI'AHBD UY
ttinl runnn to an
11 y. one humlrttd and flfty-four (164) fve', ii
00
SATURDAY, the
23rd
tit
day of March,
1878,
withn the eg hours of sai day at the court house door Torre Muuto. I will offer thu rents una profits of tho abovo described rettl est it* ,t gettw with all privileges and appui teimnce.* to tho same bo onging, for a term not exceeding seven cars to the highest der for cash, and upon fall-ire to roa ize a sum sufficient to satisfy said or^er of sice nou costs. 1 will then and there offer the roe-si nple in and to said real estate, to the ghest bidder /or cash to sail«fy the same. This 2ith day of Keb'iiary, I87».
1
The Short aw Quick
.)• i.'lC Line tp tho Eart a $ & $ A -."-av Buffalo,, and Niagara Falls f&j -MJrect Cor rec tton* ipt d»-ai-""clcdo same iiept withail Wahtish R'llwav Trains. Ccnnectionf ma-'e at. HulTalo and Niagara
GEO. W. CARICO, Sheriff.
Pr fee |6.00.
I AHDIAN'^^ALE OF RKALESTATE.' „T Not cols h:reby given that the undersign ', guardian of Henry Keuneke, a person of unsonml mind, wilt sell at private sole, the wo«thalfofth llowlng described real es ite: Commencing flf y-ne (61) rrds at thiiteen and one-nnf '!8X) fot fmm the southwest corner of toe scuhm» qusi tcrof section fourteen (U), townchlp twelve (X2i no/th, of ranK'enint (9) west,In Vig county, Iii iliiua running thence ease sixte (1H rodsand thirteen nnd (hree-fourths fl3#) feet, thenee north firty-eigh" (48) ro s, tneoce wcstsix ot (18) rods and tairieiu nnd tnreefourth-» (13^) feet, thenee gou-h forty-eight (48)rod« to theplaceef beginn'ng. .ppli ail»ns of vureh«seis wil ho receiv.*'1 at the ntore of th-.-undersigned, at No. 414 south Sacond reft, in ihe city cf 1'erro ^sute, said ennn'y and state, until the 20th day tf Mar h, 1878.
TEKMiJ—One half tei, the residue in six months, the purchaser giving note at Interest,
Jwa'vlng valuation ami appraisement lawi and securer bv good freeho security. HEKMAN Am AN, Guardian.
Februirv 27,1«8.
G. W. & J. II. Kli iskb, Attys for Guardian.
IOO
WORD. OF GO!
TO BE READ CAREFULLY BY ALL LOVERS OF
Offit* of Ou AMERICA* FAMILY Bm.it PBBUSHIXO Co., dnehmixtt. n.. OH. 1. WstlUJ, The American Family Bible Pablishlnx Company, baring been orKunifl foi seaan fee tore and aala of Family Bibl«* and other Religion* PDMMMM, aod the nil ot it* pcblieauoni baa made (be Company aeif-natainiaic. be it therefore rfilf
Saulred. That in future OM general and branch offieea are hereby instructed to cell ear liae new and Improved Family Bible* at aneh prieeaaa will eoTereoat of manufacture and hoxinr.
Pursuant shove Instructions, we are now fitting orders tor our New ANH I«-L PROVED 9.00 Itini.K AT OO. and our $15.00 BlBLK ATFA.OO. which, in nddltlnritlioI Old and New Testament, Apocrypha, and Concordance, contains N'EAIU.Y I
2000 ILLUSTRATIONS,
ABWTiox.vt rrATtmEs.
BALM, urt or CUBUT. VBS
EOOTTUES
ejm WW
LEGAL.
"SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of a decree and order of sale issued from th« Vigo circuit court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of ThomM P. Murray, and a/aiost Henry MiUer Susan A. Miller, Julia E. Patrick, Patrick Shannon, AnnieConley, Nathaniel Preston, National State Bank of Terie Hautr, John R. Brownlee, Andrew Stevenson, Milton S. Durham, Executor, estate of Wm. P. Thornton and Wm. S. Rea, I am ordered to sell the following described real estate, situsted in Vigo connty, Indiana, to-wit:
That certain portion of the north half (V£) of section eighteen
(18),
Pr's tee |8.oo.
me directed and dtliver-
ed, in favor of Samuel S. Fenner and Augustus Lotzo and against John E. Linn, I am ordered to sell the followiug described real estate, situated in Visjo countv, Indiana, to-wit:
The inteie^t ot said John E. Link in and to thirty
(30)
feet and seven
(7)
inch
es off the east de of iot number thirtyseven
day of March,
1878,
within the legal hours of said day, at the Court House door, in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges an I appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for istt. and upon failure to renPze sum sufficient to satisfy said order of sale and costs. I will then and there offer the fee-simple, ia and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satistv the same. Thh
14th
1878.
I'r fee
Gito. W. CARICO, Sheriff.
By virtue* oft do ard ordcrof sa Issued 'rout 1 he Vix» Circuit Court, to me directed and dfl veif.d, in favor of Edward B. Allen, eMc.ito-- of riioma# Dowlitijr, do ea« d, and Hcainst ler. miali Burklny and Hiw^niih jtu lley, 1 ntn ordoot. sell ih* following described re il estate,sKu.Ued in Vigo county, InJltm, '.(i-wit: number nine (9) in Dowl ng's subdivision of p«rt ol lot number flfty-on- (f#n, in sec Ion lxtei-n (Ifi), township twelve (12) nor'h, rimcenine (9) west, a cord ng oilie r'-rori*. pl:ir thi'ieof, and |.o it l"ti tight (»), ou Third a'... of, In tho ty of 'J'crro tfaute, flf four (51*
township
eleven (tt) north, range nine
{9)
west,
Iving eavt of the Vincennes road, which was set off to Eliaabeth Clem. Mary A. Clem, and William Clem in the partition of George Clems estate, recorded in order book f^ur
(4),
page fiftv-two
(52)
of the Vigo probate court, and which said land ha9 been heretofore conveyed to Henry Miller by Elias Cummings and wife, and William Clem except nineteen (19) acrcs heretofore conveyed by Miller and wife to Adjm Rignej', and on SATURDAY, the
33d
dav of March,
1S7S, f'
within the legal hours of said dav, at the Court House door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits ol the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the 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 order of sale 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 the same.
This aSth day of February,
1878.
GBO. W. CARICO,Sheriff*
SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of a decree and order of sale, issued from the Vigo Circuit Court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of Edward B. Allen, Executor of Thomas Dowling. deceased, and against Chauncey R. Pritcliard and Alice M. Pritchard, I am ordered to sell the following described real estate, situated in Vigo County, Indiana, to-wit:
Lot number six (6) in Dowling's subdivision to the City of Terre Haute, as platted nnd recorded in the Recorder's office of Vigo Countv, and bounded as follows: Beginning at the southeast corner of an unnamed street and running north fifty-four (w) feet, thence west one hundred and fifty-four
{154)
feet, to
an alley, thence'south fifty-lour
(54)
feet,
thence east one hundred and fitty-four (154) feet, to the place of beginning, the same fronting on Fourth street, as the same has been extended by Dowling's addition, and being part oflot number fifty-one
(51)
in section sixteen
(16)
28th
and
on SATURDAY, the 13rd day of March T? 1S78, within the legal hours of said tfay, at the Court house door in Terre Haute, I will rffcr the rtnrs and profits of the above discribed real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances lo the same belonging, fur a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, nnd 1 pon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy taid order of sale and costs, I will then and there offer the fee simple, in and to said real estate, to the highett bidder for *cash to satisfy the same. This
day of February
1878.
GEO. W. CARICO, Sheriff.4'
Pr fee
$8.00.
