Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 15, Number 31, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 January 1885 — Page 7

£.

5

THE MAID

A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

MAKING WAX BEAUTIES.

An Art In Which Monde Serves In the Place of Genius—Imitating: the Faces of '.f,% Popular Actresses. *f ',' Small revolving tables In some of the' show windows in Fourteenth street* .serve to attract crowds of well-dressed women all day. long. After a look at the table each spectator ip to glance at a mirror at one sidfe fte win-,

show the lates^ fijtyle o^jiej dresser.

1

..

"Those figures are all imported," said Mr. Paul 3e Spotte, who was formerly engaged in the business "Paris once had the fead in manufacturing them, but of late Vienna takes the front both in quality of work and in low prices. London has one factory, and a few are made in Berlin, but fell© work there is not first-class. The leaders strive always to get up something: new in form and feature to present the face of a favorite actress, for instance, and that is expensive." "It must require an artist to make the faces." "An artist of muscle chiefly." They are cast in claj molds. Sometimes a popular actress wjll consent to have a plaster cast of her head and shoulders taken. More frequently the cast is taken from some sweet face in the morgue, and sometimes a model is made by hand. The important thing is to get a pretty face, an attractive form, and that particular indescribable pose which characterizes the milliner model. From the cast a model is made, and then the mold is made from tjhat. When it is ready it is three feet high and very heavy. The caster stands six or eight molds, well oiled, in a row on a table in a cool ro6m or out of doors. Handy by is a big tank of boiling watch within which is suspended a kettle of melted wax. The caster pours a dipperful of

the melted wax into tho mold, which ho then revolves, and turns so that the wax as it cools forms a sheet an eighth of an inoh thick all over th^ inside. As it Hardens he goes on to the next mold. By the time he gets throiigh the row the first is ready for another coat The inner coats are made1 of cheap wax. Japanese wax is used to advantage. Paraffine and terra alba aro put into the wax to harden it if the figure is for a warm climate. Inside of all-is placed muslin saturated with stiff wax, to give tho figure strength. After the cast is made the figure is washed with benzine ©r turpentine. ^4 "Then tho eye-sockets are cut and glass eyes are put in. This is a very particular job. The customer woiula not buy a bust of Mary Anderson, even, if tho wax Mary were cross-eyed. After that tho hair is arrangod. For this A

noedlc is taken and the head ground -off uhtil tho eye forms a fork. Ahandle •7? as big as a lead-pencil is put over the tH point Big needles making forks big enough to hold six or sevon hairs are used In those parts not exposod to the eye. The hair is oombod out and laid with tho onds in layers on the wax, and the operator punches the fork down on the ends of the hair, carrying it tirmly into tho wax. A sweep of the thumbnail smooths the wax over and sets the hair, but ground the edges sc^all iieedles

•lw»

.„-rr.

Are used, and ono hair is stet ad altime. "Next the eyebrows aro put in. This is a still more dolicato operation, and requires rfice judgment in the selection of the right length and thickness of the hair as woll as the proper shade. Then the long, drooping oyelashes are arranged, and given the proper curve. The oporator works in a room heated up to 90 degrees. Finally the figure must be made up with carmine and dismuth powder. A stubby camels' hair brush rubs in tho color. Tho coloring is a delicate job, becauso tho color must be in accord with tho style of beauty, whethor blonde or brunette. Last of all, dolicato blue veins are marked on tho forehead, and then thel gurc is sent to tho hairdresser, who makes up the style of hair." v,, "What do the figures eostP" "A wholesale N«w Yo importer of millinery buys the ordinary figure in

rork

Sun.

makes up

4

Paris for $40, but if it has very ligjht hair ho pays $45. It is packed for him by putting tissuo paper over the face, then layers of cotton-baiting, and then brown paper. This bundle is thon placed in the iniadle of a bundle of hay, which has a strong bo\ around it The freight to New York is about $7 foreaoh ngure. About one out of sit is broken on the way. Whon the figure gets here the custom-house man steps in and says, •Th wax figure 8 hair it it is not hair, at least hair

