Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 25, Number 44, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 April 1895 — Page 7
vxi.
\J
fc fWOMAN'S WORLD.
yjfe'-f .* MRS. JAMES SADLIER, WHO HAS 8ECURED THE LACTARE MEDAL.
The Chicago Audubon Society—The Girls of ?oday—She Makes It Pay— D*. Farkhurst's Views on Woman Women's "j Wages—A Great Suffrage Victory.
OriLactare Sunday, the mid-Sunday -of Eebt, Most Rev. Archbishop Fabre of Montreal, on behalf of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana, presented to Mrs' Jamea Sadlier of his congregation thje Lactare medal, awarded annually by the university to Woe American Catholic layman in recognition of distinguished services to the church or the -V
MBS. JAMES SADLIER.
country. The medal is in a manner the American counterpart of the Golden Rose, which the pope sends every Easter to one of the Catholic sovereigns of EuTope.
For many years Mrs. Sadlier has been writing books, each of which points a moral. At the time she commenced writing the majority of Catholioa in this country were Irish, and all of her books treat of Irish life. She has written and translated something like 60 works, and all of them have found wide sale. Mrs. Sadlier's maiden name was Madden, and she came from Ireland. She is 75 years of age.
The Chicago Audubon Society.
,* The up to date woman may have political bees in her Sunday bonnet if she likes, but the Chicago Audubon society insists she shall not indulge in dead birds. This fashionable adornment is emphatically declared to be thonKhtless cruelty. In a word, the object of this comparatively new and unique organisation of men,and women is the protection of birds. To this end a monthly meeting is held at the Athenasum.
So extensive has become the killing of birds for feminine'fashion that the subject is attracting widespread attention among ornithologists. The Chicago Audubon society, however, claims to be the only organization formed for the condemnation of the use of birds for millinery purposes. »,«_ .'a
At the regular meeting held yesterday afternoon the Rev. George Pratt read a paper on "Amateur Ornithology, followed by musical nnmbers. The audienoe was made up mostly of women who practice what they preach by not wearing birds in their bonnets, though they indulge in ostrich plumes on the plea that this does not necessitate the killing of the bird. "There are 8,000,000 birds slaughtered annually in the name of fashion," said Mrs. E. Irene Rood, president of the society. "As an organization we propose to be instrumental in the protection of birds and in time introduce suoh bills in tho legislature. At present we are much interested in the bill now pending which relates to tho game laws of Illinois. "The Chicago Audubon society is, I believe, the only organization of the kind in the United States,"she continued. "There was one in New York, but it has disbanded."
The society numbers 44 members and was organized several months ago.— Chicago Times-Herald.
Tho Girls of Today.
That the American girl is makifig rapid strides in tho direction of a higher degree of physical perfection is shown by the work going on in the gymnasiums of schools and colleges devoted to her education and in the outside clubs organized for athletic purposes. Every form of athletio culture is now enthusiastically practiced by young women. They are riding with the hounds, they are on the tennis oourts, they are fencing and bowling, they are riding horseback and bicycles, they are rowing boats and sailing yachts, wad they are tho admiriDg patrons of dog kennels and horse shows. They have not invaded the prise ring because they are not brutes. Very few of them have organized with ball clubs or football teams, for there is a point where womanly dignity most stop, though one of the leading agitators for female physical culture fo England is a zealous advocate of football as a ladylike accomplishment
In all this there is great hope for the new woman. The girls of today are likely to become the new women of the new century. If they expect to hold their own on terms of anything like equality with men a high degree of physical health and strength will be one of tbelr chief requisites. But whether they do or not physical oulture will not be a drawback. Clear heads, sound lnngs, strong limbs and forms after the Venns do Milo order will add to their attractiveness as well as to thoir happiness. As it is probable populating the earth never will go out of fashion, it will bo a gain all round if the coming generations are not handicapped in the race by the physical misfortune of heredity. —-Chicago Tribune.
