Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 50, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 June 1897 — Page 2

VET SHE IS A QUEEN.

THOUGH SHE WEARS NO BONNET AND MAKES HER OWN CLOTHES.

Queen Stella Never Bothers Over FashIon Plate*—But She In Always Attired Artistically and Is a Great Favorite In

New York Society.

[Copyright, 1S97, by the Author.]

A qneen who never wears a bonnet and makes her own clothes is indeed a rara avis. But there is such a woman, and she is at present living in New York.

Just imagine the peace of mind which comes from entire oblivion of the Easter hat or the reception toque. Just picture the restful state of the woman who has never puzzled out a fashion plate or harbored wrath against a dressmaker. Yet this heavenly calm is the unvarying normal condition of Queen Stella of the Gonzalez tribe of gitane, or Spanish gypsies. On the coldest day of winter or the hottest of summer her head covering is never other thau a red square of silk or fine wool. This is arranged well back on the top of the head and falls in graceful folds over the shoulders about half way to the waist. The same drapery is always worn in the house, so that the queen's preparations for the drive or the promenade are exceedingly simple. In winter she puts on a pair of gloves and throws about her a large circular. In summer she dons a light "ape. The heavy wrap may bo of black or a rich Persian goods of palm leaf design, with a little upper capo of silk velours in dull red.

Queen Stella prefers to make her own gowns because she can never get a dressmaker to do just as she wishes. The dresses are, besides, invariably of one cut and very simple of construction.

The skirt, is guiltless of gores, haircloth, fiber chamois or crinoline and is made of some soft material, unlined, gathered to a band and falling within about two inches of the ground. With this is worn a low cut, sleeveless underwaist, over which comes a bolero jacket and front, of lootely gathered silk. Sometimes the sleeves of the jacket are of soft silk or crape, but often they are of black lace, which shows the bare, rounded arm beneath. They reach to the elbow, are niado full and gathered into a band.

If the costumes are simple of cut, they are often of the richest materials and most elaborate and sumptuous in garniture. On the dainty little bolero is lavished the greatest part of tho time and expense. This is often most beautifully embroidered in gold and studded thick-

yfKKS sm.l.A OF TIIK GYI'MKS.

ly with jow» Is. For less cvriMiionious occasions it may ho trimmed with ^old braid, jt or pearls. It is nlwnysof silk, satin or oriental nootls. as Queou Stella has not much liking for velvet.

The soft, full fiont leaves the neck exposed in front, hut is always high enough to beMrietlv modest and proper.

Light blue, red or black ia generally the color of the skirts. When the material is of an oriental pattern, it iH left nntriinmed. but if it is of plain silk or wool it is ornamented with rows of ribbon, bold braid or galoon.

Beads are always about the neck and often wound around the-wrints. It is most interesting to get a peep at the little queen's collection of odd, antique necklaces, amulets and jewels, some of them having been in her tribe for hundreds of years.

One wonders where Queen Stella finds the time for these feats of needlework, for she is a very busy woman in many fields. She writes articles for the press, assist.* at charitable entertainments with recitations and exhibitions of palmistry and is, Inside*, a great social favorite. Every day is filled with engagements for luncheoi *, dinners and receptions, for this talented woman has been taken up by the cream of society and received and feted to the top of its bent.

New York is always looking out for something unique, and it has found it in Queen Stella. She speaks four or five languages fluently and has the tact of a courtier and the naturalness and charm of a child of the forvst.

A short time ago ,«ome one asked her why she did not adopt the dress of the American woman, since she was here to stay for a time at least. "Why should I wear your dress?" she exclaimed in her quick, impulsive way. "Why, I would look like a find. A gypsv in tight wai«ts and corsets! Who ever heard of such a thing? "I had to laugh so much one night •when I went to MY a woman who gave a pvpsy datK-e and took the par* of a gypsy in a mutation. "What do you think? She had slippers with high French heels, a little bit of a waist, her skirt up to her knees, and on her bead a hat. "Ugh!" ah rugging her shoulders. "She looked so absurd. It was comic opera nothing real The gitana would never drew like that. W« wear good •tout aboeo, generally laccd up the

front. Our skirts are always wlrhin a few inches of the ground, and as for pinching the waist, heaven—that wo never do! We like freedom too welL "There seems to be so little known about the life of the gitane here. People seem to think we are vagabonds. But we are not. We area musical people and play much for concerts and entertainments. The Spanish gypsies live mostly in caves, and they adorn their dwelling places with pretty draperies, skins of animals and pictures. 'They are quite fond of having their photographs taken, and the pretty gypBy girl is very apt to have a large collection of the young men's pictures, just as your American belle has. "George Eliot in 'The Spanish Gyp sy* has given the truest account of the gitane of any one who has ever written about them." ALICE E. IVES.

