Terre Haute Daily News, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 30 May 1891 — Page 3

I

ipF

EARTHQUAKES CAN BE MADE.

THEIB OPEIATIOjr fill. BE »EK(DIRTRATED AT THE AIR.

A praftMwr frHU fhe Koj*l at Ki«to Auk* for Hftme* EBMfb tomwBwttqrWM*-

World'* r*ir K«M»-

CMCAOO, May 30.—Tbe nrgent call for mow information in regard to too great Exposition and numerous application from all part* of the world tor_spac© for exhibits bss hastened ^e^l.shmcnt of tbe Department of Foreign A fain. Forchkf of this department General Davis bss nominated Melville Stone,

ex

Eoth

^fT

fit

I

-editcr of tbe Chicago Daily

News., Tbe American ministers ana numerous consols resident ia the European capitals and more important cities, ere ready to aid the work when vested with tbe proper authority and supplied with authentic information in regard to the Fair. Promoter-General Handy has accomplished much in this direction by sending ont printed information to all the ereat Eoropean cities.

Tbe buildings will be completed at

lays, 5Eief A ^Sn^raetion«nrmiam says that they will be readiness by July 1, 1802. Director-General Davis has nominated Commissioner F. J. v. Skiff, ol Colorado, chief of the department of mines and mining. The following foreign nations have officially accepted the president's invitation to participate in tbe exposition: France, Great Britain, Germany, Spain, Japan, China, Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, Salvador, Costa Rica, Columbia, Peru, Cuba and Jamaica. Columbia will erect a building and make a display that will reflect credit on that country. The building will be modeled after the national capitol at Bogota. The exterior will be in imitation of sandstone, of which it is built, while the interior wille be partitioned and cnled throughout with tbe precious hsrdwooodg of he country, com-

rising more than a hundred varieties. rough and polished. The interior wi'l be filled with the products of the coantrv—coffee, cocoa, rubber, ivorj, nuts, wax, gums, fibers, etc.—while the mineral exhibit will be the richest ever shown in the United States. •"Other exhibits by private parties will be made, the principal of which and probably the most valuable and interestfag will be the recently discovered antiquities, in solid gold weighing an aggregate of forty-eight pounds, consisting of helmets, idols, birds, ornaments, etc., valued at more than $50,000. These objects are all curiously and delicately handwrought, the work of a people who lived ages

ago,

but whose history is lost

to the world. These antiquities were discovered uuried in vaults or tombs, deep in the ground, supposed to have been tbe burial place of a king or cacique."

A professor from the royal university of Toklo, span. haa- for a space 200 feet Mjuftre, in which to demonstrate the operation of earthquakes. The committee to which the matter was referred, *t«^fee w^^low about establishing earthquakes on the fair grounds, and asked for further information. The official gasette of Berlin, Germany announces ihe appointment of Herr Wermutb, a member of tbe privy council ss imperial commissioner for Germany at the

World's Fair. Secretary Noble bas decided npou a novel and, it is believed, attractive exhibit for the World's Fair, and which will typify tbe products of the national parks of the northwest of Utis country. In Hie center of the rotunda of the government building at Chicago, it, fc proposed to place a epeoitnen of California ml wood timber of the variety known as Sequoia gigautea, ft cone-bearing tree not unlike a Norway spruce in appearance. This tree has adlatnoter of thirty fee*, and is probably the largest specimen of the forest in the world. To cut it into pieces of suitable siie for transportation on the largest gondola freight car it will be neceesary to take an engine into the forest where it is rt-iated to work a saw fifty feet long in i»blade. Eight slabs will be made of the outer portion of the tree, each to be thirty-two feet in length, when fitted together at the exposition thc\y will form the es't.wior of larga room in whv other products of th# parks will be displayed, entrance ,ng o1i iiii'fti ?"-TOttf*' fc*r Ttif. thr* intttbciVjXliJe O! the ton wilt be thirty-two fvet in I- ht, pJ-Wv-t or. end in the rotor nf tiw bauur.^.and will doubtless ai •».! as inueh nM'-utfea as did the imvam redmod tsi1 tt-wid from a tingle plank at U»* .ion-

It is sett that organised labor will not secure thee sient of a minimum rat" of waj wrk done at the World's Fair btuU'u ijpi. The directors deci that theyl no moral or legal right, compel to pay a fixed or arbitrary p'v- rr

A delegation of Cbu go Welshman has called on dir w-general and asked to have ionr «!»*•». eel apart tor Welsh music and gatnee.

