Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 20, Number 21, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 16 November 1889 — Page 3

Uloponing of the Sewage of L»rg« Towns. Many are the effort* that havo been made to satisfactorily dispose of the sewage of large towns. The result* of experiments carried oi» under the auspices of the Wimbledon Sewage works, England, make it appear that a more satisfactory answer than usual has been made to the problem. The method employed there consists of sterilising and precipitating the wwttge with herring brine and milk of lime. It is claimed that the destruction of microorganisms Is Immediate and complete, and that there remains positively no disagreeable odor.

Duration of a Lightning Flash. The researches of Dnl'our, Cofladon and Trouvelot have shown that ti.a duration of a lightning flash is not infinitesimal, but that the flash lasts a mcasureable time. For instance, explains Science, if one sets a earner* in rapid vibration, and exposes in it a plate so as to receive the impression of the flash, it is fouud that the Impressions appear widened out on the negative, showing the negative to hare moved during the time the flash was in insistence

Transplanting of a Chicken''# Cornea. It is reported that Dr. Qravenigo, of the University of Padua, has successfully performed ait operation which hitherto has been vainly tried by various experimenters, both

France and elsewhere. The operation consists in the grafting of a chicken's cornea ill to the human cm In the successful case reported by Grnveoiso the graft is said to hare united quickly, and formed a cornea which was very transparent, shining and convex

A Test for Cheese.

Cheese which trill instantly and intensely redden blue litmus paper should not be eaten, his is a test easy of application, anu every merchant on cutting a fresh cheese should make It. If the cheese is dry bit

iBliSSi

SCIENCE MD PROGRESS.

PRACTICAL SUBJECTS OF IMPORTANCE TO AVERAGE READERS.

Interesting Facta A boat Minerals In Common Use T1iat Are Unknown to Many Persons—Special Items Concerning Mag nesinm and Alaminlam.

How many invalids have (.wallowed magnesia without suspecting that this powder contains a metal nearly as white as silver, and is malleable, and capable of burning with so intense alight that it rivals even the electric light in brilliancy! If any of our readers desire to prepare magnesium themselves, it can be done in the following manner: Some white magnesia must bo obtained from the chemist, and, after having been cal cirted, most be submitted to the influence of hydrochloric acid and hydroohlorate of ammonia. A clear notation will thus be obtained. whir

uy

m?ans of evaporation under

the influence of heat, furnishes a double chloride, hydra tod and crystallized. This chloride, if heated to redness in an earthenware crucible, leaves as a residue a nacreous product, composed of micaceous, whit© scale*, chloride of anhydrous magnesium.

GROUP OF ALUM CRYSTALS.

If 600 grams of this chloride of magnesium are mixed with 100 grams of chloride of sodium, or kitchen salt, and the same quantity of fluoride of calcium and metallic sodium in small fragments, and the mixture is put into an earthenware crucible made red hot, and heated for a quarter of an hour under a closed lid, we shall And, on pouring out the fluid on to a handful of earth, that wo have obtained, instead of scoria, 45 grams of metallic magnesium. The metal thus obtained is impure, and to removo all foreign substances it muBt be heated in a charcoal tube, through which passes a current of hydrogen. Magnesium is now produced in great abundance, and is very inexpensive. It is a metal endowed with a great affinity for oxygen, and it is only necessary to thrust it into the fiame of a candle to produce combustion it burns with a brightness that the eye can scarcely tolerate, and is transformed into a white powdor—oxide of magnesium, or magnesia. Combustion is still more active in oxygen, and powder of magnesium placed in a jar filled with this gas produces a perfect shower of fire of very beautiful effect.

The humble earth of the fields—the clay which is used in our {lotteries, also contains aluminium, that brilliant metal which is as malleable as silver and «s unspoilabfo as gold. When clay is submitted to the influence of sulphuric acid and chloride of potassium, we obtain alum, which is a sulphate of alumina and potash.

