Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 9, Number 30, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 January 1879 — Page 3

THE MAIL

A PAPER FOR TIIF. PEOPLE.

HOW 20 TREAT VISITORS.

First, try to make tbem fe«l at home. There is a great difference in the capacity of people for doing this. Some will fidget over a guest, and follow him up with such a degree of tenacity that he cannot help feeling as if he were in the way and in danger of upsetting the entire order of the household. It doesn't help the matter much to hear the host continually saying, "You must make yourself perfectly at home." This may seem to oonvey a doubt whether you will find it possible to do so. I have'sometimes been tempted to reply, "You must try to make yourself just as much at home as if I were not here."

It is not easy to say precisely what it is which makes one feel so much more at ease in some houses that he does in others. In certain places you are iuclined to measure your words and watch all your movements, for fear you may say something that will be regarded as improper. You begin to count over in your mind the days and weeks which must be endured before the time comes for your visit to be over, as boys watch the clock, longing for the hour to strike when they will be let out of school. And if the visit is dull to the guest, it is probably somewhat heavy to the host, although he may do bis best now to show it.

Again, do not be over anxious to find •employment and entertainment for your visitors leave them to themselves occasionally. They may not care for your society all the time, but for a portion' of the day would prefer the solitude of their own room. Place a few nice books •or periodicals there for their private solace when they wish to be alone. There may not be mueh in common between you and tbem your pursuits and tastes may be very unlike your grade and culture may be different from theirs, and if you are together all the time it may be hard to find anything to talk about. After the pump is dry it is not worth while to keep working at the handle. It is true that if your guest is •a man of tact he will naturally address himself to such subjects as are most familiar to you, and be may manage to get something out of you tbat is new and interesting. Having once been entertained by an intelligent locomotive driver, we learned more from him of the habits and tricks of engines than we could ever have extracted from books.

Again, go not out of your way to pro vide costly luxuries for your guest which, perhaps, you can poorly afford and for which he may not specially care, By multiplying courses at your table you only succeed in making the dinner stately and tedious. "Feed him with food convenient for him," and make no apologies. It he is ui»ed to plainer fare he will be more than-content with what you set before him, and if be is accus tomed to a higher style of living, he may be equally content with your simpler food.

Again, be careful to treat your poorer and humbler relations whom you have invited vour house, with due respect and cordiality—neither with any show of patronage or any marks of neglect. Whoever else may be your guests, let there be nothing in your manner to indicate that you are ashamed of the good old aunt tbat is visiting you, and the truest way to accomplish tbia is not to be ashamed of her. She may not dress in the latest fashion, and her talk ma, be of country matters—she may as! some queer questions, and show her familiarity with a style of life tbat is somewhat foreign to that of your other visitors but if you are not willing under ail circumstanoes, to treat her with cordial civility, you should not have asked her to your house. It is possible that, after all, in the eyes of your aristocratic friends, she may seem to have more good sense than their host. No man ever loses caste, in the opinion' of the truly refined and cultivated, by showing courtesy toward} such as move in a lowlier sphere.

On the other hand, do not treat your rich and famous visitors with over ob sequious attention. They will not thank you for it, or respect you any the more for your excess of defer-n-e Above all, never allude to the fa-t of their visiting you as an act of rondt scension on their part, or, by any word or look iudicate that, in your opinion, they hold a higher position in society than you do. If you fall in with all their prejudices, and echo all their sent irnenta, and hang upon tbeir lips, as the bees cling "to every opening flower," they will probably see tbrought it all, and place you accordingly.

They do not come to your bouse for the purpose of being put on a pedestal and worshipped. And when they talk with you, it is not for the purpose of hearing you respond invariably in the affirmative to their opinions. Convetmtion on such conditions is stupid business.

Treat them with all the respect that is due, and no more. They do not visit you as millionaires, but as men. Ift)it^come in any other capacity, their visit is not worth having, unless, indeed, you wish that they should remember yuu in their will.