NO
9884.
STATE OP INDIANA,
COUNTY OF VIGO, IN THE VIGO CIRCUIT COURT, NANCY T. BROWN vs. JOHN HICK-
O A E I A I O A I O S S A N BRASHER, THOMAS M. BRASHER, JULIA MEACHAM, JAMES MEACHAM, ALFRED B. PEGG, ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF MARVIN M. HICKCOX. DECEASED, HARLAN C.
O S O N A I W I LIAMS, SARAH E. WILLIAMS WILLIAM E. McLEAN, et al., in Foreclosure. Be it known, that on the
February,
A*O*O WMCH ARI A BIBLE »ICTIOSA*T.
or
TBS APOSTLE*.
anis AXI
or
THF. BIBLR, AMXALS
Aibsm. aearty MOO lllaatnti jaa.
"Tfce cheapest Bible we erer iaw."—Am.
I Lions to
26th
1878,
day of
it was ordered by the
Court tha' the Clerk notify by publication said Harlan C. Thompson, David Williams and Sarah E. Williams 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 the same will stand for trial at the April tetrn of said Court in the year i878.
JOHN K. DURKAN, Clerk.
Geo. II &J. H. Kleiser, att'ys lor pl't'ff.
E
STRAY NOTICE.
TAKEN UP-Bv Wesley Price, in Lost Creek township, Vigo county, Indiana, oa the fith i'iiy of December, 1877, one red roan cow. wtth whitish bins and shoulders, marked wl ahol*ln the fiont of the left horn, supposed to be twelve vear* old. Appraised ac$2i befote Walter It Olckersoo, J. P. JOHN K.OURK AN. Clerk.
fkKFL t*\ 77 week to agents, with U0J IU I outni iree. P. O. TICK EKY, august, Maine.
nrrror.r or
Hirro*R or Rxuaiocs
or
1400
M|
DSSOMISATIOSS
1
THE BEBUC. EASTEBK XAXMSIM
CCSTOMS. PHOTO. ALBtnt. MAItSIAOS CBBTIFICATE, fAMILT SXCOSD.
This splendid Boyaif self-explain ng a complete Library of the Holy Scripture**. The amount of ntn ie flroro the Bible proper, if bound ir blse are printed with a clear and large
lego or exasuaing.if One Dollar eent in adrasee. The One Dollar to be appliel as ptrlQn.J| "'ble* can be returned, and money will be refunded, if pnrehaaeri are »oti payment of BiMe cent. Bible* can be returned, and money iri lutiiBed. OWe r«ii JTame,
C«B ov rvHiniwi MO momi *ut |»hiv»p»I^» "vr» l'o*t Qfirt, County, and HiaU •!*«. owrwt Hxprtfi OJU«t Th© r»nft-oract* 3!on«y Order or Keffisterai |j«tt^ri. AddPBMftllcommanieaj-j
Iwtwmtr totcnti mo*rp is bjr 3Ion« Order or Keipstewl AflawMwiwrnmBnicyi AIFTFARWLTT »AIFTR,Y IMTT.y. putMlng Compiny, Ko 178 V. ToarthSt., fcsdaaitf 0.|
Intr.l
matter (extrail
separate volumes, would cost K0.00. These JJI-I Theblcd-J
tnas are of the most durable and attrae STYLE A. Amerleaa Morocco, Crashed Pa 100 iMBitTHtiftHi U39 Pini, BTYLC D. Prenoh Morocco. Raised Panel, Gilt Centre Stamp. Gilt Edges, Photograph
pa^ee, Snperb Extra msentation Edition.
£4.001
80.OC
Chritti/u Krritw, Cin., O. "Von ihoild «*nd for BrWt
tt once."—Biblical HetufUr, Rultijh. Jf. C. "A RelUble Firm."- 'alnut St. Ba»k. Cituitmati. O.
NOTE THESE IHSTRUCT10NS. 5s2|
