Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 16, Number 6, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 August 1885 — Page 8

WOMAN AND HOME.

PRESS GLEANINGS FOR PEOPLE OF DOMESTIC DISPOSITION& "T

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An Old-fublaned Flower Garden—Making Up Fair Faoes—"Seeond Summer" Fatality—Better Than a "Slop-Hole"—

Advice to a Young Housekeeper.

[From Mr*. M. A- Denison's Prize Essay.] "By being systematic, finishing one thing at a time, you don't know bow quickly the whole thing is over. Never allow yourself to be idle and rest all you can. Is this a paradox? It simply moans, give thought to small thing*. Clean your silver sitting down—m*ke yourself as comfortable as possible—throw yourself on the lounge now and then, if only for two minuies at a time, and watch Hannah. Try to en -y what you see her do, and what you do yourself. Things will thu* fall easily into t-hape. Never leave the breakfast things standing.":

E-sie'u cheeks grew crinnon.

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often do," »he said "and get so interested in a book, or paper, or knitting, that 1 hardly have time to see about dinuer." "Essie, said I, "give me your ind." She gave it. "Promise mo on your sacred honor that jour will never laave the tablS standing, with uncleaned dishes, so long as you live." "I'll try," she said, laughing. "That you will clean a kettle, a plate, a saucer-pau, a goblet, a knife, a well, anything, just as soon as it is done wit'.)." "I ought to—and I will she added, firmly. "Then you will let me teach you bow to make good bread, and put all your energies In that accompli hment, as the true artist who contemplate* hi« canvas from day to day will do none but the best work—and ail for love!"

Elsie's eye* brightened. "You ceera to make a new and pleasant thing of it, aunty. For Ernest's sako, I will do all you wiy." "And for your own, too, dear. Eut there's a little more that you will have a sort of miniature house-cleaning every day, by thoroughly doing what you do—that you will have a place for everything, so that you could find your towels, tins, flour, nutmegs, spices, knives and forks, towols, •beets, pillow-case?, and everything else, in tho dark. My dear, if you do all this, your yearly house-cleaning will be done nlmott all the time. And above all, don't think anything too good for Ernest'* use. Let him lie on the red sofa in the parlor, if it is the most comfortable for him, and he enjoys it To this day 1 remember, anu my dear love died twenty years ago, how I would follow hira when he u-sed my best furniture. To be sure the contents were good-humorod, but I never look at my ample lounge in my parlor, but I can see him springing up, like one caught in a fault, when he heard my step or saw me coming. Remember this-, an I if Ernest dies, your teirs will be less bitter." "Oh! auntiel auntie I" and two round white arms were about my neck. She was sobbing on my shoulder.

Making Up Beautiful Fnoe*. [Chicago News.] "What are the most popular cosmeticspowders or liquids?" was asked a dealer in facial make-up* and preparations for the hair. "Dry powder is a necessary a junot to any dressing table," was the reply, "whether it belongs to a man or a woman. The very infants have need of it, and there are the daintiest little powder boxes and puffs Imaginable, expressly for their use. Perhaps I'm an extremist, but I think the woman who ignores dry powder ought to be banished from civilisation. Liquids are not used much now even for stage make-up. Their place is supplied by grease paints. These come in shales and for every kind of oomplexion. For evening and house makb-up they are the best kind, but necessarily the dust adheres to them on the iitreet, and a woman who left home with a fuoe lovely from a skillful blending of grease paint11* apt ti present a decidedly grimy countenance an hour or so afterward. Dry powder* and dry rouge are the most desirable for street use. "The lips, however, are better made up with grease rouge, which is in the form of a delicately scented salve, than with the dry preparation. If a full, sort of 'come-to-my-arnw-honey' mouth is desired, both lips sliould| be made up heavier in the middle than at the sides. If the style of mouth is to be of the half-poutihg, provoking, tantalising sort, the lower lip should be reddened the most, with tho greatest amount of paint in the middle. If the mouth is to indicate lovely serenity and offer no other especial enticement than ami ibllity, both liifc must be treated very delicately alike. If a saint is to be personified the faintest suggestion of color in tho middle is sufficient. If the mouth is to denote great tirmness of purpose and a severe turn of mind the upper lip must receive the greatest attention. It is even permissible in such a caw to leave the under lip without other tinting than that allotted by nature. "In rouging the cheeks the color stymld always be worked outwardly. The chin of a long slender face may be reddenod. but not that of a plump, round one. Color on the chin lortens and widens the appearance of the face. In the evething the cheeks can be colored brighter and nearer to the eyes than in daylight Reddening close to the eyes adds to their brilliancy in the gaslight" rseoond Summer" Fatality to Children. ltr, A. Jacobite Babyhood.}

