Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 March 1879 — Page 7
RAILROAD TIME-TABLE.
L'nlfen iieput, Chestnut *nd Tenth street# for ail trains excepi I. & St. C. A T. H. and freight*. lime Ave minute® faster lhau Terre Haute time. I'epot of I. A HI. L.wrier Tippecauoe end Bixtb atre t«.
Explanation of References: ^Saturday excepted. *t3ar.«dy excepted. KVonday exepted. {Daily-
VANDAL1A LINK. (Leave going East.)
•Indiivuapolib Accommodation. ... 7 00 a \Ka«t Line 1 40 a JEastcrn Express 8 U& •Indianapolis Accommodation 8 40 (Arrive from East.) JWestern Express 1 J6 a •Mail and Express 0
5
a
Fast Line 8 t6 •Ind.anHpoliB Accomodation 7 CO ro (Leave going West.)
Fast Line 1 82 a •Mail and Accommodation 10 C8 a in iExpresfr & 10 in ^Arrive 'rom West.) Fast Line J®
a
Effingham Accommodation 8 60 a Eastern Express 8 4fi
INDIANAPOLIS A KT. LOUIS. (Leave going Kafit.) Accommodation 8 4." a Jlay Express 8 15 ID JNew York Express No. 6 1 J-t a (Arrive from East.)
Day Express .11 00 a {Accommodation 60 in JNew York ExjiressNo. 6 1 88 a in (Lo&vo K0in«r West. {Day Express 02 a •Accornmo lation I'
1,1
JNew York KxiircssNo.6 1 80 a (Arrive from West. Accommodation 8 45 a Day Express J2 New Y01 Kxpresw N .6 1 27 a in
TERRE HAUTE AND LOGAN3POKT. (Depart.) Day Mail .' 0 30 Night Express 8 DJ ui (Arrive Day Ma 52 .15 Nigtit Express 10 00
TEUItE HAUTE AND EVAS8V1LLE. (Depart.) {Nashville Express 4 85 a in •Day Express
8 16
r"
tArrive.)
•Mail and Express 10 16 ^Express 2 pin
EVA SSVILLE.TEKREHAUTE A CHICAGO, (Depart for North.) •Chicago Express fl 45 a •Danville Accommodation 8 16 $Night Express lu 1"
ni
(Arrive from North.)
{Night Express 4 80 a n. •Terre Haute Accommodation 11 15 a in •Day Express 6 40
ILLINOIS MIDLAND. (Depart.)
Express 6 9^ Decatur Passenger 3 50 1 Arrive.) Express 12 OS a Inihanupolis Passenger 10-35 a
§hc ipchla (gazette
THURSDAY, MARCH 27,1879.
THE MILL OF ETRETAT.
A ROMANTIC LEGKND THAT IS STILL TOLD MY TIIE I'KASANTS OF KOHMANDY.
I.
Etretat was not always the pretty and coquettish little nook it is now, where tolk bathe and dance, the piano tinkles and wices sing day and night. There was a time when bathers did not promenade the beach in oilskin caps and hailequin suits. Indeed, it is barely thirty years since the shore knew no other frequenters than 6tont hoarse sailors, fishermen and their wives and little ones, tanned by the sun and salty air and coarsly clad.
Before that—so long before that the memory of that time survives but a9 a faint tradition—Etretat had no need of cits and fashionables, the strangers who yearly go there to barter their money for fresh air. "They bring water to the mill," the local proverb hath it, and water is precisely what Etretat stands sorely in need of. There folk must drink the water precisely as th^y find it, sometimes turbid, sometimes brackish, and put their dependence maily in the rains, when with infinite trouble the farmers fill their cisterns. Indeed, HO scarce is water there that a majority of the country folk have entirely renounced its use, and instead slake their thirst with a particularly fine cider or a particularly vigorous brandy.
Once upon a time there was no scarcity of water at Etretat. Then in the midst of the low land, between poplars, willows and fair apple trees, ran a charming brook that brawled and murmured over its pebbles and among its cresses, and at last sought the sea
Meat
the spot where Mother Ilatville
now serves up a very excellent dish of fresh fish with a cream saure which is marvelous.
