Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 51, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 June 1897 — Page 2
•FOR outdoor wear.
COSTUMES THAT MAKE A DULL LANDSCAPE BEAUTIFUL.
A Dainty Drew* For a Tennis Party. Handsome Coaching Costume—Uses of Braid* and Velvet Ribbons—New Style*
In Basque* and Jackets.
[Copyright, 1897, by the Author.] Coaching trips and all the outdoor sports for women call for garments designed expressly for eacfr special one. For several seasons tennis gowns were made loose, rather short and in some caw 8 of remarkable colors in stripes or plaids. Next came light flannels, with odd embroidery to form rackets and balls. This had the outlines made of white rope and the crossings done with thick cord overhanded on. In fact, there have been a few like this shown this season, bat I think that the day for croqnet mallets and tennis rackets and foul anchors has gone, and I hope forever. They have made way for a new stylo of pretty and picturesque dresses that ornament the wearer and make the waste places of the earth beautiful.
There was a dainty dress, pretty enough for any occasion, made for a tennis party. It was cream colored pique with fine black dots. Down each front breadth seam there was a row of black lace insertion sewed on flat This also extended around the hips, just below the lowest of three black velvet ribbons in fcrm of a swiss girdle. Each of these ribbons was held in a point by an imitation sapphire button. The sleeves were loose but not too large gigots and wero (rimmed with one row of the lace insertion net on a line with another row sewed across the bust in zigzag shape.
Below this was a very pretty arrangement of cross tucks of the material, and above it three velvet ribbons met iu loops on the shoulders. The plain stock had three pointed rows of ribbon, with sapphire buttons on the points. To wear with this gown wae made and provided a rough straw hal with a high crown. Around the brim there wan a trimming of white lacs and black velvet, with a double red pop
NEW SUMMER GOWNS.
py at one Ride, with a stiff feather above it. A red parasol, with a doubled red ruftle vdprd with narrow white lace, was one very important part of the costume. Tho chief beauty of this costume us ono niado particularly for tennis is that it is compact, dainty and graceful, while tho most active movements can not put a particle of it out of place or xnako tho wearer look frouzy. Another very novel and fetching costume for tenuis was shown. This would have been rank heresy a few years ago. There was first a light taffeta wrap reaching to tho bottom of the dress. This had a ynko and a sort of cape of accordion plaited silk done on the selvage. There wero no sleeves, and it was probably designed to hide the glory of the gown beneath until exactly the right moment. I should havo said this wfap was in changeable tints of violet and green. The liat was sailor shape, with plaid ribbons in green violet and red. The parasol was a tartan taffeta without ornament. Indeed, ornament would have beou superfluous on this, as it coold easily assert itself. So wheu the right moment comes, and the pretty tennis girl slips off the long wrap and stands confessed in a pearl white tamise dress made with three skirts, each edged with a canary colored scalloped stripe of tmxuulo, she becomes the object of interest. Her waist is made with a loosely gathered lower portion, which Is drawn in slightly with a harness belt of tanued leather. The yoke is pointed deeply and is of the brocade. The sleeves have loose puffs at the top, while the fore part has deep pointed cuffs.
A youug married lady whose taste is considered perfect has just had a coaching costnme made that is remarkably handsome. The skirt was of the rich black annure silk which is ncmcrushable and always in fashion. There was a shirt waist of black and white striped silk, with a fold of the silk overlaid with fine white lace insertion and a stock finished with a frill of the white Jftce at the top and a cravat bow at the throat. There was a jacket of blood red broadcloth, tailor stitched and with bindiugof black silk braid ou the revers and sleeve caps. The hat matched the costume, having a red velvet brim and a black straw crown, with black lace and ostrich tips to finish. The parasol was of red silk with full ruffles of black silk mull overlaid with fiue white lace. Such
A
costume, while really elegant,
would make the wearvr the central poiut of observation almost anywhere.