Whoever may be your viaitors, keep the skeletous out of sight. Family wees, and trials, and misfortunes, if they are made the staple of conversation, will cause the visit of your guest to be very disagreeable. If you have invited him for the sake of his aid, and sympathy, and he understands it so, it is another matter. In this case becomes for your comfort, and not for his own pleasure. If he visits you out of pure friendship, and expects to have a good time, lock up the closets where you keep your skeletons.

If they cannot be locked up, bat will persist in haunting the house, it is not the time for entertaining strange or familiar friends. It may not be quite BO bad as this, and still you may nave some little family jars or domestio anxieties—some aches or pains of the body or of the mind that may cloud your spirits—if so, do not parade them before visitors.

Bogna Certificate*.

It is no vile drugged stuff, pretending to be made of wonderful foreign roots, barks. Ac., and puffed up by long bogus certificates of pretended miraculous cures, but a simple, pure, effective medicine, made of'well known* valuable remedies, that furnishes its own certificate bv its eyres. We refer to Hop Bitters, the purest and best of medicines. See "Truths"aud "Proverbs," in another col um u.

THE CHILDREN.

A mother writes: "Once a week in variably—and generally when we had cold meat minced—I gave the children dinner which is hailed with delight, and looked forward to this is a dish of boiled onions. The little things knew tbat they were taking the best of medi cine for expelling what moat children suffer most from—worms. Mine were kept free by this remedy alone.

Scalding of the throat from swallow ing boiling water occurs not uncommon ly among children left by themselves and is very dangerous, as the throat swell*1, and the sufferer is in danger of being suffocated. Send for the medical man immediately. Meanwhile, if it can be procured, let the patient suck loe con stantly, and apply a strong mustard poultice to the front of the throat.

You need not fear for the manhood of a good boy. If the little fellow looks into your eye and speaks the honest truth, if he is respectful to those who de serve respect, brave when he should be brave, and yet with no shame of being gentle, thank heaven, and do all you ean to keep him so but have no fear, As vices strengthen so do virtues. The good boy is more than likely to be a bet ter man.

Give the children the airiest and sun niest room in the house for a nursery, It is the suu that keeps the air in motion bringing to us a fresh supply every moment. The power of the sun's rays can scarcely be estimated, even approx imately. ft is said to generate heat enough to boil five cubic miles of ice water every minute. Sunshine is essential to the human race as to the vegetable kingdom. Don't shut the bright, warm sun out of your houses because it fades the carpet. Better let

the carpet fade than the bright spirits and rosy cheeks of your children. Let the warm sunshine come into your houses and/your hearts.

The love which every child brings with it, is in itself the strongest indlca tion of the needs of childhood. Love is like sunshine without it there can be no harmonious growth or development. As well expect a fruit tree to bear de liclo.us fru^t in a oellar, as expect a child to grow up into symmetrical manhood or womanhood without love. As in variably we appropriate the sunniest nook in the garden to the nursery, so must the warmest aud sunniest apart meuts of the heart be given to the little ones. Nuitured in an atmosphere of love, tbeir various powers expand in un conscious but harmonious beauty.

Wbatshalll teach my child Teach him that it is better to starve than steal that it is bettor to be a scavenger or wood chopper than an idler ana a dead beat that it is just as criminlnal, and more reprehensible, to waste Monda than to desecrate Sunday that labor the price of all honest possessions that no one is exempt from the obligation to labeg: witn head, or hands, or heart that "an honest man is the noblest work of God tbat knowledge is power that labor is worship ana idleness is sin that it is best to eat the crust of in dependent poverty than to luxuriate among the richest as a dependent. Teach him these facts till they are woven into bis being and regulate his life, and we will insure hii succes, though the heavens fall.