She
Makes It Pay.
A young woman in San Francisoo, or rather California, for the itate is her
4
field of operations, iB making a good liviue and i« having a groat deal of fun as a traveling photographer. She embarked iu the life because she was tired of the city, and she had so little knowledge pertaining to her occupation that when she attempted her first picture—that of two young'nion who wished to preserve themselves to posterity on a load of hay —she didn't know enough about her camera to get the plate exposed, bat she goon conquered all these trifles and has made a reputation for good pfotures, which insures her a cordial welcome whenever aho returns to afield previ«pfi3ly visited. She travels in a buggy, starting out in the early sprirg, and returning when she feels like it,
She is fearless and needs her dool oourage oooasionaliy when she strikes a lonely stretoh of country. An all day's travel sometimes brings her to a place where she can g«t neither bed nor board. 1 Then, as night approaches, she puts on a man's hat, kept for suoh ocoasions buttons up a long black alpaoa ulster to increase the masouiine appearanoe, sees that her revolver is in good working ordei^aud rides on. The sum of $2,500 in the hank, with the memory of many pleasant adventures, is the result of three years of this nomadic pioture.taking.,—Sao Francisco Letter.
1
Dr. Parkhorst'i Views on Woman.
The greatest thing a woman can do is to do the thing that she was specifically endowed and ordained to do, and that is to bear children and train them for the uses and service of the world they are born into, and only suoh women as are morally or intellectually incompetent to appreciate the full denotement of this, ®r who have greater ambition for aggressiveness or conspiouity than they have for fulfilling their mission, will be inclined to resent this statement of the oase as an indignity, writes the Rev. Charles H. Parkhurst, D. D., in Ladies' Home Journal.
I have yet to be convinced that any very considerable number of these are disposed to resist nature's intentions for them, but tho actuating impulse of those who do is doubtless a passion f~r some sort of celebrity and an impatience at the seclusion and the restraints which femininity, so construed, imposes upon them. They are not content to be known only in their children, and that is one great reason why their children are so little known. If Jochebed had had her head full of theories about an enlarged sphere for women and_had gone about Egypt stumping for feinSle enfranchisement, the little heroof the bulrushes would probably have shared the fate of the other male children of the period and the lawgiver of Israel never have been heard of. ______ ffcvsi
Women's Wages.
From an article on the prevailing poetry in New York, whioh appeared in The Century Magazine, read carefully this paragraph *'Can you appreciate the unspeakable danger, moral as well as physical, involved in the fact that among the 150,000 Women in our city who earn their living and often the living of children and men, too, the average wage, not" the lowest, but the average, where some are paid pretty well, is only 60 cents a day? Have you tried to understand the tenor of lives like those of seamstresses, who get from 20 to 85 cents a dozen for making flannel shirts and $1.50 a dozen for making calico wrappers? Or to fancy how it must feel to labor for suoh pittances in cold and semidarkness from 4 in the morning until 11 at night? Or to estimate their purchasing power, when coal must be bought by the buoket at the rate of $20 a ton, and rent in the vilest purlieus must be paid at a higher ratio upon the invested capital than is asked on Fifth avenue? If you and every other man and woman could be brought to realize these things and to ponder them a little, would they not cease to be? Surely it must be our ignorance, not our hard heartedness, which permits them now."
'W,
The ••Piccadilly." is
This is a delightfully becoming hat, known as the "Piccadilly." It will suit almost any face and can be worn on almost any occasion. It is made in a very fino cream straw, lined with black straw
A
'AM iH
isi
and smartly trimmed with a wide band and big bow of black satin ribbon, surmounted by a full black paradise osprey and intermixed with bunches of buttercups, some black and some goldon yellow.
Great Soifing* Victory.
Full woman suffrage in south Australia is an accomplished fact. The telegraph announces that Queen Victoria has signed the bill, and it has become a law. More than 1,000,000 square miles of territory with a fertile soil and temperate climate, a country destined to support a population of hundreds of millions at no distant day, is dedicated forever to equal rights for women. This is the greatest single victory the cause has aver gained.
