Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 14, Number 46, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 10 May 1884 — Page 7

THE MAIL

_i

PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

LOOK AT HOME,

Sbottld you feel inclined to censure Faults you may in other view, Ask your own heart, ere you venture,.

If tbat has not it* tellings too. Let not friendly wows he broken, Rather strive a friend to gain, JMany

iv a word in anger spoken ids its passage Back again.

Fin

0,-

Do not then. In idle plearore. Trifle with a brother^fame, duard It asa valued tr^ure.

Sacred as your own good name. DO not form opinions blindly,

tbI%ehl°gUbtbin0,Urri

Is

whS.

where. In this

Literary men

4

Oft become our warmest friend*.

The Hot Axle.

T. De Witt Talmage.

We were on the ligbtning-traln for -Cleveland. We had no time to "parsIt we stopped for a half hour we alwuJd be ereeted by the anathemas of a l®et*j£" ingcommittee. We felt a -ortof preeentiment tbat we should betoolate, -when, to confirm it, tbe whistle «nd the brakes fell, and

theory

X™U

aU alon^

train waa "What is tbenastterr

«del» Tbe wheels had

been making too

many

revolution^n a

minute: tbe car on fire. It was a •ery difficult thing to put Water and oil and sand and swabswere tried, and long detention caused, and a Smoke tbat threatened flame down to

thlnk now, that

il tbe matter

of

people every­

swift

"express," Amerl-

S life, we go too fast for oar endurWe tbink ourselves getting on -mi«ndidlv. when, In the midst of our successes, we come to a dead halt. What ?s thematter? The nerves or muscles or brains give oat we have made too many revolutions In an hour. A hot

^Men make the mistake of working according to tbelr opportunities, and not according to their ^pacitv of iau/iimnm "Can I run this train irom fiprlngfield to Boston at tbe rate of fifty miles an hour?" says an engineer. YOT. "Then I will run it, reckless of consequences!" Can I be a merchant, and a president of a oank, and a director in a life-insurance company, and a •commissioner, ana help edit a paper, And supervise the politics of our «and run for Congress? "I can! the .umn says to himself. Tbe store drives toliu tbe bank drives him: the school jand politics drive bim. He takes all the scoldings and frets and exasperation ot each posltio*. Some day, at the Mheiaht of the business season, he does not come to the Btore. From the most important meeting of the bank directors tie Is absent. In the excitement, of the most important political canvass be falls "to be at tbe place appointed. What Is -the matter? His health has broken «Sdown the train halts long before It gets slyto theBtatlon. A hot axle!

have

great opportunities

-opeplngm this day. If they takeaU that open, theyfare dead livin/j men who

ought

Mrpoou

'i

A,-

to be aead. The

pen runs so easy when you have good, tfnk and smooth paper, and an easy desk *to write on, and the consciousness of an ^audience of one, two. or three hundred xhousaud readers. There 4re the religious newspapers through which you

may

preaobT and the musical journals through wblch you may sing, and the agricultural periodicals through which vou can plough, an* family newspapers lu which you may romp with the whole bouse hold around the evening stand. There are critiques to be written, and reviews to be indulged in, and poems to be chimed, and novels to be constructed. When out of a man's pen be can .-shake recreation and friendship and usefulness and bread, he Is apt to keep It shaking. So great are tbejtavltations to .literary work, that the professional men of tbe day are overdone. They sit, faint

and

fagged out, on the verge of newspapers and books each one does tbe work of three. And these men sit up late nights, and choke down chunks or meats without mastloatlon. and scold their wives through Irritability, and iuaul Innocent authors, and run the ihvalcal machinery with liver miserably given out. The driving-shaft has gone fifty times secondThey stop at no station. The steam-cheat is hot and swollen. The brain and the digestion begin to smoke Stop,ye llylng quills! "Down brake! Ahotaxlet

Some of the worst-tempered people of the day are religious people, from the fact that they have no rest. Added to the necessary work of the world, they -superintend two Sunday schools, listen to two sermons, and every night have meetings of chantable and Christian Institutions. They look after the beggars, hold conventions, speak at meetings, wait on ministers, serve as committeemen, take all the hypercriUdsm that inevitably

come

to earnest workers,

rush up and down the world, and develop their hearts at the expense ofall tbe other functions. They are the best men on earth: aud Satan knows It, and is 'trying to kill them as soon as possible.

