Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 November 1884 — Page 2
Thirty
Tears liecord
JJKB.VOUB DISEASES ajJTENTION
Endorsed
by liiyai': tins
4) 1 w»
:T.d-
!L
By tho use of this REMEDY, the Stoma a speedily regain their ntrength, and tile blood is purified.
It is pronounced by hundred* of the bos doctors to be the ONLY CURE for all hinds ot Kidcoi" Diseases.
It is purely -vegetable, and eui-es when other medicinos fail.
It is prepared expressly for these diseases, and has never been known to fail. One trial will convince you. For sale by all drugpiata.
PBICE $1.26. Send for Pamphlot
OB
KON-KETENTION OF rants.
W3V W»i
M'
monials. HUNT'S REMEDY
CO.,
ProTidence, K. I.
HH
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Gives Relief at
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e. Noi a Liq
uid or SnniE Aj-
ply nto nostril
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0 oents ni.'K'.srs. 60 ecu ••by m»it TOKistered. Moii't lor circular. .~aino)e by Dia 19 oouf"'*
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n(ER8, rrarglfts N. Y.
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stfj C^0
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THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 6, 1884
I.iqni. B.-er Tonh promnti-s
digestion .u'lii'i'ihiv n.da,Jt'! t-'T malej in oi-Wtti. Goldon'r., other. O' •'r11
It is an i) •.married tmiv ot Boston bo proposes that -untile Iadie9 heieHftwi' be •ailed "b-ichflfttes."
It you have Nre Throat, a Cnugh or fi Cold, try Douglas «& Cap ticnm lougli Drops they are pleasant «be taste, ~perti:tlj h-irmVjss auc! v.-iH partly cure yu.
Fiftv th''traiJ tons soot ore tul. en from London fi'nuu'y» annually, td sold at |4 a f-.r a fertilizer.
Wed« n»t w,'"i!inr 'H it housekeeper-Whoh'-iv ln-t fi 'CH'-L lllcl ti» list! L' Price'* Sp'f. t! VUvorio. ISxmKM*. favor t!i ir *.•• e.irt-M ~n u-tl tur-i f. uis-roKi from
1
t- n«u» "lt«
under the iit'-fo'* of 5' iavoi infr kiXt:K t' lr. Pn«C8 Y:.W'-rs tr.v- hw taste odorm !:.• r»fi 11 iin 11 o)ij which tn• i-: tubule.
An English Joke.
St. Paul l.»v: Silver put on air.*. Iyour wife line's one on your coat cdi? and the color isn't just ri^ht it will make trouble.
Hosford's Acid Phosphate as a Brain Food. Dr. S. F. No«'- cornet', il. D., Greeniit'l. t).,says: ''ir' fiuki-M of '.'i'iu ra vtt11:ItT and torpoa i.-.uul iio-iy, DOC.' ceediiigiy wvil."
A New York *K! t«'i» p^n WortU. Pari*, uian-ujiiiu'-:, V2ii.i)0i) livr brii**' Irou^seui'.
Noted Men Beccmina More Noted. Araonjx the O ffi iueti staa.'Alfred Speer, P.«ss*aic, tue i'i'MJ• Grape Gr wt in 5bi- cuniry. medical use physiciaa3 yay Spew'swluee surpH^M ia it "f t'•' oipor Mi De icate ladi-w and «!fMl p-'"p!e Sm! Sheer's Port th.' best wiac to bo pro oared.
Durini? the «f-t ten years Italy lir.« expended one hun.irod tnilliou tloilers tin monster war vybsfl -.
Human Blood.
On the parity and vitality of r.!)e blood 4#pend the vigor and health of tsystem. Disease of various kinds Often only the sign tuat nature trying to remove the o'-turbinii: cuu^t*. A remedy that gives life and vigor to the biood, eradicaten t.cr ui ain. ouin nuparities from it, as Hood's Sarsapai'-li mndoubtedly does, must both nieuns o: preventing many disuaweH thai wuiii'. ©ocur without its use. Soid'y dealers
A Thunderbolt That Thirned a Herd-
San Francisco Call: A drofe of Ar.eora goats came into Plaoerville from the mountain* the other day. Over three hundred in the original band were killed by lightning at one time during a summer thunder-storm.
