Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 August 1880 — Page 2
The land wtus still the skies were gray with weeping Into the soft brown earth the seed she cast Oh! soon, she cried, will come the time of reaping,
The golden tkno when clouds and tears are post! There came a whisper through the autum haze, "Yea, thou shall find it after many days."
Hour after hour she marks the fitful gleaming Of sunlight stealing £irough the cloudy rift Hour after hour she lingers, idle dreaming
To see the rain fall and the dead leaves drift Oh! for some small green sign of life, she prays, Have I not watched and waited "many days?" Atcarly morning, chilled and Bad, she hearkens
To stormy winds that through the poplars blow Far over he hill and plain tho heayen darkens
ITer field is eovered with it sliroud of snow: Ah, Lord! she sighs, are these thy loving ways? He answers—"Spake I not of many daysl"
The snow-drop blooms the purple violet glistens On banks of moss that take the sparkling Half-cheered, half-doubting yet, she strays and listens
To finches singing to the shy young flowers: A little longer still his love delays The promised blessing—"after many days."
Oh, happy world! she cries, the sun is shining! Above the soil I see the springing green I could not trust his word without repining,
I could not wait in peace for things unseen: Forgive me, Lord, my soul is full of praise. My doubting heart prolonged thy "many days," —Sunday Magazine.
SAVED BY MATCHES.
A small room, poorly furnished a pot of mignonette in the window a girl at at the table sewing steadily. She would have been pretty if she had not been» so poor. If she had been better fed, she would have had a rosy cheek if she had had freedom and less labor, she would have had dim pies if she had worn a dress of violet silk, instead of the faded calico, it would have brought out the fairness of her skin and the golden hue ©f her hair. As it was Alice Morne was pale, and pinched, and sad, with the sewing-girl's stoop of her shoulders and the sewing-girl's heavy heart.
She rose suddenly and folded up her work—a child's garment, of fine cambric trimmed with dainty lace. She made package of it, donned her bonnet and shawl, and went out of her loding-house
She threaded the commercial streets rapidly and soon emerged upon the ave nues of wealthy private residence. Now and then a carriage rolled bv. One or two stately houses were lightea for recep tious. Many more were somberly elbsed Alice went on, with her quiet, rapid step
She stopped at last before a house in a blaze of light. Costly lace curtains con cealed the luxurious rooms within the soft notes of a piano came softly upon the girl's ears. "Tb eTracys give another party to-night,' ea rang the
She went into the rear and bell. A servant admitted her. in with her bundle.
She came out with a light step. The work had been approved, and she had been paid. A little dazzled with the scene she had just emerged from, she paused upon the pavement to count her money. '"Give me a cent," said a little beggar boy stat ting somewhere out of the silent .shadows. "What do you want it for?" asked
Alice. "I'm hungry," answered the child. He was pale and pinched.
Here's a dime I would give more if I could," she said. The child took it eagerly. She passed on with less than $2 to buy supper and pay a week's rent.
She had more work. When it was lhi ished she came the same way again thednsk. As she passed over the side walk a faint line of white attracted hei attention.
There was a knob of glass, generally called a "bull's-eye," in the pavement. It is usually inserted over a coal vault, and is removed to admit the coals. This one had not been adjusted with exactitude and at the crevice appeared a line white. Alice stooped down and examinf ed it. It was the edge of a folded paper
She drew it out with a wild thought that it might be some valuable check or draft. But it contained only a few words written in pencil: "I have watched you constantly for a week. If you would save my life come back here, and all night long place matches where you found this paper. You shall be rewarded with all you can ask. A PRISONER."
Alice closed the paper in her hand and looked around bewildered. Ko one was to be seen. She looked down at the lump of dull glass, but it was entirely opaque. The bull's eye was not set quite evenly in its place. She touched it with her foot, but could not move it. After waiting a moment, confused and in doubt, she pass ed on, recollecting her errand.
She rear door admitted her. The servant had a child on her arm, the dainty little thing for whom Alice made garments. "Mrs. Tracy said you was to come up to her chamber," said she, "you know the way."
