Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 20, Number 35, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 22 February 1890 — Page 3
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SCIENCE AND PROGRESS.
CURIOUS PRODUCTS OF NATURE AND NOTABLE DEVICES OF MAN.
Surprising and Pretty E*p«rlmenl Which Shown That a Liquid May Vibrate and CttOM Sonnd A Genu!n« Curioftity In the Vegetable World,-
A queer musical instrument, and ail experiment as surprising in its effects as it is instructive, is described by Professor Mayer, among various other entertaining experiments in his work on the phenomena of sound. The cat represents a glass jar (a backet will do as well) standing in a sink near a water faucet. A tin flageolet, soch as may be bought in the toy shops, has the highest finger hole in it closed with wax, as shown in the cut. All the other boles are left open. A rubber tube leading from the faucet is slipped over the mouth of the flute. The water is turned on and flows through the tube into the flute and thence out into the jar.
1
THE WATER FLUTE.
The jar overflows and the water runs away down the sides. These things placed in this manner will give an experiment showing that a liquid like water may vibrate and give a sound. If the flow of water carefully regulated and tho flute is of the right pattern, you will hear a low, but distinct, musical note from the water. Touch the glass jar and apiece of paper laid on the surface of the water, and you will feel them quivering with the vibrations. Here wo have a flute blown by water, under water, and giving a sound which is caused solely by the vibrations of water.
A Komurhablc Production.
There have been soino big stories told by American cultivators of nature's freaks in way of vegetables, and how we have an English contribution to swell the list.
The remarkable sample, a genuine one, that cannot be matched, and shown the cut here presented, was dug by an English gardener and originally photographed by The Mark Lane Express. This is unlike most potatoes
Tax HAN POTATO.
ill that it is a perfect likeness of a man's head. In most potatoes the eyes are well represented—too much so for the thrifty housekeeper but in this we have the nose, mouth and chin (double). The illustration is a correct reproduction of this samplo of the genus fOlapqm tuberosum, reduced about one-third in size.
SMitaiy Street Cleansing.
A ferial was lately made iu London of a ma«*ine which promises to usher in a new era tn the annals of street cleaning.
A circular water tank, capable of holding about 800 gallons of water, is mounted on three wheel*, with a pipe supplying a sprinkHt»S tube fixed across, and cloee to tho pole in front of the machine. Under the tank in the rear is an India robber screw shaped revolving roller, which rotates on the ground in an opposite direction to that of the wheels, and io conjunction with water flowing from the sprinkling tube, thoroughly cleanses the roadway, and carries the mud aside. The machine work* very rapidly, being drawn either by one or two horses, and is adapted equally well for dry and wet weather.
It is claimed that the streets in which the demonstration took place were very thorough ly cleaned, being not merely brushed over, bat washed, and so left sweet as well as clean.
Petroleum in India.
The discovery of large deposits of petroleum along tho bank* of the Lepan river, in Netherlands Indies, is reported. Raw petroleum ooitcs out of the ground in many places where the natives have dug pits. At Telega Tunggal, whore the boring reached a depth of about 830 feet, more important results have been arrived at. Appearances indicate that the main reservoir has been tapped there. The oil tested yields 35 per cent, of lamp oil of good quality. It does not contain harmful ingredients, and offers advantages as a lubrica tor. _________
Thing* of Today.
Malleable and ductile bron»& produced in plates or bars free from cracks and blow holes, is an article lately patented in England and Franc*.
A New York inVentor has patented an electric refrigerator, based on the fact that a current of electricity passed in the proper direction across the junction of two dissimilar metals cook the joint.
A submarine nun, claimed to be able to puneli a hale in any vessel afloat, is a bo« invention to touted to be carried upon deck oa men-of-war.
Thosycretn of frearing the soil with brine, for the purpose of sinking shafts through qtlicksaud. has been pPaaouaced a success.
Tbo imjxirtani fact is announced that the telephone can $»duplexed, or, in other words, four pcoj ic instead of two can talk over tin wires at one time.
Tea kav*» scattered over carpel before sweeping ini^iu^ra the color* and keep# down diss!.
THE CURIOSITY SHOP. titfgj j§gt.
Tho Chlorite Army—It Xambers Nearly
1,000,000 Men.