Alum is a colorless salt which crystallir.es on the surface of water in beautiful octahedrons' of striking regularity. Fig. I

CAI.C1WED ALUM.

represents a group of alum crystals. This salt-is much used in the coloring of fabrics it is also used for the sizing of papers and the clarification of tallow. Physicians also use it as an astringent aud caustic substance. When alum is submitted to the action of heat, in an earthen crucible, It loses the water of crystallisation which it contains iiml expands in a singular manner, overflowing from the Jar in which it is contained. See fig. 2.

at

I*

»bonid be moistened with water and ths lit mas paper then applied. This test» credited to as good authority as IVofenor Vaughn, of Ann Arbor, Mich.

SrlvnUlte IhMk.

It is reported that a plan for improving the Brooklyn iX. Y.) navy yard

it tm

fool that

wilj require about $10,000,000 if it is carried out. Ttte Philadelphia Inquirer is recpoosible for iie statement that the natural gas supply in Pittsburg and adjoin'" dfcrtrkr*- Htt passed its smith and is now u. the m.

IPsVi

THE CURIOSITY SHOP.

Beneficial Effect* of Fruits—When to Est Them. Fruits are almost as indispensable to healthful dietary as the grains, particularly in the summer season and in warm climates. They supply those delightful acids that are not only agreeable to the palate but specially suited to the needs of tibe vital organism. They cool and refresh us in the heat of sum mer they supply organic fluids Co the sys tem, replacing those that are lost \ji perspiration from day to day. Next to the grains, therefore, in dietetic importance we must place the fruits they minister alike to the pleasures of the appetite and to the actual wants of our bodies. The soar fruits, especially, are the best of cholagogues, doing away with all need of bilious remedies, so called they stimulate the liver to its normal activity and prevent that clogging up of the organ which causes retention of bite, thickening of the blood and other derangements consequent upon non-performance of functional action.

Again it will be observed that those which have keen acids come in great profusion just at the time we need them most—after the long winter, when both fruits and vegetables are necessarily scarce. Fruits are the natural corrective for disordered digestion but the way in which many persons eat them converts them into a curse rather than a blessing. Instead of being taken on an empty stomach, or in combination with simple grain preparations, as bread, they are eaten with oily foods, with meat and vegetables, pungent seasonings, or other unwholesome condiments, or they are taken at the end of the meal, after the stomach is already full, and perhaps the whole mass of food washed down with tea, coffee or other liquid or they are eaten at all hours of the day, or late at night, with ice cream, cake or other rich desserts. Fruits, to do their bent work, should be eaten either on an empty stomach or simply with bread—never with vegetables. In the morning, before the fast of the night has been broken, they are not only exceedingly refreshing, but they serve as a natural stimulus to the digestive organs.

The Chemistry of Life aud Death. Briefly stated, the germ theory of animal life and death is that it is a fermentation and a putrefaction. Expressed in terms of mineral or inorganic chemistry, this fermentation is in its different degrees an oxydization, or rusting, or burning. In inorganic chemistry the slow combination of a substance with oxygen is rusting or oxydization the rapid combination is combustion or burning. By analogy, it may be loosely said that putrefaction is to fermentation what burning is to rusting. Human life is sustained by a process which may be called oxydization, or, speaking very broadly, fermentation. To arrest this process or to hasten it too much to cause death. To live at all, wo must Durnt.oxydize or ferment slowly by the combination of the substances of our bodies with the oxygen of the air.

Certain substances tend to arrest this process others to hasten it. Some chemists believe that certain vegetables, such as mate or Paraguay tea, contain substances that have this effect of temporarily checking oxydizaSion in the body that is, that they enable :oen to use their muscles for a time without wasting them. This is not proven, but it has been demonstrated that the continued use of those alkaloids which seem to check the fermentation or oxydizatiou or slow burning going on in the body tend to produce death. On the other hand, nothing is better known than that whatever hastens the prooess hastens death. The poison of a rattlesnake has this efltet li) fc trigtr degree. Chemically, it is closely allied to the substance composing the eggs of fowls.—St. Louis Republic. „.

Dangers to the Earth.

