Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 22, Number 50, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 June 1892 — Page 6
WOMAN AND HOME.
SOME SENSIBLE TALK ON THE SUBJECT OF HOUSE SERVANTS.
Vary Lowe Dickinson—A Parent*# Doty. How Should Mothers Punish?—To Stop Koseblecd—A NIce "Way to Clean Paint.
Life on tho Ocean Ware.
-ft
We have bur maids and we expect them to
be perfect. We say, "If we coald only get some one to do as we do ourselves," but we don't mean it. We want some one to do better than we. When we break our china it is an accident when they do it, it Is sheer carelessness. If we allow our bread or cakes to burn it is because "we forgot." They must not forget. If we are tired we can put off workuatil another day they must do their allotted tasks, tired or not. When they get sick we com plain that "it is the most inconvenient time they could have selected." If they ask to go to a funeral we sarcastically remark to the family that "we suppose another grandmother is dead." If we go Into the kitchen and And two or three callers we look as black as a thundercloud, and no cheerful "good afternoon" falls from our lips, yet they must usher our friends into the parlor politely and pleasantly. We call to each other and to the niaid herself up stairs and down, but she must on no account do the same. No matter what they have to do, nor bow often they have to come, they must mount the stairs, even to the third floor, perhaps, on some trivial errand.
The truth is we expect too much of our servants. We want them to do the rough and dirty work, yet keep themselves neatly attired to answer the doorbell. We provide white aprons, to be sure, but half the time the girl has her hands in the dishwater or is on her knees scrubbing. It takes some time to dry her ifands and •^nange tier apron. In the meantinlfc the bell rings again and we grow impatient. It is beneath our dignity to go, though we may be sitting in the parlor.. Besides, it spoils the girl. Let her go ctyen if the bell does ring four or Ave times an liour. It is part of her work. It is what we hire he* for. If she docs not get through in time we can scold or call her lazy and slow.
We forget that they are flesh and blood like ourselves. We forget OUT OWS Shortcomings and expect th§m to be faultless. .Ought fi-e not to be 3, little more considljmoof OU?Sh«rfitiftid? If &he i$sloflrSnd stupid obliged to do a great deal ourselves. If she is capable find smart ought wo not to do certain parts of the work so that she n»y have time to be moro thorough? The choice of the work rests with the" mistress. Sho should, if she wishes to be economical as well as comfortable, choose that which requires judgment, such as ttoo care of the flres and lamps.—Mrs. Grayson in Table Talk.
Mary Lowe Dickinson.
An early experience in her life as a teacher led her to roalize how inadequate were tho provisions for the education of girls and women, and 'made her a student of all tho methods provided by our own schools and colleges, as well as by those of other countries, for tho education of women. Realizing that much offered women as an education did not produce educated women, and in a day when the facilities at present provided by our institutions were denied, sho set herself to tho furtherance, by every "possible mollis, of Letter systems of training for thoso who might come aftor her.
A geuulue student herself, and a genuine t*ache*, ptrhaps 110 woman in our country is better remembered and better beloved by those students'who have at some time been under her care. Iier latest work in this direction lay in Denver, where in its university of 800 students she held a professorship in English literature. Such on estimate was placed upon tho value of her services, not only as an instructor, but as a socinl and moral influence, that her chair was one of the first to bo fully endowed, and wften ill health obliged her to resign this position the chair was named for her, and sho was made the emeritus professor and hblds now its lectureship in English literature.
In y&ilnnthropic linee her interest has always lain in those fields that promised tho guanU'st good to the greatest number. Sho was at one time the secretary of the woman's? branch of the American Bible society, and specially interested in its extensive* wcirk of visitation iu tho homes of the poor.
