Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 28, Number 36, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 March 1898 — Page 2

MY LADY OF MADRID.

THE FAIR CAST I LI AN AT HER DEVO-

TIONS AND HER AMUSEMENTS!^

None More Devout at Matins Than She, •. None More Gay and Eagrer at the Snnday Afternoon Bnllflgbt A Discreet and Fascinating: Coquette. jaj [Copyright, IS9S, by the Author.] "Time flies," eaitb the epicurean idler of Grauada. "Meanwhile study woman."

I am ready to kiss the Koran on it, and it is my firm belief, that there is something worthy of perusal if you lift with me this evening the heavy leathern curtained portal of this old Spanish cathedral whence the threads of incense breath unroll and if you come with me into the cool and cumbered solitudes of saints and subtleties out of a sun that fries your forehead and reduces your thinking apparatus to despair. The va"rious chapels are glittering with firefly lights, like a garden party in Calcutta. The altar bell is tinkling for benediction. It is a wonderful sight as you stand with folded arms, or kneel rather, and look along this mighty ark. The Spanish woman is kneeling or is prostrate before one or other of her pet patrons, the wax auxiliary for tomorrow's intrigue or triumph. Her duenna is seated on the ground beside her. But watch her—this beautiful Spanish woman 1 You catch a glimpse of those twilight eyes beyoar1 the black cascade of her lace mantilla as Hhe turns a moment— yes, coquettishly—and draws the mantilla closer. She prostrates again, and her devotion is divine. Your eyes are riveted upon her. Every outline of that form is supplication and aspiration. Fair saint, ora pro nobis 1 bursts from your lips, and your soul ascends with hers to the Almighty.

The fair senorita rises again, sits down on the marble floor, and, oh, with what a delicate touch draws the mantilla just a favoring hair's breadth away from that delicious olive outline of oheek—and plies her fan quite exquisitely. How that fan catches the crimson of the martyred saint on the windov. above! Why, no! The colors on the beauty's fan are those of her favorite matadore. What are you thinking of? And what is qbe thinking of as that faJ coquets and courtesies and then retreats. The fair senorita makes her obeisance to the altar, and, with such gentle timidity, follows her duenna out of the church. The artist leaning against the pillar catches that roguish look in the Spanish eyes within those little side ourls oalled picardios (rogueries).

The artist stranger's reasoning apparatus beg'us to work again, and ho knows that this divine devotion be has just witnessed is but a prelude to tomorrow, when the fair senorita, bowed to the dust ^oday, will shout her breath away at the whirl of blood and dust going on within the arena of the corrida do toros

On your homeward path from vespers your attention is arrested by a crowd col looted urmajf a matador in gorgeous raiiweHfc feto. Watch the faces of the useu ir (be crowd. The man who coiiiux cuu# the influence of woniau rises or falls in the whole scab of intellectual or moral boing. The ten little fingers of woman that hold a man's destiny can guide it to crowns or subtraot it froui glory. Watch the faces hi thisinaiu artery of Madrid where the hoarso shouts for the "slayer" rise ideafening thunder. Yon begin to wonder if you were wise in leaving your trusty derringer in your steamer trunk at the hotel.

Above, from tho balconies so prettily shaded by tawny Moorish awnings, the watching seuorita peeps. She may never see her lover alone, so welcome these balcony moments, where the two may talk in a sign language that to any one else on the outside of it all looks like the gestures of one in danger of apo plexy. The tonrist turns his steps toward the cemetery, feeling a trifle lonely amid all these balcony calisthenics. Now, this last resting plaoe of the Castilinn noble is a weird and wonderful place. The Spanish lady in aflliction oomos here to hang up a new picture in the mortuary chapel or to. go up and down to the grewsome twilight of the vault or to sit plunged in grief. This ohapel is gorgeous with decoration of mosaic pavement and stained glass windows and an intrioate ironwork of carved grille through which the tourist stranger may peep. The sanctuary lamp trembles across the skeleton bars like the opening eye of the dead. A flight of stairs, broad and echoing, go down and down to the vault below into whose gray shadows the dead Castilian noble has been carried this morning only. And the poor lady yonder in the black and white (the fashionable colors of Gastilian affliction) is so profoundly bowed in grief. The artist tourist withdraws on tiptoe from before the grille.

