Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 24, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 December 1890 — Page 6
6
ilDm
wojian and home
HOW SOME INDEPENDENT WOMEN SUPPORT THEMSELVES.
Social La ma for Cifli—FoIIIei of FashIon'* Volar U-«—Teacl» tlio Young: One# to Uelp-Wliat to Have for Tea—Women and Styl*r-—HonseUoM Hint*.
Miss Sabry Seamans, of Faetoryville, is Industrious, frtiynl, kind hearted and independent. She ii. seventy odd years of age. yet she works like a beaver every day, and taken good care of her property. Miss Seaman* owns a house and lot In the vllIsge, as well as several acres of land close by. and no one in the neighborhood is more thrifty than the elderly spinster. Besides keeping a small garden in good shape, doing her housework and looking after a large lot of poultry, Miss Seamans finds time to weave hundreds of yards of rag carpet during the year. She tarns it ont for country housewives far and near, getting a certain price per yard for weaving it, and everybody speaks of her work with the loom as first class.
Miss Seaman* never pays the road master any money. When the time comes for the fsnblic highways to be repaired Miss Seamans shoulders her hoe, reports to the road master of her district and works out tier road tux, just as the men taxpayers do. She says it seems like throwing away money to pay it to the pathmaster.
A middle aged married woman in Scranfcon makes a nice lot of money every year crat of sticking salve. She manufactures the salvo from beeswax, mutton tallow and two or three other ingredients known only to herself, and she molds it into round sticks, which she retails at ten cents apiece. As soon as the monthly pay day- begin at the coal mines throughout the Lackawanna valley the industrious salve maker becomes a peddler of her wares. She fills a half bushel basket with sticks of salve and goes from one mining settlement to another peddling it out on the way, and often making as much as $5 and $0 a dny.
A somewhat eccentric, elderly woman ie the township of Ashley has a mania for collecting almanacs. That is her oaty hobby, and she has been riding it for nearly thirty years. It makes no difference to her what kind of almanacs she secures 'for her collection. Along about Christmas each year she visits all the drug stores in Scranton. Pittston and Wilkesharre, obtains two or throe copies of each almanac and packs them away in a big chest. There are three chests full of all sorts of almanacs in her house now. She sends to the large dtics shortly after New Year's for copies of all the political almanacs, and.the.se she ke«!ps separato from the medical ones.
Miss Augusta Goddard, a daughter of Fanner Merritt D. Goddard, of "Ovington township, Sullivan county, has charge of her father's garden every summer, and at first she was pestered almost to death with the hens. She couldn't keep-the hens from scratching up her beds of vegetable seeds. One day while she was taking a ramble through the woods she spied a young porcupine, and the thought struck her that it would be a good thing to capture and tame It. So she made a couple dt loops out of withes, caught the porcupine, took it home, and placed it in tho garden,'feeding it food she knew it liked. The porcupine soon became wonted, hopped about the garden, and acted as though it was glad to be there.
One day, when the bens came around and started to scratch la tho onion bed, the porcupine bristled toward them, and the hens got scared at the strange creature, and tumbled over one another in their haste to get out of the garden. For two summers It has chased the.hens out of the garden before they had a chance to scratch any.-"-Scranton (Pa.) Cor. New York Sun.
Social Lawn for Girl*.
Yuu think tho laws ol society are severe. You do not lxsllevo that conventionality Is a great sword held tip, not to strike you, but to protect you, and you shrug your pretty shoulders and say, "I know I was doing nothing wrong, and I don't care what people say." Now, my dear, you must care what people say. Tho world is a great judgment court, and usually the innocent and the ignorant are protected by it, though occasionally some one falling into the mire of scandal and gossip is brought into the court all bedraggled and disfigured, and the judge, not being able to see the virtue that is underneath, decides against tho victim, and all because she did not carts what the world said. I wish you would think even of the most innocent things.