W. ®^al, who haa chs*ce of the live fish exi for tbe expos: *n, is one of the foremost li-Uti-.v ia the worl* The aquari^*" i*vi .»of 6',"j i.lit !iOW!s«.fttf, titerh*lf Oltttftity lor urrsiuiiaf 4 vera- ^IF,n KJT formations below tv,.» .*!•*•« it wilt 1locked with t, av*** aj vc J-. ««i. ikm tosei« tb, a **ie dfc} »y of

q.. ateiK^aailSfitni wltfe tht |n,«Utn. vJ ap»

prop ion of pres ... a tfi effvWtx to obtaitt &u approprk a?

4

N

r«»de#t Bo««ey, el Ibe W«wW^* On®A a h&- w-' itiUBOV, 1 a. tteftWJip will -fi «t F*t ?ht«rnfe

px

iwth

Afitj,

a

da* wo wr-*? Am ,ISQ

SCRAPS

IT la said THAT tbe jfViododmdron Oo haa escaped

team

TICEBE

J'- V,

1

•teee*. "I "I —Ilarpc.

v'k

nut W&mtibtA*' -i a ilt&ter roared tb* rtor, she VST'to

v.

gardens la

Novo Scotia, and ia spreading Itself by its seeds over tbe rocka in the wroodlands there.

A GERMAN chemist haa succeeded in, prodncingartificialsilk,which baa all the qualities of tbe natural article except strength, wherein it ia deficient, being' only two tbirda as strong. &L MAREY bas succeeded tn photographing the movements of an animal under water. A ray has been token in profile while waving the edges of ita flat body and the curious mode of progression of a comatula has been taken.

Losmosc smoke is a

sunshine

killer.

The Royal Botanic society has kept

a

careful record of the bright sunshine that fell on the gardens in Regent's park last year. Out of a possible 4,455 hours tbe "beauteous eye of Heaven" was visible during 1,093.

THE expedition sent out BY *H° Vienna academy of science to explore the Mediterranean found its greatest

depth

to be something over two and a quarter miles, between Moll a and Cerigo. On the African coast, where the water IS clearer, white metal plates could be seen at a depth of one hundred and

over sixteen hundred feet. Tire rabbit excels all other animals in enduring cold. A professor in the French academy of sciences arrived at tbia conclusion after a series of experiments. He put a rabbit in a block of ice, covered the aperture with a piece of the same article and froze it fast. The animal spent the night in bis cool apartment, and the next morning,when released, went about as If nothing Strang® of unusual had occurred *•.

ODDITIES NOTED ABROAD. A lady In Edinburgh experienced a lurch in her carriage, and drove her batpin into her head with fatal conse^uenccs.

TriKHE is a small, unobtrusive society fan London known as the M. A. B. Y. S. otherwise the Metropolitan Association for Befriending

Young Servants.

Two MOKE young lions have been born in the Berlin Zoological gardens. As the mother refuses to nurso them they are suckled by a big Newfoundland.

In France

the government still levies

a tax on doors and windows. To the peasant in his small hut this tax amounts to a little more than three francs a year, but in the towns it rises to

seventeen

francs annually for each

family. Is Corea every unmarried man is considered a boy, though he should live to be a hundred. No matter what his age, ho follows in position the youngest of the married men, despite the fact perhaps of having lived YEARS enough to be their father.

THERE

is a curiosity in an English

workhouse in a girl who speaks a language which no one can understand. She has been addressed in nearly a dozen different tongues, but without evincing any intelligence as to the meaning of words.

AN official weekly in Germany calculates how an invalid workingman can live for three hundred days In the year from the seventy-five dollars allowed him by tbe Old Age and Invalid Insurance Fund: First breakfast, 311.33 annually second breakfast, $7.50 dinner, 818.75 afternoon coffee, 87.50 supper, #15 rent, 811.35 clothing, $4.75.

RELIABLE INFORMATION. A camel travels one hundred miles a dajr.

A Bcaamsn says that the average term of human life has increased in the last fifty years from thirty-four to fortytwo years.

are twenty-six monarchies

and twenty-five republics in the civilised world to-day sixteen republics are In South America.