3is Slippery Glass Eye.
~"Tl^e Squire," savi~the"autho"r cf "The Hoosier Sehooima&'ter,v "wore one glass eye and a wig. The glass eye WAS constantly slipping oi.t of focus, and the wig turning around sldewise on his head whenever he addressed the people of the Flat Creek District." Sad spectacle. Parker's Hair Balsam preserves and pxomotes the growth of the natural hair. It also restores the satural color to ir which has faded or become gray Clean *kgaut,beneficial, highly perfumed.
MEPHISTOPHELES.
It was towards the end of November tbs Imperial garden of Vienna was deserted, a sharp breeze was whirling the safron-color 'd leaves, shrunk up by the early cold the rose bushes, tormented and broken by the wind, let their branches drag in the mud. Still, the grand alley, thanks to its covering of sand, was dry and passable. Although devastated by the approach of winter, the Imperial garden was not without a certain melancholy charm. The long alley prolonged far away its reddening arcades beyond, the view stretched over the Prater and Danube it was such a promenade as a poet would have desired.
A young man was striding up and down this alley with visible signs of impatience his costume somewhat theatrical in its elegance, consisted of a frock-coat of black velvet with gold facings and bordered with fur, gray woolen pantaloons, top boots with tassels coming half way up his legs. He might have been 27 or 28 years of age his pale and rogular features were full of finesse, and irony lurked in the creases around his eyes and the corner of his mouth at the university, which he appeared to have quitted lvcently, for he still wore the student's cap with oak leaves, he must have plagued tho pliilistines and shown in the front ranks .of the burschen and the foxes.
The narrow limits within which he circumscribed his walk showed that he was waiting for some oue, probably a lady, for tho Imperial garden of Vienna in the month of November is hardly propitious to business rendezvous. Soon a gill appeared at the end of the avenue a turban of black silk covered her rich blonde hair, whose long ringlets had been slightly uncurled by the dampness of the evening her complexion, ordinarily of waxen whiteness, had taken a rosy tint from he bite of the cold. Grouped and wrapped as she was in her mantle trimmed with marten skin, she resembled ravishingly the tatuette of la Frieleuse a little terrier accompanied her, a convenient chaperon, on whose indulgence and discretion you could count. "Imagine, Heinrich," said the pretty Viennese, taking the young man's arm "I have been dressed and ready to go out for more than an hour, and my aunt kept on with her sermons on the danger of waltzing, on recipes for Christmas cakes and carp with blue sauce. I went out on the pretext of buying some gray boots, of which I have no need whatever. It is for you, Heinrich, that I tell all these little lies which I am constantly regretting and constantly beginning over again. What an idea it was of you to take the stage! What was tho good of studying theology so long at Heidelberg? My parents liked you, and we might have been married to-day but for that. Instead of meeting on the sly under the bare trees of the Imperial garden, we should be seated side by side before a fine porcelain stove in a nice warm room, talking of the future of our children. Would not that be a happy lot, Heinrich?" "Yes, Katy, very happy," replied the young man, as he pressed under the satin and fur the dimpled arm of the pretty Viennese "but I cannot help it. The theatre attracts me invincibly I dream of it by day, I think of it by night I feel the desire to live in the creation of the poets I seem to have twenty existences. Every role that I place makes me a new life all those passions that I express I feel. I am Hamlet, Othello, Charles Moor. When one is all that, he can with difficulty resign himself to the humble condition of a village pastor. "That is very noble. But you know that niy parents will never have an actor for a son-in-law." "No, certainly not an obscure actor, a poor ambulant artist, the puppet of managers and the public, but a great actor, covered with glory and applause, who earns more money than a minister, they will not refuse, however scrupulous they may be. When 1 shall come to ask your hand in a handsome yellow coach, tho varnish of which will be al.le to serve as a looking-glass for the astonished neighbors, and a tall lackey covered with gold lace will let down the steps for me, do you think that they will refuse me "I do not think they will. But who says, Heinrich, that you will ever come to that. You have talent, but talent is not sufficient you must have much good luck besides. By the time you shall have become the grand actor of whom you speak the best time of your youth will have passed, and then will you be ready to marry Katy, grown old, when you have at your disposal tho loves of all those princesses of the theatre, so joyous and so gayly decked?" "That future,"' refilled Heinrich. is nearer than you think. 