Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 52, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 20 June 1896 — Page 6
I
|f' WOMAN'S WORLD.
SHERIFF WHOM ADDRESS AS
THE CHILDREN •MAMMA."
SHERIFF HELEN STEWART.
the night, and she is not afraid to enter the jail proper at any period of the day or night unattended. Her husband, the former sheriff, died a year ago, and Mrs. Stewart asked for the position, as she had no moans of earning a living for herself and two little girls. The community sympathized with her, and she was allowed to take her husband's place. She resides in the jail but a few feet from where tho cells are located. Her children are 8 and 10 years of age respectively, and are being educated by their mother, who before marriage was a school teacher in New York state.
Mrs. Stewart's deputies make most of tho arrests, but she has served several crimiual warrants herself, and in all instances has taken her prinoners to the jail without difficulty, for people in this oounty know that she is an excellent pistol shot and always carries her revolver with her. —Brooklyn Citizen.
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Woman Earn Her Keep?—Woman In Knilnm—Th« Latnt In Corset*. The Opening Door* Modern Grace Darling*—Some Seasonable SaggectioiM.
Tho children of the sheriff of Green County, Ma, say "mamma" when they address that official. Mrs. Helen Stewart, who guards the jail at Springfield, the county seat, is a pleasant appearing woman of middle age, somewhat stoat, and having features which indicate res olution—in shorty she looks like a nervy woman, and she is. Several times, with the aid of one deputy—a man—she has looked her 42 prisoners in their oells for
Woman Earn Her Keep?
Thousands of women work in the mines of Belgium and England^ In the first named country they formerly worked from 12 to 10 hours a day, with no Sunday rest. The linen thread spinners of New Jersey, according to the report of the labor commis•ioncr, are "in one branch of the industry compelled to stand on a stone floor in water tho year round, most of tho time barefoot, with a spray of water from a revolving cylinder flying constantly against the breast, and the coldest night in winter as well as the warmest in summer these poor creatures must go to their homes with water dripping from their underclothing along their path bcctuisn thoro could not be space of aft v.*
ut:i alinwcd them
wherein to their clothing." Yet women MO "cxeijiptod" from labor •tfcutlcd by ardsliipl
Despite these washerwomen, miners and linen thread spinners, wo are told "it is woman's privilege generally to be esemytrd from £ho care of earning her livelihr ed and that of her offspring."
It vould seem to bo time that this libel upon women should bo scorned by fair minded men. Prom all antiquity the majority of women have been faithful workers, rendering a full equivalent in labor for their scanty share of the world's goods. Tho origin of every industry bears testimony to thia In our own cr:v, while •women were still homekeepers. did they not earn their livelihood? What was the weaving, the sewing, the cooking, the doctoring, the nursimr, the child care, "the work that was never done," if it was not earning a subsistence? Even in these dayB, when womn'i goes forth and receives tho reward her labor as publicly as man, •he is no more worthy of her hire. Her •ncesnt^s—sweet and saintly soul—did not dream of recompense. But was it not iter due, and shall we refuse to credit it because man was then a self sufficient ignoramus who deemed himself the only one fit to acquire property? —Alice B. Tweedy in Popular Scienoe Monthly.
Woman In Bstlaen.
Woman's introduction into the business world is no longer an experiment The feminine wage earner is now a permanent (actor in the national economy. The individual drops out of the ranks to form a center around which home springs up, but another woman, not a man, takes her place. The type remains. More Mid more places aze being made for women, to such an extent that a reoent oeuHus bulletin reports the increase in the number of women employed in gainful occupations during the period between 1870 and 1890 to have been 113 per cent, while in trade and transportation the increase was 1,051 per oent.
This change is significant It is, in fact, a revolution. Twenty or indeed ten yean ago the girls of an ordinary middle class family in which the father was a small business man, an expert mechanic,- or a farmer capable of supporting his family with decency if not absolute aamfort were expected to stay at home and help with the housework until they went to preside over home® of their own. ft was considered something of a slur to say that a man's daughters were obliged to go out to work.
