Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 18, Number 10, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 August 1887 — Page 6

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WOMAN MD HOME.

TOILET HINTS, PARLOR SUGGESTIONS AND KITCHEN HELPS.

Honors ltendered the Queen Be»-Th« I'M of Lemon ale©—Food for the B»ble*—Alvlce to Hon»fwiTe»—Kecreatlon for IlaslneMWotDcn—In SewTork.

"The bee keeper today bos hundreds of conveniences, labor saving devices and methods of increasing tlie honey production that were not even dreamed of a few years ago," said a veteran bee manto the Inquiries of a reporter. "The modern apiary is laid out in streets anil avenues of neatly painted hives, shaded by •mall fruit trees or grapevines and surrounded by acres of clover, buckwheat, honey plants and groves of bass wood and honey locust trees. •'What profit can be made with bees? Well, a good colony of Italians, hived and ready for business, costs about $10 in the spring. They will produce from fifty to 100 poundsof honey in a good locality, and will cast one swarm, and sometimes two, during the season. Taking tbo lowest figures to estimate on, each colony will earn $5 (fifty pounds of lioney at ten cents) and double their number each year. The attention required is so little that one man cau take care of several hundred hives and earn a good income. There are a large number of been kept in this city and in Brooklyn, near th« sugar refineries, and they aro said to do very well. "At the present time wo tame the bees, domesticate them, handle them without regard to danger, guide their work, remove their product at will and reap the greatest benefit from their labor*. The old method was the consummation of cruelty to keep the bees at "work from early spring uutil late fall, building comb and storing honey for their winter^ feed, aiul then destroy the bees to obtain their •tores. Now we make friends of our bees. We aro gentle and kind with them. We furnish them with hives that are fitted with •very convenience and we remove tbo surplus houey only, leaving the bees enough to winter on, or supply them with candy if they get short. '•There aro two systems of honey production, tho making of comb honey and the making of liquid or extracted hotoey. By the first tho small wooden boxes in tho upper story of tho hive aro removed when filled, the sides aro closed by iuserting pieces of glass, and they are sent direct to market. The other system is to use large frames of comb throughout tbo hive. These are removed from time to time, and by rapid centrifugal motion in an extractor the honey is thrown ont. It is then strained, put into neat jars, tumblers, etc., and scent to the dealers.

Every colony of bees has one queen. Bhe Is the only female, and lays all the eggs,' -which occasionally amount to as many as fl,000 in single day. Hho deposits each egg In tho bottom of a oell and glues it fast. The first eggs laid produce worker bees afterward BIJO lays eggs in. cells of larger diameter, which produce the drones or male bees. The queen boo is different in appearance and instincts from tho other occupants of the Live. Iliir body is much longer, brighter in color and sho is quicker in her movements than the workers. At swarming time, or at any tisuo that the colony I? left without a queen, there is great excitement in the hive, and the most singular thing in the bee business occurs—the bees set to work to make a new queen. They select a cell containing a larva two or three days old that would, under ordinary treatment, produco a worker bee, and by enlarging the cell and feeding the grub on the royal jelly, a special food that they make iu some mysterious manner, it becomes a queen. "To provide against accidents the bees usually rear several queens at once, and they sometimes emerge from their cells simultaneously. When this is the case a battle of queens occurs, and only tho best one survive*. When the queen hutches the bees leather around her and plainly show their joy."—New York Mail and Express.