TTith regard to the military organization and resources of China much might be written. but, to summarize the chief facts, it may l»e said that the military organization on paper only slightly less elaborate than the cfHl administration, and that the emperor controls forces of nearly 1,000,000 armed men —only to a large degree the arras am out of date and the men untrained. Although events have compelled the authorities to show greater activity, and to increase the number of troops by the formation of freSh corps, such as Li Hung Chang's trained regiments and the garrison in Manchuria and Central Asia, the division of the army remains unchanged, and goes back to- the date of the Manchu conquest, when it became necessary to organize the permanent forces of the empire.
They were then divided into three separate bodies, composed of the races to which they belonged—Manchu, Mongol and Chinese. The Manchus number 678 companiis of 100 men each, or nearly 70,00J fighting men. The Mongols furnish about 80,000 men, and the two combined give what has been general!}' called the Tartar array. The Chinese, or Green Flag, army numbers between 600,000 and 700,000 men, but no attempt has yet been made to organize this force for modern war. China is strong in numbers even with respect to her army, which has always been delegated to an inferior position in her community,^ priding itself on the pre-eminenue of the edit-* cated civilian, but she is lamentably deficient in organization.—London Times.
The Tower of Babel.
The distinction of being a remnant of the Tower of Babel has been claimed for three different masses, but the majority of opinions are in favor of the Birs Nimrud in Babylonia, the ruins of this temple appearing to more nearly correspond with the conceived notion of that structure. It is of an oblong form, the total circumference being 7tiv? yards. At the eastern side it is cloven by deep furrow, and is not more than 50 or 60 feet high but on the western side it rises in a conical figure to the elevation of 198 feet and on its summit is a solid pile of brick 37 feet high by 28 in breadth, diminishing in thickness to tlio top, which is broken and irregular, and reut by a large fissure extending through a third of its height.
The fire burnt bricks of which it is built have inscriptions on them, and so excellent is the cement, which appears to be lime mortar, that it is nearly impossible to extract a whole brick. The other parts of the summit of the hill are occupied by immense fragments of brick work of no determinate figure, tumbled together, and converted into solid vitrified masses, as if they had undergone the action of the fiercest fire or bad been blown up with gunpowder. These ruins stand on a prodigious mound, the whole of which is itself in ruins, channeled by the weather, and strewed with fragments of black stone, sandstone and marble. Taken in connection with the ancient tradition that the Tower of Babel was rent and overthrown by fire from heaven, this is a curious circumstance.
Asbestos.
Asbestos is a fibrous, white, gray or green mineral not fusible. The variety called rock cork very much resembles cork, is soft and easily cut aud so light as to float on water. Rock leather and rock wood are varieties somewhat similar to rock cork, but not so light. Tho finest fibrous variety, with easily separable fibers, is called amainthus, because cloth inadt of it was cleansed by passing it through flr^ This cloth was used by the'ancients to enwrap dead bodies placed on the funeral pile, so as to preserve the ashes of the body unmixed. It was also woven by them into handkerchiefs and towels. Of late years it has been considerably used as fire proof roofing, flooring and packing in safes, journal boxes and around steam pipes. Paper has also leen made of it but though, at red heat, the paper remains uninjured, the writing disappears. It is said that Charlemagne had table cloth of asbestos, which, for the amusement of his guests, be was wont to throw into the flre at the close of the meal The finest specimens of this mineral come from Corsica and Savoy, though some are found in the Alps, Pyrenees and Ural mountains, and in North America and New South Wales while commoner varieties, such as the rock cork and rock wood, are found in Lanarkshire, Tyrol, Dauphiny and parts of Scotland.
Ash Wednesday.
Ash Wednesday is so called from the custom of strewing ashes on the head as a sign of penitenoo which prevailed in the Roman Catholic church. It was instituted probably by Gregory the Great, 590-004, and was sanctioned by later popes. The ashes were consecrated on the altar before mass, sprinkled with holy water and signed three times with the cross, while the priest recited the words, "Memento quad cinis es, et in cinerem reverter is!" (remember that thou art dust, and must return to dust). They were then strewed on the heads of tho officiating priests, the clergy and the assembled people. The ashes were said to bo those of the palms consecrated on the preceding Palm Sunday. Ash Wednesday is not observed in the Protestant church in Germany.
Bacteria.