Believing fully that reforms must begin with the young, she occupied for a time tho post of national superintendent, of the so called department of higher education in tho Woman's Christian Temperance union. Sho held also for some years the presidency of the Woman's National Indian association, fw six years the editorship of a magazine devoted especially to tho care, of invalids, and associate editorship with Edward Everett Halo to his Magazine of Philanthropy. From the day of it,.4 organisation siie has been the general j|xrreiary of tho o»ier of the King's Daughters awl the editor of its magazine,
Mitch litertvry work In various directions has filled the ftnv leisure hours of busy life.—Ilome Magazine.
A Parvut'a lntr to the i'oung. The body may be Luokwl at as a living machine, delicate and complicated in structure, made to run a hundred years or so. but liable by bad management to be disarranged and hrt,M*ght to untimely destruction. All continuous physical transgression, however innocent it may seem, Is followed by retribution. Such is the punishment which overtakes multitudes who overwork hci braiiis and underwork their muscles of not a few who waste vital energy with anxiety, fret and unstinted care, of many who overlook the great law of their physical being that makes daily recuperation depend on the interchange of work and rest. Even ministers of the Gospel not u»frequently allow well meant faithfulness to end in a faUtf mental strain. Ono of the signal facts connected with many forms of physical transgression is its tendency to weaken the vital stamina of the transgressor's offspring.
The least a child cam ask of tt-a progenitor is a f^ir chance of life. To squander the Tjkil inb^jtance of one's offspring is thlUi to squander its large ancestral estate. no more valuable tha^go^Ihcml itanceorlolSgcrTiyj afldif
9, urcrc ui iw
tt. Such ao inheritance gives coast Utt lional vigor, keeps its possessor safe amid almost every form of microbe dise^ws secures the ofcdcd iwupemtive energy in case of
Attack,
makes life vxmh living up
to the normal end, tender* old «s* green and sunny and keep# upinfcNettual activity to tho last.—Ir- F. Tumt lety.
Bow Shoakt ihmldif It Is a vexed question, this el ptwisUst cMldixm. OnUysoasband.ltseemsaeewkrdly for ft man to parish* Uttte
boy or a woman to fall upon a little girl* It is a mystery to the writer how any parent who loves ber child can ever raise her hand against it. On the other hand, the child which is not corrected soon becomes forward, peevish, tiresome—in short, •sSf4-,.,!
'J&gHS
What is to lie done? The old ironclad methods of punishment are fast passing away. There is a vast change in public sentiment since Solomon's day. The "rod is spared" these days by humane parents so are the dark closet and other horrors. But do the gentle reproofs, the chiding looks, the deprivation of treats accomplish the much to be desired result? Are children better behaved than of yore?
There may not be so much outward fear of their elders, there may be less awe and reverence, fewer outward and visible signs of an inward respect for authority, but surely there is less inward, corroding rebellion, While children may not love their parents any more, they are on better terms with them than formerly. The father who is chummy with his boy, who gets down to that eager, inquiring, restless little soul and explains, visits and encourages, does not need to cut a birch gad or buy a horsewhip in order to maintain discipline. And the mother who sympathizes, cuddles and plays with her children can keep her slippers
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her feet and her hairbrush on the
dressing table. The holding off of children is a fruitful source of disobedience. They need love, tenderness and sympathy as much as flowers need air and sunslt i.
2.
It is some
times necessarylo punish, but should not parents consider well the method thereof? —New York World.
Hemorrhages from the Nose. Many children are subject to the nosebleed, and in ordinary cases it should not be interfered with or checked, as it is usually nature's wise method for relieving the head from an excessive pressure of blood which might otherwise cause serious results. When, however, the hemorrhage is serious and lasts so long that it is weakening to the child, something Bhould certainly be done to check the flow. In the first place try the application of cold, either by using very cold water, ice or brass keys— ice being the most effective. If possible, k€ep the child's arms raised above his head for or ten minutes at a time. This alone will often cause the bleeding to cease. If not, place a piece of ice wrapped in a cloth at the nape of the neck, and another one directly at the top of the nosS between tEe eyes!
