Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 14, Number 47, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 May 1884 — Page 7
THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR TIIE PEOPLE.
.*«HOUSE CLEANING.
M' USEFUL INFORMATION.
VALUABLE HINTS AND SUGGESTIONS. -ifel Harper's Bazar.
It is not a good plan to make a general disaster of house-cleaning. We believe in going to work mildly, when everything seems propitious, and doing "here a little and there a little" until every
Jt
tlace becomes a renovated whole. Still may sometimes happen that the work cannot be done in a leisurely fashion. Extra help can be bad only at snch a time and for so long, so the work of going over the whole bouse mast be done in a certain time. Even when wadx is the case there is no need of tearing up the entire house at once, burri-
M^0^pe
fashion, for to take one or two rooms at a time makes the work much less trying, and disposes of it quite as rapidly.
From garret to cellar is the order of of the march. Various stowaways in the uppermost region of the bouse must bare an airing, and an examination thoroug enough to prove that moths have not commenced ruinous ravages must bo made lu the old chests, trunks and boxes which hold extra bedding and clothes.
Everything should be removed from each bed-roam which has been in constant vise during the winter, aud from the rooms which hnvobeen occupied by visitors much of the time. Guest-rooms which have been closed, or used but a few days, will not need clean-
changes
pets and window hangings. In tbe occupied bed-rooms the closets should be cleaned lirst, and, if possible, tbe day before the room, or it might even bo done several days before. All the clothes should be removed from tbe closet and hung ont in the air and sun in the clothes-yard or on the porch, and left there all day, the boxes, etc., removed from tho shevee, and they, witb the catch-all*, bags, and shoe bag, looked over, and all the odds and ends— which will accumulate because one does not quite like to throw them away—relentlessly disposed of. If the waljs are of bard nnah they should be washed of! witb tepid water.. If they are papered they can be rubbed off witb a dry cloth ijf the shelve* and floor aro washed off with clear liuie-water, they will remain delightfully white and pureall summer. A elbsot lloor should never be carpeted'. If the lloor is old,, oif-cloth of a light color may be put over it: and If the closet is a very largo one which is made partlv for a droastng room, rug may
DO
ad
ded. Whether tho closet is large or small, the floor should be painted unless it is old and warped.
Before the things are remdved from the bed-room the/ should be cleaned and dusted. The smaller articles cab be put away in the closets, and larger ones removed to another room.
Tho glass over pictures should be cleaned with dry whiting and a woolen cloth. Carved brackets or shelves should have the dust removed from them w'lh a soft luu.tU, and afterward bo well rubbed with a little .linseed oil •ml a woolen cloth. The mirror xhould be rubbed off with whiting. The mattresses and bedding should bo put out whore tUey can have the bonelit of air and sun.
Tiie carpet is taken up after all the furniture is removed, and put out on the gross to bo cleaned. The doors arc then swept, and tho walls wiped off with a small base wheat bran. The windows thou id be washed with cold water in which soda has been put. The soda will remove all spots and stains from the glas?, and keep it from having a smoky look. Soup should never bo tict don glass.
Cleau brass knobs and rods with rot ten-stone and sweet oil or, if the brass is badly tarnished, rub it with a cotton rag dipped in a solution of oxalic acid wash off the acid, and polish with whitInir.
The floor should be mopped off with hot water and soap, or with clear limowater. After it is dry, and before the carpot is put down, wash it around, for a distance of »ix or eight inches from the walls, with a mixture of equal parts of turpentine and camphor, to destroy and keep away tho moths. If matting is to take the place of the carpet, the latter should folded up, and sheets of blotting paper wet with the mixture of tur* neutime and camphor laid between the folds. If it la thou put in a large store box which has been papered over oh the inside, and a newspaper with turpentine and cuamphor placcd over the top, it will be secured from moths.
After the carpet or matting is put down there k» nothing left to do ont bring back and arrange the furniture and various trifles, which, as they are all denned and dusted, rubbed up and polished, it takes but a little while.
