Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 19, Number 51, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 June 1889 — Page 3
SCIENCE AND PROGRESS.
POPULAR SCIENCE NEWS 8URE TO INTEREST WIDE AWAKE READERS.
How Vortex King* Mar Be Produced at Will by Means of Very Simple Apparatus. Curious Way of Dividing an Apple tnto
Halve*. Every one baa noticed the symmetrical wraiths of smoke and steam occasionally projected high tnto the air on a still day by a locomotive similar rings may often be noticed after the firing of a gun. It is not Uncommon to a smoker forming such wreaths with his mouth. These rings are simply whirling masses of air revolving upon axes curved in annular form, the smoke serving to mark the projected and whirling body of air, thus distinguishing it from the surrounding atmosphere. The whorls would exist without the smoke, but tbey would, ot course, be invisible.
VORTEX RHTOft.
All the apparatus needed for producing these rings at will, explains a correspondent of Scientific American, from which Journal the atinATwd cut is reproduced, is an ordinary pasteboard hat box, having a circular bole of four or five inches diameter in the cover. Two pads of blotting paper are prepared, each consisting of six or eight pieces. Upon one pad is poured a small quantity of muriatic acid, and upon the other a similar quantity of strong aqua ammonia. Thceo pads are placed in the box and Immediately a white cloud is formed, which consist* of particles of chloride of ammonium so minute as to float in tho air.
By smartly tapping opposite iddea of the box a puff of air is sent through the circular opening of tho cover, carrying wftb it some of tho chloride of ammonium. The friction of the air against the edges of the cover retards the outer portion of the projected air column, while the inner portion passes freely through, thus imparting a rotary motion to the body of air adjoining the edge of tho cover, the axis of revolution being annular. After tho ring is detached the central portion of the air column continues to pass through it, thus maintaining the rotary motion.
When two rings are projected In succession in such a manner as to cause one to collide with the other, they bchnvo much like elastio solid IkxUos. By making the aperture in the box cover elliptical, tho rings will acquire a vibratory motion. By fastening the box cover loosely at the cornors, the box may be turned upon Its side and rings may be projected It orison tally. It is obvious that smoke may be used ia this experiment in Ueu of the chloride of ammonium.
Xs the Kartti In Danger from the Drill? Professor J. F. Jouos answers, in a recent issue of The Popular Sclenco Monthly, the question, "Is it safe to drill the earth too much I* The professor assumes the earth to bo a hollow sphere filled with a gaseous substance, called by us natural gas, and he thinks that tappiug thcee reserveta* will cause disastrons explosions, resulting from tho lighted gas oomlng in contact with that which is escaping. Be compares tho earth to a balloon floated and kept distended by the gas in tke interior, which, if exhausted, will causo tbe crust to collapse, affect tho motion of tho earth in its orbit, causo it to lose Its place among the heavenly bodies and fall in pieces.
Another writer thinks that drilling should prohibited by stringent laws. He, too, .jSs there la a "possibility of an explosion. Still another theorist lias investigated the gas wells with telephones and delicate thermometers, and he nnnoiiuces startling discoveries. He distinguished sounds like the boiling of rocks, and estimated that a mile and one-half or so beneath tho Ohio and Indiana gas field tho temperature of tho earth is 8,500 d^gs.
be thin!