Sometimes I fear you think I am a little bit severe, but 1 have known so many girls who were so thoughtless, yet so good, ano who only found protection in the sword of conventionality. It may bang over your head, as did that of Damocles, but it is as a warning. It will protect you from evil speaking, from the making of injudicious friends, and it- will insure you much more pleasure than if all tho world ran helter •skelter and Iwcame like a wild Irish fair day.
Conventionality protects you as does the tost mother, frowning at and forbidding mot only that which Is but also that which looks vrrtum.- Uulh Ashtmwe in Ladies' Home Journal.
Kullir* of fanhlon'l
"One mi:ht as well be out of the world as out of the fashion." says the fine lady, AS she arrays herself in conformity with the latest rescript of Queen Alaraode, regardless whether, in obeying It, she does or does not violate the requirements of taste, the proprieties of eiviased society and the Jaws of harmony. As the action should IK* suited to the word and the word to the action, in oratory, so should tbc figure harmoni** with the dress ami the .dress set atT the figure. But not a whit doe* the slavish worshiper of fashion care for oougruity. If jacket like coats are in vogue your "attenuate dandy whose latitude and longitude are thoee of a beanpole will wear one of them with as much *»eU complacency mIt he were the very "mold of form/' &>, too. yor.r "dumpy woman" of too insists on her down flounce* when that is the regulation allowance.
It) poiutof f.Kt the slates of fashion are the merest formalists in e^i^eaiec. They wear tho uniform of hour. whsther it becomes or deform* them, ajwt arrange every fold methodically. {Nwrditti? to the exist lag formula, whatever that may be. The twali Is tbat alt«*»f»slsksaaWe nte are fihray* *tiff and stagy. If tantfe* who t&tt* tit«r»lfs«j the mode think that their to tlwr feshioa dates adi* to "tlwAr .'j :. hey are m*«ti»kffl.~N«w York
Itotft* tl»«
I hftVO iu mind tws bemitsfttl UUli* girls, the dei&fet of their whs teat* carefully tratwedL
4
One «f tb® tMfcfeea
frolk. but thoa^blfpi capable aboai
Whm mamma stex* war*
••n
the day seems heavy, and a iiitle wearily, peril aps, she says so, a whispered consultation follows and away they scamper to come hack after a time with beaming Itie** to say: "We made both the beds, mamma. Diun't wc help you lots?"
So eager and happy the upturned faces that mamma kisses them over and over as she thanks them for their help,
I fancy I hear some one say, "Two tots like those cannot make a bed well!" Yes, it looks nicely and a little smoothing out of a wrinkle or straightening of a pillow and the work does credit to older hands. The elder child can set the table or brash the crumbs after a meal, and both take many steps for the love of their dear mamma.
Let us not burden the dear little ones with duties or let them feel a touch of the care which they most shoulder by and by, but only inspire in them the spirit of helpfulness, sometimes stopping in onr own work, if need be, to show them how to do some simple duty.—Housewife,
What to Bare for Tea.
Some
years
ago a party of city people
spent a charming summer in a farmhouse high up among the Berkshire hills. The accommodations of the roomy old fashioned dwelling were good, the breakfasts and dinners excellent, well cooked,-and liberal in provision. But the teas! Night after night the guests gathered about a teatable adorned with plates of cold bread, of butter, and of cake, pitchers of milk, and occasionally a dish of berries or of stewed fruit. Tea there was, as a matter of course, but never a bit of meat or fish, or an egg in any form, boiled, poached or in an omelet, not even a pat of pot cheese or a few slices of dairy cheese. Warm biscuit, muffins and waffles were likewise conspicuous by their alsence.
It was all very weJl for those who ate bread and milk and were fond of cake, but for a party of ravenous young people, who had spent along afternoon playing tennis, fishing, or driving,-or tramping over the hills in the hunger provoking air, the sight of the table was not inspiriting, nor did it become more popular as the season advanced and the 'early frosty evenings im proved appetites that had never been poor. Yet in spite of 'loudly expressed hints, it never seemed to occur to the farmer's good wife that ber tea table was not supplied with every viand the most exacting eater could desire.