If the ice does not stop the bleeding, plug the nostril with styptic cotton. Every house should have a bottle of the last named article, as it will often arrest violent hemorrhages more quickly than anything else when proceeding from the head, and is also useful in dressing wounds when bleeding. If the styptic cotton is not at hand, tho old fashioned, remedy, cobwebs, may be used, but fine lint is still better. Many people use powdered alum, snuffed up the nose, which is good if tho child can snuff it up without the effort increasing the hemorrhage.
Extract of hamamelis (witch hazel) should be taken internally in dose of from one-half to a teaspoonful from fifteen minutes to one hour apart, according to the severity of the case, and it may be taken occasionally between the attacks-as a preventive or where there is great weakness of the membranes.—Good Housekeeping.
A Nice Way to Clean Paint. A good way. to clean paint, and one which preserves as well as cleanses it, is to put half a pound of glue into an old pot, pour about a quart of cold water over it and set it on tho stove, where it will dissolve slowly. A little of this glue water should be added to each pail or basinful of fresh water used. With a fine woolen cloth (old flannel shirting is capital) wash about a yard of tho paint at a time with this water and nothing else, then wring the cloth out of the water as hard as possible and dry the paint with it. Of course it ^ill not bo quite dry, but that does not matter so long as no drops of the dirty wator are left. Do not go over too much at a time. Any particularly dirty bit of molding may bo safely scrubbed with an old nailbrush without detriment to the paint if this water only is used. This glue water also cleans waxcloth and the varnished walls of passages nicely, the glue acting as a kind of soap and removing all dirt, immediately.—Chicago Tribune.
A Life on the Occan Wave. Tweuty years ago a Liverpool steam packet company wanted to extend its premises, and resolved to buy a piece of land belongiivg to a maiden lady of uncertain age. The spinster sold her land at a very low price, and as a setoff requested that a clause should be put in the agreement to the effect that during her whole life she and a companion should at any time travel free in the company's vessels.
On the day after the agreement was signed she sold her furniture, let her house and went on board the first outward bound vessel belonging to the company, without troubling herself about the destination. Sine# then the lady has always lived on one ship or another, accompanied by some lady traveler, fof whom she advertises, She is reckoned to havo made over Jfc&OOO by the transaction and the company has offered her, it is said, upward of thi3 sum for her privilege, but cannot get quit of her at any price.—London Tit-Bits.
A Woman's Sennitive Flngcm. Miss Calhoun, one of the most expert money handlers in the treasury department at Washington, has the remarkable record of counting 85,000 coins in a single day, each coin passing through her hands, awl go delicate has her sense of touch become that should there be a counterfeitooin in the lot she would detect it even when counting at this tremendous rate. She spreads* the coins upon a large glass top desk and draws them off with the tips of her fingers, one, two, three or four at a time, as she pleases, for her four fingers are all equally educated to the work. Iier eyes have nothing to do with the detection of false coins! Her fingers do It all. They have become so very familiar with the exact weight of a true ooin, the feeling of it and the amount of its resistance upon the glass desk thai a piece of spurious gold, silver, nickel or copper money attracts her attention Instantly.—New York Advertiser.
Vomen Dc*tctHn
thews aw over 500 women, including «11 the states* notf engaged in practical, technical designing. These designs am supplied to foreign a* as to domestic manufacturers. The center of interest in this work is the XeW York school of industrial art and technical design for women. One can form some wlight idea of the extent and variety of stoeh designs when one considers that they aw used, for all kinds of carpets, tapestry, ingrain, bra«M&t, velvet and oilcloths, for tabic linen, 'wall paper, frieces «ad eulned gla» screen*. towawm, decorating viodov
ffrnslfftj book covers and vases. Designs are often furnished for sets, including wall paper, border and ceiling to match. Then they are needed for textiles—calicoes, print®, silks, embroidery and laces.—Brooklyn Eagle. Or
An English Way of Cooking Chops. To broil mutton chops after the English fashion: Salt and pepper one side and, putting the chops between the bars of a folding gridiron, put that side first over a very clear, hot fire. Allow them to remain two minutes, till colored pepper and salt the other side and reverse the gridiron broil two minutes and turn again repeat this process without the salt and pepper eight times, shortening the time to 1 minutes after the first round. When the chops are soft to the touch open the gridiron and take -them out with the fingers, never touching a fork to them till they are on the table. Serve on a hot platter with melted butter.—Her Point of. View in New York Times.