1 have an advantageous engagement at the theatre of the Carinthian Gate, and the manager is so satisfied with tho manner in which I played my last role that ho has made me a present of '2,000 thaler's." "Yes," replied the young girl, with a serious air, "that role of a demon in the piece. I confess to you, Heinrich, that I do not like to see a Christian assume the mask of the enemy of the human race and pronounce words of blasphemy. The other day I went to see you at the Carinthian theatre, and every moment I Mas afraid tuat a veritable hell-tire would Issue from one of the traps where you were swallowed up in (lames of spirits of wine. I returned home all confused, and I dreamed horrible dreams." "My good Katy, that is all imagination to-morrow, too, will take place the la. performance, and 1 shall no longer put on the black and red costume which so much di?pleases j'ou.'' "So much the better 1 for my mind is a prey to a vague feeling of alarm, and I fear that the role which has been so profitable to your glory will not be profitable to your salvation I am afraid, too, that you will contract bad habits in the company of those horrible comedians. I am suro that you no longer
saj
your prayer.- and I dare wager
that you have lost the little cross that I gave you." Heinrich justified himself by showing the little cross, which was still shining on his breast.
While they were talking thus the two lovers had arrived at the Thabor strasse in the Leopolds tad t, in front of the shoemaker, who was famous for the perfection of his gray boote after chatting some time at the door, Kate entered, followed by her terrier, uot without having abandoned her pretty slender fingers to the pressure of Heinrich's hand.
Heinrich tried once more to catch a glimpse of his mistress between the dainty boots and shoes that were symmetrically arranged on the brass rods in the window but the fog had silvered the glass with its moist breath, and he could only distinguish a confused silhouette then, taking a heroic resolution, he turned on his heel and went with deliberate step to the inn of the Two-headed Eagle.
II.
That ni?ht thera numerous company
THE TERRE HAUi'E WEEKLY GAZETTE.
at the Two-headed Eagle the guests were or the most mixed description, and the caprice of Callot and that of Goya could not have produced an odder amaigam of characteristic types. The Two-headed Eagle was one of those blessed cellar's celebrated by Hoffman, with steps so worn, so greasy, so slippery that you cannot put your foot upon the first one without at once finding yourself at the bottom, with your elbows on the table, a pipe in your mouth, between a pot of beer and a measure of new wine.
Through the thick cloud of smoke that almost choked and blinded you at first, all sorts of strange figures appeared after a few minutes. There were Wallachians with their cafetan and Astrakhan cap, Servians, Hungarians with long black mustaches, caparison ed with dolmans and embroidery Bohemians with coppery complexions, narrow forehead and arched nose honest Germans with laced coats Tartars with eyes turned up like those of Chinese, all imaginable populations. The east was represented by a fat Turk coiled up in a corner and peacefully smoking a pipe of Moldavian cherry-wood, with a bowl of red clay and a mouthpiece of yellow amber.
Everybody was eating and drinking the drink consisted of strong beer and a mixture of new red wine with old white wine the food, of slices of cold veal, ham or pastry.
Round the tables turned unceasingly one of those long German waltzes which produce on northern imaginations the same effect as hasheesh and opium on the Orientals, the couples passed and repassed rapidly the women almost fainting with pleasure on the arms of their cavaliers, to the sounds of a waltz by Iamar, swept away with their skirts the clouds of smoke and refreshed the faces of the drink rs. At. the counter some Morlaeean improvisators, accompanied by a player upon the guzla were reciting a sort of dramatic complaint which seemed greatly to divert a dozen strange figures, clothed iu sheepskin and coifed with tarboukhs. lleinrich went to the end of tho cellar, and sat at a table where were already seated i.hrjo or four pei^sonages of joyous mien and merry humor. "Ah, Heinrich!" cried the eki.st of the band "mind yourselves, my friends fyenum babet in cornu. You know you had a truly diabolical look, the other night you almost frightened me. Who would think that Heinrich, who drinks beer as we do, and wha does not draw back before a slice of cold ham, could put on such venomous, wicked and sardonic airs, and that with a single gesture he can make a whole theatre shudder." "Eh! why that is the reason why Heinrich is a great urtist, a sublime comedian. There is no glory in playing a role that is in your character tho triumph, for a coquette, is to excel in playing ingenues."