There was then at Etretat a poor woman, Coquin by name, a widow, with two children. Her husband, Ludwig, man-at-arms in the service of the Lord of Criquetot, was so handsome, so resplendent, so proud in casque and cuirass that hiscompanions called him Ludwig, le Coq, a name changed to Ludwing Coquin, and of which the wearer was deservedly proud.
But Ludwig Coquin, who had follow ed his lord to the second crusade, alter performing prodigies ofvalor| and sending scores of infidels down to the shades, had at last fallen in the Holy Land upon the body of his master, the Lord of Criquetot, "and nothing had ever been heard of him, and his poor wife, Clotilda, lived with her two little ones in ex» treme poverty, awaiting the return of him who was never to cotne back.
Upon the brink of the brooklet, hard by the cot she owed to the generosity of the Lord of Criquetot, was a mean shed in which was a heavy millstone, to crush the corn from which the peasants made their black bread, but the stone had to be turned with the same painful labor ap* plied to the fisher's capstan on the beach. This was of little consequence when the stout Ludwig was there to apply hi6 broad breast to the bar, but since his departure and since the boat of Clotilda's father had gone down at sea with all its crew, the task had been found well nigh too arduous for the poor woman, although her eldest son, young Ludwig, brought willngly to her assistance the strength of his mall arms. Only, with the utmost diffi
,&r tMit*
culty could she obtain b» her labor enough to satisfy her daily wants nevertheless she endured hardt-hips with patience, awaiting hopefully the return of her beloved husband "and the growing in strength of her boys,
But all her troubles had not been told, for heryouger son, a child of four, wa* stricken with one of the cruel complaints that are so oiten found in Noi mandy,a malady which wastes their flesh, saps their forces and at last kills them, the local name o: which is car reau.
One evening, as little Jehan, pale, weak, his visage sunken with pain, lay moaning in his cradle, while Clotilda and lit tic Ludwig were straining at the bar that turned the miiUtone, an old man approached, walking with difficulty, and seated himself on the stone bench at the door. He was sheltered but indifferently from the sharp breeze of evening in the folds of the remnant of a torn cloak, and his bare fVct were flustv and b'eeding. He did not speak, but hii aspect spoke for him.
Clotilda ceased her labor at the mill, and approaching him, said: "My father, you are tired and doubtless hungry God knows there is little enough tor the children and me, but what there is. 1 beseech you, comc and 6hare with us." "Be bltssed, my daughter," said the old man, in a gentle voice "you alone ol the whole country-side have opened your door to me." And entering the cottage lie sat down to meat, not without having cast a searching and pitying glance at the humble surroundings.
Noticing the oradle of little Jehan, the old man went to it, took the child in his arms, and laying his hand on its hard and swollen stomach, pronounced a brief prayer. 1'here, woman," he said, uiving'her the little one. on whose cheek the rose of health had suddenly bloomed, "vour child is curt-d. Thi-* work is too hard for you hereafter let the water which runs before your door do the w^rk tor you. It will enrich you and yours 60 long as you remain as I have found vou, pious, compassionate, succoring the poor and trusting in God."
At that moment the mean hovel shone with a celestial light. The old man was transformed and became young a golden hemlet glittered on his head his breastplate glowed like flaine he mounted a while horse that an angel, clad in white, held at the door on his shoulders he wore the «ame fragment of a cloak* the needv wayfarer had wrapped himself in.
Clotilda, presfingher two children on her brea6t, fell upon her knee*, for the recognieed the great Saint Martin, who often appeared in Normandy, where still dwelt descendants of his family.
Saint Martin stretched his hand towards the stream—towards the hut his horse sprang forward, and the vision vanished in aluminous rav.
Next meriting, when Clotilda and the children a wakened they could not believe their e\es. The little rill had become a broad creek and the shed a great stone building. A dam stretched across Upstream, whose pent-up waters drove a huge wheel that filled the air with its harmonious tic-lac and turned six beautiful 6et8 of millstones—stones that gave a flour BO fine and white that never had there been seen its like in all Normandy. Besides this, the stream watered and fattened the land through which it flowed, the fields it watered yielded triple crops, and the cattle that pastured there throve as none o-hers did.
The mill of Etretat became famous throughout the country. There was no farmer so far off but he sent his gri*t to it, and soon Clotilda's poverty gave place to wealth, and she and her children died rich, happy and full of days, after having closed their door to the poor.
