Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 17, Number 7, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 August 1886 — Page 7
Chryiumthemam*.
Chit this oat and put it in your farm and garden scrap book, under tine month of April It will remind you that during April you nhoukl prepare a bed for chrysanthemums, the most beautiful fall and late winter bloomers with which this country is favored. Do /not fail to have a bed of them next spring, if you never had one before.
The ground roust be dug to the depth of two feet, and then thoroughly enriched with .'well-rotted manure. The plants should be set in rows about three feet apart each way, and in order to prevent them from being broken off by the wind a stout stake should be placed by each, to which it should be loosely tied as soon as it is large enough.
If you want them to bloom in summer and oarly ill, let them grow as they will if you want them for late flowering, pinch the center shoots out alxjut uno 1. They will grow and branch freely, and the branches will soon be long enough to pinch hack again. Continue this nipping oft process until the first week in August. After that let them grow. They should be constantly watered whenever the weather is dry.
Pot those for winter blooming about the middle of September. Do it carcrully. Keep them in a shady place a few days, then let thr-m lurvo the sun.
There are now some hundreds of varieties of chrysanthemums, growing from eight feet high to a few inches. The plant is an Asiatic, like tho .Shanghai chickens, and there are Indian, Japanese and Chinese chrysanthemums.
nm STNO.
Ton to twelve different plants are tho least nny well ordered household should got along with. They look well planted either in beds or clump.*. Wo present throo of tho new kinds, .leseriW by Thorpe, the well known chrysanthemum grower.
Tho first one shown, the Pitti Sing, is an interesting and distinct kind. It can lie readily seen how pmiliar its petals, tubular for nearly their whole length, tho first being tho longest, after which each whorl gets shorter until some actually fail to get out of their disc. The tubes are silvery pink while the lolxss are claret crimson. Of this type the first appeared in 1884 tho past year no less than ten colors having the same peculiarities, tave been added.
FRANK WILCOX.
Frank Wilcox resembles very much some of the best forms of African marigold is of a rich golden amber color, very prolific and persistant. It is a persistent flowering variety and a type that has many admirers.
Tho chrysanthemum is hardy anil usually needs only to be plan toil and it will live year after year, though a ferociously severe wintor, with sleet and winds, sometimes kills it out Tho prize growers, however, who pot plants for winter blooming, raise thom now from cuttings every year.
CNNAKKIX
Fig. 3 is a remarkable new seedling that as not yet been christened. Its petals arv tubular for a quarter of their distance, when they flatten into divided surface# of various lengths, tome of tho petals having throo sprangles over an inch deep, and sprawling fully three-quarters of an inch.
The plant may l*e propagated either by Sittings or from dividing roots or from seeds. Trom seedlings come many new and beautiful kind*. The chrysanthemum is now the fashionable autumn flower in cities. It has changed ami developed so much in the last tfteen years as hardly to be recognised aoynore.
Flow to Peed a Worn.
Oats am the natural grain food of the rs* This is the popular verdict But the boras not want or need something l*et Yea, h« want* a reasonable allowance good hay. clover or Umothy, or the two vuublned- OaC straw is good, when the oats re cut before the stalk has lost all of Its reeo hue. Wheat wtmbl be found a nourishfood for the home, and not dear as ime would at fins* think. But it Is very jnconttated food, and all such must be fed care and in connection with coarser food soma kind.
If oats are crushed, or jas*. coarsely ground, will prove more nourishing. In Eug* ml th«y are pused between rollers. But if hex-set teeth an* good It will generally nd its oats pretty well. Tberv is a great (Townee in barm* however, in this respect, as there to in men.
