Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 15, Number 46, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 9 May 1885 — Page 7
SlSl
J# a Wife Gardenw." [Indiana Farmer.]
Thar# is eeooomy in a woman makiag a -drudga oak of herself by doing all the work for a large family when help oan be secured at a nominal price and paid for oat of tiu surptas which bar efforts can produce in the garden and in addition to this it require* little extra labor to enable her to build op a crrtnii book account of ber own and still ban jimpia time to "store ber mind with useful knowledge read the news of the day, and be a rorppnT^w for her haflbaiit and a couai««lor for her children."
We know whereof we speak. 8ix years ago we located at Brookside. Ill health compelled us to give up all laborious kinds of indoor work. Rxercise in the open air being reccauoendad as the olily remedy for restoring health, and not being content te play tfaa droDe, we chose the garden for onr field of labor. We scarcely had sufficient strength to lift either spade or hoe, much lees use th*w: but onee fairly started in the business, found our spare time pleasantly and profitably employed in planning and performing ths lighter work always necessary to be done in the garden. Finding a ready market for our surplus, we soon discovered that the garden ceuld be made the most profitable part of the farm. The help of an extra was proffered us when needed. Our boundaries were gradually extended, nH through the natural drift and force of rfrriimfftaaens we soon found ourselves a full-fledged "wife gardener." The plat we now devote to the growing of vegetables and Email fruits for home consumption and village embraces an area of five acros. We have just finished transplanting 10,000 early oabbag# plants, and do not feel half as tired and worn out as we would have been bad we been engaged in getting out the week's washing. We keep strict account of all reoedpts and expenditures, and know just what the profit* are and where they come in. With an abundanoe of vegetables laid by for home use the groosi*s bill is greatly diminished, and this forms no inoohaiderable part of the profits. Any industrious farmer's wife, with necessary help, can do as well as we have done, if she lives close to market and if so far away that it is not convenient to grow and sell green vegetables, it can be made equally profitable to grow such aa are marketed in a dry state—such crops as Lima and navy beans, onions, onion sets, and potatoes. As many as 20 of the leading periodicals of the day are regular visitors at our home, and we find plenty of time during the week to road and digest the greater part of them all.
Two Homes.
Do you see the two farm-houses belowf You may behold the counterpart of them in a drive of three miles any day in any part of the country. Look at this:
RLOVKMLT PANFBIL'S HOTJ81. See the tumble-down, distressed look an everything. This Is the habitation of the kind at farmer who qpends rainy days in the corner grocery. The pig-pan and the wood pile are in th« fieut yard, only our space is not large enough to show them. He loses half hie lambs every year for want of proper shelter. Hti chickens roost anywhere and everywhere, and freeee their toes off in white* because they never had a hen house. His harrews, plows sad oiher farm implements stay out in the weather year after year, and ret and rust. Be loses by sheer waste every year oseagh to dress himself and his wife and children handsomely. But he has not had a whale new suit of clothes since he was married. With his long hair, his oid coat, dingy skin and tobacco dripping jaws, he himself looks for all the world like tfee picture of his house.
There is not a flower or a blade of grass about the mansion. The nasty swill barrel stands by the door year after year. There are grease stains under the window aud the roof leaks. His scythe stays just where you see it, in the old apple tree, from one summer to the next He never has time to mend fence or a broken door, or put a floor in bis stable. His cows—poor things—stand all drnwn up in A heap outdoors in the freezing sleet of winter. His family don't have milk or butter to use in winter, because somehow 'pears like the cows dry up. Pork and hominy is their steady diet. But this samp agriculturist baa time to spend all election day in town, attend every snip in the county and Mast his ."bin* and spin yarns by the hour and spit on the stove at the post office. This style of farmer "never hud no luck."
IfKAT FARMER'S HOI'S*.