TEBKJS
Pretty fancies are wrought out on many dresses by the use of braids and velv »t ribbons, which have a popularity due, we are told, to the queen's jubilee. There are some of them with thick corded silk edges in different colors, but probably the most striking are those with white edges. These velvets are employed in any and every way. Bayadere stripes are made by several rows set on straight around a skirt in graduated widths. Blue and white in combination for dressy toilets are as popular as ever and are certainly very handsome. One has a full vest front of white taffeta and an eton jacket of dark bine cravanette. This has a false flgaro above it, and all the space left on the eton front is covered by lines of white braid, though in one case the eton was of striped silk, with a crush belt and bow of the same, but the whole was blue and white in each case. Brown and white and green and white treated in the same way are used together with pleasing effect.
Basques and jackets of every style and shape are fashionable, and boleros, etons and figaros are all seen hourly. Some of them bear a very small family resemblance to the originals. There was a very dainty tan taffeta for a young lady, the skirt laid in folds all around, save in front. By tbe way. I may mention that all sorts of upright plaits and folds are very popular just now for all but wash dresses. Bias folds are also seen often on fine gowns. The waist to this tan gown was draped in fall surplice in front and was brought down to a rounded point in the back in three or four small plaits and there held with a small shirred bow of the silk. The surplice ended in a shirring held by a jeweled buckle. The sleeves had a stingy little puff at the top, with pointed tabs as caps. The yoke was cut in long points all around, and these, as well as the caps, were bordered with ivory lace. This yoke was mentioned as a flgaro, but it requires a practiced eye and a grain of salt to accept it as such.
Among what one may call novelties one finds the sweaters for ladies for cycliug. They reach but little below the waist line and may be worn with the belt outside or vice vettsa, as one prefers. They button up on the shoulders
and up each side of the collar, which is made to lie down neatly, while simulating a rolling one. The sleeves have the upper portions deeply ribbed and the lower plain, with cuffs. They have the waist sharply defined by means of the belt. Maroon, dark blue, garnet, black and white are the colors seen. In many cases the sweaters are to be chosen for bicycling on account of their flexibility in preference to any other waist, but they are not very dressy or feminine.
With these sweaters aud with shirt waists, even the silk and yelvet ones, we see worn English grain leather belts with harness buckles iu silver aud gilt. Other of the English leather belts have bicycle pockets attached to them. There are belts for both women and men of alligator and seal, lined with leather and finished very simply, but strongly.
There are suede finish silk gloves for bicycling in tau, black, mode and gray. It is said they hold as firmly as the kid ones, are more porous and consequently cooler, while the cost is hardly more than one-fourth as great.
HKNKIETTE ROUSSEAU.
Mrs. McKinley.
Mrs. McKinley, as she appears to the people of Washington, is a sweet faced lady of medium height, with fignre neither slender nor stoat, bright, expressive bine eyes, soft gray curls, which are short and parted in the middle, being held in place by jeweled side combs. Her smile is of rare sweetness, and only by a slight tinge of pallor does her rounded faoe suggest a hint of poor health. She is not nearly so much of an invalid as many people suppose, and though she usually carries with her a slender, gold headed cane it is very rarely used. Mrs. McKinley dresses in excellent taste, and always wears close fitting garments, even at the breakfast table, as she particularly dislikes tea gowns or negligee of any sort. One of ber favorite gowns is a royal bine velvet, made in princess style, and finished at the wrists and throat with ruffles of point lace.—Washington Home Mag*sine.
At the Boston horse show three ladies rode cross saddle style, aud the universal verdict was that th«y looked well. Instead of having one skirt upon one side of the horse they bad two skirts, one covering the lower extremities ou each side of the horse. At the western horse shows prisM are now offered for the best woman cross saddle riders.
AUTESATUBDAY
"•sail!
THE NEW WOMAN.