BOOM
bolt their food
K?h mora rapidly *x»d lass masticated than But whatever grain you feed do not the boras drink immediately alter. If do much of the grain wUJ ba washed
oat
the stomach wftiMdt beta* digested. Sea the bona is properly watarad a litxJa hiie befon eating fts grain. ,'orn is not the Inst rood for the bona. It too carbooaoeoo*. or beating end fattening. am wants a fat horse. Fkt is not
7*
—5-
a sign of the best erlmdth in either man or horse. It is better to sell the corn aud buy oats with the money received for it Com is apt to make a horse stiff and loggy. It is very concentrated food, as well as fattening. All dry feed is not the best for the horse's health. It needs a few roots, apples, carrots, potatoes, or other succulent food, as a relish and a regulator of the bowels. Nor is all grass good for the horse, if it Is to do any work, as most people know, we presume. A moderate ration of grass, followed with dry hay, always accompanied with oats, will do a hone good. The heme, like man and other animals, relishes a little variety, and it does him good.—National lire Stock Journal
Owls and Hawks Practically Considered. I have closely observed the habit of these birds for nearly half a century. Owls will devour rats and mice, but always prefer to subsist on quails, rabbits and poultry, which compose the great part of their food. In the thickly settled rural districts it is not uncommon to estimate that a large pair of owls will destroy $10 worth of poultry while raising one brood, and leave no evidence that they had ever caught a single rat. In the winter season, when the fields are bare and the trees are leafless, they mostly procure their food by darting into huddles of quails when they are at roost, or seizing rabbits as they make their sightly runs but always seem to prefer chickens, even at that time of the year, when the henroost is not well secured against them. In the summer season they live mostly and feed their young on chickens, young turkeys, ducks and goslings, their greatest nocturnal habit, among civilization, being to search for what constitutes the best food of man.
As for hawks, I have never been able to detect rats or mice as food in the many hundred I have killed and examined. They subsist in part on quails, larks, pigeons, pheasants and doves, all of which are insect destroyers, and friends of the agriculturist and horticulturist, but they, too, aljvays prefer well fed young poultry, and subsist and feed their young on very little else during the spring and summer. I have known a single hawk, after I had killed its mate during incubation, in May, to toko from one farm over three dozen chickens during the time it was raising its brood, up to the middle of July, when the nest was riddlxl with bullets and the young destroyed. I doubt whether there is a hawk now living in this state, over one year old, that has not cost at least $2 worth of poultry, aside from its depredations on valuable birds and young squirrels. It is as absurd to talk of protecting hawks and owls for the benefit of tho farmer and fruit grower as it would be to propose propagating wolves for the benefit of sheep raisers. Let the hawks and owls be exterminated if possible, "scientific" investigations to the contrary notwithstanding. Almost every farmer raises poultry. It is pleasant and profitable, tho greatest drawback being the invasion of owls, hawks and other thieves.—M. B. K. in Indiana Farmer.
Degliinlng the Stock Business. My beginning in the stock business was Inmblo enough. I got a few Plymouth Rock chickens, ami sold eggs enough to buy two little pig* Then I got a sow. We saved everything! All tho dish water was poured into tho swill barrel, and groin or mill feed mixed with it We gave the pigs plenty of green food, and crowdcd them right up to tho market. They helped us to buy a young cow and calf. Tho skim milk went to tho pigs, and tho surplus butter helped out our little treasury. In dtio time a pair of weaning mare colts could be bought. At two years old they did considerable work, and at threo years they were a good, trusty team. It was easy enough to multiply and improvo this stock after it was onco paid for. It was like a young man's fortune the first $100 conies tho hardest. It has been ray motto in breeding stock, if I could not afford to pay for tho services of a thoroughbred male, to wait till I could, rather than send to scrub and run in debt. This policy has paid me well. Hundreds of farmers never get a good start. They don't turn tho wasto into gain, and they won't look after little things.—E. B. in Rural New Yorker.
Fnnsies.
To prepare abed for jKinsies, select a spot where it is a little shady, at least in tho middle of tho day. A place entirely shaded is not desirable. A light soil made rich with well rotted stable manure will answer. Heed can bo sown any time in July or August to raise strong plants before winter. Sow the seed in shallow drills and water lightly. Take a little freshly cut grass and sprinkle it lightly over tho bed as a mulch. Watch carefully for the young plants, and as soon as they appear arrange the gross to lie between tho row When tho plants are sufficiently strong, about an inch high, transplant them to stmid from four to six inches apart in rows, with tho latter ten to twelvo Inches apart
Edible Pod Pea.
The department of agriculture at Washington has boon sending out to be tested a now pea. The peculiarity of it is that it is to be eaten penis and all, like a snap bean. A gentleman who tested tho edible pod pea, says: "It was planted April 17, gathered first June 11. I terra it the tall sugar variety. It has a beautiful whit® and bluo flower and blooms for along time. In taste it has a combination of the bean and pea. It is enormously productive and I think will gain great favor wherever grown."
Milk Sickness.
