Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 14, Number 39, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 22 March 1884 — Page 7
THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
AGREEABLE MEALS. It is impossible to estimate properly the immense influence which is exerted •apoa a house-hold by the atmosphere of the family table. If it is true that jpne does not come out of a room the same person he went in—the mind ever after retaining the impress of what affected it there—what great results most be achieved from the meeting in the dining room, from the conversation indulged in, and the sentiments habitually expressed there. A neat, well-covered table, is, in itself, a lesson to the chil dren.
I have noticed that a sensitive child al most invariably has better manners when dressed in his best, and have seen with surprise, the effect produced upon a certain small bov of my acquaintance, by handsomely dressed ladies who are polite to'him. To the inviting table, where there should always be something attractive, however simple the meal may be, most children will come prepared to behave properly. It is really worth while, and, when philosophically considered, is a matter of great importance, to lay aside as far as possible all thoughts of hard work done before or to be done after the meal, and to allow no vexa tious questions to be discussed at this 'time. The habit of brooding over our work, and exhausting ourselves by going all over it in our minds, is one to be studiously avoided. T'
IN THE KITCHEN.
Women at Work has a very readable article under the title of "Serving Christ -In the Kitchen." It claims that the light from a Christian woman's life can -shine brightly oven in the heat and clutter of Monday's or Saturday's busy toil It is at just such times of worry and fret as these are apt to be that she should be careful, prayerfully careful, that the key note which as a mother she gives for the day. ring out a clear, cherry one. These are the times when a mother's influences strike deepest, and sway others the easiest. The house wife who is cheerful and good-tempered in the face of these trials, who does not let the little, fretting, vexatious things of the day ruffle her temper, is holding a bright light for the salvation of others. Thi is all true, but it is also true that there is another way by which the housewife can serve Christ in the kitchen. And that is by making good, wholesome, di gestive bread, ana seeing that the meals she provides for her family are, while pleasing to the palate, so cooked that they lo not produce dyspepsia, and the ill nature and the profteness to do evil which naturally follow in its train. The housewife can ao as mych to practically serve her master in learning to be a cook and then putting her knowledge to pra tical use, as in any other possible manner. It is an utter Imposibilitv for a chronic dyspeptio to be a real Christian.
good
1 WO NEIQHBORL NEIGHBORS. Peoria Call Different people have different ideas of oeighborliness. I like most people if they are polite, above meanness, and are reasonably intelligent. But 1 would not want my best friend to get in the habit of entering my house through the back door without knocking. I never waut to live near people who insist upon having aback gate between the division fenco that ought to be six leet high and liko the oeleorated Buncombe fence. Half the neighborhood quarrels that arise originate in the back gat*. The children leave it open the cow strays in and destroys valuable shrubbery gnnnlp among servants is facilitated, and iu i»r tnation is carried back and forth througl this medium that should never be made public. It is a mistake to think that fa mlliarity begets liking and respect, although It need not always prove the old adage. The friends I like best prefix Miss to my name aud ring the door-bell when they oome to see me.
Friendliness that oonflnes itself to the front gate lasts better and wears longer than that which comes iu unannounced through the back gate. If Mrs. Jaokson's cat catches your canary, if her dog scratches up your verbena or pansy bed, if the girl drains the sink into your kitohen garden, you have time enough to let your iudignatlon cool, as you put on your hat and gloves and button your boots, preparatory to calling and enter lag a protest. Wlist you say then, having reflected upon it, will be courteous, dignified and forcible. Whereas, if you dashed through the back gate in wrap-
Kadand
slippers, with anything fur a covering you had managed to snatch in your hasty flight, there is reason to believe the protest would end in war of words, as futile as* tbey are in temperate.
Kven in performing friendly offices, the kind deed which requires some exertiou is worth a good deal more, intrinsically, than that which occasioned neither effort nor previous consideration. When one goes through a driving storm, wading through snow and mud, facing rain and sleet, to sit by a sick bed, to cheer and help the discouraged, to mourn with those who are in sorrow, the very nuiaeness of the sympathy that prompted it. There-
act itself is a proof of the genuia ipathy that prompted it. fore/when I build a house, say rear yard shall be enclosed with a high fence. I will neither "run" to my neighbor's house nor permit them to enter mine without giving me warning.
WHY THET WERE BEHEADED. The Chlneee custom of deoapitatin«r their enemies slain in war is explained by the statement that tbey believe that .the appearance of a person in the spirit world without ahead is prima Aide evidence of having committed some crime, and punishment is awarded accordingly.