It is the afternoon of the morning when the dead count went down to his final account. In the noble lady's house in Madrid—the lady who owns the mortuary ohapel and who sobbed very much this morning—there ia quite a stir going on. My lady countess is standing in her room. My lady is standing before her mirror, and she is drawing, oh, so

coquettishly,

a splendid black

lace mantilla around her shapely little head, and then she pins, oh, so jauntily, a pretty white roae on her head, and then she pins another prettier white one nestling oloae to

it,

and she laughs

ngiiin jost the colors of the funerary wreath in the mortuary ohapel! And then she holds op over her bead adorned with the black lace mantilla and the two snow nam a little xed fan, and she peeps away from under it and throws that little bead on one tide. And then down the «tmin and aw*yl To the mortuary chapel? Oh, dear, no to the

bullfight I

Why, It's Sunday aft-

•moon, and Jose, the oelebrated matadore, does the slaying today. IiOOT CLXVKLUnX

TAKES HER TYPEWRITER.

Her Hee-

Mrs. Hili tioes to Klondike as band's Secretary. Whether she is most heroic or mo.it wifely, each person must decide for himself. Certainly it requires both courage and devotion to .send a delicately nurtured woman aloDg the route just chosen by Mrs* Arthur A. Hill. Her husband has gone to the Klondike fts special correspondent for the American Press Association. His young wife would not be left behind. She accepted the post of private secretary to her husband, packed away her household gods for an

MRS. ARTHUR A. HILL.

indefinite period and bade her friends ft smiling farevrell, choosing rather to endure hardships that would daunt a veteran soldier than to be separated from the man of her choice.

This notwithstanding that she is not in the least a new woman. Contrariwise, she is an ideal homemaker and housewife. Before, her marriage, as Miss Blanche Nichols, she did clever and creditable newspaper work. She was in Chicago throughout'the period of the Columbian exposition and wrote more than entertainingly of all its sights and wonders Possibly it was that contact with strange things and people which helpod to make her anxious strange countries for to see. Certainly the strangest of them all is the Klondike. It may be questioned indeed if its like will ever again be visible. Each of the world's gold fevers has wrought a new and highly picturesque phase of human development. By all accoun'i the tragedy, the comedy, the grotesquerie of Sutter's mill, the San Joaquin valley, Ballara^ Gold Hill, the Transvaal and Creede combined could not oome near to what is now being enaoted up under the midnight sun.

Mrs. Hill goes fully prepared to bring back a most graphic and aocurate record of it all. She has a typewriter, of the lightest and most compact, a camera, specimen cases everything, in fact, which experience has shown to be needed and worth while. In addition she is fully equipped against climatio rigors. She will wear a suit of fur such as was prepared for the arctio explorers under Peary. In coat, trousers and hooded cap she will look very muoh like a slender and pretty boy. Personally she is slight, btft well knit, graceful and well poised, as beoomes an ardent wheelwoman. In oompany with her husband she has made several century runs. Together they have wheeled through the Catskills and all over the oountry round about New York. She is fair, with blue eyes and abundant flax blond hair as fine as silk. Fine hair, say the stockmen, is the sure mark of thoroughbred blood, and everybody knows that th» thoroughbred can endure to the end. Wherefore it is reasonable to hope that only good may befall the plucky young woman.

MARTHA MCCULLOCH WILLIAMS.

UNDER THE BED.

An Ingenious Plan to Utilise Valuable Spaee. Under the bed is spaoe that goes to waste or is very poorly economized in most houses, no matter how cramped for room and short of closets its inhabitants may be. Bachelors of both sexes

BETTER THAN A BOX COtfCH.

use the box oonoh, to be sure, but the box couch is not an ideal bed, and here is away to have the good of the box idea and a Christian sleeping place at the same time: Any carpenter oan make a large box, fitting it to the measurement of the bed it is to roll under, and it offers the best imaginable place for keeping best clothes—better than any trunk because nothing need be folded crosswise, and for all light materials muoh better than any oloset beoause light materials "string out" in hanging. Good casters make it perfectly easy to handle. A lid that binges *n the middle as well as at the back makes it more convenient. .. -. X. H.

Advto* to Girls.

