Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 19, Number 24, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 December 1888 — Page 3
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SCIENCE AND PROGRESS.
ITEMS OF INTEREST GLEANED FROM THE WORLD OF SCIENCE.
in Entertaining Experiment With Mirror* In Which the Lateral Inversion la Dona Away with and Some Very Curio a*
Effect* Obtained.
Everybody knows that in produced by a mirror there Is a lateral im ion that it, right and left are reverted. We bare become *o accustomed to this inversion that we rarely notice it unleea printed page is held before the mirror, when the fact that the words appear "backward" recalls it to If we arrange two mirrors so that there is doable reflection, says Scientific
American, the
£0 the inversion is got
EXPERMEXT WITH rwo rid of and some MIKHOKA. curious effects are obtained. Put two mirrors edge to edge, at an angle somewhat lew than 90 degs., and bold a book in front of them in tho position a In the sketch. An image of tho book seen in each mirror, but because of the two reflections, indicated by the dotted lines, there is no inversion, a fact which we recognize by the words appearing in their natural order. Now stand at a, and, fixing the attention on one of the images of the face in the mirrors, attempt to brash the hair. The result is ludicrous. The brush is almost surely pat to the wrong side of the bead and the hair brushed the wrong way, and it is usually some little time before one sufficiently becomes accustomed to the odd effect to use the brash with confidence.
Spontaneous Corabnstlon.
In regard to spontaneous combustion the fire* of tho year in Boston have furnished somo now observations of considerable im* portance In one cose, says American Architect, a quantity of feather dast in a bedding manufactory took flre without apparent son. It was found, however, that a piece of thick glass had been lying on the feathers, and tho aun'a ray*, concoutrated in some way by tho gluts, had set fire to them, although tho duy was a cold ono in tho mouth of March. In another case, a number of tarpaulin hats were lying, packed together, in a window. The high temperature, with perhaps tho closo packing of the hats, caused thoin to burnt into a blaze. Two other fires were earned by putting |araillne paper, such as candy is wrapped in, into a refuse barrel which contained a little wiwdust and a third, which destroyed $UU,U00 worth of property, was *occasioned by putting greasy (taper, which hud been used to wrap lunches in, into a wooden refuse barrel, which contained somo sawdust and sweepings.
I,oiiK Distance Telephoning. Words spoken in Philadelphia can now be beard in Portland, Me., a distance of 450 miles. What was nt first looked upon ns doubtful venture is now rapidly becoming recognized ns one of tho cuccewful and progressive moves in recent electrical history, Tho large and important cities of Philadelphia, New York, Brooklyn, Albany, Now Haven, Hartford, Providence, Boston and Portland, with intermediate towns, are now in telephonic communication, covering a territory represented by seven states.
There are at tlw present time over 100 manufacturing establishments in tho tcrri tory adjacent to Now Yorfc that are daily patrons of this system, either by leasing lines or by contracting for no many hours per day, and these companies are all supplied with tho improved long distance transmitter—tho in vent ion which, with tho use of hard drawn copper conductors, made possible this wonderful and potent advance in tho telephouio industry.
DafnUo on tho Texas Plains. Two hundred head or more of buffalo may bo found in the Panhandle of Texas, on tho Llano Kstaradn, and In No Man's Land. Borne are on the Palo Duro Canon ranch, owned by Capt. Charles Goodnight others in the Texas Capital syndicate, or XIT pasture, especially on the North plains, i. north of the Canadian river still others are at large. Probably twenty or more buffalo calves were captured this spring in that region and driven to Kansas for mercenary and breeding purposes. There ore also many buffalo on the south |»lai!i. The aatelo|K\ black tailed deer, and many rare but smaller mammal*, are found in the win to region. Naturalists desiring these forms should go to Tascosa, Tox., near tho Now Mexican line, a place easily news sible from Kau*as, Denver and Toxos, via the Kurt Worth and Denver railway. Tho capture of wild horses is a profitable pursuit in tins region, adds the Tox&s correspondent who gives tin. nliove information in a recent is»ue of ti.*i»,"Uiv.