A GIRL RANCHER.

Enterprise of the New Woman of the Pacific Slope.

The new woman of the Pacific slope is, if possible, forging ahead of her sister in the east in enterprises that ere ate fame and wealth. Some of the best

mm

MISS MARUARKT ROGERS,

managers of grain ranches in California are New England women. In the Pomona valley two women are successfully running stock farms. In Riverside there are seven women orange growers, and the most successful manager of the fishing boats in one of the coast towns is a handsome ycung brunette. But Monterey county has a young woman 23 years old who has made a fortune in the cattle and horse business. Her name is Margaret iiogers, and she is as artistic and talented as she is businesslike and enterprising. She rounds up the cattle on her father's ranih and her own, sees to their branding, corrals the colts and sheep, plows, sows and runs a harvesting icachine, and plays the piano and makes fc»ujy work during her spare moments. Upon her library wall hangs a medal which she won in a ladies* seminary in Oaklaud for proficiency in Latin and English literature.

MLc8 Rogers came to Monterey cminty with her father in 1876. The latter was then nearly dead with consumption, but he now enjoys fairly good health. Mr. Rogers embarked in stock raising, and his dhugiiter and her sister proved useful at tho outset. They protested against sidesaddles, and for the past 12 years have rarely used one. Miss Margaret devised a divided skirt, which she finds admirable for the purpose of riding. Mounted astride oil a heavy vaqnero's saddle, her invention drapes itself as smoothly as a pair of riding trousers and falls even lower than when she is on her feet. She is proud of the fact that she successfully rode a neighbor's horse that had nearly killed a half dozen men, that she saved the lives of a lot of lambs by swimming her horse across a swift stream, and that she rode down a chalk bluff 60 feet high at an angle of 40 degrees in pursuit of a /unaway steer. She has had several stirring adveutures that would have caused fright on the part of even an old rancher, and she says if a few stout hearted American girls would face a little ridiculo the sex would soon be freed from mauy silly customs.

F. A. W.

Progressive Young Women.

Miss Grace Emilie Briggs, daughter of that gifted and eloquent minister Dr. Charles A. Briggs, has graduated at the Union Theological seminary of New York (Presbyterian) with the highest honors of any in the class. She was the only woman among a large class of men, and she passed far the best examination of any. Yet the Presbyterian church would see Grace Emilie Briggs in purgatory before It would ordain her to preach a single sermon from a Presbyterian pulpit. Is this Christian consistency?

Miss Elizabeth Marbory has found her place in the business world, and it is a unique one. Some years ago it occurred to her that if the right person should open an agency for reading, criticising and placing the plays of dramatic authors there would be mutual benefit in it. Accordingly, she began work along this line. She was successful from the first. She now has a large and constantly growing business. She places the plays of foreign as well as home writers, and it is only through negotiation with her that the plays of Sardou and other French dramatists can be performed in this country. In France she is as well known as in America, and there she is considered eminently jus* and fair, fully mindful of the rights of French playwrights. It was owing to this perhaps that a little time ago the French government bestowed on her the coration of the purple ribbon, given to those who have distinguished themaeives usefully in artistic work of various kind*. Our own government ought to have some of these medals and decorations to bestow on its worthy citiaeaa. E. A. G.

She Stops a Street Fight and Likewise Speaks Der Mind.

money

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, JUNE 12, 1897.

THE NEW WOMAN.