Look now on this picture. It is just the same house, you perceive. Old Tumbledown Bunks, who used to own it, got so poor he mortgaged it and it had to go. Young Spruce Early bought it—a healthy and ambitious fanner, not long married. In one yearfi time be and his bright, energetic wife made the difference yon see in it They have not much live stock as yet, but what they hava is sheltered and well cared for. Toots an gathered up and put into ths workshop. Whatever would rust or rot in the weather is under shelter. Spruce ha* a neat buggy and a haodausne boras to take his pretty wife to church. Both wear good clothes, she has a convenient Utile chkkeo house. Kbt has saved enough from her cows and poultry in a year to boy ber a nice carpet and pay far getting tha walk and driveway around tha house dug and graveled. All unsightly cb)e«taar» p«t away. Ths ynrd tecoTtrcdwitfciafttgrasafrasa. There aw fiowtf led* a&d ftewariag stocks. Tfcsjr have planted hard wssi tarsal trass and planted evergreens la tMr Itay have
set eut a fine young orchard of choice fruit trees. Their children will carry with them always the remembrance of a refined, tasteful, happy home, with a father and mother whom nobody need be ashamed of It takes work and habits of neatness and common "gumption" to have a home like this, but it pays.
Wheat
fcooks better in general than it did twe week? age, but there will not be a full crop. Added to tiiis, the price was so low the past season that not as large an acreage as usual was planted. These facta, with the war be tween England and Russia, if there is one, will send wheat up booming in the next f«w months.
The Ohio Agricultural station has bean making some experiments with wheat the past year that will be of interest the country over. The director, Mr. Laseaby, tried thick and t-h'" sowing, in quantities of from one peck te seven pecks to the acre. He found little difference in the yield in consequence. A yield of 41.9 bushels to the acre was got from afield where three pecks to the acre were sown. The next yield, 39.8 bushels, came from sowing five pecks to the acre.
Prof. Lazenby also experimented in fertilisers He obtained 63 bushel* of wheat from an acre of ground on which 300 pounds of sulphate of ammonia had been put. Seed sown in the latter part of September and first part of October gave the best yields. Many interesting experiments with different kinds of fertilizers were made, with results so contradictory and puzzling as to lead to the wise conclusion that nobody knows just what is the best manure for wheat. A oneacre plot which was given five bushels of spit one year produced 89}^ bushels. Next year'16 tons of cow manure*were plowed into the Same field, and it gave 57 bushels. The varieties of wheat that weigh the heaviest to the bushel are as follows, with weight of each: Bennett and Nigger, 63 pounds each Rocky Mountain, Tasmanian, McGees' White, 62 pounds Velvet Chaff, 62.5 Finley and Egyptian, 61 Mediterranean. Treadwell, Valley and Theiss, 61.5 each.
Experiments were made with 118 varieties. Among the hardiest were found the Clipper, Bennett, Brady Club, Michigan Amber, Nigger and Yellow Missouri.
Cream Setting.
The following are the results of investigations made by Prof. Ford as to the effects of the ord.nary methods of cream setting in England as reported in the Agricultural Gazette: 1. Shaking of the milk before setting is detrimental to a rapid separation of the cream. Of two samples of milk, one being shaken before sot aside, the latter required eight hours to separate seven per cent, of cream, the time required by the other to separate the same quantity being only three hours. 2. Premature cooling of the milk before setting is more serious in its effect upon a thorough separation than the first mentioned point. When milk conveyed to a creamery in a common vehicle by centrifugal separation gave 100 pounds of butter, a sample of milk of tho same quantity and quality conveyed in the same manner, and set in ice water, gavo 00.8 pounds, while another sample, that had been cooled, transported as before, and then set in ice water, gave only 87.9 pounds.
As a general rule, Prof. Ford found that the yield of butter grew less the lower the temperature of the milk before setting. When milk set in ice water directly after milking gave 100 pounds, milk that had been previously cooled to 68 deg. gave95.7 pounds, 54 deg. gave 91 pounds, 48 deg. gave 86,3 pounds. A means of restoring the original qualities of such mttfr was found in warming the milk to about 104 deg. before setting.
Law on felling Live Steele.
The National Live Stock Journal has some observations on the subject of the liability of the seller in the purchase of horses, cattle, etc. Among them are the following:
If cme says his animal is sound, when it is not, and knowing that it is subject to any of those diseases that are not, at all times, and, to a careful observer, fully apparent, and that it is balky, or breachy, or vicious, the purchaser may likewise avoid the contract on the ground of fraud. Farther than this, if the animal possesses any defects that would be matters material to the purchaser, which ho, with ordinary care and judgment, can not perceive, these too must be disclosed, or the contract is null and void.