The fault lies not with the Mcon summer, nor with the children, but with the heat and the parent*. The summer heat may in itself he dangerous. In conjunction with bad diet it tacomes freqn-^'r fafi\ It is an ettstilM fact that r. x•]/ r.!l mortality among children in *u«uner is caused by diseases of the ^'x^tive organs, and that all these fatal would 1» averted wrre these organs not to become diseased. Now the Sftcond *-i*nn*»r *TVe sr.T~.r:*r la which the artifi. r. !. of ..• ren has begun 6r is about to begin.

Rational artiAcini arnri-^wn* the proper one for children .: A er.v.tgh and whose organs have been sat'U- entiv )irep: for it With -Mt s: rad !n jtent care few cfei. ir*# r— s. vrfr rn stomach or bowel trouble* Sensible mother *7 -.vt dwr"!^ 7-. V»n t%:T t:: xw til" Cit, lo- Iteo Hence it fc* not the s»eond summer that kilis ll-..' *h« um*-.r-r. ,-r ^!*^-aos a Ti be eons f*v»tn the fact that the rule* for the prop- -itioa or "ren ar *ery rim|JU ea that not Obtemd on account ot their very simplicity.

My tovtnr, is sol to tome awdidw or about my views, 'tsot abottt pcp.i'ar ^(isos as it is and iboati ba N«s«. la ILs natur of the feed* or ci.ii iren the most pMi^larowi thincs are d«W)| t» sanctkmad by custom. la It* first pta^, every pcw^iM* food isadministeredt aatwraily the tittle creature •wallow* ever)-thing Mat is pat totolit "It Uhk» eo (Bii|r Ask eay

dispensary physician what answer ha receives to the stereotyped query in the caea of children suffering from bowel complaint, "What does the child get»to eatF "Any thing or "It eats at our table." I shall not dwell on particulars—colored candy, sour milk, fresh bread, sausage, coffee and tea, raw fruit." vegetables. Tho result, diarrheal diseases and death. And the cause of death! Of course, the second gammer.

An Old-Fashioned Flower Garden, IC'hicago News. I The old-fashioned flower garden with it* -1 of fragrant, straggling posies is seen no uiore except in some quiet country spot Th»re can ba found tbe tall, sweet-scented sj »gia with its blossoms like orange flu.. jra, golden lemon lilies del1 icato lave.i :«r and fawn-tinted fleurde4i«, the spicy cinnamon, and the faintly-tintel blush rows. The dama«k rwe, :i !i its leave* like velvet and it* yellow heart, invariably grows beside them.

By and by as tbe season advances, here and there in such a garden blue, white and pink larkspurs and many-colored, tall hollyhocks spring into bloom, and variegated "four-o'clocks" open their eyes each day at the appointel hour. Verbenas run belterskelter in this garden, the old-time, hardy, purple variety never ceasing to bloom till frost comes, and even after that often putting out more flowers.

TherO are great yellow marigolds, and little brown and gold ones. There is abed of "johnny-jump-ups" in some shady portion of this garden, bunches of "live-forever," of pungent "old-man," and thorny sweetbrier bushes. There are single petunias, heavy with perfume, growing sturdily even among tbe grass—for tbe petunia is a bohemian, and flourishes wherever it chances to find itsel rapidly degenerating from a state of double petaled, brilliaut-hued aristocracy to a single-leaved, plain, white flower, without a home. It will lift its head up among the rankest growing nettles to look the sun in the face.