It is a good plan, if the room is one occupied constantly, to bring In bedding from another room, and let the mattresses and pillows have a few days' sunning. A hair mattress should be thoroughly dusted off with a whiakbroom, then gone over again with the whisk-broom dampened. The pillows should be Washed off with a brush dtppod in hot water let enough water soak into them to wet the feathers well, then ,et them dry in tbe sun, turning once a day, slid bringing in or covering up at night, and the feathers will went like new. A feather-bed can be treated in the satne manner. If the tick needs washing scrub It with warm soap-suds* rinse well with dear water, and dry in thosiui. It is well to be suf* that the pillows and bed are perfectly free from moisture before putting them in use again.
After the tipper stories have been finished, the lower floor comes in lor its share of attention. The same plan—one or two tnsnta time, and each article cleaned it is taken from its placeshould be followed.
If the wood work Is of oiled wood it wilt need no cleaning except rubbing eS with olesr, cold water, or net haps with Unset". 1 11. it has been rr-'ced t»d varnisl. i, it be cleaned the *me way, and if the varnish is marred id scratched, it be restored io its
Mrmer |uean Ml mixed together, ana rubbrd in kHh a silk or wolien cloth. IA very good "»h for furn flu re la itiai parts of awr oil, turpentine and Inegar mixed together, and applied [ith a sponge or woolen etoth. II there t* any reason to saspect thai
good look* !v applying turpen Ttl UnswHl-oil,« itJparts of «*et»,
Hits have made inroads In upho)»:*red Irnitnre, it should be sprinkled with nxlno. Tbe toenails Is put in a small .tiering put, such as ta used for sprink1 ig house plan Is. and the upholstered I rt of tbe furniture thoroughly satiitwl with the fluid. It does not spot
tbe most delicate silk, the unpleasant odor passes off after an hour or two in tbe air, and it will completely exterminate tbe moths.
After tbe moths have been attended to tbe part of the furniture may be polished mahogany furniture. To take stains out of mahogany tables use spirits of salts and salt of lemons, six parts of toe former to one of tbe latter mix, and put a few drops on the stsins, thsn rub until the stain is removed.
Hangings of all kinds, from a shallow lambrequin to a sweeping portiere, should she take down at the spring cleaning, well dusted, aired, and, if there are any signs of moths, sprinkled with benzine.
If the ceilings are not frescoed, and are to be whitewashed, it should be done while the carpets are up and tbe curtains down. Smoke stains can be cleaned off of ceilings by washing them with water in which common washing soda has bten dissolved. If theceiling iscracked, or small pieces of plaster have fallen out, it can be made smooth again bv filling tbe places with plaster of Paris mixed with water.
Although tbe cellar comes last, it should receive the most careful attention/ All tbe vegetables remaining in the vegetable cellar should be sorted over, the refuse carted off, and the rest
Einsin
ut baskets. Apple and vegetable* ought always to be made moveable, and should now be taken out, scrubbed with soap and water, and left out in the sun for several days. Hanging shelves and cupboards should ilrst be scrubbed witb soap, and then he washed off witb lime water, and the ceiling and walla whitewashed with a wash made of lime and water to insure a thorough purifying-
A WOMAN'S OPINION OF WOMrt
EN
I "House Talk" in Peoria Call. I distrust a woman who fails to find pleasure in the society of her own sex. There are two kinds of women of this class one, silly, pretty and inordinately fond of compliments, the other intelligent, frequently brilliant, who considers her fellow-women intellectually incapable of affording her any companionship. Such women dislike women because they have never tried to cultivate their friendship. There are many women who read little, because of family cares, but they are not, in consequence, either stupid or indifferent. A woman of this kind will frequently surprise yon with the great variety and extent of information sbe has picked up by listeningand remembering. I frankly admit that my greatest pleasure is reading, and that every moment of leisure is employed in this way. But some of my most valued women friends are women who make no pretentions to cultivation and seldom read at all. Yet they are never dull and are never uninteresting. Furthermore, when a woman is iti trouble or in the need of wise couusel and good advice, sbe will find no truer friend than a kind, generous and intelligent woman. I have known many good and intelligent men. But I would not exchange the friendship of my women friends for theirs. I prefer the esteem and good opinion of women above all Pise.
