Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 29, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 11 January 1896 — Page 2

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EBB TIDE AT NOON.

jthe breezes sleep "their morning journeys done. TIVJ seaweeds mat the sluggish cbasinel's edpes. She sand fiat twinkles in the summer snn,

And fishes flap'and epatfor in the sedges. Far off across the dimes there conies the sound Of lazy surges droning on the shingle. Hy boat drifts idly, swinging half aground-

Then bickering gulls their raucous voices mingle. Por all 1ms changed, and to the harbor bar

Has come a secret message from the ocean. A thousand hurrying rjpples speed from afar, And all the waters waken into motion. v:V —Lark.

DIPLOMATIC HASH.

Lady Whichels was- thinking. A letter

lay in her lap, and her correspondent was ijier son—not the baronet, but his brother .Bertie—who had written to say that be meant to run down to see her the same evening. is She knew what he was coming for perfectly well. Rumors of his infatuation Shad already reach6d her. He was coming to tell her that he was engaged to marry "Miss Daisy Dornton, who sang for a coule of pounds a week in the chorus of the ioronet theater. Lady Whichels groaned, and her lips were pursed in annoyance. "Your brother is an idiot, Philip!" she •1 paid sharply to a young man who entered the room a moment later. "Ho is the ,worst kind of an idiot, for he is not only idiotic, he is pigheaded."

Sir Philip Whichels twirled his mustache and grinned. "Has the climax arrived?" he asked. •. "What is the matter?" "Bertlo will bo with us today. He 'wants to see me on a matter of impor:^ance.' The matter is, of course, that he

:has

proposed to that creature and has been accepted, and now he is coming to try to gain my consent. A "Advise me, Philip," she said, "how to bring this ninny to his senses." "I'm sure I don't know what you can do," Sir Philip replied. "If you bully him, he'll marry her .tomorrow. If you •cajole him, he'll try to bully you. I don't peo what you can do, upon my soul. It

Is a cul-de-sao." The Jady, however, was not disposed to be beaten so easily. It was 10 o'clook and tho fiance might be expected at the' Firs by the express train which reached re at 4 1 5 S ix or ltation, and in six hours an idea might to he os a on he a beside lior unheeded, and beating a devil's tattoo on her dress, she sat staring out at the lawn with puckered brows. The baronet meanwhile had lounged out into tho kennels, and presently she uttered an exclamation and dispatched a servant to fetch him. "Philip," she exolaimed, "I have a no•s tlon at last. The Miss—Miss Dornton is, of courso, 'impossible.' There oan be no ''question about that. It is only necessary fto mako Bertie see it."

Philip, who had been amusing himself outside and did not relish having been brou gh LI sos ari ly, urni

ured som e-

thing to the offect that to "mako him see ?®it" was tho original difficulty. "I know all that," said Lady Whichels

impatiently, "but I know also how to do ,it now. She is, of course, gauche, awkward and as ignorant as she can bo. He jias

Boon

her with tho glamour of the foot-

Jillgbts on lior and in the poky little lodg^lngs whore sho lives. Now he shall see ill or hero! I shall invite lior down to stay with us and ask a lot of people to meet her.

Bertie is not brilliant, but ho is as sensitivo as a girl. When Miss Dornton has .. committed half a dozen solecisms, and he feels that people are ridiculing her, he will be as anxious to break his engagement off t#aa I am to soo it broken.'' "By Jove!" said Philip, "you ought to havo boon a diplomatist, mother." "It is good, isn't it?" said Lady Whichpls complacently. "I felt tlioro must be a 'way out, and now I've found it. I think your brother will bo rather astonished by -|ny reooption of his news this afternoon.

fliet

us have luncheon." Ho arvivod—the young man who lmd projeotcd tho mesallianoo—at the hour expeoted. 1-Ie certainly was astonished at his mother's domoanor.

Ho had looked for remonstrances, toars land threats and' been doggedly prepared for all. Instead of these he w»s met with smiles and cordiality Ho could not understand it. "I had hoard something of tho matter," •aid tho widow. Well, it is a democratio ago, and if you yourself nro satisfied nobody has any right to oomplain. Her father was a linen draper, I believe, and her another is quite a respectable porson, who .lets or lives in lodgings?" i&: «'Er—they are living in apartments, yes," said Bertie. "But —or 6he is oharming. I am sure you can trust my taste." "Emphatioally I oan, and I am not going to bo so absurd as to raiso any objection, my dear boy. You want to marry lss Dornton—marry her. You havo my lull and freo consent, and I should like to introduced to her too. When shall I bee her?" "I really don't know," stammered the boy. "Whenovor you like." The question was so entirely unexpected that he „was almost specchless. "Well, the best way will be to ask her down here for two or three weeks. Can •he comoP" fe "It oould be arranged—oh, yes! She is %t the theater evory night, but I want her to leave the stage, and—oh, yes, stye would oome as soon as you please." 4 "Then I will write and ask her for the ^beginning of next month," said Lady

Whichels oonolusively. "And now you jnust tell me all about it and how nobody ever loved a girl so madly before in all the "world."