Tins

NAVAJO Indians stretch a lariat

lojtether of horsev Ir about their tents at ni,,-''U FT I» tut rr..JCTI*e banrierlor KU^PIN OAT SNAKESI UUR-TULAE and WNTLJ*^.

IT is a laa&tor of record that 1X570 dollars were coiu^J in 18M, jet only eight ewKcr "es are known to exi and tV^ are In good condition wo wortii ti+v each.

TIS» comparative occurrence of the OR "LOWERCR^O** letters in

I^U^ISH

ACTION or history is as follows *, ij j, k, q, X, b» v, 7

g. JY w, Y, !0 C,

f, u,

m% ISj d, §0? h) r, ®0» i» n, s» 45 e, total, 53a. These ratios WLU bo changed ITTTLO to newspaper work.

A

WTOMXXG man

has settled the q*es-

tkN of how the prairie dogs obtain

water they drink*

tbe

HE says THEY

dig

their wells, sach village having one with a concealed opening-. He SAY* ho knows of several of these wells from 50 to 960 Jeet deep, each having a circular

STAIRWAY LEADING down

a

to

WHEN CROWNED HEADS

the

^QTIKSW before she BAD MT .^ .CD her twenty-first year. MML AcrratA'S emperor was wedded to'

I Elix&bcth of Bararia in his TWENTY-fifth

year. Irt.tFri

•Be at Wales was not Quito I when he esp.nr-.sl Rri»vv

41 U\:t nrv^nt. kinjr a«l:-. ij«ocn ot tim--Belr- .-'••fethatitiu' of jQKMr Wc.K.u,? wowiv:chUflg| r-n«1 rwrcni-eca ire-

K: W&v«KnTt 11 nljr. .was teventy--five the t:r.i«?of ii:» JSr-H to* K, fte rf vtiy, '"v a giri et wr«i-

aaffl. WttxtAM of Gcrr.nt'f-.1'- ,s t-t At'. "1stA of iburi^-.w tit* -tj

ins-.vLs .J««| fbeu h« irifc, who wiastwa

•TSSO XsLg:* j-arrUx' to. IsU

xamn ii« :, iwenty-twa mOatm to his se^xl wlfew tbe

FROM HIS MOTHER'S LIPS.

FASOUB MKH BCCAU WI»K SYSTEM OF THEIR MOTHERS.

Word* Thai Have fthape* Tbe Coorw* Of iUM-Henry tl*W» Mother Meat bt» t* B«XI *a*Iy.

^WM

tcopvtuonT, urn.1

Wha^t a beautiful volume of ohoice reading could be compiled on the favorite sayings and stories of the mothers of remarkable men. There is a lot of unwritten history here, which, if called forth, would show thut mother stono® and mother ftsy inga- hare not only,had a tvonderfol influene?, but a most direct bearing on the lives of men who have risen from the ranks up to first place in the vocation in which they have attained so much eminence. Who has not heard in conversation with a snrccssful man the words as applied to MC good maxims ••My mother used to say—

Although it is a fact thaf many c'el^ brated characters in history never had any memory of their mothers at all while the mothers of sons who have lived and died without even a tinge of smartness attached to

IIEJfBY crews' ODTUH TO rKOSPERITY. My mother, from my earliest recollec-, tion up to the present period of my ex-' istence, was always my ideal of a true and good woman, in fact the nearest approach to a perfect one on this earth. To her I owe all that is in me which is worthy of imitation and transmission to my children. She taught mo from infancy up many wise things and sayings. One of them I distinctly recollect, and I can now almost think that I hear her gentle but forcible voice saying: "Now, Henry, to bed, for remember, 'early to bed, early to rise, will make a man healthy, wealthy and wise.'" This oft repeated quotation was made to ring in my ears and was therefore forced indelibly upon my mind, and it is due to making: it nay guide through life that I owe my present good health, cheerful spirits and ifruch of my business success. I recommend its adoption to all young men starting out to make a career for themselves. My word for it, it is the best tonic yet discovered for building up the rising generation to make successful men in all walks of life *-cquirhig enterprise and arduous work.

RF.V.