Loosen your stays and breathe deep and full and long and slow and get all the blood in your body purified and turned bright crimson. Keep it up always, and it will make the greatest difference in your oomplexion and digestion. Oxygenate your bodies and illuminate your souls. ry

,7/v Woman Baalt Prwkfcnts. The two banks of Burling too, Wia., have each a woman president. Mra, Meinhardt it president tit the Meinhardt ana Miss Bite Meinhardt It its cashier, while Mrs. Florence Oooper Ball is president of the Bank of Bnrlinf-

fV A-

THE NEW WOMAN.

She Is Free From the Vulgar Small Tioe of Curiosity. gSJjj A friend of mine applied for a place as teacher in an institution managed by women. She appeared duly before ar board of old tabbies in high bonnets. They bad the air of' being horribly pious. It was a pious institution they were running. They §at around the directors* table and looked severely at my friend, a large, kindly, intelligent, gentle girl. The first thing they asked her bow old she was, which was none of their business at all, as they could see she was of age. Then they asked her if she had ever had any sickness, if any of her ancestors had ever had any sickness, or if any of them had ever been crazy or convicted of crime. They asked what he| father's occupation had been. Then they tnquired whether she belonged to church and to what church, how often she attended it, and if she taught in Sunday school. She replied that she formerly taught a Sunday school class, but that she bad given it up because it was too much of a tax on her to sing twice in the choir on Sunday at church and teach a class too. Thereupon one old tabby observed very solemnly, "Don't you think the Lord would take care of your health if you were to do his work and teach a Sunday class?" My friend was dying to recommend to the old tabby to try it herself, going to business all the week, being on her feet from morning till night, then attending church and singing in the choir twice on Sunday and teaching a class in Sunday school besides, but she did not. She held in. Then the old tabbies looked very severe and businesslike when one of them asked if she ever, ever went to the theater. Finally, after they had pumped her entirely dry, found out everything their vulgar curiosity could possibly suggest, they dismissed her with the remark that if they heard of anything they would let her know. I mention this incident as an illustration of one "kind of old woman, not of the new. The most detestable small vice of the old woman was her itching, vulgar, vile, petty curiosity concerning other people's private, personal affairs. The new woman knows nothing of this small vice. She never' listens at keyholes, never opens other persons' letters or watches her neighbors' front doors or windows. She never asks another any question she herself would not like to be asked. She has absolutely no curiosity about the personal matters of Other people. She respects their privaoy as she would have her own respected.

Miss Cornelia T. Crosby, otherwise oalled "Fly Rod," is the ohampion hunter and fisher among the women of America. The man fly caster who is as skillful as she is may well be proud of himself. The present winter she has orowned her other exploits by shooting a oaribou in the northern part of Maine. Miss Crosby is the first woman, so far as heard from, who has shot a oaribou. The ladies Who are going to the Klondike will have a ohance to try their skill in this line. In Alaska plenty of fresh meat is to be had all winter for skillful marksmen.

The Chinese woman is as probS of her deformed feet as some American girls are of their little idiotio, deformed waists. "The average woman has no shoulders, no chest, no waist and no sense," growled an old oynio whom I

Girl babies have been considered less welcome than boy babies for economic reasons. It was supposed the boy could go out in the world and work and become a produoer, even a millionaire. The girl, on the other hand, was supposed to be merely a consumer, a creature that had to be taken care of, a mere clog on the wheels of industry. Now that women are changing all that, are entering the industrial world and proving themselves as efficient in business as men, as good economists, able to amass fortunes, the old superstition that girls were of no account will rapidly die on$.

Miss Edith Pond, daughter of Major Pond of lecture bureau fame, has herself opened an amusement bureau in New York city. She will be sole manager. She expects to furnish entertainments especially suited to gentlemen's olubs. Miss Pond has had experience whioh will enable her to be very successful in her chosen line. She has a theory that it is a business for whioh women are better adapted than men, and she expects to prove her faith by her works.

On the list of officers of the Massachusetts Woman Suffrage association there are more names of national and international fame than in any other sooiety I know of. Mary A. Li verm ore is president, Henry B. Blackwell is corresponding secretary, Francis D. Garrison is treasurer, while among the vioe presidents are Jnlia Ward Howe, Secretary of the Navy John D. Long, Senator George F. Hoar, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward, Colonel T. W. Higgnson and Hon. Josiah Quinoy.