Lady Whiohels dispatohed her charming letter to her prospective daughter-in-law on the morrow, and on the day after came %ho answer, thanking Bertie's mother for hor kindness and gladly aooeptlng the invitation.

She wrote her notes, and a crowd of

ttS? ifrionds aooepted, and so the days went by a full drawing room sat on tenter 1 hooks one afternoon awaiting Miss Dornton's entrance.

The clock on tho mantelshelf had tinkled tho hour of 4. The dogcart, with Bertie {^driving, had long gone to the station. La%^dy Whiohels glanced at the baronet and L' smiled. Tho baronet pulled his mustache flJand inwardly reflected that, ass as his brother was, all this was a trifle rough on him. The company, sipping their tea aad nibbling polite fours, and muffins struggled Ineffectually to conceal their curiosity and impatience. Then there was the sound of wheels on tho drive, and everybody fixed a pair of eager eyes upon the door.

It opened, and Miss Dornton oame In «nd advanced to be presented to her hostftai. Lady Whiohels started, and the baro-

si ijWwSSEii.* A.J t- -'"p' r"

net's eyebrows won* up. Nothing could -havo been ..quieter or in bettor tasto than the manntir of tho girl who crossed the big room under an ordeal which might havo shaken the composuro .of a society bolle of half a dozen seasons. Her costume, too, was perfect, and her words, when spoken, were all that tho most fastidious could have desired. Moreover, she was not pretty, but beautiful—-the most beautiful girl present. There was no good disguising the fact—if Miss Dornton's first appearance was to be taken as typical of Miss Dornton, Lady Whichels' plot had failed.

That night when she sat in her dressing room before the fire, talking to her favorite son, the widow came nearer orying than she had done for years. '•She isn't farouche at all, Philip," she muttered disconsolately. "She i"—preposterous as it sounds when I admit itshe is really good style. "Where does she get it from—the daughter of a linen draper? It is awful! They imitate our clothes, these people, and our phrases, and now they even manage to aoquire our style. Nothing is left to us—nothing." "She is a very charming girl," said the baronet, "that is the truth. What on earth she saw in Bertie beats me!" "Philip!" "I don't see that you have any ohance of preventing the marriage now, at any rate," he observed, after a pause. "She won't call me 'Sir Whiohels,' or come down to luncheon in gloves, or make herself ridiculous at all, I fancy. You had better put a good face on it and let Bertie think you were sincere from the beginning. In fact, you'll havo to do so. There is nothing else for it." "Leave me-*—let me go to bed!" said Lady Whichels tartly. "I am too angry to sit up, and to talk about it makes me feel worst). Good night!"

But just after Miss Dornton's visit came to a termination she had cause to feel worse still, for something horrible bad happened. It began— Where did it begin? It matured in the smoking room one evening. It culminated in Lady Whichels' dressing room at 9 o'clock one ghastly morning, when she was half dead with misery and sleep.

Por ten days Bertie bad been feeling less sure of himself than he had done. Opposition was the breath of life to him, and, with the course of true love running smooth, he began to ask himself whether it was true love, after all.

In the meantime the baronet's first impression of his brother's fiancee had boen more than confirmed, and, fickle on the young lady's part as it may look, she appeared to find more pleasure in Sir Philip's society than in Bertie's.

Well, one night, when the brothers were alone together in the smoking room, the younger man unbosomed himself. He told the baronet that his engagement had been a mistako, and he wished to goodness that he had never blundered into it. Sir Philip, who had been mixing himself a whisky and potash, dropped the glass, which shivered into 50 pieces in the Abbotsford stove. As a man not given to dropping things, the accident was noteworthy and suggested that his nerves

It was on tho morning of the next day but ono that Sir Philip, who had spent the provious afternoon in London, disturbed his mother's repose in the fashion alluded to. He told her that he was going to be married. Lady Whichels, wrapped in a dressing gown, listened to him with ashen cheeks. "To Miss Dornton, mother. Bertie has jilted her, and I proposed yesterday. I don't suppose you'll be pleased, but she is the nicest girl I evor met in my life, and I mean to mako her 'Lady Whicheis.' "Bertie has jilted her!" gasped the widow. "And you—you"— "Yes. Even I! Last month I scoffed today I fall! Perhaps it is a judgment on mo. Perhaps it is a judgment on you for plotting her downfall as you did. I certainly should not have had the opportunity of falling in love with her if you hadn't. Anyhow I worship the ground she walks on and wo are engaged."