V.OBKRT

TKRRK HAUTE DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MA* 30 1S91.

vhoir

career were

-f.-rr*,T..*.i.r. tsM varaanle

ptvoep^Titaoes not prove anything in particular and it would bo useless to waste a lot of wordy metaphysics upon the subject of thidrsymposinm

Willy pit kindly furnish in a few Itnea, over yovvtnffruitare, the beat story or saying you recall most vitidly as coming from your mother's lips. 3

COTXTItn'S BRAVE MOTHER.

My dear and good mother found it hard to make ends meet and tie in the small cottage by the* Wnshburn, say sixty years ago. There was a house full of us, and as we grew apace, as they Bay over there: "It was deeper into t.' looaf and deeper into the clooath," while there was only a small wage to meet the large demand. So I mind how, when winter was coming on and the snow begun to fiill and food and fuel •wore dear, she would sit still, with a far-away look in bereyesof brooding trouble, and say, perhaps: "This is going to be a hard winter, bairns," while the tears ran down her sweet face. But V?ucn we began to whimper also, and especially at the dreadful thought that we should have no Christmas this year, the times were so hard, I mind how the look of brooding would pass away, and she would say never mind, we shall get along, and no matter how poor we are don't let us look poor and don't tell Then she would gird herself for the battle again, shoulder to shoulder with the good father who could not cut and contrive, but only earn faithful and true scant weekly wage. Then we would win ihre the winter and never hw what it ?v'.us to wapt, while I still mother coiv'j about the house with the new li -lit to her ey^s she had won by faith* and hear the br: ve words: "No mat*»r. bairns, how kojr we are, don't let \is lock ]sootf and don't tell." The savins leiaine a household word, and I r.M t.«till stays in the hearts of pH her cl-l-lrcn when the need to eta-Hi trite to it and work out our own salvation in these things that touch the common life bas passed awa^'

cM

5*4?

MR. XHBPKW'S MOTKSB'S TAJUKST. My :-a tthcr was a woman of broad cultuiv and great reader* She was Intensely rel ri

mm

and believed In the

ef& .^y of 1 'rjjpch attendajace on the Sal She did not care for money and neti.. -e any advice In regard h? it Rich lie did wfc imprt her, Iratsbe $ never tired of enthnaiaiSticaUjr the mors of life and of iial-bccofl» hmam.«sa/Mm-

C'~zX^T9. c.T authors. 8be pleaded

r- "-r.r -d nrg^atly t?.1 dto^ of :r th*-* loa tk uncomi_. le

1

veaudn^srof 'fee

tiefk if iihvjst fmrrt serviOi /Kt-

si a T.

•n abogr.

neqtri-

f, •,"

f:r,re -r

**5* ix-r risv T«® »'-|ta2.-5: Or JSC-Si a r: Mva r«ir. ag^bnt

i. Atsaiwl-tre If it v" tf vhy.y. tie life of Chrhtt aod mi*# far* i- *m*h

leaching*. "Poor Richard's" proverbs were impressed upon me early and lato, and the chief among them was that thrifty idea "Take oare of the pennies and the pounds will take care of them* •elves." I have saved many pennies, but somehow or other the pounds have failed to verify the philosophy, She was very fond of books and flowers, (pending all her spare time, by day, both winter and summer, in tbe cultivsr Uoq of her tastes in this regard. I remember a favorite statement of hers, taken from the German, which is embodied in the following pretty fcersiclc:

Place arose near thy bed. Nightly sentry to keep, Ap^I ttg$ots shell rock the#

On

rose# to sleep.

,X)U.KCrOR EBUARDT'S MOTHER'S PATRIOTISM. I left the university of Vermont April 81, 1861, came to New York and wont to the plhcc, four miles from Fulton Ferry, where my parents, whom I had not seen for nearly a year, then lived. They, like their ancestors, were poor. I reached ray destination at about half past twjj o'clock in the morning. My mother came to the door, opened It and said: "Is that you, Joel?? I said: "Yes." Before I entered the door she said: "You have come down to go to the war, haven tyou?" and I replied: "Yes." She then said: "That is right come in andiciss me."

The mother of the Gracchi had three tora, my mother only one.

I FROM BISHOP POTTKR. I should be very glad to serve you if JO could by complying with your request. But my mother died when I was a little more than an Infant, much too young to have any recollection of any words even of hers.

WHAT OTHERS SAY.