As sleep is the period for replenishing the system, for restoring the cells wasted by the nervous activity of the daythe period when the processes of diges tion reach their final result, by identifying the new nutriment with the system in the place of the waste of the tissues— it follows that children need more sleep than grown persons. Many who might be plump, active and happy if given sufficient sleep, are flaccid ana sallow, weary and fretful, because tbey do not sleep enough to allow the demand of the system for nutriment to be supplied. Children of ten feel it very hard tbat tbey are sent to bed early, while the grown people sit up and enjoy themselves long after they are to bed. If any children obanco to read this paragraph, to them we would say: "You need more sleep than your parents, because you have to grow and they do not. You need to use a great deal of the food you eat in growing larger and stronger if you oonsumeTt all in activity, you will not have enough to grow with. Therefore, you ought to sleep a great deal, and let the body rest from exercise, if you would grow strong and health^."

THE CHILDREN'S SUN DA Y. Sunday Magazine. I think you should encourage a great deal of song on the Sabbath day. Begin with a hymn. If you have a piano, or a cabinet organ, or a violin in the house, use it forsacted music only, on the holy day. Let the daughter who is just beginning to play, learn the tunes of these sacred songs, and the rest will delight in uniting with her, and your praise meeting in the morning will give you inspiration and tranquility for all the day. Go to church, and take the childreu with you. You say, perhaps, tbat the children attend Sunday school, and tbat you think that enough tbat tbey do not understand tbe words of the preacher, and they grow weary and fret and disturb you ana you think on the whole tbey are better ofl at home.

In the old stern day of the Puritans, this plea of fatigue and restlessness might have been urged, but never was. Then, though sermons were two hours long, tbe boys and girls sat by tbeir eiders, and at last learned to discipline tbeir feet and hands, and to keep themselves quiet. It is quite otherwise now. Most ministers remember tbat tbey have young people among tbeir auditors, and drop them now and then a crumb.

By going in whole households to ohurch,. the habit is established. The ohild will grow up and find it easy and not difficult to attend churohwhen be reaches manhood. Let your pew, after this, look from the standpoint of tbe pulpit, like a bed of flowers in bloom, with all the children but the baby there.

Have a good dinner, not necessarily a hot one, out a good one on Sunday. The Sunday meals should be more feasts than fasts. Have the nicest cake and the favorite preserves on the Sunday tea table.

On Sunday afternoon, see that there ia a supply of interesting reading for the older members of tbe family. Tell stories, or road them to tbe younger ones. Be never cross, morose, severe or stern on Sunday. It is the day which should be clothed in white, and on which every one should smile and be full of cheer.

End the day with praise, Bible read* ing and a family prayer meeting. Let tbe praver of the father be very direct, very simply worded, very earnest, asking God for the things the family want. Let everybody loin in the sweetest of all prayers. "Our Father in Heaven." And uhen, when sleep folds its soft wings over the household and the angels watch you, they will bear to Heaven a good account, and -God's benediction will rest upon you, to make you happy and strong. Whatever the week may hold in store for you, you will be better able to meet it, if yon and vour* have well kept the Lord's Day.

SPECIAL

DR. PRICE'S

VERMIFUGE.

SYMPTOMS OF WORMS.

THE

countenance is pale and lead-en-colored, with occasional flushes, or a circumscribed spot on one or both cheeks the eyes become dull the pupils dilate an azure semicircle runs along the^lower eve-lid the nose is irritated, wells, ana sometimes bleeds a swelling of the upper lip occasional headache, with humming or throbbing of the ears an unusual secretion of saliva slimy or furred tongue breath very foul, particularly in the morning appetite variable, sometimes voracious, with a gnawing sensation of the stomach, at others, entirely gone fleeting pains in the stomach occasional nausea and vomiting violent pains throughout the abdomen bowels irregular, at times costive stools slimy, not unfrequently tinged with blood belly swollen and hard urine turbid respiration occasionally difficult, and accompanied by hiccough cough sometimes dry and convulsive uneasy and disturbed sleep, with grinding of the teeth temper variable, but generally irritable, &c..

Whenever the above symptoms are found to exist, DR. C. McLANE'S VERMIFUGE will certainly effect a cure.

IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURY in any form it is an innocent preparation, not capable of doing the slightest injury to the most tender infant.