Age of Parents and Vitality ®f Children. Mr. J. Korosi, director of the Hungarian bureau of statistic*, recently read a memoir Ivforw the Hungarian Academy of Sciences ui*»u tba "lufluenco of tho Ageof Parents u|k«i the Vitality of Chi!.lrcn,wand In which, taking 524,000 cases as a basis. tie reaches the following conclusions:
Children whoso father ia tew than 90 years of age have a weak constitution. The issue of fathers of between 33 and 40 years are tho strongest, while tho dOKcentiauts of fathers of over 40 years ore weak. Tho healthiest children are those whose mother has not reached 35 year*. Those bom of mothers of between 85 and 40 year* of ago are 8 per cent, weaker, and those of mothers of over 40 ore 10 per wot. weaker. Tbe children of a^-od fathers and younger mothers have, as a general thing, a strong constitution but if tho pa rents are of the same age, the children are lees robust
Cutting an Apple Without Injuring lfc« Akin. To cut an apple into halve* without injuring the skin, while not a new trick, is an exceedingly clever one, and ia herewith described for tbe benefit of the uninitiated
CCTWO AX Afftx aw HALT**. Ttke a fin? needle threaded with a piece of strong silk, and pat* it through th« apple ia SHLctttn mo After tax tag the n««dkttm»j&i^ it again to C, and follow tbe dotted Uw» until A is reach*! affain,and tT Ok -"ad «*npietaly encircles the apple. *. A snw tbe skin. By puUing carefully upon tka two en* of the thread it wiU cot entirely tbrcr tbeaj i, dividing it into two fwurts, a wfcen veeied. «u*i»tak»n*»«it fern?**!*? tt will fall»jswt, th»v. thorn who have |*prto-W^ 1 to be whole and twbrt&ML Tbe same method wiy be nwd to divide tbe
lisUqv or elgbtha, If wi—
mif I*
8HOP.
CURIOSITY
gong Tba* Was Very Popular Half Century Ago. The song "We Met, Twas In a Crowd," was written by Thomas Haynes Bayly. 3e •Ian oompoeed the music to which it is sung. The words are as follows:
We met—twsa In a crowd. And I though! be would Stan me He came. 1 oexrid not liriatbe.
For his eye was upon me Bespoke—his words were coM, And his smile was unaltered I knew how tnoeh be
For his deep toned votee faltered: I wore my bridal robe, And I rivaled Its whiteness: Bright gems were to ray hair,
And I bated their brightness!^ He called metynSP As tbe bride of anotherOh I thon bast been the cause of thisaaj|' gutsh. tny mother I
Andooce again we met _'
And a fair girt was near him He smiled and whispered low, As I once used to bear him She leant upon his arm—
Ooce twee mine, and mine only— I wept, for 1 deserved To feel wretched and lonely And she win be his bride I
At tbe altar he will gtvo her The love that was too pure For a heartlees deceiver The world may think me gay.
For my feelings I smother— OhI thon hast been the cause of this anguish, my mother I —r*1—:
About Ourselves. •.
The average weight of male adults is 180 pounds of women, about 110 pounds. The average height of American recruits is about 5 feet 0 inches the average height of well built men is 5 feet 9 inches of women, 5 feet 4 inches. One inch of height should odd two pounds of weight. The 'specific gravity of the body ranges from 0.950 to 1.030. The heart weighs 260 grammes in women and 330 grammes (10)^ ounces in men the average weight is 208 grammes. Tbe period of its maximum weight is between fiO and 80. The amount of blood in the body is one-thirteenth the weight of the body, or'5 or 6 quarts, or 11 or 13 pounds. A map dies when he has lost fifth of his blood. The heart wffib each contraction ejects 6 ounce# of blood from each ventricle, at a pressure in the left ventricle of one-fourth of an atmosphere. Tbe heart sends all the blood around the body twice every minute, or In about thirty-five contractions.
A deadly poison Injected into a vein kills in fifteen seconds, on tbe average injected under the skin, in four minutes. A cubic millimetre of blood contains 5,000,000 blood oells in men, 4,."500,000 in women. There are 800 red cells to every one white blood cell. The red cells have an average diameter of 1-3200 inch, the white cells of 1-26000 inch. The speciflo gravity of the Hood is 1.055. The frequency of the pulse in the new born is 150 in infants of 1 year, 110 a* 7 to 14 years, 85 in adult man, 73 woman, 80. The respirations are one-fourth as rapid as the poise.
Minute Pan—anshlp.