The earth is carpeted in some places in in this garden with deep-green myrtle. "Bach-elor-buttons" grow wheresoever they will. On the edge of the garden the caraway and dill send up their stalk'. There is a place somewhere in *pje beds for the scarlet flowering bean and the morning glory. Even the wild cucumber vine is not scorned, and it twines itself along the fence. „:rv I ^Better Than a "Slop-Hole."

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[Cor. Phrenological Journal.]

I have observed all through life, that many neat and economical housekeeper*, who clean, and dust, and scour, and scrub the interior of the dwelling, from attic to basement, will have a filthy, unhealthful* and disease-breeding slop-hole near the back-door of the kitchen. They seem to think that there is no other way, as there must be some place to cast out the slops and dish-water. After tbe habit is once established, of stepping to the back-door to heave out every pound of slop and waste water, it is extremely difficult to adopt any other practice.

Our own practice has always been to keep the surroundings at the back-door just as neat and clean as the environments of the front door. When we commenced keeping house, mora tl*n forty years ago, in a small out-building of a farmstead, a large pail was placed beneath the waste-spout of the sink in the kitchen, to receive every drop of waute water. As often as once a day (or whenever the. pail was nearly full) the slop was carried, either to the garden and emptied around trees and vines, or where it would be dug into the soil

The little labor incident to such a daily task did not amount to any work worthy of mentioning. But our yard at the back-door was kept as neat and clean as a grassy lawn. More than this, soap suds, dishwater, and chamber-slops constitute excellent fertilising material for tbe soil. During hot weather we carry a pailful of slopwater to the garden, and with a hoe make a broad channel around a hill of corn, or any other plant, into which the slop-water is poured, and covered with soil.

Fresh earth is an excellent disinfectant The hungry soil will absorb every atom of material that will make plant food and the roots of growing plants will soon find whatever may be deposited within their reach. ______

Miss Cleveland on Drew Keform. INew York Cor. Chicago Herald.] Reform in woman's dress, I need scarcely tell you, is the hobby of a considerable number of brainy women. Soros is has been ridiculed, and yet it contains some of the brightest minds in New York. Tbe recent discussion of the subject by eminent men in tnagasine articles indicates that it has got beyond imperilment by laughter. A girl acquaintance of mine, desiring to obtain the views of the president's sister, Miss Rosa Elisabeth Cleveland, wrote to that taf|y of the White House beseeohing ber to write an article which might bs read at a forthcoming meeting of a literary club. 1 am permitted to copy some of the reply. Miss Cleveland said that she lacked the time to express herself fully on so important a subject and incidentally she intimated that a religious journal, in its eagerness to present something from her pen, bad attached tbe word "Washington" to a reprint of an old contribution, in order to oonvey the false impression that it was new work. As to reform in the costumes of her sex, she briefly wrote: "1 find in my mind one distinct conviction—that women should always drees becomingly that the law of beauty will finally be ascertained and will prevail And because the beautiful and the true tnd the good are interchangeable terms, neither you nor I need fear that, wben that goo tim« is reached, women will shoes the n-ttbetie tasta by immodest, extravagant or onheathful attire."

The Crect Card tor Ladle*

(Katharine B. Foote in Good Housekeeping.] Car ls are now always engraved in round «cript A married womanHi card is 2*^ by inches is of the most approve.! style. In tbe right hand corner is her address. If she has a .i -y she receives it is printed in the mi rn.tr. An English fa«hion puts "West* or !'.i 4* after tbe name or number of the strict but for an American n*a it is mi effect on, at here it has always been u-1 bef r» the-number, thos—1000 West Tweaty-thinL A card with tt*» daughter's nrrm is a trifle larger—eias 2# by 4. A »r with her husband's name ani her own: -Mr. and Ma John Jonas* Is of tho nuns jdae, nr "!r. and Mr*. Allen."