She might not like to have her name mentioned, but a3 I shall not her permission in the case yon will be interested to know that it was one you have heard, Miss Theresa Barcalow. She is a faithful worker in the woman suffrage cause, a member of Sorosis and of the Ladies' Health Protective association of New York. As a member of the last organization of course she has the right to protect anybody's health who stand9 in need of it. One fine afternoon she was going to the meeting of the Health Protective society. As she came to a street corner on Broadway ebe saw a crowd gathered. It was muttering and growling and occasionally howling. There was no policeman in sight Miss Barcalow drew near to see what was the matter. In the center of the crowd she saw two young fellows fighting like wild beasts. They clawed and banged each other murderously, and in all the throng of men who stood by there was none to stop them. In fact, so far from stopping them several in that crowd of barbarians cheered the two infuriated beasts on. This new woman neeoed not a second glance. Did she faint? No. Did she scream? No. Without a moment's hesitation she parted the crowd and ran to the young fellows who were fighting. She seized each one by the back of the neck and slung them apart as she would have done two cats. They jlunk away, more ashamed than they bad ever been in their lives. Two bold young prizefighters to be interfered with and cowed by a woman 1 It was too mueh. Then, having stopped the brutal performance, Miss Barcalow turned upon the crowd of witnesses. In a few choice words of fine new womanly scorn she gave them her opinion of men who would permit a bloody and degrading exhibition like that in the one of the busiest streets of New York. This crowd, too, slunk away and dissolved itself before the fire in her eye, the lash in her voice. After that Miss Barcalow turned and went her way to the meeting of the Ladies' Health Protective association.

It is likely that, with the exception of Paris and London, there are more deadbeats in New York city in proportion to the population than anywhere else on the globe. From all quarters they come, penniless adventurers of both sexes. With the men deadbeats I have no present concern, except to remark that if I had back even part of the money they have obtained from me on one pretense and another I Bhould have enough to take a trip to Europe and back. We do not expect much from men anyhow. But women deadbeats I do seriously object to for the credit of our sex. These women deadbeats are beooming too numerous. They sometimes work a little, but work is not the first object of their existence. Their first object is, if possible, to get money without work^It is within the experience of every

Busi­

ness man that women come to him making no sort of hesitation in begging for money which they have not the slightest intention of repaying. I know women who for years have largely made their living by "borrowing" funds. The usual method is to ask you for the loan of a small sum. If you give it to them, they will probably pay it back, just by way of a blind. But soon after they will come again, and this time they will not pay, nor do they pay again, though their brazeu cheek will bring them to you again and again with their impudent beggary. It is a dangerous habit to fall into, that of borrowing even small sums. There is no need of it if you use ordinary prudence. A woman who thus knocks about from pillar to post, getting

out

of

anybody she

can, degrades the name of womanhood and injures her sex in the eyes of all mankind. Don't give her a cent if she comes your way. Let her bo starved into honesty. You can always tell the difference between her an?Tthe ordinary honest woman in hard luck temporarily.

Of the 150 woir.rtn who lost their lives in the Paris fire a majority could have been saved if they had retained their presence of mind and availed themselves of the various exits. But no they lost their heads at once and acted like idiots and crazy creatures, paralyzed with fear. A training in coolness and calmness such as is considered necessary for boys, but which nobody takes the trouble to bestow on girls, would have saved them.

It gives us that tired feeling to find the local Methodist conferences still voting, as they have been doing the past six years, on the question of admitting women as delegates to the general conference. In the year 1997 will they be voting still?

Miss Effle Crooker of Great Neck, N. Y., is a preliy and plucky girl mail carrier. She drives every day in a light wagon ovei her route across the island and returns home. When she was 10 years old, si: 3 was as strong and fearless on land and water as any boy of her age, rowing a boat with case.

Baroness tie Hirsch has given monej enough to bu.'ld and maintain a commodious and beautiful hotel for working girls in New York city. Arrange ments will also be perfected in connection with the home to provide classes for the trade and industrial training of girls. This is a noble use to make of wealth.

It is much better to give people the industrial and moral training which will enable them to support themsclvra than to give money to them in charity after they have become paupers.

Mrs. Mary A. Onto is caahier of a hank in San Jose, CaL, and sbe is a good one. Beside bar upon her desk lie loaded pistols, which she can use, if occasion requires that she should.

Euu

Abchukp

OomnoL

o:

Dress and the Man.

"American men, as a rule, are slovenly, unnidy and careless," according to a writer in the New York Tribune. "A certain set, it is true, that has leisure and means, is well dressed and thoroughly groomed, but with men of affairs the distinction between Americans and Englishmen is marked. In England the same class look, as a whole, decidedly superior, and it is simply their clothes and the way they are worn and the generally scrubbed look of their faces that make the difference." It is useless to ignore clothes as a powerful factor in our lives. If the tailor does not actually "make the man," he certainly has a great deal to do with the semblance. One of the great causes of untidiness among men who can afford to dress and appear well is the lack of proper valeting. In England every well to do man has his clothes taken care of by a servant, and if he has not his own espe cial man there is always some one in the household whose duty it is to see that his coats are well brushed, his trousers cleaned and pressed, his shoes polished, bat9 brushed and all the details which in this country—except the shoes, perhaps—a busy man is supposed to see to himself.