Nowadays this sentiment is reversed. A business training is as much a matter of course for the daughters as ft* the ma And BO one is surprised when the daughter* prefer potting the training Into practice instead of devoting their time to household duties enlivened with smusemeata Tfas growth at the
mm
idea that woman is an individual, not an appendage, that she has social duties and moral responsibilities as well as men, is really at the bottom of the revolution.—Mary E. J. Kelley in Lippincott's. I Tbe Latest In Corsets.
The craze for out of door exercise for women has so wonderfully increased of I late that it has created a demand for proper costumes and also for proper corsets. This necessity has been fully met, and now there is a special kind of corset for nearly every different sort of exercise, and the models are still so neat and graceful and finely finished that it looks as if the new woman had not as yet lost the desire for dainty lingerie. Xbe new corsets are as carefully made to fit the figure as a glove to fit the hand. There is the short tennis and rowing corset, that also looks well under an empire gown on a slender woman, and it sufficiently supports a stout one if the gown above it is of the flowing style in which the waist line is concealed.
The cycle corset is also short, with elastic hips and gussets, giving the wearer ease and perfectly free action. The hammock or gymnast's corset has elastic shoulder straps and is little more than half a corset, reaching only a little way beneath the arms. The riding corset is short, but longer than the hammock style, as it has a wide elastic band that runs from the spoon back over the hips to the back. The best boon of all, however, is the new graceful, yet comfortable, if rather expensive corset, for stout women—kng below the waist and shaped with strong but easy gores, and short from the waist up, with the seams of the front and the bias gores running toward the steels in a distinct form that produces a graceful result, yet the model is not torturing like the "straight fronts," "usually made for stout women."—New York Post.
The Opening: Doors.
Ask and It shall be given you seek and ye shall find knock and it shall be opened unto you.
Relatively the Biblical prophecy Jias come true of woman. Absolutely there are some things yet to be fulfilled.
Today'8 American girl of any and all stations has so much more to look forward to than her sister of yesterday that she need waste no precious time in enviously contemplating the superior advantages her other sister of tomorrow will enjoy.
Sixty years ago an English woman since esteemed great came to this country to observe how women earned a living. She found one so oalled profession and three trades open.
Thero are now 400 trades and half as many professions by which thousands of women get not only a living, but a competency.
Women cannot vote yet in all these United States, but they can bo and have been mayors, postmasters, pension agents, county clerks, city clerks, registers of deeds, police justices, jurors, overseers of the poor, prison commissioners, stato librarians, school superintendents and supervisors, engrossing clerks of legislatures, superintendents of women's prisons, police matrons, members of state boards of charity, lunacy and correction and federal marshals.—New York Press.
Modern Grace Darlings.
In the good time coming Grace Darling will be merely one of many ship saving heroinea Tho day seems to have arrived when every town along the coast has at least one young woman with a boat and a few lives to her credit. Two of the most recent recruits to the saving list are western women— Miss Laura Bradshaw of Oakland and Mrs. Ida Robinson of San Francisco. Tho former rescued a foundering yacht and Mrs. Robinson guided a vessel through stormy seas from Honolulu.
Miss Bradshaw, who was on the wharf when the good yacht Rover was failing in an attempt to make its harbor because the lino by which the boat was to be moored was not being* properly hauled in, simply rolled up her sleeves and helped to haul. She had strong arms, and her efforts were successful. By and by others came to her aid and the yacht was saved.
Mm Robinson was the pilot of the good bark Hollinswood during a storm that split masts and made sails useless, but Mrs. Robinson steered the ship safely through it all. She has been her father's navigator for four years and oomee of a seafaring family that regards trips around the Horn and the Cape of Gxxi Hope as mere trifles.—New York Journal.
A Plucky Woman.
