Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 5, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 July 1890 — Page 6
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WOMAN AND HOME
IDE AND VARIED EXPERIENCE OF ELY IN EUROPEAN
I
Children's Hair—Some Old Folks..
Prom Lady Ely's position she was thrown into intimate relations with nearly every one worth knowing in every portion of Europe as well as her own country. Her friendship with the late emperor of toe French and the Empress Eugenie began when, as the beautiful Mile, da Monti jo, Xody Ely acted as chaperon to the empress'hiring the two or three seasons she passed in London before the emperor saw her and fell in love with her, and no one knew more of the secrets of that wooing than Lady Ely. With ail the great events fit the empress' life Lady Ely was more or less connected. When the prince imperial was born Lady Ely was sent by the queen .to be with the empress, and she used often laughingly to assure people who asserted their belief in the story that he was a supposititious child that no one who had been present could have any doubts on the subject, and her description of tbe emperor's joy and delight when all was over was very amusing.
When the queen and the prince consort paid their state visit to Paris Lady Ely was taken by the queen on account of her friendship with the empress. After the downfall of the empire she was one of the first to wekomc the exiles at Chiselhurst, and on the terrible morning when the news of the death of the prince imperial was told to the stricken empress, Lady Ely went to her at once to comfort ami console her. She was essentially a woman every one turned to in sorrow and joy, for her sympathy is unfailing.
Perhaps the most interesting part of Lady Ely's life was her friendship with Count Cavour, who had the most enthusiastic admiration and attachment for her, and who but for her ties at court would certainly have ultimately made her his wife. She was, however, unwilling then to leave tho qneen, and his death, which came quickly and suddenly, terminated whatever hope there might have been of her changing her mind.—London World.
1
Tho Photograph Album Retired.
Tho plush covered and leather bound album has been banished, not only from use, but from the house. There was a good deal of romance about the book and «ome of us may lay it aside with regret, bat the fact remains that it has had its day and that settles the matter. In the bonniere, in the enamel brooch, in the ,rd case and in tbe back of the tablet there Is a space for the sweet face and the memories it calls up, while the man with Sentiment in his soul and a secret.loeked tip in his heart can get a leather case with zoom for the wife, mother or child. I For the cards and cabinet pictures of the men and women who come and go, leaving
Sg
eir influence on our lives, there are fold* cases bound in leather or artist's silks, th a capacity of from two to thirty photographs. These book frames can be hang up, used as panels alongadooror Areplace, ot
Tho moat popular receptaole, hswover, hi a box. You cun get a chest made after the style of a cigar box of any size desired, and decorate it to suit your taste or the surrounding room. A lining of satin or velvet is cosily applied with mucilage, and if at all skilled handling the brush some wild flowers or a mask of Folly will enhance its beauty. A tin box, such as water crackers come in, is not bad, smeared with luster paints, but an oak box is better, •IMO it serves as a seat when not open, anu a palm or mallaca box is best if sweet odor is desired. These are for the floor. For tho table something more ornamental is required, and after tho $100 Dresden china thtffro are tilo boxes, porcelain boxes, and still others made of limog. *.