The woman denominated "fast" finds nothing congenial in tbe ways of women whose hearts are in their homes and whose minds are busy in the care of husband, children, brothers and sisters. They love the conversation of men, even when flavored with indelicacy, late supper safter the theater, ana the surreptitious cigarrette. They are prominent at tbe theater or the races, surrounded, not by women, but gay, vivacious and coquettish, the center of a circle of men. Such women are frequently not in tho loast bad, but are professedly indifferent to their own sex. A few, fortunately a very few, are occasionally carried beyond tbe bounds of propriety. Beginning without thought of wrong, intoxicated by flattery that proves their undoing, they go down into that ds.rk vortex from which no woman returns with untarnished virtue and unblemished reputation, I owever she may repent. Even though sbe may believe she is in no special danger, and in no need of any safeguard, no woman can afford to separate herself from her own sex, avowing herself the companion and friend of men alono. Sbe who does not have the confidence of women bas not the respect of men or the regard that is worth having. However much they may profess to-admire her, they would not select her as a companion for wife, mother, daughter or sister.
CHARLES HEADSTiS TOMBSTONE. The following inscription will be placed on Charles Reade's tombstone. It was written by himself:
Hero Lie,
By the Side of his Belovml Friend, the Mor t&l Bemttins of CHARLES READE,
Dramatist, Novelist and Journalist. His InsVWords to Mankind arc on this Stone. "I hope for a resurrection, not from any power in nature, but from the will of the Lord God Omnipotent, who made nature and me. He created man out of nothing, which nature could not. He can restore man from the dust, which nature cannot. And I hope for holiness and happiness in a future life, not for anything I have said or done in this body, bat from the merits and mediation of Jems Christ. He has promised His intercession to all who seek it, and He will not break His word that intercession, once granted, cannot be rejected for he is God. and bis merits infinite a man's sins are but human and infinite.
Him that come!h to me, I will in no wise cast out." "If any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ tbe Righteous, and he is tbe propitiation for our sins."
1
It ICR mens nisei PES. The Globe-Democrat says: Commodore VanderblU'a retipe for making millions with certain tyand celerity was never to sign a note William E. Dodge would not hold any pecuniary interest in an enterprise thai was at all active on Sunday, and he firmly believed that all his wealth was a reward for conscientiously observing the sabbath (toy the first John Jacob Aster's voodoo charm lay in Investing In nothing aside from his regular badness except in real estate and Alexander T. Stewart would have anticipated misfortune if he had broken only the smallest personal en-
PolUh U»# toaKgtton' Tc«th
With SOZO DON'T, and when they grow up tb«ir months will be garnished with sound and handsome ones. Tbe foundation of many a toothache la laid in childhood by ttegta*, and it la very important to the well-bring of either child or adult that the teeth should he well taken care of. Bad teeth are no fit masticators of the food, and (need dys-
penria. Make them white and strong, thereto** with SOZC Uve of supreme asm Dae It without delay. "S-6w~
with SOZODONT, a preserveexcellence and purity.
WHIRLPOOLS.
HOW THE MEMBERS WIFE'S CHANGE AFTER THEY GO TO WASHINGTON. -v
It is amusing to see how many "Mrs. Proudies" there are in Washington. And it is—not—amusing to see how many nice little wives, and good, plain mothers are spoiled by a taste of gayety in our republican capital. One member's wife, when sbe came here, a few months ago, was really homesick for her little village. But after the cards came in to her, and she began to realize that sbe was the wife of a member of Congress, what airs the country mite took on herself! Ladies whose claim to distinction rested upon the innate refinement and intelligence, and not upon the accidental position of their husbands, were passed unnoticed save by tbe faintest ami tingless inclination and the grade of rank of a lady's husband could nave been told by a looker-on by the warmth or coolness with which the wife of anew member welcomed them. The change in the toilet of the lady was marked. Her eyes eagerly ran over the dresses of her acquaintance. From a modest lady in a plain black silk and smooth brown locks she bunt into the less distingue style of light satin and bare shouldeis, and pyramid-shaped head with the surrounding thatch of frizzes which hide the broad, beautiful brow, and makes every woman look like an idiot, The lady nojv trips to her hired cab every day, and gives her orders to the coachman with aa icy, faultfinding tone, which she, poor soul, does not know indicates her newness to the luxury of a hired team aud livery. Her days area round -of ceaseless, meaningless toadyism her nights wild revels, where neither sense nor comfort ever show their plain,' old-fashioned faces. This woman, before hes husband's election, would nave sat up with her neighbor's sick child. Sbe would have made its tiny grave clothes and put flowers in its dead hands, the while her eyes were misty with sympathy. But now she is spoiled for everything. She will fly her round, fritter away her day, drop out of life, and not a ripple on the tide of fashionable society will show where she has gone down. The wheels of folly roll round forever here. There are half-naked women crushed in the cram with semi-respectable people, men and women. There are champagne, and punch, and lobsters, and flowers ruined toilets, lost tempers—and, finally, disappointment and remorse.