Argument* Used Against Her by English Clergymen and Cnirerslty Graduates. When a cause reaches the stage where the dead cat and stale egg argument is used against it, that cause may be considered as won. It was so in the case of the abolition of slavery in this country it was so in the case of the American Revolution, and, with due reverence be it said, it was so with the establishment of Christianity itself. When the Declaration of Independence was first read to the public in Philadelphia, the "upper classes" were dead against it. One of these fine gentlemen stood upon the outer edge among the crowd of laborers and ragged men who listened to it and went away and sneeringly wrote of the scene, "There were very few respectable people present." And the conduct of the clergymen of the church of England and of other alleged gentlemen graduates and undergraduates of the university of Cambridge justifies the eure prediction that ere long young women who have finished with honor the course of study required at that institution will receive the same degrees that are bestowed on young men. "We have passed our examinations," gently and respectfully petitioned the young ladies. "Give us the degrees you bestow on young men who have done as much." "No, we won't," answered the regents. "Why?" said the girls. For answer the opponents mounted aloft the effigy of a woman in bloomers upon a bicycle. "But we have our living to earn. The diplomas will be of inestimable value to us," still gently pleaded the young ladies. And their opponents clubbed together and bought a great store of bad eggs, to use iu case the girls were successful. A dummy woman in bloomers and a bushel of rotten eggs! These be tho arguments advanced by the clergymen and other graduates and the students of Cambridge university against giving women college degrees. 'These ancient seats of learning for England's upper classes must be protected," quoth the London Times approvingly of the university men's action. Just so. Bad eggs as a weapon of offense and defense recall the favorite Chinese method of warfare 2,000 years ago. They were frightful, those old stench balls, but they had to give way before lead and gunpowder. Meantime the new woman marches gloriously on. She will overcome with her strong will aud dauntless courage even the "thugs and blackguards" of Cambridge university, as the Boston Herald calls them.
In an apartment bouse where an acquaintance of mine lives in New York city three families have been obliged to move out in the past three months because they could not pay their rent. The families were all small, the largest numbering only four persons. In each of them there was a man breadwinner in good health and in the prime of life. In one of the families there were two men in good health. Yet none of them could earn a living for themselves and the two or three others in their household. In the same apartment house lives a woman breadwinner. She, too, has had a family to support. During all the years of depression since the panic she has toiled on and earned a thoroughly comfortable living for her household and has paid and is paying her rent every month in advance, with the prospect of continuing to be able to do so as long as there is any need. How is this in connection with the much vaunted superiority of the masculine sex?
There is eomething peculiarly pleasing to the mind of a man in the thought that some woman is praying for him day and night while he goes on and commits all the sins he wants to.
American women glory in the fact that Miss Cora B. Hertzel, attorney at law, has been appointed assistant corporation counsel of the city of Chicago, with a pay of $3,500 a year. Corporation Counsel Thornton chose her for no sentimental reasons whatever, but simply because she was the best person he knew for the place. Her time will be chiefly spent in preparing briefs and opinions and drafting ordinances. Miss Hertzel is a graduate of the Chicago Law school and has been in practice in that city ten years. In securing such an appointment because she was the person best fitted for it Miss Hertzel has achieved a great step forward for her sex, and the sex thanks ber.
Two young women in New Jersey are both claiming the same round shouldered, green looking young man for their husband. From the looks of his picture in the newspaper I should think either one of them would be ashamed to own him.
Dr. Mabel Spencer is health officer of Biley county, Kan.
Dr. Louise A. Murray has been appointed public vaccinator for the city of Syracuse.
An orator in endeavoring to pay Washington the highest compliment possible called him a masculine Joan of Arc. It WM the highest complinicnt that could have been paid him. Even Washington'8 task, however, was net to bard as that of Joan of Arc.
Lewis Hide, county superintendent of the poor farm at Jasper, Ga., was believed by his wife to have gone philandering off after some other love. Tbe two bad a quasrel, and be left home fot a time, believing that would bring bei to terms. Did she faint and have hysterics? No, she did not Did she fall ill of a broken heart and send for the doctor? No, she did not She just loaded Bp an old shotgun and waited. When Lewis came sneaking back home, naturally about dinner time, his injured wife snatched the old shotgun and welcomed him with a discharge of birdshot "Get out!" she cried as she peppewd his legs with shot Lewis got out
Kt.ir* ABCBUKP GOXXKB.
L(kM
EVENTNG MAIL, JUKE 19, 18!7.
Some Lawyers' Stories.