Pliny, tno elder, who wrotA during the First century of the Christian era, mentions the fact that there existed, even at that early da to, a copy of Homer's "Iliad" small enough to bo completely hidden in the shell of a hen's egg. Professor Schriebcr, a German inventor of a storoographlc process, in order to offset the wonder vouched tor by Pliny, translated both the "Iliad" and the "Odyssey" in so small a compass that tho volume containing both books complete could be with ease hidden in tho shell of as Bnglish walnut. In the year 1831 Tbe Chicago Inter Ocean made mention of a gentleman who had written the entire first chapter of the gospel of St John on the back side of a postal can! That little notice, innocant as it was, caused the editor several sleepless oighta. tVithiu the next three days postal cards and slips of paper with minute specimens of penmanship began to pour in frctai all directions. Among the hundreds of samples submitted for inspection tho editor acknowledged that the greatest curiosity was a postal card from John J. Taylor, of Streator, Ills., upon which was written 4,100 words iu legibto characters, the whole embracing tho first, second and thtrd chapters of St. John and ninotoen verses of tbe fourth chapter of the same and also the sixth and seventh chapters of St Matthew, besides having nine words inwhich mistakes occurred crossed orrt. All of this wonderful production, which the editor acknowledges would make three columns ot his paper sot in minion Qrpe, could be plainly road with the naked eya
Comnlcal Water.
Wo know that water exists in throe forms upon our earth that tbe solid and liquid water covers nearly'tbree-fourths of its surface, and that tho "air above contains water in tho gaseous state. But the law of gaseous diffusion of water is not so generally understood, though very simple. Wherever water exists exposed to free space, or to space occupied by other gases than its own vapor, it evaporates into that space until tbe space is filled with gaseous water, having a tension or density proportionate to tbe temperature of thespacei
Thus the water of our ocean being exposed to solar heat, and equally capable of evaporation into the dense air immediately above it. or the lighter air above the clouds, or into all tbe boundless space beyond, be that space a vacuum or plenum, must thus evaporate, or hnr® evaporated until all that space be satur--J according to its temperature, if not saturated already. Therefore, tho fact that our ocean is not dried up Indicate* the existence of water, water everywhere. Tbe spectroscope ratifies this conclusion, water, or its chief Utuent (set free when water is raised to a cetuin temperatnreK is found to envelop every star, as well as our tun and its planets.
Und* Dkk.
The largest locomotive engine ever constat d, prior to 1880, was that made at tbe BakUin locomotive works during the early part of 1S70. ft was turned out ready for ass April 10 of year and "IT .« •!*.» Uncle kit-* I vmaw poii ~L»: tot'-* «»rend of the tender He is now at work on tbe Atchison. Tte *ta a 1 Sar tn FV»
Asbci i"esti was the most powerful locomotive in the world prior to
r:. tC0n-^-ite4 i-'u* ttir:.-! I Je aotives for tbe Sortbera Pr -1« railroad, the r, at tbe' in rka, Csotrii pamy caused to *Qt at t. rv'-TVto, CaL, »'-t ar* to lriv« wheels each, ttoec I-.- "bested n,nd ?v --t I_jss I3!t,00& pounds, and •.« I Wt'1 --Ti. W'
Where ch« W* O r?:
:TtetaacK»'0r'.
HmKimill I
.-k
1:1
l:: »ac-
L-. a Jt t^
i-rtaVbastcT rta.
tons above Bi
YOUNG folks: column.
THE SEVEN PIGEON a
"I," said tbe carrier pigeon, "once carried a letter which was pinned under my wing by a little girL I carried It one hundred and fifty miles in an hour. But the little girl bathed my feet in vinegar before I started, so tbey would keep cooL" "Prom Russia I came." said the fourth pigeon. "While there I looked in an open window. There sat a man named Krilof, wilting fables. He scattered over his beautiful carpets some oats, so I went in and began to eat them. My pigeon friends went in, too, but the door opened and frightened us so that we started to hurry away, and broke some vages and window glass. At twilight we all flew to the church." "Just see what I can do," said pigw* tumbler, and he flow around in the air, turned a somersault, and after tumbling over came down again. But tbe fan tail pigeon did not say a word. He only spread out his tail like fan and stood with it behind his head. "I can eat graiiS," said a common pigeon, "and then from a pocket in my crop I can get milk to mix with it and feed its to piy two little babies in tho pigeon cot&fl—Little Men an4 Womeji,
wniw tT A TTTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.