Many of the early geologists preclictect the dissolution of the earth. The oniy problem was, In what way would the catastrophe come about! It had long been a sacred tradition, both pagan and Christian, that the world would ultimately be consumed by lire. Button anticipated, from the gradual refrigeration of the earth, a reign of perpetual wiuter, and recent physicists have conjectured that the day will wane more slowly as the cooling earth spins more feebly, until at length, like the moon, it shall flutter npon its axis as a dead world, with the same pallid face ever turned toward the sun. On tho other hand, Ln Place has demonstrated that, since the time of Hipparchus (2,000 years), the meaa day has not shortened by the 3100th pArt of second. But the most popular theory of all is that which attributes the eventual end of the world to the destructive agenoy of fire.

Buffon maintained—presumably, as an alternative to his theory above mentioned— that Igneous aud aqueous forces would gradu ally submerge existing continents under the ocean, and reproduce others like those we in habit. It is only natural that the repeated failure* following attempts to fix the date of the predicted dissolution of the earth should have converted a religious foreboding iuto scientific skepticism, at first expressed in vagaries wilder than the fabled descent into Avernus. A* the same time, however, the conjectures of philosophers and scientists above cited are sufficiently startling to warrant the serious question, Is the earth in danger*—The World and ItsWonderv,

Plants In Bedrooms.

Various opinions have been offered on the subject of tho effect of flowers aud plants in bedrooms. Plants should never be kept In sleeping rooms, nor in room* much occupied if ventilation is not well maintained. Notwithstanding this, it may be understood that the general effect of vegetation is to purify the air. The leaves of plants and trees inhale carbonic add gas and exhale oxygen, the life giving« sent essential to all animal being. On thisgr^und, and to this extent, the presefecctof flowers and plants in sleepiogchambers may be regarded as healthful During the sunshine the green leaves absorb oxygen from the air and breathe out carbonic acid, while during tbe night the pr nb is reversed. Young #*"—ts and (lowers of ut plant* inhale oxygen hence they may vitiate Mi air, just as animals do by incree the pr Krtionof« mkl The danger from pis .' h---a*s is that presents itself in the time of btassoming. —Brooklyn Sagle.

Aa OM Poem.

The following little poem has recently been called for: Xy heart watting for somebody, & -.f, sr. nbebe?

Sotu.^__.ice _eIs waiting, Wattingandwaitingtorow. ,•,

My heart shall he aad mw\ tfc-n. Totfc -i ever he he Yes! nafcr asd test.

Bat there's somebody

Bovefci'. MflW.v: TOUW

Weil, somebody, daruog

A ttumm (tor Cats. "1

Tfeere to an institution in Bright*, M—» where hamelws oats ar -are of. It to kr -.n aa the Gifford Home for

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING

YOUNG FOLKS' COLUMN.

READING MATTER THAT WILL INi

TEREST THE BOYS AND GIRLS,

The Story of an African Traveler and HI* Narrow Escape from the Jaws of a XJoo. A Merry Rhyme A boat Some Clattering

Fowls* A story is told of a traveler in South Africa. In crossing a wide plain he saw, short distance behind him, a lion slowly fofc lowing him.

THE TRAVKLXB AND THE LI' N. In great fear the anxious man l.nrried CO nnt-.il he reached a high cliff, below which was a deep ravine. Here he determined to live or die, so, creeping down into a crevice in the rock, he quietly concealed himself, having previously placed his hat and coat npon his staff, which he stuck near the edge

of the precipice, hoping to deceive the wild beast, who might mistake the effigy for himself.

In due time the lion came stealthily along. Imagining that the hat and coat were the real man, he made a sudden spring for them with such force that he bounded over the precipice and was dashed to pieces on the rocks below.

We need hardly add that the traveler rejoiced greatly in the successful result of his device and often related his narrow escape from the jaws of tile lion, i- -j-

A Great Musician.

In & little Saxon town named Halle there' was born in the year 1684 a boy whose fame will never die. He was called George Frederick Handel. While a small child he showed a remarkable talent for music, and played correctly with his almost baby fingers on the clavichord, an instrument much used in those days,when pianos were unknown. His father wished to bring him up to the study of the law, and he discouraged the boy's taste for music. But the child's ruling passion was so strong that he carried his little clavichord up to the garret where he slept, and hid it there. Then late at night, when all the household was asleep, he used to rise from his bed and play softly to himself in the dark.