Girl Friendships.
After a girl is twenty she is apt to make friends of married women, women other than those she has known in early girlhood, and who have since married. On these married friends she often lavishes affection and admiration in larger quantities than she has before given her girl friends. Such friendships are—if their objects are the right kind of women, and a careful mother will prevent an intimacy with any other kind—of great benefit to a girl, showing, her a wider sphere of woman's influence than she has yet investigated. And anything which widens the appreciation and opens the intellect is valuable.— Mrs. John Wanamaker in BfeHtgp Journal.
,:To Prevent Sweating.-
A correspondent writes: "My daughter has been troubled with perspiration under the arms since she was a child and itruins her dresses. What) is to be done?" »f 5
Wash under-the arms nlglit &nd morning with a strong, hot solution of common salt, one teaspoonful in twenty-fivtf of water. This is said to keep all parts of the body which secrete freely in the sweetest and healthiest condition. Cold sage tea drank at night on going to bed prevents night sweats and may be of use in this case. Where one set of, glands do overwork, as in excessive sweating, it is plain that others do^'t do enough.—Shirley Dare in Boston Globe.
A Woman Who Went NortiiMme. Prontschickeff accompanied tne Russian expedition which was dispatched in 1785 under the command of her husband. It sailed from fhe mouth of the Lena, the most eastern river of Siberia, to the mouth of Olonetz, where they wintered. On Sept. 1, 1736, it got as far as 77 degs. 29 mia. north, within five miles of Cape Chelynskin, the most northerly extremity of Siberia, named after a Russian navigator who discovered it in 1743. It is also called the Northeast cape. Having reached this point, Lieutenant Prontschickeff and his young wife both died and tho vessel returned.— Exchang e.
Women In Italy.
Unlike most European countries, Italy has in its population a slightly larger number of men than women but notwithstanding that, a very large proportion of women of the working classes is found in outdoor employments,, and travelers say that woman takes upon her far more than her fair share of the country's labor. Of the 11,000,000 women in Italy nearly 2,000,000 are employed in industrial labor, and over 8,000,000 in agriculture. They are in tho majority in the cotton, linen and jute industries, and in tho silk trade there are 117,000 women employed, and but 17,700 men.
The Use of Oxgall for Carpets. An old fashioned but capital way of cleaning carpets is to use oxgall in the proportion of about one part of gall to three parts of water, rubbing the carpet over with a cloth dipped in this, taking care not to wet tho carpet more than is necessary. This will both remove the stains and revive the colors. But as tho smell of the gall is atrocious and not to be got rid of for twenty-four hours at least, even with windows wide open, the process should be carried on in an pttic, or outside on a plot of grass, where no inconveniences need arise from the odor.—Exchange.
Women Lawyers in America. There are now twenty-one law firms In the United States composed of husbands and wives, and there are about 200 American ladies who practice law in the courts or manage legal publications. Miss Phcebe Couzinswas the first woman admitted to the Washington university at St. Louis, and sho has now practiced with her father for twenty-one years. Several women make large incomes by the law.
Over 6,000 Postmistress©#.
It is estimated that over 6,000 women in the United States act as postmistresses. The largest number fo» any one state, 463, ore in Pennsylvania and 460 in Virginia. North Carolina stands third with 322. Only five other states havo over 200 each— 356 in Ohio, 343 in New York, 216 In Georgia, 210 in Texas and 200 in Kentucky. ^Alaska has only one, and Rhode Island and Oklahoma have ten each.