l'ul»i»tlow of Steam tn I'lprn, The atv-iup.'»nyi?ig diagram*, taken from the steam ii|\Mvf a Corliss engine, an? of in* tere«t, cxpHins Milling Enginorr as showing the varwit: *vs of steam pressure in the supply pipn during one revotut on of the engine, The do:u«d lines
in
f'ftl
she diagrams
show the lex el of pressure nt the boiler, as *ho»v lv t-i.' steam gnu^re. Figure 1 is a renr^hi. ion of a rar»i t,»ken with the iadi-c«!o!-ijtiaelievl j:ist ftl»vc the stop ralre in ti -.-itu f.j-o at the eyiinvier. and about tUtv f*et from the boiler. Figure 'J is from a card tanen with the indicator in same pari*
VARIATIONS or StKAM rRKSSt RK. u? wj Jt a large rvtviver put in the pipe about thirteen feet above the stop vaive. It will lx noticed that the number ef pulsations is inor^.i.«ol by shortening the pipe, and that the pre,« -e does not rise SM high above tho line of tvnier pr*»«:re. nor dot* it fait quite Kt far Uel^vr The Imrl on the engine may bans i*m».-ti sng to do with thia The fall in prsMtur* a: v-r near tba cut ©If wiH mnm to explain the rounding off of the cat off •o frequently seen o« indicator cards.
VrsMtiif rram« Itowns
A contraction detail that is gaining mocb popularity in «*n» western dtiw to tb* tricking in of frame howc*. American Builder tells bow this is dona. The boil" is «43ed up With matcia«d staff, as if r* piete, thru a brick fac* wait, fear lac&M thick, is laid in contact with the ext« ti*A «t 4)na about iwy sixth ewL .:w A boy dumteftN Own all artmad cm too at the wail T2vey an b«Jd in tb» osoftar bad rva»iy. and dr.v«» through Into Uk» sldiag till the M) are flutfe with tiw face of tltt wall, when the next aottrtm are laid, atidao ott. ths walls praaqoi Uw appearaoc* ot solid maacmry. are durable, and, they add to the warmth of the hjlMtaf, 1MB to pcar~* sulxtaabal pac.r. la a*vara oiinpf
Is the Tin lisn df Smell Djtnt Out In Gt^ llirad Man? The writer of the following was strongly tinctured with the tbeoriea of Darwin: "Among the many startling disclosure* with which scientific Investigation baa made as on* of Use most extravagant is the discovery according to which the nosa is said to be gradually losing its power to discharge its traditional function in the case of the civilized people. When the sense of smell vanishes all rtber—as, it is affirmed, will infallibly be :, case one day—the organ itself is bound to follow its example sooner or later. It is, no doubt, a n-t that the olfactory sense is much keener in the savage than in the civilized man, and it is reasonable to conclude that the more we progress in civilization the duller the sense mil grow, and, as nature never preserves uaelejs organs, when the nose loses its power of smelling the nose must go."
"Let Her Go."
Here is another version of the origin of the expression "Let ber go, Gallagher,n from Montgomery, Ala.: "Squire Ben Screws is the genial and big hearted magistrate of the city of Montgomery. A colored lady having indulged in very much 'inflamed language* towards another of an equally night shade of complexion, the aggrieved one had her arrested and arraigned for trial before the squire. One of the numerous witnesses was very severe in ber testimony against the accused, saying, among other things, that sh« used 'talk that no lady can 'spress.' This so aggravated the defendant that she went for the witness regardless of surroundings. Tom Gallagher, the squire's bailiff, tried to stop the wool pulling that ensued, and caaght bold of the defendant's arm, when the sqmre, who likes to see fair play, and withal enjoys a good thing, shouted: 'Let her go, Gallagher.' This became a current saying here, and in time has become a cant phrase throughout the country."
A Royal Traveler.
Mr. Edmund Yates writes to The Now York Tribune that thero is not a inan in tho queen's dominions, who, during the last twenty years, has spent so many nights in railway travel as has her majesty's eldest Mn. During his Indian tour all the prince's railway journeys were made by night. Look at his recent record. On ono night he traveled by rail from Roumanla to Vienna. The following night be spends in the train on his way to the shooting ground. He shoots all day, conies buck the same night to Vienna w'ithout a break, quits Vienna by night on a journey to Paris, and travels by night from Paris to London. The night between Friday and Saturday of that week ho spent traveling from London to Balmoral the night between Monday and Tuesday of the next week he spent on tho return journey to town. And bis roynl highness is never fitter than after a night of railway travel. Ho seems to rise from Ins railway oouch adequately refreshed, certainly in excellent form for either pleasure or business.