If one is selling you an animal which he knows to bo unfit for the use intended, according to your avowed purposes, he cannot enforce the contract unless the defects were open to your observation, for the law binds him to discloso hidden defects which made the animal unsuitable to your express purposes. What an English Groom Said to a Yankee
Hostler.
When ahorse comes in all wet with perspiration you let him stand in the stable and dry with all the dirt on. In England we take the horn as he comes in from a drive and sprinkle blood-warm water all over him, from his head to his feet. Then we scrape him down and blanket him, rubbing his legs and face dry. Thus, in an hour he is clean and dry and ready to take a good feed, while with your way he will stand and swelter for hours, and finally dry sticky and dirty. Our horses never founder and never take cold. We never use a currycomb. You scratch your horses too hard. The only care necessary is to have the water not very cold, then bathe them instantly, while you are rubbing their legs.
Tilings To Do and To Know. Do hot plow wet land. Do not pasture a meadow in the spring. •Bo not ipiv wood ashes, with animal manures.
Do not keep a cow that cannot produce more than 200 pounds of butter a year. Every state should haTe its agricultural experiment farm.
Oats will make poultry poor and pack in their crops, it is said. The Banana apple is a sweet winter apple that is highly recommended.
A writer in The Rural New Yorker recommends a driveway to ths top of the barn. It saves back-aching hay pitching.
Theoows usually called Alderney are properly named Jersey. It is Jersey, not Alderney whence the improved breed of cattle wen brought mostly.
A Kansas school teacher distributed flower eeeds to her pupils and offered a prise to the one that produced the finest specimens. That was a school mistreat 4trth having. It is a pity there are not more lito her. Such teachers would make hosts of young florists and orchardists.
Mr. Warner, of Middktown, Hanry county, Ind., raised, over 40 years ago, a seedling pear tree that never blights. Tha fruit is excellent and the tree teaprofusp bearer. 1% sprouts abundantly and has stocked tha orchards of that part of the country. What is its taml
Mtnnesiita fanner circumvents the cut worms by building bore ft* wrene to nest ia in his garden. HaSoys a pair ef wreos wttk
Ml of yoaag wffl pen? aa insect of kind totwfr fmm 4ntf Hmm to tow dawa to dart, nad tiw cat
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..
A Morning Glory House.
St Nicholas for May has pictures and description of one the prettiest play-houses children ever- had. A brother and aster made it together. The girl was 13 years old, the toy 11 After the house was all finished and the vines covered it, the structure looked Hlr« this:
HOUSE FINISHED.
It was covered with morning glories, pink, white and purple and red, and was a most beautiful sight. The morning glories should be quite half of them white, so as to give ths house a bright look. Of mornings, with all the flower trumpets expanded, the sun shining upon them, and the leaves glistening with dew, the mansion looked like a real fairy palace. If, after seeing this picture and reading how the palace was made, our young people do not go at once off and make a morning glory house for themselves, then they are not half as nice as we think they are, that is all.
The house is made of balls of string, tacks, and hooked pieces of twig, cut and sharpened as you see at a in the illustration below.
THE FRAME.
First sow your morning glory seed in a hot bed, or in a plot of rich soil in the open ground, so that they will come up and be ready to transplant. The house may have several connecting rooms, shaped round, or with square corners, as you wish. The one in the first picture has two rooms, a round one and a four-cornered one. The second picture shows how the framework is made. While the morning glory seeds are sprouting to make your weather boarding, erect youi frame. Select a very strong, firm tree brandh, above a man's head from the ground. Dc not make the house too near the trunk, foi then your vines will not get sunshine enough. Select a point upon the branch, and drive two large tacks close together. This is the top peak of the structure. Directly beneatb draw a large circle upon the ground, with circumference as large as you wish the floor of your house to be. Then get about a hundred of the sharpened wooden pegs, as shown at a. These are to peg the string down to the ground. Lay pebbles around upon the circle, six inches apart, leaving space wide enough to enter where you intend the dooi to be, as at c. The pebbles are markers. At every pebble put a peg and string. The ground wherein the plants are to be set must be thoroughly pulverized and enriched. Begin now at the top of the peak, b, upon the limb of the tree, and tie the string around between the tacks. Pass it down to the ground and twine it under and around the sharpened twig. Pass it up again to the tree branch, each time giving it a twist around itself to~niake it stronger. Go on in this way till you have finished the circle. Some cross strings should be tied firmly at intervals in large diamonds around the upright strings to keep the heavy weight of vines from sliding, down when there is a wind. Now all is ready. Transplant your young morning glories carefully. Set them out in the evening, after the sun is off, or in the morning before sunrise, and water when you plant them. They will soon reward your labor tenfold by growing into a thing of beauty. For a window in the house, separate the vines as they grow, and turn them to this side or that, leaving either a round hole or a diamondshaped space, as you wish.