Women are made voters in a region larger than the combined areas of New York, Massachusetts, Maine, Conneaticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode
land, Delawate, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina,
Another interesting faot ft that this victory is the result of experience with partial \?Qman suffrage, which has existed in south Australia for many yeari —Boston Woman's Journal,-*. 'I
W S at is
Miss Jane I* JBrownell, the, Bryn Mawr fellow in political economy for 1808-4, made an original i, '-stipnticro into the growth and limitations of populations in the Unitqd States and look her master's degree with a thesis op «'The Significance of a ©ecreasj&g Birth Rate." li was published in the annals bf the American Academy of Political and Social Saience and has received wide recognition from political economists in this country and in Europe. Mr. Herbert Spencer has added a page to the fifth edition of the "Principles of Biology" to welcome Miss Brownell's statistics as confirmatory of some views whioh he put forth many years ago regarding the laws of multiplication.
Mrs. Morton's Sohemei
Mrs. Governor Morton and 18 other women well known in New York in various branches of philanthropic work have undertaken to establish a co-opera-tive employment bureau for the supply of its patrons with all sorts of help. Among the ladieB associated wifchMrs. Morton in the soheme aro Mrs. Morgan Dix, Mrs. Arthur M. Dodge, Mrs. W. Seward Webb, Mrs. Matthew^ Morgan and Mrs. John W. Minturn,, fix.
New South Wales is about to join South Australia and New Zealand for woman suffrage. Premier Raid has pledged tho government to establish it, though for the present it will not be possible to introduoe the bill.
The Maine legislature has played the old familiar triok on the woman suffragists^The house of representatives passed the bill giving the. ballot to women, and the senate promptly defeated it.—Providenoe Journal.
Mrs. Russell Sage is one of the managers of the New York Exchange For Woman's WorEJJNearly 2,000 women send work overy ear to the exchange, and last yea? $45,000 was distributed amor^ its consignors.
Countess Rantzau was one of the 28 guests at the luncheon given by BisI marck on March 25. ^The presence tjra woman at a political gathering is a novelty in Germany. But the world moves.
Bouillon spoons are the latest fad. In size the they are. between a tea and an after dinner coffee and have round bowla
Women of Cleveland have formed a party, the objeot of which is to keep the sohools out of politics.
There are altogether over 118,000,000 women in India.
How to Bead
your doctor's prescriptions. Serd three 2 cent stamps, to pay postage: and receive Dr. Kaufman's great treatise on diseases illustrated In oolors it gives their signs and abbreviations. Address A. P. Ord* way & Co., Boston, Mass.
Women In Maine.
The suffragists of Maine may be congratulated upon the substantial gains they have made in the laws. Although the municipal suffrage bill whioh passed the hpnse was defeated by four votes in theAnate, the legislature of 1895 will be remembered as the legislature which passed the law giving to mothers equal authority with fathers in the custody of their minor children and the care of their property, aud, further, as the legislature which gave to widows nn absolute right of dower in the property of the husband, similar provision being made for the widowers. It has also been decreed that whfire husband and wife live apart the courts may require the husband to make an allowance to his wife without a divorce being granted. The bill changing the law as to dower was drawn by Judge Savnge of Auburn and is said by lawyers to be a particularly creditable piece of legislation in the care and skill shown in its framing. —Augusta Letter.
Spring is full of terrors to atr whom constitution is not able to resist the aud den ohanges of temperature and other insalubrities of the season. To put the system In condition to overcome these evils, nothing is so effective as Ayer's Harssparilla.
She Protests.