Then there are little bamboo stands, something liko a lady's work table, with several compartments in which views of scenery, statuary, cathedrals or castles may be kept. Still another way to show photographs is to spread them over a small tablo two, threo or four deep for general Inspection. This is an easy wrty to get at them. To bo sure they will become soiled and dust worn, bnt that is tho fate of all things material.—St. Loifis Post-Dispatch. flow One Actress LITM tn Summer. "It is the popular notion," said a well known actor, "that theatrical peoplo as a rule havo a hard time to make both ends meet during the summer months. This supposition, howovcr, it is safe to say, is only true in part, for the spendthrift spirit of earlier days, which hat been the staple of many* a pleasant recital, is no longer a characteristic professional vice. Those who scatter their money to the winds, and In consequence spend the heated term in a state of uncomfortable impecunioslty, are few and far between. There are many of the acting guild who have deft lingers and apt minds tor other departments at life's work, and when their season is ended in tho labor of their choice they tnrn to those other employments, and find the rest of agreeable change as well as the profits of honest industry. "Cases in point are numerous, but I will tell you of one which is typical. I am ao
alie
uainted with a young actress who during stage vacation
earns
T«3".rT
-How
!The Photograph Album Retired One Actress Summers—How to Kill Off Ant*—Modern Italian Women—Cot the
a snug income by
turning the bark of the birch tree to decorative uses. She makes pictures from the crude article by cutting outline figures of men, women and children and the inferior animals and pasting them on black cardboard, afterward filling in the details with white lead. The combination produces a pleasing and striking silhouette effect. Different hues of the bark are employed In imparting contrasting colors to odd pictures. The bark can be made to produce either comical or serious effects, according to the picture maker. Kyes, hair, buttons, etc., are put in with. India ink. The actress I refer to is not only young bnt pretty, highly educated and a general favorite as well, and her father is an active member of the Journalistic fraternity. Perhaps 1 am indiscreet in thus giving her summer secret away, so I will make some amends by withholding her name," Philadelphia Inquirer. ________
How to Kill Off ABU.
Ordinarily in households the red aat Is not a nui*an«t from the actual loss which It mmm by consuming food products, bnt from itsi inoniinat* faculty of getting into things. It Is attracted by almost everything in the house, from sugar to shot polUh, and from fistkspoagos to dead cock* roaches* It seeass to breed with enormous fecundity, ami the Incidental killing off of a thousand or so has IKtle effect upon the apparent number. A house badly infested with these iaeataw is •tafia* uninhabitable. They form their nests in aLawat any •aetata! spot, befemea the walls, or nader floors, or behind U» 1MM boards, or
among the trash in some old box or trunk, or in the lawn or garden walk Just outside the door. In each of these neste several females will be found, each laying her hundreds of eggs and attended by a retinue of workers coring for the larvae, and starting out from dawn til), dark on foraging expeditions in long single files, like Indians on thei war path
Our first recommendation is to find the point from which they all come. They may have built the nest in some accessible spot, in which case alittle kerosene oil will end a large part, if not all, of the trouble. If the nest is in the wall or under the floor, and taking up a board will not bringit within reach, find the nearest accessible point and devote your energies to killing the ants off as they appear*. Where the nests are outside nothing is easier than to find them and to destror the inhabitants with kerosene or bisulphide of carbon. Tbe nests are almost always in the vicinity the house. The ants are peculiarly susceptible to the action of pyrethrum in any form, be it Persian or Dalmatian powder or buhach, and a free and persistent use of this powder will accomplish much.—Dr. C. V. Riley in Philadelphia North American.
Modern Italian Young Women.
In the middle classes fine dressing out of doors has to be combined with an ability 'real or supposed) for keeping hoosa. Fond mammas regale young mpn wKh stories Of their daughters' prowess in cooking in a manner worthy of Goldsmith's "Mrs. Primrose*" and have even been- known to set the hopeful young women to sweeping and eleaning as soon as the expected ring was heard at the door, in order that the hesitating aspirant might be brought to a declaration by the sight of the girl's capacity as a menial servant. Under these circumstances marriage becomes simply an escape from intolerable dreariness.
The idea of choosing a husband to whom she can prove a faithful wife rarely enters the Italian girl's head. She must be married that she may be free. Some man of her acquaintance thinks she makes a good figure in the society he frequents, finds that her dowry is sufficiently large, and tired of "living" or desirous of settling down proposes for her hand. The young wife, if she belongs to the upper classes, finds herself suddenly in the possession of unbounded liberty. Her chief duty is to act as a sort of clothes peg, that the world may praise her husband's liberality. She can now go out alone, and having little to do at home, spends most of her time calling, promenading and gossiping. St. Jam08 Gazette.
How to Clothe the Baby.
