Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 12, Number 33, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 11 February 1882 — Page 3
HE SATURDAY EVENING
MAIL,
7
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
A Paper for the People.
MODEL HOME JOURNAL.
s'TKRTAINING, INSTRUCTIVE AND NEWSY.
BRIGHT, CLEAN AND PURE.
THE TWELFTH YEAR.
The Mail has a record of success seldom ttained by a Western weekly paper. Ten ra of increasing popularity proves its
Jh. Encouraged by the extraordinary leas which has attended its publication publisher has perfected arrangements by alch for the coming year The Mail will be lore than ever welcome in the home circle, this day of trashy and Impure literature .should be a pleasure to all good people to 'pin extending the circulation of such a 'per as the .ATURDAY EVENING MAIL
TERMS:
3C{
ijoe months
{5
1
J**
00
all and office subscriptions will, invaribly, be discontinued at expiration of time. Address P. S. WE8TFALL,
Publisher Saturday Evening Mail, TERRE HAUTE, IND.
'he Indianapolis Journal
DAILY AND WEEKLY.
Ihe LarKMt ticnernl Circnlaiion ANY I'APEK IN TMK STATU OF INDIANA. A thorough Republican Newspaper which
Repulloun ought to bo without. Especlal-/V-ovotedto the interests of the citizens of
liana,
yet full of News from the Outside
urld. he terms of the Dally Journal are MM follow I telivered by Agents, per week 35c
BY MAIL.
06 Month....:... 'am lix Months .S'X! Jue Year
turday
12 00
paper only (twelve pages,) ono
All ^subscriptions nayabioin )pt whore delivered by carriers—then at Hie
THKCWSI£KI.Y7MANA STATE JODR-
"AListhfl largest and best general news»i»r published-In the Htate lt gives the WwH, the MAllKKT REPORTS, a large loplv ofHelecUnl Iteadlng Matter, and much "formation for the farm and home. Rates ir
the
WEEKLY JOURNAL, tlioCheapost 'aper In the West: Inirle Snbwcrlptlou one year, In advance, 91.90, as than one year, and over three months, uc per month. No subscription taken for ens than three months. In clubs of flvo or ver. agents will take yearly subscript ons at Vand 'retain 10 per cent, for their work. ond for circular containing a list of CASH ilIZEH, for large clubs.
LOOK AT THIS OFFER. GET UP CLU15S AT ONCE, 15 Dollars worth ©fHoeks for #1. By a RiHjeial arrangement with the pub-sliei-H we are etmbUtl for a vn .&kn our Huiserllors tho (1RANDES1 AND iOttT L1HERAL OFFER Ob IHE CENURY. Wo will give tho ten books menUned below, including one years subscrip*6u to tlie .Weekly IndlanaXSlate Journal.
TWO DOLLAIW to all new subscrlbsrs, nil old subscribers who will renew their icrlptlons for ono year at thej^ular price, at the same time send ONE DOLLAR M-n,
being W in all, will recolvo tho ^KKLY JOURNAL for another year from 'ration of present subscription, and the nKKiks. Thus by renewing for another vou get books that wou'd otherwise cost a^IKTEKN 1X)LI*AIIH FOR ONE DO I/-
itt
•ARTICULAR NOTICE.—Wo reserve the to withdraw this Dollar Offer at any o. therefore subscribe at once if you want »o TEN HOOKS FOR ONE DOLLAR, and all your frloiuls we have made tho grnnd)irerof the eontury. Jfe and Adventures of Robinson (Yuooc, lie Pilgrims Progress, ulliver'sTraveX lie Arabian Nights' Entertainments, .laved at last from among the Mormons, olm Ploughman's Pictures, Vow p'arm and Fireside Cook
"4*o]'s
HOOK,
Failles,
Noble Deeds of Men and Women, read and t'lieeH£and Kisses. -Coney should be sent by Postolllee Money teglsteriHl letter, addnwod to
NO. C. NEW A SON, Indianapolis, Ind.
Tho Best Co a ah Sjnrup it Ptao's Cure Jbr Consumption. tt nets quick Mid It tastes good. Dose amall,—bottla larce. I I Therefore ih« cheapest as well |«s the best. Sold everywhere.
OAe. and gtl.00 por bom*.