The genuine

MIFUGE

DR. C. McLANE'S

LIVER PILLS

are not recommended as a remedy for all the ills that flesh is heir to," but in affections of the liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dyspepsia and Sick Headache, or diseases of that character, they stand without a rival.

A E A N E E

No better cathartic can be used preparatory to, or after taking Quinine. As a simple purgative they are unqualed.

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. Thp genuine are never sugar coated. Each box has a red wax seal on the lid, with the impression DR.

fERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENLN Gr MAIL.

FLAVORING

Eminent Chemists and Phyaioiana oertify that these goods are free from adulteration, richer, mora effeotive, produce better results than any others, and that they use them in their own families

STEELE A PRICE'S LUPULIN YEAST GEMS. The Beat Dry Hop Yeast in the World.

Celebrated American

WORM SPECIFIC

OR

DR. MCLANE'S VER­

bears the signatures of C.

MCLANE

and FLEMING BROS, on the

wrapper. —:0:—

MCLANE'S

LIVER PILLS. Each wrapper bears the signatures of C. MCLANE and FLEMING BROS.

Insist upon having the genuine Dr. C. MCLANE'S LIVER

PILLS, prepared by

Fleming Bros., of Pittsburgh, Pa., the market being full of imitations of the name McLane, spelled differently but same pronunciation.

TUTT'S PILLS!

A NOTED DIVINE SITS THEY ARE WORTH THEIR

WEIGHT in COLD

READ WHAT HE SAYS: T«.

Trrr:-Penr Pir: For ten years I have bc-u mnrtyr to Dyspepsia. Constipation and Pi If*. I«n*t sjiriiutyuUrPlllswerereoominpnded torn? 1 used them (but with little faith). 1 am now a well in:in, have good appetite, digestion perfect, regular stools. rllrR gone, and I have gained forty pounds solid flesh. They are worth their weight In gn'tl.

RKV. R. L. SIMPSON, Louisville, Ky.

A TORPID LIVER

is tbe fruitful source of many diseases, snch as Dyspywia,?iek Heartache.(ostiveness.Dysentery. mlion* Fever, Ague and Fever, Jaundice, Pllos,Rheumatism, Kii!iipyCim|ilaint,Colic,etc.

Tntt's Mils exert a powerful influence on the Llvcrjind will wiili tyititl my relipvcihat important organ ironi disease, and restore its noamal functions.

Therapidity with w?i5 person* take on flesh, while under the iv-fof these pi lis, of itself lndlcate%thelr adaptability t«» nourish the body, hence their efficacy in i-nnntr nervous debility, dyspepsia, was! ing of the muscles, sluggishness Oftlellver.chronic.-in«tlprttlon.and imparting health and strength to the system.

CONSTIPATION/

Only with regularitvnf the bowel* can perfect health be enjoyed. hen the constipation i.« of recent date, a single dose of TFTT'S PILLS will suffice, but if it has become habitual, one pill sbonld be taken *\err night, sraduallr Iwwwilog tbe frpqnent-T of dc*e «ntil a regular daily iA wiitch nil) soon follow.

Sold Erfrywherc, 25 Onts. OFFICE, 35 MURRAY ST., HEW YORK. Collar and Milker free to

Agents. Neat, light, durable, cheap. No Ha raw required— excels all others. Farmers want it. Outlasts all others. Adjustable, Fits aay horse.

Our MILKEK, the bast on Garth, ensures, pare, clean, milk. Saves itx cast every week, delis rapidly. Bent by mall to any part of the U. 9, Bend stamp for particulars. WM UERNSEY, (feneral Agent, 73 Conrlandt street, New York.

UNIQUE PERFUMES are tbe Gems of All Odors. TOOTHENE. An agreeable, healthful Liquid Dentifrice. LEMON SUGAR. A Substitute for Lemons. EXTRACT JAMAICA GINGER. From Pure Root.

STEELE & PRICE, Manfri., Chicago, St. Louis, and Cincinnati

THE GENUINE

DR.C.MoLANE'S

Professional Cards.

s. a. Burr. S. M, BKECBCB

BUFF

A

BEECHER,

ATTOB3TEYS AT LAW,

OFFICE—No.