A plucky woman in Washington, who was one of the many clerks dropped from tho government pay rolls last year, looked around hard for a few weeks in other clerical work, and finding none did the next best thing—what she could. What this was is told in a little notice that appeared in the women's cloakroom in one of the department buildings: Wanted Washing to do, by a good plain waahpr and ironer al*o clear starching sat* {•faction guaranteed and rate* reasonalfts.
The woman's wisdom in selecting as her employment a necessary service was as apparent as her bravery in undertaking so modest afield of labor as that of laundress and clear starcher. As the situation was tersely put by another woman who is making a good income selling stove polish, after almost starving attempting to take orders for fine embroidery: "The same condition of affairs which lost me my salaried place affects the demand for a pure luxury like fine embroideries. Stove polish has to be used, centerpieces and doilies can be got on without'* When times are hard, the bread winner finds quickest returns in supplying a necessity-—
Washington Correspondent.
Buw t* Biutti,
It is one of the hopeful and comforting signs of the times that the comprwacd waist, save on a few women, is ngelyseen. is the tricycle
MSBMi
Mme. Tholoxan.
Mme. Tholozan, wife of the late sh&h's French physician, was in many ways a remarkable woman., She had lived in Persia many years and was full of anecdotes of her varied experiences of harem life in that country. She had long been literally pursued by "the fire fiend." Fifteen years ago she was saved from a burning vessel off Batoum. She was among the rescued from the terrible fires which destroyed the Opera Comique in Paris and the Municipal theater at Nice, and she arrived in Constantinople on the morning of the fatal fire which burned down Messire's famous hotel, and only escaped with her life, all hey property being burned. She caught a cold in this adventure which ultimately settled on the lungs and caused her death.
The Placket.
The shirt waist, with all its advantages, is productive of carelessness as to the skirt, and in spite of numerous devioes the band still falls below the waist line and the placket often yawns. A certain patent fastening that resembles a hook and eye, but remains more tightly clasped, is an almost certain remedy for the latter evil at least It behooves the women, who are nice to an extreme in the matter of collars and exacting as to ties, to bear the fact in mind. A white skirt or a bit of the silk petticoat may be harmless in itself, but the fact of its protruding unbidden calls down masculine criticism, and in the point of neatness of attire woman cannot afford to be outdone.
Shoulder Capes.
Capes of every dainty description maintain their own vigorously against the innovations fashion would introduce. The very smartest shoulder capes are formed of black brussels net or mousseline de soie over silk or satin, with appliques of rich lace as a finish, and the edges are completed by a pinked out frill of glace silk or satin matching the foundation. A full ruche,of net or mousseline de soie edged with rows of tiny satin ribbon is carried around the neck and very often down the front
White Linen Cushions.
White linen sofa cushions give a wonderful touch of daintiness to the subsummer cottage parlor. They are, above all, suitable—the right thing in the right place, as they admit of laundering. Some of them are traced in all over designs, others have small flowers worked solidly in wash silks, like violets, forgetmenots and the like, and almost all have deep hemstitched borders.
The Fashionable Be'lt.
Wearers of the fashionable belt should remember this: A slender waist can wear anything about it One that is not trim and small needs either a tightish belt or none. A ribbon about it accentuates its size, and should never be donned unless decidedly drawn to give a belted in appearance
The wsi* r* ^olished tables for luncheons and which seems now and again to fall into a certain sort of disfavor, chiefly because nccelty must be had by some hostesses at all cost, is this season in especial vogue. „t-
By a decision of the United States supreme court Mis. Hetty Green secures title to Chicago property worth, it is estimated, over $500,000. The case has been pending for SO years in various
Trimmed skirts are assuredly winning their way. A recent model from Paris shows gussets of the material set in the front and side seams, each being outlined with a narrow ruche.