At last Dr. Handel saw that it was of no use to try to force his child's inclinations, so at the age of 7 little George Frederick was placed under the care of Zuckau, the organist of the cathedral at Halle. Under this teacher-he made such wonderful progress that when he was only 9 years old he composed a whole church service for both voices and instruments. At 14 the pupil had far,

•)Sf Over the Fence They Flew, Over the fence they flew 1

tj

Over the fence, that's true .1??^ Over the fence, without much sense It seems to me, they flew!

Over the fence but why y£ s51 Take such an endless fly? Tfc" secret's known to them alottd,

And so we'll put it by. Hf

THOSE HAPLESS FOWIA Over the fence, just so, And that seems all we know. VThat was the matter? why all the clatter?

History books doot show. Nobody knows but they, Why they have oome our way But there suspended till books are ended

Those hapless fowls must stay I

Bow She Knew a Male.

Golden Days is responsible for the following anecdote: A little 5-year-old girl of Seattle, Wash., was leaning out of the window when a team attached to a transfer wagon went rattling by. She suddenly turned to her companion and cried: "Ob, sea, Uode Fred! there does two rooote." "How do yon know they are mulesf May be tbey are horses." "No,

tit.

te kqy.

body! •we body?

I dees I know moots

tnm

"How do little girls know the difference, petf •/.".« "Why. bones have hair tails and mools jv$ only have meat tails."

A by Bfeym.

A queer Bale hoy who had been to school, AMI was up to all sons at tricfet, PIstoTered that t, when upside down.

Woufclpam for the figure*

Bswfaw aslrti hi*ageby agood oUdaaM The ical youngster said, Tb8 H«B I stand en my teet SOat thl%

But when I sued en asy headf*

PHYSIOLOGY AND HYGIENE.

A Trained Nurse's Views on the Belleste Art of Feeding the Stek. It is often one of the hardest of a nurse's tasks to persuade the patient to take sufficient nourishment, and to be successful in it she must be persuasive, patient, persistent, rich in expedients, and should observe a few general directions which & trained nurse enumerates as follows:

All foods for the sick should be of the very best quality, well cooked, palatably seasoned and attractively served.' A savory dish will always sharpen the appetite of one in health, end it must have a stimulating influence upon delicate patient, to whom the flat and insipid preparations usually offered are loathsome and even nauseating.

excelled his master, and yvasjent to pursue a variety of superstitions or curious ideas v:_ —":~"1

his musical studies lit Berlin. He soon became famous, and his music was published and admired while yet he was hardly more than a boy. When he was 530 he went to Italy, where he lived for six years. He then traveled to London, and remained there during the following fifty years of his life. He at once became widely known, and rose quickly to the highest fame through his wonderful music. When he grew old his sight failed, and at last he became totally blind. Still he kept up his spirits, and continued to compose and play in public till within a week of bis death, which took place in 1759.

of

A monument in Westminster Abbey marks the spot where ho lies buried. His great work, "The Messiah," by which he- is best known, will always secure him a place in the hearts of those who truly love musio.

Surprise is frequently a useful element in tiie dietetic treatment of the sick. Something unexpected will often be acceptable, when were the patient consulted and advised of what was being prepared for him, would take away all appetite for it. Cooking in the sick room is, of course, always forbidden, nor should the smell of food be allowed to reach the patient if it is possible to prevent it. Absolute neatness in the service of food is a prime consideration. There is more to the patient in clean napkins, spotless china, etc., than many think. A slovenly nurse is out of place anywhere. If the doctor directs that certain foods be given hot, he means that they should be hot, aud cot merely warm, in which condition some are very insipid.

Occasionally one sees the nurse tasting the food in the presence of the patient—a most unpardonable habit. No more food should be at one time taken into the sick room than is likely to be eaten, and whatever is not eaten should be at once removed. Nurses often leave it in sight, in the hope that the patient may want it a little later, but almost Invariably they are disappointed. It is quite a common thing for the physician to find milk in a glass or pitcher standing near the bedside of his patient, and often the appearance of the glass is such that even a person with the strongest kind of a stomach would not ?are to drink from it. Of all foods, milk probably takes up impurities the easiest. Hence, to keep it exposed to the air of a sick room or any other bad air is to simply render it unfit for use. A nurse with anything approaching neatness would never allow a glass which has held milk to be used a second time without carefully washing and rinsing. Some consult their own convenience altogether too much in feeding the sick. Food ought to be given at regular intervals when possible.