A i.."-: nr* card, married or unmarried, is "y 3tf inch** in tiao, with his addre^s, eUwtr Iwae or dab, in right hand -orner, and always prefixad by "Mr.,* unfes* iwfeai-.nkteryor naval officer, when

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Ms runt Is basal A clergyman's card Is Mt iockai to sise, with Um name of u.s mrch in tl-.o sft hand eonnr, and his in the right haad corner. Ayooag t:y'- .id. whether the eldest daughter, M'i* or a yowngar daughter, Mia Mary Smith, Is 9 by inches in siaa, all •:tgrav%i to round script It people ars traveling and moving aboat they have mo address engraved oo their etrds.

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(BahgrhooA.)

The anxiety eo often canted by tbe *anIfiring away of a little child firoan hie asaal familiar sarroeeddtafs, or his bring separated Cross hie parento in a crowd, is made oa-

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naeeesarlly distressing by the fact that usually he carries with him no certain means of identification. To label him with his full name and address would be so simplea precaution that it is surprising that it is not a univer-fil practice. We brand our cattle, punch cabilistic characters in the webfeet of our fowls, engrave do^ collars, and scrupulously tag umbrellas and bunches of kevs, while giving hardly a passing thought to what would happen to our little speeehles* toddlers and ourselves should they stray into unknown streets or meet with some accident in the domains of stranger*.

In the customary marking of undergarments with indelible ink it would be but little mora trouble to use the full name instead of initials and on other garments a convenient place could be selected—say the inside of the collar-band or of tbe end of the sleeve—where the full address could be placed. If everybody would adopt such a plan and recommend it to others there would be at once a beginning which migl^t go far tow ir establishing a uniform custom, the usefulness of which would seem to bo beyond question.

Preparing Fralts for Canning. [Detroit Free Press "Household."] Boil tomatoes twenty minutes, add a little salt can hot

Boil ripe currants six minutes amount of sugar to a quart, eight ounces. Boil Siberians, or crab-apples, whole twenty-five minutes eight ounces of sugar to a quart

Boil peaches whole fifteen minutes, using six ounces of sugar to a quart Boil pears from twenty to thirty minutes —twenty for halves and thirty for whole pears—using six ounces of sugar to a quart can of fruit

Boil whortleberries five minutes the amount of sugar to a quart jar should be four ounces.

Boil plum ten minutes eight ounces of sugar to a quart is needed. Boil blackberries six minutos with six ounces of sugar to the quart

Raspberries six minutes, with four ounces of sugar to the quart BoU cherries five minutes the amount of sugar to a quart is six ounces.

Fruit cans ought to be tightened both before and after the fruit cools. Never .use poor rubbers if you want your fruit to keep welL The best cans have porcelain tops. Keep canned fruit in a dark, cool pladb in tbe cellar. A plain board cupboard (in the cellar) with doors is just the thing to keep fruit in. Swing shelves in the cellar is no place for fruit Fruit gets too much light and sometimes takss a fall, and, great the fall thereof, as well as great waste of fruit and time. Avoid all such calamities. Have a cupboard for your fruit Any man or boy that is handy with tool 4 can make one good enough to put in a dark corner of your cellar. I can assure you it will pay well for the trouble. Fruit kept in the dark retains its flavor better. Try it and judge for yourself. ,iVW

Marked "Taken." [Exchange.]

It is now as easy a matter to disoern an engaged man and one who is not in Paris as as it is to tell by the solitaire diamond ring that a girl wears on her wedding-ring finger that she has been espoused. The way it is done is for the man to wear a small pearl heart hanging loose from bis vest buttonhole by a delicate Venetian chain.

Olive Logan describes Marie Van Zandt as a little American scbool-girl, of that nice, little, slim, stylish kind.

Mrs. Maxwell—Mis3 Braddon, thenovefist —is at the bead of the Children's Country Week society of London.

Gail Hamilton is. a tip-too housekeeper. T--,?i5 Late Summer Toilets. iV'*'

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WALKING DRESS, EVENING COSTtKX. On the left is a stylish walking dress, with colored lace front Tablier tunic and plastron of colored lace worked on tulle. Alpaca jacket bodice and back drapery to velvet skirt High and rovers velvet collar. 8traw bonnet covered with tulle, and trimmed with roses. Parasols covered with lace.