Is the component material

of chief value, and tho wholo figure is dutiable at 86 per cent ad valorem.' "After pay ng tho duty and allowing for the rislc of breakage, the nguros sell here at retail for from $75 to $100. If they have arms for full-dress figures they cost $125. Twenty years ago they cost double that amount. They are an expensive article for a show dindow. The tempo ature of the window must be looked after so that they don't melt. The light of tb fiules the colors so that thev must bo touched up once a month or ao^ If one cracks it can be repaired. Theti are two Italians in tho city who repair figures, but the cracks can never be wholly concealed. Some of the milliners repaint their own figures."—A etc

It is the old, old story: Love at first sight A walk in the beautiful moonlight night both catch a dreadful cold and gave up all hop®, but finally find w»U«jl to ac**tleof Dr. Ball Cough1 I Syrup, gtt married, and Me at last hap-

"A QOB-SRKT Is Oreatn Balm.*' 'Writs* :Mwu ML A* J*ek*©». ot Portwto&etuJ N on May 2*. 1881. I bad

Catarrh for three years I bad tried nearly all remedies but to no purpose. Two or thtree time* a wee* sw no* would bleed quite frealv and I thought the •ores In would never beat. Your on one bottle of HOOT'S [Kidney and Balm bascuted me. This preparation Liver] RKVKOT ar.d two bottles cured is ant a liquid or a annff, and is «uily me."—W. H. Blanchard, BoeUm ft applied. Pi toe 60 eenta. See advt, Lowell R. R.

THE LUCK OF LITERATURE. An Interesting Reminiscence of One of America's Humorists.

Speaking of O'Brien puts me in mind of Artemus Ward, We were ali intimate friends, but there has been so much invention and nonsense written about the latter that I almost tremble to say a word lest I may be put down among tfie fabulists. Especially an Englishman by the name of Hingston, trusting to his imagination for the facts, and having been the traveling agent of Artemus lor a while, got out a book, in which the main parts of the great humorist's life were omitted, while other

were pure

low end then put up her hand.to give Artemus'^debut into a touch to bef curls or bangs or back

prominence

iy imaginary to fill in.

jj

thi3 There was in

i860

rioted in this city by

two brothers, Stephens, called Vanity Jfatr, which braced up brilliantly for a while tinder literary and artistic genius, but1 finally flickered and was likely to expire. The editorship was offered to me, but I saw plainly I could do nothing with it. I said: "There are only two men in this country that can do any good. One is John 6. Saxe, and the other Artemus Ward." At that time I believed this to be his real name. "Saxe you can't have for he is about to run for governor of Vermont, so you'd better get hold of Mr. Ward as quickly as voucan." 5

My advice was heeded, and -I was nsked if I would write to Artemus and learn his views. I did so to Cleveland, O., and made him the distinct offer of coming to New York on a salary of $30 per week, and an increase on the success of the paper. He was prompt, arriving in New York almost as soon as his letter of acceptance. He afterward told me that he was getting but §10 per week on The Plain JJcaler, and assumed the editorial chair of Vanity Fair but salt could not save the paper, notwithstanding its genuine merit The American public does not want refined wit, though since that time they have been partially educated up to it they want broad humor and personal allusion.) Punch never did sell in this country, at*d if we want anything outside of a daily paper it must bo cheap and a great deal of it. Witness our so-called literary papers, eight large pages, running six continued stories, for 5 cents.

When Vanity Fair was sure to go down Artemus was very despondent. What should ho doP One day walking up Broadway I said to him, "Charley, why don't you lectureP" Why the idea was absurd. He could write,but he could not talk ho was not able to say ten lines on an emergency. I soon talked him out of that by telling him tjiat he could read his lecture or commit it to memory. That point settled, now what should be his subject? At that time.the canard of the Twenty-serenth street ghost was in full blast, and I suggested ghosts as a subject, knowing that whatever ho wrote he would make it funny, and before we parted it was agreed that he should write what he coula on this subject, and on the next evening come down to PfafTs, the noted Bohemian resort on Broadway above Bleecker •street, and read it to the party that assembled there every ,night.