And what is more ho married her, a fact from which an interesting moral may be drawn by ladies who fanoy their abilities for diplomacy. The deposed dowager never forgave him, nor herself, and when she reflects that it was all entirely due to her own brilliant interference she feels there are certain emotions whioh language is wholly Inadequate to oonvey.—F. 0. Philips in Madame. -v..

A Chinese Dinner Party.

"When a Chinese minister at Washington," says a correspondent, "gives a formal dinner to any of his countrymen of sufficient rank to be thus honored, or to Japanese visitors, he never fails to go through a curious form of etiquette. "Before taking his seat at the head of the board he approaches the guests, who stand in a line round the table, and, without uttering a syllable, pushes each tenderly and playfully and points significantly to the unoccupied post at the hoad of the table. "It is etiquette for the guests to observe a rigid demeanor, neither speaking nor moving and demonstrating by their inflexible attitudes their unworthiness to occupy tho place of honor. "This over, the minister sinks into his chair and no doubt would have been greatly surprised had anybody taken it. No one speaks until the minister drops a remark, whioh is finally taken up and commented upon. Then the chief speaks again, and more observations follow. So it may be said that the chairman, in a measure, supplies subjettfa for conversation.

i-

"Another Curious custom at these formal dinners is that after the fish is eaten the guesta all rise simultaneously and dust their chairs with their napkins. "The bill of tare is pretty nearly the same as would be served at any other foreign legations, with one oar two special Chinese delicacies only."

y»'' 5"

fv^ere

not properly under control. •§%$ "You'll have treated the" girl d——d badly," he said sharply. "You think thatl ought to marry her?" "I think that you oughtn't to have asked her if you weren't sure of your elf What are you going to do?" "I'm going to jilt her," said Bertie sulkily "that's what I'm going to do, and I don't beliove she likes mo as much as she did, Philip."

r'"

"A good thing for her if she doesn't!" opined tho other. "I dare say. Anyhow she leavos us tomorrow morning, and I shall write to her rooms in town, saying' I feel that I'mado a mistake, and—and—that it had better end. If she wants a cheek, I dare say my mother"— "Oh, don't bo such a confoundcd young cadi" oxclaimod Philip. "A cheok!" "You seem to have a very wonderful opinion of Miss Dornton. I wonder you don't marry lier yourself." "Perhaps I may, if I got the ohance of asking her and sho will have me," answered the baronet. "When you have written your elegant epistle let me know. Now I'm going to turn in."

SHE WON SUCCESS,

MM. Smith J$Td Tills by Working Hftrd anil Cultivating Uor Talent, I'jMra. Dea Carr Smith, who lias recent ly received award for china decoration at tin Atlanta exposition, and whose' exquisite work tho Arkansas exhibit has attracted so much attention and universal admiration, has recently been brought to the attention of the publio in a number of newspaper artioles which have spoken of the originality and unique beauty shown in the design of the space devoted to the women of Arkansas.

Mrs. Smith was born in Rushville, Ind., and now has charge of the art department of Galloway college, the largest and highest grade sohool for girls in Arkansas. She has spent years in prepa­

ration for her work, studying tinder the best American artists, under Kenyon Cox in New York made a special study of foliage under Carl Weber in Philadelphia and did work in life under Satterle, who on seeing one of her sketches gave her a scholarship. All this has given her a broad foundation for her work in china, in which she has received instruction from those able ceramic artists, Punch and Aulich of Cincinnati.

To this wide cultivation and geat talent have been added ten years of experience, making Mrs. Smith a most successful teacher, whose work is much sought after. She had a studio in Seattle several years, and while there spent her summers in Alaska and California, making many beautiful sketches along the Pacific coast. Since she has been in Galloway college her success has been phenomenal. She insists that all work be thorough and takes nature as her model. During her three years residence in Arkansas she has done much to create and develop a genuine appreciation of art in its truest sense in the state.—Atlanta Constitution.