HALF HOUR'3 AMUSEMENT FOR YOJJTHFUl. READERS.
A
Brief Chapter on Pi«eoo*-*t*e Pouter, tbe Passenger* the Carrier, the Bnsalao# tbe Tumbler and the Common Pigeon.
Hew Use for Efp. Inalargegarde^ere wvra pigeom,^ they were unlike each other. The largest bird said, "8ee what I can dor and he took a long breath and his crop puffed out so that the other pigeons had to play "peekaboo" to see his bead behind it. This was the pouter pigeon. "V said the pasBsbger pigeon, "came from the south, where I have millions of pigeon friends. Sometimes we would all fiy at once, then we looked like a big black storm. When we all sang 'coo' together it sounded as if the clouds were singing. I flew once from the Carolina rice fields to New York in six boura
liule» for Using Books.
Never hold a book near a flro. Never drop a book upon the floor. Never turn leaves with the thumb. Never lean or rest upon an open book. Never turn down the cornors of leases. Never touch a book with damp or soiled hands.
Always
Nkeep
your place with a thin book
mark. v,'.: Always turn leaves from tho tdp with the middle or fore finger
Never open a book farther than to bring both sides of the cover iuto the same plo Always open a large boc)j( fro»^
a
JSll
and never from the ends or cover Never cut the leaves of a book or with a sharp knife, as the edge Is Wire to ran into the print, nor with the finger, but with a paper cutter or ordinary table knife.
Never hold a grn*ll book with the thumb pressed into the binding at the lower back, but bold it with the thumb and little finger upon the leaves and three fingers upon tbe back.
Letting the Cat Out of tbe Bag. There are a great many expressions in every day use of which we have lost the original meaning. "Letting the cat out of the bag" is one we all uso easily enough now to denote the, untimely revelation of a secret but who stops to inquire who let the first cat out of the bog, and why the cat ever came theret
Yet surely enough, in the long ago of a village market place, some crafty yet unhandy rustic stuffed tho house cat instead of the sucking pig into the sack he carried in his band, ceiling it hastily to some unsuspicious and not too wise purchaser, and then purposing to decamp to his native fields before the sack could be examined.
But a careless knit, a weak place in tbe sacking, and forth peers a frightened whiskered face, and, amid the jeers of the bystanders, Puss wriggles into daylight, and tho first cat is let oat of the bag.
Error and Mistake.
It is generally supposed that "error" and "mistake" mean the same thing but that is a mistake. The difference is important, and is illustrated thus In Golden Dim If you have a thermometer which is fatnty, and it reads 50 degs. when it should read43deg*., and yon put it down at 60 dega, that ban error bnt if the instrument is correct, and you pat it down 60 degs. when It rends 48 degs., that is a mistake. An inanimate object may be in error, bnt it cannot make a mistake a sentient being may make a misa an no in or I f1
A Novel CM for Egg*.
Here is a new osa few eggs. All that is needed is a pen or pencil, a few eggs or egg shells, a very little artistic talent, with a few aa® there you am
-sTiiAourtxaAE* a gti
t""
i«» IfcrJ -f
i'"-'
2
Cfcr poatpaoy at nsar 1 UK
"iMM
i!®8
pot, pair of •~i be w*
Hew II* XiMtaUa about what jm :*t respect wopfe people think of you, igwiDbepam wa
jroo
tooch yon
w0I
tot yooratlf oat at
*ud yoo, mod job wIB iftu on earth.
PHYMOLOGY AND HYGIENE.