One Thing and Another.

"Moth" and freckles can be removed, according to a writer in a pharmaceutical journal, by using a wash composed of equal parts of lactic acid and glycerine, which is harmless when applied to the skin.

Bathers who have suffered from an encounter with the long tentacles of the jelly fish, are told by Medical News that the sting is speedily relieved by applying water in which common washing soda has been dissolved in the proportion of an ounce of soda to two quarts of water.

Suction, or exhaustion of the air by the use of the cupping glass, for elevating a depressed fractured parietal bone in a child, has been successfully employed by a Philadelphia physician, and it has been suggested that this principle may be extended to aid in cases of fractured cranial bones in adults, also, and in ttf|: extraction of bullets, morbid growths, and TOrious fluids.

The Hour of Death*

"Rarltn snrm jq regard to the hour of death. There is quite a prevalent notion that the largest proportion of deaths occur in the early hours of the morning, while dwellers by the sea are pretty generally credited with the belief that the majority of lives "go out with the tide other impressions, perhaps less widespread, might be mentioned. It has, however, been recently stated that from time to time careful observations have been made ic hospitals which have resulted in showing that the act of death takes place with fairly equal frequency during the whole twenty-four hours of the day. Very recently an investigation has been made in Paris, which showed that there was a certain falling off of the number of deaths between 7 aud 11 o'clock in the evening, but that, with this exception, the proportion of deaths is about even.

How to Keep lee In a Sick Room. A saucerful o£ shaved ice nay be preserved for twenty-four hours with the thermometer at 90 degs. Fahrenheit, according to The Medical Times, by observing the following precautions: Put the saucer containing the ice in a soup plate and cover it with another. Place the soup plates thus arranged on a good, heavy pillow, and cover it with another pillow, pressing the pillows so that the plates are completely imbedded in them. An old jack plane set deep is a most excellent thing with which to shave ice. It should be turned bottom upward, and the ice shaved backward and forward over the cutter,

SOCIAL ETIQUETTE.

Usages in Regard to Full Drees and Matinee Toilets. The best usages for dress in New York are the standard for refined persons in a great part of our country, and social etiquette of New York may be quoted aa follows on this point: ,u\

At weddings, luncheons, receptions of all kinds, matinees, visits of ceremony, and indeed anything that occurs in the day time, a gentleman should wear a morning costume, no matter how grand the toilet of the i«n«« Fashion and etiquette demand it. A dark or black frock coat, with vest of the same, and lighter trousers, cut according to prevailing style, are the best form for all daylight social affairs.

It to considered quite proper for a gefatlemanto attend an opera in a matinee suit, provided seats have been taken elsewhere to a box, but be is limited in his visits between the acts to such of his acquaintances as are also in demi-toilet.

Ladies consider an evening bonnet and light gloves as the height of dressing for a theatre or concert unless there is some prearranged understanding that a wandering star in the musical or dramatic firmaments is to be especially honored by a display of fine toileta.

Gentlemen need never wear full dress at theatre or concert unless tbs Isdies do, though, when no lady is expected to be in grand costume, a gentleman may select whichever style of garment lie pleases mid go in tell dress if be prefers.

There are many ways in which a taatefiti lady will brighten a sober garb without exhausting ber purse or worrying her mind and handfc SfeeWiUdo this ta grateful appp-ia Hon of tto approved custom of going t» the opera and to the concert room, and even int a proscenium box st the theatre, in ft pretty visiting drat She can afford to enjoy the theatre, good music and the opera many man timss during the winter on this oount, and tbe gestkntan who does aofc feci

Anmpjwi to

eeoort a lady in a carriage can

indulge in these luxuriee twice or tbree times •soften because of tUb latitude of etiqpette fat the matter of drm

MAIL.