It is important for people that live in districts where milk sickness is prevalent, to know that water will sometimes cure it We give the patients, whether beast or human being, all the water they want Begin with a half pint ami increase the portion every half hour according to the thirst of the jwtient We have given two gallons in one day to a young man. When we gave the first the patient's head, had to be held up while he drank, and the next day be could walk alone.
J. W. A.
Things to Do and to Know. The Early Harvest is a new and very sweet blackberry.
Raspberries are among the roewt profitable and reliable of small fruits. Prussia has ninety-seven fames for each l.iiOU inhabitants, and Austria-Hungary ninety-nine.
En this country to-day are more than 3,000,000 colonics of bees in apiaries, having from a half-dona to 1,000 or 1,500 hives.
At the agricultural college at Lansing aa acre has been set aside to experiment with huckleberry cultivation. The huckleberry has a future.
Keep a private berd book and register the birth and peculiarities of ewy farm animal on your phca It will make useful and intarecting reading.
When a soil ts left to itself tbe quantity of nrop which it will yield rapidly sinks to a minimum where it tends to remain through a lmg series of years.
Oregon pays a bounty of two cent* far every squirrel killed, and ooe man was recently paid for 135,000 squirrel talk which be bad ooitectadL And ta a very
Nm jmn
Oregon will be passing a game law fortUdtng squirrels to be shot, and trying, at all cost* to EBtka then pkattfal again.
Growth of Ocean Steamers. The illustration shows the gradual growth of ocean steamers, from those of the year 1845 to the iron leviathans that cross the Atlantic in less than seven days in 1880. A secI tion of the hull is seen of each, cat dowrf through from top to bottom.
OCEAJF STEAMERS.
It will be observed that while they have increased immensely in size, the shape of these hulls has remained practically the same. They look bkft an iron pot cut down through. The true shape of the deck is slightly elevated in the center. This is not shown in the illustration. If it were, then the diagram of our steamers would resemble somewhat the section of a duck's body. However much ocean steamers have changed, they still preserve in sectional outline the form of a fish or waterfowl, the models of all ships. 4is4rfl§!J
The Flying Fish.
There has been much discussion about whether the flying fish really flapped Its wingfins like a bird. Engineer Baird, of the navy, throws light on tho subject in a late number of Science. He assures us that this curious bird-fish really does beat its wings, and that it can change its direction in the air. It has been supposed that its flight was more a jumping than a flying. Engineer Baird's observation shows that this is an error.
FLYING FISH.
The picture shows the motion' of the fish through the air. In the Cape Verde island region there are numbers of a very large flying fish, in which the beating of tho fins, like a bird1# wings, are plainly visible. A school of flying fish will keep togethe* nearly as well as a flock of ducks.
Houdin, tho celebrated prestidigitator, attributed his success in his profession mainly to his quickness of perception, which, he tells us in his entertaining biography, ho acquired by educating his eyes to detect a large number of objocts at a single glance. His simple plan was to select a shop window full of a miscellaneous assortment of articles, and walk rapidly past it a number of times every day, writing down each object which impressed itself on his mind. In this way he was able, after a time, to detect instantaneously nil of the articles in the window, even though they might be numbered by scores.— Scientific American.
The Beating of the Fnttiro. Volcanic heating will bo tho result of the successful experiments of scientists who succeed in drilling a hole ten miles deep. A recent writer believes that the solid crust of tho earth, which floats over a molten sea, is only about the thickness mentioned. He states that tho temperature of the water in tho artesian well now being bored at Pesch is 101 deg. F., and that the boring will continue until 178 deg. is reached. The obvious deduction is that the heat of the earth will u£imately be used by man in place of costly fuel and furnaces. It needs no seer, he says, to pierce the not distant future, when we shall be driven to every expedient to discover modes of obtaining heat without the combustion of ftiel, and the perhaps far remote future when we shall have shafts down to the liquid layer, and avail ourselves of its extensive use for domestic and commercial purposes.—American Cultivator.
.Magnetic Clock.
A curious application of the magnet Is described in a French journal, the subject of it bring a clock recently patented in France. In appearance the clock consists of a tambourine, on the parchment head of which Is painted a circle of flowers corresponding to the hour si^ns of ordinary dials. On examination, two bees, the ooe large and the other small, are discovered crawling among the flowers. The small bee runs rapidly from ooe to the other, completing the circle in aa hour: while the large ooe takes twelve boors to finish the circuit. The parchment membrane is unbrokm, and the bees are simply laid upon it but two magneta, connected with the clockwork inside the tambourine, moved just under the membrane, and the inmcft which an of iron, foBow them.