There Is for Canadian women a property qualification for voting whereby single women and widows vote on municipal matters. On all matters requiring outlays of money or of special importance to the town the property qualification is 9800. The Australian system of voting prevails, and women very generally take advantage of their privileges. 4*
1
&
The manageress of two leading^ life insurance companies in California is said to receive $10,000 a year—possibly the largest official salary paid to a woman on record. She has over a hundred women under her control and regulates the insurance concerns over a large area.
1
With all that is said about older persons being pushed aside by the rising generation there has never been a period when middle aged women have held more important positions in social and in a certain sense in public iy£ £jiag y*ey now occupy.
Police matrons are now employed in New York* Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, New Orleans and other large cities. The ap» polntment of the matrons has generally been secured by the efforts of women, and in spite of the opposition o! the police.
Before putting garments away Jet theru be mended afcd thoroughly cleaned—sent to the cleaner. If need be. Dirt invites moths, and besides, what a satisfaction there is in taking out clothes that are all ready to pa* on!
Equal parts ot linseed oil and liSla water mixed anlpouKgl over the burn. A cotton qr linen cloth wrung out of the mixture utd laid ppou the woond.
A
ACCOMPLISHMENTS.
ISIjM
DO WOMEN OF THE CITIES LACK IMPORTANT ESSENTIALS?
One Thins
18
Granted, Namely, That
Young Women of the Metropolis Do Kot Entertain Their Friends with Music of Their Own—An Experiment. S
Some time ago a western man made tne singular remark to aNew York acquaintance that the women of Gotham, though they were very charming, had no accomplishments. He complained that they hail mastered none of these attractive branches of a decorative education, such as music, painting or ornamental needlework. They could talk more wittily than any other women in the country, dressed better, were more accomplished hostesses, seemed to have read an enormous amount,, but there was not one of them who could sit down and play a sonata on the piano or sing a ballad sweetly or paint a bunch of roses on a papier mache plaque. They possessed noneof the "accomplishments" which were thought of such high value in our mothers' and grandmothers' day.
Putting painting out of the way—for, unless it is practiced seriously as an art, it is of no moment—the westerner's criticism on music is unfortunately true. There is no music in the drawing rooms o^ rich or poor New York, unless the music of the greatest professionals that is paid for at $3,000 the song. A piano might as well be left out in the furnishings of the parlor jf today, for no one touches it. The pianos of Fifth avenue are mute, unless charmed into melody by Paderewski or DePachmann, when a well bred audience forcibly keeps silence, and girds at being so restricted.
But the more graceful and charming art of singing—an art so peculiarly a woman's —is also fallen into desuetude. The fogs and the frosts of a New York winter may have ruined the voices of the New York girls but whatever is the cause, voices they have none. Nobody sings here except a few obliging young Englishmen and here and there a girl who is looked upon as across between a wonder and a bore. Their talents all run in other directions. They can talk on all subjects as well as college professors they can read in several languages they can ride like their brothers, and discuss religion like Mrs. Humphry Ward. But to sit down at the piano and sing "Jock o' Hazledean" is as far beyond them as it would be to square a circle.
The western man said this was not the case with the charmers in his section of tho country, and to prove the truth of his assertion took two New York friends t-o call on a girl from the far west who. with her mother and sister, was spending the winter in one of the fashionable up town hotels. The young lady was found to be an agreeable if somewhat phlegmatic person, very gorgeously dressed, quite pretty, not bright, but fairly talkative and leaving upon the mind of the beholder the impression that she was a female of the most undoubted respectability and corresponding dullness. There was nothing about her which suggested that she possessed the musical temperament—tho most impractical, romantic, dreamy and exalted of all forms of the artistic temperament.