New York Janitors' Daughters. Tho joy of the janitor's daughter is Coney Island, and she dates nearly all of her recollections and rominiscences from the oponing visit of each seasou. Bhe it is that patronises tbo merry go round, thj shooting gallery, the •ausnge maker, tbo itinerant photographer, tho alluring dime museum, tho elusive clam In his chowdered lair, aud all the other deception and delights of the season at Coney's Isle. I remember one night I came home late from Coney Island, and, as it was very cool, I lighted a cigar and started to walk tip Broadway with ono or two companions. Just as wo passed Chambers street a magnificently appointed political procession, resplendent in oil caps and oil cloth capes, swept into Broadway and started northward. It was some such exclusivo association as "The Gentlemen's Sons' club of the Fourth ward." Ono feature that dwarfed cverythlug alse was a bass drum. Attached to it iu a more or less casual manner was a very small and red faced Irishman, who tnarcbed with dispassionate indifference to the rest of tho column and murdered the drum with unceasing rigor and enthusiasm. We chanced to bo a Utile ahead of the procession, and, as the drum awakened the echoes •long the deserted streets, the doors creaked and opened for blocks ahead of us, and every building gavo up its quota of pretty janitors' daughters. They rushed out in pairs, quartets ami downs and clapped their hands and jumped up and down in anticipation of the gorgeousness that was coining up the street to the music of the ml faced Irishman's big bass dram. He exercised a fascination over them that was simply irresistible, and they blew kjtaeta at him from the Upe of their plump fingers as they danced along. "Oh, Mary Ann," screamed one of the girls to another across the street, "do pipe his Claud* Plantagenets with his little drumf -Do IT shrieked Mary Ann In return, as sbe beamed on the artist with a pair of beautiful blue «y«s. "Well, don't ir "I notice he's got his 8undnjr whiskers with him." "Yea, an' be has his mother's own smOe, if be docs favor papa in his feet."

A wild and delighted roar from the red faced drummer, as he looked from one group of laughing and dancing girls to the other, and boat an itnpas^oned arpeggio in minor on the drum, interspersed with chromatic and frantic runs. Then one of the girls clasped her hands and cried, with iu tod* •crihabte uacUOft:

H)» \Villi:~you--*rt^-#»ch--«— •Yah,* ho*fed the radiant drummer. •Whose darlin' are rou aowf continued the Riri

•r

of

the darlin'

tho Janitors' daughters."

Be marched on In «tth an ever Increasing throng of jxwug womm around him.

It was the roott extraordinary show of pretty girts 11*** w«r 3?o collection of

Up

town women could haw approached ft. —New York Letter to San Francisco Argo•ant.

A Type off Asaartaaa B*Mty. Wbsn the people of tie United 8tatas shall be deprived of the constant Influx of foreign Mood from Eur©|s Uwj will finally dsvuto*

into a fixed and regular American type. This peculiarity will have as its distinguishing characteristics slenderness of form, disposition to great muscular activity, extreme nervous sensitiveness, remarkable quickness of intellectual apprehension and a general alertness. These are, to a great extent, tho characteristics of the American Indians, and when the white race shall becomo thoroughly localized in North America it will conform to the type of the Indians in their chief physical qualities* That tho whites who have been hi America for a few generations have already begun to assume the Indian type of bodily configuration bos repeatedly been recognized and declared by competent physiologists and anatomists. The artists who are ever alive to the peculiarities of form have not failed to notice that a certain sleudemess of figure has become so far characteristic of the Americans that it is never omitted in any pictorial representations, and the typical Yankee of the caricaturist as well as the typical southerner is always shown as a tall, slender, muscular, nervous personage. It may not be out of place to add to the testimony of the physiologist and tho artist on these points that of tho commercial man, which is fully corroborative of their observar tious. An Importer of French and German gloves said to the writer that such articles, intended for the American trade had to be manufactured expressly, because the hands of th» Americans are longer in proportion to breadth than those of the typical French and German people, and the fingers as a rule are longer and more slender.

Enough bos been said to show that there will one day be a characteristic type of form for the American people, nnd that there will, in consequence, be a type of American beauty. Already the American women are being recognized as the most beautiful in the world. The uncrowned queens and untitled princesses from the United States are by the force of their charms rapidly winning titles and social supremacy among the Old World aristocracy. But the American women are only in the iufancy of their reigu in the realms of beauty. They are to have their charms recognized throughout the civilized world as the queens of loveliness and what tbo Egyptian women were to the world for many centuries, two or three thousand years ago, the American women will be in the future.—New Orleans Picayune.