Is a constitutional and not a local disease, and therefore it cannot be cured by local applications. It requires a constitutional remedy like Hood's Sarsapaiilla, which, working through the blood, eradicates the impurity which causes and promotes the disease, and effects a permanent cure. Thousands of people testify to tbe success of Hood's SarsaparUla as a remedy for catarrh when other preparations had failed. Hood's S&rsap&rilla also builds up the whole system, and makes you feel renewed in health and strength.

TEQUILA TONIC.

IT IS AX UNFAILING REMEDY FOR Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Low Spirits, General Debility, Muscular Weakness, Nervous Exhaustion, Loss of Muscular Power. Tremulonsness, Sleeplessness, Neuralgia, Dizziness. Malarial Poison, etc. It. is a preventative or the evil effects of mental or physical overwork, Extremes of Temperature, the inordinate use of Spirituous Liquors, High Lining. Venereal Excesses, Change of life, want of Exercise, etc. It gives strength and vigor to the digestive organs, takes away the tired, sleepy, listless feeling, giving a new and fceen sest to the jaded appetite, strengthening and invigorating the entire human system.

TEQUILA TONIC EXPORT CO.. 41 126 Franklin St., Chicago, ill.

OKATKITUL—COMFORTING.

Epps's

RRKAKFAST.

"By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of dlgee» tion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well-selected Coeoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy doctors' bills. It is by the judicious use of such ar tides of diet that a constitution may be grad* ually built up until Btrong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with nure blood and

Sense of Taste

and Smell.

TRY THE CURE

Or the Lleuer.Hab toyAds

a

properly nourished frame."—{Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk Sold only in half pound tins by grocers, la* beled thus: JAM K8 KPI'S

A

CO..

Homoeopathic Chemist*. London, Eng

Xtt. CHAECOT'S

PLEASANTLY

EXHILERATING

INVIGORATES EVERY ORGAN OF THE BODY. CURES

Nervousness and Sleeplessness

RIGHT A WAV.

Free by Mail, 50 ceuts and JI.00. SKND TOR CIRCULAR LIFE ELIXIR CO., 80 VE8EY ST. N. Y.

Cleanses the

Nasal Passages,

Allays Pain and

Inflammation,

ifl

Catarrh

ELY'S

Cream Balm

FEVER

Heals the Sores

Restore* the

UJ3L

'-FEVER

A particle is applied Into each nostril and Is.agreeable, Price 50 cents at Druggists by mall, registered, 60 cts. ELY BROS., 56 Warren St., New York.

DRUNKENNESS

Positively Cartd

ministerial Or. Halaes' Golden Specific.

It can be given in a cup of coffee or tea without the Knowledge of the person taking it Is absoluteley harmless, and will effect a permanent and speedy/ ure, whether the patient Is a moderate drinker or an alcoholic wreck. Thousands of drunkards have been made temperate men who have taken Golden Specific in their coffee withont their knowledge and to-day believe th^ quit drinking their own free will. IT NEVER FAILS. of their own free will. IT

ey quit NEVER FA1

Tbe system once Impregnated with the Bpeiflc. It becomes an utter Impossibility for the liquor appetite to exist. For salt by

JAS. E. SOMES, Druggist,

Cor. 6th and Ohio sta.. Teire Haute, Ind.

MAL.730R

^JSTTHE GENTLEMAN'S FRIEND. Onr Malydor Perfection Syringe

Sent

tre*

bottle. Prevents DMrteUire. Cures and fllcct In 1 to 4 days. for it.

to

with every

Ask your Druggist For sale by

any address

for

GUUCK & CO., Draaoisfe, TERRE HAUTE, INO.

1

&^CHE ^WDERSf

CT9.PER 80**

•yoa

JLZJU-

LDA(

OSE NSFFVATS MAMLESS NU0AC8E MWDCItS. THtv ant awcciric.

Ommtrntm

JTo

Opimtm, Bmmide*

#r JTiiimMm.

TEST All MOt A CATBAKTXC. PRICE CEKTS. FOR SALE BY DKlMtltTS. os sijrr sr iu«~. addssss ths

XOVTMA2T XHEtTTO OQ55 ttds St* Mbrie, I. Y., aid fartermttoasi

Bold by J. St C.jBAPR.

