Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 16, Number 17, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 October 1885 — Page 8
MAN AND HOME.
10RT STORY WITH A VERY OBVIOUS MORAL.
Fair Sex at Horn* and Abroai-BtaM for the Kitchen—Learn To Be Self- \y.Supporting—Motes and
Items.
IMrs. M. P. Butts tn Phrenological Journal.] "Kate Hardy has gone to housekeeping." "Housekeeping! I didn't know that aha was married." "Oh,
yea she
bas been married sis
aoonths and more."" "Why, she isn't sixteen years old, is ibef 2k seems only yesterday that sbe was a little girl in short dresses.7' "She will be 17 on her next birthday.** "TV bat kind of a man has she marriedf "Oh, 'a man of words and not of deeds,1 as oar school copybook used to say. One of those young fellows that nit in corner groceries with their beels braced against the store smoking a cigar—more than twelve years older than Kate. By tbe time she's grown up they'll be ready for a divorce."
This conclusion "truckme forcibly. I had -been hearing a great deal about divorce lately—sermons on divorce, newspaper article!), dismal croakings and prophecies, promulgation of remedies, etc. I was reminded of the old saying: "An ounce of preventions is worth a pound of cure."
Here was Kate Hardy, but tbe other day going to school with tbe other children of the neighborhood, a bright, forward, rather wilful girl, fretting a little as she grew older at tbe monotony of her life and the prosinem of ber surroundings longing for a Journey, new books, a pretty room. Her home was hopelessly commonplace. Cooking, cleaning, sweeping, was the daily, monthly, and yearly routine. -Once when Kate petted some geraniums and coaxed them into bloom, ber mother found fault because they were in tbe way. "1 want something to cheer me up a little," wid Kate, pleasantly. "My work is enough to cheer me up," said Mrs. Har-ly.
At that moment *he was dressed in a faded calico, with her bair drawn back in a tight liitle knot she wa minus a collar, and ber dark apron was soiled and greasy. She waA not a flatten), but she believed in saving washing and in dre-ting according to her work. Kate looked from her flowers to ber mother, and something not entirely unlike disgu-it dawned in her face. Feeling Huoh as was then awakened in the young girl rapidly develops into character. "We do not realize bow plastic is character in the young indeed, it only exists as emotion. But dn some sudden heat it takes form, and if a wrong form, can only be changed by great suffering.
Here, then, -was my little friend married, and to a man unworthy of her a man who, by and by, would be sure to arouse her repulsion. Sho would grow into a strong woman and find horolf mate 1 to a weak man. There would be antagonism, bickering, wearisome efforts at adjustment, and in a moment of irrepressible and maybe righteoui
Anger,
a resolve to separate.
They l)r«M Soberly. [Cincinnati Times-Star.]
A lady who has just returned tfrom a rammer tour throughout England and northern Europe says that ono thing which was particularly noticeable on tbe streets was the sobornos* of the ladies' dressed. Everything was dark and subdued. When rhe came back she had grown so aocustomed to European ways that the gay dresses an gorgoous coloring of many of the street dressed here struck her a") almost provincial. I suppose she looked on them very much as the city resident leoks on village costumes—so out of ta*te and style as to be really curiosities.
I think that if this observing traveler had gone through southern Franoe or Italy that she would have found the street dresses brilliant enough to startle even an American. In Italy especially the ladies an fond of colors, and the combinations which they sometimes make are, to say tbe least, startling. And as a matter of fact, some color, not- too much or too vivid, is vary pretty and effective in a street dress. Then it prevents the throng on the pave meat from bocoming monotonous. There is always a flash of color to relieve the eye. I •might draw an analogy from the clouds. A .grey, leaden sky is inexpressibly dull aad wearisome, yet let tbo sinking sun ret it aglow, and all at onoe it becomes gloriously intereting and .beautiful. The case is the «ame, I should fancy, with the crowds oa tbe streot, and sincerely hope that the American ladies will not abandon color just At present.