Miss Long, daughter of the secretary of the navy, is studying medicine at Johns Hopkins university, Baltimore. It is therefore at last the proper thing for young women in the highest social circles to study and practice a profession if they wish.

I have lately seat a picture of Miss Gail T^nghUn, winner of first prize in the collegiate debate at Cornell university. She is a gentle faced, clear eyed girl, with well squared shoulders, a good chest and a waist tbat has never been squeesed in. It is as large as that of the Venus. If die had ever laoed herself, the blood oould not have flowed freely up to her brain, giving her sense enough to win a college debate over a number of young men. Miss Lsughlin will participate in the intercollegiate debate between Pennsylvania and Cornell universities. She is studying law •t Cornell.

A Generous Dnehess.

It is generally agreed that the dominant note of thei character of the late Duchess of Teck was her amiability, but that term does inadequate justice to the hears from which it sprang. She was charity itself and a wonderful organizer of charitable relief on a large scale.

It is raid that she gave out of her own pocket a good fifth of the annual amount granted to her by parliament, and a story, vouched for by the St. James Budget, shows that she knew bow to give on a small scale, to be generous in mind as well a8 with money.

There were to be some festivitif at White Lodge, the Richmond residence of the duchess, and an invitation was sent to the secretary of a charity in which the duchess was interested. By a later post the young lady received a letter from a friend, asking her to a tennis party which was to be held the same day.

1

Next, morning both invitations were acknowledged, but the replies were oarelessly put in the wrong envelopes. The duchess opened the letter in which the writer declared to her friend tbat she was very sorry she could not come to tennis because "Stout Mary" hadasked her to White Lodge, and she was bound to go.

The day duly arrived, and the frank young lady was warmly welcomed by the duchess, who afterward took her aside and laughingly said: "My dear girl, I know I am stout, but I cannot help it. You should be more careful in posting your letters and never forget tbat you do not know who will read what you write. Don't apologize. I have forgiven you."

The Cranky Passenger.

There is no doubt tbat he was a very impudent conductor, but some way there was no one in the car who did not have a sneaking feeling of sympathy for him. It was on "one of the surface cars and the woman was one of those passengers who feel that the cars are run for their own individual convenience and are hardly willing to submit to the imposition of a fare for the privilege. This woman had been what the oonductor called "mean" from the time she entered the car. She wasn't suited with her change, she wouldn't have the door shut, and she wouldn't have the window shut. The other passengers would have been indignant if they had not been pleased to have something to break the monotony of the ride. But the climax came when the dissatisfied passenger started to leave the cat. The platform was crowded with men. The dissatisfied passenger turned to the gate side of the platform. "Thd other side, madam," said the oonductor politely, but madam persisted. "The other side, madam,''' reiterated the oonductor. "I intend, "said the lady in frigid tones, "to get off on this side." ",A11 right, madam," (there was a note of despairing resignation in his voice, for the car had been waiting some seconds). "Gentlemen will you please step aside and lefr the lady jump the fence?"—-New York Times.

Paralysed the Geese."

During the war we were not permitted to carry guns, but the boys'used to hide their weapons and slip out unobserved and indulge in a few hours' hunting. I saw a young fellow start out one day and when he returned, not more than two hours later, he had 21 wild geese. I recollect one instance during that period when we were not allowed to carry guns when the geese became so numerous and bold as to make it almost impossible for us to raise a crop. I had afield of wheat, which they were picking up before the grains had time to germinate. I took an ounce of strychnine, dissolved it in acidulated water, soaked corn in it and scattered the corn over the wheatfield. The next morning I gathered up a wagon load of dead and paralyzed wild geese, some 40 or 60 of them, in the wheatfield. Eight or ten of them recovered and became domesticated.—Kansas City Times.

S

"Man Sandy," said a Perthshire farmer, "Jock Macpherson's an awfn' mean chap." "Hoots, toots, man!" said his friend. '^Ye're haverin! Hoo d'ye mak' that oot?" ®g Jfj, "Weel, I'm" jisfc sayin he's mean— beastly mean. It's like this: I was up at his boose the ither nicht, and he said, 'Peter, will ye hae a bauf o' whnsky?' and I said, 'Aye, of coorse!' Weel, he got his bottle oot and began to pour me oot a glass, and, thinkin to be sort o' polite, ye ken, I said, 'Stop, stop!' And he stopped!"-^-London Telegraph.