Long, long afterwards the possessor ot the famous mill, naturally a descendant of Clotilda, was one William Coquin. He was rich, as none of his forefathers had been, but he had inherited none of their good qualities, being hard to hi& servants, greedy of gain, haughty towards his inferiors anil pitiless for the poor and unfortunate. If they sutler," he would cry, '*it is because they deserve to suffer." Unhappily, all thg country-side followed his sad and cruel example, so prosperous and independent had Etreiat become.
One evening William Coquin was enjoying the cool ol the day in this arbor, listening to the murmur of the millstream and the joyou3 whirr of the wheel that never rested night or day on the table were a fine mu£ of cider, a fair, white wheatenloaf and a delicious little cream-cheese. Looking up, the miller beheld approach timidly an old fisherman, old and bent—so old" and bent that he seemed well nigh broken in twain. He was tanned as brown as leather and a ragged fragment of a cloak was wrapped around his shoulders. "Master," he said, humbly, "a morsel of bread and a draugh of cider—I have walked a long distance to-day and am worn out my boat has been shipwreckeJ and I have lout all but these rags. Have mercy on me, and I will pray for y9u.' "Out of here! Get out!-' screamed the angry miller, falling into a frightful passion "away, you dog. How dared\ou, miserable vagabond! enter my grounds without my permission? Go! Had you behaved yourself you would not have had to beg and sponge on others. Off— to the devil with you!"
And as the old man still begged a bit of bread the miller called his men to drive him out.
But they had not laid hands on him, when a tremendous gust of wind smote the country and laid everything level with the ground—mill, trees, dwellings, barns. The earth trembled, the skies were black as ink the roaring waves ran up and swallowed the ruins.
The old fisherman was none other than the great Saint Martin. The white horse on which he now appeared cast a lurid light, and the rider's cuirass glowed like ligntning in the pitchy darkness. "William Coquin," said the Saint, stemlyj "you have proved false to the faith and the promise of your fathers. Of the fortune and wealth God gave you you have made an evil use you have
:JV
331E TEKRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE
nei herbeen liberal nor fust towards the poor and unhappy, who are »he friends of God. Therefore you shall become poorer and more wretched than the meanest of them, and ur name, even, hitherto blef^ed and honored, become the designation of all that is wicked and all that ia vile."
He said this, and disappeared at a gallop, in the midst of a sheet of lightning that cast a baleful glare over the wrecked and ruined country side.
On the morrow- no trace could be found of the mill, stones or creek nay, there was not even the original rivulet left.
History records that the wicked miller was reduced to such frightful destitu'ion that he was forced to dispute with the swine the rotten apples that the fanners cast aside as worthless at last he vanished fron lhe Norman country— no one cared to ask whither.
VII.
As the great Saint had predicted, the name of Coquin assumed a new and disgraceful meaning, and when nowadays it is said of a man that he is a coquin there needs not to be &aid much more about him. Nevertheless there still live at Etretat, a fair ily of excellent, honest folk, descendants of Clotilda, who have nothing in common with the unworthy miller except the name.
As for the river, if ever you go to Etreat you can see for yourself that no trace of it remains, neither is there a mill, nor yet any source of prosperity save the tide of strangers that once a year breaks upon the lonely and rugged shore.
At low tide, however, Saint Martin, having pity upon the poor women that needed sott water for their washing, has permttted the lost creek to reappear here and there in little pools among the boulders of its old bed, so that for a little while daily or nightly they can beetle their linen. When the tide comes in, however, you see no more of the stream than if there never had been such a thing.
Finally, as the great Saint Martin, it is many a long day since his apparition in Normandy has been credibly recorded, possibly because of his indifferent success on a previous occasion. It is, however, known that at the beginning of the last century a familv tracing its descent from him lived and flourished in Normandy, and it is altogether probable that its representatives survive to this day. Indeed, less than forty years ago such representatives dwelt in the chateaux of Lions-la-Forei and Neufchatel.to whom their great progenitor had bequeathed the power of curing the carreau by the imposition of hands so that annually, in the month of September, the sailors and peasants brought their children from all parts of the country to invoke the protection of the Saint, through the instrumentality of !iis decendants.
VIII.
Such as it is, this is the legend of the Mill of Etrptat and the Great Saint Mar tin.
Coquin—Knave, rascal.