"I used Hood's Sarsap&rilla for catarrfc, and received great relief and benefit from it. The catarrh was very disagreeable, especlaly in the winter, causing constant discharge from my nose, ringing noises in my ears, and paint in the back of my head. The effect to clear my head in the morning by hawking and spit... ting was painful. Hood's Sorsaparilla gave me relief immediately, while in time I was entirely cured. I think Hood's Sarsaparilla is worth its weight in gold.- Mbs.G.B.Gibb, 1029 Eighth Street N W, Washington, D. a

Hood's .Sarsaparilla

Bold by all druggists. fl sixforfS. Prepared only 1 Sold by *11 druggists. fl tbcforfS. Prepared only C. I. HOOD CO.. Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. by C. I. HOOD CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mas*

IOO Doses One Dollar I IOO Doses One Dollar

Mlscliler fbr Meats.

CTAR

MEAT MARKET.

27 north Fourth street

Is the leading and best equipped shoo in the cltv. Mr. Mischler alwavs has on nand The Choicest and Nicest Meats Of all kinds to b« found anywhere in tbe city

£)R GILLETTE.,

ZDJEZDNTTIST-

Filling of Teeth a Speciality. Office—Corner Seventh and Main streets, In McKeen's new block, opp. Terre Haute House

K.

GEO. MARBACH,

DENTIST.

REMOVED to 423% Wubash Avenue,

DR

DENTIST

810 north 18th street.

All work warranted as represented.

J. NUGENT. M. J. BROPHY.

NUGENT & CO., PLUMBING and GAS FITTING

A dealer In

Gas Fixtures, Globee and Engineer'* Supplies. 500 Ohio Street. Terr* Haute, Ind

JSAAC BALL, V,

^FUNERAL DIRECTOR.

Cor. Third and Cherry Sta., Terre Haute, Indole prepared to execute all orders In his line' with neatness and dispatch.

Embalming a Specialty.

RS. ELDER BAKER, HOMEOPATHIC--

I)

PHYSICIANS and SURGEONS,

OFFICE 102 a SIXTH STREET, Opposite Savings Bank. Nlghl £klls at office will receive prompt at* tent-ion. Telephone No. 185.

«.

STECK

PIANOS. All styles atKussner's Palace of Music, Albert J. Kussner, Sole Agent. "H R- R. W. VAN VALZAH,

XJ Successor to RICHARDSON A VAN VALZAH,

DE33STTXST.

Office—Southwest corner Fifth and Main Streets, over National State Bank (entranoe on Fifth street.

Established 1861 Incorporated 1*88.

QLIFT A WILLIAMS CO.*

Successors to unit, Williams 4 Co. J. H. Wii-MAHS, President. J. M. Cun, Sec'y and Jreas.

ITAUnTACTTTBKES or

Sash, Doors, Blinds, etc.

AMD DXAUCSS IN

LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES GLASS FAINTS, OILS

AND BUILDERS' HARDWARE. Mulberry street, eorner Wh.

WANTED

to canvass for the sale of Xur*ery Stock I Steady employment guaranteed. SALARY dnd EXPENSES paid to successful man. Apply at once stating age. Mention this paper.

Cbase Brothers Company, Rochester, R. 7

-pq-QTEL GLENHAM,

FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, Bet. 21st and 23d stii, near Madison Square. EUROPEAN PLAN.

Jr

'1^

N. B. BARRY, Proprietor

New end perfect plumbing, according te tbe latest scientific principle*.

WANTED PflM

I

over

Arnold's clothing store.

O. LINCOLN,

R. GAG£,

DKALXR IN

ARTISTS' SUPPLIES

Picture Frames. Mouldluga Picture Frames to Order.

MoKeen's Block. M8 Main St, YJ #th and 7th.

u,

SALESMEN I*. N..I-w-ryStock. Alii****!* mranted FIRST CLA**H. Permirvjnt. Pleases*. Peoflt-

'ti*for Hi- ifht K" u. alaT»'tise» ww-ksr. ral Inbegino' r- N »-xpe-—-nr". Outlit If«. Uiii« for ,pe. CHARLES H. ("HAKE,

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umer man, Uocbester, N.

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