In America a man arrogates to himself a certain credit in not caring for clothes—' 'he has no time for such nonsense"—the consequence being that when conventionality demands a recognition of its claims, it requires an especial effort, which is often apparent. Many political and business men will say that it is a distinct disadvantage to dress well in this country. Older merchants regard a punctiliously dressed clerk with disapproval. Public men say that their constituents distrust "frills," while a large majority simply do not want to take the trouble to dress, and yet these very men like their womenkind to be well dressed and grudge no expense so far as the latter are concerned, while they themselves wear slovenly clothes and do not even try to look fresh and neat.

Ktl* and Plants.

Ether, it has been discovered by a Danish experimenter, has on plants an effect exactly the reverse of that which it has on animals, and instead of putting them to sleep will awaken them even from that deep slumber which ordinarily nothing but the arrival of spring can disturb. The plants to be etherized are placed in airtight boxes or glass cylinders, according to size, and exposed to the fumes for from 24 to 96 hours. By doing thiB in the fall the activity which otherwise would not begin for months is started, and the plants, on removal from the etherizing chambers to a hothouse, at once leaf out, bud and blossom in a most surprising way. As yet only willows, hyacinths and lilacs have been tried, and in many instances well developed flowers were produced before Christmas. With lilacs the success was especially great, but this is believed to be due simply to the accidental hitting in their case of just the right amount of ether to administer. It is believed that further experiments will reveal the best procedure to follow with other plants and that the discovery will be of vast importance to florists, enabling them to control with accuracy the out of season blossoming of any plant. Tho process is inexpensive and easy of application, the only danger connected with it being that of fire, as tho ether fumes are ready to burst into flames on small provocation.—New York Times.

Tlio Artist In Sand, Kioto.

We passed a dollniaker's shop, in which sat a couple of girls manufacturing little puppets that to the lifo resembled the ridiculous little boys who were eagerly looking on and who probably served as unconscious models to the busy artists, who turned tho toys off so rapidly. I strolled over the way to where a crowd of children were breathlessly bending over a man who was busy at something among them. The man turned out to be one of those of whom I had often heard, who was engaged in painting a picture of colored sand upon the ground. One of the crowd was a little girl with her baby brother fast asleep strapped upon her back, as is the way of the country.

On each side of a patch of sand, so spread as exactly to resemble a huge piece of white paper, stood two lamps, and on this he drew his picture with colored sands taken from half a dozen different bags and into which he would dip his hand now and again, letting the black sand trickle from his fingers and go at will, sketching the outline of a fish or a man or anything else, and then he would color the sketch, sometimes doing two colors at once.—Strand.

Poker at the Capital.

Some of the stories of the big games of the' 'old days" are taken with a large grain of salt. Many of them were similar to the game in which ex-Congress-man Tom Ochiltree was engaged not so very long ago. Ochiltree was discovered one morning coming down Fifteenth street, looking very blue. A friend meeting him inquired what the trouble was. "Oh, I was in one of those big congressional games last night," said the Texan. "Well, I suppose from your looks that you lost," Haid the friend "Well, I should say I did," responded Ochiltree. "I lost $50,000 in one sitting last night, and the worst part of it is that #2.75 of it was cash."—Washington Cor. Philadelphia Press.

Bo—ini and

WHMT.

One day Gounod, on entering the room erf Rossini, found him thumping the piano with all his might, but drawing the most discordant noise from the instrument. "What in the name of all that is good are you playing?" asked the Frenchman. "I am trying to play that new score of Wagner's," replied the Italian. "But the score fa upside down." "That's true," was the retort *'I bad it the other way tap at first, tat couldn't make bead or tail of it, so I thought I might succeed in this way."

1

"The Candle Thief.