Air Ow fcr Vim.
At the time when so many livea were kwt fay the firs la Park row. Mew York, Gen. Meigs suggested the ose on eoch occasions of an ordinary bow and arrow to throw a line,* under socb circoimtanfru, within reach of the imperiled tnmatm of a building. This has resulted In aa invention by Mr. W. A. 1 BartJett of an air gan, which will throw a bsavy line with grappte books accurately at the spot aimed at, and at a bright of 150 feet. It weighs ISM than 100 pounds, aad will be* oacnK a part of tbs apparatus of every Haw
ft
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MATL1
DIAGRAM.
The diagram represents respectively, a ship, tho flying fish and tho angle of the wind. The fish usually starts to windward in its flight, and then changes its direction. It can bo observed most advantageously from on board a ship, and it was here that Engineer Baird made his observations. The light in the air seems to dazzle the fishes' eyes. When alarmed they dart quickly forward by wagging the tail fin. If, then, a scoopnet be placed in front of them they will jump into it.
Education of the Human Eye. The following story from The Penn Monthly is related of Agassiz, and it is sufficiently characteristic of this remarkably accurate observer to have the merit of probability. We are told that onco upon a time the professor had occasion to select an assistant from one of his classes. There were a number of candidates for the post of honor, and finding himself in a quandary as to which one he should choose, the happy thought occurred to him of subjecting three of the more promising students in turn to the simple test of describing the view from his laboratory window, which overlooked the side yard of tho college. One said that he saw merely a board fence and a brick pavement another added a stream of soapy water a third detected tho color of the paint on the fence, noted a green mold or fungus on tho bricks, and evidences of "blueing" in the water, besides other details. It is needless to tell which candidate was awarded tho coveted position.
York hook and ladder company. It will also be used for smashing heavy plate glass in upper stories, dislodging iron shutters, and in quickly raising hose and ladders, regardless of obstructions, to a great height
Sulphurous Acid in the Air of Cities. Under the slow but continuous action of the sulphurous acid thrown in the air of cities by the combustion of coal and the influence of the frequent changes in the degree of atmospheric humidity, it is found that the peroxide of red lead, used in coloring certain placards, is destroyed and sulphated. At the same time the protoxide of lead thus liberated is transformed into insoluble sulphite, and this salt, being easily analysed, it is believed that a certain means is thus obtained for determining the condition of the atmosphere in largo cities and its relations to the public health, rjr?
a in
Glass flooring is being increasingly substituted for boards in Paris, this being especially the case in those business structures where the cellars are used for offices. At the bank of the Credit Lyonnaise the whole of the ground in front is paved with large squares of roughened glass imbedded in a strong iron frame, and in the cellar beneath there is sufficient light, even on doll days, to enable clerks to work without gas. Although its prime cost is much greater than that of boards, glass is, in the long run, far cheaper, owing to its almost unlimited durability. $
Electricity and Plants.
An interesting experiment, showing the influence of electricity on the growth of roots, has been made in Germany by Professor Hodefieiss. Plates of copper were thrust upright into the earth and connected by wires with similarly placed zinc plates about 100 feet distant, an electric battery being thus formed, with the earth between the copper and zinc in the circuit Both potatoes and beets planted between such plates gave an increased yield—beets 15 per cent, potatoes 25 per cent.—as compared with other parts of the same field. .....
Keeping Lobsters Alive.
1
It is possible to keep the adult lobster alive for along period in a moist, cold atmosphere. Atf45 degrees P., in a proper device, lobsters have been kept alive and in good condition for fifteen days, and in a moist atmosphere only, their gills not having been immersed in water during the whole period. This discovery renders it possible to transport living adult lobsters across the continent, and to stock tho waters of tho Pacific coast It is also possible to pack tho lobster eggs in seaweed in a similar manner and to transport them for long distances.,
Facts of Interest.
Paper roofs for buildings are now made, which are said to be superior to anything heretofore used. They are made fireproof, and it is believed they will last almost indefinitely.
Galvanized water tanks are forbidden to be used on board French men-of-war. It has been shown that water passed through 200 yards of galvanized iron pipo took up 4.29 grains of zinc carbonate per gallon.