The lady whom she met was not lovely she was sallow and dark very disagreeable looking—clutching her cash, mere gown at her breast, ana turning im. patiently toward her little sewing-girl. "Why did you not come before?" she asked, in a hoarse voice, with a slight French accent. "The child should have had that dress to drive in today "I was sick yesterday I could not finish it," answered Alice, tremulously.
Madam snatched the package, tearing open and letting the little embroidered
robe
fall on the bed.
:jgasiit. »ney," said she i'Next time I
She went
"Well, here is your mom opening a velvet purse. will employ some one who will do as they promise."
Alice turned' away with a bursting heart—for the woman's words meant starvation to her. She dared not raise her voice in reply she divined truly that the heart under that rich robe -was one of stone.
As she passed dqwn stairs, she heard a low voice. It proceeded from one of the rooms about her. "And he is twenty-one to-day," it said. "Yes it is three years since his Mysterious disappearance," with a sneering laugh.
The voices were stealthy. A doo closed and shut them in. Alice passed down into tHe street.
She walked fast, treading unthinkingly, upon the bull's eye, and went home, When she flung herself down to weep, she suddenly felt the crumpled paper in her hand.
What should she do She lay .thin Icing a long time. She considered the strangeness of the request, the possibility that it was not meant for her, the idea that it was a hoax, or written by some madman—for it was a man's handwrit
But the girl's heart was warm and true The possibility that some one was in trouble, and she might help him, was the thought that had the most weight. With no one to counsel or object, she obeyed it.
She went to the store and spent one dollar other precious money for matches, She received a large package, containing thousands of little lucifers.
The city clocks were striking nine as she reached the bull's eye. The street was silent, the pavement deserted. As she bent down, some one tapped on the bull's eye. She slipped a sheet of matches into the crevice. It disappeared. She waited a few moments the hand tapped for more she supplied them.
As she waited again a pedestrian approached. She arose and stepped back into the shadows until he had passed otherwise, she did not fear. The street was quiet, and she could see tho stars twinkling in the clear ky.
Hour after our she supplied matches,
rfat
intervals of quarter hours. Occasionally the rap came for an early demand. But she could not see the hand. She only imagined it to be a man's.
It was lod| past midnight. The city clocks were near striking two when her matches became exhausted. She had not been sufficiently supplied, she thought.
Quite at a loss what she ought to do, she rose from her cramped position, standing in doubt, when a voice said: "Come with me!"
She started in terror, for a man stood beside her but the next words reassured her. "It is I whom you gave the matches to do not be afraid, but take my arm, and walk fast. I am not safe here."
Alice could see only a tall form, and a pale face, ,the features of which she could not distinguish but the voice, though hurried, was gently modulated, and the stranger took her hand with a grasp that was not unpleasant. "You must be tired but this has been a good night's work for you, little girl," he said. "What did you want the matches for asked Alice trembling.
He had drawn her hand within his own, and she was walking rapidly beside him. "It was the only way in which I could get fire," he answered. "The heat melted the cement which enclosed a "bull's eye in the wall of my prison, and I escaped through the cavity. It was larger than the one in the pavement. I have been a prisoner in my own house for three years."
As they left the vicinity of the Tracy dwelling he walked slower. "I was quite helpless," he added. "I knew of no one to appeal to whom could trust. But listening and waiting, as a man only listens and waits for freedom, Igrew familiaf with your step as it passed so often over the bull's eye and lip the steps, and a week ago, when I heard your voice to that beggar boy, I resolved to trust you. I knew your tread the instant that it touched the curbstone, and I slipped the paper up the crevice. You saw it immediately. The hours till you came passed heavily you were my only hope. You area brave, good child. Now, where is your home Can I go there for a little rest before daylight?" "It is a poor place," said Alice, "but you are welcome."
Daylight was dawning when she revealed her poverty-stricken little room to him. He flung himself into a chair and dropped his face upon his folded arms on the table. Alice fancied that he was praying, and moved about noiselessly prepar ing a little breakfast. She did not real ize that this man was young and hand some, and it was not, 'perhaps, propriety to have him there. She was only zealous, in her pity to serve him seeing by day light how ill he looked.
But by noon there were strange doings in the little sewiqg girl's room. She had been sent a lawyer, the most renowned and popular one in the city, and he came with two other gentlemrn, so grand that little Alice was quite awe-sticken. Finally, Mr.'Lionel Tracy—that was the name of the hero—went away with them, and she was left alone with her poverty and wonder. Only she was not quite so helpless and distressd as she had been, for one of the strange gentlemen had smiled upon her, and left a few pieces of gold on her table.