An odd experience befell Mr. Hunter during his return from a hunting trip to the settlement last fall. One evening he left a candle burning on the table in the Forty-nine Mile camp while he went out to the hovel to look after his horses. To his surprise wlieu he return?d to the camp the candle was not only extinguished but could nowhere be found. Mr. Huuter is not entirely free from the influence of those wild, weird legends peculiar to the backwoods of the Miramichi, especially those that relate to a fabulous monster known as "the Dungarvon Hooper." He lit another candle, however, and again went out to attend to his team. When he came back to the camp he found that the second candle had vanished as mysteriously as the first. This was a severe blow to Mr. Hunter's peace of mind, but he pulled himself together and examined the camp thoroughly to see if some practical joker was not coucealed about the premises. Finding no trace of anything in human form, he placed his third and last candle on tne table, stood his ax within easy reach and awaited developments. In a few minutes a flying squirrel hopped in the door, boldly mounted the table and knocked over the caudle, thus extinguishing the flame. He started for the door with his booty, when Mr. Hunter took a hand in it and put the little rascal to flight.—Fredericton (N. B.) Cor. Forest and Stream.

Charity In Judging Character.

Hasty judgment of the actions of others is dangerous and often unjust. We measure too much by some superficial appearance and condemn hastily, when, if we but knew and understood the motives and reasons, we would warmly approve. We sometimes say of some one, "That pain, sorrow or loss has not deeply affected him." But we do not know. It is like tbo death of a few of the soldiers in front of a regiment. The broken ranks close up again into the solid phalanx, and tho loss is not apparent. There may be no disorganization, no surrender, no craving for pity, no display of despair. It is like the calm, dazzling play of the waves warmed by the morning's sun after a night of storm and disaster. There is no sign of the wreck. The tide has carried the debris away far out on the ocean the treacherous water has swallowed all signs and tokens of the night's awful work. Wo see ouly the fairness of the morning, not the suffering of the night. Let us be charitable in our judgment and condemn not when we do not know. —William George Jordan iu Ladies' Home Journal.

Smart Pupil.

Teacher—Can you tell me iu what year Csesar invaded Britain? Pupil—Yes'm.

Teacher—What year was it? Pupil—You can't expect me to answer two questions in succession. That question belongs to the next in the class.—Boston Transcript.

Tossed on the Foaming Billows You may never have been, but If you cross the Atlantic, no matter how smooth the watery expanse, without sea sickness you are—well, a lucky voyager, that Is all. Old tars who have spent r.lieir lives on the ocean waves, who were almost born, so to speak, with their "sea legs on," suffer now and then from sea sickness In very tempestuous weather. Sea captains, tourists, commercial travelers and yachtsmen say that there Is no finer safeguard against nausea than llostetter's Stomach Hitters, and it has been equally reliable as a preventive by Invalids who sometimes suffer as much In those conveyances as ocean travelers do In steamships. Biliousness, constipation, sick headache and disorders of stomrch caused by oppressive climatic Influences or unwholesome or unaccustomed food or water, always yield to the Bitters speedily. This popular medicine also remedies, rheumatic, kidney and nervous disorders, and the Infirmities Incident to Increasing years.

Everybody Says So.

Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the most wonderful medical discovery of the

age, pleas­

ant and refreshing to the taste, act, gently and positively on kidneys, liver and bowels, cicansimr the entire system, dispel colds, cure headache, fever, habitual constipation and biliousness. Please buy and try a box of C. C. C. to-day 10, S. :.0 cents. Sold and guaranteed to cure by all druggists.

Considerate.

Mrs. Muwed—There is one thing I like about you, my dear—you don't throw your mother's biscuits in my face.

Mr. Nuwed—No, darling I don't want to spoil your beauty. Her biscuits were ev*jn worse than yours.—Brooklyn Life.

Just as Germany is the land of short sight, so it is the land of stuttering. At the present time there are over 100,000 stuttering children in the national schools. The infirmity, indeed, is supposed to be contagious

Try Graln-O! Try Graln-O! Ask your Grocer to-day to show you a package of GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it, like it. GRAIN-O has that seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. the price of coffee, life, and 25 cts. per package. Sold by all grocers. _____

Dover, N. H., Oct. 81. 1898.

MESSR. ELY BROS. The Balm reached me safely and in so short a time the effect is surprising. My son says the first application gave decided relief. I have a shelf filled with "Catarrh Cures." Tomorrow the stove shall receive them and Ely's Cream Balm will reign supreme. Respectfully, MRS. FRASKWJF FREEMA*.

Cream Balm is kept by all druggists. Full size 50c. Trial size 10 cent*. We mail it.

ELY BROS., 56 Warren St.. X- Y. City.

Shake Into Your Shoes

Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It cures painful, swollen, smarting feet and instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions. Its the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen's Foot-Ease malt— tight-fitting or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching feet. Try it to-day. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores. By mail for 95c. In stamps. Trial package FREE. Add re**, Allen & Olmted, Le Roy, N. Y.