Note* Ventilation, Vegetarianism and Sundry aiatten of Health and Comfort. To obtain ventilation by a window, without a draft to strike tbe person, a direction to tbe following effect has been constantly repeated by hygfenists apd hygienic publications, apparently without a suspicion of its fallacy on tbe part of tbe public's instructors: Fit a strip of board into the window casing at tbe bottom, under the lower sash, so as to raise the sash two or three inches, and the thin space between tbe panes, where the sapjes lap over each other, will be open above and below, affording egress and ingress to the air fat vertical directions, while tbe board excludes a horizontal draft that would strike a person near the window.
Tbe objection tttthis plan is, according to Sanitary Era, t»t it Is built exactly wrtng side up, in defiance of tbe law of gravitation, and will not work. It contemplates tbe exit of tbe warm and rarefied air of tbe room downward through the colder air between tbe sashes, and earpecta the still colder and heavier air outside to climb upward through the^ighter inclosed air and tumble over th$ top of the sash into tbe room. Tbe amount of air exchanged between outside and inside in this way will be hardly perceptible unless a strong breeae Mows against the window.
Tbe way to get ventilation through this interspace, and a truly exoellent way, is to push up Jhe lower sai*h to the top of the q^sing, and pull ihe upper sasb down within a few inches of tbe Ball, stopping the gap at the bottom with,the board above mentioned. The outer air will then find a downward entrance, and tho lighter air within will escape upward.
"*"A "Vegetarian's Kxperlenee. ,• Mr. John Burroughs, the naturalist and author, who gave up the use of meat some three years ago, is quoted as expressing himself in the following manner, in answer to tbe question of what apparent effect theomissiou of meat eating had upon his health: "1 find I need lesB physical exercise," said Mr. Burroughs, "that my nerves are much steadier, and that 1 have far fewer dull, blank, depressing days in fact, all the functions of my bddy are much better performed by abstaining from meat. In summer I make very free uso of milk at other seasons I cannot touch it I eat one egg a bay, usually for breakfast I eat oysters, fish, and fowl, oatmeal, hominy, beans and a great deal of fruit of all kinds. When I can get good buttermilk I want no better drink. There is groat virtue in buttermilk. Two yejyjs ago I gave up the nse of coffee, and think I am greatly the gainer by it Certain periodical headaches with which I was afflicted I attributed to coffee. If I missed my coffee in the morning I was sure to hare a bad headache. Since 1 have left off coffee my headaches are much lighter, end the character of them has entire-, ly changed they leave me on the going down of the sun.
Turpentine Baths for Rheumatic Pains. Make a concentrated emulsion of black soap, 200 grammes, add thereto 100 or 120 grammes of turpentine, and shake the whole vigorously until a beautiful creamy emulsion is obtained, for a bath take half of this mixture, which possesses an agreeable pine odor. At the end of five minutes-there is a diminution of the pains and a favorable wanntfi throughout the whole body. After remaining in tbe bath a quarter of an boor the jfetient should get into bed, when a prickling sensation, not disagreeable, however, is felt over the entire body then, after a nap, he awakens, according to Practical Medicine, which is authority for the above, with parked diminution in the rheumatic pains.
Ol»^fWheo the Hal* Grows Thin. your hair is thin and threatens to fall or the parting is growing inconveniently wide, let it down at night and massage the scalp. Hub it, gather the loose skin between the fingers, pinch it a little, invent exercise for it witt the tips of the fingers. Give it some wont to do every day and brush it
Part it on the side at night and give the day's parting a rest No treatment of this kind will produce spectacular or sudden remits, bnt if there be no disease of the hair follicles and the geoeral health is good, it will often work wonders in a twjplvemonth. ',
Hot Milk for the Overworked. People who cannot drink cold milk often find it palatable and very beneficial when fak-nn as hot as possible. Upon some tired and overworked' persons It has an exhilarating effect almost equal to a glass of wine. The milk sboold be fresh and heated as hc^as possible without bofiing. h*$
A Remedy for Headache.