Heinrich sat down modestly, cal'ed for a large glass of mixed wine, and the conversation continued on the same subject. On all sides it was admiration and compliments. "Ah! if the great Wolfgang Goethe had seen you!'' said one. "Show us your feet," said another "I am sure you have a forked hoof."
The other drinker's attracted by these ex(lamatious, looked at Heinrich reriously, all happy to have the opportunity cf examining elosely so remar kable a man. The young men who had formerly known Heinrich at the university, and whose names he hardly knew, came up to him and shook him cordially by the hand as if they had been his intimate friends. The prettiest valseuses as they passed shot at him the tendere.it glances of their blue and velvot eyes.
One man only seated at a neighboring table seemed to take no part in the general enthusiasm his head thrown backward, ho wathrumming distractedly wi I "i his fingers on the crown of his hat a miliary inarch, and, from time to time he uttered a sort of humph, singularly dubious.
The aspect of this man was of the strangest, although he was dressed like an honest burgher of Vienna, enjoying a modest fortune his gray ey"es were shaded with green tints, and shot out phosphoric lights like the eyes of a cat. When his pale, flat lips parted, they showed two rows of teeth very white, very sharp and very wide apart, of the most cannibal and ferocious a&pect his long nails, sh ning and curved, took a vague apiearance of claws but that physiognomy appeared only by rapid flashes to the eye that watched him fixedly, his face rapidly resumed the bourgoLso and debonair appaarance of a retired Viennese merchant, and you felt astonished that you could have suspected of villainy and deviltry a face so vulgar and trivial.
Internally Heinrich was shocked at the indifference of the man. Tha iisdainful silence took away their value from the panegyrics which his noisy companions lavished upon him. It. was the siience of an old and experienced connoisseur, who does not allow himself to be deceived by appearances.
Atmayer, the youngest of tho company, the warmest admirer of Heinrich, could not endure this coldness, and addressing t-iie strange man, as if taking him to bear e.ess to an assertion that he advanced, he siid: "It is not so, sir, no actor has ever played th role of Mephistopheles better than my comrade here'" "Humph," said the stranger, flashing his green eyes and cracking his sharp teeth. "Mr. Heinrich is a young man of talent, whom I esteem very highly but he is wantIT- in many things nece.s. ary to play the role of the devil."
And suddenly drawing himself up: "Haee you ever seen the devil, Mr. Hoin :'i_-h^"
He put tins question in such a strange and mocking tone, that all the company felt a shudder run down their backs. "THat, however, would be necessary for the truthfulness of your play. The otherevening was at the theatre of the C'arin thian Gate, and I was not satisfied with your it was, at tho utmost, a sly laugh. ,vi dear Mr. Henrich, this is the way yon oaght to laugh."
And thereupon, as to give him the example, b" burst into a laugh so sharp so strident, so sardonic, that the orchestra and the dancers stopped at that very instant the glass windows trembled. The stranger contiured this pitiless and convulsive laugh for several minutes, and Heinrich and his companions, in spite of their terror, could not help imitating it.
When Henrich bad recovered himself, the vaults of the tavern were repeating, like a feeble echo, the last note of that broken and terrible twitter, and the stranger was no longer there.
IIL
Some days after this strange incident, which he had almost forgotten, or which he remembered only as a joke of an ironical burgher, Heinrich was playing his part of the demon in the new piece.
On the first row of seats in the orchestra was seated the stranger of the tavern, and at every word he pronounced he shook bis bead, winked his eyes, smacked his tongue against his palate, and showed signs of the liveliest irooatienca.
"Bad 1 bad!" he muttered to himself. His neighbors, astonished and shocked at his manners, applauded, and thought tc themselves that the gentleman was very hart to please.