Bacteria is the name given to certain forms found in animal and vegetable fluids because of their shape, and is derived from a Greek word meaning a clnb. They are mere points of organized matter, and constitute the lowest form of organic life. Thoy are found in the sap of plants, in tho blood of man and of the lower animals, and are abundant in eggs. Thoy bear an important part in healthy as well as morbid processes, in the ripening of fruit as well as decay. They also exist in suspension in the air, and the festering of an open sore is occasioned by" the entrance of bacteria from the surrounding air. They also act as powerful organic ferments in the transformation of starch into sugar, of sugar cane into glucose, etc.
The K*«t« as an Emblem.
The standard of the eagle was first borne by the Persians. The Romans carried figures of the eagle as ensigns, in silver and gold, and sometimes represented the bird with a thunderbolt in its talons. The Romans formally adopted the eagle ia the consulate of j&Iarins, 103 & G. The ensign of the German empire was a two beaded eagle, to show that the empires of Rome and Germany were united. This two headed form was fir.«t used when Charlemagne became master of the German empire. The eagle was the inn-—t&l standard cf Napoleon I, and is the sta urd of Austria, Russia and Prussia, lis adoption as tho national emblem of the United Stat** took piaceat an early period of Uia nation's history.
A Feather
In Bis Cap.
Tho expression, "a feather la his cap,'1did not the it to decorate Vs.#'." for some festive ©c km, but ns£«w» -wcleafe custom the Haugjuristo*. Only be who bad killed Turk could ad«ra himself with a fi rher, and the mnnb&r is- of spooafol of boitwater, dScAted the iber of the slain. Tfeepttraas. two cup: of floor, Flavor to taste "to ptome himself," bad Its source In tb* *2 ingret -its together, without beating the Muae trsdiiioa.
YOUNG FOLKS' COLUMN.
PLEASANT READING BOYS AND GIRLS
An lukiEnlflcant Looking Worm That Produce* One of the Most Valuable mercantile Articles of the World—A Frank Bxplanatlon by a Small Boy.'^
Among many of the useful discoveries and inventions with which the Chinese are credited is tho manufacture of silk, which is supposed to have originated with, them at all events they jealously guarded the method employed as a most valuable secret, and other nations obtained knowledge of it slowly and only through various ingenious artifices. A writer in Vick's Maga«inftl from which our cut of the silk moth, giltr worm and cocoon is reproduced, tells that the secret was carried into Persia by some monks who had resided along time in China, and knowing that they would not be allowed openly to carry away tho silk worm eggs, concealed them in a bamboo cane, and in rtifa way the different varieties of silk worms were scattered over many parts of the world.
The Bombyx mori is the priucipal one of the silk producing moths, and belongs to the family of Lepidoptera, in which are some of the largest and most beautiful insec&. It is of a grayish color, the body of fn® male hottiAlf an inch long and that of the female somewhat longer and stouter, while the wings are short and weak. The larva is without hair, of gray or cream color and from three to three and a half inches long. The silk vessels are two sacs running-along the aides of the body and opening by one spinneret on the under lip of the larva.
I
SILK MOTH. SILK WORM AND COCOON.
When the larva is fully matured it ceeds to spin its cocoon, and from the sacs throws out a silken thread about 4,f00 yards long. While doing this it continually moves its head around for about three days. The cocoons are whito or yellow in color, egg shaped, and measure from an inch to an inch and a half in length, and from half an inch to an inch in diameter. They are like a hard shell with some of the silky fibers on the outside.
In order to use the cocoors for silk, thfey are gathered before they are pierced by the moths in making their exits from the fhell, thus bursting them and injuring the silk. T&ree or four days are required for the silk wprms to spin their cocoons, and two or thrpfl days after they ate gathered before the sh are burst. When the cocoons are gathered the chrysalides have to be killed by heat, either dry or steam heat, and are then sorted according to their size, color and quality.
Tho mulberry leaf is the principal food ol the silk worm, and groves of the mulberry tree are cultivated for this purpose.
Swinging on the Gate. Now our merry little folks Take a merry ride, Ned and Goldie, Ted and May,
Two on either side.
Singing, swinging on the gate, In the pleasant sun?" First they're bound for Boston town.
Wondrous sights to see :Then for grandpa's dear old farm, To a husking bee Now, for auntie's house, to dine
Surely they'll be late, If they wait to journey there On the garden gate. "See us swing] hear us sing.
Happy hearts have we Never were the robin birds Half so foil of glee." -Selected.