Advice to Housewives.

Don't entice flies into your cook room by leaving a little milk in one cup and grease in another between meals. Scald your tin vessels with lye water. Wash your table ware in soapsuds and rinse them iu water slightly blue. Keep handy a pieco of saudpaper to rub your steel knives. Put your silver spoons, knives and forks in a white flannel sack containing powdered chalk.

Don't make afire in your back yard every three months for the purpose of burning up your old clothes. Tear them in strips one half inch wide, sew together firmly and smoothly wind them into balls. Have your husband make you two wooden knitting needlos, thirty inches long, cast on your stitches in the usual manner for knitting plain cloth, knit back and forth until you get a rug of any desired length. Spread them around your cook stove. Take fifteen cents and buy you a brush for cleaning the handles of ypur cups, stands, etc. Dirt settled around the handles of tableware looks nasty. Brush back your hair and see tbac your collar is properly adjusted before tting down to do the honors of the table. If you dont feel pleasant see if you can't assume a pleasant appearance at the table nothing looks better.

Don't feed your company on apologias give them something more substantial. Before going out shopping know what you want and tho quality of tbo same don't pull and buul over every piece of goods in the store. If you are not a good judge of the article you want frankly tell your merchant so and request him to select it for you. As a rule all women aro not judges of shoes or kid gloves. If you can afford but one fine article of clothing let that be a pair of shoes. Don't wear a fifty cent collar, a seventy-five cent pair of shoes and a twenty-five cent pair of gloves with a dress that cost 11.50 per yard. Let your whole suit correspond in quality. Don't put a $40 bureau in your parlor and have a set of rawhide bottom chain to go with it

Don't entertain your visitors by lamenting over your inferior help or by not having any at all. Hire your help by the year and pay them a salary sufficient to keep them. You had bettor pay $13 per month for good help than $5 for inferior. Don't hire inferior help if you believe in falling from grace.—Chicago New*

Food for the Babies.

The practice of dosing infants almost as soon as they are born with sweetened water, teas and castor or olive oil is a relic of meddlesome, superstitious ignorance—tho sooner discarded by mothers and nurses the better, says Laws of Health. Nature provides in tho mother's broast the kind of fowl best adapted to the needs of the infant watery and laxative at first, richer and more nutritious afterward. By trusting to nature and ber resources, and distrusting the fussy ofBciousness of meddlesome nurses, with their invincible desire to do something for little, tender beings, and, worse'than all, to administer the so called soothing syrups, an immense gain to tho welfare of infant life would result When a babe seems to be in actual pain about its stomach or bowels a little essence of peppermint in warm, sweetened water, or a spoonful or two of warm whisky toddy, will usually give prompt relief.

The proper time for weaning is pointed ont by nature in the provision of one or more grinder teeth for each jaw. Under some circumstances, as when the health and strength of tho mother are feeble, it may be better to wean sooner. Cow's or goat's milk, diluted with a very little warm water and made just perceptibly sweeter than natural, with the addition of a little pulpy bread, makes an excellent form of nutriment during this period.

The rule of plainness and simplicity requires to be under iatingly followed throughout childhood. Concentrated sweets, such as candies, jellies, ice cream, sweet cakes, rich podding*, sweetmeats, pics, marmalades or butters made of fruits well boiled down—in short, every preparation of food, refined and concentrated or made up of a complication of aliment*, should be rigorously excluded as wholly unfit to build up strong, symmetrical and healthy bodies. Almost any ripe fruit of natural bulk and composition may be freely allowed, especially when the craving for It Is strong.—Chicago News.

tin ITse of Unon J*l».