Why

Do people buy Hood's Sarsaparilla In preference to any other,— in fact almost to

the

exclusion of all others?

Because

They know from actual use that Hood's is the best, i. e., it cures when others fail. Hood's Sarsaparilla is still made under the personal supervision of the educated pharmacists who originated it.

The question of best is just as positively decided in favor of Hood's as the question of comparative sales.

Another thing: Every advertisement of Hood's Sarsaparilla is true, is honest.

Hood's

Sarsaparilla

is

the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists.

Prepared only by C.

I.

$L

Hood & Co.. Lowell,

Mass.

nil are the only pills to take

tlOOQ S rlllS

with Hood's Sarsaparilla.

COKE

CRUSHED

S3.50 Delivered

COARSE...

$3.00

UeI,vered*

Equal to Anthracite Coal.

Citizens'Fuel & Gas Co.,

507 Ohio Street.

JOHN M. VOLKERS,

ATTORNEY.

Collections and Notarial Work.

5«1 OHIO STKKMT.

DAILEY & CRAIG

503 OHIO STSBBT.

Give them a call If you have any kind of Insurance to place. They will write you In as good companies as are represented In the city.

N. HICKMAN, TTIiT.DIEIR'X'JLKIIEJR

1212 Main Street.

All calls will receive the moBt careful attention. Open day and night.

St. Louis

and Return Saturday Night, June 19th.

Tickets good n't liming until Monday night] Juno 21st Inclusive. All the Summer Hardens open.

Full particulars at Big Four ticket offices, Terre Haute house and Sixth street, station. F,. F. SOl'TH. (ieneral Agent.

l'cter M. Foley, Lawyer, :tJ4V4 Ohio Street. Terro Haute. TTAC1IMENT AND GARNISHEE NO2Y THE.

I No. 43IH.1

Before A. B. Felsenthal. J. I'.. Harrison township. Vigo county. Indiana. Terre Haute Abattoir and Stock YarksCo., vs. II. II. I'hllper. whose christian name Is unknown to the plaintiff.

In attachment and garnishee. Whereas. It appears by the affidavit of tho plaintiff that the said defendants are nonresidents of the stateof Indiana, and whereas also It appears from the return of the consta hie to the summons herein Issued, that tho said defendants were not found In Ids bailiwick. It Is therefore ordered that due notice of the pendency of this action he given to the said defendants by publication In a newspaper of general circulation published la said county.

Said non-resident defendants are therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action against them and that the same will stand for 1X97. at 2 south Third

trial on the 6th day of July. 1W. at 2 o'clock_p. m.. at my office, lis street. Terre Haute. Indiana.

Witness my hand and seal this lflth day of

[heaiJ^' A. B. FELSENTHAL. J. P.

ORA D. DAVIS.

Attorney.

^"OTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS.

The State of Indiana. Vigo County, In the Vigo Superior court, of Vigo County. No. 525B. Robert Campbell vs. Clara Campbell. In divorce.

Be It known, thaton the 22nd day of May, 1897 said plaintiff filed an affidavit In due form, showing that said Clara Campbell was a nonresident of the State of Indiana.

Said non-resident defendant Is hereby notified of the pendency of said action against her. ard that the same will stand for trial July 14th. 1«T7. the same being at the June term of said court in the year 1W7.

[SKAI..1 DAVID WATSON.

N

Clerk.

OTICE TO HEIRS. CREDITORS, ETC.

In the matter of the estate of Matilda Greenwood, deceased In the Vigo Circuit court. May term. lf»7.

Notice is hereby given that Charles B. Caton. as administrator of the estate of Matilda Greenwood, deceased, has presented and filed his account and vouchers In final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Circuit court, on the 1st day of July. IW7. at which time all heirs, creditors and legatees of said estate are required to appear In said court and show cause, If any there be, why said account and vouchers should not

**w/tness

the clerk and seal of said Vigo

Circuit court, at Terre Haute. Indiana, this 4th day of June. 1887. [SKAT/1 DAVID I,- WATSON. Clerk.

J8AA0 BALL A SON,

FUNERAL DIRECTORS,

Cor. Third and Cherry streets, Terre Haute Ind., are prepared to execute all orders In their line with neatness and dispatch.

Embalming a Specialty.

To the Young Face

Ipwioin'i Comuioi Powoaagive* fresher Icharms to the old, renewed yonth. Try It.

iiisaii