More About Gllderoy's Kite. "To bo hung higher than Gilderoy's kite" means to be punished more severely than the very worst of criminals. "The greater the crime the higher tho gallon's" was at one timo a practical legal axiom. Haman, it will be romombered, was hanged on a very high gallows. Tho gallow.. of Montrose was thirty feet high. Tho ballad says:
Of Gilderoy sae frald they ware They bound him mickie strong, Tull Edeoburrow they led bint tbair,
Agd on a gallows hong They hong him high abone the rest. He was so trim a boy. They "hong him high abono the rest," because bis crimes were deemed to be more heinous. So high he hung he looked, so it was then said, like "a kite in the air."
Safe Interest.
All national and state banks receive ^pposits subject to check at sight, but do not pay interest. Principal trust companies have two systems, elective at the time of depositing. ono similar to tho above banks and the other a time account, when & notice of from ten days to two weeks is required. On the first system they pay 9 per cent, and on the latter per cent. No reliable banks pay more ratoof interest than that cited here, and on any larger rate of interest it would be well to examine carefully the security. The Philadelphia and Wastern Saving funds are exceptions. These pay 3 per cent, but demand at least two weeks' notice.
Spun Glass.
Mr. Dtibus Bonnet, of Lille, Franco, has invented a process of spinning and weaving glass into cloth. The warp is composed of silk, forming the body and ground work, on which the pattern in glass appears, as effected by the weft The requisite flexibility of glass thread for manufacturing purposes is to be ascribed to its extreme fineness, as not less than from SO to 60 of the original strands arc required to form one thread of the weft Tho process is slow, for no more than a yard of cloth can be produced in 12 hours. Tho work, however, is extremely beautiful and comparatively cheapo
Wouldn't Take a Woman.
When Miss Fnwcett, daughter of the late postmaster general of England, applied to a famous mathematical coach at Cambridge to be taken as bis pnpil, she was rudely repulsed, and the uagallant tutor remarked that ho "wo take no tabbies." Very welL This same s* Fawcett has been systematically beating the best men of ber year in the Trinity college examinations, and will doubtless be senior wrangler for the ensuing year.
"The Man WHhoat a Country." It is now pointed out as one of the enrioaitics of magaidno history that the MS. of
The Man Without a Country" remained unpublished for many months in the office of The Atlantic, though the war spirit was at its highest pitch, and when published sold *00,030 coptw.
$
Trial of Criminals.
criminal is tried under the law of the country where his crime Is committed, so matter what his nationality. No criminal can be anrcetad in a fore'"" coon try without the content of the gover sat of titalooastry. Persons are sometimes kidnaped, how* ever.
Anther of "Kober* Stem" Mrs. Humphry Ward, author of "Koh-n tamer«t* bora ta Australia. brother, Theodora, it SKiborimMar tn New a is a to Leonard Huxley, _:V\ .!»*» M*. ataay Shane.
It is -Bated that there are 5,0 la ABM.
~A who get shaved A It That raea&s an expet ,.:ar» ot SB cents a week, or $1X60 a year for each man, or f*?r the
try
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^raKRE HATJT,K
THE CURIOSITY SHOP. YOUNG FOL'
J*.*
A HALF HOUR'S FOR OUR OWN GIRLS
A VnHOT Rhyme from Tells All A boat Skimming Tellow and Churning It Intoa Golden Ma»J
Butter. 8ldnt.sfeim.dcim. .. *V.. With the skimmer tight
Take the rich and yellow cream. Lea re the milk so white.
Churn, churn, churn. Now it's churning day Till the cream to butter turn.
Dasher must not stay
WAITING FOB THK
,'BUTT*R
I
TO COKE."
Pres*. press, press, Ail the milk must be From the butter's golden moss
Pressed most carefully Pat, pat, pat, Make It smooth and round Here's a roll of butter now—
Wont you buy a pound 1
Taste, taste, taste,' This is very nice Spread It on the children's bread-
Give them each a slice.