Lemonade made from the juke of the lemou is one of the best and safest drinks for any person, whether in health or not. It is suitable for ail stomach diseases, excellent in sk-knew, in cases of Jaundice, gravel, liver complaints, Inflammation of the bowels and feveT*. It is a specific against worms and skin complaint*. The pippins crashed may be used with water and sugar and taken at a drink. Lemon juice is the bwt aatf-scorUatic rwxdy known. It not only cures this OMR, bctp^ ftaft. Sailors make daily um of it for Uli vUTpKm I advise every one to rub Uwir sptniswith tamoa juice to keep them faal rtioB, Tbe bands and nails ante wfclta,soOand suppisby DM daily aw of TAAMI tmtni at aoa^

plan prevents chilblains. Lemon is used in intermittent fevers mixed with strong, hot, black coffee, without sugar. Neuralgia mAy be cured by rubbing tbe part affected with a cut lemon. It is valuable also to cure warts, and to destroy dandruff on the head by robbing the roots of the, hair with it. It will alleviate and ilnaily cure coughs and colds, and heal diseased lungs if taken hot on going to bed at night. Its uses are manifold, and the more wo employ it internally and externally the better we shall find ourselves. Lemou juice, according to a writer in Good is anti-scorbutic, useful in removing tartar from the teeth, and anti-febrile, etc. A doctor iu Rome is trying it experimentally in malarial fevers with great success, and thinks it will in time supersede quinine.—People's Friend.

Beereation for Business Women. A seashore cottage is situated at Ocean Beach, N. J., and forms a most delightful summer resort for business women and others who are in need of rest and recreation, with but limited time to spare and insufficient means to pay the charges asked at the usual resorts. It is situated immediately on the seashore, buiit in tbe most attractive manner, with a number of piaras and cozy little window balconies, and has ample facilities for tbe enjoyment of surf bathing upon its own beach. Everything is provided for the comfort and healthful enjoyment of tbe visitors, and at tbe lowest cost to each with whioh it is thought possible to meet the bare running expenses of the cottage from day to day, and this has been fixed at $4 a week, payable in advance.

Tbe stay of each visitor is limited to two weeks, and two persons are expected to occupy each room, so it is suggested that friends or acquaintances visit tbe cottage at the same time. There are bath bouses connected with the cottage, which cau be used without extra charge, but each person must provide her own bathing dress, and tbe occupants of each room must keep their rooms in order. Ladies must go provided with clothing enough to last during their stay, but no large trunks will be received. References as to the respectability of the visitor will be required. This is tbe third season since the cottage was built and visitors of the first year have secured rooms each season since, and speak in tbe warmest praises of its delightful advantages. It is well furnished, having all the comforts of a well appointed house, is but a short distance from the depot, and remains open until dept. 15.—Brooklyn Eagle.

How a Woman Drinks Soda. There is a marked difference between the manner in which a woman absorbs soda water and the modus operandi adopted by tho average man. The latter stands up straight, grasps tbe handle of the glassholder firmly, holds it up even with his face, waits till the foam settles the least trifle, inserts half of his face in the foam and gulps the compound down at a single drnught. The woman goes about it in a different way. She daintily extends tbe thumb and forefinger, picks up the glass carefully and raises it about six inches from the oounter. Then she bends her head forward, and as soon as she does so her lips also bend forward until one would think she was going to whistle. But she doesn't She just bends lower and lower until she gets where she can touch the edge of tbe glass with her extended lips without wetting the remainder of her feature* Furthermore, she doesn't finish the task at the first attempt She drinks ber soda methodically the

rnMn

drinks his impulsively, which shows

that in this at least the difference between a man's way and a woman's is reversed.—Albany Express.

A Spleed Bound of Bee.

To a round weighing twenty-five pounds take three ounces of saltpeter, two pounds of sugar—brown is best—one ounce of cloves, one ounce of allspice, one nutmeg and a teacupful of salt Beat all the spices together until fine, and rub them well into both sides of ths round, together with the sugar, and add lastly a tablespoonful of cayenne pepper. Take out the bone in the middle and fill the hole left with fat and spices. In three weeks it will be ready for use. Keep it in a covered vessel, and turn it every other day until wanted. Then bind a strip of cotton around it, and make a crust of flour to go over the top and keep the flavor from escaping. Put tbe round in an oven to bake, with a little water in- the bottom, and let it cook slowly from six to eight hours. Leave it till it becomes cold, then take off the cloth and crust, and no better relish for supper can be desired.