Naturally,'when a hearty meal has been served In 'the middle of the day, there should beoo thought of having to prepare a second dinner for the evening. But there should be at least some relish to vatythe monotony of plain bread and butter, something to give tho meal an aspect other titan that of a perfunctory "feed," where every one eate'on the principle upon whichJSTicb alas Nlckleby "distended his stomach with a bowt'of porridge" tho morning after his arrival at Dotbeboys Hall—not that be wanted it then, but lest he should'be'in conveniently hungry when there wasnoth ing to eat.—Christine Terhune Henriek iin Harper's Bazar.
Women and Style.
Did you ever notice that women n^ho have tho least claim to "style" are'the ones who say the most about it? They get this becauso it is "all the style." "They will not buy that because it is^'out of fashion. They talk of fashionable'dressmakers *uJ becoming hate, and -spend their time poring over fashion plates,'vfrhen the best French modiste or milliner* could not make them other than just what they are—dowdy and sloppy. And y*t' their apparel and uppearanco are not particularly unkempt or removed from neatness or cleanliness. They simply have A sloppy untidy way of getting into things and wearing them.
Dressmakers and tailors say there are comparatively few women and men who know how to wear their clothes. Style and success in dressing depends entirely upon the carriage of the wearer. Learn bow to walk, how to carry tho head, shoulders and body, nnd what is "in style" or out of style it will never affect the "good dresser" reputation of a man or woman. It is not tho prevailing fashions that make a woman elegantly dressed or stylish with the correct carriage she will be all this and moro in last year's—or any other year'i plainest well fittlnggarb.—ChkagoJETcrald.
Woman and Her Ate.
"To-morrow," laughed a bright faced matron, "will bo my fortieth birthday, and I shall have to alter along established lino of comparison. For twenty years and more 1 have used the phrase 'as if I was 4P to indicate a condition tax removed from my real one. Now, alas, the trended ltno is almost passed, and I must adjust myself to my new future. It will seem venerable indeed to put GO as a possible objective point, but probably if I live to reach GO even that limit will not seem to me hopelessly old. It is curious bow one's ideas of age change. When I wasin my latter teens I went home with a -ochool friend one day and met her sister, a fair halved, pretty young woman, whom I admired immensely. When we went upstairs to her room, however, on the wall hung framed her graduating diploma, which betrayed by its date that her age was 23. ,1 often recall now with amuse ment bow the girl fell in my estimation at this discovery. Gay, girlish, positively juvenile at £3! What a preposterous idea, I thought,, from my intolerance of 17 years, But ah! looVing back from almost 40, 33 has a vastly different aspect."—New York Times.
GttlMica Shonld C*n tor Tftelr T«*tk. Never make the mistake of supposing that it will be "time enough" when the second teeth come in to teach the child how to cleanse the teeth. This habit is not easily instilled later if not begun in early childhood. I know one young lady who firat wielded a toothbrush at the age of S year?. She I* obont 9H now, cleanses her teeth herself and they are as clean as her mother's, which is saying much. The father is a deatist, which may have something to do witib the exceptional state of affairs.
Teach the child to clean the teeth and •ee that it is done thoroughly night and morning. Ev^n the temporary set should be preserve*,!, if for no other reason, beoutM some of them will not b* lost until the twelfth year and therefore mn*t be retained among the new teeth. It tbey are decayed tlwy will eonJaiaSnate tbooihers, beeaa# desay i# oonutgions, espedaily in the same ts»atb..—N«w Yrwrik Herald.
Pmjtr Bwfes a* of Art. Prayer "msrkm of art IJOW, mwb msm iha& tfe«y *or*w of Dtajew keep prrayvr book* hi w*" It they prk%Ali tbe way from soaj^hini trntlr' tMs IK «lemanle4 the book Is to «4er. Books h*m feswtt been set with jewel*., awl ws^rmsiHBt of ItA Twin m% -s l» tn»ie to of tb* Lock," Md the mxcmWie iasro«pln togeiber tbe ortfeiet. on alady** I wHdk included to skin row*, a
TERRE HAUTE SATTTKDAY EVENTNG MAIL
Bible and billet doux. Perhaps, indeed, the Bible was in strands company, but no more strange than tliat in which the prayer book of today finds itself. It does not go on my lady's bookshelf. It has nothing to do with pews or altars. It belongs neither to literature nor religion. It goes into her jewel casket, and is counted in with her diamonds and her finger rings.—New York World.