But the marvel was all over with her, and the gold was spent, arid poverty and care came back, when, one day, there was a knock on the door, and the landlady's little girl said that a carriage was standing for her, and a man in waiting said that she had been sent for."
What could she do but obey the summons?—wondering what fairy it was— that luxurious riae—until she began to see through it, for the carriage stopped at the Tracy mansion.
There had been great public excitement—the papers haa been charged with the development of the infamous plot in high life whereby the true heir of a great fortune had been drugged while ill, and
concealed, and a story trumped up of his mysterious disappearance but Alice, in her solitude, had known nothing about it. Her pennies went for bread instead of news. But when die stepped upon th® threshold Lionel Tracy, the restored master, met her with a tender courtesy that took away all her fear and made her feel like a little queen in the midst of her splendor.
H"ave the rest all gone spray?" she
I .|S|THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE,
asked, seeing no one but new servants and a pleasant woman, whS was the housekeeper. "Yes I am quite alone, anu shall be, unless you come and live with me," said Mr. Lionel Tracy. "Do you want a sewing girl asked Alice, innocently. "No I want a wife," he answered ''one whom I can love with all my heart as I'do you: Will you come?"
Did she Well, yes. And the public had another little episode to excite them —the famous Lionel Tracy's marriage. Alice grew charming with happiness, and she was chronicled a beauty when she became his bride. She laughs, and says she bought happiness cheaply with matches.
Depraved Women.
From the Denver Great West. There it goes again! A nephew of exGovernor Hunt, ot Colorado, Kills a gambler from New York in a% dance-hall at Albuquerque. Charles Hunt, a gambler, shot and killed another gambler. The papers say that there was a quarrel between those two gentlemen over a "depraved woman." Now, what, is a depraved woman She is one who is looked up to by that noble animal man, when he is lower in the scale of life than the one who made her a victim. A woman who has had her passions over heated by a man who has been ruined by the gossip of her own sex, who being bloodless are therefore passionless, or who being ignoant are therefore guarulous and gossipy She is the victim who by vhe hand of lust has been thrown from a home into a ditch, and who being helpless is therefore depraved!
Men are never depraved! They are gentlemen! They get roaring drunk, foolishly besotted, wickedly inhuman, but are never depraved They make love to unfortunates whose nature is to cling to 8omebody,who are throwu to hell by the religious element, who have no society to enter save that of the wild and fearful, who do openly what many real nice folks do in private, who do without the marriage ceremony what many others d© with it as a protection, who live upon men who are willing to support them, and, therefore are depraved.
Well a well. The world is full of those who are willing to be supported. Bloodsuckers of church, state, politics, enterprise, society, and the so-called affections but none are depraved except those who are openly or secretly hired and supported by that noble animal—man.
Depraved woman! There must be something' good in woman over whom a quarrel is waged by gentlemen, therefore we doubt the cortectness of the statement as to the character of the woman, who, if she has lived to no other good purpose, has indirectly rid the earth of one useless being.
Six Little Women. From the Boston Journal.
In 1816, sixty-four years ago, six little women of Waterford, Vt., rode on the same horse and at the same time some miles over the Waterford hills. Their names and ages were as follows: Lois Rowell, aged twelve years Nelly Caswell and Rhoda Pike, aged eleven years Polly Caswell and Lois Pike, aged eight years and Anna Caswell, aged four years. Lois Rowell sat on the saddle and held the reins, and small Anna Caswell and the other four misses rode behind her. They had a nice time, which they all still remember, for they all are still living, though older and soberer women than then. Lois Rowell, now Mrs. Charles S. Gregory, lives with her son-in-law, Mr. Caswell, on a beautiful farm on the west bank of the Connecticut in Concord, Vt She has been totally blind some five years, but is intelligent, cheerful and social— one of those venerable ladies whom it is pleasant to meet and converse with. She is the only one of the six whom the writer of this has the good fortune to know, or perhaps he might say as much of them all. Nelly Caswell is now Mrs. Giles Jones, of Victory, Vt. Rhoda Pike is Mrs,. Nelson Millen, whose residence the .writer does not remember. Polly Caswell, now Mrs. Horace Buck, and Lois Pike, Mr3. Jefferson Hosmer, live in Littleton, N. II., and Anna Caswell, Mrs Wilson Buck, in Charleston, Vt. They are all now widows, except Mrs. Millen, and Mrs. Millen is" her second husband Who knows of six other women who together enjoyed a lark sixty-four years ago that has been a pleasant .memory to them from that time to this
TUTTS PILLS
A-
ENDORSED
rf
BY
PHYSICIANS, CLERGYMEN AND THE AFFLiCTEP EVERYWHERE. THS SSEATEST MESIfoi
TBiMfiPH OF THE AGE.