They know sot that it is as much a duty to take care of their health as to go to the •sacrament. It is as much a sin to eomrait suicide Vrlth the sword of truth as with a pistol. Our earthly life is a treasure to be guarded. It is an outrageous thing to die when we ought to live.

Tbore It no use in firing up a Cunarder lato such speed that the holler bursts 1^3 mid-Atlantic, when at more moderate rate It might have reached the docks of

Liver poof. It is a sin to do the work of thirty years in five year*. A RockyMountain locomotive engineer told me, that at certain places they changed-loco-motives, and let tbe machine rest, as a loeotnoave alwayskeptiofull heat soon aot out of order. My advice to all overworked good people la, *p/" Slacken vour speed you come to the crossings: All your fadlities for work at this rate will be consumed. You are on fire now. I see the premonitory smoke. A hot rude I

Some of our young people have readtill a ey are erased—of learned black smiths. who at the for*e conquered thlny languages and of shoemaker*, who, luding acl leather, got to be -iphiV'1* ww1? *tv. •_? milliners, who, ousto:a ^ttytttf OB t!.v:r ^umeof n: bl* tm of we vt* pbf1**

•dio

were at the glass tatia,wrote a vol.:is. The fact is, no to be troubled with -?agee and, Instead ilng phllceopher*. •an rsurplusef ..i. ers and the

.r« !vv

greater than rum mililoers Extraor--i eodur-

rk

TERSE

headache and a.botch of a recitation. We ana told of how many books a man can r&d in the five spare minutes before breakfast and the ten minutes at noon but I wish some one would tell us how much rest a gets ia fifteen minutes after dinner, or how much health in an hour's horseback ride, or how much fun in a Sunday afternoon of cricket. He who has such an idea of the value of time that be takes none of it for rest wastes all bis time.

We were recently asked by the editor to give our experience on questions of health aa related to literary toil. Our

answer is, that we have lived until this time without ache or pain, save three q^airpg of ague one anmmer when we were feol enough to own a place in a malarious aeignborboed. We account for our health, which is so far more extraordinary than anything we have ever observed, by the fact that we are fanatics on the subject of sleep. We have two or three hundred friends whose sleeping habits are like Napoleon in one respect: we want nine hours' sleep, and we take it—eight hours at night, and one honr in the day. If we miss our allowanceas we often do—one week, we make it up the next week er the next month. We have sometimes been twenty-four hours in arrearages. We formerly kept a memorandum of hours for sleep tbat we misled we pursued those hours till we caught thess. If, at the beginning of our summer vacation, we are many hours behind in slumber, we go down on the Bea-shore or among the mountains, and sleep a month. If the world abuses ns at any time, we go and take aa extra sleep, and when we wake up all the world is snillng on us. If we come to a knotty point in our discourse, we take a sleep, and when we rouse up the opaque has become transparent. Going to our afternoon nap, we say to tbe servants, "Do not call for anything. If the house takes fire, first get the family out, and my manuscripts, and when tbe roof begins to fall, eall me!" This fanaticism on the subject of sleep, together with a half-hour in tbe gymnasium, and a walk of four miles each day and abstinence from all stimulants, not exoeptiug tea and coffee, has, under God, eaabled us to escape the hot axle.

Somebody ought to be congratulated —I do not know who, and so I will shake hands all around—on the fact that the health of the country seems improving. Whether Dio Lewis, with his

nastic clnbs. has ponnded to death American sickliness or whether the coming here of many English -ladles, with their magnificent pedestrian habits has taught us a lesson or whether the medicines In tbe apothecary shops, through much adulteration, have lost their force or whether the multlplicaof bath-tubs has Induced to cleanliness people who were never washed but once, and that just after their arrival on the planet—I cannot say. But sure I am tbat I never saw so many bright, healthy-faced people as of late. Our naldens have lost tbe languors they once cultivated, and walk thestreet with stout step, and swing the croanet-mal-let with a force tbat sends a ball through two arches, cracking the opposing ball with great emphasis. Our daughters are not ashamed to culture flower-beds and while they plant the rose In tbe grouad, a corresponding rose blooms In tbelr own ebeek.