A mixture of ice and salt in proportion ct one to one-half, applied to the head frequently. gives instant relief in sotno cases of acijte headache. It should be tied up in a small linen cloth, like a .pad, and held as near ns possible to the seat of the pain.
SOCIAL ETIQUETTE.
Table Manners of Children—Some gtfe Rolen to Teacli Them. There is a diversity of opinion as to the age at which young children should be allowed at tbe tables bat a very good rule, advised by Mary B. Monroe in Good Housekeeping, is to let them be brought in whim tbe dessert ia served. This can be made a real pleasure, not only to the children but to the parents. The little ones have bad their dinner earlier, and tbe little taste of sweetmeats given by their mothers' permission' can do no harm. We are referring, at course, to babies and young children, aay under 6 years.
I believe, says Mr. Monroe,'in children being brought to tbe table, for it fa necessary Jhat tbey should begin aa early as pooible.to learn table manners and nowhere can they be taught so well as at the family table.
Here area few good old rules that can be safely followed: Give tbe child a seat that *h.n be strictly It* own. Teach It to take Its seat quietly to use its napkin properly to wait patiently to
be served, to answer prompt
ly to aay thank yon if asked to leave the for a forgotten article or for any purpoee to do so at once never to interrupt never to contradict never to tnakfe remarks about tbe food, such as "I saw that turkey kiUod and bow be dkl bleed," as I once beard a Utile boy remark at a Thanksgiving dinner.
Teach thechQd to keep his plate in order net to handle the bread or to drop food on the (doth and floor to always say "Excuse ma ptettae," to tbe mother when at home, and
to the
lady or hosted when visiting, if toavlng the table before the rest of tbe party to fold its ™»pHn and to put back its chair cr poA it ckee to the table before
leaving,
Waving the table not to return-
"A
and aftar
Bint Again* AflMatisa. is .always citl.-rdi tbpeop sense, and it :i"Dav^n
___ It iaaiio nr» or less a mat^ -f st fty, becauseitai sakekof that!. «n original tasight into 18* which ia ears to de•slop interesting natural qualities.
a a Wedding Invitation. A El oaibUto a»~1 a wedding rf— mmAu card*, one tot bride's parent id »d to the newly married pair. Tbey shook! be scat ao as to arrive the day of the wedding.
"Ot\,! where shall rest be found"? The worn-out mother sighs: 8tocklngs to mend, and trousers to darn, Dishes to wash, and butter to churn. While my back feels to break, and head and heartburn.
And life is a oofistant friction. The summer came and went, The matron no longer sighs Elastic her step, and rounded ner cheek, Work seems but play, life is now sweet, And the change was made in one short week,
By Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Positive remedy for those derangements, irregularities, and weaknesses so common to womankind.
The best medical writers claim that the successful remedy for nasal catarrh must be non-irritating, easy of application, and one that will, by its own action, reach all the remote sores and ulcerated surfaces. The history of the efforts to treat catarrh daring the past few years obliges us to admit that only one remedy has completely met these conditions, and that is lily's Cream Balm. This safe and pleasant remedy has mastered catarrh as nothing else has ever done, and both physicians and patients freely concede tnis*fact. The more distressing symptoms quickly yield to it. 51-2t.
V?
To Cure Heart Disease.
Use "Dr. Kilmer's Ocean-Weed Heart Remedy." It regulates, corrects and relieves tne most distressing cases. Price 50c and 91.00. Pamphlet free. Binghampton, N. Y. Sold,recommended and guaranteed by J. & C. Baur.
lOO Ladles Wanted,
And 100 men to call on any druggist for a fret trial package of Lane's Family Medicine, the great root and herb remedy, discovered by Dr. Silas Lane while in the Rocky Mountains. For diseases of the blood, liver and kidneys it is a positive cure. For constipation and clearing up the complexion it does wonders. Children like it. Everybody praises it. Large sire package 50 cents. At all druggists.
ri
Persons wishing to improve their memories or strengthen their power of attention should send to Prof. Loisette, 237 Fifth Ave., N. Y., for his prospectus post free, as advertised in another column.