A baby's clothes should be sufficiently long to cover its feet, but without the superabundant length that we are accustomed to see it wearing. The dress* should not be low necked, for that exposes the throat and chest, and flannel should be worn next the skin. The long clothes should be discarded, if it were for no other reason than harboring dirt. Such clothes do not serve the purpose of keeping the heat of the body. Besides, it is an extra expense, which, with poor people, is a consideration.
But baby is growing, and soon it reaches a period—that of shortening—which marks an epoch in babyhood. Then what do we find The child wears a frock, low necked, reaching little lower than tho knees, and the sleeves are tied up with pieces of ribbolu Stxeb e. Ar«*a afc ouce exposes tke arms, legs, throat ana cnest t6 draughts, and it is small wonder if the most disastrous results follow. And to finish the costume baby wears the merest semblance of a sock, that still leaves tho legs bare, or more frequently it wears no socks atalL By a law of nature it is well known that small bodies cool more readily than larger bodies. Here, then, at a time when the child should be kept specially warm, the best means of cooling it are afforded by improper clothing.—Mrs. F. C. Pressler,
Cat the Children's Hair.
The only way to keep a boy's hair healthy, says a Now York expert bn hair, is to cut lit regular intervals, keeping it at a reasonable length, so that it may cover his head and protect it from cold or draughts without imposing any burden on it. Boys with exceptiogally lusty and strong hair might employ the Fauntleroy long style of dressing it without injury, but to the average youngster it was certain to bring some result in the way of an impairment of the hirsute growth. The direct effect of too Tong hair was to exhaust the only secretions of the hair itself, and so destroy its vitality. It also imposed a drag on the little bulb or root by which each hair is fastened in the scalp.
When this bulb is injured the healthy life of the hair is at an end. It ceases to lubricate itself, and grows dry and brittle, and at last foils out. Even when not actually dead it is so weakened that a slight pull or drag in combing it will bring it out. Tho cutting of human hair, and especially in children, has the same foundation and reason as the pruning of vines and trees and the clipping of grass. It prevents the sap from being distributed over too extensive a surface, and by concentrating its circulation strengthens the parts to which it is applied.
Some Old Folks.
Mrs. Phoebe Trapis, of Hornellsville, N. Y., lived lot years, and Matilda Riley, of Ray wick, Ky., died at the age of 115. Mrs. Sarah Horne, of Dover, X. H.( is 99, and never falls to visit her friends every day, walking two miles. Patrick Dailey, of Meriden, Conn., is well and hearty at the age of 103 years. Mrs. Bridget Eagan, of Rondont, N. C., is in good health at the age of 106. Mrs. Rachael Hicks, of Oyster Bay, L. I.. lived to be 101. Bridget Feeney recently died at tbe Home for the Aged in New York city at the age of 104, and "Uncle" William Sullivan, of Richmond, Ganandaigua county, X. Y.,b strong, healthy, and in possession of all his faculties at the age of 101. Mr. Sullivan's mind is clear, his memory good, and he frequently walks from his home to the village of Honeoye and back, a distance of ten miles. William Shirley, a neighbor of Sullivan, and a native of England, is 103 years of age, and was one of the stalwart soldiers of Wellingtons army In the battle of Waterloo. Mrs. Annie Gaines, of Walton,is century old, and so Is Thomas Senders of the same place.—Herald of Health.
Good Potsta of tbe Carrot. There is in this country no vegetable which Is so generally despised because it is misunderstood as the carrot. When it is young and delicate in flavor it is little used but when it is old and rank it is used and in such a targe quantity as tm give It the refutation of being coa#m and unpalatable. Twv or three siloes trf oid carrete are enough to flavor three quart* of soap, yet it is not nnttsttal for a cook to pat into her soup two or three of these strong winter n^geUhies, or to scatter them in a stew as fcisely as potato®*.
There te something peraUari? dfaMgrwa&e In tbe vegetable served ia this war. The winter carrot can no mote he mad*
MS®
The winter carrot can no mote he mmm upper ea«h of a window, because the botta tfcefcaaiaofftsteworsoap thaadone or mtrjbe ceOta*
any spice or condiment. It is simply a flavoring root, which must be used moderation like bay leaves or any herb spice. The spring carrot, on the contrary, is a delicate, delicious vegetable which makes «n excellent cream soup, or which may be served in Flanders fashion as vegetable in cream sauce, one.
She's to Blame.
I moAn the noble, generous woman. I lay it to her charge that this mother breaks herself down. She will not stop to rest. She toils, toils, toils! God pity her, how grand is her love of us all!
But, madam, why did you not ask your light
footed
daughter to run
letter ceased, and one can understand the fatal impulse which prompted the poor husband to his terrible act.—Exchange.( ,, 7*
To Clean Kid Gloves.
Another method of cleansing kid gloves is to use naphtha, pouring it into a deep saucer. Put the gloves on the hands, and dip one hand at a time in the saucer, wetting the glove thoroughly, then rub it quickly with a soft dry cloth. The rubbing must be done very quickly or the glove will look streaked.
Should there be any spots that were not removed with the first dipping and rubbling wet a corner of the cloth and rub the soiled part till it becomes clean.
In using such volatile articles as naphtha, benzine, chloroform and ether the rubbing should be done very rapidly, that the stain may be removed before the liquid dries.— Maria Parloa in Housewife.
LOTO on Board a Steamer.
People who are not seasick fall in love with great facility on board ship, but people who are fall out "of it with a greater quickness than can ever be imagined. If I could only give a suggestion to the bride it would be this: Forbid your husband seeing you until you are quite well. When a man is seasick he doesn't look as badly as a woman does. It is probably because he is so crime hardened that nothing could affect him, but a seasick woman is enough to make every man forswear matrimony and become a Nineteenth century monk.— London Letter.
In washing all body linen, napery and bed linen the practice of soaking them for tome hours in water in which borax has been dissolved is a good one. Nor should clothing be boiled beyond fifteen or twenty minutes at the most. None but the best soaps ought to be used in any kind of washing, and after clothing has been rubbed in the first water and pat loosely into the boiler, with plenty of water to scald it in, it should not require rubbing again in the sudsing water.
If a child chokes in trying to swallow a button, a penny, or any article of the kind, turn him head downward, holding him by the nock and heels. If the offending article does not roll out of his mouth administer a dose of castor oil to aid its passage through the stomach and intestines.
Every woman who seeks to take her place side by side with man as his helper, whether in home, church, school or state, advances the deepest interests of humanity. for in no single relation of this world's life or work is it good for man to be alone. —Mrs. Ellen B. Dietrick.
There is nothing so pleasant as fragrance in one's room, Break off branches of Norway spruce and place them in a vase of water. In a few days tender pale green branches feather out, soft and cool to the touch, and giving a delightful health giving odor
Huber. the Geneva naturalist, w*s stone blind from 17 years of age, and it was only through tbe untiring assistance of hi* wifs that he was able to study and completely master a branch of his sdenoe requiring the keenest observation.
Richard Baxter was nursed In filtfteowell |aiif and accompanied, when hunted op and down the country, by a wife, whom it intensifies her nobility to say. he married as much for convenience as kim.
A room is ventilated best by opening the sad& of a window, because the hottest
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL:
:l
York Trib-
up
stairs and
get that box for you? Why drag your blessed weary feet up there at the close of a day when you have walked more than sixteen miles about the house? I say you are to blame. Yoa are old enough to know better. You do know better. But one might as well talk to—to arose and forbid it to breathe out fragrance and die. Why do you not ask John to get up and open the window? What if he is reading his paper? 'John would gladly do it if
you
asked it.
John loves you but it is not a man's nature to think of small services in behalf of his loved ones, as it is a woman's nature. A man is alwayf thankful,"however, when he is told what he can do. He feels like kicking himself that he did not perceive the necessity of his action yet he is thankful, I assert, if he be at all manly.—New York Weekly.
Where Mother Is Wrong.
A mother of a family has no right to cease to be a companion to her husband simply at the dictates of her children. Of course the children will have the measles, and there will be times when the mother heart must stand by, night and day. But you are to blame, madam, if you let this go too far. When my wife is invited by me to go to a concert and she says: "Oh, dear! I'm too tired. Take Kittiel" it makes me mad. It hurts. Time was when she did not refuse my invitation. Didn't she, only last week, coolly propose that I "take Kittie" on my trip west and "show her Niagara Falls, she's never seen them," when I had proposed to take her dear, tired self away and give her a rest of two weeks from all the children. Kittie, indeed! I'll take the child to Niagara at the proper time if I don't, why, Niagara will keep till her husband takes her there on a wedding trip. I say wife was to blame in all this. But how can I tell her so? She would only burst into tears, complain of her hard lot and break me all up.—New York Weekly. »,
The Power of Perfume.
A particular perfume will often recall those who used it or were associated with it in days long by, but it is not often the result is so tragically romantic as in the following instance: A highly nervous, sensitive gentleman lost his wife. After inconsolable grief he appeared to be again taking up his daily life much as usual, but he suddenly shot himself. It is said that upon his table this letter was found: "I had hoped to take courage and go on as before, but in turning over her drawers and papers I found behind a heap of linen a flacon of the perfume she always used. I wished to pull out the cork, but in doing so I let the bottle fall, which broke, and the whole perfume was spilt tile floor. The scent was everywhere ii^k^wpuse,
I must go."
1
And I—no,rlI not —St. Louis Chronicle.
•m-
-A V/OMAN'S PRAISE,
Uiey sat upon the rocks beside the see He still a youth, while gray had touched her
She praised him, as a woman may who, fair And strong aad kind, with gentle ministry, Knows well how great her influence may be. "I watched your thonghtfolnessand tender care
Of a younger stranger. In my heart yoa bear Thename of gentleman, for courtesy." Years passed, and years divided, as they win.
The boy and woman yet from that glad hour Sweet deeds of goodness came his life to fill. Ah, who shall estimate the wondrous power Of woman's praise—her words for good or ill!
She soured the seed—eternal blooms the flower. —Sarah K. Bolton in Youth's Companion.
F^THEY WERE AFTER BARGAINS.
Three "Women in Counsel Over tho Merits of a Bath Towel.
One is bad enough, two are worse, but three women in counsel over the merits of a bath towel, are enough to make a poor, worn out clerk wish he might depart from earth by the electricity method. "It seems like quite a good one for the money, doesn't it?", says the intending purchaser. "Well, I don't know," says the other, holding the towel up at full length and eying it critically. "I got one quite as good for 37K cents at White's.'* "You did?" "Yes, but it was eight or nine weeks ago, and 1 don't s'pose they've any more like it." "I may be mistaken, but I've an idea it would shrink," says number three, taking the towel from number two and wrapping a corner of it over her finger. "See, it's a little thin." "Well, I wouldn't mind if it did shrink a little, because—oh, look at this onel Isn't it lovely?" •'Beautiful! How much is it?" "A dollar and a half." "Mercy! I'd never pay that for a bath towel." „, "Nor I." "These colors would fade." "Of course they would." "Do you know I like good plain crash as well as anything for towels." "I don't know, but—see these towels for fifteen cents. I paid twenty-five oents for some last week not a bit better." "Let's see they are full length? Yes. They are cheap. I've a good notion to— but I guess I won't. I have so many towels now." "They're a bargain if one only really needed them." "Howdo you like towels used as tidies?" "Horrid." "I think so, too."
1
"So do I—oh, let me tell you. I saw a woman on the street one day with an apron made out of a red and white fringed towcll'* "Mercy! Looked like fury, didn't it? How was it made?" "Oh, one end was simply gathered to a band, and—there, the towel was just like this one—and she'd taken it so and gather^ it in so, and—really it didn't look so bad, after all." "Do you suppose the colors would run in this border?" "Well, I hardly know. I had one very much like it once, and the colors in it ran dreadfully the very first time I washed it." "Then I'll not take this, for I—why, if it isn't 4o'clock, and"
the towel toda^.'