'The most thrilling incident I ever iaw in a courtroom," remarked a western attorney the other day, "was in southern Kansas. The senior lawyer of the county bar was a distinguished looking and courteous gentleman 'of the old school,' who had little patience with the joking always going on during court recess. He was exceedingly nearsighted, but had a habit of laying his glasses on the table during his speeches to the jury. One day, as his back was turned toward the other lawyers, one of them picked up the glasses, and with a bit of mucilage fastened to the lenses pieces of tissue paper which exactly covered the glass—not particularly noticeable, but at the same time preventing vision through them. Soon the owner of the glasses came back to the table to examine some papers for reference in his address. He put on the glasses, looked at the paper, adjusted them again—and then a pallor overspread his face that was pitiful to see. He staggered to a chair. 'My God, gentlemen, I am blind! I have feared it for years,' he exclaimed, and dropped his head on his hands. "For an instant the courtroom was hushed. Even the practical joker must have felt remorse at the evident suffering of his victim. Before any one could speak or the sheriff rap for order the attorney lifted his head, took off the glasses and had his sight again. His face flushed as he rubbed the tissue paper from the lenses, and he stood up, an angry and excited man. 'If I knew who did that dastardly trick, if I knew who had brought that minute of grief to me,' he broke out, 'I swear I would kill him.' He left the oourtroom, and the judge adjourned the session for the day. I never want any more practical joking."—Detroit Free Press.
Fruit as Food.
A Chicago physician is responsible for revolutionary theories in regard to fruits. He undertakes to prove the practical worthlessness as food of all cultivated varieties. Hyper-acid fruits, such as the lemon, shaddock, orange, apple and cherry, he asserts, should never be eaten. Subacid fruits, such as the g*ape, pear and peach, may be eaten, but with extreme caution. Sweet fruits, like the fig. banana and date, he unqualifiedly commends, as they are simply wild fruits and have not been changed from their natural conditions or flavor by man. On the other hand, the fruits he condemns, he says, are forced or abnormal variations, as is shown when cultivated and afterward allowed to run wild. They immediately retrograde and assume the 'sour and inedible qualities originally inherent in them. Man, he claims, has not been able to make a proper food of them. They are unnatural combinations of fruit' elements, and are frequently prone to cause digestive disturbances when taken into the stomach. By forcing seedlings, grafting and assiduously cultivating under artificial conditions man has modified the progenitors of our present domestic fruits, he has made them acceptable to the palate, but he has not eliminated their harmful qualifies.
Stories of Brahms.
Many stories are told of how the late composer Brahms treated pianists and singers who were eager to get his criticism. If out of these aspirants for his favor was fortunate enough to find him at home and be received, Brahms' first concern was to seat himself on the lid of his piano, a position from which he rightly deemed few would have the temerity to oust him. If this failed, he had recourse to the statement that the instrumant was out of tune. "Oh, that does not matter," remarked one courageous individual. "Perhaps uot to you, but it does to me," replied the master. On one occasion he was just leaving his bouse when a long baired youth, with a bundle of music under his arm, bailed him with, "Can you tell me where Dr. Brahms lives?" "Certainly," answered the master in the most amiable manner, "in this house, up three flights.'' And so saying he hurried away.
CONDEMNED.
When an innocent man is condemned
for
iny crime he doesn't lose hope. His lawyers appeal from one court to another. They are bound to lave him, if he can be saved. It is the tame way with a rood doctor when bis patient seems :ondemned to death by disease.
But doctors make mistakes sometimes they lose |eart too soon. After they have tried everything they know and the patient is uo better, they think there is nothing more to be done. They do a a get at the root of the disease. They frequently give a patient up to die of consumption, and are afterwards surprised to see aim get strong and well again.
Mrs. W. B. Duncan, of Arlington, Phelps Co., Mo., writes: My husband took four bottles of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery when he was (as he thought) almost into consumption, and we were very thankful that such a medicine could be found. I wish all persons troubled with cough would take it. Long may the Golden Medics! Discovery' and 'Favorite Prescription' be nade. I shall always recommend and prai* these medicines."
All long and bronchial diseases are cured by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, because it supplies the system with healthy blood. It pots the vital forces into action and fills the circulation with the life-giving ted corpuscles which builds up solid, muscular flesh and healthy nerve-force.
AS a medical author, Dr. Pierce holds aa eminent place in his profession. His great thousand-page illustrated book, "The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser" is one of the standard medical works of the English language. Nearly 700.000 copies ire re sold at fi.30 each. A paper-bound copy will be sent absoimteiy free for the cost of mailing only, 21 one-cent stamps or, doth-bound for 31 stamps. World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N.Y.