When she produced a guitar and proceeded to touch its strings in the first preliminary warning tones, the effect was most incongruous. She looked so unlike the sort of girl whom one would expect to charm harmonies from that most picturesque instrument. A second look at her, however, revealed the fact that her hand, picking at the strings, was the artistic hand, with long, supple fingers, inclined to taper, and round, flexible wrist—the only hand which combines an appearance of refinement with a look of strength.
Then came the triumph of the westerner. She not only played well, but she played with the skill and the feeling of a successful professional. Then she sang. Her voice was not particularly good, but she knew how to make the most of it, and she had had good musical training and better musical insight. Then she played on the piano—finely this time, and never like an amateur showing off. When she finished with this sho realized that her talents were being exhibited for some purpose—the New Yorkers had always suspected that the westerner had told her beforehand—and after a few moments' talk and laughter produced a mandolin from an embroidered silk case and snapped away at that with a little shell instrument, warbling plaintive Spanish ditties of the sweetest and most tender kind.
By this time tho guests would not have been surprised to see her draw back a curtain and reveal a pipe organ upon which she would dash off a Bach fugue. She did tell them that she bad tried the bandurria and found it inferior to the mandolin, and so had given it up. An Italian friend of hers had given her a few lessons on the harp, but the instrument was too cumbersome to be convenient, and, besides, it spoiled the ends of her fingers. Since she has been in New York a German teacher, with whom she had been making a study of Wagner, had wanted her to take lessons on the zither, but she had thought It a mistake to study too many instruments it would only result in not reaching proficiency in any. She intended to devote herself seriously to the piano the guitar and mandolin were merely pastimes that she took up as a momentary fancy.
The New Yorkers went away greatly awed. They did not think they had ever before meta girl like that, unless she was one of those women who were going to support themselves by singing or playing. Still, with the peculiarity of the real Gothamite, they would not admit the charm of anything outside the four walls of their dear city. They confessed that it was very agreeable to listen to the mosic, but after all "a women like that was just like a professional musician. You might just as well marry the girl who cosnes every Monday and Friday to teach Barney O'Flynn's daughter's to play the scales." —Xew York Cor. San Francisco Argonaut. _F! .• -mi La«e Cloaks for Summer. KfiJs
A lovely summer cloak to wear over a sllk
dress is made entirely of black lace with large bishop sleeves and a ruflle of lace at the neck. It falls in loose and graceful folds back and front, and having ik lining, shows the shade of the dress bePfntK Yon can imagine bow a blond teauty would look in such & garment, fliyrtt lovely lace cloak has a jet zouave and trailing ends of jet passementerie arranged at the back in the same way as the ribbons that are now so fashionable. The peeves are enoarmoos and made at black taocade. Both cloaks reach to the feet.
New Orleans has two woman photograpbets Baking a handsome living as proprietors. Many girls earn oomfortable salaries retnaebing and coloring photographs.
Kitchen Cdors and Woolen Dresses. It took me a long time to learn that woolen dresses were entirely unfit for domestic work, and although I rarely do much cooking or work about the kitcheu, I always wear cotton dressed in the early part of the day. I got my lesson on that one day when I first went to housekeeping. I had a pretty nuns' veiling in brown, with velvet trimmings, and I was very fond of wearing it. Is was past its best use, and I thought it would make an admirable house dress, so I put it on, and one day the servants left and I had to put the house in order and get luncheon. When my many duties were done I had an errand a little way over town, and thought I wouldn't take the trouble to change my dress. So I put on my ulster and cap and started out. I got into a warm street car and sat down near the stove, as I felt somewhat chilly. Five minutes later two ladies came into the car and sat down near me.
I paid very little attention to their conversation until one said to the other in an undertone, "Dear me, sombody has been frying crullers, for I can smell them." And her companion gave her a little push and whispered: "Hush! She'll hear you 1" It hadn't occurred to me before, but I now noticed that I carried on that wool dress the odor of. the kitchen and the identical smell of crullers of which my neighbor had spoken. I have frequently observed since that I could tell almost infallibly what many people had cooked for breakfast by the odors which clung to their garments as they came into the street car with a woolen dress on, and could readily tell if it had been worg during the performance of any ctflifiary duty.