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, JUJJE 20, 1896.
or the fashion that has wrought this change or whether women have grown mow sensible and are demanding room to breathe matters not The result is the only thing in which we are specially interested, and this is exceedingly favorable to health, good sense and the comfort of the woman of today, and scores a great gain in the probable advancement of generations to come. Women who some years ago had waists somewhat on the hour glass principle are wearing dresses that give them a couple of inches more belt measure than of old, and they look quite as well to the ar tistic eye, and a thousand times better in the eyes of those whose opinions are worth having. The fashions of the day have perhaps made the large waist possible. The enormous sleeves have been the objects of attention in the toiler, and whether the waist was a fraction or so larger or smaller really did not oount At all events, there is more amplitude, more room to breathe and more space for expansion, and women should be duly and humbly thankful.— New York Ledger.
Honse Service In Anstralia. Some revolutionary suggestions in regard to domestic servants are being discussed in Australia. It is proposed to call them' 'household employees.'' They will eat in the dining room, either with the family or by themselves. They will not be at the beck and call of the mistress. There will be two shifts of "employees, one to work from 6 a. m. to 2 p. m. and the other from 2 p. m. to 8 or 9 p. m., so that they may have the afternoons and evenings off every alternate week. It is believed that the expenses of the household would not be increased by adopting this step, as domestic service under this new condition of affairs would be rendered so attractive that servants would be obtainable at half the present wages, and sweating in factories would be largely diminished by reducing the number of applicants.
utensil for the kitchen,
not in general use, is a small paint brush. It is neater and more effectual for the greasing of pans than the usual bit of paper.
Waitresses are to take the placs of waiters in the restaurant of the house Ot
DESIGNING DOLLS.
A Thy Miss Who Has Made a Great Sao* v«ss In Drawing Paper Toys.
The hundreds of people who see their children playing happily with paper dolls daily do not realize what afield for the labors of talented persons the manufacture of these paper toys presents. One of the best known designers of paper dolls is Miss Marguerite McDonald. She is now a young miss of 16, but she was only 13 years old when her dolls, whose designing had been her amusement and play, was brought to the attention of one of the largest art publishing firms of the country. The firm was so pleased with the artistic quality and original character of Miss Marguerite's work that an offer was promptly made to her for it, and the little girl found that her-play had become profit able. Since the first of her dolls became popular, her pretty handiwork has been much added to, until her doll family is large and distinguished.
Marguerite is the daughter of a naval officer, and her home is in Washington, although she was born 'in New York New Yorkers have a still further claim upon her from the fact that her mother' family live there, too, and Dr. Rogers, long the pastor of the church at the cor
MARGUERITE M'DONALD.
ner of Twenty-first street and Fifth avenue, was her great-grandfather. Marguerite's mother says that when the young artist was a small child, a mere baby, indeed, she saw a pencil one day and took hold of it at once as if she knew how to use it. This fact was so striking, as well as unusual, that her mqther noticed and remembered it, am: felt sure her little daughter would show a talent for drawing when she grow older. This she did very soon, and her painted dollies were the delight of all the children of the neighborhood long before they became an article of sale in the shops. Tl.tr were comical enough at first, though from the very start her originality of design showed itself.
The publishing firm have been very much interested in the little girl from the time they saw her first productions. Last Christmas a year ago they sent her a most beautiful gold watch, set with diamonds, at which you may imagine she was much pleased. Miss Marguerite is a pupil of the Washington High School. Her taleut is a perfectly natural one, she having had no instruction beyond that which is got at the public schools. She means to be an artist, and hopes some day*o use the brush in more ambitious work than her dolls, pretty as they ar®.—Philadelphia Press.
Mrs. Anna B. Jefffers.
"For the first time in the history cf the state," says the Baltimore News, "a woman is today holding a state office in Maryland. Colonel Luther H. Gadd, state librarian, sent his resignation to Governor Lowndes recently, and Mrs. Anna B. Jeffers of Annapolis received her commission, filed her bond and entered upon the duties of tho office, to which she was appointed by Governor Lowndes and confirmed by the senate just before the adjournment of the general assembly. She is the daughter of a late gallaut officer of high rank in the navy, a lady of much personal popularity, ar.d will doubtless make as excellent a state librarian as those of Kentucky, Michigan and other states in which this office has come (o bo regarded as one which women are peculiarly adapted to fill."