Mrs. Mary Smith Hayward of Chadron, treasurer of the Nebraska W. 8. A. and one of the leading merchants west of Omaha, made a spirited protest this year against paying her taxes. 2t was addressed to the county. treasurer and set forth that she was a person and entitled to protection in her ngnt% wising her claim on sections 1 of articles 14 and 15 of the constitution of the United States and on the bill of rights of the constitution of Nebraska
"Half a span of aogry steel" will produce no more fatal result* than a neglected cold or cough. For alt throat and lung diseases, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is the beet remedy. It t* Invaluable In cases of croup, whooping cough, bronchi tis, and la grippe.
cBRiaiiAii seisms
Is
TERKE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, APRIL 27,1895.
Georgia,
Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, Kentucky, Tennessee, West Virginia and the Indian Territory.
This act commits to full woman suffrage the government of a territory much larger than tho United States from the Atlantic coast to the Mississippi river, and' from the Canada froiwler to the Florida keys, ,|
mestizo
The original Christian Science society of Terre Haute, hold meeting* every Sunday at 8 p. m. in hall ov«r the old Prairie City bank* Entrance by Commercial stairway. All am welcome.
Xtose Colored buow.
Bold James in amazement, "I thought you told ma That roso colored snow
Ou the ground 1 could Beat"
"So 1 did," answered Arthur In tones of delight. "But did you not know
That some roses are white?
A Dress Bint.
Hero is one of the many ideas for adjustable bodice adornments Make a yoke of five bias double folds .of .satln lapped a little over each other so jhey will look about an inch wide, trim it round the edgo with lace four or five inches wide, gathered full, and finish it with a folded satin collar or one of lace, with full roeettes at the side, and ycu'can have a tbea-4 t$r and morning gown all in one. The satin may be of any oolor you choose. It hooks in the back, and one or_two pins will hold it in place.—Chicago
No Troablo to Show
It is still a little eaqjpfor presidential booms, but it is no trouble to
goods.-—Washington Star.
Tbe Knife Not Needed,
A MASSACHUSETTS TOWN HEARS AND WONDERS.
What a Miracle was There I Twisted Limbs and a Croolced BTeclc Straightened.
the Taunton, Matt., Gazette.)
Over in the town of Wrentham, Mass.. everyone is agog with excitement. A child who had been physically deformed for four years, and who was the object of the pity of the entire town, has had her limbs straightened out, her head again made erect by the straightening of her neck, and is running about town now with the freedom and abandon of any child.
Mary S. Fuller is the name of the little c'ripple. Many of our readers will remember her. She'is but a child of eight years, and has spent the past four years in bed, hopelessly crippled. Rheumatic fever four vears ago attacked the nerves and cords of her lower limbs and neck, so that the .former were drawn all out of shape and twisted and ff-fceut backwards in a pitiable manner and the cords of the latter were so tightened on one side as to dray her head down on her shoulder. Her arms, too, were helpless, and neighbor's hearts bled at the little one's suffering. The progress of the disease reduced her to a skeleton, and the poor mother has almost given her own life for that of the child, in her untiring watching at the little one's bedside. Four years of watching] four years of waiting! and at last the child hegan to mend, her cords relaxed, her nervous system gathered strength and power, and to-day, as stated above, she is running about the town a vigorous and happy child. Wrentham rejoices, physicians applaud, and new methods in nerve treatments nave been successfully vindicated. Formerly the surgeon would have been'called on in this case to straighten the limbs. Now the idea is to work in harmony with nature so far as possible, and to this end remedies are employed which assist nature, supplying to the weakened parts the chemical properties they need. For instance, in the above case, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People were used, aud effected the oure easily and naturally.