AVOID FARM MOR TO A OES. A writer in an exchange hits the nail squarely on the head in advising farmers not to mortgage their farms, as follows: "Money at seven percent, will double in ten years if tbe interest is kept invested. If the farmer carries a mortgage of say ?5,000 for thirty years, it will cost him about 935,000 for the use of the $5,000. This enormous figure, obtained by computing interest at seven per cent, on theamouuts paid, lag no .more than a fair estimate of the cost of such a mortgage, for the farmer can always invest bis money in something that will doubtless yield him seven per cent.
Therefore:—I. Do not mortgage the farm unless it seems absolutely necessary. But, as a general rule, it is less valuable than a particular one, it may bo well to specify by adding 2. Do not mortgage to build a fine house. By so doing you will have to pay money for an investment that does not bring money. 3. Do not mortgage the farm to buy more land. Where there is absolute certainty that more can be made out of tho laud than the cost of the mortgage, this rule might not apply. But absolute certainty is rare, mistaken calculation common. 4. Do not mortgage tbe farm unless you aresureof the continu ed fwrtility of the soil. Many persons borrow with tbe expectation of re pi ment baswl
OH
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MATT,
BO
that bis heart doth safely trust in her, knowing that "she will do him good and not evil all the days of her life," "strength and honor in her clothing, wisdom in her month, and "in her tongue the law of kindness," with the beautiful hands that are stretched «ut to the poor and reached forth to the needy whose works praise her in the gates, so that her husband, also, who is known in the gates and sitteth among the elders of the land, he praiseth her, because he knows that he owes nine-tenths of hta success to such a wife. "Favoris deceit fnl and beauty is vain," but the brighter qualities of womanhood are fadeless, and are even "as the shining light that sblneth more and more unto tho perfect day." ___
A STOR OF A POCKET. Norrlstown Herald. Afire broke out in a dwelling house the other night, and after tbe man and his wife had safely reached the street the latter said that there was $50 in the pocket ol her dress, hanging in a second story back room. "ill go for it," said the husband, and he plunued into the bnrning buMding.
The flames raged furiously, and the man did not return. At the expiration of an hour the fire was extinguished and tbe black building caved. Firemen groped their way up the mu stairs through water ana blinding smoke, and fonnd the man In the closet still fumbling at his wife's dress, looking for the
He was nearly suffocated with smoke, but had strength enongh to say that he thought he would have found the pocket inside two hours. It never occurred to htm to seise the drees and rush out with that. Some men get so excited and nervous In time of fire.
NcrrwirasTAKOnce much has been said about the importance of a bloodpurifying medicine, it may by puesible that tbe matter has never seriously claimed yonr attention. Think qf it novel If, by the use of few bottles of Ayer's SaTMpanila you avoid the evils of scrofula, and thansmit a healthy constitution to yonr offtpring, thank the suggestion.
THIS IS MT MOTHER. The following touching incident, related in BUrlington Hawkeye,illustrates both the tenderness of the German heart and familiar lines of Coleridge:
A mother is a mother still,
5 sn.p holiest tiling alive. We were at a railroad junction one night, says the writer, waiting a few hours for a train, in tbe waiting room in the only rocking chair, trying to talk a brown-eyed boy to sleep, who talks a great deal when he wants to keep awake.
Presently a freight train arrived, and a beautiful little old woman came in escorted by a great big German.