Gen. Russell A. Alger, who was seen at the Fifth Avenue hotel a few minutes previous to his leaving for his home in Detroit, said very feelingly: "It will be impossible for me to write anything for you at this time for the symposium. I have just had a great affliction in the loss of my daughter, and I can assure you when you speak to me about my mother, it is a very tender subject to me. The last time I saw her I was only twelve years old, and she bade me good-by with the words: 'God bless you, my boy do right always." The greatest regret of my life has ever been that I did not have the opportunity to make her as comfortable as 1 would have liked."

A young poet in New York, whose devotion and loyalty to the memory of his mother is so strong that he will not permit anyone in his presence to speak lightly of any woman, says his mother's favorite expression was: "Never under any circumstances do anything mean."

Mayor Grant's mother died when he was but sixteen months old. CoL Robert G. Ingcrsoll was" a little tot of two years wh^n his mother passed away and llev. DrvLyman Abbott, pastor of Plymouth eliurch, Brooklyn, has been equally unfortunate in the loss of his mother.

If all the pleasant facts in connection with the compiling of this symposium could be printed it would make an interesting story in itself.

ARTHUR IRVCTO GRAY.

HOW ACTORS MAKE UP!

A Few Strobe* with tied or Black Change the Whoio Countenance. No set rules are laid down for malting up faces. A painter might as well try to give to his pupils in a few set of rulcf* the drawing of a "Raphael" or the colorinf of ft "Titian.** The ordinary text books do not amount to much. Eveiy Tlu-rp-'r.n must study these things for luinielf, as they cannot be taught But a few valuable hints may "be given. Cse your fingers to apply gri as? pain* to th" face. Every makeup box olu 2 retain a tin palette on which the actor, like the painter, can mix ids colors after warming the palette. Powder is best applied with a harefoot or* a puff and liquids and water colors with a :a?"t bfaslu Tbe principal colors for making up are black, blue, rod, white and flesh color. Every actor should make himself acquainted with the illumination of the theater before making up. The lighter the theater^e more careful one has to be. Wri.-iles can only be drawn where yottr face suggests wrinklea. If a lady desires to make up for tbe parlor or street she should rub into the skin a preparation of rose water and glycerine,, wipe it of? as much as possible and apply drop chalk then brush it off with »:eoft'brush aad apply the roage very moderately on the proper part of the sbeek.

A lew strokes with red or black at the eyebrows, nostrils or corners of the *sre sufBci nt to cfca-.ige tbe mn* 'Tanco.

Tb :Mot the brows mast be dark-.-•rthan :'-rt of the hair lite ei. .r of h? .'ir5:ctf '*&«• •. --r ox" tr. ''.a,

T&--.S

it a was Her ofter. repeated little money -tri**eaae«m

white.tmtik-.-meet* -decaje^l-

He*-..* a.r ihem with^jrelloWvOr sjray. To tppear eatir»lj.a^: *y

Ar- •_ ^'.oadd alw-.v*we*r sto-^ t" fits*? kCKT*2 Lhrlr A as a in t-tr zjtwb blw ".v -X P- A WI-.I tOIK- 53 us .-f L'..* between reii''*"* -'gwsMu t& .» a^o&ldal*: ir-.-br.iza trUh cugratfter of •. TSe aHam-

for i: ^ce dharactors tbe lips r.-.i-t bere -d, adUnsr trnnst tbe fisee ". rea sitar «akiaag

up.

^cbu-Jss black s&lt dkJpitiaTl s.

For

POETIC MELLIFLUENCE. True aa4 JValae. mtn is a fletn

Thtwgh It lie la tho tasV 'ftamgh erery by-pMser Should efve tt a ttmurtt Tboo*b hidden awhile,

Still lu sirtoe# wilt ahtns, Till it aaddenly jtloami With glory divine.

Bend bat sane. Though the wind, pafflringST, Bhoald hear tt shovo

To tho itar« of the sky Ont tried by the truth And the testings of fame, Forgotten it falls

To the toll wbesoe cam®. Though obBcorlty trample And tread upon worth. It will ste&dUy rise

From the trammels of earth Though chanco'* vagaries The worthless advance, It will flee in dismay j|p

At truth's conquering glance.' George Blrtseye, to Detroit Free Pre*

Reverie.