But we need another proclamation of emancipation. Tbe human locomotive goes too fast. Cylinder, driving-boxes, rock-shaft, truck, and valve-gear need to "slow up." O. that some strong band would unloose the burdens from overtasked American life, tbat there might be fewer bent, shoulders and pale cheeks and exhausted lungs and quenched eyes the laws and medicine ana theology less frequently stopped In their glorious progress, "because of the hot axle

THE BEST BED.

Of the eight pounds which a man eats and drinks in a day, it is thought that not lees than five pounds leave his body through the skin. And of these five pounds, a considerable percentage escapes during the night. This, being In great part gaseous in form, permeates every part of the bed. Thus ill parts of the bed—mattress, blankets, as well as sheets—soon beceme foul, and need purification.

The mattress needs this renovation quite as much as the sheets. To allow tbe sheets to be used without washing or ohanglng three or six months would be regarded as bad housekeeping but I insist, if a thin sheet oan absorb enough of the poisonous excretions of the body to make it unfit for use In a few days, a thick mattress, which oan absorb and retain a thousand times as much of these poisonous excretions, needs to be purified as often certainly as on oe in three months. A sheet can be washed. A mattress cannot be renovated la this way. Indeed, there Is no other way of cleansing a Mattress but by steaming it or pick lag it to pleoes, and thus in fragment exposing it to the direct rays of tne sun

lag it to pleoes, and thus in fragments expoalng it to the direct rays of tne sun. As these processes are scarcely practicable with any of the ordinary mattresses, I am decidedly of the opinion that the good old-fashioned straw bed, which can every three months be exchanged for freeb straw, and the tick washed, is the sweetest of beds.

If in the winter season the porousness of the straw-bed makes it a little uncomfortable, apread over It two woollen blankete, which should be washed. With this arrangement, If you wash all the bed-cohering often, you will have a sweet, healthful bed.

Now, If you have the bed to air, with open windows during the day, and not make it up for tbe night before evening, you will have added greatly to the sweetness of your rest, and. In oonsequence, to the ton** of jour health.

I heartily wish this good change could be everywhere introduced. Only those who have thus attended to this important matter can jndge of its influence on the general health and spirits.

MOTHER'S COOKING. Philadelphia Call. Mr. B.—Theee biscuits remind me of mother's

Mrs. B.—Well, I declare! Have yon gonecrwy? Mr. Craxy my dear. Of course not.

Mis. B,—Wei!, I never expected to hear you say tbat any of my cookiag resea) bled your mother's. She was wonderful cook, I have no doubt, for vou have said sos million times.

Mr. B.—Yes, she certainly was. In fact there was only one dish she ever failed in.

Mrs. B.—What was that? Mr.

Decaose -»a night,

vt tried tbe ex^^uriUand •f it -..(y aakfc*

^f

BETTER THAN DIAMONDS, and of greater value than fine gold is great tonic and renovator Uke KidneyWort. It expels all poisonous humors Irom the blood, tones up the system and by scting directly on the mart important organs of the body stimulates them to healthy action sad reetsres health. It has effected many marvelous cares and to all Kidney diseases sad other kindred troubles it an invaluable remedy.

SEPARATE BEDS. I

Much of the discomfort and nervousness of which people complain when they rise in the morning is due to the fact tbat they do not sleep alone. They are electrical changes going on in the system during the night and where persons lodge together night after night under the same bedding these disturbing causes will work destructive results.