Boll Tour 8b«l.

Engene Blackford bas made a sensation in club kitchens and restaurants by proclaiming that boiled shad is preferable to broiled shad, fried tM or planked shad, and there is much talk about the new dish. It is an old luxury among epicures, who bold that mors of the delicate flavor Is retained by boiling and that the innumerable bones are not so bothersome. But boiled shad is inoomplote without cream sauce. Take one cup of cream, with a few spoonfuls of hot water to keep it from clotting, and stir into it slowly two tablespoon fuls of melted butter. Heat this in a vessel set inside another vessel of boiling water and add to It one tablespoonful of tbe liquor in which the shad is boiled. Then let it boil up once to thicken and pour it over the shad. Any herb spoilt this purs sauce, which has no flavor except that which it develops from tbe fish.—Albany Argus. 'f*?*

9un.

A

Ths Etnplro Sash. $

Tying tbe Empire sash is to be one of toe questions of tbe hour this autumn, and indeed it already agitates tbe souls of the truly fashionable. The effect desired may be learned from French and English portraits, but the secret of producing it Is—pins. A West Pointer may fasten one end of his sash to tbe tent pole and wind himself up in it and look well, but tbe girl who has an Empire sash to keep in place secures tbo folds with pins and so keeps them from making a narrow wisp in an hour. Tbe long looped bow looks after itself pretty well, but a safoty pin nfT*T»gr its folds doss no harm, and another, or even two. Is not out of place among the bows into which the long ends are knotted at tbe toot of the skirt

Bow Mew Yorkers Get Eggs. Eggs arrive freely at Fulton market, from Iowa to Long Island. Not mors than one in ten is strictly fresh. Western eggs cost 18 cents a dosen, and fresh eggs from 25 cents to SB centa New laid eggs, tbe only scrt fit to boil, are 85 cents a dosen. Tbs individual pons for cooking eggs in tbe styIs known as "panned* are vary convenient In each pot a small bft of table butter place in the oven just k»g enough to melt this, when break in the eggs, staaun, return to ths oven, and cook from three to six minutes. Serve immediately in tbe pans.—New

York Evening

Tbe Fhench method of admlnfatffingcMtoroQ to children is to pour the oil into a pan over a moderate fire, break an egg into it and gttr up. When it is done Savor with a fittls salt or sugar or cunant jelly.

When tbe knives sand forts ef* stained wtth eggs scour them with common table salt Medkatoe stains can be removed from spoons in

TT TCEKRff .HAUTE /SATURDAY IKVBNING MAIL. I

WHAT SHALL WE WEAR?

A FRENCH PALETOT OF VELVET WITH LACE TRIMMINGS.

The Present Styles in Low Newport Ties, Canvas Shoes and Dressy Slippers of French Kid—A Distingue Toilette for

Evening Wear. Tbe distingue evening toilette shown in the cut is composed of fine white cashmere and black velvet Tbe pointed neck opening of the short bodice is trimmed with velvet Tbe pleated parts are caught into the shoulder seams aud fastened below under the Swiss bond of velvet which is sewed to one side and hooked on the other. A band of velvet four inches wide finishes the half long sleeves.

UV1CNINQ TOILETTE WITH SWISS BAND.

This model, furnished by The Season, may be made in other materials than the ones mentioned when this is desired.

A*

Shoes for Summer Wear.