How the Mink Fishes.
While engaged in geological work on the Cedar river, Iowa, says Mr. C. L. Webster, my attention was attracted by a mink engaged in fishing for her young. On the rip-1 pies in the center of the stream, where the water was not more than two feet in depth, was a flat bowlder rising a few inches above the surface. On this rock the mother mink took her position, and watched for small fish to approach, when she would dive into the water, be gone for a moment and reappear usually with a fish in her mouth, which she would deposit in the center of the stone, stopping its struggles by a quick, sharp bite back of the head. The process was repeated unto seven fish were deposited on the rock. Then, taking one of them in her mouth, she swam to the shore, climed the steep bank, and ran hastily to her young in a borrow under an old stump.
Why Be Was Kept After School.
Elder Brother—Well, Georgie, did you do all vosr lesions today! Younger Brother—'Yest I did 'em every one.
Elder Bratfcer—But if you did all your teens, why yocr teacher keep you in „ng after st-u-'il?
Younger Brother—'Cause I did 'em bat I did *em all wrong.—Golden Days. ctfsa
Cr£am Cake.
One cupf il of soar cream, one cupful granulated ss •. «gg,one-half teaspooofoJ
sapfjl
mSK
THREE HAUTE SATURDAY 1VENIKG' A TT,
FOR BRIGHT OF TODAY.
1
Bright the eyes of blue and brown, Bare each curly pate, Gay the little passengers
On the garden gate. "Here we go, to and fro, Don't you think 'tis fun,
PHYSIOLOGY AND HYGIENE.
High Altitude Treatment of Commnptiou. lane«r In the llpast! Drain.
In considering tho treatment of consumpjon by high altitude, a medical writer •numerates certain dosirablu conditions of slimate: (1) Extreme purity of the air, (2) lerial rarefaction, (8) low relative humidity, uid (4) immunity from wind, fog and miasmal emanations. The cases sent to such climates should be carefully selected. No case should be sent in which there is senile change, Ir 'yngeal ulceration, gout, rheumatism, organic nerve disease, or hysteria. When there is no marked emaciation, severe pyrexia, or kidney complication, Mir. Tyson, the authority quoted, finds that the cases do welL An importaut rule is that the patient should live continually in the chosen place, and not return, even for short visits, to lower altitudes.
This length of time, as stated in The Brooklyn Medical Journal, he believes to be fully two years. Cold, di'jy air is stimulating. According to Mr. Tyson, it is detrimental to all fungus growth. The secretion from a cavity Las a tendency to dry up. Its rarefaction increases the number of respirations, and has a considerable influence in permanently expanding the lungs. Slight oozing of blood from the mouth, nose and throat is common when patients first arrive. It may be that the mucous membranes near the surface of the body become dry, and there may be slight congestion when the air is cold. In the lungs, however, the supply of watery fluid is so great that dryness is impossible, and, at the same time, the air is warm before it reaches the lungs. The removal of the watery vapors would even relieve the congestion without bleeding. It may be, however, that the diminished air pressure tends to draw the blood to the surface, and so cause bleeding. Mr. Tyson believes, however, that these Blight hemorrhages do not harm, and that the membranes soon become accustomed to the changes in the air.
Honse Drains.
House drains as a source of ground contamination are pronounced by Professor John McMullen to be even more dangerous than the common sewers, since they are so frequently located immediately under the house, where '^1 the results of any defect are more directly manifested. By unskillful construction, or by subsequent careless usage or want of repair, the filth is effused into the basement or cellar, and impregnates the soil under the house. In country districts isolated outbreaks of diphtheria, traceable to cesspool effluvia, are not at all uncommon. In these cases it is generally found that there is a water closet in the house, where there is little or no provision for any change of air, that the soil pipe is never ventilated, and that the closet drain discharges into a cesspool which is completely covered up, and only cleaned at rare intervals. The consequence is that any gases generated in the cesspool have no outlet, except through the water closet into the house, and hence result attacks of diphtheria, ulcerated sore throat and other ailments. From an inquiry instituted by the state board of health of Massachusetts respecting the predisposing causes of diphtheria, its prevalence, etc., it is shown that this disease has boen most severe in the rural districts where there are no sewers, and where tho drainage is bad.
How Long Shall We Sleep?