320

Treats exclusively Diseases of the

ETE AND EAB!

Ofleei Mo. 581 Ohio Street, TER RE HAUTE, IND. Office hours from 9 a. m. te 1 p. m. and from 3 to 5 p. m.

O. LINCOLN,

DENTisT.

Office, 221 Main street, near Seventh. Ex tractlng and artificial teeth specialties. AU work warranted. (dAw-tf)

DR.

L. H. BARTHOLOMEW, Snrgeoa and Heehaaleal DENTIST, Dental Room, 157 Main Street, near 6th,

TIBBB HAUTE, IND.

Nitrous Oxide Gas administered for pat. ess Tooth Extraction.

W. BALLEW,

DENTIST,

Ofllce, 423% Haln Street, over Sage old eonfertloHery stand. TERRK HAUTE, IND.

Can be found In office night and day,

Business Cards.

ERRE HAUTE BLEACHERY

o. 201, oorner of 4th and Mulberry Sts.

Conducted by

MRS. M. A. GERARD.

Straw Hats and Bonnets bleached altered, colored and finished In a superior manner. Millinery work done at trade prices, and on short notice. Patronage respectfolly so licit ed.

CAL

THOMAS,

Optician and Watchmaker For the trade, Main street, near Sixth, sign of big man with watch.

R.

W. RIPPETOE Gene ti Dealer In GROCERIES, VISIONS AND PRO­

DUCE,

r-" '-,. vv.'':

EXTRACTS.

Ohio Street, bet. Third and Fourth, north side.

JQR. J. P. WORRELL,

National Block, 155 Main street

LKISSNER,

Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Pianos, Melodeons, Organs, Musical Instruments, Ac.,

Palace of Music, 48 Ohio t)i

-Y^AGNER & RIPLEY,

Importers and workers of

Scotch Granite and Italian Marble MONUMENTS, S A A N S A

No. 418 Cherry St., bet. 4th and 5th. TERRE HAUTE, IND.

S1REPAIRED

EWING MACHINES AMD ADJUSTED In the very best manner and warranted to werk, by JOSEPH FOLK, No. "822 Mali street, north side, between 3rd and 4tt streets, up stairs. Don't condemn your ma chine until Mr. FOLK has had a look at It for the real trouble may be very light and the cost of repairing a mere trifle. The be* needles and oil constantly on hand.

Junel9-tt QITY MARBLE WORKS.

M. HANRAHAN, Manufacturer and dealer In American and Italian Marble and Scotch Granite Monuments, Tomb Stones, Urns, Vases, Garden figures and Statuary

Shop, 126 south Third street, between Ohio and Walunt, east side, Terre Haute, Ind. Flist-class material and workmanship. E

GBERT CURTIS, Terre Haute, Ind., Breeder of Pure Brown and White Leg horns, Brown and White China Geese, ana Muscovy Ducks.

Stock and Eggs for sale. Agent for Animal Meal for Fowls and 8wlne, and German Roup Pills.

•GUSINESS CHANGE.

JLY

'cars

STOP,

TJLWhite

Where

4

r-spfnf in???

JPN UI JR

At the

i-j'-M __ ___

LUllesof thoYi ranged and turlni Noonocanfu nosessit. It Bre centa (silver, currency or

In beau

Noonacan fully appreciate this it. l|.ls given nwa months' BUb«crtE strated LEISUBE HOURS, a lane three column quarto,40pages, flUedtnththochoicest art! cela on Places, Travels, Biography, Sto^, ilea. Poetry, etc., by writers of wide reputation. Without doubt this is the chesp-.

doubt SUTSS.

the chesp-.

HOLLO"

E

PHCENIX "FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORKS,

Terre Haute, Ind.

SUCCESSORS TO F. H. McELFRESH.

ilgnc F.

succeeded to the

business of F. H. McElfresh, are now prepared to receive orders for feteam Engines,

turned Shalling and Pulleys, Bolting Chests,

Gearing of all kinds, Reels (Iron «r wood Elevator Heads and

Flour Mill, Saw Mill Machinery, Iron conveyor Spiral ana Wooden Cogs of our own manufacture.