A Costly Cape.
A cape worth $1,000,000 is described by a Washington correspondent of The Pittsburg Dispatch as follows:
There area vast number ot fine dresses from all parts of the world in the National museum, and the most extraordinary art!* cle of this kind is the $1,000,000 feather cape. This comes from the Sandwich Islands, and is made up of red and yellow feathers so fastened together that they overlap each other and form a smooth surface. These feathers shine like the finest of floss gilk, and the r?d feathers are prettier than the yellow ones.
It is the yellow feathers, however, that are expensive. They are febout an inch long, and are worth in the country in which they are found fifty cents apiece. They were in times past taken for taxes by the Hawaiian kings. They are taken from a little bird known as the nho, which is very difficult to capture. Each bird has two of these yellow feathers under his wing, and the birds are caught in traps and the feathers are pulled out and they are then freed.
There is a letter in the museum from the prince of the Sandwich Islands, who states that it took more than 100 years to make this cape, and the authorities of the museum say that it is worth more than the finest diamonds in the English regalia.
Uses for Old Newspapers. 4
A few cents' worth of back numbers fpom a newspaper office are eqnai to dollars' worth of tho best moth proof ever sold, though a little more troublesome to lay smoothly. As a lamplighter paper saves matches, and for wadding iron holders is a better non-conductor than cotton. It makes the shelves in the cellar and wash house look neat, and wrapped around the glass fruit jars excludes the light, which is as hurtful as the atr to some fruits. Patterns cut in newspaper are no new thiag, but it may not be generally known that a cheapand durable doormat, equal to cocoa, can be made by having files of old papers cut lengthwise into sections three inches wideband packing these together on edge in a frame of wood.—Good Housekeeping.
Advocates of tho Slipper.
Opinions are much divided as to tbe*£~ flcacy of "spanking," so called. There are mothers who pride themselves on "never laying a hand" upon their children, and tlie fiat has gone forth among educators that the teacher unable to manage her class without a resort to corporal punishment does not deserve to be a teacher. Well, all can think as they please, of course, and there are certainly times with children and moods in children which call for a genuine old fashioned spanking as a means of grace. As not a few mothers can testify from actual experience, bad tempers and naughty ways have often been "nipped in the bnd" by a little physical pain administered just at the right time.—{Leisure Hours.
The .ride's Veil.
Somebody ngkr 'tow to arrange **veil and how far itshoulo xtend. You cannot to a veil by the yar-: that is to say, you not tell how mu 1 you need the proper way is to have the storekeeper send apiece of tulle and then drape it on the bride's head. It should fall well over her train though not beyond it, and should Teach the edge of the skirt in front. The orange blossoms are put on so that they .-are only visible after tho veil is thrown back, which ceremony should be performed "by two of the bridesmaids when the new'ly made husband leans forward to kiss ithe bride.—• Ladies'Homo Journal. ......
Dr. Bryan, intended mankind to 1
bbuy can-
Some Thlnjja for a Boy tLeara. To swim. To dance. To tta ^straight. To make a fire. To be punctata*. To hang up his hat. To help his mother br his sister. To wipe his boots on the mat. To close a door quietly. To go up and down stairs qnictly. To read aloud when requested. To remove his bat upon entering a house. To treat the girls so well that they will all wish he was their brother. Either to sing or to play a musical .instrument—New York Ledger.
Economize your strength. DonU think you are committing the unpardonable sin to sit down when yon can about your work. Yonr back is of more conseqnenoe than "the speech of people." And suppose some women do call you "shiftless," you can afford it if yon keep your superb physleal strength, and at the same time have a well kept, well ordered household, with a cheerful, happy woman as the queen of it.