This programme was carried out, and Artemus duly appeared with what he called "A Lecture About Ghosts," and read it amid uproarious approval, the main fun of which was that there was not a word in it about ghosts, and it was settled on all sides that it must brought before the public. But howP There was an actoirand occasional manager at that time playing general utility at Wallack's theater, the elder of the name, on Broadway,near Broome street, whose name wasDeWalden. I went to De Walden.whomI knew, and talked Artemus to him. He saw it and an introdOction followed. De Walden worked assiduously, and the entire press helped him. Everybody was the friend of Artemus, for a more genial, jovial, liberal man did not live. Alas! for himself, De N alden took Niblo's saloon, now the dining room of the Metropolitan, for one night, with the privilege of six. They ran the six nights, crammcd to the door, and I doubt if ever audience l&ugfaed before or since as they laughed that week. The financial result to Artemus was $1,280 and Artemus was jubilant From that hour his course was one of uninterrupted success, and lecture after lecture followed* each one greater than the preceding, and fortune flowed into the pocket of Artemus. —New York Graphic. —. ——1 tJF-

Whit tier and Holmes*

:f4|

Mr. Whitticr and Dr. Holmes are now our patriarchs of song. But it is in years only that they arc old. The later verses of Whitticr have the same unchanged quality and graphic simplicity and deep and catholic feeling, the same penetrating pathos and Now Kngland vigor, which have been always hist For hwf a century he has been a bard arousing patriotic and humane emotion, a minstrel cheering and soothing and charming with tender ballad ana romantic lyric. And hefcia the latest song of Holmes, tho ave of the beautiful illustrated volume, which happily reminds us how ever fresh ad familiar are the strains which it preludes, and which will go on echoing and singing themselves along the coming years.

These are the singors who still happily connect us with the great group of which they are parts. But it Is the especial glory of that' group, which contains toe Various senilis which first challenged the attention of the world, and satisfied it that at las# the Muses ha$ alightedi u|Ki|this tn«nUnent, that they j|re ps illustrious as c|tizens as the^ are TOnbWokft, a4 philosophers, historians, noV' ^i-. essayists, masters in science^ atftisoitolars. There is perhaps no similar group whose members were of such lofty and blameless life, so free from the common faults of men. of letters—of lives so regular, So ^ell-ordered and diligent, so free from every reproach.—Harper*$ Magazine for January.

ix a 4 S S

"For six years I h«d kidney disease with pain, la back andibtpe. TlUB^froVed

Siskin and Pinch^

Old, but Keep It Before the People. Henpeck him. Snarl at hirm Find fault with him. Keep an untidy house. Humor him half to death. Boss him out of his boots. Always have the last word. Be extra cross on wash day. Quarrel with him over trifles. Never have meals ready in time. Run 'bills without his knowledge. Vow vengeance on all his relations. Let him sew buttons on his shirts. Pay uo attention to household expenses. Give as much as he can earn in a month for a new bonnet. Tell him as plainly as possible that you married him for a living. Raise a row if he dares to' bow pleasantly to an old lady friend. Provide any sort of pickup meal for him when you do not expect strangers. Get anything the woman next door gets,whether you can afford it or not. Tell'Hhi the children inherit all their mean traits of character from his side of the family. Let .it out sometimes when you are vexed that you wish you had married some other fellow that you used to go with. Give him to understand as soon as possible after the honeymoon that kissing is well enough for spoony lovem, but that for married folks it is very silly.—Presbyterian Banner.