Parses Swinging From a Chain.
The fashionable girl these days lets her purse swing from a chain which she wears about ber neck.
The chain must be very fine and the purse of silver or gold mesh with agate top. This idea is more for novelty than convenience, for a purse dangling from one's waist is apt to be a trifle annoying. But it is the fashion, and so the girls are all doing it. A few of the fair maids tuck part of the purse within the belt, as if it were a watch.
Many of th so woven gold or mesh purses are wonderfully beautifuL They not only have the gold ball top studded with jewels, but a tiny gem or two glistens among the woven gold threads of the purse itself.—New York Mercury. 'v
ry,
Denim Decorations.
The decorative possibilities of that standby, blue denim, are being shown this season as never before. It would seem as if the skill of the decorator was being concentrated on the effects he can produce with this fabric. In combination with white, as an outline trimming on the stuff itself or in laoe curtains, over which it may be draped, or in upholstering white enamel furniture, its use is especially successful. All over chairs and divans that are upholstered in the blue or green denims are showily relieved with white buttons and piping cord as a finish.
Aa OkMaad Www.
An Oakland woman has recently built a cottage, doing all the fcarpentering, plumbing and painting bemU While doing it she never oooe hammered a finger, used a cuss word, joined the anion, got drunk or went on a strike. A record to le proud of, is it not?— Newman Tribune.
YAWN IN A MAIDEN SPEECH.
An Incident Which Typifies the Sleepiness of the Knglish Commons.
The occasion of making one's inaiden speech is hardly the time one would expect a legislator to select for giving eent to a yawn. It is nevertheless en record that some 80 years ago, when the present Duke of Devonshire, then Lord Hartington, was making his maiden speech in the house of commons he visibly yawned, and Mr. Disraeli, who-e keen eye noted the occurrence, is accredited with having made the remark that "a man who can yawn in the midst of his maiden speech is capable of rising to the highest position in this house.''
Since his transference to the upper house the noble duke has probably found even more facilities than existed in the commons for dozing.
Mr. Gladstone used to be a frequent offender in the same direction. The Grand Old Man was often lost to all consciousness cf what was going on around-him, and yet, marvelous torelate, after quietly nodding away through a portion of a debate, he would wake up, deliver himself of a big, long yawn, and then make a speech which, for lucidity and power of argument, would seem to imply that he had heard every word that had been spoken throughout the debate.
Mr. Chamberlain and Sir William Harcourt often appear to be fast asleep, but it is doubtful if either of them ever really loses touch of what is going on around him.
The habit, of tilting the hat well over the eyes and sitting with bowed head and legs crossed one over the other is one which appears to find much favrr with a large number of members in cacli succeeding house of commons, but it will always be a moot point whether they really go to sleep or merely "ma' believe to, as children say. At all events, it is noticeable that they never seem at a loss for a word or sentence when the time comes for them to rise up in their places.
Putting all others out of the question, however, the champion sleeper of the house is Sir Richard Temple, who goes to sleep at all times and under all sorts of conditions. At times he appears to be anxious to ward off the feeling of somnolency which is obviously obtaining the mastery over him, but the effort is all in vain and his head will insist on falling upon his breast.
How his hat ever remains upon his head, seeing the dielccatory swerves and strange movements the latter as sumes from time to time, is a matter for wonderment.—Pearsrn's Weekly.
He Sure You Are Uifflit
And then go ahead. If your bl-K1 is impure, your appetite failing, year nerves weak, you may be sure that Howl's Sarsaparilla is what you need. Then take no substitute. Insist upon flood's and only Hood's. This is the medicine which has the largest sales in the world. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the One True Blood Purifier.
Hood's Pills are prompt, efficient, al ways reliable, easy to take, easy to operate.
Small, CIOM Fitting, Quaint Bonnet.