One thing is to be remembered, and here, perhaps, is a lesson in botany which you do not all know. Climbing vines will not twine both ways, from right to left or left to right, indiscriminately. Some go one way, others another, but each has its own way of turning its head, and you cannot make it turn about Tho morning glory travels from left to right and around as it climbs, recollect Try tc make (me go the other way, and see how it will dodge you. If a plant dies replace it with another.
A Young Politician.
A little boy and girl playing in tne yard. The girl finds an apple under the tree, and with an exclamation of delight begins to bite it "Hold CM," said the boy. "Throw it away. The colwy is comin', and if you eat that apple you will be took sick, an' you can't talk, an' the doctor will come an1 give you some bad medicine, an1 then you'll die." The girl throws the apple down, and the boy, snatching it up, begins to eat it "Don't," the girl cries. "Wont it kill oo, toof1
No," said the boy, munching tho fruit, "it wont kill boys. It's only after little girls. Boys don't have colwy."
Whipping Children.
Col. Ingersoll says: "If ever any of you are going to whip your chfldron again have your photograph taken in the act. Let it show your red, vulgar face, and let it show the dimpled face of your child. And if that child should die 1 cannot think of a sweeter way to spend an autumn afternoon than to go out into the country, and, sitting down cpou the little mound, to look at the photo* graph. 'If your child has got to get up early in the morning it is Just as easy to waken him with a kiss as with a dub."
Hare is a vary good riddle. Who caa it! I have a mouth that nsver drinks, 11 have a soul tfeat never thinks,
7
I bare abed and ha v« a toe, But have no feet oo which to Tel many a ode a day I hn i, asnetfcaeoacsrpet, feea«» arereL
TERRB HAUTE SAJTURDAY EVENING MAIL
GENETAL GRANT.
Is the Old Hero Dying Because of Medical Intolerance,
The American Homa&opathist has an article on the treatment of General Grant
by
Bays:
the Allopaths, in which it
"General Washington was murdered by his medical attendants but at least they were heroically—too heroically endeavoring to extinguish the disease. Their brutality was of the active sort, and in purpose commendable, though disastrous in result. General Garfield was maltreated for months under an error of diagnosis, and at last escaped beyond the reach of his eminent torturers. Here, also, there was u*ucb medical heroism and activity displayed, albeit misdirected. Other illustrious patients have suffered from eminence in the profession but General Grant seems reserved as a shining example of coldblooded expectancy. To him the little group of eminence have nothing to offer but a diagnosis. For him they propose no relief but in the grave. Ignoring the anly source of therapeutic salvation, they gather round his bedside to observe bis unaided struggle. The fiat has gone forth that nothing can be done and nothing will be permitted to be done. Those who question such a decision are quacks and cranks but who ought not to be proudsuch a designation from such a source? Scholarly, refined, cultured, earnest gentlemen as they are, of wtsat avail are all these good qualities in the presence of such therapeutic bankruptcy? On the contrary, while so-call-ed scientific medicine is to the fore, well may the daily papers announce in startling headlines, 'A bad day fcr General Grant—Seven doctors in consultation."
Yes, the hero of Appomattox is dying! He wbo knew no fear in war, knows no fear in suffering. His quiet fortitude wins universal admiration.
President Lincoln, in visiting a hospital during the late war, noticed a poor Confederate boy, mortally wounded. With his native tenderness he put his arms around bis neck in sympathy. The sight melted the hospital to tears.
The heart of the American people in like manner bleeds for Grant, the Bilent sufferer. It would have him get well, by any effective means
His physicians say he can not recover. They fill him with anodynes but despite their favorable bulletins he is daily growing worse.
A specialist who baa won reputation in the treatment of cancer visits his bedde. The opposition he encounters from the attending physicians brings painfully to mind the story of the dog in the manger.
And General Grant, perhaps, must die because of th's intolerance! Is it possible that there is no hope of cure outside of the medical profession?
Preposterous! For years medical men insisted that certain fevers were incurable, but Chincona proved the contrary. For centuries they have protested that certain renal disorders were incurable and yet a special preparation has cured at.d permanently cured the very worst cases.
Why may it not be possible in likp manner to cure a case of cancer? B. F. Larrabee, of Boston, was doomed to death by many eminent Boston physicians. J. B. Henion, M. D., of Roches ter, N. Y., was given up by the best doc tors of all schools. Elder J. S. Prescott of Cleveland, Ohio, was gravely informed by tbem that he could not live, and yet these men and thousands like tbem have been cured and cured permanently, of serious kidney disorders, by a remedy not officially known to the code.
What has been done may be done again. General Anson Stager died of Bright'? disease in Chicago last week. "Joe" Goes, the Boston pugilist, died of it. Hundreds of thousands of people perish of it ever^ year, while in their doctor's hands. cause of death may be oalled blood poiBoning, paralysis, heard disease, convulsions, apoplexy, pneumonia, or some other common ailment, but the real difficulty is in the kidneys. Physicians know it but they conceal the fact from their patients, realizing their inability to cure by any "authorized" means. The remedy that cured Larrabee and Henion and Prescott (i. e., Warner's safe cure) is a special, independent discovery. Its record entitles it to recognition, and it gets it from intelligent people. Its manufacturers have an unsullied reputation and are intltled to as great consideration as any school of physicians.
Professor R. A. Gunn, M. D., Dean of the United States Medical College of New York City, rises above professional prejudice and on its personally proved merits along gives it several pages of the war-nest commendation in his published works—the only instance on record of a high professional endorsement of such a preparation.
The tfnprejudiced people do not want General Grant to die. If there is in all nature or anywhere in the world a remedy or a man able to cure his cancer, give them a chance.
Will they do it?
No.
v,
(,
Why? Is it not too often the case that many excellent physicians who are greatly devoted to the code, would prefer that their patients should die rather than that they should recover health by the use of any remedy not recognized under their code
tzr
Wabash Scratch and Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford# Sanitary Lotion. Use no other this never fails. Sold by Buntin A Armstrong, druggists, Terre Haute'
OH! MY BACK
Bray strata or cold attacks that weak bade aad aearlr prostrates
Scrofula for SO Years.
For children who are weak, subject to colds, especially those inclined to catarrh, or for any skin eruption, I consider it infalliblo. I wish it was in my power to do justice to this wonderful medicine. It has done so much for me, I feel I can never repay my debt of gratitude.
A LADY OF ATHXNS.
I certify that the above was wiitten by a lady whom I have known for years— of high social position, and one whose statements merit a careful consideration. C. W. Lane, Athens, Ga., Feb. 20,1885.
Tetter for Twenty Tears, ft" I have suffered with tetter on hands for over twenty years. It made its appearance every winter, and was exceedingly annoying. At times I was incapable of doing my household work. I tried every remedy that was suggested and was treated by physicians, but to no avail. About six months ago I was induced to try Swift's Specific, and have taken six bottles. It has entirely cured me, there have been no signs of return of the disease apparent. My general health has been greatly improved. As a tonic and blood purifier S. S. S. has no superior.
MRS. M. J. SWAKN, Jackson, Ga. July 15,1884. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC, CO., if'-if* 'l&A Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.
I WAS TBOUBLBD with Chronic Catarrh and gathering in my head, was very deaf at times, had discharges from my ears, and was unable to breathe through my nose. Before the second bottle of Elv's Cream Balm was exhausted I was cured, and to-day enjoy sound health.— C. J. CORBIN, 923 Chestnut St., Field Manager, Philadelphia Pub. House, Pa. ,d\ See adv't.
Do as You Please
When you please to do right and you will always do the proper thing in taking Dr. Bigelow's Positive Cure for coughs, colds and all throat and lung diseases. Pleasant to take and cure speedy. Trial bottle free at Gullck & Co's. 3 ?•r
Cancer Cured.
Wm. Black, Abigdon, Iowa, was cured of cancer in the eye by Dr. Jones' Red lover Tonic, which cures all blood disorders and all diseases of the stomach, liver and kidneys. The best tonic and apetizer known. Price 50 cents, at Gulick & Co's. 8 y*
Griggs'Glycerine 8alvs.
The great wonder heeler has no equal for cuts, bruises, scalds, burns, wonndp and all other sores will positively cure piles, frost bites, tetter and all skin eruptions. Satisfaction or money refunded. 25 cents. Get the best of Gullck AOo. tf.
**The Best In the World.
rr!j.'W. Hamilton, of Merrillon, Wis., says, 1 have sold Warner's White Wine Tar Syrun for years. It is the best cough medicine in the world and has no equal for asti ma
f.
H/Bf FEVER
jroa.
BROW*5,
THE
BEST TONIC
ike KUCIM,
the Serves,
the Blao*,
Gives Hew Vigor.
h—«Imun a in praetfo*, I fcond WMWfrbWM •IjMd fa an
OenatM taa trade mart and gw*ed ve<am wimmm. Kkeaeaacr. Sriidrw BMV OftnCU)
Idkaas*] Mw&l
lAI/raMNM, Dt
5
YOUNG MEN!—READ THIS. THE VOLTAIC BKLT CO., of Mai shall. Mich., offer to send their celebrate 1 ELECTRO-VOLTAIC BELT and other ELECTRIC APPLIANCES OP trial for thirty days, to men (young or old) afflicted with nervous debility, loss of vitality and manhood, and all kindred troubles. Also for rheumatism, neuralgia, paralysis, and many other diseases. Complete restoration to health, vigor and manhood guaranteed. No risk is incurre as thirty days trial is allowed. Writ them at once for illustrated pamphlet free. jaS-ly.
NIXED STATES MARSHAL'S SALE.
By virtue of a writ of execution to mo directed from tho Circuit Court of the United States, for the District of Indiana, in a easr wherein First National (tank, Danville, 1111 nois is Plaintiff and William Collett, et. al., are Defendants. I will on Monday, the 18th day of May, 1885, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m., at the door of the Court House in the City of Terre Haute, VJgo Uounty, Indiana, expose at public sale to the highest bidder, the rents and profit* for a term not exceeding seven years, of the followinR described Real Estate in Vigo County, Indiana:—Lots No. four (4) and five (5) in Block ten (10) of Tuell A usher's subdivision of part of southeast quarter of Bee
rste Penn. If
such rents and profits will not sell for a sum sufficient to pay Judgment, interests, and costs, on said execution, I will at the same time and place, offer for sale in like manner the fee simple of said Real Estate, or so much thereof as may be necessary. Said sale to be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws.
ROBT. a FOSTER, United States Marshal.
McDonald, Butler A Mason, Attorneys for Plaintiff.
nu
ZEIiY'S
rf Cream Balm, Cleanses the Head. Allays Incarnation. Heals the Sores. Restores the Senses of Taste A Smell .4. qnlck and positive Core. SOets it Druggists. 00 ets by mail registered. Bend tor circular. Sample
Vi
USA.
ly mail 10-cents. ELY BROTHERS, Drogfsts, Owego, N. Y.
-t
sissssii
The Mirror
is no flatterer. Would you make it tell a sweeter tale?
Magnolia Balm is the charm-
er that almost looking-glass.
-V
I Advertising Cheats!!! "It has become common to begin an art ele, in an elegant, interesting style. "Then run it into some advertisement tha
1 have had a most distressing case of inherited scrofula for the last thirty years, which has been under treatment. of many of our best known physicians! we avoid all such, without any visible effect, but was re- I «And simply call attention to the merits lieved by the use of Swift's Specific. I jjop Bitters in as plain, honest terms as possure if any one will give this medicine a patient, faitbiul trial it will give them the same relief, for my case was regarded almost hopeless by many. Of course it would not take the same time or quantity for a young person or the disease in either stages. Even if it did not positively cure (which is almost impossible in oases of inherited affliction,) it will give you renewed strength, flesh vitality, even although reduced to a "confirmed invalid" as was my condition.
sible, "To induoe people "To give them one trial, which so prove* their value that they will never use anything else. '•pie Remedy so favorably noticed in all the papers,
Religious and pecutar, is "Having a large sale, and. Is supplanting all other medicines. "There is no denying the virtues of the Hop plant, and the proprietors of Hop Bitters have shown great shrewdness and ability "In compounding a medicine whose virtues are so palplable to every one's observation."