"Dp to the fifteenth year most young people require ten hours sleep, and until the twentieth year, nine hours." The Analyst lays down this rule and then says: After that age every one finds out how much he or she requires, though, as a general rule, at least six to eight hours is necessary. Eight hours' ff sleep will prevent more "nervous derangements in women than any medicine can cure.
During
growth there must be ample sleep if
the brain is to develop to its fall extent and the more nervous, excitable or precocious a child is, the longer sleep should it get, if its intellectual progress is not to come to a premature standstill, or its life cut short at an early age.
Damp Soil and Consumption.
An English physician ^Ivances an array of statistics in support of tho theory that not only does a damp soil greatly promote consumption, but that its presence may be abated fully one half by the introduction of suitable drainage. A well known Massachusetts physician holds similar views, and considers that the amount of moisture in the soil is a fair criterion of the proportion of consumption among residents.
SOCIAL ETIQUETTE.
The Magic Pasteboard and Its Many Convenient Uses in Society.
To many people the visiting card is bat an insignificant and trifling bit of paper, but those who "know society by heart" maka it serve as a convenient medium of social intercourse. For instance, cards have become rery useful as means of conveying somewhat informal invitations. For dinners, balls and other
very
ceremonious occasions, they are
inadequate .Jmt Good Housekeeping pronounces them in good tastd for dances, lunches, "at homes'1 and teas, and says:
The words "at home" are 'written upon the card by the hostess herself, also the hour and often the nature of the entertainment, as "Dancing," "Progressive euchre." The envelope should exactly fit the card, and while it is not out of place to send by mail, it is in better taste that they shonld be delivered by a servant. i:,
The convenient card is also used in replying to invitations. This is frequently correct, but not unless the invitation itself was in that form. Where one more formal was engraved, or written in the third person, a note, also in the third person, is necessary. In using the card the phrases, "Accepts with pleasure," or, "Regrets to decline," are proper, but it is not allowable to merely write "Accepts" or "Declines," as this is too. curt a form to be really courteous.
If a call is intended for more than one member of a family, it is well, though not obligatory, to send up a card for each person. In event of seeing no one, a card most be left for each without faiL It may be turned at the corner or not. In small towns this is not the necessity that it is in cities where there most be some indication whether the visit was personal or not. \Aud these area very few of the many use? of cards, which, properly understood, simplify social duties.
Good Manners at Home.
The presence of good manners is nowhere more needed or more effective than in the household, and perhaps nowhere more rare. Wherever familiarity ecdsts there tea tendency to loosen the check upon salfish conduct which the presence of strangers involuntarily produces. Many persons who are kind and courteous in company are rode and careless with those whom they Iw® best. Emerson saya, "Good manners are made up of petty jttcrifices,* and certainly noshing can more thoroughly secure the harmony tiwi ponri* of ilus family circle thto the babit of making small sacrifices, one px another, Children thus leara^good manners to tbebetf and most natural way, and habits thus acquired will never leave them. Courtesy and kindliness will never lose then- power or ibeir ch&rm, wbiia all sporions imitations of then? wtobedogasoL
There is danger in impure blood. There is safety in taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, the blood purifier. 100 doses one
r*
A Scrap of Paper Saves Her Life. It was just an ordinary scrap of writing paper, but it saved her life. She was in the last stages of consumption, told by physicians'1 that she was incurable and could live only a short time-, she weighed less than seventy pounds. On a piece of wrapping paper she read of Dr. King's New Discovery, and got a sample bottle it helped her, she bought a large bottle, it helped her more, bought another and grew better fast, continued its use and is now strong, healty, rosy, plump, weighing 140 pounds. For fuller
Pruggist,
articulars send stamp to W. H. Cole, Fort Smith. Trial bottles of this wonderful discovery free at Carl Krietenstein'8 drugstore/ (4) ii®
A Remarkable Letter.
The following letter from Mr. W. A. Thornosn, of Columbus, Wis., is peculiarly interesting: "My wife," says he, "has been treated for her head, stomach and nervous prostration by three doctors in New York, two in Chicago, one in Philadelphia, one in Cincinnati, and at the large institute in Buffalo for sixteen months. They all failed. But one bottle of Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine helped her wonderfully." This should toe used in all headaches, backaches, changes of life, nervous disturbances, fits, rheumatism, etc. Ask at J. & C. Baur drugstore for a free trial bottle and Dr. Miles' new book on the Nerves and heart. (2)
A Great Surprise
Is in store for all who U9e Kemp's Balsam for the throat and lungs, the great guaranteed remedy. Would j'ou believe thai it is sold on its merits and that any druggist is authorized by the proprietor of this wonderful remedy to give you a simple bottle free? It never fails to cure acute or chronic ooughs. All druggists sells K«mp's Balsam. Large bottles 50 and SI.