Put pure olive oil into a clear glass bottle, with strips of sheet lead, and expose it to the sun for two or threo weeks then pour off the clear oil, and the result is a lubricant which will neither gum nor corrode. It is used for watches and fine machinery of all kinds.— Boston Transcript
In an objective for a microscope magnifying 2,500 diameters tho lens measures 4-100 of an inch in diameter—so small that it has to be handled with pincers—and tho workman has to use a magnifying glass in fitting it into an instrument With higher powers the lens is still smaller, and microscopic power runs up to 8,000 diameters and more.
j. Girl's Dress. We have here a tasteful costume for a girl 10 to 14 yeara old. The picture shows both front and back.
GIRL'S DRKSS.
It looks well made of satine, plain over flgired goods, or all over embroidery. Embroid«red trimming to match. The stockings match tho plain fabric in color. Gretchen waist It is laced with cord the color of the dress, ....
Yachting Shirt.
Gray or navy blue flannel shirts, tastefully made, laced and tied in front with a silk cord and tassel of crimson, blue or white, ought to be among every man and boy's wardrobe. They are extremely useful for boating and fishing. Along the water among a party of gentlemen they can be worn all day and eveningtoo.
TACHTXHO SHIBT.
In winter, for school and {day, boys can wear soch a shirt constantly. A simple knit undershirt beneath is all that necesmry In Urn line, and the youth will look well dressed and be comfortable. The pattern here givch Is an approved one. A simple turn-down collar of the fabric is sewed fast at the nedk.
Bags, Belt* aad
FMM.
Tbe newest shopping bag is the best of alL Th* porteroonnaie is inside, the slit
far
hand
kerchief outside has strap to fasten in front, with tiny pockctbook for change, car ticket*, etc.
Alligator, walikin, figured pressed morocco the preferred feathers. Fancy pocket books an made of bright acartet English morocco, with corner and clasp of dull old sil ver.
The flexible open purses, both the kng with double rings and the oval shape with clasp and chain (the latter Intended for change), ars SCDI favorite*. Tbs gold perfectly
Then those crocheted of purse twist maybe found in any and every color, those of black, mingled with mauve being very stylish for light mourning.
The tassels and rings, clasp with chain, can all be purchased in gold, silver or steel, so ladies can crochet and mount a purse to
In fans, the attractions are many. Those of gauze or lisse have taken the fancy they ran be purchased to match the dress. The scented wood sticks are seen from end end through the gauss some are edged with lace, others are daintily painted in Wateau landscapes or Japanese designs, and all ire lovely.
Then come the ostrich feather fans, so soft, so stately these are in black ostrich, is white ostrich, and for young ladies every color to match the dras.
A very lovely but costly fan is made, the frame of expensive wood and covered with natural flowers. To send one's fan to the florist to be repaired, the same as one sends one's boots or hats, is really an addition to the expense of living.—New York Fashion Bazar.
Fashionable Curtains.
The demand is just now quite equally divided between tamboured lace and Madras curtains. The former style has been somewhat out of favor, or at leest there has been no enthusiasm in the trade in them, but they are rapidly recovering their lost prestige, and are the best selling medium priced curtains in stock. A novelty is known as Soumak it is a tamboured pattern in bright colors on Brussel net lace, very pretty and effective. A style not unlike the lace is shown with similar tambouring on pine apple muslin.
High class tamboured curtains are very attractive. The fine hand-made goods in this grade reach far up in price, quite beyond tho reach of any but the favored of fortune. The shading in the leaves and flowers in these fine goods is a veritable art work. Rich heavy curtains of Egyptian lace are shown they are very elegant and costly. The same may be said of the Russian guipure and point lace curtains.
Nottingham curtains are in good demand for first-class out of town trado, and really furnish about the best value for the money of any lace goods in market There are attractive styles in printed Nottinghams, showing clear, bright, floral patterns on white grounds. Clusters and trailing sprays of wild roses on white ground are especially adapted for country houses, cottages and chambers. Single bordered curtains are again preferred, those with double borders seeming to have the pattern too much crowded on tho curtain and having a heavier and less pleasing effect than thoso having border only on ono side.