Nutritious food is essential as a means of restoring a consumptive to health. A mediciae that will strengthen the lunga and soothe all irritation is also neccassarv. Suoo a remedyJs. Jr. Wistar's Balsam of Wild Cherry that giyes complete satisfaction. It quickly cures coughs and colds. I

An Old White-House Servant,

Martin Rcnehen, one of the old-time employes of the white house, died at Washington lately at the age of 74, says the Cleveland Leader. He was fo^ twenty years emploved at the executive mansion, and this during the administrations of Jackson, Van Buren, Harrison, Tyler, and Polk. He knew all"of the great men of the days before '60, and there are numberless anecdotes of his witty repartees and his curious adventures floating about Washington. At one time it is said he found an old telescope in the attic of the white house, and brought it down upon the porch to look at the stars. It was during the Tyler administration. The President was entertaining the cabinet and other guests at dinner. Martin had mounted the telescope, but he could see no better than with the naked eye. After adjusting tho focus in every way he discovered that the old telescope had no glass in it, and was giving the telescope a good going over in very emphatic language when Daniel Webster, who had come out of the while house unobserved, and was watching Martin from ?ehind, said: "What is the matter, Martin? Can't you see anythingP"

Mr. Renehon turned around, somewhat embarrassed, but immediately replied: "Mr. Webster, I have been disappointed—I can't, as I wished, contemplate the heavenly bodies, but I am squally gratified in seeing an earthly luminary before me." At this Daniel Webster laughed, and going into the white house, told the company of the iompiiment he had received.

Wade Hamptoo^l Crow Story. „eneral Hampton tells*me that while on his Mississippi plantation he saw a tame crow that could laugh and talk. The bird would say "Hello," "How are you?" and several other things of like import. It was the most wonderful raven since the days of Barnaby Rudge and Edgar Po6. One morning a vast ritrtnber of crows assembled in & tree on the plantation and prepared for a powwow. The tame bird fiiw among them, and, rearing up, saltited the congregation with a brisk "Hello. How are ^ou?" His astonished brethren scattered in alarm, as if Ihei^ had been fired upon froffi a mountain howitzer. This marvelous fowl of the air was to have been taken to the New Orleans Exposition, bat its sudden disappearance prevented. General Hampton surmises that some negro shot him by mistake. —Cor. Augusta (?«.) Chronicle.

ifcc

*1 Would That I Went Dcrtdl cries many a wretched housewife to-day* g.«, weary and disheartened, loreee herself to perform ber daily task. "It don't seetn a« if could get through the.day. This dread ft:

fSERRE HAUiaC SATURDAY- EVUfrlNG i^A^L.

In his famous collecton Dr. Prim had a siskin and a Harts finch, and the for­|mint, mer was an unrelenting enemy of the latter. Hear the Doctor's account: "The siskin would chase the poor Hartz for a half hour at a time, fnghtening all the birds and making a tearful row. He understood scolding, and when I looked at him he would keep quiet The instant I moved away he would dart like a bullet through the air straight at the Hartz finch, and, unless the latter dodged him, he would have a bunch of feathere in his sharp little bill. One day, after two or three talks, I caught him and cut some wing feathers to impede his flight. He was quiet enough in my hand till I put him back, and the moment I opened my hand he stood np and went like a rifleball from my finger, and knocked the astonished Hartz finch off the perch. I caught him again and cut of so much of his wing feathers that he could not fly at all. He shook himself, tried his wings, and, finding something wrong, jumped up on the perches one by one till he was well up. Here he paused for a moment, and then caught sight of the Hartz finch on a perch about his own level and some five feet or more away. He forgot his faulty wings and leaped for his enemy. The force of the spring took him more than half way, but there were no wings to help him, and ho fell to the bottom with a thump. A more thoroughly abashed scamp never was seen. He picked himself up, looked at me and then at the birds around him. He was conquered, and poor Hartz had a rest for several weeks."—Golden Days.

I back-ache, these

frightful dragging-down sensations will kill roe! Is there no relief?" Yea, madam, there is. Dr. Pieres's "Favorite Prescription*'!* an unfailing remedy for the complaint* to which yonr «tz ii" liable. It will restore yon to health again. Try It. AH drnggiats^

Scientific Misoe\la»y.