At the end of the first act the stranger rose as if he bad taken a sudden resolution, strode over the big drum, the cymbals and trombone, and disappeared through the little door that leads from the orchestra to the stage. Heinrich, waiting until the curtain rose, was walking up and down in the wings, and when he came to the end of his short promenade, what was his terror to see as he turned, standing in the middle of the corridor, a mysterious personage clothed exactly as he was, and who looked at him with eye« whose greenish transparency had Strang* profundity in the darkness the white, sharp, wide-set teeth gave something ferocious to his sardonic smile.
Heinrich could not fail to recognise the stranger whom lie had seen at the Twoiieaded Eagle, or rather the devil in person, for it was he. "Ah! ah! my young friend, you wish to play the devil You were very middling in the first act, and you would decidedly give too poor an idea of me to the good citizens of Vienna. You will allow tire to replace you this evening, and as you might interfere with me I will send you to the celler below the stage." "Heinrich recognized the Prince of Darkness and felt himself lost putting his hand mechanically to the little cross that Katy had given him, he tried to call for help and to murmur his formula of exoscism but, terror choked him he could only utter a feeble rattle. The devil seized Heinrich with his hooked hands by his shoulders and pushed him by main force through the floor then he entered UJXMI the scene, when his cue came, like a perfect actor.
His incisive, biting, venomous and truly diabolical acting at first surprised the specta tors. What especially produced a great ef feet was that sharp titter like the grating of a saw, that laugh of the damned blaspheming the joy of paradise. Never had an actor attained such powers of sarcasm, such a depth of villainy the audience laughed but they trembled. Ail the audience was panting with emotion phosphoric sparks glinted from the fingers of the terrible actor trains of sparkling llame ran from his feet the light of the lusters grew pale, the footlights shot out reddish and greenish flashes a sort of sulphurous smell reigned in the theatre, the spectators were, as it were, delirious, and thunders of frantic applause greeted each phase of the marvelous Mephistopheles, who often substituted verses of his own invention for the verses of the poet, and thij substitution was always happy and accepted with transports.
Katy, to whom Heinrich had sent a box, was in a state of extraordinary alarm she presaged some misfortune with that spirit ot divination which love gives.
The pei'foi manco ended amidst indescribable enthusiasm. When the curtain fell the public called for Mephistopheles with loud cries. He was sought for in vain but at last a scene-shifter came aud told tho manager that Heinrich had been found in the cellar, where ho had probably fallen through a trap. Heinrich was unconscious he was taken to his home, and when he was undressed they saw with surprise that ho had deep scratches on his shoulders as if a tiger had tried to crush him with his paws. Katy's little cross had preserved him from death, and the devil, vanquished by this influence, had contented hini'-elf with flinging Heinrich into the cellar of the theatre.
The convalescence of Heinrich was long. As soon as he was better the manager of the theatre offered hinr a very brilliant engagement, but lleinrich refused it, for he was by no means anxious to risk his salvation a second time, and he knew, too, that he would never be able to equal his terrible duplicate.
After two or three years, having come into a little fortune, he married the handsome Katy, aud now the two, sitting side by sid" in front of a porcelain stove in a nice warm room, are talking of the future of their children.
Playgoers still speak with admiration of that marvelous evening, and are astonished at Heinrich's caprice which made him abandon tho stago after a great triumph.
Heirs of Dead-and-Oone Worker*. ["Uncle Bill" in Chicago Herald.] New York is being crowded with millionaireism. Five of the meu so enormously enriched by Novada mining are here now, or have been recently. Families whose fortunes are permanently enlarged come to the metropolis to live luxuriously. Square miles of residences, each representing, on the average a yearly expenditure of £25,000 for maintenance, aside from whatever special and personal extravagances the inmates may indulge in, make an aggregate of capital dazzling to contemplate. Year by year tho amount of money withdrawn from active use in business grows immensely, ana the number of rich idlers increases proportionately. Among all the young sons of the Astors and Vanderbilts there is not one who has an active pursuit save that of pleasure, and I mention these names because they are familiar and not for exceptionality.