The mother of the child said: "She had been given up by four doctors, who were certain that they could not cure ner. Why, she oouldn't open her mouth, and I actually had to force the food into it. Her mouth was all sores, and, oh dear, what a looking child she was, and such a care I Jfobody hut myself knows what a trial we bom haveheen through for she was too young to realize it. my statement will do anyhodv any good I shall be glad to have it published, and if those who read it will only come to me if they are skeptical, I can convince them in very little time that I "know what I am talking abontl People around here say it was a miracle, and believe it was."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain all ths elements necessary to give new life and rich* ness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are for sale by all druggists, or may be bad by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., for 60c. per bos or six boxes for
A LADY'S TOILET
Is not complete' without an ideal
POZZONTS
Combines every element of beauty and purity. It is beautifying, soothing, healing, healthful, and harmless, and when rightly used is invisible. A most delicate and desirable protection to the face in this climate.
wvwvr
Iniljt npon having tHe gnraisa.
IT
IS
FOR SALE EVERYWHERE.
BI-CHLORIDE OF GOLD CURE For Liquor, Optr* and Toumxm Habit* t! 106 south TVoth Mtid-a-half fttivet* A. h. Brown,Kolirttnr.ami '*r. J. T. LAP(iHRAl,
SULPHUR BITTERS
Will, cure
The worst cases Of Skin Disease Front a Common Pimple On the Face
5
chow
••A
To that awful Disease Scrofula.* Try a bottle To-day. I
Send 3 2-cent stamps to A. P. Oi£way & C3o. Mass., for best medical work published
FITS CURED
{From U. & Journal of Medicine.)
Prof. W.H.Peeke,whomakesa specialty of Epilepsy, has without doubt treated aud cured more cases than any living Physician his success is astonishing. We have heardof esses of 20 yesrs'standing cured by him. He publishes a valuable work on this disease which he sends with a large bottle of his absolutecure, free to any sufferer who may send their P.O. and Express address. We advise anyone wishing a care to address, Prof. W. H. PEEKE, F. D.,4 Cedar St, New York.
We want a few
»DIAS
We cannot make.you.rich in a month but can give you Steady Employment and will pay you well for it. Our prices correspond with the times. Write for terms and territory.
THE HAWKS NURSERY CO., Milwaukee, Wis.
^ELSENTHAL, A. B. Justice of the Peace and Attorney at Law, 26 south 3rd street. Terre Haute, ind.
Railroad Time Tables,
Trains marked thus (P) have Parlor Can Trains marked thus (SVJhave Bleeping Oars. Trains marked thus (B) 'have Buffet Car. Trains marked thus (V) have Vestibule Oars.
•n 1 S /T\\ TM
MAIN LINK
ABBTVK nOX TKX BAST.
No. 7 Western Express •(VAS). 1.30 at No. 15 8t. Louis Mail 55 No. 1 Past Line* 2.05 pi No. 21 St. Louis Ex* (PDVA8) ... 2.28 pn N S an A a & No. 11 Fast Mail* 9.00 No. 5 St. Louis Limited*(VAS) 10.00 am
LEAVE FOB THE W*Sr.
No. 7 Western Ex'fVAS) No. 15 St. Louis Mall
No. 1 Past Line* No. 21 St Louis Ex* (PDVAS) No,18Eff. Aoc No. 11 Past Mall*..... ... No. 5 St. Louis Limited *(V&8).
L40 an 10.15 a 2.20 pn 2.88 4.05pn 9.04 pm 10.05 am
AJRKIVE FROM TEE VEST.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) ... 1.20 a No. 6 New York Express (VAS). 2.10 a N 1 4 E in ha A No. 20 Atlantic
Express (DPVAS) 12.32
No. 8 Fast Line 2.06 p* No! 16 Indianapolis Acc 5.00 No, 2N.Y. Limited*tDVAS) ... 5.15 pro
LEAVE FOB THE BAST.
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MICHIGAN DIVISION.
LEAVE FOB THE KOBTH.
No. 62 8U Joseph Mall «.20 a No. 64 South Bend Express 4.00 abbtve fbok the worth. No. ftl Terre Haute Express 11.45 a No.S8Terre Haute Mall ..... 7.00pn
PEORIA DIVISION.
LEAVE FOB XOBTHWBM.