Cngllsh and American Women. [Philadelphia Press.] English women of the gentler class*, sp.'ud the whole year in apparant idleness. But they usually superintend their menage in summer as in winter. They control the iiff.tir.4 of the poor, and the schools in their parish. They fkotvh, botanize, geologise, carry en, in short, their home life in July as in Xtacamber. But our average American wife and daughter, after driving dressmakers mad preparing for the summer campaign, leave all cam work suui responsibility behind them in their closed houses and surrender themselves to utter idle nest of brain and body throe months of the year. Even the children ore abandoned necessarily to the cars of servants Mid undergo the demoralizing life of a hotel or hoarding-house during the only time when tbegr are free from school duties and are up|K«ed to be under the s*oot influences of hems and parental discipline.
We have no intention of croaking in the midst of summer harmonic. But a warning note is not amiss. Are the manners, ta*te or usefulnet* iu life of the American woman belp.nl by her annual appearance in tbe role of a sammer boarder!
Rooks In the Ctaeet ChamWr. (Gsk1 House tapping.] At one time I was staying in boa where the gnet chamber contained among tbe furniture a little shelf of book*. I have often thought of them since with a vender that more careful hostesses did not provide the sama. Nights when I could not sleep and moraines when I waited in my room for the brea .fast bell I dipped into the content*—a volume or two of poem*, some short stocks! and interesting travels comprised the whole—and I found not tbe least pkasaut part of my visit In those quiet moments by the window which overlooked the grsat, old faibiooed garden. Any housekeeper could spare six or eight books from her library and almost any goest wookl felons her for the thought A little workfeaskit folly stocked pen, ink and paper veady to hand—the visitor cares nearly as asoeh f(* these as Cor fmb towel-! and ex* thk coverings. _________ la taeha Os— [Qstearan, wtfc.)
1
Bopposs yoa ssn a married man—as
psls|n
jroo are and had a good business
as tow* yoa have—aad yoa van not fcqrlag up mooh money as yoa diss d»an aot aad jm had several
IN
children—as we hear you have—and yoar wife should wake up crying some night— as we trust she may not—and say—as possibly she would in such a case—"I dreamed that you ware dead and we were turned out of tbe house, and the baby was sick, and I had no money to pay the doctor, and Harry's clothes were ragged and I had no way to get more, and Minnie had gone to the Orphan asylum! Oh, dear I Fm so glad it was only a dream 1" What would yoa do in such a case?
,.-r. How to Boil an EgS. {Western Rural.] "Now, how many of you know how to boll eggs? asked MM Parlua, as she smiled encouragingly on the fifty neatly dressed young women who attend the training school for nurses in the hospital on Biackwell's island. Two or three bands went up hesitatingly and one young woman ventured tbe suggestion that "you put the egg in boiling water and keep it there two minutes and a half." This was amended by another to read "three minutes," but tbe amendment was not accepted. "Now, girls, what did I tell you about albumen tbe other day?" expoitiilatad the lecturer. "If you subject it to a beat above boiling, it—" "Coagulates," prompted a bright-eyed listener. "No, it becomes hard, positively indigestible, just like India rubber so if you put an egg boiling water for two and a half minutes, you will find part of tbe white bard and tough, and the other part uncooked, a nice thing to put in a sick man's stomach. If, on the other band, I pour boiling water on the egg, and then let it stand where it is just warm for tan minutes, it will be all cooked through and easily digestible." Tbe experiment was performed, and resulted to tbe confusion of the yonng woman who leaned to the two minutes and a half theory.
Vforking the Rale Both (Chicago Tribune.] The effort to make a servant girl's college in Chicago a ucce« is certainly a commendable one and has the best wishes of all who have eaten badly-cooked steak or slept in badly made beds. On tbe other hand, would not a college for mistresses be an excellent thing? The manufacturer who puts bad goods on tbe market would be laughed at were he to explain that it was because bis employes bad failed to do their work well. It is his business to know how to get good work from them, and if he fails he gets no sympathy, nor does be deserve any.
Why should not the tame rule apply to mistresses, whose business it 4 to, in one hense, manufacture the foal their husbands eat? Why should the wife's excuse of inefficient help be accepted, and more than would be the man's were he to plead the same reason for failing to supply her with the necessaries and luxuries of life? If a college for mistresses were to be established, both to instil this idea an 1 to I each the best methods of managing employes, it ought to result in a benefit to the community. The difficulty would be in tiecuring the attendance of pupils. What mistress will admit that she has anything to learn in the management of servant*? These remarks, of course, are brutal, but this is a brutal world.