Indeed, we had quite a bit of a joke about it, and several of us used to amuse ourselves, when we went out in the morning, with trying to decide what our neighbors had breakfasted upon, and- it isn't at all difficult to discover. Just take a little pains, cultivate the sense of smell, and it is easy to get a comfortably correct idea of the bills of fare of persons with whom you come in contact.—Interview in New York Press.
J,,v
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After the Grip Hood's Sarsaparilla will restore your strength and health, and expel every trace of poison from the blood.
Dangers of Eye Brightness. Methods for beautifying the eyes have long been in vogue among women of fashion, and not a few resort to those which ultimately injure the organs and the general health. Atropine is a most common drug for making the eyes look large and lustrous, but the continuous use of it so weakens and paralyr.es the muscl.es that weak eyes come on early in life. An eminent oculist claims that the widespread disease of weak eyes among women is largely due to the tampering with these organs for making them more beautiful than nature intended.
The extremes to which some will go in the matter is illustrated by an English woman, who was arrested in the streets of London for drunkenness. It was found later that she was simply suffering from the toxic effects of atropine, which she had instilled into the eyes to dilate the pupils for a more brilliant appearance. She was determined to be beautiful, and to accomplish the purpose she ran the risk of injuring her eyes for a lifetime.—Chicago Journal.«
Just as sure as hoi weather comes, there will be more or less bowel complaint in this vicinity. Every person, and especially families, ought to have some reliable medicine at hand for instant use, in case it is needed. A 25 or 40 cent bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera, and Diarrhoea Remedy is just what you ought to have and all that you would need, even for the most severe and dangerous cases. It is tho best, the most reliablo and most successful treatment known and Is pleasant to take. For sale by druggists. June.
Soale & Grime*, Attorney*,! 308% Main street, TTACHMENT NOTICE.
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No. 2,807. Before A. B. Felaenthal, J. P., Harrison township, Vieo county. Indiana. Emille Stange vs. William Hantz. In attachment pnd garnishee.
Wherea* It appears by the nflidavit of the plaintiff Stange that the said defendant is non-resident of the stato of Indiana, and whereas also it appears from the return of the constable to tne summons herein issued, that the said defendant was not found in his bailiwick, it Is therefore ordered, that duo notice of the pendency of this action be given to the said defendant by publication in a newspaper of general circulation published in said county.
Said non-resident defendant Is therefore hereby notified of thepondoncy of said action against him and that the same will stand for trial on the 5th day of July, 1802. at 2 o'clock p. m., at my office, 26 south Third street, Terre Haute, iDdiann.
Witness my h&ud and Real this 12th aay or May, 1892^ FELSENTHAL, J. P, fSBAL.)
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5?
CATARRH
Is a most loathsome, dangerous, and prevalent malady. It is a blood disease, usually of Scrofulous origin, and for which local treatment is useless. Before health is possible, the poison lVuist be eradicated from, the system, and to do tills
SUCCESSFULLY
the disease must bo treated through the blood. For this purpose no remedy is so effective as Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
For the past eight years, I have been, severely afflicted with Catarrh, noue of thomany remedies 1 tried affording me any relief. My digestion was considerably impaired, and my sleep disturbed by phlegm dropping into my throat. In September last I resolved to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla, began to use it at once, and am glad totestify to a great improvement in my health.'* —Frank Teson, Jr., engineer, 271 "SVcst Fourth street, New York City. "My daughter, 16 years old, was afflicted with Catarrh from her fifth year. Last August she was ......
TREATED WITH
Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and after three months of this treatment she was completely cured. It was a most extraoi^inary case, as any druggist here can testify." Mrs. D. W. Barnes, Valparaiso, Neb.