What Shopping In Paris Teaches.

nl'A correspondent writes: "Shopping in Paris teaches us many things, and among others the new uses to which are put familiar substances. A fashionable trimming for ladies' black capes.is now a gelatin lozenge. The 'sequin,' as it is called, is a thin, small pastel, dyed black and having the effect of jet. Each sequin is sewed on separately, tod with each garment the purchaser does well to buy a box of the ornaments, as they are liable to drop off. Fortunately for the wearer of gelatin trimming, rain, at least in our hemisphere, does not descend warm otherwise the decorative art of a mantle would dissolve in a shower. In cold water the new substitute for jet loses neither substance nor color. Cheapness and lightness are the advantages of this edible haberdashery." —London News.

The Fashionable Magpie Contrast.

The magpie contrast, which is the name given to the effect when black and white are brought together, is well displayed in a bonnet intended for evening wear at concert or opera during the season. The small, rather low crown is of white satin felt, the tiny strips being braided in basket fashion. The narrow brim is cf softly twisted black velvet cut out at the back so that the hair show#? below, while there are falling over it two of the long, hornlike shaped rosettes so muoh fancied, daintily made of fine duchess lace. A narrow twist of white satin is just abpve tho velvet at the edge of the orown, and on one side there stands up a 10 inch white pompon, while on the other is a star shaped buckle of rhinestones. Velvet ties come with this bonnet—Ladies' Home Journal.

Not Mew at All.

It would appear from the recent writing of a well informed woman on women's clubs that the new woman is not new at all, but decidedly old, dating back to 400 years before the Christian era, when famous Grecian women held original opinions concerning the sun and moon and made studies on the whole solar system. Prom that time to this the writer mentions the numerous women who have forced the world to acknowledge their superiority, so it would seem that "new woman" is a misnomer.

The English Woman.

Charles Dudley Warner lectured be* fore the students of Trinity college, Hartford, the other evening an "England as It Is." He spoke in terms of admiration of the present type of English woman, not the new woman* be said, but the English woman of society. She is robust and graceful. Her carriage is irreproachable. In former days ehe had been accused of being poorly dressed. Now, however, it is not true. She dresses in perfect taste.

Make* Beautiful House Plant People who enjoy a bit of green in the house when fields and flower gardens are wrapped in the desolation of winter will find that a sweet potato, planted in moist loose earth or aJar of water, with the seed end projecting upward, will make a beautiful growth of vine in a very short time. It resembles the English ivy and rivals the glossy leaves of *he Wandering Jew for house decoraaoa.—Northwest Magazine fel

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, JANUARY 11,1895.

imW

Mary A. Llv«rmore.

Mrs. Mnry A. Liveruioro colebrnted her seventy-fifth birthday very quiotly at Melrose on Deo. 19. She had a bad cold and wan confined to her. room must of the dnv. Sho received many congratulations by letter and telegraph and many presents. In the evening she made an address in tho First UmverBaliit church at Lynn, "A Dream of Tomorrow. At the close of the lecture she held a brief reception and received the congratulations of ruany friends. A formal celebration took place at Salem on Dec. 23, when Mrs. Livermore was the guest at the Thought and Work club. Mrs. Livermore at 75 il^ull^aMfager than any young woman in Mfsgach|psetts. May she see many hapg^returns of the day!—Boston Woman'^Jouma*!!

Athletics at Bryn Mpt

Bryn Mawr is keeping up wftjh the other women's colleges as far as athletics are concerned. The Philadelphia Ledger says that Frederick Law Olmsted is now at work upon plans for the grounds. These provide for a circular bicycle track with four laps to the mile, and within this is a large space for tennis, basket ball and other sports. This will bo so arranged that in winter time it can be flooded and provide a fine skating pond for the students. These grounds are kept in order by an athletic association of the undergraduates, who manage such affairs in much the same fashion as they are looked after at men's colleges.

k.'A-.:,- Miss Noe Tsuda.

Miss Noe Tsuda, now a special student at a New England woman's college, is canvassing among rich philanthropists for a fund to give Japanese women a four years' training in America and fit them for teachers. Miss Tsuda is a woman suffragist in America, but it is feared that if she should divulge her broad views in the land of the mikado she would be a woman sufferer.

Io the Brginiitog

Of the new vear. wbdn the winter season of close c-infinement in only half gone, many find that their health begins to break down, that ihe least exposure threaten* sickness It ia then as well as at all other limes, and with people even in roid tinalt!i, that tl.e following facts should be remembered, mmieiv: tha Hood's Sarxaparilla leads every thing the way of medicine* that it accoo. plishes the greatest cures iti the world has the largest sale in the world, and re quires the largest buildinpr in the world devoted exclusively to the preparation the proprietary medicine. Dno« not thip conclusively prove, if vnu are Mck, t)»a: Hood's Siraaparilla id the, medicine for you to take?

The Doctor's Discovery.

DR. BROWN, OF DAVID CITY, NEB., FINDS A MEDICINE OF RARE VIRTUE.

He First Ctires Himself with It, and fhck Prescribes it for His Patients with Gratifying Results. (From the Lincoln, Neb., Call.)

Dr. Samuel L. Brown is a pioneer residsnt of David City, having lived tnere for twenty years. He is well known all over Butler County, having practiced medicine in every part. It is his recovery a very «eriou«

I now have a remarkable ease at Brainerd. Augustus Talbot, the postmaster, was suffering from diabete abd insipidness, and was in the first stages of Bright's disease. The doctors had foiled to give him any relief. All hope of his recovery had been given up when 1 was called in and took charge of the case. coven. and the other ailments overwhelmed. A happier family cannot be found than that of Postmaster Talbot, of Brainerd."

He is now on the road to complete reery. The Bright's disease was headed ofl, th

Sworn and subscribed to before me fhis seventh dav of September, A. D. 1893, at David City, Neb. E. S. Etrwroir. (Signed) Notary Public.

Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People are now given to the public as an unfailing blood builder and nerve restorer, curing all forms of weakness arising from a watery eondition of the blood or shattered nerves. The pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent postpaid on receipt of price (50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50—they are never sold in bulk or bj the 100) by addressing Dr. Williams' XedioiM Company, Schenectady, N. Y.

ChlclMMter'a EaaJiah BnML

ENNYRQYAL PILLS

brlciMl

—A

0»17 Oe»Ue.

Mrs, ataqra reliaUe. Drante tor CUdmUft EnfU** D**ixa,

K«Mwitb

Mae ribbon. Take

iMO&e*. Rtf*** dtmgerout tint and imitation*. At DraggUt*. PC »«PO ta wtmtm tor parttoatea, wttfaoetato a»d "Hrllfff (w LaStes." to ty MStava

Md «T all Loca^ Dni«tau.

8ANT a DAVIS. FRANK J. TtTOK.

DAVIS & TURK

ATTORNEYS AT LAW,

4M}4 Wsbssfc Ave. TERRE HAUTE, IND.

DAILEY,

503 Ohio Street.

Give him a call Ifyon have mnjr kind of In•uranee to plsoe. He will wrttoyou In asfood companies as are represented in the city.

AKtflWWttCAHT SPAKKUH6 CONCENTRATED UQU

PS

WTO*

115

r7:from

disease that is looked upon as a miracle. When visited by a Call reporter Dr. Brown gladly related the history of his sickness and his final cure.

This will be my first step into the field of a personal interview, but I am so enthusiastic over my recovery that I feel like conducting a regular experience meeting.

Six or seven years ago partial paralysis set in upon mv left side, ana I soon became affected by kindred ailments. The pension board found my trouble to be "partial paralysis of left side, varicose veins of both legs, and left varicocele." I was also troubl .d with Diabetes. I became unable to perform manual labor, having to give up tne larger part of my practice. I could hobble around by the use of crutches and cane. I tried every medicine that 1 ever heard of in endeavoi ing to relieve my suffering. "About a year ago I read of a medicine called Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, that seeir.ed to fit my case, so I sent for samples. 1 was so well satisfied with the samples that I sent for more, as they acted directly in harmony with nature. Tnose are the things I look in treating diseases. I used a number of boxes of the pills, and I am now entirely relieved of all my several ailments, and am able to move about onee more, witaout being hampered with crippling diseases. In my practice I always use Pink Pills where the diagnosis of the case favors them.

Office:

25 S. Seventh St

Correspondence solicited.

507 Ohio Street.

1.1. & 6. Broadbnrst

Miners and dealers in

Sugar Creek Coal

For steam and domes* tie use. All Coal thor ooehly screened.

M5ce

122S.

Third St.

0.1. FLKMING, M. D. C.

VETKBTN ARI A N.

means from 2 to 5 pounds a week gained in healthy

flesh.

p^HEUSER-BUSC$

Subject of Vital Importance to Eye and Ear Sufferers ....

TRADE MARK.