Beside the poke which bears the stamp Of Parisian approval there is a small, close fitting bonnet, quaint in shape and made of rather coarse straw or else of the faucy braids. These bonnets, though not unlike the Dutch cap in shape, are somewhat larger, and are worn farther on the face. The trimming in some instances takos the form of a wreath and encircles the bonnet. Then the dexterous milliner bends it so that it seems almost oval. Some times the chief decoration is at one side and stands up very high. Again, the entire front is quite plain, the trimming is at the back, and either flares out in bows at each side, or stands up quite straight just in the center. Rosettes of piece velvet or gauze ribbon are liked on these bonnets, and many good color effects are obtained when a little care is taken, and some thought is given to the contrast between the rosettes and flowers. —Isabel A. Mai Ion in Ladies' Home Journal.
Craah Costume*.
A few years ago a prediction that coarse kitchen toweling would one day be a fashionable dress fabric would have met with scorn, but today, amusing and absurd as it sounds, crash is made up into the neatest little morning costumes and is indorsed by the best tailors. There are various weaves and weights of crash. The coarse weaves are somewhat shaggy in surface, while the close mesh is smooth. The color ranges from ecru to brown. Dresses made of this material are usnally untrimmed or finished ouly with a belt and collar of colored linen or duck. A wide, full skirt has stitched, overlapped scams and an Eton jacket, which has flaring cuffs and revers of green linen. Another has a blouse waist with a rolling collar and buttons of turqucise blue.—-Philadel-phia Ledger.
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Her Kalnr Dty Attlrr.,
A brave woman appeared on "the sidewalks of New York" the last rainy day wearing a divided skirt, belted coat and watefproof leggings. The dress was of gray material and reached just below the knees. As other women struggled to keep their skim out of the muddy drabble and the overflowing gutters, •he walked on unhampered and unheeding the remarks of criticul pasaersby.
Not even
a grain of salt is
^wanting to emphasize and' 'make perfect the flavor of"
NONE SUCH
MINCE MEAT.
1Pure,
wholesome,— an econom-j
teal luxury. Sold Take no substitute.
Mrt
ELL-SOUUE CO.. SYRACUSE, N. Y|
E
xcursions...
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9*^ J^IANAPOLIS and Tetiirn. O .Tune S3 and 24 Democratic. State Convention: good until Juno 27, inclusive, returning. GjJiJ ANDERSON. 1ND., and return FFLV.W June 3a and 26 Epworth League
State Conference tickets good* returning until June80. KK DAYTON. OHIO. wiO.DD June S3 and 24 Knights of St.
John Encampment: returning until June 29.
O OK WASHINGTON. D. 0.. and re«plO.£D turn. July 4, 5. 6. Y. P. S. O. E, returning until July IS, with privilege extension until July 31. return.
©17 XA
BUFFALO. N. Y.. and
|)ll .uU July 5 and 6 National
1
Educa
tional Association good returnIng until July 12: privilege extension until September 1st.
Homeseekers' excursion to west June 22. Sunday excursions—half rates every Sunday to Big Four points where fare does not exceed S3.50. Ticket office Terre Haute House and Sixth Street Station. i*
E. E. South, G. A., Terre Haute.
C. & IE3. X. It,
S^mer .^Tourists'
11
n:
HATES TO ALL
Northern Resorts.
Tickets on sale from June to September!», 181)6. good returning until October 31. 18M. Parties who are in search of health, pleasure or sport now have an opportunity to go cheap.
For detailed Information, call on K. 1). Dlgges, ticket, agent. Union depot, or J. It. CONNELLY. General Agent.
E. & T. H. R. Ft.
KXimSIOiW SOUTH, Jane 15th, 16th, July 6th, 7tb, 20th 21st
One Fare for Round Trip, Plus $2. Territory to which tickets will le sold— Alabama.Vlorlda, Georgia, Kentucky. Mississippi. North Carolina, South Carolina. Tennessee and Virginia. Tickets good returning :il days from date of sale. .1. U. CONNKLLY. Gen. Agent.