Go into the evening resorts of time-killers and you will at every turn meet fellows who do absolutely nothing useful from the beginning of the year to its end. They are the heirs of dead-aud-gone workers. They are destitute of manly pride, but full of the foolish vanity of dandyism. Vicious, als Naturally. Their extravagances in that direction are ju now remarkable. It has suddenly become the fashion among them to keep bachelor apartments, no matter how adequate to all rational requirements their family homes may be. Within two years a dozen or more magnificent buildings have been erected on the French flat plan, except that no women or kitchen are included. Suites of two or four rooms are rented at $1,000 to |5,000 per annum, usually to be lavishly furnished by the tenant, who is very often a rich family's scion on his rapid way to the devil. A restaurant, from which the most elaborate meals may be ordered for delivery in his own dining-room, enables him to entertain his friends in as carousing a manner as he chooses and these guests need n«t be masculine, notwithstanding the monastery rules of the house.
YOUNG AND OLD.
[From the French of Nicolas Martin.] Alas! you climb upon life's road, Which I descend with stooping brow You glide—so light appears th load—
While I am tired of marching now In childhood's smiling horoscope So fair appears your destiny I But I am very poor in hope,
And very rich in memory.
Lean down a little, fragrant rose, Upon a heart that wants your bloom But I—I feel mine eyelids close,
And I am leaning o'sr the tomb. The growing whiteness of the day Is destined soon night's shades to kill And my last perfume dies away,
While your young soul la opening stiJL
Woman's Sobering and Belief.
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A Postal Card Story
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AustralianPolitics.
SYDNKY. N. S. W., Oct. 111. —The Provincial assembly by a majority of one shelved the resolution iu favor of the federation of the Australian provinces and annexation of New Guineau.
Not Legally at War.
PAKI2, Oct. 31.—The Journal Dts De'oats denies that Fraaee a legally at war w:'h China. It center ds, therefore, that E glan 1 a no rt asor to forbid French ve: sels to evict ial at Hong Kong.
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Our New Minister.
I'AKIS, Oct. 31.—Theodore Rou9tar, French minister to America, visited President G-tvy this morninr. He departs for Washington to-day.
Steamer Aground.
GLA'.GOW, OC*. 31.—The titate LiDe Steamer State of Alabama, which arrived here Oct. 28th from New York, had been aground in Clyde and is leaking badly. Apart other cargo was damaged.
PRETTY WOMEN.
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Manslaughter.
LOCKPOBT, N. Y., Oct. 31.—Dr. Ira T. Butler, alias Richmond, was found guilty of manslaughter in the first degree.
Gunboats
TOULON, Oct. 31.—Two cruisers and five gun boats have been ordered to prepare to sail immediately for China.
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ing Shot Gun for #tO,:: #12 Concert Organelle for $7, a $25 Magic Lantern for S12. a Solid Go *25 Wateh for *15, a 815 Silver Wa:ch :or *8. YDII You can get any of these articles Free If you will devote a few houre of your leUnre time evenings t. inTroduein. our new poods. One la-iy secured a GoH Watch free, in a single all. rnoon A geiiilenaan got asil-UiaiyT ver watch fur iifieeu minutes work A boy 11 vears old seen ted a watch In one day hundreds of others have done nearly atw-il. If you hive a iMagic Lnnom yo« can start a business that will av you from to |50 every night. Send at «-nc* for our illustrated Catalogue of (*old and Siver vVatchee, Self- ocaing Bulll'og Revolvers, Spy Glattsea. Indian Scout nnd Astronomical Telescopes. Telegraph instruments, Type Writer.-!, Organ Aceontlana, Violins, Ac. Ac. It may sart you on the ro»d wealth
WORLD MAM FACTi'KINK CO., 122 Namu Street Nevr York.
NELGEN'S
Steam Dye House,
660 Kai/i SI., SIcKeen's Slock.
The Only Steam Dye House in the City. Dyeing and iV.onring of all kinds of Ladies' Gsnt*' and Children's wear, such aa Silks, Satln-, Cashmeres, lpacas, etc cleaned or dyed in any desired shade.
Kid gloves or kid slippers cleaned or dyed lace curtains and lace lies cleaned, shawls cleaned or dyed, plumes, cleaned or yedgent-.' garments cleaned, dyed and rrjp?"r?-?.
All my work is done by a steam proee**, which urates It loot as nice as new. A man can save buying a new suit by taking his old clothing to Nelgen and nave htm to clean, dye and repair rt. Ladies can do the same with their dresses by having them cleaned and dyed.