IS Miles'Nerve upd Liver Pills. An important discovery. They act on the liver, stomach and bowels through the nerves. A new principle. They speedily cure biliousness, bad taste, torpid lives, piles and constipation. Splendid for men, women and children. Smallest, mildest, surest. 30 doses for 25 cents. Samples free at J. &C. Baur's.
Hoffman's Harmless Headache Powders brace the nerves with no after ill effect.
The farmers, in their swamps, we're sure, Could find the roots and plants that cure, If, by their knowledge they only knew For just the disease each one grew. Take courage now, and "Swamp Root" try. :idney, liver and bladder complaints) (for kidney As on this rem©
ou can rely. Baur.
For sale by J. &
A Sensible Man.
WoSld use Kemp's Balsam for the throat and lungs. It is curing more cases of coughs, colds, asthma, bronchitis, croup aud all tbroat aud lung troubles, than any other medicine. The proprietor has authorized any druggists to give you a sample bottlo Free to,convince you of the merit »t' this great remedy. Large Bottles 50c aud $1.
If you have numbness in arms or limbs, heart skips beats, thumps or flutters, or you are nervous and irritable— in danger of shock—Dr. Kilmer's OceanWeed regulates, relieves, corrects and cures. For sale by J. & C. Baur.
COMPOUND EXTRACT
)i
0
The importance of purifying the blood cannot be overestimated, for without pur® blood you cannot enjoy good health.
At this season nearly every one needs a good medicine to purify, vitalize, and enrich the blood, and Hood's Sarsaparilla is worthy your confidence. It is peculiar in that it strengthens and btiilds up the system, creates an appetite, and tones the digestion, while it eradicates disease. Give It a trial.
Hood's Sarsaparilla is sold by all druggists, prepared by C. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar
LOOSE'S EXTRACT PLOVER BLOSSOM
I
ImttBSBSnSSM
1
MOORE'S
Tfcsy aot in Blood.
Dn. E. C.
gtSSSSS^TSSM
ijjjgGREAT PnTiflM1 Blood Purifier.
TRADE 1U8K
rr (jujaas
Cancers, Humors, Sore*, Ulcer*. Swellings, Tumors, Abaceoses, Blood Poisoning, Salt Kb earn. Catarrh, Erysipelas, Rheumatism, and all Blood and Skin Di#ea»e«. FKICK. $1 per Pint Bottle, or 6 Bottles for fS. ib. can Solid Extract $2-50
J-B-LOOSSBEDCLOTOETO^
For sale by J. & C. Baur.
EMORY
Mhid in «w
Books MHKTMI
oreMiiac. T«*Umooi*I«rroin «il
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oca
HEW
ttS Solid I
ia
Out
worML
mutt OOLO a*th MSWasd wttfc w«t» onemnwvte
IcxalKr «nm
Slightly UuuttvM 35,
Absolutely Sure
For Malaria* Chills* & Impure Blood They expel disease germs, and Purify the System Druggists,& Dr. C. C. Moore, 78 Cortland St. N.Y
They Positively Cure.
A GREAT BLESSING TO WOMEN.I Bead Symptoms and Conditions this Specific will Believe and Care. IE VIIIIhave nervous or sick headache,stomir I till aohaohe, backache, spineache, bloat* ing, internal heat or scalding urine, I# Vnia have ohronio weakness,bearing down IT I Ull or perversions incident to life-change If Vnn have uterine catarrh, suppressed or II I Ull painful periods, or ovarian dropsy, If VAII bave suspicious growths, disposed to II |UU tumor or cancer, or hemorrhage, up quickly a run-down constitution and brings refreshing sleep, dispel those dull tired looks and feeland bring back youthful bloom the nervous system.