The London Lancet, in a recent issue, draws attention to this evil habit, and says that there is nothing that will so derange the nervous system of a person who is elminative in nervous force as to lie all night in bed with another who is absorbent to nervous foroe. The latter will sleep soundly all night, and arise refreshed in the morning, while the former will toss restlessly, and awake in tbe morning fretful, peevish, faint-hearted and discouraged. "No two persons," says the Lancet, "no matter who they are, ahould habitually sleep together. The one will thrive, the other will lose. This is the law. The case of the aged David and the youthful maid who was sought to impart physical energy to the king in his senility occurs to miad. The grandmother and heir little grandchild is another case in point. The aged one keeps strong the little one pines away ana becomes enfeebled. A lady in middle life informed us the other day that

Bbe

arose in the morning

nervous, worried, and weak, while her husband would sleep soundly all night. Tbe touch of his foot even would awaken nervousness and discomfort, while be seemed to be wholly unaffected.

To some of extreme susceptibility tbe fact that one sleeps with the bed pointing east and west is ominous. It is said by some scientific men to be little less than suicidal for certain parties thus to locate their couches. The proper position of the bed, they say, is north and south, in harmony with the magnetic currents. It is easy to poo-hoo at such suggestions. Some persons can ride backward In a carriage or car with perfect ease ^scend and descend In an elevator can cross and recross the stormy ocean with no vertigo or nausea, while others must face with the carriage or railway train, or they suffer great discomfort. It is plain that we are not all alike, and tbat we must regard the electrical conditions of each one.

Aside from this admitted law there are ether reasons why this plea for separate beds should be heeded. It is a matter of cleanliness, health, and morality as well. Each person should have his own couch as his own seat at tbe table.

STALE BREAD.

Mrs. Jack Robinson in Minn. Spectator. •'What does your mother do with her stale bread?" I asked of a young girl the other day hoping to hear of some new way of serving that "delicacy" with which always had the misfortune to be well supplied.

The girl's answer was so amusing that I give it verbatim: "Stale bread Why, what she don't want for poultices, she soaks up and gives to the hens." Did you ever! Clearly a very Important branch of that woman's domestic education has been sadly neglected.

Not to know at least six ways of "making over" that which tries so hare to keep our cupboards from wearing a fersaken look, ought to be considered a crime to be atonea for by a strict adherence to that article of diet, plain and unvarnished, for at least two weeks.

I believe the're are a good many who need a few lessons on the subject, judging by tbe number who have asked just how to prepare tbat boiled bread I spoke of a few weeks ago. 1 wasn't very explicit in my directions, It being so common with us tbat I supposed everyone else knew how It was prepared. Cut stale bread into quite thick slices, and let boil with your beef a few minutes not until it is aaushy, but just long enough to be moist all through, and serve while hot.

Almost everyone knows that slices of stale bread dipped In egg and water and then fried In butter, make an excellent dish for breakfast or tea. but few know that graham bread is still better when served the same way. When preparing it, don't forget to add a little nice syrup to part of the bread after soaking, ana before frying, for the children. 1 never saw a child yet that didn't think it "Oh, awful good!"

My father used to dip siloes of stale bread quickly into hot water, lay tbem in a tin and set in a very hot oven until brown, and we children thought it the very best way to make toast.

Cold biscuit are almost as good as dumpllng8»if added to soup a few minutes before serving.

Chop bread and apples very fine, add well beaten eggs until moist enough to press into cakes, then fry in batter.

Did you ever make a dressing of bread crumtie, last as you would for a turkey, and lay it beside your roasting beef or pork, after pressing into balls? If you never did, just try It the next time you roast beef, and see how nice it is.

Here are my six different stale bread recipes already, and yet I haven't mentioned milk toast, butter toast, chicken toast, puddings, or steamed bread no, nor poultices boiled, baked and fried neither have I told you that, if you are determined to feed your stale bread to the hens, it would be well to follow Grandma Steams' recipe for "hen bread." She says If you fry it in lard, using plenty or pepper, that the hens will lay twice as well. I suppose that means two eggs a day, and if ever I get a ben I mesa to try it. But until then, stale bread will continue to be an indispensable item In our bill of fare, and I shall be grateful for any hints that will help me to serve it so that it will look ana taste like something else not quite so common.

Have just found new recipe, and am goiag to try it to-morrow morning.

A LOVING MOTHERS WARNING. They—these two, whose lives were bouna up in each other, whose hearts beat synchronously, and who had but one idea between" them—eat upon the back piazza in the shadow ot the moonlight about 11 o'clock at night, when the mother of the girl put out the milkcan previous to retiring for the night. Softly breaking the silence, tbe good woman said: "When the milkman comes in the wtorniag don*t yon two drink up all the milk leave a little for breakfast."

Folia* tlMB Yoaagstcm* Twrtfc With SOZODONT, and when they grow np tbelr mouths will be garnished with sound and handsome ones. The foundation of many toothache 1s laid in childhood by neglect, and it Is very important to the well-being of either child or adult that the teeth should be well taken care of. Bad teeth are no fit masticators of the food, and breed dyspepsia. Make them white and strong, therefore, with SOZODONT, a praserative of supreme excellence and purity. Use it wttbont delay. Ww

HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MATT,

Murdered*

*'I do think, Jerome, you might let me have a little more money!" Victoria Hale was sitting at the breakfast table, a pent upon her cherry lips. She looked very pretty in her morning dress of fluted white lawn, with a breakfast cap of Swiss muslin and roso-color-ed ribbons, very becoming to her clear olive skin and large,

I

..

keeper ana cashier in a large down-town firm, and had scarcely been married three months. However, he had begun to discover that his divinity was not all divine. "More money, Victoria!" he repeated. "Are you not getting unreasonable Do I not keep you liberally supplied with all that I have to spare?" "But it's so mortifying to go shopping with Mrs. Hyde-Seoor ana Mrs. Bonsin gton and have to stand by while they are purchasing the sweetest things at such bargains." "Don't go shopping with them." "You would snut me up, then, from all amusement and society "Nonsense, Victoria! You knew better than that. Here are your prettily furnished house your garden, your little conservatory, te amuse you." "One cannot be contented with the same thing forever." "If you wanted a perpetual change you should have married a milllanaire." "Don't be cross, Jerome," said Victoria, coaxingly. "But you know all the neighbors along the river-shore are rich, and I don't want to be left behind. I shall be mortified to death if I can't have a croquet breakfast in August." "I have no especial objection to that," said her husband. "1 suppose it need not necessarily be expensive." "And I need a lace parasol terribly. And oh! Jerome. Mrs. Lacy says I may use her cream-colored ponies while she's at Long Branch. Isn't it kind of her "I dare say it's very kind," said Jerome, ruefully "but you know a pair of ponies cost in the keeping "And the summer silK that is such a bargain at 's?" "Yes, yes, yes, #nly remember, Vic, that there is a limit to our funds."

Mrs. Hale was satisfied with the grudging assent so reluctantly screwed out.

down Ingdale ponies bought the lavender summer silk, a "love" of a lace shawl to wear with It accepted an Invitation to visit Saratoga ana Lake George with a party of gay young friends, ana cried all night before 9he could induce her husband to oonsent.

Vic, you don't understand," said Jerome. "We must study economy or we shall go to ruin." "Economy!" retorted Victoria. "I am sick of the very word."

Her husband turned silently away it was hard just When he had most need of sympathy, thus to be repulsed.

"They tell me," said old Mr. Hardie, Blocke & Co., "that Hale's wife dresses the most elegantly of any one at Saratoga this season." "What!- Hale who keeps Denny's books—Young Hale ««Y68." "The'deuce! How can he afford it "Ah,! that's a different matter. If I were Denny I should keep an eye to things." •'They've had some serious lessons already," said the other. "That burglary last week cpst them $7,000." "Any trace of the burglar "No. The safe must have been opened by skeleton keys." "Humph," grunted old Hardie. "If the cashier was any one but Hale, that Denny trusts as he would trust himself "O, nonsense, nonsense!" cried the other old gentleman. "There's such a thing as being too suspicious! You'll be saying next that Hale is at the iiead of a gang of burglars." "He may be, for all I know," said Hardie.

Meanwhile Reginald Denny begap to be strangely mistrustful. Not to Jerome Hale—but others about him. "Hale," said he, "sometimes I think these knaves of burglars are nearer home than any one imagines." "Do you, sir A ghastly look came 'overthe young mans featsres. "Impossible." "At all events, it is worth looking into," said Denny, "the circle of suspicion seems to be narrowing down. Do you mind sitting up for a night or •WO?" "Not at all, sir. if you desire it." & "I'm .sorry to ask it of you, as you don't seem well .this last week or two "Pray don't mention it. I am well enough," said Hale, almost Impatiently.

It was the first night of his vigil—a

with

rain

cark, tempestuous midnight, falling outside. Reginald Denny had gone home, but some uaanalyzed notion induced him to return quietly and by stealth toward I o'clock in the morning. Letting himself in by his own private key, with a word of reassurance to tbe alarmed watchman who paced the outer halls, he noiselessly entered tbe banking-rooms.

The safe where tbe money and valu able papers were kept was wide open Kneeling before it, with both bands full of bills, hurriedly transferring some to an open leather case on his right hand, and putting others back was Jerome Hale himself.

In an instant Reginald Denny's iron grasp was on his arm. "So I have got at the root of the matter at last," said he, in a deep, stern voice. "So you are the burglar, Jerome Hale!"

White with rags and dismay, Hsle sprang to his feet and confronted the man whom he had so long been system

Rt»*Yoa

Ely

have discovered me," he cried,

In stifled accents, "but you shall never convict me!" There was vivid flash, the report of a

istol, snd the next instant Jerome Hale dead before the eyes of the horrified an "It was not his own fault so much ss It was his wife's," people ssid when the ualv facts connected with Jeroire Haw suicide leaked out. "He WM week, but not naturally wicked, and she persecuted him mercilessly for money. Poor girl! her dress snd fashion and luxuries woe dearly bought."

And Victoria Hide, sitting psle snd agonized la her deep widow's weeds, knew as well as if supernatural bands had written It in fiery letters on tbewall that she bad murdered ber husband!

FABICHS

he

wishing to be successful with should guara tbem agsinat expossheltering his sheep the himself snd catches cold,

sheep ore. farmer exposes use Dr.

nmRnnnnnnnnninivinnnini

The Rev. J. Searlcs, of New Yovk, is one of the most widely-known and highly esteemed of Methodist ministers.

Mr. Setries ssars:" I am tor I OW8 to those vrlth Jk aim, to taj thsi a raasdy has been discovered that is Indeed a marvelous success. My son was greatly afflicted with Rheumatism, and suffered so severely that, at times, he was obliged to have morphine tacted into his arm to get relief. While in this oon--ition he discovered a remedy which effected Immediate relief, and a permanent oure. He has since forniahod it tomany others with the suneresolt I have also furnished it to a number of "persons suffering with Rhwimatium, and the result has been Immediate relief, and a perm-nent eure. Amoogothers, I gave it toBev. Wm. P. Corbit, paster of £eaeorve St m. E. Church, New HaTen,Oonn»,who was suffering greatly with this terrible dfseasa. I will give you us own

MQOOiflMn.n What Hr» Corbit Hayst ITew Haven, July M, IRQ. "Mr. Settles: Dear Sir:—I wish to say iorthe benefit of all whoare suffering with Inflammatory Rheamat!urn, that your medicine is Infallible. I suffered or two months the most excru 16 pounds of fieeh, and was not a month I heard of your retm Instantly relieved by it If there fs a specific for diseases of any kind, yours most certainly 1s for

In Its severest form. WM. P. Ooasrr, New Haven, Goon."

matory Rheumatism in Jts severe

Such is ATHIX)PH0R06—a thorough and efficient cure for the worst cases ofltheusnd Neuralgia.

If yon cannot get ATBZAVBOBOS of yonr Oranrlst, we will send it express paid, oa receipt of regqhtt price—one dollar per bottle. We prefer that you boy it from your druggist, but if he hasnt it, do not be persuaded to try something else, bat order si one& from us ss directed. ATHLOPHOROS CO., 112 WALL ST., NEW YORK. ilium—muni It. immmmimiii

miimmimmimmmmiinnmnTa

Tell the children to cut out and save the comic silhouette pictures as they appear from issue to issue. Thiey will be pleased, with the coUecttoa.

This space is owned by BLACK.WALL'S BUIIII.

Of course we mean the famous animal appearing on the label of every genuine package of Blackwell's Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco. Every keeps this, the but Smoking Tobacco made. None genuine without trade-mark of the Bull.

How Watch Cases are Made.

Most persons have an ambition to carry a gold watch case, and yet few people know how a watch case is made, or the vast difference in the quality of them. In a SOUD GOLD WATCH CASE, aside from the necessary thickness for engraving and polishing, a large proportion of the metal is needed only to stiffen and hold the engraved portions in place, and supply strength. The surplus is not only needless, but undesirable, because gold is a soft metal and eannot furnish the stillness, strength and elasticity necessary to make the case permanently strong and close-fitting. The perfect watch case must combine gold with some metal that will supply that in which the gold is deficient. This has been accomplished by the James Botf Gold Watch §£jwot which saves the WASTE of needr iL^ less gold, and INCREASES the SOLIDITY-and STRENGTH of the case, and at the same time reduces the cost ONE HALF.

|M Mlrtwp to Eiyrt— Wateh CaM VaitaHw, rfcllaMpUa, ra^ tar baafcoa* IHactrato4 r»»pkl«» •kowtog k«w JimW aa* Watofc

Cum

htf^TlTliai

Bull's Cough Syrupy

taking one of carters ua immediately after dinner. Dont forget 10 4t

an au4*

{lb be continued.)

THE 8URE

CURE

FOE

,KIDNEY DISEASES, LIVER COMPLAINTS, CONSTIPATION, PILES, AND BLOOD DISEASES.

PHVSICUKS ENDORSE IT HEARTILY,

"Xlda«7-Wort Is ths most suoa—sftil remedy lever wed." Dr. P. C. Ballot*. Moukton, Vt. "Kidney-Wort la alwmya reli*bU."

Sr. B. V. Clark. So. Hmo, Vt.

••Kidney-Wort has oursd ny wlfliaa*r two years •BflMtng." Dr. C. K. Bummcrlixi, Son Hill,»». IN THOUSANDS OF CASKS It eared where aO else had fldled^It is mild, beSSSS, CKBTAXX IK ITS ACTIO*, but

gfrea Hew Ufls to «U the important organs ot the body. Ttaenataralaotlon ot ttw Kidneys Is teetered. Sbe Urer is clean—d of slldisases, end tbe Bowels more freely sad healthftilly. In ad* way the went dlaeeess are eradicated

«m, nuifin«m.

Dry eaa be sent by mail.

WPM, MCHAJOMO* Jk OO.Birlltfio Vt.

I N E W

Wabash Scratch** and Itch. Is cured In thirty minutes by tlseawrtiaatton •f WOO LFORD'B SANITARY LOTION. Sold by BonUn A Armstrong.

WHOLESALE

Candy Manufactory

—AND—

BAKERY.

A. B. Mewbinney & Co.

(tii nmt. Terre Hsstf, l»d

(V

PSALMS

[REVISED,]

you well and to rejoice.

2. It shtll cure all the people and pat sickness and suffered ttnaer foot. 8. Be thou not afraid when your family is sick, or you had Bright'a disease or Liver Complaint, for Hop Bittern will cure you. 4. Both low and high, rich and poor know the value of Hop Bitters for

Dill­

ons, nervous and Rheumatic complaints. 5. Cleanse me with Hop Bitters and 1 shsdl have robust and booming health. 6. Add disease upon disease and let the worst come, I am safe if I use Hop Bitters. 7. For all my life have I been plagued with sickness and sores, and not until year ago was I cured, by Hop Bitters. 8. He that keepeth his bones from aching from Rheumatism and Neuralgia, with Hop Bitters, doeth wisely. 9. Though thou hast sores, .pimples, freckles, salt rheum, erysipelas blood poisoning, yet, Hop Bitters will renwve. them all. 10. What woman is there, feeble and sick from female oomplaints, who desiieth not health and useth Hop Bitters and is made weU. 11. Let not neglect to use Hop Bittero bring on serious Kidney and Liver complaints. 12. Keep thy tongue from being forder, thy blood pure, and thy stomoeh from indigestion by using Hop Bittern. 18. All my pains and aches and disease go like chrff before the wind when use Hop Bitters. 14. Mark the map who was nearfy dead and given up by tbe doctors after using Hop Bitters and becometh well.

X5. Cease from worrying about nervousness, general debility, and uriuary trouble, lor Hop Bitters will restore you.

1068. 1884.

TBEEE t",

COMPANY.

Notwithstanding the high river and no toe harvest at Terre Haute we will as usual have a full supply for all demands both local and foreign. We will sell the

Best Lake Ice Solid and pure. Orders given to drivers left at the office, promptly attended to.

Tfrom

No. 415J OHIO STREET*

TERRE HAUTE, INDtylty.

{EHabtUhed 2S75.)

For all Disease of the Eye, Ear, Head,Set) Throat, Lungs and all Chronie .Disease^ •Espoelally CHBOyiC DISEASES of WocaraM •P* Children fistula, Pile*, LuDua,Caoe«rt, Ow« Habit, Rheumatism. Neuralgia, Skin DJaeaaea. EABjJs of th« STOMACH, LfviR, 8PLEKH, HBABTt dl««aaaa of the Kidneys and Bladdar, andjall djajaaawst the G»nlto-Urlnary System. ALL KERVODS Mk EASES: Paralysis, Chore* or St. Vitua Danes, Bffe lepsy, Catalepsy, SCROFULA la all tta forma, aadatt those dieoasas not suoe«sfully treated by lha Physician" and Deformities ofall kinds, aodlturtriWJiia» furnished. ELECTRICITY and ELECTRIC ATM*

All eases of Agse, Dumb Afoe or CM* and Fever, Fistula, Ptlaa, Uleera and FU'auiaS of the Rectum, Lupus, moat Canoara, moat Skia JMs» eaaes, Female Diseases generally. Granulated U% leers of tbe Cornea, Weak and Sore Byea, Oatsrt* of the Eye. Bar, Boas, Throat or SWn /ScMiMfta* Spermatorrhoea or dlaeaaea peculiar to Mas aod TsatM*

Operations for Pterygium. gfrabUmaa or Croaa B]ra% Artificial Pupil, Opium Habit JTape Worma, HrfMoei*. Varicocele, Hernia or Boptare, Epilepsy or Fws, MA Sore Leas. Old Sores fanywbere upon tbe bod? Btwa* mat km, Aeflts or Chronic, Oooorrhasa, Syphilis as* Chancroids.

Blight's Dissise aad Bflioas Cdte, Bt«.

CooanltaUoo Crsssstd Invtttd. Addrsss wttb

An Old Soldier's

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$ik

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4 X3

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L. F. PERDUE, -||f|

Proprietor and Manager,

No. 26 north 6th Street

HE COMPLETE H0ME.«M.

book.. New edition.—New binding*.—New illustratloes new designs. Superbly gotten up. Same low price. Adapted to all classes. Sells at sight. Agents doing Ma work. EXCELLENTTRRMS. The handsomest prospectos ever issued. Apply now. WM. GARRKTSON

St

*"3 1% 1

vf*. 'I,.*

Ife

Co.. fjVtnce Block. IndUnapotlMod.

iUao other grand new books and Bibles.

m-

EXPERIENCE. _«CM*ert,7exMi May a, net.

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Ayer's Cheny Pectoral

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^Tfor IsmllJ ase,lad I bate foand tt to ba •afnvalaabteiviBedyfor thro* and lsa* j. w.

Warn**."

ot teertmotrtals oerttfjr to «W «OM rf all bronchial and toj by tte TWE o( Ana's

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