Devotion and Sacrifice Overdone^ [Lucinda B. Chandler.] Loving by sacrifice has been so imbred in women, so cultivated by religious teaching and social custom, that it is blooming in several forms of sickly sentimentalism. A noble pity and sympathy will seek to hold the highost vantage ground and aim to win the weak to climb for it. Lavishing bouquets and delicacies on hardened criminals, or sinking in the mire with them in wifely devotion will not do this. If there is any thing more senseless and foolish in woman kind than caressing poodle dogs and cultivating animal pets, it is the ideal of high virtue in cossetting, miserable, good-for nothing men.
The world needs women who as mothers will contribute to the world well-bred, wellborn, and nobly trained men, if they be come wives, and who if unmarried may help the race to grander heights at virtue and educatioa Such women will not extinguish noble activity in a sickly devotion to criminals, even if such are unfortunately husbands. Some of the well-merited sarcasm bestowed by the press upon the silli ness and foolishness of dog and criminalpetting woman would be wholesome if applied to foolish wifely "devotion."
Learn To Be Self-Supporting. [Frank Leslie's Illustrated.] If every girl would learn to be self-eup-portiug in an emergency, the sum total of human misery would be immensely re duced. If every girl, regardless of her father's pecuniary condition, would put her band to some difficult employment—would acquire special training as milliner or dressmaker, as painter or sculptor, as printer or bookbinder, as designer or pat-tern-maker, as architect or decorator, as cabinetmaker or jeweler, as shoemaker or hatter, learning some of tho«e myriad trades to which she is by nature quite as well adapted as are the young men around ber, she would achieve for hnr-elf a most enviable position of independ enca. She would not, indeed, change ber nature, but her art she would not learn to discard, permanently, that domestic life to which qhe is supremely fitted, or to ignore matrimony ami despite the men but she would occupy a coigne of vantage from which she coul exorcise dignified choice in marriage, instead of being compelled to accept an uaworthy husband from position of dependence.
An Idea In Stairs.
(Mechanical
News.]
Set it dawn that winding stairs are at expensive, inconvenient, dangerous and in artistic arrangement Straight fights art equally dangerous and more inartistic. Flights with right angled turns at landing ways give a fine effect, and do not trip one up, and children cannot fall far when they start from the tap. Wbera there are very little children or very old people, "halved steps" are good things that is, the staircase is composed of two separate stairways, each half the width, each having full height of riser, but tbe treads arranged so as to alternate or break joints. A child or very old per JO n, instaad of having to t. ke serea-ineh steps, can walk up the center of tbe flight with the right foot on tbe right hand set and take only three-inch steps or two parsons can pass each other, each taking the regulation steps. This Is not theoretical, but it is a good thing which is in actual use in some old English booses.
A Xot*d rartstaa Drees-Maksw. Z:L {Theodore CfeQd Upplocott's.) There fas however, a grand* coutarlare who surpasses all her masculine rivals in fatuity and caprice—namely, 3fm& Rodrigoe#, tb* great theatrical dressmaker. Mm fLxtriguas always ask* the Journalist not to mention her by name. "Pot It •imply." she cays, "the first dressmaker in Paris everybody win know woo is meant" This lady regards herself as the collaborator of Sardoo, and Dumaa, and Angier Dumas is her peculiar favorite. "We understand eaoh other." she says, "and he feds that my genlns coenptel— his."
Nothing caa to am aasaaag than the sesne labor vast sakwa* abort 4otaioofc ta The
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL,
from her private rooms and
finds herself in the presence of a doasn ladies, to whom she has given rendezvous for that day. Many of theoe die imperiously puts off to another day. And when tbe favored one is selected the Grande couturiers settles herself in her arm-chair, calls for her footstool, her fan, her cup of beef-tea, ber smelling-salts, and so proceed-a to preside over the terrible and imposing ceremony of trying on the drees of an actress.