Ayer's
Sarsaparilla
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer&Co., Lowell,Mass. Sold by all Druggists, l'rico six bottles, $5.
Cures others, will cure you
Xt Onrea Coughs, Colds, Sore Throit, Oronpt-Whoop-tog Cough, Bronchitis ud
A«lhm&.
A ocrialn oure foi
Consumption in first ougti, *wi» «»n relief In ftdvanoed •tages. vro at once. You will a«o the eroellent effoot after taking tho first dote. Sold by dc*Jer« evarywhu* Large Bottles SO cent* aoA 61.00. it Cures lofluouia.
A pamphlet of Information andab-/ stract of the laws, showing How to/' Obtain Patents, Caveats, Trado/ .MarIts, Copyrights, sent tret./ jUd»« MUNN Jt CO., sjlOl Broadway,
New York.,
ur Mlaaed hli OpiiortnnKy J)OVT Mln Ht Tour*, Itcntlcr. Tuo majority no^loct tlielr onportanltles. nml from tlmt crtnuollvo In povurtjr rinu ulo la obscurity I llnri owlng despair it tho lot or moiiy ttioy look back on lost, forever lost, opportnnlty. T.trela puaa. Inst Reach out. Be op and dolna. Improre your opportunity, and secure prospovltr, promfnoiico, peace. It was sold by a philosopher, that "the Goddess of ortnna odors a golden opportunity to each porson at some period or llfei embrnco the chance, and she potir* out her riches full to do ao and she departs, nevtr to return." How slmll you flna the ooldkx opportunity? Investigate cvory chanco that appenrs worthy, and of fair promise that Is what all sua* consfal men do. 11 ore Is an opportunity, such as Is not- often within the roach ol laboring pontile. Improved, It will give, at least, a uratid start in life. The cof.lK« opportunity tor many Is here. Money to be made rapidly and honorably by any industrlons person of cither sex. All ages. \oo can do tho work and live at homo, wherever von are. Even baginnorsareenMly earning from SS toSlOper'day. Yon can do as well If yno will work, not too nnrd, but Indostii ously and yon can Increase your Income ns you go on. Yon can give spare time only, or ail yur time to the work. Kasy to learn. Capitol not required. We start you. Allls comparatively new and really wonderful. Instruct ano •bow von how. fr«e. Kaftnre unknown among our workera No room to explain here. Write and learn all fr«e, by return mail. Unwise to delay. Address at once. Uallett Co., Uox 8(tO. Portland, Maine,
WHERE DOLLARS ARE MADE
Thp line of th^QUEEN A CRESCENT ROUTB igh KKNTOCKY, TENNE88KE, ALABAM A, MISSISSIPPI, aod 1X)UIKIANA
throug
OFFERS GREATER OPPOMTXTTIKS TO
SETTLERS, MANUFACTURERS &GENERAL BUSINESS ENTERPRISE
than aay other part of the U. 8., vast bodies of
Coal, Iron, Timber & Farm Lands
A too THOUSANDS of ACRES of LOXiV JLEAK YELLOW PINE for sale cheap, This road runs through the thriving towns of Lexington, Danville, and Somerset, Ky. Rock wrood,Hairlman, and CbalonoogH, Tenn Ft. Payne, Altai la. Birmingham, and Tuscaloosa, Ala.: Meridian, Hatueobarg, Jaekgon and Vlcksborg, MJm. Nevr Orleans, Delhi, Monroe, and Hhreveport, La. Borne of the new towns will donate money and land to locate manufacturing enterprise*.
The R. R. Co. will make low rate* for Passengers aod Freight, and afford Investors erenr opportunity to examine the different locaUUe«. If aeoaisary, will send a representative with the party.
Fall particular*, and any required 1 nformaUon, will be sent fay mall on application to,
Bo.otDWAm5o.£«.AJ&
ilfi
mm
1MNATX,0.