On the right is shown an exquisite summer evening toilet, with scarf drapery. A lace scarf, or one of tulle trimmed with lace, is draped about tho shoulders and waist in Hie manner shown. One end is fastened over tbe breast, the other is carried around the shoulders, down the front, and fastened at the side with along bow of ribben. The elbow sleeves are trimmed with laoe and ribbon to match.

Two Stylish CoUjunt for Children.

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Fig. 1 shows a eollar of ooagrcst canvas and crochet work for lHtle girls. It Is bemused narrow upon the front and bottom and trimmed with crochet lace ani insertion. A strip of canvas between tbe lace and insertion. The collar is pleated to a pretty hooding of last and ribbon.

F%. Si» a csrocbet collar.

11m TnwNM of Beatrlea. Have yoti any curiosity aboot the sort of trooaeeatt a priaoscs hast I have eeen Um •ketches and meUeriab of em of Princess Beatrice's trousseau frocks, which are being mads by Redfern. One is a pretty brown-end-bloa shot-twead, with silk ts match. The skirt of the latter, and •nrugtd is widi pwrpsinlli ulsr pisetteb

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TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVEISTING MAIL. •Jt

Tbe bodice and tonic are of tho tweed, tht front of the bodice being trimmed with folds of the silk, arranged flcha-fashion. A pretty little jacket to go with this gown is made of the tweed, lined with peacock-col ored satin, and trimmed with the shot-silk down the fronts, which are straight, though the back fits tightly to the figure.

Another nice frock i* of grenat blanket cloth, the long wide plaits on the skirt being separated by folds of Ottoman silk in tbe same color. There is also a vest of the Ottoman, the bodice and scarf drapery being of the cloth. A jacket is made to accompany thia frock, the material being the blanket cloth. It fastens from the left shoulder, and is trimmed round all the outlines with fine sable.

A gown of navy blue cloth is cut out in scallops, which fall over a trimming of interlaced cardinal red braid. A similar but narrower trimming edges the tunic, which is quite short The fronts of the bodice are scalloped over a vest of interlaced red braid, and the sleeves are finished at the cuffs to match.

The jacket corresponding with this is at navy cloth, edged with one row of cardinal braid. A revtrs, turned back at the side of the chest, is lined with red silk and a smaller revers, turned back at the right side of the basque, shows a similar lining. This is a very effective little arrangement, and one quite new to my experience.

A cream colored clotb is made over a skirt of pale blue veiling, being quite plain except for a narrow pleating round the edge. The bodice of tbis fastens diagonally from tho left shoulder by means of carved mother-of-pearl buttoxu. The vest and cuffs are pale blue.

Another cream colored dress is of Cairc cloth, with pleated skirt and scarf-like tunic made of cream colored satin. The bodice of this gown is pleated and worn with a belt

Princess Beatrice was married in a white satin gown, made with train, and low neck and short sleaves. The front was covered with Houiton lace, the same worn by Queen Victoria at her marriage. The long Honiton point veil was abo that worn by the queen at her marriago.

At Beatrice's wedding her majesty wore 8 black toilet Of broche silk and grenadine.

Striped Dresses.

Stripes are the favorite design for lawn, gingham and zephyr dresses this season. They are worn in the merest penciled line on white, or in a series of lines of difforeni widths, or ia alternating stripes half an inch wide of two shades of a color, or else in bolder wide stripes of blue, brown, or red on white. Skirt? are given variety by arranging the stripes in odd ways thus the apron stripes are crosswise, while the Lack drapery has lengthwise stripes. The lower skirt, which is seen only in front and on tho sides, is pleated in crosswise stripes for tall, slender figures, and in lengthwise stripes for those who are short and stout. The gathered belted waist3 and the sleeves have the stripes taken lengthwise. Very little lace is put on such dresses as it washes badly, a collar, belt and cuffs of embroidery being used instead.

The milkmaid overskirt is becoming as popular as the housemaid lower skirt This overskirt is pretty for dresses of two materials, one striped and the dtber plain. The overskirt. is turned upward on the left to the bolt, and this is covercd with the striped part, while the remainder on the right side is of plain goods. In other dres3ea the stripes are used alone for tbe basque, while the skirts are of plain fabric, unrelieved by trimming in still others this ia reversed, the stripes forming the skirt and drapery for a basque of plain goods.