Bhoda Broughton, the novelist, is a gray haired, bright eyed, profoundly intelligent looking woman, and lives with her sister in one of the most picturesque old bouses in Oxford. Her age is 60 and sbe has been novel writing for twenty-three years, during which period she has turned ont only ten novels.
Dr. Rose Wright Bryan, of Nsw York, fan established something new under the ML This Is aeupeptic lunch room where the dyspeptic may go and be happy. This refuge is called "The Aryan," and la furnished with such foods only as nattue, interpreted by
Mrs, H. I. Stone, the leader of the Chi* eago "Four Hundred," has In her possession autograph copies of George Eliot'* works and some letters firom the rail Maggie Taltivttv written about the time iter "Deronda" was published.
It is said that a Joint of meat maybe kept 1 iy days by wrapping it loosely in a fine _.. th wrung ont of rincgnr and hanging it in a draught of air. If the weather is very warm tbeclotb should be moistened twice or even thrice a day.,
A loaf of bread six days old only lows 1 per cent, of its weight by drying, and if placed in the oven between two pans tor an boar become like new and may be eaten by with weak digestion witfc* ©at timt of -^peaces*
Off be of tfes Girls' Norsaal .legeof t!r Ityof Xe* York, itfsidy ooc-batf have hesn tcaebers in and oo« comml*of ««& -1
ItissaMtfeatif !a»pcH« iBOEtli)saltan*! wster.wl cotae^ dm to (tueya*--witfcetniiniurtt .•«.
&
ii».i
Mm. Vmstylam, *& Ma**., Tb»it fieMof alacpecxtt tlMr 4kl
twcma&mtakdesad
FRENCH SOCIETY QUEENS
mm
WOMEN WHO TENDOM OF
RULE IN THE UPPER HE PARISIAN WORLD.
1^4
Rank and of
Fair Foreigners*
MARQUISE DE VILLEKEUVS.
The Marquise de Villeneuve, nee Bonaparte, is the youngest danghter of Prince Pierre Bonaparte, who shot Victor Noir. She was brought up in the bitterest privation at Auteuil, near Paris, in an old house lost In the depths of an immense garden full of beasts, for Prince Pierre owned a regular menagerie of lions and wild hoars. His pet was a huge lioness, which bad the freedom of the garden, and often crouched at its master's feet. After the fall of his family he would certainly have starved but for his wife's exertions.
Priucesse Pierre went to London, set np a milliner's shop there and fttiled. Then,
PRINCKSSE !|JK VETTKRNlCn.
going back to Paris to carry on the almost hopeless struggle for a living, she found a benefactor in M. Durny, the historian, and ex-minister of Napoleon IIL He sent her boy, Prince Roland, to the Lycee'Louis le Grand, and afterward to the military school of Saint Oyr 'a work for a commission and her girl, tfee Princesse Jeanne, to a dfawitig school, as she had a taste that way. The poor llittle princesse was working for the illustrated papers to earn her bread when the marriage of her brother with the wealthy heiress of the Blancs, of Monte Carlo fame, changed the fortunes of the family as with the touch of a magic
Vj •A
OOMTKSSK TATOGK.A.
Wand. The bride took a warm affection for her sister-in-law, begged her to accept some of her superflnons ricbe*, and soon ^_ 'each of her little hand* held a million"
I marriage portion, and a union with
Chris
lA°1
/£«,, jt ,\t
Polish tho Old
They Have We*4tl». Manners—lieprcseatatlves Eegiiue and of tho Xew Order—Soma
right by American Press Association.]