"JOHN" AND "WILLIAM." Ever since the Conquest, the race for popularity among Christian names England, has been greatest between "John" and "William." In the age after the arrival of the Normans, "William" was the commonest Christian name. In Domesday, for instance, there are sixtyeight Williams," forty-eight "Roberts," and thirty-eight "Walters," but no "Johns." In 1173, at a banquet given at the ceurt of Henry 11., it was commanded that none but those of the name of "William" should dine at it, and accordingly one hundred and twenty "Williams" all knights, sat down to the table. In Edward I.'s time this disproportion had become less marked, for in a list of \Villshir9 names, containing 577, there are 82 "Williams" to 8S "Johns." In a century after, "John" had outstripped its competitor. In 1347 out of 133 common councilmen for London, 33 were "Johns," the next highest name being "Williams," with 17, while Thomas" in consequence of the cononizu'ioit of Becket springs into notoriety with 15. In 2385. the guild of St. George, at Norwich, in a total of 376 names, possessed 12S "Johns" to 47 "\Vi liamr»" and 41 Thomases From this period, owing to the two saints who bore »h name, and despite the aversions felt fcr the worthless Monarch, who had al-o borne it, "John" retained its supremacy, and to this circumstance we owe the name of "John Bull," as wtll as the "Jean Gotdain," by which the French called us all through the middle oges. "William" retained "a sturdy second place." It fared worse at the hands of the Puritans, who rejected it as a Pagan name, with horror but it recovered its ascendency with Wiliiam of Orange and the Protestant Revolution, and now it stands, as it did eight centuries ago, at the head of all the names in our baptismal registers, while John has again 6unk into the second place.—[Our English Surname.
YE MULCTED COMPOSITAIRE. Even hard-working newspaper men sometimes have their fun. In an article in the Hawkeye the word "supposititious" occurred a word which compositors, and, as for that matter, almost everybody else are apt to spell "suppositious." To make assuranc doubly sure the editor called the attention of the proof reader to it, predicting in advance that it would be set up wrong. Sure enough, it came back in the proof ''suppositious." It was duly corrected in proof, but unfortunately the compositor "couldnt' see it" and the word went into the paper as set up. Whereupon the editor made minute of his prediction and the result, and sent it to the composing room, from whence there came back this uniqe rejoider, written by one of the compositors: Bounce, foreman, bounce with care
MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS.
Ultra.
1
The negligent compositaire That overlooked this cross erraire. Even the eminent editaire Wagered with the proof readairt. Send him down to the managaire, Plaine him down with a big plauaire, Punch him in the ribs withe the screw drivaire, Punish him all over everywhere, This negligent compositaire.
THE new Howe, at 511 Main street, ib the simplest, most durable, and lighest running shuttle machine in the market
&
ASK the recover p«i I'vspopt f'S. I'll lion* tuft' r-, vie 1 Hi* fvv« and ague, the mervurla d8ea*Pd p&Ment how they recovered hea th, cheerful spirits and good ppetite: they wilt tell you bv taking SIMMONS' LIVKK REGULATOR.
mmmi
The Ckeaprit, curette 11 ml Host lainily 'ledicine in the World! For DTSPEPS1 A. CONRTI PATIO.V, Jaunriiee, ftiiious attscks. MJK IKALAtJI E. Coli'\ Depression of Hpirits, SOUR ST'IMACH, Heart Barn, Jtc., Ac.
This unrivalled Southern Kcmeily is warran tn«l not to contain a single pArtk-le of MERCURY, or auy injurious mineral substance. but is
PURELY VEGETABLE,
containing those Southern Rootjan 1 tlcrsb an ailwise Providence has placed In countries where Liver Diseases most prevail. It will cure all Diseases caused by Dernngementof the Liver and Kowels.
The SYM.P10MS of L'.ver Complaint area bitter or bad ti8te in the mouth Phin in the Back, Hides or Joints, often mistaken KlieuuialUin Sour Stomach Loss of Appetite Bi wels alternately costive and lax: Headache I/099ot memory, witba painful sensation of having failed to do something which lought to have been oonc del)iity, L«w iuirits, a thick yellow appearauce «f the Skin and Eyes, a dry Congo often mistaken for Consumption.'