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BITUMINOUS COAL
SI.SO TOISV Telephone 8#1, Mscksville. No. 10 Nona Thlid Strict, Terre Haute.
C. O. O. &
rpo CONTRACTORS AND PROPERTY OWNERS. Notice is hereby given that on the 5th day of March, 1886, the common council of tho city of Terre Haute adopted a resolution declaring an existing necessity for tne improvement of alley oetween Wabash avenue and Cherry street extending from Ninth street to the west line of north and south alley between Seventh and Eighth streets, by grading and paving the same the full width thereof, the sidewalks to oe 5 feet wide and paved with Portland cement concrete next to the property line to the width of 4 68-100 feet, ana curbed with, bard limestone, the road way* to be 20 feet wide aud paved with brick the said improvement to be made iu all respects in accordance with the general plan of improvement of said city and according to the plans and specifications on file in the office of the City clerk, the cost to be assessed to the abutting property owners and become due and collectible immedi-
fately
on approval of the final estimate, unless the property owner shall have previously agreed in writing, to be filed with Sold plans, to waive all Irregularity and illegality of the
Sroceedlngs
STREET
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No. 9% E*prel&<* Mail* l&OOan No. 17 South western Limited* 8DPV. 1.43 vc No.5Mattoon Kxpr No. S arrivee from Indianapolis :A?P'S
ana pay his assessments when
ue. .*'• Scaled proposals will be received for the construction of said improvement at the office of the city clerk on the 21st day of.May, 18#5, until five (5) o'clock and riOt thereafter. Each proposal must be accompanied by a bond with good freehold sureties or equivalent security, in the sum of two hundred dollars. liquidated damages, conditioned that the bidder shall duly enter into contract and give bond within Ave days after the accepts ance of his bid for the performance of the work. The city reserves the right to rejectany and all bide.
Any property owner objecting to the necessity of such improvement, may file such objections in writing, at the office of the city clerk on the 20th.day of May, 18%, and be heard with reference thereto at the next regular meeting of the common council thereof.
CHA8
TO
.GOODWIN, City Clerk.
PROPERTY
CONTRACTORS AND OWNERS. Notice is hereby given that on the 4th day of September, 1894, the common council of the city of Terre Haute adopted a resolution declaring an existing necessity for thu Improvement of tbeslaewalks on Walnut street from First street to Water street by grading and paviug the same, the sidewalks to be 12 feet wide and paved with brick or concrete next to the property line the width of 8 feet. The SHid improvement to be made in all respects in accordance with the general pi«u of Improvement of said city, and aocoraing to the plans and specifications on file in the office of the city clerk the cost to be assessed to the abutting property owners and become due and collectible Immediately on approval of the Unal estimate, unless the property owner shall have previously agreed in writing, to be filed witb said plans, to waive all irregularity and illegality of the proceedings and pay hisassassments when due.
Sealed proposals will be received for the construction of said improven^eut, at the office of the city clerk, on the 21st day of May, 1895, until five (5) o'clock and not thereafter. Each proposal must be accompanied by a bond with good freehold sureties or equivalent security, in the turn of two hundred dollars, liquidated damages, conditioned that the bidder shall duly enter into contract and give bond within five days after the acceptance of his bid, for the performance of the work. The city reserves the right to reject any and all bids.
Any property owner objecting to the necessity of such improvement may file such objections in writing at the office of the city clerk on the 20th day of May, 1895, and .be beard with reference thereto at the next regular meeting of the common council thereafter
TO
CHAS. H. GOODWIN, City CleiK.
CONTRACTORS AND PROPERTY OWNERS. Notice Is hereby given, that on the 18th day of September, 1894, the common council of the city of Terre Haute adopted a resolution declaring an existing necessity for the improvement of the sidewalks on Fourteenth street from Wabash avenue to Locust street, by paving the same with brick io the width of six 8) feet from the property line. The said improvement to be made in all respects in accordance with the general plan of Improvement of said city and according to the plans and specifications on file in the office of tne city clerk the cost to.be assessed to the abutting property owners and become due and collectible immediately on approval of the final estimate, unless the property owner shau have previously agieed in writing, to be filed with said plans, to waive all li regularity and illegality of the proceedings and pay his assessments when due.