A Toad at Its Toilet.
Ono bright summer day I saw a toad sitting on a lump of brown earth and dressing, or rather undressing himself. Ho was about half grown and his coat was too tight for him. So he took off the dirty, brown coat, or skin, and appeared to his visitors in a new one,which had grown under the old skin. The new one was white and clear, and tho blood showed through it in pink spots. The tight skin had begun to Bplit about the nose and along the back and Mr. Toad helped it with his feet, until it was off. As fast as he stripped off tho old skin ho ato it I Then be sat still awhile in the sunshine, drawing his breath freely, winking very wisely, and thinking how haudsome he was. He would not pinch his beautiful form with a tight coat, and fancy that it made him look max) graceful. This sensible gentleman wore loose robes in warm weather, as people do in India.
Some children seem to think that no living ereature is of any use, if they cannot understand its habits, or if it annoys them. If they would watch the toads in their gardens they would see that they eat many injurious iwycts, and therefore should be carefully f/roiSrved from harm, instead of being persecuted.
There is an old saying, "There is a jewel in a toad's head." His eyes must be bright like jewels, for he sees every fly that comes within his reach, and hii long tongno darts out and catches the fly as quick as a wink. I have seen (wenty toads together in a warm mud bole. The brown backs of the old ones were dotted with yellow and blue spots. The young ones were of several ages ami sixes, and were colored with various shades of red and brown. In the spring they are found with frogs in water. There the young ones are hatched from eggs. Afterward they live on the land in holes. How funny they are, without tails, hopping out of our way, as we walk the roaal
An Amusing Toy,
A good deal of fan can be had with the ring top, it being one of the easiest things imaginable to make, according to Golden Days, which describes it as follows: It is simply a flat ring, about an eighth of an inch thick, with two nicks on opposite sides. Such a circle can bo easily cut oat of a piece of cigar box wood. As the central hole need not be cat, the making of such adisk will not occupy more than ten minutes. In fact, a large penny, nicked with a file, will answer every purpose, to begin with.
The strange thing about the ring top is that it is spun with the legs, tho hands having very little to do with it
Apiece of string about a yard long has its opposite ends tied together, arid Into it are slipped the legs to about the level of the shoe tops.
The legs are then kept apart in cat's cradle fashion, and the top being placed upright in the center, has the string put in each nick, and it is twisted round and round until the ,• Will t« nO uivix. The Le^ are then pressed apart, the string •rista I shot out and sent rolling ng the
TAS HIS A Tor. GOO,. and troe for tnezDendoos distances. The game is played by two or mors, who •v.*. 1
r\ op~-- eodf: am, aad firing
v-r,
a- to other on the
way, the top going furthest before the cotl&kmb the W ar of the coanei Anytl dm.: •, daly nicked, sack a* cortain rings, canister lid*, box tops and toy v' can be pi ed into servi doe re-
t_i-Jag
paid
J» fact that aeavier 'greater the moaMr m, aad straii -tr the top wiu go.
the material tho Ike farther aad
Old Saws ta Blqfaa IJMM than wort rer tea: aakaaadhc ate it
WbcathscettiBw^tfccBtfcentlearioepfer When that* Is a wig ttae is ahraysa wsgr.
2S..-
A area* IWs. Saenctal dejx utomm —lima ISMMfe
a the other fea aire -jiaglNkataaotlMflia
taSFkaof tk betaar fasa a&
HYGIENE.
of Starvation Upoa tke Moral aad Urate! Faculties. question in regard to the effect ion on the moral nature of man is by Popular Science as follows: perfidal observer death by starvaiply means a wasting of the body, agony, an increasing weakness, a ic state of the brain and asleep from there is no awakening bat is this all it meansf In many cases of bodily di»» the state of the mind is the first indi*cator of the mischief going on in the system.