Low shoes are very generally worn this season: they have rounded, not pointed, toes, are laced across the instep and have medium high heels. Dull kid uppers with patent leather foxing, or at least Hps of patent leather, are most used. Many fancy kinds of kid and of cloth are also used for the upper parts of these low Newport ties. Tan and gray undressed kid are light and pleasant to wear, and are used both for low shoes and for slippers the latter nre for full dress, or for mornings at home, and should be worn with stockings of tbe same color. Dark blue and brown cloths, also shepherd's checked cloths, form the upper part of low shoes, and also of high buttoned boots. Tan and russet kid are liked for hou-e shoes and for tennis shoes. Canvas shoes in tan shadt-s are also liked for tbe country, while for the house are white canvas or linen duck shoes with patent, leather foxing. Dressy slippers of black French kid have embroidery of fine jet beads on tbe toes, while those cut higher on tho instep have tho large square Mollero buckle and tow. Tan and reddish lirown kid buttoned boots and low shoes are worn by little girls. Harper's Bazar. sJw

How the Fair S«x Use Perfume*. The indiscriminate use of perfumes is a thing of the past among tbe cremo de la creme. A lady no longer tips a bottle of triple extract over her handkerchief or sprinkles it ad nauseum over herself. Patchouli and musk are shunned now in any form, and delicate odors, such as violet heliotrope or orris root, are used. Even these milder odors are employed in the shapo of sachet powder, instead of liquid extracts, in many cases. Laces, underwear, ribbons, note paper, gloves and all smaller articles of dress are made fi ngrant by large sachet bngs that are of a size corresponding to the bureau or dressing table drawers. These bags are oomposod of silk and lined with raw cotton, upon which the powder is spread. This, In addition ton very moderate use of a faint suggestive odor, such as the wood violet, for instance, is all in the way of perfume that is allowable by a ally refined woman. Pari dan dressmakers have a way of sending perfumed gowns to their c«"Ttomers. A strange feature connected with this fashion is tbe fact that the odor remains forever.

Paletot with Kpnulet Sleeves. The paletot, witli epaulet sleeves nnd sbanl trimming, lieru represented is a very pleasing model from The Season:

•.ir

ir

PALETOT WITH KPACLXT 8TERVWJ. The fronts of this velvet paletot open over tbawl trimming of flat pleated lace arranged ou a plain waistcoat foundation. Pleated lace (lublics tbe shawl trimming below and tbe epaulet slwvas. The sleeves are further trimmed with bow* of corded silk ribbon, and a how of similar ribbon, with long ends, marks tbe waist line tn front of the paletot.

rtixtrd Mutln Chemisette. In place of tbe plain masculine chemisette, so much worn of late by ladies with jacket bodices, has «some Into the foreground a pleated muslin arrangement This latter cool and dainty iu appearance, and cu% |f» mad* to match tt V*

Tt«m* from Vanity Fair.

Steels in tbe drapery at tbe back of Juaf lift tbe skirt two or three Indies from tbe ground to as to exhibit Flora MrFlimsey*

Gainesborough bats are as fashionable as they were two seasons ago. and, tf anything, a trifle larger.

Tbe latest nousecee recommended for a beautiful complexion is to rub the face night and morning with olive ofL

of cream

Picturesque gardm party hats

SETS

colored India muslin shirred upon fine wins and trimmed wit* garlands of pals yeflow with hearts of golden brown.

.. SOCIAL ETIQUETTE.