Hence the horrible mutulations which took place on the evacuation of Shanghai by the Taipings, when the imperial officers gave orders for the decapitation of every rebel body and even the coffins containing the remains of prominent rebel leaden were broken open and dishonored to insure their punishment hereafter. Hence, also, the anaietv di» played by the friends of officers who lost their heads during the rebellion to recover them and sutch them on to the bodies again as much as £133 having been paid by the officers of the imperial army for the head of a friend.
Pug dogs as pets have had their day among the extremely fashionable, but colds never go oat of fashion, so twit it la alwaj necessary to know that Dr. ugh 8 all coughs and
Bull's though Syrup is a sure cure for id eoida. CARTER'S
little Liver Pills *111 pos
itively cure sick headache and prevent Its return. This is not talk, but truth. One pill a doee. To be had of all druggists. See advertisament. 15-4w
THE VALUE OF SYSTEM. Bow Bells. It is astonishing bow much time peo0b lose for want of system. A girl rises, dawdles about dressing, gets late for breakfast, and then the mist part of the day is gone.
A young fellow has finished his work, he idles about with a few friends, and before he knows it it is half past nine o'clock, and the best part of the evening is practically wasted.
Any quantity of work can be crammed into a lifetime if there be ouly orgaaization and application.
No matron or maid, sitting down for instance, to make a knitted counterpane, could do the whole at one sitting but a quarter of an hour's work everyday would accomplish the whole task, long as it is, injthe course of a few weeks.
The minutes too, have an odd trick of
leaves the years periodically blank. The young husbands who come home in the evening and grow sulky because their wives are untidy, and find the fireplace with the day's ashes in it, and who are told by their spouses that there has been so much to do that time for tidying up could not be found, may be sure that system is ?acklng somewhere.
The heaviest days work can be got tbrongh, either by the fireside on the wife's part or out of doors on the hue band's side, if time is only taken by the forelock, everything begun early, and everything, too, systematically carried out.
WHILE
permanent Cure of Rheuasa
tism and Neuralgia through the agency of ATHLOPHOBOS
must depend on its
power to expel the poisonous and provoking acids from the system, it at the same time possesses wonderful potency in immediately alleviating the torture, invigorating muscular action, and limbering stiffened Joints. Says Rev. A. S. Cooper, of Williston, Vt.: "Twelve hours' use of
ATHLOPHOROS
SINCE LAST OCTOBKR
greatly re
moved pain from my system snd rendered the muscles so supple that I eould get up and down with ease."
CHILDREN'S CHATTER.
"I know where the dark goes when morning comes," said little Clara. "It goes down cellar it's dark there all day."
A boy at school, on being asked to describe a kitten, said, "A kitten is remarkable for rushing like mad at nothing whatever, and stopping before it gets there."
At one of our churches last Sunday a little girl patiently listened for along time to the sermon, and finally, becoming very hungry, whispered to her mother: "Ma, can we go home to dinner when he gets through telling this story "I shall teach you to speak properly and then to write as you speak," said a teacher in the public schools. "Poor Billy Wilcox," said a little voice apparently involuntarily. What about Billy?" Please, ma'am he speaks through his nose—he will have to write through his nose, won't be, ma'am
A very quick child made an observation to her teacher one day, which had a reat deal of truth in it. How is It, my ear," inquired tbe lady, "that you do not understand this simple thing "J do not know, iudeedt" she answered, with a perplexed look4 "but I sometimes think! have so many -things to learn, that I have not time to understand."
A gentleman who observed Jimmie carefully taking the eenaua of a company assembled in a parlor awaiting a call to supper, inquired:* "What is the matter, Jimmie 1" "Why," replied the urchin, with a troubled air, "here's nind of us, counting me, and mamma has gone and cut the two pies into quarters, and that only makes eight pieces."