Dr. J. C. Booth, of the United States states that the commoner metals of commerce have greatly improved in quality in/he last few years as a result of improvement in the work of purification. Much copper now averages 99 per cent, pure, while a large proportion of the silver from the mining regions contains 99 and aine-tenlhs per cent of the pure metal. Concerning the waste in working precious metals. Dr. Booth remarks that, while a loss of ten per cent, is tolerated in working iron in the fire, the' government hoids the mint responsible for a greater waste in working gold than one-tenth of one per cent, and the actual loss i§ psq^lly far less than this. ...

In the open air. mineral coal is liable to crumbling and often td spontaneous combustion. An Australian mining engineer, Wenzel Poech, has discovered a simple and inexpensive meaus of preventing loss from such sources, the plan consisting chiefly in treating the coal-pile with- steam for the exolusion of the air and securing a permanent retention of moisture. The theory is that the absorption of oxygen and other gases, for which the way is opened by the evaporation of the hydroscopic moisture, causes the deterioration of the coal, and this cannot happen if the coal is kept full of water.

The doctrine of the permanency of the ocean basins, about which geoloists disagree, is strongly supported by iv. O. Fisher, who refers to a suggestion which he made in 1882 to account for the origin of the vast depressions which the oceans fill. Acceptiug Prof. G. H. Darwin's theory that the moon broke away from the earth more than fifty million years ago, he thinks tho ocean basins may be the scar that was formed, and that the basement rocks of continents are fragments of the crust which had already solidified, and which were left behind.

gist Re\

It has been demonstrated by Dr. Hans Molisch that the roots of plants maybe deflected from their normal direction by exposure on one side to certain gases. If such gases aro in moderate quantities the roots bend away from their source if in larger quantities, toward- such source. The side of the root exposed to the action of the,gas grows mqre strongly than the other.

A German experimenter. Prof. E. Wollny, has found that soil covered with living herbage or dead -vegetable matter is colder in summer and warmer in winter than bare soil under otherwise similar conditions." The difference of temperature is greatest in summer and least in spring and autumn. Bare soil heats more quickly in the spring and cools more quickly In autumn than that covered with living or dead vegetable matter.

In a communication to the French Academy of Science, Mons. A. H. de Villeneuve has urged the importance of usipg*distilled water for drinking purposes, and has suggested that the cost ma^jr be greatly reduced by- using that obtainable from steam engines. He asserts that it is not unpalatable and' contains sufficient air, while the absence of lime salts is an advantage. jA Swedish naturalist, Dr. Wills, has investigated the strength of Various kinds of sea weed to resist strains, such as are catised by the swell Of the sea* He finds that seaweeds are very strong and elastic, th6 parts which ordinarily lie lowest in the water being capable of bearing the greatest strain. "The little living worms which have been most unexpectedly.discovered in ice are described by Prof. Leidy as being white or colorless, and' from onefourth to one-sixth of an inch long by one-seventy-fifth of an inch in thickness, the species being unknown.

The deep sea crustaces, according to Moseley, either have very large 'eyes or are eyeless, and there must be a source of light in the deep sea. That sourcc, he claims, is phosphorescence, but its light must be very aim. r'

^Prof

Perfumes Out of Style.

Perfumers and pharmacists are actively engaged in tho production of new perfumes. Hardly a day passes but what some new article of the kind is put on the market As they appear, names are given them which are as preposterous as they are amusing. One of the most recent manufactures of this class is called "Sea Spray.*1 It may be a perfect imitation of the odor of the white caps, or it may not but if it is, there is no doubt that a company organized to extract bergamot from the waters of tho bay would pay a handsome dividend. In spite of the continued manufactures, delicate perfumes, be it recorded, are much less regarded as an essential to the toilet to-day than for many years past In fact they are falling into disrepute. Lavender and Florida water and bay rum are extensively used at the bath, but beyond that all aromatics are look* ed upon with disfavor generally. "Some perfumes leave so rank an odor bfehfrM them after the essential oil has evaporated I wonder that the habit of using them has not fallen into disreputeloug ago,''said a Fifth avenue dispenser of the spicy and fragrant mixtures to a reporter for the Mail and Express. •«Go to the opera now, and odors of musk, rose, patchouli, jockey club, mignonette and other sweet-smelling saturates for the handkerchief ana clothing are remarkable for their absence. And well it is so, for if there is anything that will render the atmosphere of a large room unbearable, it is the combined, perfumes of the hundreds of extracts that always leave a remembrancer behind them." mm