—the food drink—is crushed from the best *fcmalt and hops. A rousing tonic. To the nursing mother it is nourishment for herself and babe. To consumptives and sufferers from wasting diseases, to all who are thin and sickly, it means more flesh and greater strength.

At all Druggists* and Grocers'.

Prepared by

ANHEUSER-BUSCH BREWING ASS'N, St. Louis, U.S.A.'4'Slgll FINAL TRIUMPH—The Supreme Court of Washington, D. C., has awarded to the Anheuser-Busch Brewing Ass'n tto disputed Highest Score of Award witr Medal and Diploma of the World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893. 'I

Says Dr. W. Alexander Byers: Let us drop a word of encouragement to you if you haveby mistake consulted some specialist ol "ye olden time class," who, ly advice and treat ment, has left you with no ray of hope and whose very treatment LEFT YOU IN A W0R8E CONDITION THAN YOU WERE BEFOREyo began to take it. You are not alone, for ,, daily patients are coming to us with the same old threadbare story from all over the state,^'} saying, 'Doctor, I treated with Dr. So-and-So and he prorriised to give me a permanent cure.' I can't bear at all." "I was suffering with Inflamed eyes, now I AM ALMOST BLIND— scarcely can see across the street." We will say as before—we do cure and only take those cases that can be cured, and will cure ours. IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO CONSULT our Kye and Ear specialist. He has had 20 years' experience in the treatment of Eye and Ear diseases and has always cured a large number 01 those taken for treatment where OTHER SPECIALISTS HAVfi FAILED and examination at the

ELECTRO CURE INSTITUTE,

South Sixth Street. ....

DR. W. ALEXANDER BYERS In charge'of this Departme»t.

ALBERT FTESS,

Has just received a complete line of

Lap Robes and Blankets,

Trunks and Telescopes#

650 nvc.A.xisr sme-EEi'.

S. Xv. FBJVXRR,

Hui Idors Ham ware, urnaees,

and First-class Tin Work,

1 2 0 0 Is I A I 3 S S E E

Special attention given to diseases of horses tile and dogs. Office 811 Main street.

NOTICE

ARTIFICIAL. -f\

Stone Walks Plasterin

Moudy Coffin.

Leave orders at 1517 Poplar St., 1241 South Fifth St., 901 Main St., Terre Haute, Ind.

W. S. HOUSTOW, Prest. W. P. BLAIB,Sec. JOHN

Terre Haute Brick & Pipe Co.

YitriM Shale, Hollow Brick, Drain Tile, Fire Clay Construction Goods.

Are you going to build 1 Why put in a poor foundation TetT£ ailte When you can have the best? We save you moneg.

A Gas Stove

Will heat a bed or bathroom for less than i]4 cents an hour. This is cheaper than to take cold. The store is always ready for use.

Citizens' Fnel & Gas Co.,

OF APPOINTMENT OF ADMINISTRATOR.

Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned has tbls day been appointed *n1„ ax administrator ofthe estate of Thomas Tboanpwm,

December 28,1806.

I

*4

1

"...

Come and see him during our week of free consultation

IIS ,#

iljll is-M?

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

:®iti

H. TAYIOR, Supt».

Works:

St. Mary's Road.

1C1,C 1 ,aui,v

Stlmson, Stlmson & Oondlt Attyb OTICE TO NON RESIDENT.

N'

State of Indiana, County of Vigo, in Superior Court of Vigo county, term, 1896.

No. 4778 Leonard D. Scott vs. William Ballon, if living, and if dead, the unknown heirs of William Ballon, impleaded with others. In action to quiet title.

Said non-resident defendants are herebynotified of the penitency of said action against them and that the same will stand for trial February 18th, 1886, the same being at the December term of said court in the year 1885. 2718 fSEAL.] HUGH D. ROQUET, Clerk.

GAGG'S ART STORE

5

Be it known, that on the 25th day of December, 1895, said plaintiff filed an affidavit in^ due form, showing that said William Ballou'V, and the unknown heirs of William Ballon are non-residents of the state of Indiana.

Artists' Supplies. Flower Material. Picture Framing a Specialty.

648 Wabash Ave. North Side.

TERRE HAUTE IND.

DR. fi. W. VAN YALZAH, ZDZEItsTTIST

Office, No. 5 South Fifth Street.

J8AA0 BALL & SON, FUNERAL DIRECTORS. Corner Third and fDerry streets,Terre Haute, Ind., are prepared to ezeente all orders ilk their line with neatness and dispatch.

Embalming a Specialty.