Sealed proposals *wlll be received for the construction of said improvement at the office of the city clerk, on the 21st day of May, 1895, until five (5) o'clock and not thereafter. Each proposal must be accompanied by a bond with good freehold sureties or equivalent security, in the sum of two hundred dollars, liquidated damages, conditioned that the bidder shall duly enter into contracUand give bond within five days after the acceptance of his bid, for the performance bf the work. The city reserves the right to reject any and all bids.
Any property owner objecting to the necea^ sity of such improvement may file such objections in writing, at the office of the city clerk on the 20th day of May, 1895, and be heard with reference thereto at the next regular meeting of the common .council thereafter. j-:
STREET
CHAS. H. GOODWIN, City Clerk..
IMPROVEMENT FINAL ESTIMATE.
Notice is hereby given that the final estimate report of the cost of the Improvement of Thirteenth and One-half street from Poplar street to Oak street was on the 16tb day of April, 189V. referred the committee on streets and bridges, and any person aggrieved by such estimate may apnear before said committee, on the6th day oi May, 1895.attheoffice of the city civil engineer in said cliy, and make objections thereto, which objections will be reported 1o the common council of the city or Terre Haute at the next regular meeting of said council after the said committee shall conclude the bearing upon said, objections, at which time objectors and all persons interested may be heard in reference to such objections before the council.
7J|i
CHAS. H. GOODWIN, City Clerk.
IMPROVEMENT FINAL ESTIMATE.
Notice is hereby given that the final estimate report of the cost of the Improvement of Washington avenue from Sixth street to Seventh street was on the 16th day of April, 18195. referred to the committee on »treets ana bridges, and any person aggrieved by such estimate may appear before said committee, on the 6 day of May, 1895. at the office of the city civil engineer in said city, and make objections thereto, which objections will be reported by said committee to the common council of the city of Terre Haute at the next regular meeting of said council after the said committee shall conclude the hearing upon said objections, at which time objectors and all persons interested may be heard in reference |o such objections before the council.
W. w. Ramsey, Attorney for Plaintiff*. ^OTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS, State of Indiana, county of Vigo. In the Sujperior court, Vigo county, March
Hatd defendant is therefore hereby notified: •f the pendency of said action against ber^ and that the same will stand for trial Junoj nih. )8&S, the same being the June term of •nid ronrt, in the year 1895k r-iKAU] Attest: HUGH D. ROQUET, Clerk,
Martin Hollfnger, Attorney. ...^ \TOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS.
*"P
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term,
Markey vs. Myrtle NT
No. 4,488. John H, Markey. Divorce. Be It known, that on the 12th day of April. !)«., it was ordered by the court that tho ci«*rk notifiy by publication said Myrtle N. Markey as non*resldent defendant of the pendency of this action against her,
I
In thfe
'"state of Indiana,, County of Vigo Circuit court, June term, 1 No, 4,480. Levi Hoopengarner vs. Sarab Ltston, George Lifcton, the unknown heirs of IzzleSaseen, formerly IzzieQuinn, nee Izzie Liston, and John l). E. Piety.
Be it nown. that on the 12th day of April, 1895. It was ordered by the court that the cierk notify ton, George Ir.de tsaseeen, formerly Izzie Qui nn, nee Izxlo Ltston, and John D. E Piety as non-resident defendants of the pendency of this actios against them.
ordered by publication said Sarah LisListon, the unknown heirs ef
Said defendants are therefore hereby notified of the pendency of this action against them, and that the same will stand for trial June 71b, 1! term of said [SEAXJ
895, the same being at the June Co art, in the year 1895. HUGH D. ROQUET, Clerk.