A Counterstroke.

"We're ruined," exclaimed the editor, "utterly ruined!" "Why, what's the matter now?" "We advertised sheet music as a premium to subscribers, didn't we?" "We did."

Well, our miserable contemporary over the way is giving away pianos to play it on."—Atlanta Constitution.

Very Close Indeed.

"This gentleman," said the phrenologist at the open air performance, "is a close observer—a very clow observer. "So much so," continued the phrenologist, "that I doubt exceedingly if be would have been here tonight had we charged any admission fee."—New York Journal.

The four principal diamond mines of the Kimberly district employ about 9,000 persons. From 3,000,000 to 8,000,000 carats ara turned out each year, and np to 1893 ten tons of diamonds, valued at £30,000,000, had oome from these mines.

The Coliseum at Rome was built by Vespasian to aooomxaodate 100,000 spec* tetom It covers five and ooft-halfaorei gttd was ISO tost high.

An Incautious Epicure.

"I suppose," said the young wompn, that when a miner makes a bigdiscoveiy it is to bis interest to avoid spreading, the news, so as to keep as muoh as possible for himself." "Some of them try it," answered the returned gold seeker. "But as a rule it doesn't work. When a man has suddenly reached enormous wealth, he is almost certain to betray the fact in some way. "Have you known of such case on the Klondike?" "Only one. Ordinarily the men don't try to deceive anybody. One chap made a big discovery and tried to keep it quiet, but it wasn't more than a day or two before everybody knew he.,..had struck it rich." |m, "Something in his manner betrayed it?" "No." "He was seen spending more money than usual?"

"No. He never spent any money in public. He was a great one for keeping it to himself." "Perhaps he talked in his sleep?" "Wouldn't have been anybody to hear him if he had." "You surely were not mean enough to shadow him?" "Didn't have to. He practically announced that he had suddenly become a millionaire himself. There wasn't any possibility of mistake."

How did he do it?"

if

Distressing Stomach Disease Permanently cured by the masterly powers of South American Nervine Tonic. Invalids need suffer no longer, because this great remedy can cure them all. It is a cure fdr the whole world of stomach weakness and indigestion. The cure begins with the first dose. The relief it brings is marvelous and surprising. It makes no failure never disappoints. No matter how long you have suffered, your cure is certain under the use of this great health giving force. Pleasant and always safe. Sold by all druggist, in Terre Haute, Ind.

To Cure Constipation Forever. TalceCascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or25o. If C. C. C. fall to oure, druggists refund money.

Many People Cannot Drink coffee at night. It spoils their sleep. You can drink Grain-0 when you please and and sleep like a top. For Grain-0 does not stimulate it nourishes, cheers and feeds. Yet it looks and tastes like the best coffee. For nervous persons, young people and children Grain-0 is the perfect arink. Made from pure grains. Get a package from your grocer to-day. Try it in place of coffee. 15 and 25c.

Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life ATTRJ. To quit tobacco easily and torever, be mag netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50o or $1. Cure guaranteed Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.

GOOD TIMES HAVE COME.1

Ton can afford to tadulge yourstlf or yotir Umily ln the luxury ot a gpod weekly newspaper and a quarterly magaefne of fiction. You can get both of these publications with timost a library of good novels for $$ per year.

TMCJOURNAC, 0T SOCIETY

TOUttatr

world-famed for its brightness and the most complete General Weekly—covering a wider range of subjects suited to the tastes of men and women of culture and refinement than any jcurnal-ever published. Subscription price, |4 per annum.

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Club price for both, $9 per annnm. You can have both of these if yoi subscribe NOW and a tonus of 10 novels selected from the list below Regular price for each, 50 cent! All sent postpaid.

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THomptun

SJMTP. ^,

i-fHP. SALE OP A SOUL. J1» S. MtttlllS.

7-THE

COUSIN OF THE KISG A S V»i»We«tTJ«. 4-5IX MONTHi IN HACKS By Clarice I Cllnflum »—THfi SKIKTS OP CHANCE.. By Ctputo AKftd

ANTHONY KENT Br Charte* Ste*e* Wtyrie. ,,-AN ECLIPSR .»l» VIKTUIi By Clumpmn Btiwlt. i*-AN UNSPEAKABLE -IKI?N By Jerrn GMtl*t I j—THAT DKHAfJFUL WOMAN By Hwold VjTOM.