Sometimes m»ny ot those symptoms attend the disease, at others very few butthe Liver, the largest organ in the bo ty, is generally the sent of the disease, and if not Kegulated In time, grtafc suffering, wretchedness and DEATH will ensue.
I can rc-ouimecd is aji cfflciciobs remedy lor aisoase of tne Liver, Heartburn and Dyspepsia, amnions' Liver Regulator.
LEWIS ti. AVUNDER, 1625 Haste'* treet. Assistant Post Alaste-, t..iadelphia. "We have tested its virtues, personally, uud know ihut tor Dyspepsia, Biliousness, and Throbbing Headache, it is the best medicine tho world ever saw. We have tried forty other remedies before Simmons' Eivcr Regulator, but noueofthem nave us more than temporary relief but tae Regulator not only relieved, but.cured 11s." -E«. Telegraph and Messenger, Macon, Ga.
MAMUFACTURED ONLY BY J. H. ZEILIN & CO., PHILADELPHIA.
It contains four medical elements, never united in the same nappy proportion in any* other preparation, viz: a gentle Cathartic, a wonderful Tonic,an unexceptionable Alterative and certain Corrective of all impurities of the body. Su-.h signal success nas attended its use, that it is now regarded as the
EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC
For all diseases of the Livwr, Stomach and Spleen. As a Remedy in Malarions Fevers, Bowel Comp'alnts, Dyspepsia, Aleniai Depression, Uestlesmt-Hs, jaundice, Nausea, 4ick Headache, •,Colic, Constipation and biliousness
IT HAS NO EQUAL.
CAUTION.
03 there area number of imitations offere to the public, we would caution the com mnnity to buy no Powders or Prepared SIMd MONS' LIVER REGULATOR nnlew in our engraved wrappi r, with Trade-Mark Stamp and S'gnaiuro unbroken. None otheris gennme.
J. H. ZEILIN & CO
Philadelphia.
Your valuable medeclne Simmons' Liver Regulator, hasBavcd me many Doctors' bills, 1 use it for everything it is reecomended, and never knew it 1.1 fail, I have used it in CoMc and Grubhs. with my mules and horses, givng them about half a bottle at a time. 1 have not lott one that I gave it to, you and reecomend it t*every one that has Stock as being the best medicine known for all complaints thdt horse flesh I* heir to.
IS. T. TAYLOR,
A cent for Grangers of Georgia.
T. MCELFRESH. H. C. GILBERT.
Phcenix Foundry
Machine Works,
TERRE HAUTE. IND
Manufacture all kinds of stationary engines, flour mill, saw mill, and coal shaf machinery. Spccial attention given to mill work. We are agents for the best quality of milling machinery of all kinds, French burr mill stones, batting cloth, scales, steam pumps, leather and rubber belting, head blocks, circular saws, goy jrnors,
iteam Guages, Wire Ropes, etc.
Our facilities for manufacturing and ihipping are equal to those of any estabishment^n the west, and we will stand X'hind everything we do. We have always on hand a variety of second-hand engines and boilers, which we will guarlutee to be what we represent them. Call and examine our price-list and goods before purchasing elsewhere. ftfcELFRESH & GILBERT.
No. II,002. STATU OF INDIANA, COUNTY OF VIGO, IN THE VIGO CIRCUIT COURT, NATHANIAL S
HOLMES, ys, P^LLY A. HOLMES, in divorce. Beit known, that" on* the 26th day1 of February, 1879, it was ordered by the court that the Clerk notify by publication said Polly A. Holmes, as non-resident defendant of the pendency of this action against her. Said defendant is therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action against her and that the same will .stand for trial at the April term of 6aid court in the year 1879.
JOHN K. PURKAN, Clerk.
M. Hollinger, Pl'fTs Atty.
APPLICATION FOR LICE vSE NOT lea' is hereby given that I will apply to the Bjard of Commissioners ol Vigo county, Indiana, at t&elr June term, tor a liceofe to sell "intoxicating liquors," In a less quantity than a quart at a time, with the 1 rivilege of allowing the sime to be drank on mypre aiees, for one year. My place of business and the premises whereon said liqaors are to be drank, are located on the west end of lot No. one hundred and eighteen (118) In Rose'* subdibision of 47 and 82- 1C0 acres off the ait side of the west hall of section twenty-two (33), township tw*lre north, range nine (9) west, south side of Chestnut street between Tenth and Eleventh streets, in Terre Uaute, in Harrison township in Vlao County, Indiana.
WALTER LY.
LIQUOR APPJJO TION. OTICE is hervby given that I will apply to the Board o* County Commissioners at their March term, 1878, for a license to sell "intoxicating Honors" in a quantity of less than a qnart at a time, wltn the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises for one year. My place of business and the premises whereon said llqors are to be drank, are located at 314 south Fourth street in Harrises townshin, Vigo County Indiana FRANCIS BURNS.
I
I he Champion, Weir and Smith Plows,
.. The Celebrated Weir and Champion w,
Three Horse Sulkey Plows.
Also the Leidy and Avery Stalk Cutters. Call at once, as these Implements are the very best. Terms easy.
II 0 GEIIS WHEAT &
DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF
Farm Implements,
Ohio St.. East Side of Public Squares
Open and Top Buggies, Spring and Farm Wagons. The Celebrated Hughes Sulkey Plow. The Hamilton, Fort Wayne, and Buckeye Breaking Plow, for General Purposes. The Canton, Clipper, and Othci Stubble Plows. A full 6tock of One-Horse Plows, both Right and Left Hand, Double-Shovels, Iron and Wood Beams, Single Shovel Plows. The buckeye and Osbourn Self-Binding Harvester. The Buckeye Table Rake, Dropper and Mower. The Wheeler Self Rake, Dropper, and Mower. 4
Xlxresliingv. :fcv£a,cla.ines,V
The Russell, J. Q. Case, and Springfield, Pitts, with steam or horse power. The Taylor and other first-class Sulkey Hay Rakes. We would call the attention of Farmer^ especially to our Bar Plow Cultivator. EST A full stock of Repairs always on hand for Machines, cilier Reapers or Threshers sold by us. 1ST Farmers are most cordially invited to call and examine our stock before purchasing. Ail of our goods are Fully Warranted.
IDOIST'Or FOEC-ETTO
Trees for Everybody.
Fruit trees evergreens, shade and ornamental trees, all kinds of small fruits, a full and complete assortment of green house and bedding out plants patronize home industry and save from 25 to 50 percent. Get trees adapted to our cli mate. I have the largest and best assortment in the west. My trees are young, thrifty and well grown. The :ost of trees is a small matter. Buy the best and you will save money. I guarantee all trees bought of me true to name. I have a large 6tock of evergreens well adapted for screens, or wind breaks, which must be sold regardless of price. Call and see me before buying anywhere else. My low prices will astonish you. Send for fruit and plant catalogue. ,r.
VX
LAWRENCE HE 121148$*
Mont Rose Gardtn and Nursery between Fifteenth and Sixteenth streets, eait of blast furnace, Terre Haute, Ind.
DURING THE WINTER
Wildy & Poths
have made up a great deal of first class work, which will be sold
1
AT THE BOTTOM
this spring. They will soon have more jobs to select from than ever before, and cannot fail to please every body. There could not be a, better season to buy in than this. Their establishment is one 01 the very largest in the state and has*a wide reputation for good work.
No. 10,946. STATE OF INDIANA, COUNTY OF VIGO, IN THE VIGO CIRCUIT COURT, CHARLES P. WOLFE, VS.
WILLIAM LANG, et al in foreclosure. Be it known, that on the 19th day ot February. 1879, it .was ordered by the Court that the Clerk notifiy by publication taid David M. Ro9», as non-resident defendant of the pendency of this action against him. Said defendant is therefore hereby notified of the pendtney of said action against him, and that the same will stand for trial at the April term of said court in the year 1879.
JNO. K. DLRKAN, Clerk.
M. M. and G. C. Joab. Pl'fi's Atty's.
R0EDEL, ,v
rvna? $
V" 1* -fit Corner of Ohio and First Streets,
3
For Louisiana open kettle molasses, refined sugar, domestic wines and liquors, queensware, and the choicest breakfast bacon, hams, sidemeat, &c., &c. Serve your own interests by buying there.
NOTICE TO HEIRS OF PETITION TO SELL REAL ESTATE. Notice is herebv given that John R. Cu^ps, administrator of thg estate of Thompson B. Cupps, deceased has filed his petition to sell the real estate of the decedent, his personal property being in sufficient to pay his debts and that said petition will be heard at the next term ot the Vigo Circuit Court.
Test. JOHN K. DURKAK, Clerk. Claries T. Burton, Attr.
NOTICE OF INSOLVENCY. At the February term of the Vigo Circuit Court, the Restate of James H. Watts, deceased, was declared probably insolvent. Creditors are therefore notiged that the same will be settled accordingly, HARVEY EVANS,
Administrator.
Dated 25 Feb. 1879?
#4
PLOWS! PLOWS!
».
4 jr= I* Three Car Loads Just Received.
\V. F. WALMSLEY
North Fourth Street, Near Chestnut.
a
CO
IX
ORDINANCE PROVIDING TOR MFANSOF KGRESS FROM PUBLIJ BUILDINGS WITHIN THE CITY OF TERRE HAUTE, IND.
See. 1. Be it ordained by the common council of tho city of Torre Hinitc, that it shall he unlawful for the vwner or owners, orngentfor the renting of any bifildlng within thollmitsoftheclty of Terre Haute, to lei tho same to any per on or persons for tne purooso »f holding any theatrical and other xlilbition or public show, for which money is demanded or received, until the s-ti'i owner, owners or agent shall have Aled with the City Clerk a certificate of the Board of Public Improvements of said city, that, said owner, owners,or agu .t have provided means of egress from s&i 1 building, satisfactory to said board ami any oue violating the provisions o' this orainanoe shall, upon conviction before th* mayor of said city, be flned flity dollars and costs for the first offense, a 01 huudred dollars for each sueoeed in it offense.
Section 2, Whereas an emergency exists for tho immediate taking effect of this ordinance, therefore the same shall take effoct and be in force from' and after its passage and publication. nvm
JOS. M. W'lLPY, Major.
JOHN B. TOLU EOT, Clerk. Terre Haute, iod., March 10, 1870.
No. 10.978. STATE «F INDANA, COUNTY OF VIGO: IN THE VIIGO CIRCUIT COURT. JOSEPHS. Rus'r, vs. NAN
CY JANE RUSH In divorce. Be it known that on the 18th day of February, 1S79, it was ordered by the Court that the clerk notify by publication said Nancy Jane Rush, as non resident defendant of the pendency of this action against her. ^.•?,
Said defendant is therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action against her and that the same will stand for trial at the April Term of said Court in the vear 1S79 sw
JOHN K. DURKAN,Clerk.vi Buff & Belcher. Plaintiffs Attorneys
No. 10,977. STATE OF INDIANA, COUNTY OF VIGO, IN THE VIGO CIRCUIT COURT, ANNA
M. SHARP vs. PETER D. SHARP, in Divorce.. Be it known that on the 18th day of February 1879, it was ordered bv the Court that 'he Clerk notify by publication said Peter D. Sharp, ae non-resident defendant, of the pendency of this action against him.
Said defendant is therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action against him and that the same will stand for trial at the April Term of said Court in the year 1679. SI
JOHN K. DURKAN, Clerk
Buff & Beccher. Plaintiff's Attorneys.
No. 11.019. STATE OF INDIANA COUNTY OK VIGO, IN THE VIGO CIRCUIT COURT, ANGIE
L. WILSON, VS., MOSES EASTER, ESTER EASTER, LEWIS C. HUCK, CHARLES GREEN, AND JEROME W. GREEN, et al in Foreclosure. Be it known, that on the 4th day ol March, 1S79, it was ordered by the Court that the Clerk notify by publication said Lewis C. Huck, Charles Green and Jerome W. Green, a3 nonresident defendan's 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 term of taid court in the year 1879.
JOHN K. DURKAN, Clerk.
M. M. and G. C. Joab Pl't'fFs Attys.
NO. IICOI. STATE OF INDIANA COUNTY OF VIGO, IN THE VIGO CIRCUIT COURT, MALIN-
DA F. WINN, vs. HARVEY WINN IN DIVORCE. Be it known, that on the 24th day ol February, 1879, it was ordered by the Court that the Clerk notify by publication said Harvey Winn as non-resident defendant of the pendency of this action against him. Said defendant is hereby notified of the pendency of said action against him and the sdn.e v/ill stand for trial, at the April term of said court in the year 1879.
JOHN K. DURKAN.
*"ky Clerk. Davis & Jgavis, Pl't'fFs Atty.