Take even such a simple thing as indigestion, which, as every one mast know, is only a manifestation of a deranged stomach, and what do we findf That too lownesB of spirits induced by this affection may vary from slight dejection and ill humor to the most extreme melancholy, sometimes inducing even a disposition to suicide. The sufferer misconceives every act of friendship and exaggerates slight ailments into heavy grievances, ob in starvation, the power of reason seams paralysed aad the intellectual faculty dated jjeally before the functions of the body suffer or even the wasting of its tissue beoomes extreme. Bach being the case, the unfortuiate individual is not accountable for his aofions, even if they be criminal in character, long before death puts an end to his sufferings.
Aids to Beauty.
Individual bean ties have their own theories as to the preservation of the complexion. A stage beauty of a few years ago used to claim that for ten years she had never touched water to her face or neck, bat removed dast and all imparities by ^areful robbing with a piece of white velvet
Many professional beauties are careful to wash their Cu^s only with pure water, without a trace
OT
soap, as the alkali in the soap,
onlelf it is\*$he very beet quality, has a tendency to nx^hen the skin. Mrs. Long try is said to use a wash of oafmeal dissolved in warm water etpry night before retiring. frequent exercise, wholesome food and scrupulous cleankness are, after all, the best aids to beauty. Daily sun baths are highly recommended by woolen whose girl like complexions testify to the good results of the treatment In all cases it is safe to assert that the simplest and mos^natural methods are the most effective in preserving or improving the complexion. -. Drugs and chemicals lend only a seeming aid for a time and then leave the unfortunate user worse off than she was before.
An Aceldent of Childhood.
Putting buttons, beads, etc.,^nto the nose is a by no means uncommon occurrence among young children, and mothers will therefore be interested in the following remarks from Journal of Health:
A very young child, after such an accident, can rarely bo persuaded to forcibly blow its nose if it could tho foreign body would iu nearly all cases be expelled. Whep it is too young to do that, his nose should be blown for him in the following manner: Have an assistant hold tho head steadily between his or knees, then lot tho mother apply her lips closely over the mouth of the child and blow suddenly and forcibly into it It is surprising with what ease the trouble can be removed by this means. The child will very likely cry when tho operation is attempted if it does, so much tho better. If the simple procedure advised fails, the services of a physician will generally be needed to accomplish the removal of the foreign body.
Fresh Air for Students.
Students, of all people, should understand ventilation. The weariness and headaches which come of close application will be greatly lessened by giving tho lungs all the fresh air they can possibly contain. Children can play longer without fatigue in fresh air than when confined indoors. All workers know that fatigue and exhaustion come sooner if there is a lack of fresh air. Especially in training the voice must the student breathe pure air for the development of proper tone. And we would wish that there might be more attention given to this almost neglected subject on this side of the Atlantic. If people knew bow easily one may acquire a full, rich and well modulated voice our ears would not be so often rasped by nasal twangs and sharps and flats of varying degrees.
SOCIAL ETIQUETTE.
The Judicious Selection of Friends and Social Acquaintance*. Every woman ought to regard her home, whether grand or humble, as her kingdom, and steadily refuse to admit y0An its sacred portals any but those whom she can at least know enough about to feel sure that they are worthy the confidence of her acquaintance and the mild form of friendship which the relation of hostess and guest would seem to imply.
Such is the counsel of Annie JennesB Miller on choosingaafs friends, and she adds, among other sug&Hons, the following: "I must confess
Joa feeling of absolute revolt every time that 1 bear a man or woman claim as a friend another about wheta they know absolutely nothing and the deplorable custom of adding each newly introduced person to one's list of invited, what sending oat cards for a reception, cannot be too severely censored. Such a course must rvsalt in tho gathering f!, rai •ROO' roof of a BUM* _i OKi uf bt :. mity.
It is far better for the hostess to invite to her drawing rooms fifty persons whom she knows to belong to her own grade of society, whose mental, social and moral qualities she can vouch for, than hundreds of injudiciously sH~*ted persons about whom she knows noti except that Mrs. Dash entertains them. 1 know of a v&ty charming woman, whose nature in respor^'ig to all kinds of imper tent demands upon ber for admittance to ber drawing room, have made it impor TMo for a ran'!y self respecting perto there ati-.l. and yet, in ber own character as a woman of refinement and in* v. aba?-, ili^y i_:.ily wi ». Jhns a geaaroos lift to a struggling generuus lift to a •trnggli aad yet, gret.' -imiaatftm nm deciding j, aad who is aot, worthy of cos's confidence aad patronage.