^Uleneuve, of
an old Provence family dating back to Charlemagne, brought happiness after days of trial and pa
The house of the Princesse de la Tour d'Auvergne is a grand center in the aristocratic Fanbourg. It is situated behind the Inralides. To be seen at her receptions is a brevet of good birth and good breeding. But the old Dnchesse de Maille rules the
ocacmes db )aaiar-Ai»Ksrnuo. called to tfee tlirons tlbe thuAmm S», I* KMM* far pride of Mrtfeoa tfc* kft bank of to* If «IMI Coon* d* Pari* W»
Rochefoucauld Bisaecia would, of course, titkc precedence of all other ladies at court, but the scepter of antique privilege would no doubt rccrue the Duchessede Maille, who, with he" haughty manners and pow tlerwl hair,.iOofev more like a nisrquise of the time of l^om^ XV than a Nineteenth century duchesse. Mme. de Maille stickles for »:.ntk uat3*« forms and old trndit tons. Her equipages date from the last century while she is always recognized at the Bois de Boulogne by her immense coaches, with postilions and outriders in livery—an eccentricity pardonable in a very old lady.
The hpme of the duchess^ in the Rue de Lille has not been changed since she went there as a bride many, many years ago On the first floor are two large vestibules, two vast salons and a dining room. In one salon the furniture is of the time or Louis XV, and the other of Louis XVI. On every side the eye rests on light, grace ful draperies, white and gilt walls. It is curious that the duchesse, who is a sister of the famous amateur artist the Marquis dfOsmond, should have so few pictures and artistic objects about her. The fact is that all her purchase) of art treasures are sent to museums and public institutions, thus proving her real generosity.
The Duchesse de Cbevreuse, a rigid dow ager, who hunted an errinjt daughter-in-law, the Duchesse de Chaulnes, out of house and home and iuto her grave, exhib its the noble Faubourg in its perfection of gloomy state.
Of the many foreign ladies for whom a long residence iu the French capital has
OOMTKSSK DK MA1LLT-NESLK.
gained the social freedom of the city her highness the Princesse de Metternich ranks first and highest. The Austrian princesse, who was anything but a beauty coutrived. despite of her disadvantage that way, triumphantly to support proximity to the prettiest and best dressed women in Paris—the Empress Eugenie and those beauties of her court whom Winterhalter grouped around her in one of her portraits now to be seen in the galleries at Versailles.
The Princesse Brancovan de Bessarabte has a house in the Avenue Hoche which is furnished with oriental splendor, and where on Sundays a morning banqnet of all the arts, or Concordia, as it Is laugh ingly called, brings together some of the greatest literary and musical celebrities of the capital. The princesse is a passionate lover «f music, and her rendering of genu
OCfMTRSSK DK GtTKRKB.
ine eastern compositions seems likely to lead to anew departure in musical taste. Her sister-in-law, the Princesse Bibesco, another Roumanian grande dame, shares the same pflsslon. and her salon is more ex clnsivcly musical. Comtesse Patocka is a first class pianist. These foreign ladies, however, find their match in some of the French beauties.
The Countesse de Mercy-Argentcnu is an instrumentalist of talent, and the Com tesse de Mailly-Nesle, blonde, petite, elegant, with hair of liquid gold, eyes of azure, a queenly port and a proud curl of the under lip, is an artist to the finger ends, both in painting and in music.
The fine voice* in society are equally nu merouR The Vicomtesse de Tmrn is frequently heard at her own musical sol rees in the Place Vendome. But the finest voice of all the grande dames of Pari* i» that possessed by the Comtesse de Guerne. nee de Segur. It is warm, deep, thrill ing in tone, and would prove a fortune to Its owner under other circumstances. Sbe was Gonnod's favorite pupil, who trained her musical talents from irifatwy, and war always one of the best friends of her fami ly circle. Many Of these ladies belong to the true Concordia, a musical association of persons in fashionable society, which on one occasion gave the entire "Redemption'" of C—mod in one of the Paris church*-* is an imperfect picture of wlf ..t is left of the "old sectetar of France The bu!f b&vw grand names, many of which are IKTOS in the history, literature and diplomacy of the past. They often have wealth, aoe and wit. Brit the new society of Fraj L, the bonrgeol&ie of the modem tnotuueisy and of the republic, posnes* scores of women wh maooers, mind and heart eo*»*d and ofU... surpass thane of the mo*t gmnde dame of "the noble Faalh4»tu&." And this Is as it mid be in an age wben titles of birth ^-velost much of their old value and significance.