We have also secured the agency for the best quality of French Burr Mill Stones, Defour A Co's Dutch Anchor Bolting Cloth, a variety of Grain Cleaning Machinery, Mldllngs Purifiers, Flour Packers, Scales, Corn Shellers, Wire Rope. Ac.

Tbe well-known excellence of the machinery and castings manufactured by the Pheenlx Fonndrjr and Maealne Works will be fully maintained, and the capacity of the works is such that we can guarantee prompt shipment of any orders with which we may be favored. We would respectfully solicit a continuance of the trade to liberally bestowed upon the establishment heretofore, which shall always receive prompt attention, at the lowest [atesfor

m~keUaU*^cffiSSmfLBERT.

WAY fc CO., New York.

The Only 25 Cent

AOUEJREMEDY

IN THE WORLDT"

THERMALINE

A safe and reliable substitute for Qui* nine. The great tasteless medicine for all diseases caused by Malarial Poisonlay, being a preventive as well as a certain remedy for

FEVER and AGUE,

CHILLS&FEVER

Damb Ague, Agae Cake, Remittent, Intermittent fevers, Kldnejr Di»ease, Liver and Bowel Complaint, Dyspepsia and General Del lllty the best general Tonle for debilitated Systems. Price 23 cents per box. Family boxes 91X0 Sold by Druggists. Mailed on receipt of price.

DUND AS DICK A CO

35 Wooster Street, New ork.

Teh cliht explanatory botok mailed FBEK on application. Sold by D. P. COX, Dwgglst.

Jy27*ly J. J. BAUR, Druggist.

Never Failing Remedy

THE EUROPEAN

VEGETIBLE3GUE CORE!

For Fever and Ague, Intermittent Fever, Dumb Ague, Remittent Fever, Bilious Fever, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Liver and Kidney Regulator, and Yellow Jaundice. Purely vegetable. Warranted as here represented. For sale by all druggists. cents and 91 per bottle. If your druggist has not got It, I will send it to yon free of charge on receipt ofyour order, at 50 oents and 9L00 per bottle. Try lu Prepared by 6-ly JOHN BOMMER, Terre Haute, Ind*

O I A

A. O. COMBS,

'VH Vtfi Dealer in all Grades

Brazil Block, Block Nut, •AND

BITUMINOUS

rders for any quantity promptly filled.

MM: St. Cfearles Hotel, Cor. Third and ohlo Streets.

•rOrdcn received for Coke, Anthracite, Pittsburg Mid Cannel Coals. Qil«i Any worker can make 912 a

Fthepenyon

UND—THAT

MY

Country Men and

Country—As you come down on the street

from the depot, tell conductor to S

^""""""tbe

f*

I 'F

at

A

R. W RIPPETOE'S

Front,"

155

Prices.'_

Lowes

THE HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID FOR PRODUCE

tc., a

colors. In all'the tints of the natural flowers. Motto who falls to see It—airshould jr, postpaid, to all who send twenty* or stamps taken) for a three ir Illustrated Magasine,

cents per

outfit

HOLLOWAY'S PILLS.

These famous Pills PURIFY the BLOOP and act most powerfully, yet soothingly, on the LIVER, STOMACH, KIDNEYS and BOWELS, giving TONE, ENERGY and vigor to the whole system. They are wonderfully efficacious In all ailments incidental to FEMALES, Young or Old, and as a general FAMILY MEDICINE, for the cure of most complaints, they are unequalled.

IMPORTANT CAUTION.—None are genuine unless the signature of J. HAYDUCK,

HOLLOWAY A CO., New York.

A CUBE FOB ALL!!

Holloway's Ointment.