manners and Customs Practiced In' '•f- Polite Socfctty. "The days are past when children used la rko the moment their parents entered tlio room where they were and stand until 1h«»v Iwiil received permission to sit," says Mi-s. Louisa C. Moulton "but tho mistake iMiow nsado usually in the other direction of allowing to small boys and girls too much liceuso to disturb the peace of the heuseliold. I think the best way to train children in courtesy would be to observe toward them a scrupulous jKjiiteness. I would go so far as to say that we should make it a point to listen to children without interrupting them, and to auswer them as sincerely and res]ectfully as ir they were grown up. Of course, to allow uninterrupted chatter would be to surrender the repose of the household, but it is very easy, if children are themselves scrupulously respocted, to teach them in turn scrupulously to respect the convenience of others, and to know when to talk and when to bo silent "If a child is brought up in tboconstant exercise of courtesy toward brothers and sisters and playmntes, as well as toward parent* and uncles and aunts, it will have libtlo left to learn as it grows older. "The best brought up family of children I ever knew were educated on the principle of always commending them when it was possible to do so, and letting silence le the reproof of any wrongdoing that was not really serious. I lmve heard the children of this household, when their mother had failed tc say any word of commendation after some social occasion, nsk as anxiously as possible, 'What WHS it, mamma? I know something was wrong. Didn't we treat tho other children well, or were we too noisyP In that bouse reproof was never bestowed unsought, nnd commendation, of whatever it was possible to comiuend, wus gratuitous."., ,,»

tn

Ceremonious Calls.

•ittli

Ceremonious colls by gentlemen, which include those made after halls, parties and dinners. should lie made within a week after the event, whether one accepted or not So prescribes a masculine authority in such matters. Such calls, some ono has stud, should resemble wit in their brevity, not exceeding tho length of a reasonable sermon—say twenty or thirty minutes nt the most.

7

Letters of Introduction. letter of introduction should be left open in order that tho bearer may acquaint himself wjth its contents. In giving letters of introduction one take? a great responsibility. Give them only to persons in whom you have enough confidence to be willing to be responsible for them.

Vigor and Vitality

Are quickly given to every part of body by Hood's aarsaparilln. That tired feeling Is entirely overcome. The blood Is purified, enriched, and vitalized, and carries health Instead of disease in every organ. The stomach Is toned and strengthened, the appetite restored. The kidneys and liver are roused and Invigorated. The brain Is refreshed, the mind made clear and ready for work. Try it

Clara Erskin Waters is the namo of a Boston woman who Is building a Hindoo temple in her back yard. ,f

And now they say that Mme. Ktclka Oerster has hopelessly ruined her voice by indulging in fits of furious anger.

If yon desire to possess a beautiful oomplexion take Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It cleanses and purifies the blood, and removes blotches and pimples, making the skin smooth and clear, and giving it a bright and healthy appearance. Take it this month.

Give Them A Chanesl

That is to say, your lungs. Also all your breathing machinery. Very wonderful machinery it is. Not only tbe larger air-passages, but the thousands of little tubes and cavities leading from them.

When these are clogged and choked with matter which ought not to be there, your lungs cannot half do their work. And what they do, the}* cannot do well.

Call it cold, cough, croup, pneumonia, catarrh, consumption or ariy of family of throat and nose and head and lung obstructions, all are bad. All ought to be got rid of. There is just one sure way to get rid of them. That Is to take Boschee's German Syrup, which any druggist will sell to you at 75 cents a bottle. Even If everything else had failed you you may depend upon this for certain. jy2-eow.

You Carry

A whole medicine chest in your pocket, with one box of Ayer's Pills. As they operate directly on the stomach and bowels, they indirectly affect every other organ of the body. When thu stomach is out of order, the head Is affected, digestion fails, the blood Incomes impoverished, ami you fall on easy victim to any prevalent disease. Miss M. E. Boyle, of Wilkcsbarre, l'a., puts the whole truth in a nutshell, when she says: I use no other medicine than Ayer's Pills. They are all that any one needs, and just splendid to say,® money in doctors' bills."

Here is an instance of

A Physician

wlio lost his medicine chest, but, having at hand a bottle of Ayer's Pills, found himself fully equipped.—J. Arrlsou, M. I., of San Jmk, Cal., writes:

Some three years ago, by the merest accident, I was forced, so to speak, to prescrilte Ayer's Cathartic 1'llls for several sick men among a party of engineers In the Sierra Nevada mountain*, my medicine chest having 1»ecn lost In crossing a mountain torrent. I was surprised and delighted at the action of the Pills, so much so, Indeed, that I was led to a further trial of tliem, as well as of your Cherry Pectoral aud Sarsaparilla. I have nothing but praise to offer in their favor." I

John W. Brown, *t. D-, of Ocean*, W. Ya., writes I prescribe Ayer's Pills In my practice, and find them excellent. I urge their general use in families."