TRIUMPH OFJSCIEXCK: Chemistry never achieved a more decided trumph than in the production of SOZODONT, which ia a botanical preparation, of wondrous efficacy in preserving and beautifying the teeth, ree* cuing them from decay, and rendering them as white as alabeater. It ia a toilet luxury of which all should avail themselves The unpleasant odor communicated to the breath by catarrh, bad teeth, etc., is «rtitely obviated by this fragrant and aalatary antiseptic of which one bottle lasts along time. Draggfeta and perfumers sell it. ... 8-4t,

A Subtle Poison. v.

There never, perhaps, was a period so frightfully productive of crimes of what may be called private poisoning, as distinguished from that which was practiced by public men and for more or less public ends, than the seventeenth century. This seems to have been chiefly owing to the fact that a knowledge of arsenic had thed become popular. The notorious "Naples water" employed and sold freely by the woman Toffana, or Tofania, was believed at the time to be a preparation of arsenic,1 and there was another preparation of the same deadly substance in use about the same time. Both these poisons were more virulent than arsenic, and one of them at least is said to have been prepared by means which modern science has only recently cotiio to understand.

Recent research,it is said, has proved that arsenic, when applied to organic matter such as tiesh, forms compounds of a character far more poisonous than arsenic itself. This is a singular fact that seems likely to present some curious developments, and it would seem to be not merely arsenic that may be intensified in its action this way. Dr Burdon Sanderson says tho medical officer of health for St Pancras, experimenting with the material taken from the abdominal cavity of a dog that had died from inflammation of the peritoneum, found that when injected into the abdominal cavity of another dog the virulence of the poison was rapidly increased, and that thus it was possible, by passing this poison through a nun*ber of dogs, to breed a poison \ybick was as intense as that of a snake. So, also, it is suspected by some that diphtheria will result from a simple sore throat, developing its true character after passing through successive individuals. k!'lit was by a knowledge of some law, which seems to be thus obscurely indicated, that acquetta di Perugia was produced, an the production of this .poison led to the forming of an association of young married women for the assassination of their husbands.' The "Naples \vaterf" however, was more extensively jused than this. It was as olear as water, and five or six drops would cause death, which, however, would not be immediate, and of which the best science of the day could give no explanation. The woman Toflana is said to have Confessed to 600 murders by its means,and is known to have used it with impunity ior half a century.1— London Globe.

Origin of the Habeas Corpus^#

,As

the public has been deeply interested in obtaining correct election returns, it may be jpentioned in this connection that Great Britain owes the habeas corpus to an adroit fraud. Tho reader must not suppose that I am advocating or excusing such things, my object being merely to mention a strange historic fact The privilege of habeas corpus is contained in tgna Chwrtft) .ifaL. operations had been nullified by royal authority, and this was one of the cartaes that led to the civil war in which Cromwell reached distinction. In 1674 the house of coromoris passed a bill fully defining the naiure and power of habeas corpus, but the house of lords opposed it, and yet it wa& eventually carried in the above mentioned manner. In the filial vote in that body the yeas were 67 aftd the nays 55—-in all 112 whereas the journal shows that the whole attendance at that time was not more than 109. The discrepancy is explained in the following manner: Lord Gray, who was one of the tellers, favored tne bill, and as a very corpulent nobleriiah voted, Gray exclaimed: "You Ought to pass for five.'' The other teller .did hat, (in the confusion of the moment) .notice this, and the fraud escaped detection. The bill to which humanity is st deeply indebted thus entered existence, and I need hardly add that the writ of habeas corpus as it exists in America is a close copy of the bill which was enacted in the above-mentioned manner.—New York Cor. Troy Times^

Barney Gallagher, who was clerk in the last Nevada State Senate, and has held several county offices in Elko, Nev. has gone crazy from cigarette smoking.

A Remarkable Escape. Mrs. Mary A. Dailey, of Tunkhannock, Pa., was afflicted for six years with Asthma and Bronchitis, during which time the best physicians could give no Teli#f. Her life was despaired of, until in last Oetober she procured a bottle of Dr. Kiug's New Discovery, when immediate relief was felt, and by continning its use for a short lime she was completely cured, gaining in flesh 50 lbs. in a few months. Free trial bottles of this certain cure Of all Throat and Lung Diseases at Cook A Bell's Drug Store. Large Bottles $1.00. -4-

These are feolld Fact*. The best blood purifier and system regulator ever placed within the reach of suffering humxuilty, truly Is Electric Sitters. Inactivity of the Liver, Biliousness, Jaundice, Constipation, Weak Kidney, or any disease of the urinary organs, or whoever requires an appetizer, tonic or mild stimulant, will always find Electric Bitters the best and only certain cure known. They act surely and quickly, every bottle guaranteed to give enire satisfaction or money refunded. Sold at fifty centsa bottle by Cook A Bell. (4)

Bnckleo'a Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts,Bral*es, Sons, Ulcer*, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and

LUnaCllvUt W wvuey ir« For sale by Cook A BelL

DR. W. W. CLARK'S Oil of Arnica cures catarrh, chilblains, rheumatic Estns, and is the best general purpose or onsebold liniment now in use. All know the valuable curative properties arnica. 4-3m.

Dr. Warrens Dyspeptic's Delight cures Iff rsnnri of dyspepsia out of 20. For sale by J. J. Baur A Son, and Cook & Bell, Terre Haute.

1

A CLKBGVMAN'S TOXGUE. Bev. R. Priert says: Tonaogcannot express the good th«t Warn«xS Wbiie Wiueof Tar Syrtip ha» done for me and my family. haw labored In the cswe fift en years, and have never found anything tha» wl I lelMve Ilorsen«ss smd_initauon of^ the Throat and Langs lika White Wine of Tar 8yro|».

ii-

ITTLfc

CURE

Bick BeadACbe and rcHera all the troubles tad*. dent to a bilious state of the system, each aa ... rlneSB, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after cattag" Paia to the Side, Ac.. While their moat rcmadi, 1 able Success has been shotni In caring f'

SICK

if|SI

Headache.yct Carter'sLittlc Liver Pills aro valuable la Constipation, .curing and preventing^ this annoying complaint, while they also corrtmtv' all disorders of the Btomach, Stimulate the ItarF' •nd rtgoiate the bowels. ISven if they only oored&

I4 rAtUTi

Ache they wotildbcalmostpricclcw to those suffer from this distressing complaint bat forte- .. siately their goodness does not end here, and tbow

ACHE

Isthebano of

PO

S

-i

many lives that here ia where we

make our great boast. Oar pills care it wttep others do not. Carter's Little liver PHIs aro very radian* •cry easy to take. One or two pills make a dose. They are strictly vegetable ana do not gTipe oc, parse, bat by their gentle action please all wao pee them, Jn vials a* 25 centsj five for$l* i)j druggists everywhere, or sent by CARTER MEDICINE CO., New Yorifc

Why call Cal'ett-' .diir's Liver BittenM^I": the Left Liver Btfr- ,, lers? Because tlw^S human liver isonr'

Cour

trade mark and|fiv left liver, see S each bottle,^.' 11 one 1 eip:r without It SK