Fine batiste curtains in the style known to the trade as "coin spots," are popular. The name comes from tho goods having at intervals spots the sizes of tho various American silver coins. These spots are woven in the fabric and are of the same color as tho ground or in any of the fashionable contrasting tints red, blue, olive aud sometimosa combination of two shades of'the same or a contrasting color being seen. Madras curtains are in high favor. There are various styles, colors and qualities, all good and making desirable draperies. Anew tint of lemoncolored Madras goods, both in patterns and by the yard and with narrow fabric for vestibule curtains to match, is just now in great demand. Chenille curtains are shown in seventy-two inches wide goods these extra wide curtain are designed for portieres and there are regular widths and table covers to match. Silk Turcoman curtains ore allowable all tho year round, and are especially desirable for portieres, where it is desirable to shut off tho view altogether. These curtains havo a very wide range of values, being found at $5 tho window up to $100 for fabrics that are real works of art. A later style than the Turcoman,' nnd ono that is growing in favor, is tho chenille curtain. There are new patterns that are extra wide and very fine and light in weight. They are in good demand for summer use, and are being ordered for folding doors in country houses. In curtain poles there are various attractive patterns. For plain, ordinary use, walnut and osh poles, with acorrt ends, are preferred. They cost from forty cents to 81.75, according to finish and length. Some of the fine ones havo brass tips and brass rings. Cherry is a popular wood for such purposes. In costly fittings there "are elaborate brass rods in fancy patterns of various sorts. Looping chains of bras3 rings, links and twisted loops are popular. They cost from twenty cents to ?1 each.
All shades are now put upon spring rollers, and have fringe at the lower edges. Ecru and greenish gray are the popular cold's. They cost from seventy-five cents to $1.25 per window, with all tho fittings, and put up complete for use.—Decorator and Furnisher.
New Capes, New Wraps.
It is so fashionablo to wear muslins now oh tho street, for driving, etc., in a hot day, the little shoulder capes and wraps which merely cover the waist are greatly in demand.
Those mado of jet lattice work havo besides them others of color—bronze, garnet or steel. A little wrap of black Chantilly lace fitted in the back, just two little points falling over the tournure the fronts, long spiral tabs, tiny jet balls sewn all over the lace two thickly ruched flounces of Chantilly lace, above these a ball of cut jet fringe, a jetted cord with tassels fastening across at tho waist line. Could a more stylish wrap bethought off
Another stylish cape is of beaded grenadine, finished with a fringe made of beads. A novelty is a filigree of lace or grenadine made V-shape from neck to waist, back and front, finished in a short basque effect below the waist Beaded net edged with lace coven arms nearly to elbow, rounded in with the curve of shoulder, giving a sleeve effect
All wraps for visiting are very short, all for travel are very long. The Bedouin wrap is the latest in traveling wraps. A very stylish one is made of fine silk mohair, a very dark blue with raised lines. The back is laid in three large boxplaits, the fronts are fitted but not tight, and double breasted these and collar are bordered with broad braid, bora buttons close the fronts. Tbe Bedouin bood Is lined with bine silk aud caught in- tbe center of the pelerine which forms tho sleeves.
Milkmaid Taate.
-3.
ft?-. W$
HV
Madams Mora's
Badame
A
Tbe tunic is becoming as popular aa tbe full housemaid skirt proved last summer. This natty overdress, also called the lavense tunic, Is pretty for dresses of two fabrics, one striped, tbe other plain. The oiaikirt Is turned bade with a deep rovers, and drapes high on tbe left side, the narrow portion of the revers reaching to tbe belt This is outtrai with the stripe, while the remainder Is of tbe unpatterned goods. If yoked bodices are chosen, the stripe forms the yoke, and tbe gathered portion is of tbe plain material If a plain, round waist is preferred, there area belt and sash added of the stripe, with surplice folds of tbe same erasing each other over tbe chest.
FASHIONLETS.
Laos bonnets made In Brussels net, to match the color of the dress, are extremely pretty.
LAOS drsans are being more and mors worn, especially in Paris. The lace Is black, or else Is usually ecru, plain or ccnbroiiered io colors. It made over colored goods.
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s&£>
results from that true contentment which indicates perfect health of body and mind.! You may possess it, if you will purify and' invigorate your blood with Ayer's Sassa-y par ilia. E. M. Howard, Newport, N. H^ writes: I suffered for years with Scrttf-' nlous humors. After using two bottles ot Ayer's Sarsaparilla, I
|I
Found
yi
AYER'S
Sarsaparilla
and commenced giving it to him. It surely worked wonders, for, in a short time, he was completely cured."