I wonder, sometimes, as I nit And think—for thinking Is my way, Bow woald the world have looked to me

Lacta bad not said mo cay Would she be sitting here. I wonder, And I, perehanee, be standing thereT Would she he asking for a bonnet,

AM I be looking at her hairt Would aUo b« thlnkiOB of tho ball room And 1 be longing for the club? Would all her thoughts be set on mnsla,

Andplnoon smokoJ—ah. there's the rub'

*Tls better thus—a'happy bachelor And better than a wife, a friend Alone, with half as much to worry,

And more than twice as much to spend —Harvard Lampoon.

In Paradise.

Then was a beautiful garden. And there was a man within And there was a perfect woman,

And there was no thought of sin. And thero wero flowers and sunshine Sparkling on hill and plain, But how ooold they know the sunshine

Before they had seen the ralnf There they were blessed and honored Above all the future race But what could they know of horibr

Before they had felt disgrace* How could they know they were happy Until they had drunk of woe? How could he know sho was perfect

When everything else was sot Such life was but half of living, And, all things else above. Until they had suffered together.

What could they know ot love? —Louise J. Beeeher, In Christian at Work.

,A Paradox. vM-

Oh, matters mundane now and then, Gel singularly mixed Here is an Inconsistency

That hardly can be fixed.

I know a hard and narrow man, .» A miser and morose, Who, though a million miles away,

Would still be lust as close. 0 —BostonCourier,

rr

Good Measure.

They sat together, and she said. How far is it 'round the world, dear Fredr* Then Fred, sly rojuo. of course, made hastf To glide his arm around her waist. "Just my arm's length, dear Maud," said he, "For you aro all the world to me P* ... —Juiy.

Not ao Easy as It LooJrs. r" Ho was looking at a typo, Piling lotierrf In bis stick.

1

And each one seemed to fall In Una-,. *iSo gracefully and slick. That's easy work," he muttered,

I e'en could do It well If I only had a half a chance And could the boxes tell." The typo hade him try bis hand

O'erjoyed tho stick he took— He set oue line—it's standing yet— 1» Bra/TS j^is sont oF Igk. —Montreal Gacett*

5

Th« Pansy.

1

A little flower, faded and old. With purple leaves and a heart of gold* Wrapped in a kercUiof white as snow 1 found it to-day

All withered away.

Where I placed It tor keeping years ago.

A story lives in this pansy's dust. A story pathetic with youthful trust And 1 would I could tiro It over again.

For it speskft to me— Out of memory—

Ot a love that was sweet, but was all In vain.

Tbe pansy has faded, as did my dream, In theyears that have •. used, and yet 1 seem, Through allot life's tur vl"? dla,

To have kept us r~

l*

Of tho kerchief 1 wra od it la. Eric GachrclL la N. O. Picayune.

Her Definition.

Ob, what is a s-.cc::u .1-:, ray little maidt* tasked ofm- ch.inaw Tot "A sweetheart," sr.! a utd she sweetly smiled Ic away that sot me with teve nearly wild "Is a something, which

3

pi-

rntr"'"

-Breo: tyo

Liltle Trifles.

When away from the heme ot your childhood, do yt» ever turn hack tn your thought. And recall frftsa the past little trifies, whose totrincieal ralne Is naoghtt Yet they cling to the whole of a ttfetime, fran the mmd they caa nercr escape They servo as an indes to tho future, and pan ot life's history make. Whca recalling these trifling metaestoea, aach pleasure someoften will brra& While others eocM to as more sadly, tod pleas are replace with a stins Then irapnsro by the past tittle trifles, which will teach ym to show what 1s wrong. To adapt the good and the taerat, that your

4

life may he happy sad ton#.

—JVTT-

flbe Took Cttnu

Will you have D»r I Hkti Shesasweredme: **¥es," And later she bad me. liegm to confess. —Washiagtcra Staa

Wlthmit—Ye4 Wish.

staad bc-aaath the trr-- •, ers oaee we stood, Wet •. togssher,«- from

'its?

mh»

t?ie He-- art j, 'S .i fab c~n the wseed. as tike sett aarmsr «t the Ga-xfa nftattt iSftskii arewe«.c-t tare '-ittte --.-JtwheMes-- rttuytO, jim v-'Mheaasth t. mvf. Snm&m. JF »ttrnhnsms saratff tt«aws»

pa-«-s orer tt that Jfar tic 5 ^way.