The Tina* Home Spirit. [Boston Journal.]
It is not difficult to arrange the outward conditions of so many feet of space. The difficulty lies in giving the life to the room, putting in the true home spirit of serenity and happiness. The good housekeeper, tin gracious woman, gives character to a house which would be bare and poor in all luxuriousness without ber gracious influence. In the home circle, within the living-room, the laborer becomes recuperated, strengthens bis courage, regains vitality, and after a restful evening looks forward to the next days' labor without timidity. The home centers of New England with their poor furnishings sent forth the makers and preservers of a nation. The modern homes with their more luxurious appointments can not do more than furnish men and women kge for emergencies.
I- 'a Pumpkin Marmalade.
I
[Boston Budget]
Fare, core and cut into small pieces a me-dium-sited ripe pumpkin of rich color take •ix pounds of sugar, one pint of good cider vinegar, a doxen cloves and one ounce of best root ginger bruise the ginger and tie it with the cloves in a tpioe bag, put it with the sugar and vinegar in an earthen jar or porcelain-lined kettle that will hold two gallons when it gets warm put in as much pumpkin as the jar will bold, pressing it down, anil boil it until it is well cooked (it will be quite transparent and soft) take it out with a strainer and set it near the fire while the liquid boils to a thin syrup, put tbe pumpkin back into the jar and let it boil for half an hour, crushing it as much as possible the while with a wooden spoon.
Teach the Children Drawing. [Providence Journal.] "The development of a child's mind, is an epitome of the mental evolution of the race. Long before the printed page has any msan ing for him, pictures area delight. His in stincts teach him the best medium with which to express his ideas, and he naturally adopts a bold and broad Btyle. Apiece of chalk and a board fence, or a bit of charcoal and a whitewashed wall, will prove ir resistible. Happy the child whose parents furnish him with a blackboard which be can lawfully cover with the oreaypns jf
fancy. tr Taste. t* (Leigh Hnnt]
?.hia
The first step in taste is to dislike nil artifice the next is to demand nature in her perfection but the best of all is to fiud out the bidden beauty, which is the soul of beauty itself, to wit, the sentiment of it The loveliest hair is nothing if the wearer is incapable of a grace. The finest eyes are not fine if they say nothing. Wbateiathe finest harp to me, strung with gold and adorned with the figure of Venus, s, If it answer with a discordant note and bath nb ohords in it fit to be wakened? ^.. J.
SSTSFtpg
'j The Cooking of. a Beefsteak. Tbe rule of the famous "Beefsteak Club,' organized in England in 1734, for the cook ing of a beefsteak, was as follows: Pound well your meat until the fibres break, Be sure that next you have, to broil tbs steak, Good coal in plenty uor a moment leave, But turn it over this way and then that, The lean should be quite rare—not so the fat The platter now aad then the juice receive. Put on your butter—place it on your meat— Salt, pepper turn it over, serve and eat
IHnrfer Table Noveltlei. [Detroit Free Press.]
Among the pretty dinner-table uoWlties are cups made of solid ice, with ribbons tied on tbeir handles. Out of these pretty and perishable dishes one eats cafe mousse or some other delicious fancy ices. Other courses are served in pretty paper boats. Little pates or other delicate trifles are set on in small pasteboard boxes or dishes, sur rounded with numerous paper frills of different colors.
J* L*' Rangs Still Gotag. (Cincinnati Enquirer.] There Is a tendency among ultra-fashion-able people to remove tbe bang entirely. Girls in society who have low, broad forebeads brush tbeir hair back plainly, leaving only a few stray curls on the brow. This fancy is taksn from the English aristocrats, who no longer permit their daughter to wear curled bangs. ''Straight fringes" are still iu vogue, though not as becoming.