They talked in Germau, he giving her evidently lots of information about the route sbe was going, and telling her abbut her tickets ana her baggage cheek, and occasionally patting her on tbe arm.
At first our United States baby, who did not understand German, was tickled to hear them talk, and he snickered at the peculiar sound ef the language that was being spoken.
The great Dig man put his hand up to the good lady's cheek, and said something encouraging, and a great big tear came to her eye, and she looked as happy as a queen.
The little brown eyes of the boy opened pretty big, and bis face sobered down from its laugh, and he said,— "Papa, it is his mother!"
We knew it was, but how should a four-year-old sleepy baby, that couldn't understand German, tell that the lady was tbe big man's mother, and we asked him how he knew, and he said— "Oh, tbe big man was so kind to her."
The big man bustled out, we gave the rocking chair to the little mother, and presently the man came in with a bagre man, and to him he spoke English
gage man, and to him he spoke English He talked of horse trading, buying and selling and everything that showed he was a live business man, ready for any speculation, from buying a yearling colt to the crop of hops and oarley, ana that his life was a busy
Jo talked of horse trading, buying
one,
and at times
full of hard work, disappointment, hard roads. But with all this hurry and excitement he was kind to his mother, and we loved him just a little,
When, after a few minutes' talk about business, he said, "You must excuse me, I must go in the depot and see If my mother wants anything," we felt like taking his fat, red hand and kiss ing it.
Oh! tbe love of the mother is the same in any language, and it is good in all languages. "This is my mother, and she does not speak English. Sbe is going to Iowa, and I have got to go back on the next train, but I want you to attend to her baggage and see her on the right train, the rear car, with a good seat near the center, and tell the conductor she's my mother." "And here is a dollar tdr you, and I will do ad much for your mother .some time."
Tbe baggage man grasped the dollar with one nand, grasped tbe big man's hand with the other, and looked at the little German with ati expression that showed that be bad a mother, too, and we almost know the old lady was well treated.
Then we put the sleeping mind-reader on a bench and went out on the|platforrn and got acquainted with tho .big German
BY
au experience of tbe
land's virginity only, which on failing may leave tbe land less productive, and ilia means of repayment thus be remov ed. In this way trouble begins which may result in the loss of the farm. Keep very clear of mortgages.
TBE HOME A NO EL.
A man, »aya Robert J. Burdette, is among men all day long, hears politics, club stories, slang of the street, boot black repartee, and junior clerk smartness, the ways and sayings and doings of men until be wearies of it all, and when he comes home iu tbe evening he wants to see a home angel, with homelight in her face and lovelight in her eyes, deliciously womanly in dress and manner, with a voice as soft as tbe war of the street is harsh: a voice that is made for coaxing and petting: a facc that is dimpled and beautiful browed,
land oi at sea, out on the prairie, dr in tbe crowded city, Ayer's Cathartic Pills are tbe best for purgative purposes, everywhere alike convenient, officious, and'safe. For sluggish bowels, torpid liver, indigestion, baa breath, flatulency, and §Jck headache they area sure remedy.
DESPERATE CRUELTY. Philadelphia Call. Mary—Yes, I have loft my last place. Sarah—An' what did you lave for Mary—The mistress was too hardhearted. Sbe had no more sensibilities than a ox."
Sarah—-An'did she abuse you, dearie? Mary—Indade she did that. Sarah—An' what did sbe do? Mary—She put an allarutn clock right in my "room, an' in tbe mornings it made such a noise I could not slap an otheiTwink. .,,
"DON'T CARE A DAM." The Pittsburg Dispatch says: A work entitled "A Cursory History of Swear ing" has just beau issued in London According to its scholarly and intelligent author when a man says "I don't care a dam," be is not swearing at all, but merely quoting the duke of Wellington, who invented the expression, introduced its use. It appears that there used to be a coin in India, of infinitesimal value, called "dam," and that is what the man "doesn't care." So, too, according to the author of tbe book, the phrase "don't care a curse," a milder form of the iron duke's oath, but merely the equivalent of "don't careacress," the word "curse" being an old form of "cress."