,,, ,IIe Kept His Seat.
During one of the naval engagements of the late war a sailor by the name of John Davis performed au act of bravery that has rarely been equaled. While the battle was at its height a shell entered the Valley City, of which ship Davis was gunner's mate, and exploded on the berth deck, setting it on fire.
Captain Chaplin, the commander of the vessel, jumped down into the magazine, and while directing his men to extinguish the flames passed up with his own hands the loose cylinders of powder. The fireworks on board became ignited. Rockets whizzed and blue lights blazed up in the very midst of the ammunition. The shcllroom caught fire, and it seemed as if the Valley City must be blown to pieces.
John Davis, appreciating the danger and desirous of doing all in his power to avert it, jumped up on an open barrel of gunpowder aud sat down on the head, covering it with his person as well as he could to protect it from the showering sparks.
Captain Chaplin, seeing him quietly seated while everybody else was at work, ordered him in peremptory tones to"get down and help put out the fire."
The young gunner's mate staid where he was and replied calmly: "Don't you see, sir, I can't, for if I do the sparks will fall into the powder. If I get down, captain, we shall all go up."
Notwithstanding the terrible danger. Captain Chaplin could not repress a smile, and Davis' heroio action was rewarded after the battle by immediate promotion.—Youth's Companion.
Try Grain-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. Ail who try it, like it. GRAIN-0 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. 15c. and 25 cts. per package. Sold by all grocers.
The Red Mark.
Listen to this thrilling anecdote of King Theebaw's household arrangements:
King Theebaw's palace at Mandalay has been turned into an "np to date" club. The audience chamber, with the golden throne in it, has been portioned out for lady members. All the walls are gold leafed, and golden pillars support the roof. Yet near the door is such a weird mark of former days that I think most of us would prefer the less magnificent surroundings of our own clubs without envy. It is the red mark of a murdered woman's hand.
Once the king, in the days of his prime, took a fancy to a beautiful young Mongolian and insisted on bringing her as an attendant to his court. His wife grew madly jealous, and with the fierce temper of her race stabbed the unfortunate girl in the audience chamber before the assembled court. As she fell her band, covered with blood, clutched the wall, and for some reason or other no one has obliterated the mark.—New York Commercial.
"Who is she?
We don't know who the editor of the "Pattern Cook Book" is, but when she says Cleveland's baking powder is the is the best ou the market, and she always feels sure of her cake when Cleveland's is at hand, because it makes a fine grained, spongy cake, while cake made with other brands is coarse-grained, she shows that she has investigated the subject for herself.
Educate Tour Bowel* Willi Casearets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 85c. If C. C- C. fall, druggists refund money.
Stop drugging yourself with quack nostrums or "cures." Get a well-known pharmaceutical remedy that will do the work. Catarrh and Cold in the head will not cause suffering if Ely's Cream Balm is used. Druggist will supply 10c. trial size or 50c. full size. We mail it.
ELY BROS., 56 Warren St., N. Y. City. Rev. John Reid, Jr., of Great Falls, Mont., recommended Ely's Cream Balm to me. I can emphasize his statement, "It is a positive cure for catarrh if used as directed."—Rev. Francis W. Poole, Pastor Central Pres. Church, Helena, Mont.
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 makes 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 25c. in stamps. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmted, Le Roy, N. Y.
To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic 10c or 2S0. If C.<p></p>COKE
C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money.
CRUSHED COARSE...
Delivered.
Equal to Anthracite Coal.
Citizens'Fuel & Gas Co.,
507 Ohio Street.
JOHN M. VOLKERS, ATTORNEY. Collections and Notarial Work.
5*1 OHIO STREET.
A Handsome Complexion
is one ot the greatest charms a woman can iirmnis Powun's COMVUEDO* PJWDMM gives it.