*. 'I The Southern Beauty. Printer Ocean.] Miss Tulee, of Florida, the great beauty ot the south, who bos been so much noticed at 8baro«, Atlantic City, bryn Mawr, and other resorts, is a deep brunette, with*ex quisite features, large dark eyes, and a wealth of very black hair, which she eoinfos straight back. Her beauty lies almost exclusively in her face. ^Si
Worth Remembering.'* r£ [Chicago Herald.
lir£^
Tho^e who have no ic9 can keep butter cool by wrapping several thicknesses of wet cloth on the outside of a new earthen flower pot and setting it above the butter where there is free circulation of air. This causes an evaporation of water in the cloth and cools tbe butter, -H
Working In the Snnshiae. Inter-Ocean. I
Continental ladies sit in their balconies and gardens for hours at work without so much ns a parasol. Tbe habit is a preventive and a palliative of neuralgia, besides being a stimulant aad colorative to tbe bair.
J?
Salutary.
The Baltimore grand jury reports'that lis introduction of the whipping-post to punish wife-besters has had a salutary effect.
It is alleged by frien li of Or. Mary Walker that she has declined twelve offers of marriage.
Girls employed in the watch-factory at Watarbury, Conn., get $1.30 a day.
Anew fancy of tbe fair gold knitting needles tipped with pearls.
A stspladder of plash is the latest thmg to put in a parlor corner.
Th* average life of a seal-skin sacque eight years. A* Odd CMRM Pat. {Chicago Herald.)
An odd ooffee machine has baon patented la London. A lamp beneath boils the water for fafasiaa, and at ths same tima roasts the herriea, which, a* roasted, are aotomatfcaily emptied Into a hopper and ai iiaadi by a adil attached. Ttaitfce ekie nssin of the grson sol same I
"Tbo Bast Liver Drops" iatbeheadin'toaartickel I seed this moral n' in a religions newspaper, bnt I consider my fiver one o' tbe beat th' is in tbe bixness, and my liver never drops. At least, I never knowed ov Its dropin'. I dont say it wouldn't drop ef 1 wuzn't pertickler about where I get my groceries but ec long es fit 'em of E. R. Wright, aich tbe same is tbe "White Frnnt," I am
poorty shore it hain't go'nter go back on me. An' I'm ekally shore 'at if them other proprietors uv fast-class livers'd trade there, their livers wouldn't go back on them. And then Ed Wright has everything in the market, incloodin' Dressed Turkeys, Dressed Docks, Dressed Chickens. In frnita he has Oranges, Lemons, Quinces, Apples and Cranberries. In vegetables ne has Sweet Potatoes, Mammoth Cabbage, Celery, Carrots. He has also entire Wheat Floor,
E(aple
lain and self-rising Bockwheat Floor, Syrup, Honey and Oysters,,
Miller's Menu.'
Joe. Miller, the Chestnut Street Grocer,^?
Haft PEACHES, t*
r.
GRAPES, SCELERY A BE I E S
ORANGES, ^R, LEMONS,
SWEET POTATOES, TURNIP8, V.GREEN CORN, "*I
Sorghum Molasses, 6xtra fine, 40c per gallon, Pure Cider Vinegar, Sweet Ciaer New French Prunes, New Raisins. New Corrants, Evaporated Peeled and Unpeeled Peaches, California Dried Peaches, Evaporated Raspberries and Blackberries, Oar Cream Cheese best in city, Best Coffee, 12%clb, Green Coffee, 10c ib, Sugar Curod Shoulders, 7c lb, Sugar Caied Shoalders, English Care,Kingans 7}4c lb, Hams, Special Sizes, 10c tt.
W. W. Oliver.
4
NEW ARRIVALS.
IJ
a
Foote's Seed Store.
BULBS—Hyacinths, Tulips, Narcissus, etc. FLO WKB POTS—Common and Fancy. BIRD CAGES—Great assortment. FLOWER STANDS-Wood and wire PURE BIRD FOOD—Not the trash sold in ordinary boxes. MOCKING BIRD FOOD—Headquarters for this fine preparation. BASKETS—Market, lunch, clothes, laundry and farmer's baskets.
J. A. FOOTE,
-317 Main Street."
Raisins, New Preserves, Apple Butter, Oysters, Cod Fish, Chickens, ,, Dressed Chickens,
A
EGG PLANT, MICHIGAN APPLES, OYSTERS, NEW HONEY,
FAT CHICKENS,
Country and Creamery Batter, And lots of other good eating.
Good Eating
Low^ Prices!