Sold by all Druggists. Price $1 Six bottles, $5. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell,
Mass., U. S. A.
MADAME MORA'S C0R8ETS.
MOST COMFORTA1ILE AND I'EKKKCr FITTING. Pi Merchanta say they givo bettor satisfaction than any coract they ever sold. Drctwmokeni rooomniend thom for tliuir flnO shape. Cannot break over hip*. Aro particularly llkrd by
Liulieiiof full figure. Tho "CO. TOUR" and "AI.DINK" have tho
PATKKT
Contour. I- KRAT8 A CO., ta Rftlne. Birmingham, Conn. Aldlne. *•'Fitr.p«tHck Co., Comfort Hip. 71 Leonard St., N.*.
Mora's
adame Mora's adame Mora's
PETRDLINE
A trial will convince the most skeptical that
ag r*r more jx other plasters. Do not be induced to take other
S30
tasters which are Inferior, but be sure and get genuine "Petrollne," which Is always enclosed in an envelope "tth the signature of the proprietors, The P.W.P. Co.. also above seal, ta green and gold, on each plaster. Sold by all druggists, at £5 cents each, and our Agents.
J. J. BAUll & SON, Torre liauto, Ind.
chtncs. Only
Indudin a full »ct of extra Attachments, needles, oil and usual outfit of ss etch. (liftTMlMd ftrffcrt. HrlWtrliOffr will nod them taywhera on II
Dr. BEN TOMLIN'S
Medical & Surgical Institute
Corner of 6th and Ohio *t*., Terre Haute, Ind. for ALL CHRONIC and HPECJAL DIHEA8EH, Male and Female, MEDICA Lor HUROICAL. Office hours^ to 12 1 to 6 and 7 U8.
A TRIAL TREATMENT FREE in the following disease*, vi*: OPIUM, morphine or laudanum HABIT. NERVOU8 WHKAHEHof MEN and WOMEN, FITMor KPELEP8V and. BORE, WEAK oi^DEFICIENT EYKH.
The"*follow1ng I will TREAT-NO CUKE, NO PAY, with a written guarantee, vis, CAN~ CKRH, fuMORft. and OIJ SOREK, TAPIS WOKMH, FISTULA, PILEH and ALL DIKEAHEH of the RECTUM, without tbe KNIFE. orCAUKTICH.
nOMPOUND OXYGEN AND
V_Y OZONE
chltis and Hay Fever.
We Give S Days Trial, Frw/ DB. BEN TOMLIN, «th and Ohio street. Terns Haute, lad. Office boon: 9 to 12,2 to 5 and 7 toS.
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7
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7
1 VUIIM
5 x)
great relief. It has entirely restored me to health." James French, Atchison, Kans^ writes: "To all persons suffering from Liver Complaint, I would strongly recommend Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I was afflicted with a disease of the liver for nearly two years," when a friend advised me to take this medicine. It gave prompt relief, and has cured me." Mrs. H. M. Kidder, 41 Dwight st., Boston, Mass., writes: For several years I havo used Ayer's Sarsaparilla in my family. I never feci safe, even
At Home
without it. As a liver medicine and general purifier of the blood, it has no equal." Mrs. A. B. Allen, Winterpock, Va., writes: "My youngest child, two years of age, was taken with Bowel Complaint, which we could not cure. Wo tried many remedies, but he continued to grow worse, and finally becamo so reduced in I flesh that we could only move him upon 1 a pillow. was suggested by ono of the doctors that Scrofula might bo tho cause of tho trouble. We procured a bottle of
Tiurcx
HACK.
Which covers tho open apac* and urotoetii thoBplna Tho •*l.A RKINK* ha» tho popular
KKKO-
VABI.H BTWO*.
which
can
IH
Instantly taken
out,
WRRNOTTT CUTTINO O»
nmrvo/ nrudlco. for MA1IAMK MORA'S CORSETS. No other* havo th»
r«i in uvurm
x»lobrfttcd French Curved Bnml. Ilownro of imitAtlonn offcml to deceive tho public. Forsnlo by nil lending dowers. Manufactured by
R. GAGa BEAMS
ABTISTS' SUPPLIES*
Picture Frames, Mouldings, Picture Frames Mads to Order.
McKeen1* Block. Main st. between •Ui and 7th.
•""i:
