Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 20, Number 36, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 March 1890 — Page 3
SCIKi-.Cl- AND PROGRESS.
NEWo AND NOTES ON SUBJECTS
or
VERY GENERAL INTEREST.
A Pleasing Kxperiment Which Often Oo» %Ain\ In a Coarse of Chemlatry and That abjr He Performed Without a Laboratory—A Sew Kim Pest.
t*
Atnmoniacal gas, combined frith the elementsof water,is analogous to a metallic oxide which includes a metallic root, ammonium. This hypotbetically composed metal mhy be in a manner perceived, since it is possible to amalgamate it with mercury by operating in the following manner.
EXPERIMENT WITH AMMOITIUX Take a porcelain mortar, in v/hich pour a quantity of mercury, and then cut some thin strips of sodium, which are thrown into the mercury. By stirring it about with the pestle a loud cracking is produced, accompanied by a flame, which bears evidence to the union of the mercury and the sodium, and the formation of an amalgam of sodium. If this amalgam is put into a slender glass tube containing a concentrated solution of hydrochlorate of ammonia in water, the ammonia will be seen to expand in a remarkable manner, anl spout out from the end of the tube, which is now too small to contain it, in the form of a metallic substance (see cut). In this case the ammonium—the radical which exists in the ammoniacal Baits—becomes amalgamated with tfte mercury, driving out the sodium with which it had been previously combined the ammonium thus united with the mercury becomes decomposed in ammoniacal gas and hydrogen, the mercury assuming its ordinary form.
Phosphate of ammonia is very valuable from its property of rendering the lightest materials, such as gauze or mualiu, incombustible. Dip apiece of muslin in a solution of phosphate of ammonia and dry it in contact with the air that done, you will find that it is impossible to sot fire to the material. It will become charred, but you cannot make it burn. __
A Valuable Soft Alloy.
A now soft alloy which adheres so firmly to metallic, glass and porcelain surfaces that it can be used as a solder, and which is valuable when the articles to bo soldered are of such a nature that they cannot bear a high degree of temperature, is described by Iron. It consists in the main of copper dust, obtained by shaking a solution of sulphate of coppor with granulated zinc, which precipitates the copper in the form of a browuish powder. This powder is treated with sulphuric acid, and by adding mercury an amalgam is formed, which when properly heated and kneaded in an iron mortar becomes soft as wax, and in this ductile ctato it can be spread upon any surface, to which, as it cool? and hardens, it adheres with groaf. tenacity. "A
1
S
A New Kfiemy of the Kim.
In the sketch here presented is illustrated what Mr. L. O. Howard calls "a newly imported elm insect." ThU new pest belongs to the Coceid insect tribe, and has been introduced from Europe on European elms, and was found lastseasou in several places iu New York state, and also about Boston and in Washington.
Tin* accompanying illustration, a reproduction from Insect Life, will bo of assistance in recognising the pest, and will give an idea of its appearnuco about the middle or last of Juno, which is a season when the coccids may be most readily detected. Troes that are much infested with these insects make their presence known at a distance of several rods by a peculiar sweet though somewhat pungent odor.
rtrtx GROWN FRMAUS COCCIDS. No systematic experiments with insecticides have as yot been tried, but an application In June of whale oil soap and kerosene, made pretty strong and applied with a stiff brush, appeared to kill all that were thoroughly washed, but some on the small branches escaped, so that enough were left to thickly colonise the tree again within a year or two. Thoroughly spraying the trees with kerosene emulsion, at a season when the insects aiv active mid tender, might lead to more satisfactory results, but the chances are that some would escape. It has been noticed that a few of the insects sometimes remain on the leaves until they fall in the autumn, and in this way they could be carried from one tree to another. When active they may easily be carried to widely separated localities upon the feet of birds.
New* In Brief.
"Some genius announces that he has dis-' covered a process of condensing and solidifying natural gas, so that it can be handled like coal," says Science News, which adds, however, that readers will hardly need to be reminded that this is an Impossible achievement
A boy who has the powor of causing heavy objects to adhere to his fingers when closely pressed upon them, and who has in till* manner lifted a maximum weight of five pounds, is a phenomenon reported from Baltimore.
The cotton seed oil industry of the south represented by a hundred and twentr-fire mills in operation, with a capital invested Wtlmated at *25,000,000.
A company is eagagtd in trying to mala th« desert of Sahara "bkwaora as the row* by digging wells, Irrigating and planting date tree*.
Experimtoia am now being made in growing cinchona trees in California.
,THE CURIOSITY §HOP.
Black Friday—How Speculators Got Corner in Gold. The term "Black Friday" was first used in England and was applied to the Friday on which the news reached London that Charles Edward, the young Pretender, had arrived at Derby, This created a terrible panic. On May 11, 1886, the term was again used in London, when the failure of Overead, Guerney & Co., on the previous day, was followed by a widespread financial ruin. In September, I860, occurred the celebrated Black Friday in the United States. The cause of the panic was the attempt made by Jay Gould and others to create a corner in the gold market by buying all the gold in the banks of New York city, amounting to 115,000,000. For several days the value of gold rose steadily, and the speculators aimed to carry it from 144 to 200.
On the Friday following (Sept. 24) the whole city was in a ferment, the banks wore rapidly selling, gold was at 162% and still rising. Men became insane, and everywhere the wildest excitement raged, for it seemed probable that the business houses must be closed from ignorance of the prices to be charged for goods. But in the midst of the panic it was reported that Secretary Boutwell, of the United States treasury, had thrown $4,000,000 in gold on the market, and at once gold fell and the excitement ceased. It is estimated that the profits of Gould and his partners were at least $11,000,003.
Edison as a Newsboy.
The following is one of the "Talks with Edison" which George Parsons Lathrop reports in Harper's Magazine for February: "At the beginning of the civil war," said Mr. Edison,. "I was slaving late and early at selling papers but, to tell the truth, I was not making a fortune. I worked on so small a margin that I had to be mighty careful not to overload myself with papers that I couldn't sell. On the other hand, I could not afford to carry so few that I should find myself sold out long before the end of the trip. To enable myself to hit the happy mean, I formed a plan which turned out admirably. "I made a friend of one of the compositors in The Free Press office, and persuaded him to show me every day a 'galley proof of the most important news article. From a study of its head lines I soon learned to gauge the value of the day's news and its selling capacity, so that I could form a tolerably correct estimate of the number of papers I should need. As a rule, I could .dispose of about 200 but if there was any special news from the seat of war the sale ran up to 300 or over. Well, one day my compositor brought me a proof slip of which nearly the whole was taken up with a gigantic display head. It was the first report of the battle of Pittsburg Landing, afterward called Shilob,you know, and it gave the number of killed and wounded as 60,000 men!"
The Original Bluebeard.
The story of Bluebeard was written during the reign of Louis XIV by a Frenchman named Perrault, and was probably suggested by the deeds of Giles de Laval, better known as Marshal de Retz. This bloodthirsty character was born in 1896, and subsequently served under the Duke of Bretagne and Charles VII with distinction, and was one of the trusted captains of Joan of Arc. In 1482 he was reputed the richest man in France, but quickly squandered his fortune. It i? said that soon after this event, through the influence of an alchemist named Prelati, Giles pledged all but his soul *to the devil in exchange for wealth equal to that which he had spent.
At all events, his career from that time became that, of a^damon. Young women, girls of tender age, and even little children were inveigled into his strongly guarded castles and never seen alive again. It is related that the children were dangled at ropes' ends, pricked with needles, and otherwise tortured until dead, and their heads were afterwards used as ornaments for his mantels and bed posts. After he had carried on this career of crime for about eight years he was arrested, confessed," and burned at the stake ^bout Dec. 22,1440. The remains of fifty-four of his riotims were identified.
Spanish America.
Spain's colonial possessions in America are Cuba and Costa Rica in Asia, the Philippine Islands, the Sooloo Islands, the Caroline and Palaoa Islands and the Marianne Islands, and in Africa, Fernando Po, Annabon, Corisco, Elobey and San Juan. In the year 1885 the sovereignty of Spain over the Caroline Islands was formally decided by the pope, and Great Britain and Germany accepted it. Spain lays claim to a strip of about 500 miles on the west coast of Africa, extending from Capo Bojador to Cape Blanco, and extending into the interior about 150 miles. Also the district of Ifni, near Cape Nun, opposite the Canary Islands, the islands off jJlobey on the west coast of Africa, and the country on the banks of the rivers Muni and Vava. In reference to the Sooloo Archipelago, let it be understood that the extent of that under Spanish protection was defined by the protocol signed at Madrid, March 7, 1SS5, by representatives of Great Britain, Germany and Spain, as including all the islands lying between the western extremity of the island of Mindando on the one side and thtf islands of Borneo and Aragua on the othef, excluding all parts of Borneo and the islands within three maritime leagues of the c^»st.
English and Scotch Ijbnnets. The English bonnet, which ,tvas superseded in the early part of the Sixteenth century by the hat, was made of clotV, silk or velvet, less or more ornamented,According to the taste or means of the wearer. In Scotland, however, bonnets were universally worn for a century or two later, md they still are, to a certain extent, a national characteristic. The bonnet worn bytae Lowland Scottish peasantry was of a Jkroad, round and flat shape, overshadowiugihe face and neck, and of a dark blue color, excepting a red tuft like a cherry on the top/ It was made of thick milled woolen, mi with reasonable care would last man bfs whole life. From having been worn, tillfcomparatively late times, by small rural proprietors—such as owners of a cottapj and An acre or two of land it gave to th«« loop notabilities the distinctive appellation of bonnet lairds. The bonnets worn by the Highlanders were made of the same fabric, but rise to a point in front and ar» without an^ rim.
Leboucheie oo Homburg Wat«n. Homburg waters are, in fact, hunbug. Th« Kluabetb spring fa a gentle pu-gative. Resides this jbere are two or three iron springs equal/in value to a pail after a red hoi poker has been dippsd into it The water*'Vwere an excuse for gotog to tfa« place to aimUe when the "tab^esMfced now th*y are an excuse for going theWwhen the Priace of Wales visits the place in the autumn. —London Truth.
p»y of Private Soldier*.
Th» nay of privates in the Unit^ States araj TOtnade USamonth ffimutft of th# war* In 18M It wwreleea to lieVmonth. Private, in the r*#*ranny todty rewire aft fiwt $18 a increased to fl&
YOUNG FOLKS' C0L|JMN.
AMUSEMENT AND INSTRUCTION FOB BRIGHT BOYS AND GIRLS.
The Photographing of Baby—How the Artist Succeeded in Stealing the Uve? Little Fellow'* Picture—A Brief Account of a Man with a Stieese. (The artist speaks.)
4
THE PHOTOGRAPHING OF BAB tUAWTUENOK. There, he's caught sight of something! Steady 1 I have him now!
He's a perfect little grasshopper At jumping, anyhow. IPS
TERKE HAUTE ^ATURX&T EVENING- A TT,
Is the hahy ready, madamef Well, you must not be seen, And his father, peifeapa, would better
Tn a second and a half!
mm
P8§ lit
(Papa and mamma speak.) And this is the way they cheated Our baby! We have to laugh To see how much like a deacon s-
mm
He looks in his photograph —Wide Awake.
The Power of Truth.
1
It is related of a Persian mother, on giving her son forty pieces of silver as his portion, that she made him vow never-to tell a lie and said: "Go, my son, 1 consign thee to God, and we shall not meet again till the day. of judgment."
The youth went away, and the party he traveled with were assaulted by robbers. One fellow asked the boy what he had and he answered with candor that surprised his questioner: "Forty dinars are sewed up in my garments."
The robber laughed, "thinking the boy jesting. Another asked the same question and received the same answer. At last the chief called him and asked him what he had The boy replied: "I have told two of your people already that I have forty dinars sewed up in my clothes."
The chief ordered his clothes to be ripped open, and the money was found. "And how came you to do this?" "Because," replied the boy, "I would not be false to my mother, whom I solemnly promised never to tell a lie." "Child," said the chief, "art thou so mindful of thy mother, while I am insensible, at my age, of the duty I owe to God? Give me thy hand, that I may swear repentance on it."
He did so, and his followers were struck with the scene. "You have been our leader in guilt," they' said to the chief "be the same in the path of virtue."
Andt taking tho boy%^ilntr, ~ttit yiT5troifi pentance on it. Boys, speak only that which is true. You may do much good by it if you never lead a band of robbers to God and honesty. :V-i
A Man with a Sneeze.
There once was a man with a sneeze, Who always would sit in a breeze. When begged to take shelter
He'd cry, "I should swelter!" And straightway go on with his sneeze. —St. Nicholas.
Old Laces, i'
Many of our girls do not know why old lace iB so much more valuable than new. The fact is that the valuable old lace is woven in lost patterns. It is frequently almost as fine as a spider's web and cannot be reproduced. Before the time of the French revolution whole villages in France and Belgium supported themselves by lace making, and patterns were handed down from one generation to another as heirlooms. The most celebrated weavers always had all the orders they could execute in a lifetime, and bound themselves by an oath to work for certain dealers only. When the Beign of Terror began iall work 6f this kind was interrupted. After the storm had subsided the dealers and workers were far apart—some dead, some lost, some escaped to foreign lands, and such of the women as remained were bound by their oath to work for but one. This oath was held by the poorest of them to be binding, and there were instances where they suffered actual want rather than break their word. Some, however, taught their children and their grandchildren, and rorny patterns were in this way preserved, and today specimens of these laces are worth their weight in gold
A Touch of Nature,
A little maid upon my knee Sighs wearily, sighs wearily Tm tired out of dressih' dells And havfng stories read." says she "There Is a book. If I cooJd see, I should be happy, pufflckly: My mamma keeps it on a shelf— 'Bat that you cannot have," says sher "But here's your *01d Man of the Ses." And 'Jack the Giant!1" (Lovingly I tried the little maid to soothe.) "The intcrestin' one," s&ys she. "Is that high up one! seems to me The fings you want jus* has to be Someflng you hasn't got and that's The interesting one!" says she. —St. Nicholas
Don't Lilt the Wire.
It it always best to avoid danger, if poadble therefore th«re is one rule which ought to be taught ia every school in the United States, and that is, never lift an electric wire off the ground. As long as It is on the ground it is harmless, no matter what pressors may be an it The moment it leaves the ground it may be dangerous. If it is in the way of traffic yoa may safely pdQ it across ^the street with your foot then put your foot on it and held it «n the ground and it cannot burtywv but do not lift it. Never tooch wire tied op apok. ft may not be dangerous, hot it is UfeetSs unloaded gun—it may kill you. 1 ', "i
PHYSIOLOGY AND HYGIENE.
CcadillaM Favorable to Long We—A Pop* ur Notion In Time of Epidemics. Ill a- paper on "Class Mortality" Mr. Nod A. HnmphrejB draws attention to the fact
that in the Peabody buildings in Loudon, which now accommodate some 20,000 persons of the poorer classes, the number of infant deaths has been reduced 7 per 1,000 below that of infants in London generally during the l&itflve years. This shows, he said, how orach hdjpsutg has to do with our rate of daatfe and thi« is confirmed by the fact that the poorer classes who live much in the open gardeners, nurserymen and agriculiborers, attain an average age almost sa good as that of clergymen themselves, in spite'of their much greater privations. It is Impure air, in the long run, which shortens life even more, than any other
own
jUjO^.the-pi
Just step behind the screen. Sow weH steal from this lively little Fellow bis photograph, That win show him grave as a deacon
P&J
.: |j£ *5- Foyer and Filt ffl Dr. C. V. Chapin, of Providence, during the investigation made after the outbreak
of typhoid fever in the winter of 188880 the filters in use in houses where fever had existed
were examined. They were given to Dr. Prudden, of New York, and others skilled j&J&cteriological work. In three of these filthe typhoid organisms were found. Bethe typhoid bacilli several organisms to faeces were associated with them, tdden described the contents of one of ts as a mixture of water, carbon and .n excrement, A diagnosis of theoutby exclusion gives a strong presumpof river water infection by typhoid ex- &, and the laboratory investigations applgr to give this view a significant confirmation.
According to The New York Medical JdSrnal these inquiries alone make it certain the filters that are in ordinary use are sources of danger to the families .using them, since they collect filth and micro-organisms from the water and serve as hatcheries to the latter.
Psychology of Epidemics.
'A. curious feature of epidemics istheunosdal boldness with which people dose them(elves with remedies of whose power and properties they know absolutely nothing. According to the Lancet, there exists at such seasons a mental perversity to be found In 't&e' idea that the epidemic is to be treated by common sense or nostrums largely advertised or by specifics frequently mentioned, and those suffering under this delusion feel it Wholly unnecessary to seek skilled assistance. In Vienna it has been found necessary to forbid the sale of antipyrin, except under doctors' prescriptions, as no less than seventeen deaths were attributed to stoppage of the heart's action owing to overdoses. The freedom with which the prescription of this remedy has been assumed by the public has long since been viewed with anxiety by the medical profession, and frequent warnings have already fallen upon deaf ears.
j-rl fk' Hypnotizing. Arnoivg niirious phenomena of the modern science of hypnotism, it is told that one day M.
Charcot publicly hypnotized a gendarme, and then told him 'to assassinate M. Grevy, whom be would find in the corner of a gargen. The poor constable went out and stabbed a tree with a paper knife, and came back •trembling and confessed the murder. Such bleats have been done in Leeds as well as in Paris, and we know what is the power of the magnetizer. It has hitherto been one of »the fairy tales of scleuce, but now it is said -to have added a new and terrible chapter to the records of crime.
•Ai "Shaking Up" a Cure for OyapepsK. fpTNew York truck driver tells of a gentlenan who every morning for six months past ^i riddeP doven cotfn with him oh his truck. "Heiffw firm," says the driver. "Oh, no, he didn't ride on my truck to save car fare, because he gave me a Christmas present that must have cost money enough to pay car fare every morning for a couple of years. He told me that he was troubled greatly with dyspepsia, and that the shaking up he received during the ride down town did him a great deal of good."
How the French Give Castor Oil. The French method of administering castor oil to children is to pour the oil into a pan over a moderate fire, break an egg into it aud stir up when it is done flavor with little salt or sugar or currant jelly.
SOCIAL ETIQUETTE.
Calling Customs of Small Towns—Who Shall Make the First Visit? The etiquette of calls differs somewhat in large cities and in smaller towns. In the former one is apt to be dropped, save by intimate friends, unless rigorously observing a certain amount of what might seem to the provincial dweller useless ceremony while she, in turn, may order her social life in a way very different from her city sister. Calls are the currency with which we largely pay our social debts, and none of them are more important than the first call, in regard to which it is often a vexed question whose place it is to take the initiative. On this subject, however, there are some well established rules, which Good Housekeeping states very clearly as follows: $
If you area newcomer in your place of residence, your part is as natural as it is simple, merely to "stand and wait," as it is the privilege of the older inhabitants to indicate a desire for your acquaintance. This rule is not hard .to accede to in the cordial life of smaller places where the nearer neighbors are sure to call, and through them you will meet others. If, however, our lines are fallen in a great city and we have few introductions to pave the way, we may be obliged to wait a long time for here people have all they can do to keep up with the social demands made upon them, and the pleasant ways of smaller towns cannot be followed.
Usually, in the case of any but a new comer to the town or neighborhood, the younger will wait for the older lady to call upon her, if there be much difference in age, but the elder may take the advantage of her position and desire the other to do bo, and this with so much tact as to convey even a greater compliment than her call would do.
Where two ladies of the same place meet for the first time, both having resided there for a long period, either may request the other to visit her, or may continue the acquaintance by calling, unless there is between the two some marked difference of social standing, when she who holds the highest position will make the first call. That such a difference exists often, even in oar democratic country, we mast admit. These visits must be returned, if possible, within the week, and the formality of the first must govern that of the return call for it is necessary to remember that until some degree of friendship is established the perse® who made the first advances has the privilege of continuing or dropping the acquaintance.
1
Tfee Oorx»et Thin*.
"There is a fashionable way to leave a carriage," said a lady who conforms to all the fins of fntfrVT "You must never lean forward getting your head out first. The property trained woman retains her seat tin ooe foot above the carriage step, rising, sinks bar weight upon it saM^y and gracefully to the curtx,
•lightly
Were all wise enough to heed this &dvice in season, a world of suffering would be avoided. If you suffer from impure blood, scrofula, dyspepsia,biliousness,headache,take ,~y
Horsford's A old Phosphate, A Healthful Tonic. Used in place of lemons or lime juice it will harmonize with such stimulants as are necessary to take.
Stop! Nature Haw a Cure. Eaton Rapids, Mich. J. M. Loose Red Clover Co., Detroit.— Two years I was afflicted with a very severe attack of Erysipelas. After two phy8icianc^ad used their treatment for several veils and I continued growing blind, and iu their diagnosis concluded that there was no earthly help or hope for me. I gave up, having tried all the remedies I knew or heard of. My neighbor, Mr. Miller, came in to see me one day, and said try Loose's Extract of Red Clover, as he had known of its working remarkable euros. I told him I had lost hope, that nothing would do me any good in this world. He insisted, and taking his hat went to the drug store and bought me one bottle and urged me to try it, which did. Ten days afterwards I sent for two more bottles, and it was wonderful how I improved. I continued using it and to-day I am better than I have been in yfars. No sign of erysipelas has shown' itself and I heartily recommend it to suffering humanity as the greatest and best blooa purifier in existence. Yours truly,
Hknky Marvin.
For sale by J. & C. Baur. jfc Failures in Idfe, People faii in mnnjr ways. In business, in morality, in religion, in happiness, and in health. A weak heart is often an unsuspected cause of failure in life. If -the blood does not circulate properly in the lungs, there is shortness of breath, asthma, etc. in the brain, dizziness, headache, etc. in the stomach, wind, pain, Indigestion,faintspells,etc. in the liver, torpidity, congestion, etc. Pain In the left side, shoulder and stomach is caused by heart strain. For all these maladies Mr. Miles'N«w Cure for the heart and lungs is the best remedy. Sold, guaranteed and recommended by J. & C. Baur. Treatise free. l")
JSlcctric Bitters.
This remedy is becoming so well .popuiaras t( rQeiliio special mention. All who havo udod~Electric Bitters sing the same song oipraise,—A purer medicine does not exist and it is guaranteed to do all that is claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all diseases of the Liver and Kidneys, Will remove Pimples, Boils, Salt Rheum and other affections caused by impure blood. WiH drive Malaria from the system as well as cure all Malarial fevers. For cure of Headache, Constipation and Indigestion try Electric Bitters. Entire satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Price 50 cts. and $1.00 per bottle at Carl Krietenstein, s. w.corner4th and Ohio streets.
If you have numbness in armB or limbs, heart skips boats, thumps or flutters, or you are nervous and irritable— in danger of shock—Dr. Kilmer OceanWeed regulates, relieves, corrects and cures. For sale by J. fc C. Baur.
MOORE'S
Xhey »ot in the Blood.
Slightly laxatlT*
Pilules
Absolutely Sure
For Malaria, Chllla* A Impure Blood Th«y expel disease germs, and Purify the System Druggists, 9c Dr. C. C. Moore, 78 Cortland St. N/*
They Positively Cure.
COUCH
SYRUP.
fh^CG i$T
SWAMP
4?
BAAT KIDNEY IIVV I LIVES AND
BLADDER'CUR IE. Etead Symptoms and Conditions Xhii Specific will Believe and Core. II Yah
flr®
threatened with, or already havo
II I Uli Bright's disease, or Urinary trouble. Vntt have sediment taurine like brick dust II iOU frequent calls or retention, with distress or pressure in the parts, limbs bloat, II Vmi have Lame Back. Rheumatism, stingII 1011 ing, Aching Pains in suk or hips, IX Vnu have Diabetes or Dropsy, body bloati II IDU or scanty or high colored urine, have Malaria, Torpid Liver.Djroepsls "Ague or Gout,
ifTMta™BLOOD
Seminal Weakness or Syphilis, VAI1 have Stone in Kidney. Gravel tn BladII lull der, Stoppage of urine or Drfbbtag,^
fimiit* up quickly a run-down coostitutionIHIIIuS Dwtoiiect early symptom*. Imr Bon 60a Bmrr to 8wt,
ootstde and insMe wraypeu. «nBirwiwgad«• Ima» *Co.» thamtno, x.
Me# extra large $1*
5^1v^§«
March
Are the besfc~ months in whiels to purify your blood. Hood'*
Sarsapa rlllais the« best bloodf purifier-
At no other season does the human system so much need the aid ol are-1 liable medicine like Hood's Sarsaparilla, as now. The impoverished condition of the blood, the weakening effects of the lon& cold winter, the lost appetite, and that tire* feeling, all make a good spring medicine abso* lutely necessary. Hood's Sarsaparilla i» peculiarly adapted for this purpose, and increases in popularity every year. It is the ideal spring medicine.
May
I must say Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the best medicine I ever used. Last spring I had noappetite, and the least work I did fatigued meever so much. I began to take Hood's Sarsaparilla, and soon felt that I could do as muck in a day as I had formerly done in a week. My appetite is voracious." Mas. M. V. Bayard,
Atlantic City, N. J. N. B, If you decide] to take Hood's Sarsa* par ilia do not be induced to buy any other.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists, fl six for f5. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
its. 01 slxforfS. Prepared only ft CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mast.
Doses One Dollar
r. JORDON,
The well known Throat and Lung Physician of Indianapolis, Ind., No. ll)jwest Washington street, Has patients visit him from all parts of th» United States for treatment of Catarrh, Throat and Lung Diseases. Dr. Jordon's Lung Renovator, the great Lung Blood.Liver and Kidney Remedy is sold by all first-clan* druggists throughout the United Statos. England, Germany*and Canada. Wholesaled by Cook, Bell & Lowery, Terre Haute, Ind. 32390'
JJOTEL GLENHAM, FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, Bet. 21st and 22d sts., near Madison Square*
EUROPEAN PLAN. N. B. BARRY, Proprietor.
Now and perfect plumbing, according t» the latest scientific principles.
DrLiNDSEYS'BLOOD SEARCHER-
Makos a Lovely Comploxlon. Is a iplendid Tonio, and cures Boils, Pimjc Jes, Scrofula, Mercurial and all Bloc ^Diseases. Sold by your Druggist. Sellers Medicine Co., Pittsburgh,Pa^
Prof. Loisette's
MEMORT
DISCOVERY AND TRAININQ METHOD
In spite of adulterated imitations whloh miss th* theory, and practical results of the Original, in spite of the grossest misreprssentations by envious would-be-oomp«titors, and in spite of "base attempts to rob" him of the fruit of his labors, (till of which demonstrate thetindoubtod Muperiorit? a"l popularity of his teaching).. Prof. Loisette's Art of Never Forgi'ttinx Is reuoirniiseo to-day in both Hemisphores as tnnrklng nn Kpoch in Memory Culture. Bis Prospectus (nont post free) give* opinions poopleln all parts of the globe who havo actually stadie his System by correspondence, showit that his System ia used only white being ttuditd, afterwards: thiu anv omk oan be learnm in a rfnoM nadinff, mvid-winderinff. cured, tie. For Prospectus Terms and Testimonials addnws Prof.
A. L.OI8KTTE, 22? Fifth Avenue. N.X
HEALTH IS WEALTH
WtTR CAT NT-!
Dr. E. C. West's NkrvkandBrainTRbat* ment, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizziness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by t" the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental Depression, Softening of the* Brain resulting in insanity and leading to misery, decay and death, Premature Old
Los
Barrenness, Loss of Power In either sex,
Use (be *Sf AIX
Stricture,
»V iples, Uleera,
In
voluntary Losses and Spermatorrhcee caused by over-indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. $1.00 a box, or six boxe» for S5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of prlcew
WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied with 16.00, we will send the purchases our written guarantee to refund the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued only by J. A C. Baur, druggists, soie agents, corner Seventh and Wabash Avenue, Texr» Haute Ind.
escope* 1 I
the world. Our ncllfuxtar* uaaqnalcd, and to introduco our •npenor tood*
W« will wndrRBK
to ova rruojr in ueh io«*lltr. IM abort. Only thou who writ* I too*at onetcan malt* rare
of
I tka efcanM. All yoo ha*» to do in laterals to ihow our goods to tfcou who call—rour nclfchbof* 1 and thon afoand you. Th« bef»nnln«r of thl* (iilrerllwrnrnt (how* the *m#J1 end of lh« Ml*-
Th* followtag eat ftru the «pp«r*nci! of It rwltioed t»
at tt* flftUih part of Us bulk.lt «r*nd, doobl* 'teoo*. a* bca*y to evrjr. W* will alio *iiow yon how rem SndtktftTatS toftlOaday at l«Mt, from th« turt.wlth•vttip«r1eae«. B«tMrwrlMatmee. WapayalUipreH
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AddrM*/B. HAXXETT CO., Bo* 88O, Po*TtA*», Mai*a.
Mind wandering curod. Book* teamed in ooe reading, Tfitirrmifilii /rrm nit pirts of tbo iclob*. P-iwpoctas I'OftT rsxB, sent on application to Hror. A. Loisotle, 237 Fifth Ave. No* York.
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To cure Biliousness, Sick Headache, Constipation, Malaria, Liver Comolaints, take the safe and certain remedy,
SMITHS
BILE BEANS
Hlze 40 little Beans to the
bottle). TllKr ARE THE MOST COSVKXIEST. Suitttbla tor All Price of cither mlze, 25c. per Bottle.
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alted for
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MAI&90R
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S FWEB0.
Oar MsJydor Perfection Syri bottle. Prevents tttrtetare. tSfifSSl&wSASWW. gSJSSTfc^-bSSSK^ii"
free with every jret 6oa«rrti«»
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