Mackerel, Etc., at
THATCHER PARKER'S. The Fourth Street Grocer, oppo site Market House.
1
rpHE "FAVORITE"
COOK STOVE
THAT .„.v
Geo. S. Zimmerman Sells
Is ahead of everything out In tbe cook stove line.
The "Jewel" Soft Coal Base rf- Heating Stove
Keeps Are all night. Be sure and see them at
GEO. S. ZIMMERMAN'S, 648 Main St MeKeen Block.
Coal! Coke Wood
tJ BUY YOUR
Winter Coal
While you can get It at
SUMMER PRICES.
HARD AND SOFT COAL, WOOD AND COKE.
A. EATON, 723 Main St.
W.BGUR.
J* H. Wrr.TJAMi, J. M. CLOT
CLEFT, WILLIAMS 4 CO,
uMMvrAcrvBJum or
Sasb, Doors, Bliids, etc
t^maaa, LATH, 8HIM61J& OLA88, FAHTS, 008 Mi EDILBKB8' UBDWAS&
ilMTl •mmfc,
A Ha M. Black, Attorney. 818% Ohio street. OTIC TO NON-RESIDENT.
N
HERZ' BULLETIN!
Seems to be over, making room for this Grand Indian Summer Weather, and once irore things are all quiet along the ranks and apparently J?eace and Harmony prevails. However there is something in the air again, and if our prophetic spirit does not fail us, we anticipate a
"KID GLOVE WAR"
In the near future. Let it come, we are ready for the fight, with a line of Kid Gloves second to none as to quality and assortment and prices to insure victory. During the past week we have received plenty of
NEW GOODS
At the right pric«s, viz:
Chenille Fringes, in black and leading colors. Creton Fringes, in popular styles. Fur Trimmings, in JFox, Beaver, Neutria and all other desirable styles. Feather Trimmings and Fancy Trimming Braids. Novelties in Handkerchiefs. Best values in Underwear and Hosiery. Embroidered Flannels in large variety. Infants' and Children's Mother Hubbard Cloaks. Felt, Cloth, Flannel and Knit|Underskirts. Infants, Misses and Ladies Knit Hoods. Latest Styles in Collars and Cuffs. Elegant Dress Patterns of Ladies' Cloth with Embroidery to match.
ASA M. BLACK, Attorney. Office—818% Ohio Street. QUIKT TITLB.
IJO
Seedsman.
O I
TO-DAY
.A.lid Buy Your New Dried Peaches, -1 Quinces, Apples, Apricots,
State of Indiana, County Of Vigo, »temberTer enjj
More Plush Cloaks. More Short Wraps.
More Newmarkets and Children's Cloaksv
At Our Well Known Leading Low Prices/
IlERZ' BAZAR.
in the
Vigo Circuit Court, Heptember Term 1885. No. 14143. Ifaac Little, Benjamin R. Little rinaua iu» uiuic. ui uw ahj »o. rison Monett, Polly Monett, Lawson Mon e».t, Sarun Collins, etal.,—To Quiet Title.
Francis M. Little, Lruis w. Myers vs. Har-
Be it known, that on the 26th of September 1885, it was ordered by the Court that the Clerk notify by publication said Harrison Mouett, Polly Monett, Lawson Monett,Sarah Collins, William Collins, Nancy Warford, Wilson Warford, Matilda Wise, Henry Wise, Charles Wise, ^Carter Wise, Abram Wise, Solomon Hogan, jr., Nancy Sharp, Stephen Sharp, James Howard, the heirs at law of John Sebastian, deceased, and the nnknown heirs of said decedent as non-resident Defendants of the pendency of tills action against them.
Said Defendants are therefore hereby not! fled of the pendency of said action against them and that the same will stand for trial Wednesday, Nov. 25tb, 1885, the same being in the November Term of said Court in the year 1885. 8-8W. MERRILL N. SMITH, Clerk.
state of Indiana, County of Vigo, in the Vigo Circuit Court, September term, 18*5. No. 14,140. Stephen Adah*, vs. Maggie Schwab, Margaretha Schwab, Barba-a Schwab, John Schwab, Frank Schwab, George Schwab, Fred. Schwab. To set aside fraudulent conveyance.