Possessed ot this REMEDY, Every Man may be his own Doctor. It may be rubbed into the system, so as to reach any internal complaint by these means, it eures Sores or Ulcers in the THROAT, STOMACH, LIVER, SIDE, or other parts. It Is an In* fallible Remedy for BAD LEGS, BAD BREASTS, Contracted or Stiff Joints GOUT, RHEUMATISM, and all Skin Diseases.

IMPORTANT CAUTION.—None are genuine unless the signature of J. HAYDOCK, as agent far ihe United States, surrounds each box cf Pills and Ointment. Boxes at 25 cents, 62 oents and 91 each. 89~rhere is considerable saving by taking the larger sizes.

TOPsix

Organs,

to amount of SjLOtfO

THE FRIEND OF ALL!

uiimi 25cents. Newsdealers all sell LplBUHI Hi Canada subscribers must send five cents extra for postage./

as

agent for the United States, surrounds each box of Pills and Ointment. Boxes at 25 cents, 82 cents and 91 each. r! ttVThere is considerable saving by taking the lareer sizes.

(lie

Women

from

Main

you will always find the

SUOAHU, COFFFEE8, TEAS, TABLE SUPPLIES, And All Staple

St.,

...

best

and Fancy Groceries

attractive by the uaoof

.Ued Faith,

words

Quality aad

enantlny of mat­

ter are taken into ac-

oeoont. The Xagaalne makes friends with overr one who reads It. Wo wish all to iry.lt oe months, and offer tho motto as a iadnoement. Price $L00 per year, 50 months, 25 oents for three W Tbe Publishers. J.

»^Smseltf2 oents for

L.

*•'8

AXTI-FAT

PARESmonths,

ft Oov fl

want Agents in every place. Pianos BUrer^

WILSON & McCALLAY'S

"HAPPY THOUGHT"

WAVE-LIME

PLUG TOBACCO BEST CHEW IN THE MARKET. urgOLD EVERYWHERE.

ANTI-FAT

IS

tin- great reinedV for Corpu

It I puri.lv rentable an I pirfLctly lurniloss.

AI.LA?

lency. I It acts on the food in tlx- stomach, )-'vvi'iilln'.'l'sco::YiTslrtn into fat. Takrn nccorlhr.' to illn i'tlon^. It will red arc

fat

Is a sample-: reduced

pcn»a from S to & pomdn a wwt.

In placing tills runicly btfore tin- public as a n»l-

UTO

euro for olieslty, we do so knowing its ability to cure, as attested by hundreds of testimonials, of which the following from a lady in Columbus, Ohio,

Gentlemen:—Your Anti-Fat was duly

received." I took it according to directions and ft

IIIP

five pounds.

1

was so elated over the re­

sult that I Immediately sent to ACKERMAN'S drugstore for the second bottle." Another, a physicluu, rvrlilni for a patient from Providence. K. I., savs, "Four iotilis have reduced her weight from 199 pounds to 132 pounds, and there Is a general Improvement in ln-alth.''

A

gentleman writing from Bos­

ton, savs: "Without special change or attention to diet, two bottles of Allan's Antl-Fiil reduced nu I'oUr anil ono-quarter pounds." The well-known sale Druggists,

SMITH,DOOLITTLE

JT

SMITII,Whole*Bos­of

ton, Mass., write as follows: Allan's Anti-Fat has roc I need a lady In our elty seven pounds in thrdc weelts." A gentleman In St. Louis wrltesi '"Altau'tf Anti-Fat reduced me twelve pounds in three weeks. and altogother 1 have lost twenty-flve pounds since

Its use." Messrs.

PHontiETOHS

I'OWELI,i 1'LIMFTON,

rugglsts,

of Buflalo, N. Y-write: "To

In/ li l)r

TIIE

OF

AXLAN'S

Whole*at

ANTI-FAT: Gentle-

men,—The following report is from the lady who used Allan's Anti-Fat.

1

It (the Anti-Fat) had the desired

cffect, reducing the fat from two to lire pouuds a week until I had lost twenty-flve pounds', 1 hope never to regain what I have lost."' Anti-Fat is on unexcelled bload-purifler. It promotes^dljrestion. curing dyspepsia, and Is also a notent nmedy for rheumatism. Sold by druggists. t*ainplilel on OlxiJIty sent on receipt or stamp. BOTANIC MEDICINE CO., PROF'BS, buffalo, N.Y.