JOHN H. NBLOKW
M. B0LING-ER & CO.
Opposite the Nmk«t HMHW,
Dealers ia Staple and fancy hardware, n-
ware, rape, wlue, Rlrrt Cages, Timothy
Clover and Hungarian Seed, Window Glass
Sash, Doors, Paints, ^Olls Wire-Cloth, Ac,
Ac. M^YOU should call and examine our geods and prices before purchasing elsewhere.
Best quality Barb Fence Wire at Bottom
prices. A full line^ditching tools, also stove pipes
in all sizes.
No. 1292- State of Indiana, ceonty of Vigo in the Vigo Superior court, September term, 18S4, to quiet title. Josia Locke, vs. ,Sarah MeGxew, Jestie McGiew, et. al.
Be it known that on the 16th day ot October, 1884, it was entered by the court that the clerk notify by publication said James M. Reynolds, John L. Stevens William O'Neal, adminlft n'^rof James M. Parks, Frank H. n.aton and tlarvey Evans, administrator of James Watts, as non-resident defendants of the pendency of tbiB action against them.
Said defendants are therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action against thi and 'hat the same will it and for ti ial December 20(h, 188t, the same being December term of said court in the year 1884. irifcRrutL N. SMITH,
John T. Scott, Horace B. Jones, Attorney*
o. 1,320- S'tate of Indiana, county of Vigo, Njn the Vlito Superior Court, September term. 18S1. lo quiet title, Josiah Locke rs.
John
\V.
Baqgetr, Nancy Baggeit, Sarab S.
Bowman. Be it known, that on lfth day of October, 1884. it was ordered the court that tbs
notify by publication taid John W. Baggett and Nancy Baggeit as non-resident defthdnnts oi the "pendency of this ajtieu fgalnst them.
Satd defendants arc therefore hereby notified of tho pendf-ncy of said action against them and that the same will stand for trial on De ember 24tli, 18S4, the same being December term ot said court in the year 1884.
MEKKILL N. SMITH, C!erk.
John T. Hcott, Horace B. Jones, Attorneys.
CALL AT THE
BUCKEYE GROCERY,
1369 East Main Street
te to your interest. You will
find groceries at the very lowest rock bottom price- The Buckeye pays the highest case prices for all produce.
WM. NOItKIS. nwfmwuwBuiwmg
WM. CLIFF. J.. II. CLIFF. C. JN .CLIFF
Terre Haute Bailer Works..
CLIFF
&
CO.-
Prop'rs.
Manufacturers of Locornotivc, .Stationary and Marine Boiler", I'J ubular and Cylinder) Iron t'anks, Jails. Smoke Stacks, Breeebing and Sheet iron Work.
Shop on First street, between Walnut ana
Poplar,
Terre Haute, Ind.
BS#~Repairing promptly attended to.
APPLICATION FOK LICENSE. Notice is hereby given that we will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo county, Indiana, at their next term for a licenee to sell intoxicating liquors in a less quantity than a quart at a time, with the privllegeof allowing the saree to be drank on our premises for one year. Our place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank is located on lot No. 10 in block No. 1 in Edgar Coal Co.'s addition in tfce town of Co 1 Bluff, Kevins township, Vigo county, Indiana.
THOS. WKBOTKK. WM,II. MAKTIN.
STEWART'S HEALING POWDER.
SOLD BR HARNBSD AND DRUG STOBB8Warran'Dd to cure all open OwHCw or UOBALSIIOID aopcause
Drain Tile.
Tile of all sizes at manufacturers irices at the tile store, No. 113 south Fourth street. Terre Haute. Ind.
Farewell Massaniello.
Last night the members oi the Massaniello club met at the office of the Traffic Manager? ot the Illinois Midland, and adopted a constitution and Inlaws. It was decided to drop the name Massaniello and change the same to the Xi:re|Haute 1 hilhaimonic Society."
A Wandering Stranger.
A stranger who gave his name as Wm. Mason was fouid wardering around fh Uaion depot about 2 o'clock this
(c 0||g noniwi ci »ww* ealth and vigor, cures Dyspepsia, ix^. Miming and was taken to police headotence, Sexual Debility. |i. Ifarters and afterward locked up tn suspicion.