Women Do Kot Help Each Other.
Said a young business woman the other day on whose shoulders the support of a widowed mother and three little brothers has depended fdr tho past ten years: "I never have had the right hand of fellowship from a woman. Not to one do I owe a particle of my success. Any help I ever got came from men they gave mo letters of introduction to other men they signed the lease for my house they assisted me in getting rebates, commissions and discounts on investments and purchases they found or helped me to find a market for my wares when I got established, and to them aa a class I owe everything that my own energy -could not accomplish. Women are good they keep the world in pretty manners, but they keep a very small corner in their hearts for their struggling sisters."—New York World.
Care of the Children's Tectii.
Take care of your children's teeth. It is better to send the youngsters to a dentist than to buy them new frocks. Indeed a child's teeth should he confided to the care of a dentist while they are making their appearance. If the dentist is properly versed in his profession he makes a record of the child's physical tendencies as well as the state of its dentition, and to these notes he adds from time to time such variations as are significant. Then he sends for the child once a month or once a year, according to its needs, and is thus able to develop the best teeth that are possible to the little one's constitution or physical condition.—New York Letter.
*4i Machinery in the House.
There is no reason why women should tiro themselves in squeezing juice from fruit for jelly or in stoning cherries when there are several patent processes for doing this work with perfect success, enabling the worker to go through preserving time with unstained hands and unexhausted patience. JThere are enough necessary things to do in a household which cannot be done by machinery. Housekeepers should take advantage of every chance that offers for genuine help in their work.— New York Tribune.
Slow to Whiten Floor or Shelf.
This is a good preparation for whitening board floor or shelf that has become gray or black from abuse or careless usage Take three pounds of potash, boll it aad stir it into ft pound and a half of "whiting." When the mixture has the consistency of thick cream, lay it on the hoards with a brush, taking good care not to stain hands or clothes with the preparation. Allow it to remain on for a day or mors, according to the condition of the boards, then scrub it off thoroughly.—New York Journal. IsAWv,
Mrs. Catherine Sharp, at Philadelphia, says that whoa she was 12 years old she sold milk to Gen. Washington aad his staff from her father's farm. She is t&W 113 years old and her mental fac»»"3cs cm unclouded ./K
Or. Backiaad, the geologist, had a wife who found time to assist him with her pen, prepare and me&dhis fossils, aad furnish many of the drawings and illustrations ic his works, bssktas educating a large family. *Two of the daughters of Obe lord mayor
London are deaf and dumb, but km* beanao thoroughly educated in the anil jtem lit Holland that they can bf Hp fading understand the play at a theatre.
•WIWIWN «INHHIWI») H•• I I IIL A N IF I
'•. ,-
Novelties for Uttle Folk.
There are the tiny kid shoes of all colors, with silk hose, plain or open worked, to There are bronze shoes and hose, tan suede shoes, With corresponding hued socks or stockings, cream and pale colors spun tibbed silk, with double heels and toes, embroidered up the instep and leg, and ordinary, everyday stockings of every size, fitting children from one year upwards. Then there are the small, hemstitched pocket handkerchiefs, with an initial letter in one corner dainty white and cream batiste parasols fer coming hot days, with frilled edges, and delightful babies' en-tout-cas, with a bird or an animal on the handle, which may assuredly be counted among the novelties.
Mrs. Stewart's 845,000 lace. Another of the late Mrs. Stewart's peerless lace treasures is an almost exact copy of a bedspread of Alencon point lace, with pillow shams made by special command of Napoleon Ion the occasion of his marriage with the Princess Maria Louisa. This copy is of less value than the original imperial outfit, but Mr. Stewart paid $45,000 for it The exceeding delicacy and beauty of the texture can scarcely be appreciated or understood from any description. It has a zephyr like, line hexagonal ground, which is profusely studded with lilies and bees, with medallions and running vines on the borders.—New York Star.