A CHANCE TO MAKE MONEY.
Salary and Exien6e8 p»Ud1or Commi8 slon if preferred. Salesmen wanted everywhere. No experience needed. Address stating age. The L. Van Dusen Nursery Co., Geneva, N. Y.
GEO. MARBACH, DENTIST.
DR
REMOVED to 423)4 Wabash Avenue, 6v«fr Arnold's clothing store.
J)R. GILLETTE.,
Jv5 DB3STTI8T. Gold Filling a Speciality. Offloe—Corner Seventh and Main streets, In McKeen's new block, opp. Terre Haute House
DR
C. a LINCOLN,
DENTIST
810 north 13th street.
All work warranted as represented.
QHOLERA HOGS.
Cosh paid for dead Hogs at my factory on, the island southwest of the city, also Tallow, Bones and Grease of all kind. Dead Animals removed free of charge. Office No. 18 2nd,
Telephone No. 78 •gJ*iuBON
BMITH
T\R W. VANVALZAH„£
JL-/ Successor to RICHARDSON dt VAN VAI-ZAH,
DENTIST:-
Office—Southwest oorner Fifth and Maiii Streets, over National State Bank (entrance on Fifth street.
JSAAO BALL,
ti! AsS
FUNERAL DIRECTOR.
Cor. Third and Cherry Sts., Terre Haute, Ind Is prepared to execute all orders In his lino with neatness and dispatch.
Embalming a Specialty.
J. NUGENT. M. J. BROPHY.
NUGENT A CO., PLUMBING and GAS FITTING
A 4 dealer in
Gas Fixtures, Globes and Engineer'* Supplies. 008 Ohio Street. Terre Haute, Im
Established 1861. Incorporated 1888.
QLIFT & WILLIAMS CO.,
Successors to Clift, Williams A Oo J. H. WILLIAMS, President. J. M. Curt, Sec'y and Tree*
KAXtnrAcrtmras o*
Sash, Doors, Blinds, etc
akd naAixsm is
LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES
GLASS, FAINTS, OILS
AND BUILDERS' HARDWARE. Mulberry street, "orner Dth.
BREAK FAST.
"Br a tborongh knowledge of the natural
Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast U^ea with a lellcately flavored beverage wbteh may save ns many heavy doctors' bills. It Is by tbe Judicious nse of such arUcleaof diettliustaeonstltotlon may be gradually built np unUlstrong «n«g£^to -wrtirt every tendency to d! se. Hundreds crf subtie maladies are doa arouml ns ready to attack erever there is a weak point. We may e-' pe many a fatal shaft k*plpi ourielves well tor&Bed wftb parebWand a properly nourished frame.—{CIVII Servloe
Made "imply siia botthf water or milk SoJdoi in half pound beied S—=i:
Bom IS*twthlt CtMraxtsta. Usdm, rag
MAE^DOR
w^JSTrm saiwurt
moo.
-f v- iHKfteOM ityttefle frwwlth every •. -w.-.. it .ts iMrMewvk Ceres Clsnai 1 UlfH I to 4 Onrm. Ask year Urwa[\ (»«It. sewi any editress for IMS. FerseJe OULfCK 4 CO.. Oi sggirti, TCSItC HAUTE, Mft
I
T-f
The Chki ttww f^T the great Success of Hood's Sarsaparllla Is found in the article Itself. It is merit that wins, and the fact that Hood's Sarsaparilla actually soeompllsnes what Is claimed for It, Is- what has given to this medicine a popularity and sale greater than that of any other sarsapa*,•4. rtlla or blood purlmerit Wins fler before the public. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures Scrofula, Salt Rheum and all Humors, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Biliousness, overcomes That Tired Feeling, creates an Appetite, strengthens the Nerves, builds up the Whole System.
If
vf $
Hood's Sarsaparilla Is sold by all druggists.