I have suffered
from acute inflammation in my nose and head—often in the night having to jet up and inhale salt ana water for reief. My eye hss been, for a week at a time, so 1 could not see. I have used no end of remedies, also employed a doctor, who said It was impure blood—but I got no help. I used Ely's Cream Balm on the recommendation of a friend. I was faithless, but in a few days was cured My nose now, and also my eye, Is well. wonderful how quick it helped MRS. OKOROIB
S. JUDSON, Hartford,
GONE OUT OF FASHION. Now York Sun. Giving up seats to women has almost entirely gone out of fashion in the elevated cars. Whether or not the reason Is the cushioned comfort which muit be relinquirhed in order to obey the ld custom, or that there is a general decline in pratical tenderness toward the gentle sex, tbe correspondent does not explain. No matter bow young or handsome a woman may be, be asserts, or how well dressed, she is usually left standing in a crowded car. Wall street brokers, professional men on their way home from down town, merchants with excellent manners—all these now sit complacently while women stand at their very knees. Old women are an exception to this new rale of city railroading, and there is one other, acoording to this observer. During the hours of the late afternoon, when the cars are full of mechanics and working women, mixed in with shoppers in finery, the men in tlie'garb of labor will relinquish their seats readily to thoM whose dress similarly betokens toil, but never to those who ere arrayed for leisure.
HAVK yon a cough? Sleepless nights need no longer trouble you. The use of yer's Cherry Pectoial, before retiring, ill soothe the cough to quiet, allay the inflammation, ana allow the needed repose. It will, moreover, speedily heal the pulmonary organs, ana give yon health.
AH
ex-Oonfoderato story says that
during one of Lee's battles near Richmond he saw a comrade on his knees, with his band held high above his bead, crying out." Oome along, furlough eorae along." He wanted to have a finger taken off by a bullet so that he could go home. An officer came up behind him and gave him violent kick^The soldier cried: "If that ain't a discharge. IT11 be hanged.** He said afterward that he thought a pieoe of a struck him.
burst shell had
CnrraiH dracists begin to complain that tbe only congh remedy tbey can now sell is Dr. Wistaria Balsam of Wild Cherry. This goes to prove that intelligent people are determined to get the cure for coughs, colds, and coniption. and will not take a substitute.
B«eklra% Arnica Salve. Tbe Bwt Salve in tfceworidlbrCut*,Bral»e», Sans, Ulews, Salt Bhesun, tfcver Sores, Tetter* Chapped Hands, Chilblain* Coras, end sol stein enqpttaas, and porittveiy cores Plies, or no pay requited. It 3s guaranteed to five perfect «att*r»ctkD, or motMqr refunded. Se per box. Ffcr sale hrQook* Bell. (tL)
SIMPLE HOME REMEDIES. Tbe following remedies for many simple ailments we find recommended in Hall's Journal of Health. And while the remedies may not be new to many of our readers, they will be found useful to all. We now pablish them that they may be at hand for ready reference.
Half a teaspoonful of common table salt dissolved in a little cold water and drank will instantly relieve "heart burn" or dyspepsia. If taken every morning before oreakfast, increasing the quantity gradually to a teaspoonful of salt and a tumbler of water, it will in a few days sure any ordinary case of dyspepsia, if at tbe same time due attention is paid to the diet. There is no better remedy than the above for constipation. As a gargle for#ore throat it is equal to chlorate of potash and is entirely safe. It may be used as often as desired, and if a little is swallowed each time, it will have a beneficial effect on the throat by cleansing it and allaying the irration. In doseaof one to four teas poo ufuls in half a pint to a pint of tepia water it acts promptly as an emetic and, in cases of poisoning, is always on hand. It is an excellent remedy for bites and stings of insects. It is vsluable astringent in hemorrhages, particularly for bleeding after the ex tracting of teeth. It has both cleansing and healing properties, and is therefore a most excellent application for superficial ulcerations.
Mustard is another valuable remedy. No family should be without it. Two or three teaspoonfuls of ground mustard stirred into half a pint of water acts as an emetic very promptly, and is milder and easier to take than salt and water. Equal parts of ground mustard and flour or meal made Into a paste with warm water and spread on a thin piece of muslin, with another piece of muslin laid over it, forms the Indispensable "mustard plaster." It is almost a specific for colic when applied for a few minutes over the "pit of the stomach." For alj internal pains and congestions there is no remedy of such general utility. It acts as a counter-irritant by drawing tbe blood to tbe surface hence in severe cases of croup small mustard plasters should be applied to the back of the child's neck. The same treatment will relieve almost any case of headache. A mustard plaster should be moved about over tbe spot to be acted upon, for if left in one place it is liable to blister. A mustard plaster acts as well when at siderable distance from the affected part. An excellent substitute for mustard alaster is what is known as "mustard eaves." They come a dozen in a box, and are about four by five inches. They aro perfectly dry, and will keep for a long time. For use it is only necessary to dip one in a dish of water for a minute and then apply it.