Ttmomisz
1
STA STso*.
t'rafiU of tit* "PsMios PUy." Tb« profits of the "Passion Piay^ tbb yea* rw»f* --1*i trterof a millisnof "m*. nti vtm .(tribnted among tiot n* la tit* profit* were HS0,930. Many in its be village of Oberaminersao tbink tbat *_i* sbonld be the last perform BBCLast wii»«r tl» great enm which from Htm Immemorial crowned tbe sum mit of Sobel was blown down in a storm, tkwff wy wben tbe epMS Ml tbe ^Passion Play" sbotxld tmm. Tbe cross was tvplnoed by an iron ma.
r~
1
hdda 5/A BLANKET"
See for yourself how 5,-£ Blankets wear and other makes tear.
FREE—Qet from your dealer free, th* $4 Book. It has handsome pictures and valuable Information about horses.
Two or three dollars for a 44 Hon*Blanket will make your horse worth monand eat less to keep warm.
i5A
5IA Five Mile 5/A Boss Stable 5/A Electric'
Extra Test
SO other styles at prices to suit wufbody. If yon can't get them from joor dealer, write as,
5/A
^ORSt^
BLANKETS
ARE THE STRONGEST.
msico the famous Horso ltrnn'l Hnknr .OnnVcts
JQORSEY'S COAL OFFICE, 1007 WABASH AVE. Leave your orders here for
Block and Bituminous Coal
And they will receive prompt attoutlon.
JP C. DANALDSON,
JLTTOiaijrE'X* -AT Xi^W 228WABASH AVENUE.
TR GEO. MABBAOH, XJ DENTIST. E| B1IX OHIO STDBDB3ST.
T\K W. O. JENKINS, JL/ Office, 12 south 7 at. Hours 1«) to 8^80 Residence, cor. 5th and Linton.
Office telephone, No. 40, Baur's Drug Btor®. Resident telephone No, 176,
DE
GILLETTE., D. D. S. DEJ3STTIST.
N. W. Oor. Main and Seventh, opposite U»e Terro Haute House.
•ns. E. W. VAN VALZAH, JL/
Buoeesaor to
RICHARDSON & VAN VALZAH^
IDEl^T TIST.
Office—Southwest eorner Fifth and Mala Streets, over ^aUonal »tate nan* lenumnes on Fifth street.
J.NUGENT. M.J. BKOPHY.
jq-UGENT & CO.. PLUMBING and GAS FITTING
A 4 dealer In
Gas Vlxtures, Globes and Engineer's Supplies. SOS Ohio Strset. Tsrre H»nUi, Im* ROBSBT H. BLACK. JAMES A. NMnwr
JgLAOK & NISBET, UNDERTAKERS S»D EMBALMERS, 26 N. Fourth St., Terro llaute, Ind.
All eallH will receive prompt and careful attention. Open day ana night.
JSAAC BALL,
FUNERAL DIRECTOR.
Cor. Third and Cherry Bts., Terre Haute, lad. Is prepared to execute all orders in bis line with neatness and dlspatol
Kutb*lmtaff a SpMliiltjr.
DR8.
ELDER BAKER, HOMEOPATHIC
PHYSICIANS and SURGEONS.
OFFICE 102 a ftJXTH STREET, Opposite Savings Bank. Night calls at office will receive prompt at* tentlon. Telephone No.
IBS.
A BOHITECT. JOL w. Tt. wiusoisr, With Central Manufacturing Co., Office, tm Poplar Street, Terre Haute, lnL
Plans and 8t kinds of work.
peclficatlons furnished for all
3k.
6S8 WABASH, AVE.
Estahllsbed incorporated 188K,
QLIFT A WILLIAMS CO., Sneeessont to CJlft, Williams A Co. 3. H. William*, President. i. M. cun, Hoc'/ and Tress, *AJ»tfrAoro«Bas or
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