Ufervou* Debility I
A Cure Onarmiteed!
vK. E. C. WKWTX Nerve and Brain TreatI jnent a specific for hysteria, ditxlness, Avulsion*, nervous headache, menta.1 uoKion, loss of memory, spermatorrhoea, •otoncw lnvoluutary emissions, premaold age, caused by over exertion, self se^r over indulgence, which leads to —ry decay and death. One box will cure «mt ca«es. Kacli box contain*one month's tment. Ono dollar a Ixx, or six boxes ve dollars sent by mail prepaid on reof price. We guarantee six boxes to any ease. With each order received by six boxes, accompanied with flvedolwe will send the purchaser our written ran tee to return the money If the treatit does not. effect a cure. Guarantees isvi only when tho treatment is ordered dlfrom us. Address JOHN C. WB?T4CO.
Proprietors, 181 and 1S3 W. Madison SL, agvv, Ills. Sold by Cook Jk Bell, Terre te, Indiana.
TARTLINC DISCOVERY!
LOST MANHOOD RESTORED.
A victim of youthful tmpradeoce canning Atnr« Decay, Nerross D*b01ty, Lotf lUaeta, bartc* triM la Tain vmj known
wUleend FM8to hi* felion-^rarprt. tdH. RKK\TE8,U0to»iuuaSC, S.Y.
OTICE TO THE PUBLIC.
.tie undersigned have opened a receiving in the rear of No, 17 South Second •t, where I am nrvpared to receive Rough vw, Gmtsd of anj* kind, Pork and Beef *klings and Roues whether green or dry, hich Iwili pay the highe« cash prices, will also buy DefKl Hogs by the slngte or car load. Hogs received on thelslarKl .*st of tlie city, at Uo factory otllce No .tli Second street. In the rear entrance the alley. Torre Hante Ind.
DR. C. W. BENSON, of Baltimore, Md., In the course of his practice discovered what now are renowned in medical practice, viz: a combination of Celery and Chamomile in the shape of Pills. They are used profession at large and constantly recommended them.
It is not a patent medicine. It is the result of his own experience in practice. They are a sure cure for the following special diseases, and are worthy of a trial by all intelligent sufferers. They are prepared especially to cure sick headache, nervous headache, dyspeptic headache, neuralgia, paralysis, sleeplessness, dyspepsia and nervousness, and will cure any case. Tlie doctor's great remedy for Skin disease, called Dr. Benson's Skin Cure is exceedingly valuable and greatly sought after by all persons who have skin diseases or bad complexion. An excellent toilet dressing.
Sold by all druggists, Price, 50 cents a box. Depot, 106 North Eutaw St., Baltimore Md. By mail, two boxes for $1 "or 6 boxes for S2.60, to any address. '•CHAS. N. CRITTENTON, 115 Fulton St., New York City, soleagent fpr Dr. C. W. Benson's remedies, to whom all orders should be addressed."
DR.
C.
W. BENSON'S
SKIN CURE
3
Is Warranted to Cure
ECZEMA, TETTERS, HUMORS, INFLAMMATION, MILK CRUST, ALL ROUOH SCALY ERUPTIONS, DISEASES OP HAIR AND SCALP, SCROPU LA ULCERS, PIMPLES & TENDER ITCHINCS on P*rta of the body. It makea the skin white, toft and tmooth removes tan and Xtocklos, and is the toilet drctsing in THE WOULD. Elegant:jr put up, two bottles In ono package, oonshitiwg of boti internal and external treatment. All first clatsdruggists have it. SI. per package!
[THE ONLY MEDICINE
IN EITHEU LIQUID 0B DBY F0BH That Acts at theaawe line ea
|TSi IIYXM, TEX BOWELS, AED TEE EIDEETS. [WHY ARE WE SICK?
Because w« allow thue great organs to I become clogged or torpid, and poisonous I
humor* are therefor* forced into the blood [that should be expelled naturally.
KIDNEY-WORT
WILL SURELY CURE |KIDNEY DISEASES, LIVER COMPLAINTS, |PII.ES, CONSTIPATION, URINARY
DISEASES, FEMALE WEAKNESSES, AND NERVOUS DISORDERS,
I by causing free action of these organs and I restoring thilr pouter to throw qf disease. lThy MlTer Billons pains and acliest [why tormeated with Piles, Constlpatloat I Why frifhteaed or«r disordered Kldneyat
Why endure nenroas or tick headaches! Use
KIDNEY-WORTand
I 'orAlso
rvoice In health.
It Is put up in Dry Vegetable For*, In tin I on* package of which makes six (junta of I medicine. In U««ld Fona, very Ooaeea
those that cannot readily prepare it
1 grjt acts with equal efficiency In either form. I GET IT OF YOUR DRUGGIST. PRICK, U.Ofl WELLS, RICHARDSON A Co., Prop's,
VIll sond the dry post-paid.) BCBUKOTOR, TT.
MRS. LYD1A E. FINKHIH, OF
LYKN, MASS.,
jj 5
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOTOP.
Isj^osinreCnre
far all
UM«
TatniVil C*i*»iiliti
MI VIIUINH
•eessiaM I* Mr kit ftaal* |*|*latlM It will cure entirely
UM»worst
form of Vtemale Oom-
filalnts, all ovarian troubles. Inflammation and Clew* tloa, FklUnft au«l PI«plac«mcnU, and the consequent Spinal Weakness, aad Is particularly adapted to tho Change of IJfo» will dbeolTe and expel tumors from the stem la as early stagts of aerek-proent. The tendency caanron humorsthsro la check edrary speedily by Its nse.
II itntTN falntnses, flatnlency, destroys aU crartag for stlraalants, aad retlers* weakaeas of theitoaaeh. It curve ntoattag, OTeadaclxa. Jterroas Proetratloa, General DebtUty, Bleeflsssne—, Deprsloa aad UxttfMllOOe
That feeling of bsaHa* down, catataf pato.wHrht and bMkache. Is always pormane*Uy
CUT^I
by Ite tisa
ItwOlatallUmeeaBd nwior all circumstances act ta barmocy with the 1A*Sthatgoreni Us*
female tjMmm.
For the cure of Kidney Comptelatt of stthsr sat thf Osmpeoad ia uiuai jaasirlX.T9IA X. MKKHAJTS TE6ETABXJB CS*» POCNDls prepared at SI aad W TTestem ATeaaa, Lyu,Masa. PrtcafL Stelwttlesfor«A SeothyMQ In the form of pUU. atoo lath* fona of loeiige^ oa receipt of price, flpsrbox foeelthea. KranahhMB freely aaawers ail letters of la^alty. Saad to aa^ lsC iMita as above. Histtw IM»
Ito ftually Aoaid be witboat LTDIA K. ruiuUICt LTTEU PHX& Tbey ear* cuii»W|aHna, hfl" aad torpidity of tbeUrer. teats per baa. fir Said by aM Drantets. took! RrralallM la Card Prlstlsf. with name neatly printed'"
*v
ARUlSrOX SMITH.
VIA.
uiurnHii Rl
newest and nobblesl.A klrcs«,Eureka Card Oo S
-RiurFm&klln
OroT«, IUs.-«BK-K-A Ja21-4t.
BOiEHnna
M. Richenbach, in noticing the statement that Dr. E. Spitzka found in the egg of a turtle a live maggot, says that he once found in a hen's egg a small piece of printed paper.
Mr. Maxwell Hall has succeeded in establishing a regular system of meteorological observations throughout the Island of Jamaica, and both shipping and agricultural interests have the benefit of weatber-forecasts.
Prof. Owen, in an article lately published, questions whether man ever receives a third set of teeth. He ascribes alleged cases to the reappearance of old and worn stumps in consequence of the shrinkage and absorption of* the jaws.
Calomel, Dr. E. Drechsel note3, readily dissolves in a solution of mercuric chloride and mercurous nitrate. Mercuric chloride is precipitated, however, by mercurous nitrate, except an excess of mercuric nitrate is likewise present.
The commission appointed by the government of South Australia to inquire into the matter of the sparrow nuisance have sent in a report. They recommend that the sparrows, who lytvft multiplied excessively, should be destroyed, and that rewards be offered for the heads and eggs of the birds.
A watch-maker at Youvry, in Switzerland, claims to have made a watch which will run four years without winding up. The Nature says that a box containing two watches intrusted to the municipal authorities on Jan. 19, 1879, has just been opened, and the watches were found going.
It is stated that the Fheng-ehui, or the superstition of geomantic influence, is still so strong in China that troops had to be sent to protect the telegraph line between Soochow and Shanghai. However, the authorities iu that country are quite well awake now to the necessity of the adoption of the great inventions of the west.
A tunnel to join France with Spain by passing under the Pyrenees at some point equidistant from tho Bay of Biscay and the Mediterranean is under the consideration of the government of each country. The present routes by Bayonne and Perpigaon are too distant for a great portion of the traffic between the north of Spun and the south of France.
Prof. Archibald Geikie writes in the Nature giving a general idea of the great geological vain® ,jif the fossils from the shiucs of Liddesdale and Essdale, on the Scottish border. The more important of them consist of fishes, crustaceans, and arachnids. When the discoveries are fully examined, the conclusions are likely to prove of great importance.
L'Etincelle is the name given to a new petroleum motor invented by MM. Eteve and Lailemont. It is like an ordinary steam engine. A hydrocarbon vapor is injected into the cylinder, and there ignited by a spark from a small dynamo machine. The explosion of tho gas drives forward the piston, and the same process at the other end drives it back. The consumption of petroleum from which the vapor is produced is said to be very small.
In the Gazette Chemica Italiano. D. Vitali says tho reaction discovered by Schcenbein in researches on blood stains is preferable to any other. A blue coloration is produced by a mixture of oil of turpentine and alcoholic tincture of the resin of guiacum on the addition of a little blood or a very dilute solution of bcemowlobin. But all substances capable of acting as direct or indirect oxidizing agents are capable of producing the same reaction^
Sympathetic.
Our misfortunes are blessings if they cause us to sympathize with the unfortunate. The late Thaddeus Stevens, of Pennsylvania, was deformed by a club foot. Though sensitive to this misfortune, yet it interested him in persons who were lame, as the following anecdote shows:
Lydia Jane a Quaker widow of considerable literaiy taste and ability, with whose husband Mr. Stevens hacl been well acquainted, was left with a family and in very destitute circumstances. He first gave her a house and farm in fee simple.
Then, desiring still further to help her, he brought her eldest son, Bvron to Lancaster, to educate him. The boy bad disease of the knee joint, which rendered that member stiff. Soon after his arrival in Lancaster Mr. Stevens called on Dr. Carpenter and asked him if he had noticed the boy.
He replied that he had and stated his trouble. Mr. Stevens said that phvsiclans had been consnlted, who said that nothing could be done, and asked the doctor if he could do anything to relieve him.
He replted that he could, and after about five weeks1 treatment the boy was able to walk about As soon as Mr. Stevens saw him out without cratches be was delighted and expressed his thanks and gratitude to the doctor.
He wished to know what tho charge was, and when tho physician replied that it was a matter of benevolence on all sides and there was no charge, he insisted upon giving him a very handsome fee, saying at the same time,— "Now, doctor, if you come across any poor boy that is deformed or disabled in his limbs in any manner, take him in hand and relieve him and I will pay you liberally for it."
If yon could only see the glrla of Ashantee you wouldn't blame the lung for killing 200 at once.
The man |who stood in front of his glass for two hours getting the color on his mustache, said he was "dyeing to see his girl."
Hygiene of the Teeth.
A hard crust is the best possible dentifrice. I never could get myself to believe in the natural necessity of a tooth-brush. The African nations, the Hindoos, the natives of Southern Europe, the South Sea Islanders the Arabs, the South American vegetarians, in short, three-fourths of our fellow men, besides our next relatives, the frugivorous animals, have splendid teeth withont sozodont I really believe that ours decay from sheer disuse the boarding-houso homo lives chiefly on pap—wants all his meats soft-boiled, and growls at cold biscuit or an underdone potatoe in other words, he delegates to the cook the proper functions of his teeth. We hear occasionally of old men getting a second, or rather third, set of teeth. I met one of them in Northern Guatemala,and ascertained that be had become toothless during a twelve years' sojourn in a seaport town, and that he got his new set upon his return to his native village, where circumstances obliged him to resume the hard corn-cake uiet of his boyhood years. His teeth had reappeared as soon as their services were called for, and would probably never have absented themselves if a pap-diet had not made them superfluous.
An artificial dentifrice will certainly keep the teeth wfiite, but that does not prevent their premature decay disuse gradually softens their substance, till one fine day the hash-eater snaps his best incisor upon an unexpected piece of bone. Every old dentist knows hundreds of city customers whom the daily uso of a tooth-brush did not save from the applying, before the end of the fortieth year, for a complete "celluloid set." I do not say that a soft toothbrush and such dentifrices as oatmeal or burned arrow-root can do any harm, but, for sanitary purposes, such precautions must be supplemented by dental exercise.
Let a child invigorate its teeth by chewing a hard crust, or, better yet, a handful of "St. John's bread," oy carob-beans, the edible pod of the Mimosa siliqua. Children and whole tribes of the Northern races seem to feel an instinctive desire to exercise their teeth upon some solid substance, as pet squirrels will gnaw the furniture if you give them nut-kernels instead of nuts. Thus Kohl tells us that the natives of Southern Russif are addicted to the practice' of chewing a vegetable product which he at first supposed to be pumpkin or melon seeds, but found to be the much harder seed of the Turkish sunflower (Helianthus perennis). Their national diet consists of milk, khkuruz (hominy, with butter, etc.), and boiled mutton, and they seem to feel that their Turkoman jaws need something more substantial. The schoolboy habit of gnawing pen-hold-ers, finger-nails, etc., may have a similar significance.' The Mimosa siliqua would yield abundantly in our Southern States, and its sweet pods would make an excellent substitute for chewinggum. Our practice of sipping ice-cold and steaming-hot drinks, turn about, has also a very injurious effect upon the brittle substance that forms the enamel of our teeth no porcelain glaze would stand such abuse for any length of time, and experience has taught hunters and dog-fanciers that it destroys even the bone-crushing fangs of the animal from which our canine teeth derive their name.—Dr. Felix L.
in Popular Science Monthly.
right is just
"MOTHER HAS RECOVERED" wrote an Illinois girl to her Eastern relatives. "She took Utters for along time bat without any good. So when ehe beard of the virtues of Kidney-Wort she got a box and it has completely cured lier, so that she can do as much work now as she could before we moved West. SBnoe she has got well everyone about here is taking it?' See adv.
Preparing Turkey
Oswald,
"We Una" and "Ton'UM." The "boys in blue" who went South during the war were often amused by the queer phrases they heard from the "boys in gray." Among these were "we 'uns" and "yon 'uns," which the Northerners thought Southern provincialism. The Christian Index, of Georgia, denies this allegation and gives good reasons for its denial. It says:
Wo have recently discovered (or think we have) that the usage is confined entirely lo tho inhabitants of the Allegheny range, reaching from Pennsylvania to Alabama. The mountain population, without regard to latitude, seems to be largely homogeneous, as if descended, chiefly at least, from a common stock.
They have mingled but little with the people of the lower country, and being thus isolated, have preserved some oi the peculiarities brought from the mother country, which elsewhere among us have disappeared.
We '«7W is not a usago peculiar to the South, as has been supposed it is peculiar (in this country) to the mountains, whether North or South.
Nor is it an Americanism it is common to this day in Scotland, and it was doubtless imported thence to our mountains by the hardy Scotch immigrants, whose ancestors to this day bear the marks of their ancestry.
Nor is the usage a modern one. This very day, in reading Tyndale's New Testament, we feund in Matt. 3:9 the following: "And se that ye ons thinke not lo saye in yourselves we have Abraham to oure father."
This was printed in 1526, more than three hundred and fifty years ago. So this form of expression has the prestige of antiquity it was the language of our ancestors, and had its origin in the genius of our people.
The only difference between the mountaineers and ourselves is that they are of purer stock, and have kept the traditions of ouDjfathers which we have forgotten. Stul, we must thiok that our language is improved by the disuse of this mode of speech, no less perhaps than by the change of orthography.
An Illinois farmer stole dog in Chicago, and never felts bit consciencestricken until the brute spread seven cases of small-pox is the neighborhood. The fanner doesn't care for dogs any more.
THBT
only can appreciate health who
liave suffered from long continued illness. Brown's Iron Bitten gives health and strength, and thus have made very many happy.
HALL'S
Vegetable Sicilian ^3air Re-
newer is the most reliable article in ose for restoring gray hair to its original color and promoting its growth.
tat
the Table.
The secret in having a good roast turkey is to stuff it palatably, to baste it often and to cook it long enough. A small turkey of seven or eight pounds should be roasted or baked tnree hours at least. A very large turkey should be cooked an hour longer. After the turkey is dressed, season it well, sprinkling pepper and salt on the inside stuff it and tie it well in shape either lard the top or lay slices of bacon over it wet the skin, and sprinkle it well with pepper, salt and flour. It is well to allow a turkey to remain some time stuffed before cooking. Pour a little boiling water into the bottom of the drippingpan. Just before taking it out of the oven put on more melted butter, and sprinkle over more flour this will make tne skin more crisp and brown. While the turkey is cooking, boil the giblets well chop them fine, and mash the liver. When the turkey is done, put it on a hot platter. Put the baking-pan on the fire, dredge in a little flour, and when cooked stir in a little boiling water or stock strain it, skim off every particle of fat, add the giblets season with salt and pepper. If chesnut stuffing is used, add some boiled chestnuts to this gravy. It is excellent
Many great cooks make extra trouble in preparing a force-meat stuffing of real, ham, bacon, onions, potatoes, or bread crumbs and all soils of things. But the ordinary, old-fashioned stuffing for a turkey is generality liked the best. Take the soft part of good light bread (not the crust), and do not wet it as is usually done, but rub it dry and fine, and work into a piece of butter the size of an egg. Season with salt, pepper and Summer savory. Add to this a dozen or more oysters, whole, aud it will be very fine. Some good cooks who are ruled bv taste, and not by books, add to a stuffing liko the above large chestnuts boiled. The chestnuts are put on afire in a sauce-pan or spider to burst the skins they are then boiled in salt water or stock, then mix with the stuffing whole. Serve with a chestnut sauce.
A Scheme That Didn't Pan Out Well. "I don't know whether they do it intentionally or not," said young Jack Kanebiter, thoughtfully, "but somehow these newspapers pass around an awful lot of unreliable information." "How's thatP" languidly inquired his running mate, Jim Ardida. "Why, I saw in the Post last (week that a poor young fellow in St. Louis borrowed an umbrella of a bank president, and the next day returned it.'.' "Rippin' lie, that." ••Oh, no! he did really," continued Kanebiter "ho walked into the bank the very next day and returned the umbrella. The president was so much astonished that he called the young man back and made him his cashier at a big salarj'." "Because he was so honest, eh?" "Exactly. So, you see, as I had gotten one of tho first editions of the paper, I thought I'd work the same racket bofore any of the other boys caught on." "Good scheme." "So I rushed around to tho Nevada Bank and^ked Louis McLane to lend me an umorella. There was a director's meeting going on at the time, so I thought 1 haa'em sure." "What did old moneybags say?" "He said, 'Why, it isn't going to rain for a month yet' 'I know what I'm about," said I, "just you lend mo an umbrella.' So he told'a clerk to let me have one, and tako ten dollars for security." •'Great Scott!" "But that ain't the worst of it. When I looked at the umhrella, I'll be hanged if it wasn't one that McLane had borrowed from me two years ago."
And then they both lit cigarettes and mused over the utter unreliability of the press.—San Francisco Post.
Suspicions Symptoms,
A minister who was perhaps not too careful in his habits was induced by his friends to take the teetotal pledge. His health appeared to suffer, and his doctor ordered him to take ono glass of punch daily. "Oh," said he, "I dare not Peggy, my old housekeeper, would tell the whole parish." "When do you shave?" tho doctor asked. "In the morning." "Then," said the doctor, "shave at night and when Peggy brings you up your hot water, you can take your lass of punch just before going to glasi Bed.
The minister afterward appeared to improve in health and spirits. The doctor met Peggy soon afterward and said: "I'm glad to lidar, Peggy, that your master is better." "Indeed, sir, he's better, but bis mind's affected there's something wrang wi' his mind." "How?" "Why, doctor, he used to shave at night before going to bed, but now he shaves in the morn, he shaves before dinner, he shaves after dinner, he shaves at night—he's aye shavin'."
It has been proven that the peacock hasn't a bit of vanity about him. He simply displays what God gave him, and that's no more than the turkey does.
A PHYSICIAN'S OPINION. A physician writing to "The Journal of Health" in speaking of Brown's Iron Bitcers, having carefully analized its Ingredients, says: "There is no other remedy in existence so harmless and yet so effective. No other compound should ever be vsed for general ill-hedth and chronic diseases of the pulmonary, digestive and urinary organs. It la very mild, yet, very sure in ite action, and gradually restores perfect health and strength to every function of the organs of life. Its action is so very mild that there is no room left for reaction and relapse, neither will its discontinuance eause a craving for its further use, or bring on a renewal of past disorders."