T. E. Hastings, M. D., of Baltimore, Md„ writes: That Ayer's Pills do control and cure the complaint* for which they are designed, is as conclusively proven to me as anything possibly can be. They are tho beat cathartic and aperient within the reach of the profession."

Ayer's Pills,

mrao sr.' .iL

Dr. J, C. Ayer tt Co., Lowtfl,

It Needs No Miseroscope eive an increase in flesh, afld at improvement in temper in a feeble, peevisn infant fed upon Lactated Fco.l which embodies the chemical compon ents of mother's milk, blended in jusi the right proportion to nourish babioi and invalids most efficiently.

CRYING

are made

GOOD NATURED, HEALTHY, HEARTY, by the uaa of

Lufrfat

DS

Babies do not err if they sre satisfied, and they cannot bo satisfied if they are not properly nourished by their food, or It It produces irritation of stoiuuch or bowels.

Very many mothers cannot properly nour. Ish their children. nnt tho milk of many mothers produces bud effects in tho child becauss of constitutional disease or weakness.

For all such eases there is a remedy in

LACTATED FOOD.

Hundreds of physicians testify to Its grest value. It will DO retained when even lime water and milk is rejected by tho stomac hence it is of Kreat value to all invalids, la either chronic or acute cases. 150 MEALS for r.n Infant for $1.00. £ASiLY PREPARED. At Ir.legists—2ic.,'«0c., fl. A \hvU»|p mm.i on application.

XW.l.u*. .Itui'liiiMoii,

KIRKS WHITE

The only bmnd of Laundry Soap awarded a first class nieUal at tho New Orleans Exposition. Guaranteed absolutely pure, and for general household purposes is the very best

SOAR

University of Virginia.

(Founded by Thos. Jeflbrson.)

The 64th Session Begins Oct, 1st, 188? and continues nine months. Thorough Instruction in Literary, Hcicntlflo and Professional Departments, Including LAW, Medicine, Pharmacy, Engineering ana Agriculture. For Catalogue apply P. O. University of Va., Va. to CHAH. H, VKNABLL, je—aug. Chairman of Faculty.

Hay Fever

Is an inflamed condition of the lining! membrane of the nostrils, tear-ducts and throat, alfbcting the lungs. An, acrid in,ucus Is se creted, and dls charge Is accom pan led with a burnt nt sensation. There are severe spasms of sneering, freotient attack or headachi watery and Intlam ed eyes

CREAM BALM A Positive Cure. A particle Is ap plied Into each nostril and isagreeable, Price AO cents at Druggists by mail, registered, 60 cts. ELY BROn., 286 Greenwich St., New York.,*

obrttnsts DM In four dsya or

CELEB

Mass.

gokl by all Druggists.

without

6. Patent-

A POSITIVE fesrs

CTLPI Imia.

tb« most

Man's Soluble Medicated Bougies.

Ho stokeoia* results, sa /rata the use of •Dbebs, oopslM or oU or sandalwood whioh in

receipt of pries. For far*""

TOATLAY

P. O. Box 1M or John at.M. Y.

0RSET

THBaopertorlty

ofCoraltaeover bom.

or whalabooa bas now been demonstrated by over tAx years experience- It te more durable, more pliable, more comfortable, azxd NEVER BREAKS*

Tbe nto of thue Corsets is now over 7000 daily* Beware of wortbieas Imitation* boned, wltb various kinds of cord.

None are genuine unless Or. Warner'# Cora line" to printed on inalde

at

tbe steel cover. FOB SALB BY ALL LEADnO KZB0HAH18.

3674 259 BtetsStmfc. CHIOAOOftlU*