The llabies.

Certain colors play a prominent part in the toilets of children this season. Blue and red were great favorites a short time ago in fact, blue seemed to predominate. Now all soft, pale shades are allowed.

Babies' pelisses are made almost always of the old shapa perhaps the pelerine is a trifle shorter, but that is the only real difference. Trim niugs and materials are, however, to bo se3n in immense variety, the latter being of guipure, point lace, chenille, etc., then lovely hand embroideries in silk, and silk fringes to match when ornamen:ed with lace, small bows matching the silk lining, if the foundation stuff be faille, ottotoman or etamine are arranged between the fan pleats of the lace bands of plush of soft, delicate colors are also employ od as finishes on such pelisses. The Mother Hubbard is disappearing.

Combination Summer Dress. A pretty combination for a dressy summer frock consists of cream-colored Boaupre veiling and a small quantity of the same kind of veiling in stripes of blue and cream made up thus: A coulisse skirt opening on both sides with panels of the stripes for borders falls over a petticoat of dull red velveteen. This same velveteen appears in the form of an open waistcoat, showing a blouse chemisette of blue surah in the short bodice jacket or corsage, a large sailor collar under one of blue surah falling over a high neck KnnH of the velvet in narrow band cuffs at the wrist, repeated in bands on the sleeve just below the elbow. The cuffs and bands on tbe sleeves are edged with a piping fold of blue surah.

Five O'Cloek Teanpoono. [Jewelers' Circular.]

"Five o'clock" teaspoons have already proved acceptable, and are having quite a run These spoons are larger than the "after dinner" coffee's and smaller than the ordinary teaspoon, being a happy medium between the two. While of a uniform size, each spoon of a set differs in design from its neighbor, an affords a pleasing study over a cup of tea. Enameled ^sts in coffee spoons, which are made in conjunction with beautifully enameled cups an 1 saucers, are another notable feature in tableware.

FASHIONLET3.

Lineu pillow slips, with bem~3titched ends, are now more popular than pillow shams. Tbe Queen Anne style of furniture has gone oat, and that of Mary Stuart and Marie Antoinette is coming in.

Flowers are mnch worn, especially large oorsage banquets of daisies or roses. American mac are beginning to wear a flower or tiny bouquet in the buttocholg nearly as generally as is done in London. (The newest silk hosiery consists of lacewoven stockings, tho foot and ankle having lengthwise clocks and embroidery up the ados in inch-wide bands, leaving a plain stripe down th^ instep, while the calf of the leg is entirety laoe-woven.

The dress skirt, when not draped, is now pp^iiy sawed oo the bottom of fhe bodice, whether it is round or pointed, and phratH skirts are lesa fashionable Europe than those that are shirred or ganged on to the wakt

Wash dieaJMS for young girls have a yoke bailee belted, and the skirt is plain and round, with tucks above tbe hem. The assb bow worn at the back Is made of the dress oeaberial audi is tockad across the cods, which are edged with embroidery.

As a rale fasts tot UM seaside are fantastic and eccentric to the last degree, bat aoaeo are seen in simple shapw of black or white soft Japanese straw, trimmed with only a scarf aad bow at win or Mated ou or laoe, fastened with gilt pina

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HERZ' BULLETIN!

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Received another big lot of SILK MITTS of all grades, at our well known low prices?

HERZ' BAZAR:

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'S PIXLEY & CO.S

Another Cut on Prices.

5$

BOYS' 'SUITS.

THIS TIME ON A \-J

Surgical, Dental, Optical, Mathematical and Veterinary Instrument# »n Appliances, and making Artificial

cal and Veterinary Instrument# and Appliances, and making Artlflcla' Limbs and Deformity Apparatus, Galvanic Batteries, Microscopes, $ Drawing Instruments, Trusses, Tourists Glasses, Spectacles,

Kye Glasses,

Our Truss, Elastic Stocking and Brace Boom ia in charge of a competent physician, who properly adjust* uch appliances in each particular ca#e, and taket measure menu correctly, where it is necessary to make to order to fit any special case.

Prices are reasonable and terms of pay raent made eaey. Call and examine out goods, or addres us for descriptive circulars and price list.

Win. H. ARMSTRONG CO.,, Opposite Poetoffice—No 23 s6th st. £5*. Terre Haute, Ind.

Established 1808. Incorporated 1878

PH(EN1X FOUNDRY

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MACHINE WORKS,

Manufacture and|deal in all kinds of

Machinery and Machinery Users Supplies*

FLOUR MILL WORK

OurJSpeclalty.

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Hare more patterns, larger experience »nd capacity, and employ more mechanics than any other similar establishment with In s«y-enty-flve mile of Terre Haote« ..

Repair and Jobbing Work Given special attention. Write or call on us and see for yourselves. SOI to 338 North Ninth street, near Union Depot. Tern Hanto. Ind.

JAMES T. MOORE

THE OLD RELIABLE

IS SELLING jf

Gasoline" Stove'4

ntrmt woiuun

The "Lyman",

Get it at once and while avoid lng3tbe3com In? ftnmmer heat, save yoar fuel.

JA11ES T. M00KE,

667 M»i" Street

T. J. PATT05 & CO.,

mtAijm in

CHOICE MEATS.

Sootbdown Mutton and}Lamb. 8ontbeesst Ooraer Fourth and Ohio.

REWARD!—Ofvaluable

110—#80 to every P^nwn

•coding information of school vacanciee and needs. So troottle or expense, fcend stamp tor ctrmlars to CHICAGO SCHOOL AGESCY, Chlcs#o, 111. IBS fcauth Clark Htrwrf.

R—We want all kinds crf-Tceeher* for Schools and Famlllea.

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Although, things are trying to be rather quiet just at present]" we shall not cease our efforts to keep the ball rolling during the heated term." .,

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.v-r ODD PANTS

We have cut them regardless of manufac- .:/ *. tur/ers' Cost or Value.

We are determined to turn broken line^ into ca?h in all departments., Call early if you wish to take advantage of this .***,r'"

5 GREAT BARGAIN SALE

-AT-

PIXLEY & CO'S Clothing Store.'"

W» H. ARMSTRONG & CO,

The Only Firm in the State

Dealing exclusively In

PATENT VENTILATED TRUSS.

TRUSS & CHEAP.

35,000

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We call especial attention to the above fig-. ares and that there no question in our mind that out of 36,000 Rolls of Choicest ?WalI

Papers

In designs, patterns and coloring" the most fastidious can be fully and Katisfactorlly suited. The stock embraces som« very choice patterns from French, German and Eoiillsh factories and from all the leading American manufacturers. We would respectfully offer the following

&•« INDUCEMENTS: ''t The lftfWst and choicest stock to select from Oar thorough knowledge of the business thereby enables us to assist yoa in making wise selections. Oar very low prices. Fair and honest dealing with coorteooa treatment.

We have also secured tbe service of

SKILLED WORKMEN**

From other cities whoee reputation for artistic labor is unexcelled and will sarantee satisfaction in every Instance t* all who have their work entrusted to oar care

Having pnrchaaed st aiwlanee's sa last fall the stock of C. Traqnalr, will offer al that is left of the same at exceeding low prices.

Thankfnl for tbe large pxtrraiage extended to as In the paM. wr»ild solicit and hope ,. to merit tbe continuance of the same in our Tnew qaarters,

673 Main Street,

J' S doors west of 7th street, sooth side.

THE W. ROBERTS (X)

AVE EVERY THING A'D

CONVERT IT INTO shS

MONEY!

The ondendKned baa opened a Receiving Boom, No sootii Seaond street, where he ia prepared to receive itoogh Tallow and Grease of any kind. Pork and B« ef Crarklinn. Dry or Green Bones, for which he will pay the Htfchwd Cash Prices. He will also toy Dead Hop by single or car load. Hog* received at tbe Factory, Southwest of the City on the Island. Office No. IS scatb Herons street, Ten* Heate, Ind,

HARRISON SMITH, Terre.Haute, Ind.