The Tootliplck Market.
Nearly all the toothpick mills in this state are now closed, in consequence of overproduction and inability to dispose of accumulated stocks even at the present low prices. The original and largest manufacturer in Oxford county informs tis that he now wholesales his goods for less than one-twelfth of their cost when be commenced manufacturing in 1861,— Lewiston Journal.
Why It Is Popular.
Because it has proven Its absolute merit over and over again, because It has an unequalled record of cures, because its business Is conducted In a thoroughly honestmiinner, and because It combines economy and strength, being the only medicine of which "100 Doses One Dollar" Is true—these strong points have made Hood's Sarsaparllla the most successful medicine of the day.
A Hew Method of Treating Disease.
HOSPITAL REMEDIES.
What are they? There Is a new departure In the treatment of disease. It consists In the collection of the specifics used by noted specialists of Europe and America, and bringing them within the reach of all. For instance the treaiment pursued by special physicians who treat indigestion, stomach and liver troubles only, was obtained and prepared. The treatmentofotherphyslclans celebrated for curing catarih was procured, and
BO
ou till these incomparable cures now include disease of the lungs, kidneys, female weakness, rheumatism, and nervous debility.
This new method of -'one remedey forgone disease" must appeal to the common sense of all sufferers, many of whom have experienced the ill effects, and thoroughly realise.t^is absurdity of the claims of patent medicines which are guaranteed to cure every 111 out of a single bottle, and the use of which, as statistics prove, has ruined more stomachs than alcohol. A circular describing these new remedies is sent free on receipt of stamp to pay postage by Hospital Remedy Company
The Pulpit and the Stage
Rev.
F. M. Sbrout, Pastor United
Brethren Church, Blue Mound. Kan., says: "I feel it my doty to tell what wonders Dr. King's New Discovery has done for me. My Lungs were badly diseased, and my parishioners thought I could live only a few weeks. I took five bottles of Dr. King's New Discovery and am sound and well, gaining 26 lbs. in weight."
Arthur Love, Manager Love's Funny Folks Combination, writes: "After a thorough trial and convincing evidence, I am confident Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption beats 'em all, and cures when everything else fails. The greatest kindness I can do my many thousand friends is to urge them to tnr It." Trial bottles 10 cents at J. A C.
Baiu's drug store. »1.00.
Regular sizes 50c and
Modern Discoverers.
What Bell and Edison are to the telephone and electricity, says the Pittsburg News, Dr. .Franklin Miles, the well-known specialist in nervous disease, Is to the nervous system and nerve fluid. Among his numerous discoveries his Restorative Nervine is undoubtedly one of the greatest. It is unsurpassed in nervousness, dyspepsia, headache, epilepsy, neuralgia, backache, melancholy, sleepless, ness, change of life, etc. Free trial bottles of it may be bad of J. A C. Baur's, druggists, and also Dr. Miles' new book on "New and Startling Facts" for the afflicted. Everyone should read this very Interesting, Instructive, and illustrated book. (0)
Miles' Nerve and LWer Pills. An important discovery. They act on the trough bowels the liver, stomach and nerves. cure and constipation.
v....
and children. Smallest, mildest, surest. 30 doses for 25 cents. Samples free at J.AC. Baur's.
GRATKFUI/—COMFORTING.
Epps's Cocoa
BXtKAKFAST.
"By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful applies Hon of the fine properties of well-selected Ooeoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage which may wave us many heavy doctors' Mils. It is by the Judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enonch to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around ns ready to attack wherever tbere is a weak point.
W«
may escape many a fatal shaft or keeping ourselves well fortified with pure Mood ands property nourished frame.fi-{C5til Servlot
Made simply with boiling water or milk Sold only in half pound «nsbvgrooers, ]«. baled thus: JAJHKS IFPili CO-
HonuaopaUile Chemists, teados, Kn*
Prof. Loisette's
MEMORY
BISC0VEBT ARB TBAIWRQ METHOB
ssicx
5/A
J, 1
ciiP& FLY NET
CHEAP AND STRONG!
other styles Nets, prices to suit WM. AYB.ES6-AONS,FHILADKUPHI
A
S
Sold by all dealers.