ItWillffi! ana beauty--restores
Give it to your weak and delicate daughters. Not a drop of impure can escape its healing and purifying
mflthys
influence. »w If Vnn value good health and hope for long II IUU life, use Female Kemeay. Cam
Symptoms continued with certtflo&tes of ourws OCC in "Guide to Health" tree. Also advice tree. Dr. Kilmer A Co., Btnghamton, N. Y. Drugglgta 1.00
Dr. JORDON,
The well known Throat and Lung Physician of Indianapolis, Ind., No. newest.Washington street, Has patients visit him from all pnrtK of the United States for treatment of Catarrh, Throat and Lung Diseases. Dr. Jordon's Lung Renovator, the great Lunir Blood,Liver and Kidney Remedy Is sold by all first-class druggists throughout, tho United fttnies. Bnglnno, Qermanj and Canada. Wholesaled hj Cook, Bell A I.ower.v. Tcrre Haute, Ind.
WEST'S
CO
mcmr*
tb— ««»#»«,•» w*B Ail tbcwMfcyea tStem. Afl
„«.SS!2f«w
ed by 82300
Prof. Loisette's
MEMORY
DISCOVERY AND TRAIHIN8 METHOD In spite of sdnlternteAfmitnttonn which mlu the: theory, arid prtColic&l rowultn of the Orlultml, in spite of the grossest minreprwout&tlons by tmvioun would-be competitors, and in spite of 'base attempt8 to rob" him of the fruit of his labors, {all of which demonstrate the undoubted imporiorlty ami popularity of htateaohlng). Prof. Loisotto's Art or Hevar l''orjr» ttinK is mciijtii*ed to-day in both UomiaphernA
HS
marking en lipoch tn
Memory Culture. His Prospectnu(snnt pimt free) gives opinions people In all parts of thu «li.li« who
HFTVH
act
ually studie, his System-by onrrwpondonco, tOiowliiq it mil fin/v whi.6 beino Mnditd, not any bonk can oa lear*y1 a *mol* 'if, if'C. For Proapootus, xriftli Avenue. N.1C
DdlNDSEYMMra i^Malrea a Lovely Comploxion. Is a [Splendid Tonio, and euros Boils, Pimpkjos, Scrofula, Mercurial and all Bloody
VlOUUill JkVUiUt liUVA VU1UO A«VII Jos, Scrofula, Mercurial and al ^Diseases, bold by your Druggist. 'Sellers Medicine Co., Pittsburgh,Pa
HEALTH IS WEALTH!
MRKV
r^«sl
NEHVJC
MENT,
ANDBKAINTHEAT-
a guaranteed specific for Hysteria,, Dizziness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakeful-
Brain resulting in insanity and leading to misery, decay and death, Premature Old Age, barrenness. Loss of Power in either sex, involuntary Losses and Spermatorrhea caused by over-indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. SI.00 a box, or six boxes for 36.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price.
WE GUAKANTKK SIX BOXB8 To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied with $6.00, we will send tho purchases our written guarantee to refund the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued only by J. & C. Baur. druggUts, sole agents, corner Seventh and Wabash Avenue, Terre Haute Ind.
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to introdtic* oar
sttMitor foods w» win trad ruui leoKB rsuoir In «sd localtty, •sibovs. Only (1OMwho writ* to as at eoMesa make ran of tlx thSDM. All yon bar« to do la fstamls to *kow oar roods to the** who Mil—your actjrhbon
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Th« followtag rat firs* flw spj*«nue« of It rduc«djo
•boat «b* Mitthput of lis balk, it Is a grand, doabl* sis* Ms-
TEQUILA TONIO.
IT IB AX UNFAILING REMEDY FOR
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Low HplriU, Oen•af Debility, Muscular Weabnens, Nervous
the evil effect* of mental or physical overwoik, Extremes of Temperature, the lnordJnate use of Hpirituous Llquora, High Li Ing, Venereal Excesses, Change of life, waat of Exercise, etc. It gives strength and vigor to the digestive organs, takes away the tired,
128 Franklin St., Chicago, 111-
GJuE^BAM,
FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YOKK, U«U 21st and ZiA st*., near Madison Kquaie. EUROPEAN PLAN.
N. B. BAKKY, Proprietor,
acd perfect plumblog, itfjwmlinK to
tbe iatesnfientme principles.
*JSrTHE6MTtBU«'JFBIMD.
SttW&fS Ig^SE-asssMrs: «-»•. 1 CO?!l)^gfERRE HAUTE, »Htf.
•address for®!.
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