J. A. JDvYlI.KY,
503 OHIO STB.UET.:, Give him a call if you have any kind of Insurance to place, lie will wrltoyou In as good companies as are represented In the city.
Justice of the Peace and Attomey-at-Law.
Sit Smith Third Street. Terre Haute, fud.
N. HICK51AJN,.
1212 Main Street.
All culls will receive the most careful attention. Open day and night.
MARTIN HOIXINUKK. Attorney for Plaintiff J^OTICE TO NON-RESIDENT.
Tiw State of Indiana. Vigo County. In the Vigo Circuit court.. May term. 1WX1. No. 2IW2. Joseph Smith, executor of will James Lane, deceased, vs. Cora Williams, who is Impleaded with Eliza J. Smith et al. In sale of real estate.
He It known, that on the 23rd day of May, 181Xi. said plaintiff tiled an affidavit In duo form, showing that said Cora Williams, who is Impleaded with Eliza J. Smith et al.. Is a non-resident, of the State of Indiana.
Said non-resident defendant Is hereby notified of the pendency of snld action against her. and that the same will stand for trial June 25th. 1SW5. the same being at the May, term of said court In the year 189fl.
HIGH I). liOQCET.
[SEAIj.1 Clerk.
H. J. HAKKH. Plaintiff's Attorney. .SHERIFF'S SALE.
Ity virtue of an order of sale Issued from the Vigo Circuit court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of Terre Haute Savings Hank and against Herbert E. Sutton. Clifford It. Hutton. Alonzo Sutton. George N. Borden, executor of estate of George W. Borden, diseased. Herman Hulman. whltford Manuel, Thomas A. Nnntz and Tho/ntis R. Underwood. I am ordered to sell the following described real estate, situated In Vigo county, Indiana, to-wit:
Twenty-five (25) acres, the west half (Vt) of the south half (Vt) of one hundred (100) acres off the north side of the northwest quarter (X) of section nine (#), In township ten (10) north of range ten (10) west and thirty (30) acres off the south end of the southwest quarter (M) of the northwest quarter (H) of section nine ffl), In township ten (10) north of range ten (10) west, situated in Vigo county. Indiana, and on SATURDAY, THE aOTII DAY OF
JUNK,
iauo,
between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day. at the north door of the court, house. In Terre Haute. I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenance* to the same Itelonglng. for a term not exceeding seven years, to the hiifh est bidder for rash, and upon failure 1. realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said jut/t, ment and costs. I will then anci there offerJ the fee-Hlmple In and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same.
This 29th day of May.
JOHN BUTLEB.
Printer's fee, 810.00. Sheriff.
H. J. BAKKR, Plaintiff's Attorney. gHERIPPH HALE.
By virtue of an order of sale Issued from the Vigo Circuit court, to me directed and deliver**!. In favor of Charles A. Craln and against Daniel X. Moore. Carrie L. Moore, A an a S ha an A us a I a ordered to sell the following described real «*st*t«. situated In Vigo county. Indiana, towit:
Part of the southwest quarter (H) of section wenty-elght(28). in townshlpeleven (Jl) north of range nine (9) west, described as follows: Commencing at the *outhwe*t corner of said quarter (H) section, and running thence east one hundred and six and two-thirds (10GK) rods, thence north twenty-two and sixsevenths (22S-7) rods. the»ir«* west one hundred and six and two-thfr« !08*i) rods, and thence south twenty-two and six lx-seventh»
(28 S-7) rods to the place of beginning, situated In Vigo county. Indiana, and on MONDAY, TIIK OTII DAY OK .JULY, 1 800, between tbe hours of 10 o'clock a. m.. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day, at the north door of the court bouse, in Terre Haute. I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to tbe same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to tbe highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realise a sum sufficient to satisfy said judgment and costs. I will then and there offer the feesimple in and to said real estate to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy tbe same.
This 13th day of June, 1SBS. JOHN BUTLEB. Pf.«8J».
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