Common baking soda is the best of all remedies in case of scalds and burns. It may be used on the surface of the burned place either dry or wet. When applied promptly, the sense of relief is magical. It seems to withdraw the heat ana with it the pain, and the healing process soon commences. It is the best application for eruptions caused by poisonous ivy and other poisonous plants, as also for bites and stings of insects.
Owing to colds, over-fatigue, anxiety, and various other causes, the urine is often scanty, highly colored, and more or less loaded with phosphates which settle to the bottom of the vessel on cooling. As much soda as can be dip* aed up with a ten cent piece, dissolved half a glass of cold water and drank every three hours, will soon remedy the trouble.
NO MARKS.
Mr. T. M. Casad, editor of the Corydon. Iowa, Times, writes that his little girl burned her loot severely on a stove. One application of St.. Jacobs Oil, the reat pain-reliever, cured it completely, Teavlng no marks. By two applications ot St. Jacobs Oil he cured himself of a torturing pain in the side.
A VERY NARROW ESCAPE. Philadelphia Call. "Doctor." exolaimed a man, rushing breathlessly into tbe office of a homeopathic physician, "you know that bottle of pills you left at my house last evening, with instructions tnat on no account must my wife take more than one every two hours "Yes, yes," said the doctor, with visible alarm, "they are very powerful. I trust your wife hasn't exceeded the prescription dose?" "No. but my little three-year-old boy got hold of tbe bottle during tbe night and swallowed every pill in it."
Where is tbe boy?" demanded tbe doctor, rising hastily. "When I left tne house be was out in the back yard stoning a cat." "Well, tbe physician replied, resuming bis seat, here is another bottle of
fnntructionsvery
rills, but be careful to follow the concerning your wife. In her weakly condition an overdose might prove disastrous." "But wbat shall I do sbout the little boy asked the anxious father. "Just keep the pills out of his reach and they won't bnrt him any."
An Editor's Tribute. Tberon P. Keator, Editor of Ft. Wayne. Ind., "Gazette," writes: "For the past five years have always used Dr. King's New Discovery, for coughs of most severe character, as well as for those of a milder type. It never fails to effect a speedy cure. My friends to y?hom I have recommended it speak of it in same high terms. Having been cured by it of every cough I have had for five years, I consider it the only reliable and sure cure for Coughs, Colds, etc," Call at Cook A Bell's Drug Store and get a Free Trial Bottle. |1.00.
Large Site
Electric Bitters will do all that is claimed tor them. Anndreds of testimonial* attest their peat curative powers. Only 60 cents a bottle at Oook A Bell's.
The True Test.
If a man is hungry within an hour, more or less, after a meal, be is a dyspe tic. Ikshows his stomach is not able dispose of what he has eaten. But to eat and thus impose more work is an absurdity. Take Dr. Sones' Red Clover Tonic, which cures dyspepsia and all stomach, liver, kidney and bladder troubles. It is a perfect tonic, appetiser, blood purifier, a sure cure for fegue and malaria diseases. Prioe 60 cents, of Qulick A Co. 8
WHY
do you suffer with Baok Ache,
Pains in the Chest, Rheumatism, \r lameness anywhere when a Hop Piaster will surely give yon relief! Druggists sell them, 25 cents.
"The Sua leea Hove."
The Rev. J. Jasper (colored), who ins*"** that "the sun do i» popular in Richmond, Vs., that when a stronger inquires the way to his church, tha directions are to take a car to a certain corner and then follow the crowd. The evidence of success of modern dis-
onres coughs, and colds, consumption and all throat and lung diseaees speedily, thoroughly aud permanently, Trial bottles free, of Gulick A Co. S
1HE SATURDAY EVENING
MAIL,
TERRS HAUTE, IND.
A Paper for the People.
A MODEL HOME JOURNAL.
ENTERTAINING, INSTRUCTIVE AND NEWSY.
BRIGHT, CLEAN AND PURE.
THE FOURTEENTH YEAR
The Mail has a record of suceesi seid mo attained by a Western weekly paper. Twelve yean of increasing popularity peeves
worth. Enoouraged by the extraerdlnasgr suooess which has attended its publication the publisher has perfected arrangements tqr which for the coming year The Mall will be more than ever welcome In the home circle. In this day of trashy and Impure literattu* it should be a pleasure to all good people to help In extending the circulation of such a paper as the
SATURDAY EVENING MAIL
TERMS:
One year HIT mOBthflM...mf....MtM...H«*.l*H.H*MH*..«HM4. 1 Three months ....................