WOMAN

By an Immense practice at the World's Dispensary and Invalids1 Hotel, having treated many thousand cases of those diseases peculiar to woman, I have been enabled to perfect a most potent and positive remeJy for these diseases. ...

To designate this natural specific, I have named It

Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription

The term, however, is but a feeble expression of mv high appreciation of its value, based upon personal observation. 1 have, while witnessing Its positive results lu the special diseases Incident to tlu orsranlsm of woman, singled It out as Ihe cllatax or rrovalM mi of air nedleal earear. On its merita, •is a positive, sale, and effectual remedy for this elasi of diseases, and one that will, at all times and timer all circumstances act kindly, I am wllllug to stake inv reputation as a pliyMan and so conOdenPam I that It will not disappoint the most sanguine expectations ol a single Invalid lady who nses It for any »f tho aliments for which I recommend It. that 1 oflbr and soil It under A IWITIVE GUARANTEE. (For conditions, set! pamphlet wrapping liottle.)

The following are among those dlsoiises In whlrli mv Favorite Pranrlpllm has worked curcs, as if by miiglc. and with a certainty cever before attained by anv medicine: ucorrliflea. Excessive Flowing, rnhifiil Montldv Periods, Suppression* when from unnatural can**, Irregularities, oak Back, Prolapsus, or Failing o( the Uterus Anteverslon and

Bearlngwlowtj Sensations, Internal Despondency, [est Ion. Inlmpotency, and Female Weakness. 1

Uetroverslon, Heat, Nerve Threatened datamation and Barrenness, or Sterility,

us Depression, Debility. Despondet Miscarriage, Chronic Congestion, md Ulceration ot the Uterus lmpotei

do not extol this medicine as a cnre-all," but it, admirably fulfills a atnclcBcaa af

Favorite

aflfecUons.

A V. PU

sod Invalids'

pmrpeet,

lei

"ARBLE WORKS.

day Ad-

XU1U at nome. Costly outfit free, dress TRUE A CO., Augusta, Maine.

WITH ONB STROKE OF can reach, with an advertise

ment In the Saturday Evening Mail, almo« every reading family In this city, as well as the residents of the towns and country

sounding Terre Haute.

o$4nVss t~Lk

SOT

sap

being a

diseases of the

most perfect specific In all chronic diseases of 1 sexual system of woman. It will not disappoint, nor will It do harm, In any state or condition.

Those who desire further information cn these subjects can obtain It in Tltr. PsortB'9 COXXOX SBlfSl MEDICAX ADVISER, a book of over 800 paces, post-paid, on receipt of $1.«0. It treats minute Chose diseases peculiar to Females, and give* I valuable advice In regard to the managemen those aSfecttoni.

Pro £r,V^rfcfsDlspeasafy

Qvallds' Hotel, Buffalo, s. Y.

S3300r.:^v4oVJ.*trL.i^£: fifmi!! REMEDY FOR BAIDSBt

•l7wt»EA a BOWgrowthMBalr,Whtokcrs

BAKirrrr.

J. YF. BARHKTT.

orTfustaebss

K.A. SWIFT

BARNETT & SWIFT, IMPORTERS AKD DKALXRfl IK

Rosfe and Gray Scotch Granite

AND ITALIAN MARBLE MONUMENTS,

Tombs, and Stones, Vaults, Mantels. East Main street, between Twelfth and jk, Thirteenth street®,

TE RE HAUTE, IND.

All work warranted to give satisfaction.

-JJNITED STATES SCALES.

STOCK, GRAIN. WAGON, DORMANT AND R. R. TRACK. With protected bearings, and otherwise highly Improved. Warranted superior to all others. 8old the cheapest. No pay till tested and found strictly as represented.

S. J. AUSTIN &CO., Terre Haute, Ind. Office at Eagle Iron Works.