Nojtor*—t beart-^ 4merioaa can desire any Ugberl thant ofgatUeman or lady aad oos caa on xne soch by carcfolly cboo^-r~w'si..t«—i, taordsr*4-*-'! awo ti tend toward the MQtof character which wOi eodura,
Real aad Cuau iHIenal BreedJag. Mcaer
it
sometimes ooly a fab* eft-
most stffl admire it. 7 graceful speech, the frai. —'la, the bow, Use bat rated sfcMT* it' .•. v: as a nta paaa a woaiaa, tha feet to the agad, the wminfno— to give not admire it! .. s» traits svaaia what osed to a ntry Uuapkin waad him. r— •.apersoaoCreal brB&^^evea 1 BO Caav«ntl«aal brsedias. The gvtMMrt tfarnp, to ass tha bat ft is novmex* coin is aaafcitna—d m£tSrMr
m£±L.
Misfeken Remises
Continued from Second J\tge, He stared blankly at the child a moment. murmuring some abortive congratulations. The invitation to dinner ne declined. He must go at once to his
Apparently
Be was wildly impatient to reach her arms, for with the briefest possible adieux, he rapidly turned his steps in the direction of Tremont street, not once looking backward.
Who can describe his thoughts, if "thoughts" those formless, void sensations that filled his brain could be calledT Had not Electra said, in the note she had sent him on the day following his act of renunciation, that she should "never marry"? True, girls often are heard to utter that formula, but then Electra was different. Her words were never lightly uttered. Yet she was married, ana a mother, and lost to him forever. And by his own act.
Now here occured one of those singular coincidences that baffle reason. Professor Basford had reached the exact spot where Richard Fanshawe had made the same remark more than three yeafe previously, and hero, with a sudden glow of self-illumination, he uttered the words: "I am a fool!"
Mr. and Mrs. Fanshawe watched the long drab figure up to the vanishing point. Then they turned, looked at each other, and smiled. "Dick," said his wife, with flushed cheeks and eyes brimming with mirth, "do you know, he never got the news of our marriage, and he came back to—to take me!" "He did, did ho?" said Mr. Fanshawe, scowling at the place where the drab ulster had disappeared.
Electra broke Into a laugh, but turned suddenly grave. "Indeed, Richard, he was frightfully in earnest," she said. "HiB vehemence fairly took my breath away." "Effect of tropical climate," said Fanshawe, "Ah, poor devil' I am sorry for him. How he looks 1 HiB liver must be in a fearful state." "Dick," said Electra. pensively, as they walked towards their pretty homo, "you never did Orville Basford justice. He has a line intellect and an unusually
orga
He idealizes -"ho idealiz-
inclined to idealize things. women. He"—very softly ed me!", "While 1," said Dick fervently—"I only idolize you, my darling!"
Mrs. Fanshawe mentioned Basford only onc« more *on their way home. That was after a lonur pause, during which her husband had been eyeing her intense oountenanco with some anxiety. He was human and notwithstanding the look with which liis wife hud answered his lover-like speech, and which was still thrilling along his nerves, a little demon of doubt was trying to mak6 itself felt. Not that he for a moment be lieved that Electra was regretting Basford but sometimes the old feeling would come over him that in somo of her moods Electra passed into spheres of thought where he, plain matter-of-fact Dick Fanshawe, the partner of lier common joys and sorrows, could not follow, and whero, if he could, he would feel terribly uncomfortable and out of place. This, in their present relation, gave him a queer sensation of being left outside, and was nlways accompanied by a little pang, as of lotting his wife for the time being. Therefore when that Minervalike countenance was turned towards him, ho humbled himself In spirit bofore the great words which he intuitively felt were coming. "Dick!"said Mrs. Fanshawe, solemnly,"some women ought to marry Orville Basford, if only to keep him from wearing that hideous thing on his head."
And to her dying day she will never understand why her husband broke into such sudden and disproportionate laughter, nor why he abused his opportunities by rapturously pressing her hand under cover of the broad apronstrings of the nurse, who walked bofore them trundling the chariot of tho sleeping Richard Agamenticus.