IT IS NO WONDER
that soixiany people sink into untimely graves when we consider how they neglect their health. They have a disordered Liver, deranged Bowels, Constipation, Piles or diseased Kidneys, bntthey let it go and think they "will get over it." It grows worse, other and more serious complications follow and soon it is too late to save them. If «ucb people would take Kidney-Wort it would preserve their lives. It acts upon the most important organs purifying the blood and cleansing the system, removes and prevents these disorders and promotes health.
SAVE
your cold tea it is excellent for
cleaning grained wood.
To Match that Bonnet! Feathers, .ibbons, veivet can all ba colored to match that new hat by using tbe Diamond Dyes, 10c. for any color at tbe druggists. Wells, Richardson A Co., Burlington. Vt.
CHKOWIC CATARBH.—I
have
BUFFERED
for years from Chronic Catarrh. Six weeks ago I wss induced to try Ely's Cream Balm. Belief was instantaneous, and continued use bas resulted in an almost complete cure.—S. M. GstKXi, Book-keeper, Steamboat Co., Catakill, N. Y.
PAIS from indigestion, and
taking one of Carter's Little Liver Pills mediately after dinner. Dont fgnjet this. 10-41
WHOLESALE
Candy Manufactory
—AND—
BAKERY.
A. B. Mewbinney & Go. ••Mk Mb T»w Hssle, (si
OrMfes LCTIWI.
PRESIDEDTIAL FAVORITES.
SOME INTERESTING FACTS CONCERING THE MEN WHO STAND CLOSEST TO THE CHIEF
EXECUTIVE.
Visitors who, from curiosity or business, have called at the White House, must have been impressed by the courteous yet systematic manner with which they were received and escourted through the mansion. The gentlemen whose duty it is to receive all persons coming to tbe White House are Colonel E. S. Denmore, Mr. John T. Rickardand Mr. T. F. Pendel, aud they have occupied their present positions through the various administrations einoa and durittg tbe war. Mr. Pendel wis President Lincoln's body-guard saw him to his carriage the fatal night on which be visited Ford's theater, and now has in bis possession the blood-stained coat which Mr. Lincoin wore on that memorable occasion. There is not a public man in America to-day who does not know, and who is not known bj, these gentlemen, and the reminiscences of public and social life which they can recount would fill' a congressional volume. During the weary yet exciting years of the war through the more peaceful times of Grant's administration while Hayes held the reins of government, and when Garfield was shot, it was these men who stood in the executive mansion, welcsming the adveut of each new administration, bowing at its departure, and receiving both martyrs through its portals.
During that long, hot and never to be forgotton summer when President Garfield lay between "two worlds," the nation became aware of the deadly malarial influence which hung about the White House. But all through that period these three men never deserted their posts for a single day, although each one was suffering intensely. In conversation with the writer, Colonel Densmore said: "It is impossible to describe the tortures I bave undergone. To be compelled to smile and treat the thousands of visitors who come here daily with courtesy when one is in the greatest agony requires a tremendous effort. All that summer I had terrible headaches, beart-burn and a stifling sensation that sometimes took away my breath. My appetite was uncertain and I felt severe pains in the small of my back. I was under the doctor's care witb strict instructions not to go out of the house but I remained on duty nevertheless. You would be surprised at tbe amount of quinine I took on some days it was as much as sixteen grains." "And was Mr. Rickard badly off, too?' "I should think be was. Why, time and again we have picked him up and laid him on the mantel, hero in the vestibule, he was so used up." "Yes," exclaimed Mr. Rickard, "I was so weak I could not rise after lying down without help, and could only walk with the aid of two canes, and then in a stooping position. Oh, wo have been in a pretty bad condition, here, all of us." "And yet you are all the embodiment of health." said tbe writer, as he looked at the three bright and vigorous men before him. "Oh, yes," said Mr. Rickard, "we have not known what sickness was for more than a year." "Gave you some secret way of overcoming malaria and its attendant horrors?" "I think we have a most certain way," replied Colonel Densmore, "but it is no secret. You see, about two yeare agof iny wife began to grow blind, and I was alarmed at her condition. She finally became so sbe could not tell whether a person were white or black at a distance of ten feet. One of her lady friends advised her to trjr a certain treatment that had done wonders for her, and to make a long story sbflrt, she did so and was completely cured. This induced mo to try tbe same means for my own restoration and as soon as I found it was doing me good I recommended it to my associates and we have all been cured right here in tbe stronghold of malaria and kept in perfect health ever since by means of Warner's Safe Cure, Now I am not a believer in medicines in general, but I do not hesitate to say that I am satisfied I should have died of Bright's disease of the kidneys before this had it not been for this wonderful remedy. Indeed, I use it as a household medicine and give it to my children whenever they have any ailments." "Yes," exclaimed Mr. Pendel, "I use it in my family all the while and have found it the most efficient remedy we have ever employed. I koow of very many public men who are using It today and they are speaking well of it." "I weigh 160 pounds to-day," said Mr. Rickard, "and when my physicians told me over a year ago I oould not hope to recover I weighed 122 pounds. Under such influences you cannot wonder that I consider this tbe best medicine before tbe American people."
The above statements from these gentlemen need no comments. They are voluntary and outspoken expressions from sources which ore the highest In tbe land. Were there the sliebtest qu jetton regarding their authenticity they would not be made public, but as thoy furnished such valuable truths for all who are suffering, we unhesitatingly publish them for the good of all.
^CONSUMPTION CCBEK5 An old physician,, retired from practice, having haa placed io his hands by an Eut India missionary the formula of a simple vegetable remedy for the permanent core of
iuveand radical core lor nervous ueuimjand all nervour complaints, after having tested its wonderful curative powers !n thousands of cases, hasfeltlthlsduty to make it known to his suffering fellow*. Actuated by this motive and a desire to relieve human suflferi wbod
IIIU) 1UUU TV «Mi» ifltertn*, I will send free of charge, to all who demre it, this receipt, in German, French or KngHib, with foil directions for preparing and oslng. Bent by mail by addressing with •tamp, (naming this paper.) W. A. NOYES,
Power's Block, Rochester, N. Y. (eow.) FITS: All Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day* me, Marvelo"* cares. Treatise and 12. trial bottle tree to Fit cases. 8end to Dr. Kline, 931 Arch Street. Philadelphia, Pa.
mnm
was its present proprietors, and is the reMilt of experiments, hasea oa many years experience as Pba r-, maeisia. It !s wholly different from a 11 other I KeMmdou ever) tuea for these trouble* being perfectly hnrinlV*: tiid agreeab er, of-: firing in tbos* re»pee&* a marfct-cf, runtnet to the danger*)a* and
"FEVER
harmful llqokl*, njtsffi and ouster*
I Ixiwc pointer*. Apply bp the flutter tato tb* nortrela. 8e»d for circular, fifcentsatdrngK. ».
PSALMS
[REVXSBD.]
Hear this, all ye people, and give eat all ye invalids of the world, Hop Bitters will make you well.aod to rejoice. 2. It shall cure all the people and put' sickne&s and suffered ttnder foot. 3. Be thou not a/raid when your family is sick, or you had Bright's disease or Liver Complaint, for Hop Bitters: will cure you. 4. Both low and high, rioh and poor know the value of Hop Bitters for Dilious, nervous and Rheumatic complaints, 5. Cleanse me with Hop Bitters and I shall 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 at year ago was I cured, by Hop Bitters, 8. He that keepeth his bones from ach- ?. ing 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 remove them all. 10. What woman is there, feeble and sick from female complaints, who desiieth not health aud useth Hop Bitters and is made welli 11. Let not neglect to use Hop Bitters bring on serious Kidney and Liver com- *, plaints. 12. Keep thy tongue from being furder, thy blood pure, and thy stomoch from indigestion by using Hog Bitters. 13. All my pains and aches aud dis-,. ease go like chtff before the wind when uso ilop Bitters. 14. Mark tho map who was nearly dead and given up by tbe doctors after using Hop Bitters aud becometh well. |5. Cease from worrying about nervousness, geueral debility, and urluary trouble, for Hop Bitters will restore you.
A l\ I RT 92
wet
RheumaMum, Nmiralfrf*. 6fttn OtneiwM, DI#
KAHE6
of I ho HTOUACH,
/iimF sid
Wm
W
THB0HIYTEDB
IRON
rroNid
Will pnrilV tlie BL( late the LIVER anal Hid
RE8TOUS TUB ___—. wd VIGOR of YOUTH. I, pepsla, Want of Appettte, Indigestion, Lack, of Strength,... and Tired Feeling absolutely cured. Bones, muscles ana uervos reoelvo nowforc«L £Uilivens tho mind ana
g—SfEgmTT* supplies Brain Power.
Snffcringfrom complaints
ICO
peculiar to tlielr eex will
Sad to DB. HARTEB'B XBON TONIO a safe and speedy cure. Gives a clear, healUiy oomploxion. Freauent attempts at counterfeiting only acid to tho popularity of the original. JDo not oxperl-, men
the
ORIGINAL
AJIDBBST.
Send your address to Tho Pnnart^rMedjOp.l St. Lonla, Mo., for onr "D«oui ,Full of etranae and uMfaUafo
BOOK, itlon,
!Oo.\
XK.»f
SSrri
if
No. 4-*5h OHIO STREET,
TF.RRE-HAUTE, INDI4N4. (Established 187 B.) Z'of all Dteeaseoftho Mye, Etr, Head,Xo*
Throat, Lut qb and all Chronic Disease*, Especially CHRONIC DIABASES of Womsa ss Children Plutula, I'llen, i.umn,('»ncerB1 Oplta
ei'LEKN,
HEART
diieMc* of tltfl Ktdii«x* »IK1LlVIiK, Bladder, and all lh«
(".PDlto-Orlti-rr
Stneta. Al.L 8ERVOU8 D*8*
EA8EM: Paral) is or bt. Vl.'u* £ance, Ept* l«p*r, Catalepsy,
.-3Cliireu
.'ItuKUJ.A iu all
It*
forma,
AH c*mm
itt
aad all
th«)»p not •iiwcMfiillv treutod lr the "au«y 2'hysiclui" and Itefot untie* of 41 kiudf, *na jn»trumeu!i iurnhrfteii. JSi ECTMICTTYand SCZ.JLCTJIIC BA TUA
Agao, lcmb Ague or Chlllt
Krrer, Fistula, Plloo, Pleor* aud Fiuurst
vt vna AjHt
£turt
iiiiuafr ur osiu IIMWIUSI* W*
Spermatorrhea or dlxean^s peculiar io Mei ind Yvoths. Operation* for Pterygium. Strabiainu* or Croao Kyest Artificial Pupil, Opium Habit, Titpp Worm*, Mvtywela, V*ritoa«l#, Hernia or Rupture, Kpilvrwr or rtU. OM Sore 1/fgH,
Old Sere* /auywhera upon the body/ llba*
matlsm. Acute or Chronic, OoaorrlMsa, Syphilis tsf Chancroids.
Bright's Disease ul BUIoas CoUe, St*
Consultation HTM and invited. Addrsss witb stamp.
A HOME DRUGGIST
TESTIFIES.
Popularity at home to not always the beet test of merit, bat we point moadly to the foot that no other medicine
HM
won for itself
sneh universal approbation in its own city, State, and country, and among all people, aa
Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
The following letter from one of oar test 1 HifMCOfl interest
osetts Druggists should be of:
to every soflerer:— "Eight years ago bad an attack ol
RHEUMATISM. .»«.
vere that I could not move from the bed, or drew, without help. I tried several remedies without nrach if any relief, until I took Area's
SABSAPASIJXA,
by the use of two
bottles of which I was completely Have sold large quantities of roar
SAMA-eared.
PAKILLA, and It still retains 41* wonderful popularity. The many notable ewes it has effected ta this vldnit eooTinee me that It is the best blood medicine ever offered to the Mblle. E. F. HASSU."
Wra St, Backland, Mass., May 13,1882.
SILT RHEUM
DHL I IlllUUIfli Carpet Corporation, was for over twenty years before his removal to Lowell afflicted with Salt Rheutn in Its wont form. Its ulcerations actually covered more than half the surface of his body and fimba. He was entirely cored by A VEH'S SARSAPAKJLLA. See eertifleate In Ayer's Almanac for 1463. ruxrxtxD
BT
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mast.
Sold by all Druggists •!, si* bottles for