$1
six for |S. Prepared by a I.
Hood
%Oo. Apothecaries, Lowell* Mass.
TEQUILA TONIC.
JT IS VN UNFAILING REMEDY FOK DyRpepnia, Indigestion, Low Spirits, Oo oral Debility, Muscular weakness, Nervoi
Oenous
Tremuxzlness,
proven tatlvcMf
tbe evil elects of mental or physical oveirwoik, Extremes of Temperature, the Inordinate use of Spirituous Liquors, High Living. Venereal Excesses, t'hango of life, want or Et ^uvlse, etc. It gives strength nnd vigor to tl.j digestive organs, takes away the tired, sleepy, listless feeling, giving anew nnd keen wwt to the jaded appetite, strengthening and invigorating the entire human system.
TEQUILA TONIC EXPORT CO., 126 Franklin St., Chicago, ill.
CRAWFORD
HOUSE,
Corner of 6th and Walnut Sts. CINCINNATI, OHIO.
.?• Entrance on Sixth Street.
LEWIS VANDEN
I'BOI'Ill
F.TOR,
RATES:
C1.50 and p'-r Day.
i.utuM youtnlfc-
i.laitii i'* hit (ii.vlx* t«tk» tlioy 9 il.i.i i. UilplitV 1I»' »i.M,
lluii\.r,
ll»t'r or
HIkikIi 11 ni|lilnl« thli o, -.nieiiy Viw i.Kiqun.." It notw tits lit «o iVcPppt 1/ 1'rfIWU tl lit I'f KUint'l 'i
l*rep«n
ll L'l.hll ll.N.J i«ii nn»*-reu
.« j, \\rr» of ti.qtthy nn»*»-rel WJ QutUi! to Hi iuth HhR
DRUNKENNESS
the Ltaner Habit, rjBlilveJr Cored Or
lven In a cup of ooflbe or tear* tnowledge of the person taking
It can be without the permanent and speedy cure, whether the patient Is a moderate drinker or an alcohollo wreck. Thousands of drunkards have been made temperate men who have taken Golden Bpeclflc in their coffee without their knowledge and tod*y believe they quit drinking of their own free will. IT NEVER FAILH. eo.
ii is absolutoley harmless, ana will eflect a
Tho system once impregnated with the 8pe Itlo, It becomes nn utter impossibility for th liquor appetite to exist. For salt by ___ .... DMKH, Dru
A H. E. 80MKH, prugtlst,^
Cor. flth and Ohio sts., Terre Hau
CATARRH
ELY'S CREAM BALM
Cleanses the NnsmI
Passages, Allays
Pain and Influ
mat Ion, Heals Mir
WflVER
Kor«s, Restores
Senses of Taste and
Smell,
Try the Cure.
A particle Is and lsaffreeiit
K. GAGG nBAtm
iv
ARTISTS' SUPPLIES
picture Frames. Mouldings
1/
^Ss"' f'-„Picture Frames
to Order.
McKeen's Block. M8 Main at,, fltb and 7th.
GRATKITTL—COMFORTING.
Epps's Cocoa
ap plied Into each nostril Prlee GO cents at Drngglstat
by malT, reglM* '*ed, 60 cts. ELY BIMb., Warren St., New York.
$
^WDERS
QTI.PER BOX
USE HOFFMAI'S HARMLESS HEADACHE POWDERS. THIT ftffi inciric^ Contain Mo Opium, Bromide* or Xareaite*.
TK8T All MOT A 0ATSAZTI0.
PI ICE 28 CEXTS. FM «*LE BY 0RUMMTS. ©a swrr »t **«.. *r-^wiSTss •Etovyrts. A.isr xt ro oo. y, 55 S«ta8t, Bstto, *, Y..ss Msoaticesl
Sold by 3, it C. BA^iL
7A
as
7
TS»M mmtitm,
t. .m fet al J*mm IM »o tkwv* "r*
im
'.V.
pwswtr Ti -It
r*
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