Did She DleT
o! .* "She lingered and sufllared along, pining away all the time for years, "The doetors doing her no good "And at last was cured by this Hop Bitters the papers say so much abont," "Indeed! Indeed! "How thankful we should be for that medicine
A Daughter' Misery.
"Eleven years our daughter suffered on a bed of misery, "From a complication of kidney, liver, rheumatic trouble and Nervous debility,
Under the care of the best physicians, Who gave her disease various names, "But no relief, "And now she is restored to us in goad health by as simp'e remedy as Hop Bitten that we had shunned for yean before using it."—The Parents.
Father Is Getting Well.
"My daughters say: "How much better father is since he used Hop Bitters." "He is getting well after his long suffering from a disease declared inourable." "And we are so glad that he used your Bitter."—A Lady of Utica, N. Y.
WNone genuine without bunch of green Hops on the white label. Hhnn all tise vile, poisonous stuff with "Hop" or "Hopi" in their name.
No. 415} OHIO STREET,
TERRE HAUTE, INDIJJN^.
l'
(BMHUM 3B1S.)
v* if Tor all IHsceueefthe JBy, Mar, Head, Wit
Throat, Lun§» and all Chronl* 2Wnitii% CHRONIC DIUASBS ON* CMIdrtn rtrtnl*, Pilea, LeaM,Oaoe«r«, Ukblt. KhcnmatUm, NcnrsMa, ffltf BASES of the STOMACH, LIVKB, fl of lb* KhliMTt wd BltMr. the 0*ntt»-Urlm»irr System. ALL SASSS: Parilrtte, Chora* M, VHl itpay, CaUl«|»r, SOSOrtJLA la all Ml thoM SIMMM not eewewhillr tra* PkyiMu" lad DeforiatttM «f Ml kM farcbfced. ELSCTMICITTand MZJKCTMIC BJLTMM
•Bds
All MMJ Of A|«», Mk AfM ••4 rmr, Ftotult, HlM, vtoeti M4
of ths lactam, Lvfw, ael Omm. mm* Bktm •MM, HATL* PWMM IMHHF, TRMHM Ulcer* «f tha 0*rn«a,WMk tU S«ra |n, »t Ik* By*. Bar,
ION,
Tkrat «r Sk|a flMtna
SptrmatwrrMM wt 4t«M»« pacmllar t« Ilea aad T« Oaarattoaa te Pterygium, StriBI—i «r Or«M
•right's Disease sad Bittern* Cell*, Its. Gaaaaltaltoa tree aa4 lavtM L4dr«M villi
GRATEFUL—COMFORTING.
EPPS'S COCOA
BREAKFAST.
"By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of dlffeetion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many a heavy doctors' bills. It is by the Judicious UKOOI rach articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to rest* every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle meladlu are floating around us ready te attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with mire blood ana a properly nourished frame."—[Civil Service
Made*simply with boiling water or milk. Bold only in half pound tins by grocers, labeled thus: JAMBS EPtS CO.. Homoeopathic Chemists, London, Kng.<p></p>CONSUMPTION:
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jQANVILLE ROUTE.
Chicago and Eastern Illi- ^. nois Kailroad.
Tf
Short and Direct Route
Chicago, Milwaukee, Madison, Green Boy, 1 Minneapolis, Ht. Paul, '1 Cedar Kapids, Omaha And al! points in the North and Northwest
THREE TRA*IN8 DAILY
Between Terre Haute and Chicago arriving in time to make close connections wltb trains on all roads diverging. sar Woodruff Palace and Sleeping Coaches on all night trains.
Tourists Guides giving a description of Use various Humme* Resorts will be furnMbdS upon application to R. A. CAMPBELL, GenlAgt. 824 Main St. Terre Haute, Ind.
a
cheats the
WM. HILL, G. P. A. Chicago, I ha.
GAGG,
PBAT.TO I*
______
R.
XTVI
ARTISTS SUPPLIES,
PICTURES, FRAM&S, MOULDINGS.
Pietnr Yamee Made to Order.
McKeen'* Block, Ho. 646 Malo stroei between 6th and 7th. V* 1 -if* ay t% w*-'
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