Tbe .JM, -«m

Qt.wt&H*'. pveextit ftssily plays AteB. IstaaditigKta

tret act aSi^ to lhypartseghy my side, ,• Thy «4rit tsaS^hh-sasftf K«SBJ EAR# fatrt Above all Awhta, 4fc* shaU jBlSl shtdg,

As&tfre iw

sts«««th tifeat I

amt

wsm SPKCXFIC.

TAKE

S. S. S.

FOR

ECZEMA.

My little four year old girl had aggravated case of ecrema. The ba^ jfliyri clans treated her, wltihoxit af good results. A single bottle of & 8. ig cored heraound and welL This vafl four years ago, snd she has bad no tain of the disease sinoe and heralds If perfcctiv smooth and clean.

James E. Henry, Detroit, Miofc Y^eatise on Skin diseftes mailed fraa, Swift SpecLQoOo., Atlanta, Oft,

am MKDicAii.

He Has Evidence

of

CURING!.

Hundreds and Hundreds of the wotst

CHRONIC DISEASES.

W. D. REA, M. D.,

who has created unch a sensAtion in and around Louisville, Ky., by curing diseases that almost baffled tho medical fraternity ot the country. 33

Dr. Rea has charge cf the electrical and surgical denartment of the Coffee Medical and Surgical Institute of that city.

By special request he will visit TERRS HAUTE,at the

National Hotel, Monday and Tneftriity ••4 June SM and «M,

RETURNING EVERY MONTH, TO REMAIN TWO DAYS DURING THE YEAR.

Dr. Rea hss been connected with the largest hospitals in this oountry, and ha* no superior In diagnosing and treating diseases deformities. He will give 160 for any cd- that be cannot tell the disease and where located lew five minutes.

Treats all Curable Medical and Surgical diseases, Acute and Chronic,

CATARRH,

Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat end Lungs, Dyspepsia Rright's Disease, Kidneys, Diabetes. Liver, Bladder, Chronic and Female and Sexual Disease.

^Epilepsy or Fits Cured. 1

A

4

In the fllmy In"?

Positive Guarantee.

ti

Young or Middle Aged Men StiflTering from Spermntorrbea and impt ,icy, ss the result of self-abuse in youth, or In mature yearn, and other eaoses, pfot .rlnff some of the following effects, as em .- on, biotohes, debility, nervotisne^- !:.• loetv QBfusion of ideas, aversion to •.

i1

1

de?- tlve

memory and sexual exhaust!* unfit tbe victim for business or r, pes* msncntly cured by remedies not in/uriotw. a S in is as SyphUIs, and complieatl ir-, a* mte throat, falling out of the hslr, i»iii in ».f p. tlons, etc., aerennr or other ht"-" -!ni», Ooaorrbes, Gleet Stricture, aii.l *,. Lmmry and kidney troubles are speedily cured by treatment that has never failed.

He undertakes no incurable cases, bet cures thousands given up to die. Kember the date and come early, at Ss is rooms are always crowded wherever CM p. Consultation free, correspondence wi and oonfldential. Address, COFFEE MEDICAL INSTITUTE,

No. 520 Fifth 8t., Lonisvilie, Ky,

MI«3KIIAWKOUS

MURPHY BROS., ^ou™^:

Headquarters for nice fitting g*rmetr« rirst-chis« workmanship and moderate prk ', II you are tone«l of spring salt gl acalL-*"

FRED 8TERGHI1134 MAIN.

Oeneral furniture repairing, "f c,'!terin* *«d fxrtilw tmfk*

81.BACV1WT.

NORTH END BLEfiGHERY.

Prepared te do any kind Mess, in-.

(.) BEKHATISS EiTS ASD BuNNfcIS

from aref -l*ee.'=' i. f«w *ng stt»»s oa sx ThirdsfwtetBorth of! aat

Siajpi us siraets -er«r Hw aoodlaad

feraralr

BX(xurjy-HAKm

mom'*

Second-tod goods t'.r safe..

A lr*txlass !in* of necoiMi-bafi^t liom ted furniture lor *mle "Watch thl* adtcrti^eneat fiwr mr prices on folding bedJL ARNOLD & CO.,

-at,a: 117 north Fourth street.

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