Why use the man liver as trads*§t mark? Because^

BITTERS

Patented April 14,187*. iver bitters is specialty for Liver ix»mpalnts in all their*. •rtrmx. Beinig compounded from pure root'. Iiei ba, and oll peach, the great appetiser ofthenge. a favorite family tonic and a* warranted medicine. Liver bitters get at that, seat of all diseases by the diroot action, open-% 8 of

ing digestive organs the liver at the sitme^ on the kidneys, cleanses^ time acis direct the lungs, cures flea the blood and beautifies the skin. ASk vour druggists for them. Manufactured Barbero & Callendar, PeoriN, Ills. Sold Terre Haute by tne following drugglnlSk Adamson A Krttenstine, 6-11 Main ft •, Cook Bell, 801 Main Bt,, J. J. Baur A Son, 703 Maia^ C. F. Zimmerman, 1241 Main, C. C. Pop'ar, J. A. Willlson, 601 4tb, Allen H«vens, 500 lath. J. E. Borneo N. E. Osri 6th and Ohio.

cures brights of the kidneys, puri-§

Science of Life. Only $1.

BY MAIL POST-PAU*.

KNOW THYSELF.

iirsatliseicsi Hevk enSiWhq hood. -i' Exhausted Vitality, Nervous and PUjrfcial Debility, Premature Decline ini aa, Lrrorsof Youth, and the unto miseries iesuiting from indiscretions or exoesNes. Al ix ok for every man, young, middle-aged an£% old. It contslnsliffi prescriptionsf«r all anna at chronic diseases, each one of whi«* Vt invaluable. So found by the author, wbofi£ experience for 23 years Is such as probMtjP never before fell to the lot of any physician* 900 pages, bound in beautiful Frenchi musU*. embossed covers, full gi.t, guaranteed to be* finer work in every sense—mechanical, ary and professional—than any other wwlc sold in this country for #2.50, or the money will be refunded in every Instance. FIM only SI.00 by mail, ^tpaid. lllustiwMwe BHtnple cents. t»end now. Gold medal awarued the author by the National MedieaK Association, to the officers of which be fers

Tne Science of Lile should be read by, (be young for instruction, and by the afflicted toff relief? It will benefit all.-London lancet.

There is no member of society to whomthW book will not be useful, whether yoanfe parent, guardian, Instructor or clergyman.—. Argonant.

Cddrei W is'., who may be consulted on ail diseases requiring skill andexperience. ChratUa and obstinate ^i sea sen that 1| J} A 1 ha*e baffled the skill of all sicians a t-peclaltr.

RSKEDT

8H9.hTHYSELFphy­ff^AiothOTn

treated successfully without an instance of failure. Mention this ptr*

^THEOHLYTRUK

IRON

rroNic

ipeedy cure. Gives a cle*r, health

,4

WllljpariJ Utetl and kiiiiuiui end VIGOR of YOUTH. D*y pepsla. Want of Appetite, jf»* digestion, Lack of HtrenfJttu and Tired Feeling ab*Jlu««tf enred. Bones, masclesaiw nerves recelvo now forc%

Enlivens the mine

ting only .on'o^crt,

^DMAMBOOK.

ranooitod niMfol lalorma«oa.f

STOPPED FREE

Mmrptfut tucctn. Insane Persons HeitortC Dr.KLIKE8 OEBAT

*UB*Nerve ATKSctimv*ERVERESTORER***''•OHljrm**-Fifr,ms8/«I~NVBAfftctont. curt /tr Im/iLLitLi tl taken at directed., HFKJF Uliflnc

DiS8A#ftS.

Fm-AtjMa ofyout

which he will

HMioI soirn fellow-rone

St-.Sew

fsend

tax

cents for

receive reetacostIj* box of goods which will Vielp «1L of either ami .to more money rUfht away^thaa

anything ele in this wor'a. Fortunes the workers ab«olntelv sure. At once add.MM..awatt TRUE

A

CX)., Augtwta, Maine. »ly

rH^

COMPLEfEH 0 E. .. .. met,—Tie* illusliaUlw mW iiime low tgbt, doing ptiil|i(flS.

T4f^,Mir*

SH'CSWHB-.

Mt*

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W»t «*»^jft«illsapillMiaf M*o fiber *t»

FIOOD PN FSWIIIK n»ULINTSLXTE W rtw vi J. V. asCnrrty Co.* e»