The Holidays
And the colder winter weather are now rapidly approaching. The joyful season Is eagerly anticipated by young folks in thousands of homes but in pearly all there are ono or more older ones to whom the cold waves and the storms mean renewed suffering from rheumatic back or limbs. It is not claimed that Hood's Sarsaparilla is a positive specific for rheumatism we doubt if thore is or can be such a remedy. But the remarkable success Hood's Sarsaparilla has had in curing this affection is sufficient reason for those who are suffering to try this peculiar medicine.
THKBRKATH of a chronic catarrh patient is often so offensive that he opcomes an object of disgust. Aftcratime ulceration sets In, the spongy bones are attacked, and frequently entirely destroyed. A constant sconrce of discomfort is the dripping of the purulent secretions into the throat, sometimes producing inveterate bronchitis, which in iis turn has been the exciting cause of pulmonary disease. The brilliant results which have attended its use for years past properly designate Ely's Cream Balm as by far the best and only cure.
Suffered for Six Year*.
Wife suffered six years from oppressed menstruation. Has been treated by the best physicians without benefit. Two bottles of Brad field's Female Regulator relieved ber. W. A.
SIMMON*,
JkcKAffpfill
UgltyfcVlAJE
IwftUXAD
Gfljj
J°\p
IAich Ht%
THE ONLY
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CELERY
rame
COMPOUND
CURES PROOFS
Neuralgia
"Paint's Celery Compound cured my nervous sick headaches."
"Paint's Celery Compound cured my nervous sick headaches."
Mis. I.. A. URBNTN**, San Jacinto, Cal.
Mis. I.. A. RBNTN**, San Jacinto, Cal.
Nervous Prostration
Nervous Prostration
"After using six bottle* of Paine Celery Compound, I am cured oi rheumatism." SAMUKI. HUTCHINSON,
"After using six bottle* of Paine Celery Compound, I am cured oi rheumatism." S AMUKI UTCHINSON,
Rheumatism
South Cornish, N. H.
South Cornish, N. H.
Kidney Diseases
"It has done mc mare food for kidney disease tnan any other medicine." G«o. Annovr,
Sioux City, lows.
Attn
"l'ame's Celery Compound has been of ere at benefit for torpid ltvt-r, indigestion, and til^u«ness." ELIIANIMI C. UiiAl.t, (Juethce, Vt.
All Liver Disorders
COATESCOLLEGE
FOB WOMEN,
Hccond term hf/tlns Jan.'2nd, MW9. Special advantages hi Kcionco, I.niiKViago and Literature. Muslo Department, under direction ot ProM. Ignacc ltukowitz. Home and social culture. Thorough Inst ruction In all branches For Information call on or address John Masou Duncan, President, Tcrro Haute, iud.
LADIES
Who Valut a Refined Complexion
MUST USE
POZZONIS
MEDICATED
COMPLEXION POWDER.
FRIENLP
gBOlrf
jjKKGER TO LIFE or M0TKEft^CHlI&
ff&OK
J3RADFi£li) REGULATOR UX,——'
Sold by J. E. hoMEH, cor. (Hli and Ohio.
GRATEFUL COMFORTING.
Epps's Cocoa
BKEAKFA8T.
"By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which fprvertj the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the line properties of well-selected 5oeoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage which may nave u* many heavy doctor*' bill*. It
IK
by the Judlelon* uae or such ar
ticle* of diet that a conntHntion may be gradually built up until »troiig enough to ro*l*t every tendency to di«ea«e. Hundred* of nubtie maladiea are float!ng around u* reai' attack wherever there la a weak point.
tie maladiea are floating around u« ready to la a weak point. W« may eacape many a fatal shaft by keeping ouraelves well fortified with pure blood and »_jrt
Sroj-erly
nourished
McNutt's,
S. C. Write the Bradfield Keg. Co., Atlanta, Ga. Sold by James E. Somes, cor. 6th and Ohio. 17-1 ra.
tte.
Made «impl
frame."—{Civil HervSoe
with boiling water or milk
Hold only In half pound tin* by grocers, labeled thus: JAMIL* 16VVH CO.. H»ueopatlilc heml»ta. Loaiton. K»g
tiA#n CLAUS SOAP.
CHICAGO.
•m