TSlYTCf' Ddi 01 TCTT haa eucI I s# a 5»combining in
CUBE SICK r.cnyMCHE.Si"'—
ni,u
hereto-
jfc"* "^.TagoniifVc o.au-
TUTT'S PILLS
CURE DYSPEPSIA. £paren. geffect is to increase the
FUTT S.i'illalssrt'SSSSSflS
URE CONSTIPATION, jjaiinilnte. Thn? the system i8 nonrished, and
TUTTS PAIS
vacuatioBS are produced. The mpfdlty with
CUPEFCVFRANDAft'F
FDTT'S
PERSON'S
MTTSPiUS
CURE TORPID LIVER.
TAKE
ON FL£jH wlule tinder ibs Uj°nce of these P'.liH. indicates their adaoLibility to nourish the body, hence their ofBcicv In caring nervous debility, melancholy, dygpepeda, wasting c/the mn8cles,a}uggiahnesi of tbe liver, chronic
PilLS
CURE BILIOUS CO
rOTT'6 PIUS
lure KIDNEY Cwnphmi
Sold everywhere. Price SS centa. __ Offio*
TBTT'S PUIS
IMPART APPETITE.
Murray %net) rsw VAKtr.
™Ocpat?'DR.KEAN 173 So»tt Clarfc Street. Chitaro, *tX 'raqg^Prirjite,Hinwi,
SncfiMtortb«a, laiinti itt,) FMBaUDiM-M,
r""
—-jssi&r «5
ABimwfMvtoa.
1 lift DilDCD may bo fcmnd o*» Jle at llv rftrCn Rowell ft Co"* Kcwntper AD-
Using Bureau(10Spruce8t-Vwhere advertising ontmc& may be W« lor It IN NEW YOUK
RAILROAD TIME TABLE. Union depot, Chestnut and Tenth streets for all trains exevpt I. A St. L., C. & T. H.
freights. Time Ave minntes faster than Terre Haate time. Depot of I. & 8t. L. corner Tippecanoe and Sixth streets.
Depot of T. H. A S. E. corner First and Main streets. Explanation of references: fSaturday excepted. ^Sunday excepted. JMonday excepted. gDaily.
VAXDALIA LIW.
Arri"t from West: Depart lor East m...No. 1 ..gHotel Car Express2 56 8 50 a m...No. 3 "Accomodation... 40 1 32 a in...No. 5 ...j Atlantic Expresa.J 40 am
Arrive from East. Depart for West 1 25 a m...No. 2 \Western Express.! 32 am 10 10 a m...No. 4 .....St. Louis Mail...10 18 a 2 30 ni...No. 6 ^California Express^ 86 7 00 m...No. 8 ..Indianapolis Mail..
CHICAGO & EASTERN ILLINOIS. (Depart for North.) Chicago Express 7 50am "Danville Accommodation 3 10 Night Express
A
TERRE HAUTE & LOGANSPORT. (Depart.) Day Mail............ 6 SOfftfi Accommodation 4 00 pm (Arrive.)l Day Mail....'........ 1 00 Accommodation ID 00
TERRE HAUTE & EVANSVILLE (Depart.) Nashville Express 4 80 am Day Express 2 40 (Arrive.) Mail and Express 10 45 Express 2 40
ILLINOIS MIDLAND. (Arrive.)
Mail and Express 37 Indianapolis Passenger 1 07 (Depart.) Mail and Express 6 37 a Indianapolis Passenger 4 V7
TERRE HAUTE & SOUTHEASTERN R. R. (Depart.) No.l, Mail and Express 00 am (Arrive.) •. 1, Mail and Express 3 00 pm j. in. & i. (Leave Indianapolis.) tSouthern Express 4 10 a in L. & Mad. Ae 7 40 a n|. & M. Mail 2 50 veuing Express 8 25
Dr. J. P. Worrell
Trea a Mtc.luaively o« toe EYE i^DEAR! Office: No. 521 Ohio Street,
Office,
yi
No.7 ...Indianapolis Mail...7 00 am
TEItRK HAUTE^ IND.V1'1
Office hours from 0 a. m. to 1 p. m, and from 8 to 5 o. m.
Dr. L. J. Weinstein Residence, t-.. 328 north Sixth street, S. W. corner Sixth and Chestnut streets. ......
:N
and
10 50 pm
(Arrive from North.)
Night Express 4 20 a Terre Haute Accommodation „11 10 am Day Express 5" 20
INDIANAPOLIS A: ST. LOUIS. (Leave going East.) Accommodation 8 IS am Day Express 3 10
New York Express No. 5 1 38 am (Arrive from East.) Day Express 10 52 am Accommodation 6 39 New York Express No. 6 1 38 am (Leave going West.) IDay Express _10 54 a (Accommodation 6 80 gNew York Express No. 6 1 38 a (Arrive from West.) Accommodation 8 13 a Day Express 3 08 New York Express No. 5 1 38 am
4A':
503 north Thirteenth street, corner Liberty Avenue. Office hours at residence till 8 A. M.
Hours at office 8 A. M. till 12. From 1 till 6 p. M.
E O A
Wo. 30 north Fourth street, Is the man to see for fresh fish, game or seasonable fresh vegetables and cured hams. Wont be undersold.
Kizer & Dietz,
jtlacksmitlis, Wagon Slakeri and Repairers. HORSESHOEING A SPECIALTY.
Have added a ilrst-class woodshop to their shop on south Sixth street, below Ohio, and can do all kinds of wagon work, repairing etc. Give us a call.
Dr. Otto Wilde's DENTAL BOOMS,
No. G2G, marble Block, Terre Haute, Ind. WDr. Wilde is prepared to raake all kinds of Dential Work wj^of superior excellence. Gold.
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT OF AD2INIST RA Notice is hereby given that the underminted Administrator of
be solvent.
August 4th, 1880.
JOHN W. DAVIS.
AUA DQRTER^ FOB COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS. Centrally Located. Kates |2 per Da N A I O N A O S E
HEINLY WATSON, Proprietors.
orner of Sixth and Main 8ta^ Terr* Haute IndiaA. Also Proprietor* and Owners £TNA
HOUSE,
DAVYILLR, ILL
E.F. STETSON* M. D.
Office IV*. 521 Okie Street, Between Fifth and Sixth Streets. Residence No. 812 south Fourth street.-
Office Horns: 9 A.x.to 1 r. and fro S to 5 P. K.
ANTON MEYER'S
Lager Beer Brewery,
THE LARGEST IN THE STATE. The beer is unexcelled for purity and excellence.
Supplied in kegs of all sixes to the trade and families.
BREWING EVERY DAY
the year round, without intermission.
I A N 'T E E A
CSHERMAN. G. SICKFORD. SHERMAN & SICKF0RD, Terre Haute Novelty ttorks and
Brass Foundry.
Machines built and repaired. Patterns and Models a specialty. Ohio street, between Fifth and S£xth, Terre Haute.
Work Done on Short Notice.
Opera House Saloon
1
•. /.
-w
A N
BILLIARD HALL.
,, V!
•, J,
Four of tho best billiard and 15 ba
{iquors,
)ool tables in this city also the bes whfskies and brandies. Wines oi all kinds, such as— California Reasling, French C!iret, Keokuk Ives, Keokuk Iowa Claret, bottle Iowa Claret, Piper Heidsiqck
75c per bottle. 60c 75c 75c 40c V"
Champaign, $1.50 Imperial Domestic Cham- j., Faign, ,75c Monopole Domestic
Champaign $1.00 Also the, finest Imperial port and cherry wines for medical purposes.
Louisville
Female Seminary,
425 & 427 4th Ave., Louisville, Ey
Oldest school in the city. A boarding and day school for young ladli Each pupil receives especi MissNold. The best is always the cheap-
esand little girls, ial attention from
est. For catalogues, Address, ANNIE F. NOLD, Principal.
Dyeing and Scourihg.
By greatly improved facilities I am pre' pared to do all kinds of
Ladies' and Gents'
Wear, in cleaning and coloring, at reasonable rates, and invite all wishing anything done in this line to try the old reliable house
H. F. REINER,
Markland Coal.
Leave orders with
E. BURNS,
orner Fourth and Wdlnut or Firs and Poplar streets. Keeps also two other grades equally' as good.
N'
OTICE^OF APPOINTMENT OF ADMINISTRATRIX. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed administratrix of the estate of Elizabeth Hughes, late of Vigo County, deceased. Said estate is sup posed to be solvent.
RKTTTE HUGHES,
July 10th, 1880. Adr"1"1,*'-ILtl.'*
HIRTS
nncntpuloim parties are falsely representing t« roii!(um«rs that tliey are Belling shirts of out
!lilrl* Jlatle in Order by na bear stamp iviiib Indelible Ink on Yoke, thiwi
&
f^5\\30N[ CHICAGO^
CINCINNATI,
^LOUV^
Our Rond.r-JInde Shirtx bear stamp with lutlellble Ink on Yoke, tbaai
All
Silver, Vulcanite, Coralite and
GO*7 Amber Plates, Carved Work, Artificial Palates, Ac. Nitro Oxide (an excellent and safe ancesthetic) given. «WA11 operations in our "Specialty" will receive prompt careful and successful attention.
Others are Falsely
Represented.
WILSON BROS.
importing and Jobbing Men's Furnisl1"**,
Joseph Briggs'
No. 46 Mt. Vernon Place Baltimore. English, French and German Boarding and day School for Young ladies, Mrs. Mary I.Jones and Mrs. B. Martland Principals, assisted by Professors Brickenstein, Lanier, Barton, and a large corps of others. The 21st
UTUII, NUU TARGE corps oi omers. ine zisi annual term will commence September 20th Circulars sent ori application.
1880.
THE
Indiana University
BL001HNGT0N, INDIANA.
College year begins Sept. 2d, 1880. Tuition Free. Contingent fee, 98.50 per term. Both sexes admitted on equal conditions. For Catalogues and other information, address ROBT. C. FOSTKB, LKXTTXL Moee,.
Secretary. President.
Bowel Complaints.
Speedy and Effectual Cure.
PERRY DAVIS* PAIN-KILLER
Baa stood the test of FOKTT TXABS'trial Direction* wtth eaehboOU,
Know Thyself.
'"pHK tuitold mlstrte 1 that result frr mlndi?••retlon in early life may be alleviated and cured. Thoso who doubt this MB-: sertion aaouM purcbase the new medio&l work uhl shed by thn PKA-
ODY MEDICAL INSTfTUTE, Boston, entitles Ol'LlFK OK SKLF-i
PMGSKBWAIOX. Exhausted vitality neivorsand physical dcbilitv, or vitality impa.red by the erioraof vonth or too closn application to business, may bo restoied and manhood regained
I'wo hundredth edition, revised and Jenlarged, just published. It ie a standard medical work, the best in the English language written by a physician of great exnerienoe, to whom was awarded a fold and jewelled medal by the National Medionl Association. It contains beautiful and very expensive engravings. Three hnndred pages, more than 50 valuable presariptions tor all forms of prevailing disease, the result of many years of extensive and successful practice either one of whioh Is worth ten times tho prlceof the book. Bound (n Franch cloth price only $1. sent by mall post-paid.
The London Lancet says: "No persou should be without this valuable book. Tho author Is a n»ble boneftotor,"
The Tribune says: "The author has had unprecedented success in dealing with nervousness of all Kinds and its affections, whether due to pernicious habits or inherited. He is a Nervo-speciali»t. and therefore knows whereof he writes witn such power and ability."
An illustrated sample sent to all on receipt of 8 oents (or postage. The author refers, by permission, to Hon. P. BISSBLL, M. D., president of the National Medioal Association.