14-A

DKAI. IN OfcNvpu lly

Otaer MtK«nd»ee

WHVl lAfS GLADVS l«T fU.fd ChitiiU Mu«r»r

16-A VHRV kKMAkKAllf.H

OIKI-. By BKfclofd.

,,_A MAKRIA'-.B FOR HATE. By Vy»o«., •—OUT IIK THE SULPHUR By WRUNG MAN llr Oumpljn B»«H •B-TMB HUNT FOR HAPPINESS. By Virtatl

Cmh»« ... •I—HER SI RAMGK EXPERIMENT. ByHinild* Vyaaa »»—ON THE ALTAR OF PASSION. By l«»»n ClUltt. •j-A MARTYR TO LOVE. By |jUn« S. Wood.

Consider /ft

10 Tons Hard Coal .*70 00 10 Tons Gas Coke 35 00

Net Saving #85 OO We can LIGHT AND HEAT your boose for what you are now paying for hard coaL Call and see us.

GAS COMPANY

507 Ohio Street.

Dr. Cort P. Askren

announces removal to his new offices, Homw- 1I4-U5 GRAND OPERA BOUSE 8 to 9 mornings. TERRB HAUTE 1 to 4 afternoons. 7 to 9 evenings.

A Handsome Complexion

is ooe of the greatest charms a woman caa possess, talon's Otntruooom Vywmm

gfvsstt.

Your friends may smile But that tired feeling Means darfger. It

A

Indicates impoverished And impure blood.

This condition may Lead to serious illness. It should be promptly gL Overcome by taking

Hood's Sarsaparilla,

Which purifies and Ky, Enriches the blood,

W

1

"^Strengthens the nerves, Tones the stomach, Creates an appetite, And builds up,

Energizes and vitalizes

1

The whole system. .Be sure to get

..

Ai

"Game around one day with tfie smell of onions on his breath."—Washington Star

Mrs. M. E. Busselle, 67 Park Street, Newark, N. J. says: "After having used Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup in my family with most gratifying results I pronounce it the friend of all mothers.''

:\3

Only Hood's.

HIGHEST-CASH PRICE PAID FOR

Also Tallow, Bones, Grease

ALL KINDS,

At my Factory on the Island southwest of the city.

HARRISON SMITH,

j. Office 13 S. Second St.

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

Dead Animals removed free within ten miles of the city. Telephone 73.

1

4

if

REMOVAL.

J. A. Nisbet, Undertaker

Has moved his store to

103 N. FOURTH ST.

One door north of Cherry St.

CataYfb

ELY'S CREAM BALM Is a positive cure. Apply Into the nostrils. It la quickly absorbed. 50 cents at Drafrgiste or by mail samples 10c. by mail. ELY •BROTHERS, 6fl Warren St., New York City.

GEO. HAUCK & CO.

Dealer in all kinds of

Telephone 83. 940 Main Street.

ART

Store

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

irSi^9IX™' Terre Haute, Ind.

JOHN M. VOLKERS,

-ATTORNEY. Collections and Notarial Work:

521 OHIO STREET.

J8AA0 BALL & SON, FUMERAL DIRECTORS,

Oor. Third and Cherry streets, Terre Haqte _jid., are prepared to execute all orders In their line with neatness and dispatch.

Embalming a Specialty.

N.HICKMAN,

TTISrjDEiaTjA.KIEJJB 1212 Main Street. All calls will receive the most careful at' tentlon. Open day and night.

C. F. WILLIAMS, D. D. S.

DENTAL PARLORS,

Corner Sixth and Mala Streets,

TERRE HAUTE. IND.J'

jgAMUEL M. HUSTON,

Lawyer^?-' Notary Public.

Booms 3 and 517tt Wabash avenue. Telephone. IfiT.

jytL L. H. BARTHOLOMEW, Dentist

071

Main

St* Terre

lad.

The Perfume of Violets

Tbei the lily, Um parity of sad the flush of Hebe sndfots Powder.

of the rose* in Possoin's