LTDIA
E.
PIWKHAM'S
Vegetable Com
pound has done thousands of women more good than the madidnes of many doctors. It is a positive cure for all female complaints. Send to Lydia E. Plnkham.
The Great
Consumption Remedy«
BROWN'S
EXPECTORANT
Has been tented in hundreds of cases, ami iMMr failed to arrest and cure COJVSUMPTIOy. if taken in time.
It Cures doughs. It Ctires Asthma« It Cures Bronchitis. It Cures Hoarseness. It Cures Tightness of the Chest• It, Cures Difficulty of Breathing
BROWN'S EX|ECJO^N^
Is Specially Recommended for
WseQfiJve Covem,
Jt will short** the duration of the disease a-id alleviate the paroxysm of co^fhimm, so a* to mable the child to pass through it without leaving any serious consequences.
PRICE* 50c and $1,00.
A. KIEFER,
Indianapolis. Ind.
SOMETHING ENTIRELY NEW.
Health-Preserving Corset.
^SiSSaWwStJaBr By a novel arrangement of TXBmlaBBw fine coiled wiro springs which UBtJBBr yiold readily to every movemerit of tlio wearer, the moBt
JmH I'KUFECT FITTING jmflmmEak
ft,u'
comfortable corset ever
1 made iB (tenured.
Ml Will
1 IS APPROVED BY BEST PHYSICIANS.
a a a
dealers. Manufactured by
SVEBV CHICAGO CORSET CO., warranted*** or
BO
Kefoude* Prioe by Mall, 81.80. LADT AUE1TTB •WANTED,
You Can Eat
(n moderation, anything your appetite cravea so matter how Dyspepuo you are, if you u« POPHAM'S
MEADOW PLAIT!
A SPKBDY AND POSITIVE CURE FOB
S E S I A It will Cure your Indigestion,
It will Prevent Sovir Stomach.
It will Cure Sick Headache.
It is a Gentle Laxative.
It will Cure Heartburn.
It is Pleasant to take.
It will Regulate your Liver,
It Is Purely Vegetable.
__ It will Assist Digestion.
It will Cure Habitual Constipation, Tone th* Digestive Organs, Purify the Blood,C1 System from all impurities and is a MottTalsa Me VsallT iletlclM, Get a bottle and be CaredA Bottle will oost you one dollar, and do ypf more good than anything yon ever tried. TrU Bottle* Ten Cents. Just try it once.
Sold by GIJLICK & BERRY. Tme Haute. POPHAM'M ASTHMA will relieve any case in five minutes. Bold by all Druggist*. _______
ISTINL
Samples of l»r. K. W. Be««l elcbrslfd Aaln* mn Reflef sent free to any Iwho nsfe. Immediate relief
guaranteed, fiOc.Hiid 81.00 packages mail. A. kTHUIDGE.Rome, N. Tr.
week in your own town. Terms and
tPOO$5outfit free. Addrea» H. Hallett A Co., Portland, Maine.<p></p>REED'S
TONIC
^GILT EDGEN^
IS A THOROUGH REMEDY
In every case of Fever and Ague, while for Disorders of the Stomach, Torpidity of the Liver, Indigestion and disturbances of the Animal forces, which debilitate, it has no equivalent and can have no substitute. It should not be confounded with the triturate compounds of cheap spirits and emential oils often sold under the name of Bitters.
Foi Sale by druggist* and general dealers everywhere. Wholemle agents JOHN OONFABE.
Terre
Enreka
Ha
iaute, Ind.
Drain Tile
Machine
Till* Xlaoblna ia BcbstaoU&l and durable in conmxraaUcra stiapla in ito crtsagemsntst easjr of sccccm to it* wearing parta bovine 3TBSKOTH THAT MVJUf OBOSS VXGJLXCT oould aearoeljr BREAK,— laavinc Utile to be deelrcd as as KTTECTZVE TILM xaouxx.
ire drfrt till! VttMoe br f.fr bur** or ttrrm pojMT, veil Mritaittfhkc-r. Oer Tl» .oiittt rm Sm*ta*. Ia diamttr tat lo »fc*r*
u,rP
*5"1
OkUMtlniMMl. A»»«rtek »5««»t»pteteMKSCM. It I* M? IU«« efelM. Seed NtMwhr.
CE ASVXJtM TATTOOS,!s&ssopelis. JB±