Address Dr. W. II. i'ar- TT 1 ker.No. 4 Biilflnch Street, ft HH.I Boston, Mass. Theuutho* may bo oonftulted on allmT. diseases requiring skill and f| y^0j[
Virginia Springs* CHESAPEAKE &JBI0 RAILWAY-':
The Groat Pleasure Boute to
Washington, Baltimore, *. Philadelphia, New York, Boston,
And all Eastern Points.
The Cheapest and Most Direct Route TO Staunton, Charlottesvlllej
Richmond. Petersburg, Lynchburg, Norfolk,' Danville, Wilmington,
Sayan Ah, Augus
THE WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, Known worlJ wide for tho many healing virtues of its waters, are located immediately on tbe line of this great Pleasure Route, while many others, «f equal merit, within a short distance and easy of access uy regular lines of flrst-class Concord C'ache*.
By examining our Map aud Time Tables you will find this THE MOST DESIRABLE ROUTE, Asour passengers have tho privilege of stoptag at any or all ot the Springs in tno Mountains of Virginia and resume their journey at pleasure. No other line can offer these ndueements. Our Road-Ued is first-class in very particular. TRAINS EQUIPPED WITH ALL M00ERN
IMPROVEMENTS,
And everything that is necessary for the comfort and convenience to the psssengera. To NEW VOBK you ivc ebeise of two routes either via tiordonsvllle, Washington, etc., or via Richmond, Va., tukeobO of the magnificent steaoieis on the Old Dominion Ocean Steamship Company, posing within view of all the places of historical 1 uteres on the Jam*s River, Ola roiukvom/ort, Fortress Monroe, Hampton Roads, Rip Ilaps, Jamestown, etc.
TRY TflIB LINE and be convinced that it Is the finest Pleasure Route on tbe Continent Tickets on Sale at 171 Walnut Street, Gibson House, and Gr»nd Hotel, Cincinnati beard Company's Stermera. and at all principal TUket Offices in the West and Southwest.
N. M. JOHNSON,
General Western Freight and ^Passenger agent, walnut Street, Cincinnati, O.
For all kinds of vegetables
fruits, fresh butter, eggs and
chickens, go to R. Dahlen's, No
II south Fourth street.
S
f/:
Evade a Nuisance!
Jesse Robertson & Co., having purchased the odorless pump and apparatus are prepared to clean vaults, cesspools and sinks at short notice*.
Si
Orders from neighboring cities w?ll receive prompt attention. .. Address, Robertson Sc. Co.*
No. 225 Ohio street.
City orders left at510 Main street or at office 225 Ohio street will be attended to at once.
HERIFF'S SALE.
4
Place, corner Fourth and Cherry street isyonr best market if you have aesira bl po ullry, eggs, country produce, or lidos for sale. He pays the best price in cash The retail trade in this city who wish to keep regularly supplied will find it to their interest to place orders with him.
Mt. Yernon Institute,
By virtue of a decree and order of sale issued from the Vigo Circuit Court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of Isaac W. Evans, administrator of the estate of Isaac Evans, deceased, for the UBO of John W. Davis, administrator de bonis, and against Albert Halter, I am ordered to sell the following described real estate, sitnated in Vigo County, Indiana, to-wit:
Lot number ten lt In Dean's addition to tho city of Terre Hiaute, as designated on the recorded plat thereof, in Vigo County, In--diana, and on SATURDAY, THE 11th DAY OF SEPTEM
BER, 1880,
between the hours of 10 o'clock A. m. and 4 o'clock P. M. of said day, at the court house door in Terre Haute. I will offer the rente and profits of the above described real estate, together wtth all privileges and appurtenance! to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder fqr 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 19th day of Angost^ 1880.
I HAY, Sheriff.
John W. Davis, Atty. Printer's fee, W.
Agents 1W anted, for SITNFH'a BIBLE DIC-
TI0HAET
""HOLM AWS NEW
Pictorial Bibles. 11'M
ii.'iii'
Philadelphia.
tirain Speculation!
GKAlW find PROVISIONS in SMALL or LARGE 'quantities—flO to any amountwrite for circulars.
A. J. Maloy, Broker
135 La Salle Street, CHICAGO, ILL
Member Chicago Board of Trade. Chicago Open Board of Trade.