I
Mail and office subscriptions will, invariably, be discontinued at expiration of time. Address P. 8. WEST PA lit,
Publisher Saturday Evening Mall, TERSE HAUTE, IND.
WHERE IT IS SOLD.
TERRE HAUTE.
E. L. Godecke Opera Home S. R. Baker «P O. Lobby Grove P. Crafts
w..Terre
Annapolis, Ind.* Atherton,lnd.7.™'i..'.T.....i-i.....Geo.H. Denny Armiesburg, Ind...MMM....~~. -..A. E. Boyu comingdale, Ind .^..Oscar McCxjy Brazil, Ind. Bowling Green, Ind.. Bridgeton, Ind.....—.. Clay City. Ind ...... Garlisle, Ind Cloverland, Ind...
Tbook.MrwdeugM.
-2-
Very Remarkable Recovery. Mr. Geo. V. Willing, of Manchester, Mich, writes: "My wife hss been almost helpless that she could not tura in bed alone. She used two bottles of Electric Bitters, andisao much Improved, that she is able now to do her own work."
Vital Questions!!
Ask the most eminent physician Of any school, what is the beet thing in the world for quieting and allaying all irritation of the nerves and curing all forms of nervous complaints, givine natural, childlike refreshing sleep always?
And tbey will tell you unhesitatingly "Some form of Hope!" CHAPTKB I. Ask any or all of the most eminent physicians: "What is the beet and only remedy that ean be relied on to cure all diseases of the kidneys and urnary organs such as Bright's disease, diabetes, retention or inability to retain urine, and all the diseases and ailments peculiar to Women"— "And they will tell you explicitly and emphatically "Buchu."
Ask the same physicians "What is the most reliable and surest
tell you, Mandrake! or Dandelion!" Hence, when these remedies are combined with others equally valuable
And compounded into Hop Bitters, such a wonutrful and mysterious curative power is developed which is so varied in Its operations that no diseases or ill health can possibly exist or resist its power, and yet it is
Harmless for the most frail womanf, weak est Invalid or smallest child to use. ±, CHAPTKB 11^ "Patients "Almost dead or nearly dying"
For years, and given up by physicians of Brightv and other kidney diseases, liver ooaiplaints, severe, have been cured.
Women gone nearly crazy! From agony of neuralgia, nervousness, wakefulness and various diseases peculiar to women.
People drawn out of shape from excrucia ting pangs of Bttfeumatlsm. Inflammatory and chronic, Jor suffering from scrofula!
Erysipelas!
V*JN
Have been cured by Hop Bitters, proof of which can be found In every neighborhood in the known world.
Proiessional Cards.
GLOVER,
Mi
ICorner of Eighth and Poplar Streetsj f!AT,rfi PROMPTLY ATTENDED! arTKLKPHORK.
R. W. C. EICHELBERGER,
Oenllst 'and Anrlst.
Room 13, SavlngB Bank Building. Terre Haute, Ind.
Office hours. gZ1^ J. RIOHAKDSOH. R. W. YAK VAIXAH
RICHAKDSON & VAN YALZAB
DENTISTS.
Omro-Southwest corner Fifth and Main streets, over National State Bank (entrance on Fifth street Communication by Tele* phone.
W.BALLEW,
DENTIST,
Met, 48SX Main
Street, over
•Id confectionery stand. TERRE HAUTE, IND. Our be found in office night aad day
O. LINCOLN,
a
DEKT1ST1
Office, 19% S. Sixth, opposite P. O. Extracting ana artificial teeth spec work warranted.
RQAGG,
Haute House
News Stand.— .....National House Clarence Hart South of Poetoffloe Walsh A Smith.~~....... 661 Main Street Mrs. Elisabeth McCutcheon, 1184 E. Poplar
St
ILLINOIS.
Areola, Ills„ .... —•Harry Moore Casey, ills. ....................B. F. Miller Chrisman, Ills ..McKee Bros Ferrell, Ills ..Elmer Hitch Hut»onville, Ills Harry Adams Marshall. Ills v. L. Cole Martinsville, Ills J. H. Ramsay Mattoon, Ills— .-•• Paris, Ills W. B. Sheriff A Oo Robinson, Ills -John M. Harper Scott Land, Ills... .^-• ••L. O. Jlnklna Toledo, Ills Edmund E. Park Vermillion, Ills. .J. W.Boyer Westfleld, Ills...,. Bird Barlow
INDIANA. .Foster M. Marts
...T. M. Robertson Robert Bohannon
.... W. J. Duree P. T. Jett ..J. M. Warner ..H.D. Falls
Clinton, Ind Edwin Cunningham Catlin, Ind Joseph A. Wright
COHI
Bluff,Ind.. .-..E.Davis noflfee, Ind— —.........—X H. Curry Dana, Ind Chas. Hutchinson Eogene, Ind A. Conaway Farmerfbuig, Ind............-..Jenn^ra A Reed Fontanett, Ind Greencastle, Ind,. Lan^don Harmony,Ind„ H. Strong Lewis,Ind -J-8-Merom, Ind. ...A. B^Ooc per Montezuma, Ind New Lebanon, Ind Newport, Ind— Praireton, Ind, Pimento, Ind... Perrysville. Ind„.~..^ Rockvllle, lnd_ Ro«edale,lnd.... Sullivan, Ind™ Banford, Ind— Soonover, Ind... St. Marys, Ind Shelburn, Ind. Waveland, Ind
Chas. E. Hunt ,_Lee Burnett Bird Davis
T. L. Jone*
.W. T. French J. E. Sinks A. C. Bates ....W. Bucher .W. S. Smith
Ed. May
A. D. Jenkins F. M. Curley .Chas. Froment
EL A. Pratt
HECOMPLETE H0ME.WJ5S2,
New edMM.—New UtestnttoM froa Superbly gotten up. Suwtowprfccv Adapted W *u Srito Msifta. A|cemO 4ajtc bfr vork. EXCSUUDTT TOWS. Th£lu*4mmBt pnmpeam
Co".'«oV*»ce Block. IndbMpoUtJad. book*
and F~
fratkd
E E A S E S S
OR.
STRONG'S TAMPICO
CORSET
PERFECT
•CFFORT
ABsstVrar
VRBREAXABLE
"EWABD OF 20
offered far psir cl fti.Wwie'i AMPICO
is «&ich a Xfenqrfeo stay breaks.
IU Patwt Tripl# Back pwemtt MdMdu,nisal IniUttoa sndsmsa 111
IIII
ssoBrtsa rattans Iwispeisfre
Bnrsn of i—ItH*MMU-Bay oaiy the ceanifie. «Wcb s» stooped on iasfaeof const ItefirfsuMm t3SPicof gF newhsntfcrit, Samples«asOsd 1B. WTgATltCI AM^K-fss, fW WW.
specialties. AJ] (dAw-tf)
ssAunt is
ARTISTS' SUPPLIES,
PICTURES, FRAMnS, MOULDINGS.
Picture Frames Hade to Order.
McKeen's Block, No. 048 Main street bftween 6th and 7th.
SAVE
EVERY THING
AND CONVERT IT INTO
MONEY.
The undersighed has opened a Receiving Room, No. 18 south Second street, where he is prepared to receive Rongh ^low and Qroase of any Wnd, Pork and_ Beef Cracklings, Dry "and Green Bones, for which he wifljpay the Hiahest Cash Pri alaobuy Dead
lghest Cash Pn Hogs by singl it the Factory,
Ho wiD
je or car load.
Hogsreoeived at fEe factory, Skwthwestrt the City on the Island. Office No. 18 souts
THARR?8(iN
"SMITH,
Terre Haute, Ind'
W.8.0UVT. H. Williams J/M. CLOT
CLIFT,WILLIAMS & CO,
KAjrvrAcrtranas or
Sash, Doors, Blinds, &c
AIM OKALSBS
nr
LUMBER, LATH*
8HINGLE&
GLASS, PAINTS, OILS mad BUILDERS' HARDWARK.
Mulberry Street, Oorner Ninth, TKRHK HAUTE,
FRANK PRATT
DZALKBIX
Itallas Marble aad aU Made of Aaseii«an aJMd Foreign Onuiito
-MONUMENTS
CORNER
FIFTH AND
STREETS TERRE
WALSTUT
HAUTEJND.
ytteteJ.ft»QsNlrJ!Ca,aflssa«,0. Send cents for postage, and of either sex it away than anything else in this
world.
The Chreat
Consumption Remedy.
BROWN'S
EXPECTORANT
Has ftesn tested hundred* of eases,« MMW fititod to arrest and euro SUMPTION, if taken 4n
to
as to
W1M V9
Salt rheum, blood poisoning, dyspepsia, indigestion, and in fact almost all diseases frail Nature Is heir to
MUM.
It Cures Coughs. Astht 3* It Cures Asthma, It Cures Bronchitis. It Cures Hoarseness. It Cures Tightness of the Ch
enable the
Si
1
It Cures Difficulty of Breall ing
BROWN'S ExpscTOf\iif
I* Specially Mecom mended foi
WMOOPtJfd COUG*+ It will shorten the duration of the diiiiM and alleviate the paroxyetn of
Tchild
to paee thromfh
without leaving any eerioue conaequeneee FBICEf 50c and $1.00. A. KIEFER, 4.
No* 415& OHIO STREET^
TERRE HAUTE, iNDIJ|N^
(Ettabliehed 1815.)
For all Disease of the Eye, Ear, Bead,Elm Throatt Lunge and all Chronic JMssosMfc Especially,CHRONIC DISEASES ofWotmaws
Children Fiatula, Piles, Lupu»,Cm«er«,Optar Habit, Rheumntiam, Neuralgia, Skin Diieaatt, TO» EASES of the STOMACH, LIVER, SPLEEN, HKASTt diseases of the Kidneys and Bladder, and all disease*
Kidneys
Operations for Pterygium. Strabismus or Cress rtiflcial Pupil, Opium Habit, Tape Worms, HjuUfMfljy aricooele, Hernia or Rupture, Epilepsy or FW OMi' are Legs, Old Cores (anywhere upon the bodrt mat ism, Acute or brook Gonorrhoea, Syphilis
A: Varicocele, ___ .... Sore Legs, Old Eores (anywhere upon the bod mat ism, Aot Chancroids.
Bright's Disease aad Hlltu Celle, Kta
Consultation tree aad invited. Address wWfciti
THE
MOST
RELIABLE FOOD
THE WOflUI
CHILW^ mu: 11
HAIL'S
i--
Indiana^Llis.
fnlr
ma
")ub Pir
lUUQi a suu an MISV ALL NERVOUS Vitus Daeee,
the Oenito-Urinary System
IMM
its forms,
BM
ilk
rully treated by
Mm
"baar*
Physician" and Deformities of all kinds, ana inatnsBMMt furnished.
ELECTRICITY and ELECTRIC BA All eases of Ague, Dumb Ague Ferer, Fistula, Piles, Ulcers and FL_ of tho Rectum, Lupus, moat Cancers, most SkHi eases, Female Diseases generally. Granulated LJ^. Ulccrs of the Cornea, Weak and Sore Eyes, Oatantr of the Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat or Skin (Kwnlj.# Spermatorrhoea or diseases peculiar to Mea aad Ttiaa.
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Hair Renewer.
Seldom does a popular remedy win snefc Strong hold upon the public confidence as has HALL'S HAIB RBSXWEB. The eases In which it has accomplished a complete restoration of color to the hair, and vigorous health to tho Scalp, are innumerable.
Old people like It for its wonderful power to restore to their whitening locks their origins! color and beauty. Middle-aged people like Hi because it prevents them from getting bald, keeps dandruff away, and makes tbe hair grow thick and strong. Young ladies like it as a dressing because it gives tbe hair a beau tiful glossy lustre, and enables them to drees it in whatever form Jhey wish. Thus it is tho favorite of all, and it has become so simfflf because it disappoints no one.
BUCKINGHAM'S DYE
FOB THE WHISKERS
If— bfftomt one of tbe most important popn* lsr toilet articles for gentlemen's ose. Whea the beard is gray or naturally of an uade» lirtMs shade, BOCKWOHA*'S Drs is tho
B. P. Hall & Co., Nashua, N.H. Sold by all Druggists.
twt VMM AU fin FAILS. BestObogb Qyrm Taalcsgood. psetotime. BoMbydrngiHsta
P£TT/rSLYESALVE 43YRSOLD TO DA
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Fortunes await
tbe workers absolutely sum. Atoaeeaddrea TRUE A CO* Augusta, Maine. f*ly
Dioloat, Hay Fever, Aa
tJl Dnaoriata. or by a X. T. j£lZXI/X12nB» Warrsa,na Return tAii*«ttli1W iKtthjwM
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