Be it known, that on the 2d day of October, 1885, It was ordered by the Court that the Clerk notify by publication said Barbara Schwab as non-resident defendant of the pendency of said 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 November24th, tbe same being the November term of said Conrt, in the year 18X5.
N
MERRILL N. SMITH,Clerk.
OTICE TO XON RESIDENT.
State of Indiana, County of Vigo, in the Vigo Circuit Court, September term, 1885. Smily Brown vs. Matilda E. Donnelly, James M. Allen, et al.
Be it known, that on the fltli day of October, 1885, it was ordered by the Court that the Clerk notify by publication said Caroline S. Wood, impleaded with I'eter M. Donnelly et al., in the original complaint of said Brown and also on the 10th day of Octol»er, 18%, it was ordered by the Court, that the iiaid Clerk notify by publication the said Caroline S. Wood, Impleaded with Peter M. Donnelly et aL in the cross complaint of aaid Allen in said canse, as non-resident Defendant of tbe pendency of this action against her.
Said Defendant is therefore hereby notified of the pendency is said action against her. and that the same will stand for trial December 8lb, 1885. the same being at November term of ssJd Conrt, in the year 1885.
MERRILL SMITH, Clerk.
JJ^GAGG,
OtiUI IX
ARTISTS' SUPPLIES,
PICTURES, PBAMjbS, MOULDIHGft
FSefare Frames Made to OrdeT.
McKaen'a Block, No. 648 Main ataea between 0tb and 7th.
—AVOID—
Main street fancy prices and leave yoar measure wllh
A E N
The Merchant Tailor,
Corner Statb and Ohio streets. Beat foods mt& trimming kept. Good work and a perfect guaranteed.
7
J. J. fidar & §on,
'(Deutsche Ajbetheke)
Druggists
AND DEALERS IN
FINE PERFUMERY
AMD
TOILET ARTICLES,
All proprietary articles and new remedies received us soon as known and continually kept 4d stock.
We have the largest and most complete retail stock in the State of Indiana.
LOWEST PRICES
35,000
We call especial attention to the above flg« nres and that there is no question In our mind that out of 85,000 Rolls ot Choicest
Wall Papers
In designs, patterns and colorings the most fastidious can be fully and satisfactorily suited. The stock embraces some very choice patterns from French, Qennnn and English factories and from all the leading American manufacturers, Wc would respectfully offei the following
INDUCEMENTS:
The largest and choicest stock to select from. Our tiiorough knowledge of the business thereby enables us to assist you in rank-, ing wise selections. Onr very low prices. Fair and lionart dealing wllh courteous treatment.
We have also secured the service of
SKILLED WORKMEN
From ulher cities whose reputation for artistic labor is unexcelled n»!%•!!I sarantee satisfaction In every Inntimce t« all who havo tliolr work entru*ted to our care.
Having purchased at assignee's sale last fall the stock of C. H. Traqualr, will offer all that is left of the same at exceeding low prices.
Thankful for tbe large patronage extended to u« In the part, would solicit and hope to merit tbe continuance of the same In our new quarters,
673 Main Street,
5 doors west of 7tb street, south side
THE W. ROBERTS CO.
T^ELGEN'S STEAM DYE HOUSE,
06O Main St., HeKeen's Block. Cleaning and dyeing of all kinds of La« dies and Oent* clothing. Cfents garment* also neatly repaired. Write for price list.
AVE EVERY THING -X
AND CONVERT IT INTO
MONEY!
Tbe undersigned has opened a Keeclvina Room, No. ISsoath Second street, whcie ha la prepared to receive Roqgb Tallow and Grease of any kind. Pock aad Beef Craekllngs, Dry Oreen JBones, fa? which he will pay Jtbe Hlgbart OMb,Prices. He will also. b&D^i^tpid^orfer load. Hop receivedI at toe Fasfafy, fjoothwet of the atycm tbe Island. QQSa-Ha 13 sooth Seo»onajstreet, Tern Hanta. Ind.
HABB180H SMITH, Xtare Hanta, 2nd.