Help
Is needed by poor, tired mothers, overworked and burdened with care, debilitated and run down because of poor, thin and impoverished blood. Help is needed by the nervous sufferer, the men and women tortured with rheumatism, neuralgia, dyspepsia, scrofula, catarrh. Help
Comes Quickly
When Hood's Sarsaparilla begins to enrich, purify and vitalize the blood, and sends it in a healing, nourishing, invigorating stream to the nerves, muscles and organs of the body. Hood's Sarsaparilla builds up the weak and broken down system, ana cures all blood diseases, because
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists, fl. Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. a re he on pi to a tlOOCl S HillS
V-P
•^"OTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS.
State of Indiana, county of Vigo. In the Superior court, Juno term, 1897. No. 5273. Ltda E. Oilman. Cephas H. Gilman. Emma E. Ernest, Caroline Allen, William A. Griffith and Mary P. Kent vs. Augustus B. Ewlng, Mary 8. Ewlng, Fred B. Ewlng, Jesse Ewlng, Anna E. Kerr, George W. Kerr. Pelaglr Taylor, Charles T. Taylor, Clara E. Wilson, William 8. Wilson, impleaded with William L. Ewlng and Mary S. Ewlng, In quiet title.
Be ft known that on the 12th day of June, 1897. It was ordered by the court that the clerk notify by publication said Augustus B. Ewlng, Mary 8. Ewlng, Fred B. Ewlng, Jesse Ewlng, Anna E. Kerr. George w. Ken Pelaglr Taylor, Charles T. Taylor. Clara E. Wilson, William S. Wilson, as non-resident
?f f|!9UIIf IIIH.IIJJ iiovii» »s*-/ss a
defendants of the pendency of this action against them. Said defendants are therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action against them and that the same will stand for trial on the 9th day of August, 1897. the same being the June term or said cr.urt In tho year im. DAVID L. WATSON,
N
Vi:
with Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Vandalia-
Pennsylvania
NEW ENTRANCE TO NEW YORK
Passengers Via Vandnlla Pennsylvania Lines Xow llave Choice of Tliree.
All are convenient locations Cortlimdt street and Desbrosses street. In the downtown district, and Twenty-third street in the uptown district. The latter entrance was formally opened May ltith. when two new and commodious ferry boats, double-deckers, constructed especially for the Pennsylvania
Lines and furnished and finished In up-to-date style, will be placed lu service between the Jersey City station and Twenty-third street, connecting with all inbound and outbound trains over the Pennsylvania system, the same as the boats running between that station and Oortlandt street and Desbrosses street, which will also be continued In dally service.
The Pennsylvania Lines' three entrances Into New York enable passengers to quickly reach the business port Ion In the lower end of the city, as well as the hotels and business blocks In the very heart oft he great metropolis. The ride across the river Is a delightful and refreshing termination to an enjoyable trip. All through trains from the west over the Pennsylvania Lines land passengers In New York between 9:30 a. m. and 9:30 p. m., treating them to a grand view of the city's water front. Its extensive clocks, where at almost any time may be seen ships of many nations. The wonderful panorama gives visitors a slight Idea of the magnitude of New York. The new Twenty-third street ferry line is particularly noteworthy In this respect.
For reliable information. Pullman car reservations and tickets, apply at City ticket office, 654 Wabash avenue. Telephone 37, or Union Station.
GEO. E. PARKING TON. Gen'l Agt.
St. Louis
•4'
I
$2.50
and Return Saturday Night, June 19th.
Tickets good returning until Monday night, June 21st Inclusive. All the .Summer Gardens open.
Full particulars at Big Four ticket offices, Terre Haute house and Sixth street station. E. E. SOUTH, General Agent.
Clerk.
OTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS, ETC.
In the matter of the estate of Matilda Greenwood, deceased In the Vigo Circuit court. May term, 1H97.
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. 1W, 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
'^v/tness the clerk and seal of said Vigo Circuit court, at Terre Haute, Indiana, this 4th day of June, 1S97. (SUAr] f)A V11) L. WATSON, Clerk.
pAACJ BALL 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.
DAILEY & CRAIG
503 OHIO STBEBT.
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,
TTISTJDJ3JHTJLJ3Z1£& tSIZ Main Street. All calls will receive the most careful atteutlop. Open day and night.
To the Young Face
Posmrft COOTUIW* ptrwDwtfve. fresher charms to the old, renewed youth. Try it-
msissaay