VALENTINE'SSSS
SCHOOL OF in nUlrond
TELEGRAPHY!®
T^K, GEO. MAKBACH,
J-7 DENTIST.
511XOHIO STREET!
TVB MEDICAL ELECTRICIAN Ji\
-I/J.U CATAKHH, HKAB, THROAT,
NERVOUS DISEASES,
Molesjumon, Superfluous Hair Remc
115 ». Sixth Street. Honrs: 9 to 11 a. m. 5 p. m.
T^R. W. O. JENKINS,
J—' Office, 12 south 7 st. Hours 1:80 to 8' Residence, cor. 5th and Linton. Office telephone, No. 40, Baur's Drug Sk
Resident telephone No. 17S.
J)K. GILLETTE., D. D. S. DDErtsTTIST.
N. W. Cor. Malu and Seventh, opposite] Torre Haute House.
T)B. Tft. w. vanvalzah -I—•'
Successor to
RICHARDSON fc VAN VALZAJ IDEJ-tSTTIST. Office—Southwest corner Fifth and Ml Streets, over is ationai state jbanx tent on Fifth street.
J. NUGENT. M. J. BROPHl ]sq"UGENT & CO., PLUMBING and GAS FITTI]
A dealer In
Gas Fixtures, Globes and Engine^ Supplies. 508 Ohio Street. Terre Haute, A ROBERT H. BLACK.
AMIES
A. Ntsi
JgLACK & NISBET,
UNDERTAKERS nnd EMBALMERJ 26 N. Fourth St., Terre Haute, Ind. All calls will receive prompt'aud card attention. Open day and night.
JSAAO BALL,
FUNERAL DIRECTOR.
Cor. Third and Cherry Sts., Terre Haute, Is prepared to execute all orders in his llj with neatness and dispatch.
Embalming a Specialty.
4 BAKER, J.
PHYSICIANS and SURGE0
OFFICE 102 S. SIXTH STREET, Opposite Savings Bank. Night calls at office will receive prompt al tentlon. Telephone No. 186.
A
RCHITECT. w. j&. wxiisoisr,
With Central Manufacturing Co., Offico, I Poplar Street Terre Haute, Ind. Flans and Specifications furnished for kinds of work.
The Unknown Deal
Let it not be said of your friends. Cull on now Arm
BIPLBY 5c
West of Court House, Roedel block.
Tablets, Markers, Brein
Plates, Corner Posts, Etc., Etc.
GRANITE AND MARBLE.
Cottage & Spire Monumew
0 Stone a Specialty.
NEW PRICES TO SUIT THE TIM I
a
NePlus Ultr?
Dyeing and Renovating Ladic and Gentlemen's Wear in aU dc eirable shades of any fabric at shoi notice and moderate prices at
H. F. REINER'S
STEAM DYE WORF 088 Main Street. 1
Established l«tl. incorporated 1688, QUFT A WILLIAMS CO.,
Successors to Cllft, Williams dc Co. J. H. WXLUAXS,President. J. M. Curr, Sec'y aud Tress
VAjrtrrACTOKXBSor
Sash, Doors, Blinds, etc
AVD DKALKBS A
LUMBER, LATH, SEINOLEl GLASS, PAINTS, OILS AND BUILDERS' HARDWIAflk.
Mulberry street, corner
I# ft A
CTWSISeSi WANTEO
'juT
A Js GrAGG, k'A i* STS' 'LIES ^Sdi, /Picture. Frames
ings
M0SM18EML
UnMuMled-factlitte* Oss of known &$***£ I (Address W.'mT.SMITH, Geneva Warsnjj fotobHitfd
IMS.
Owm' K. Y."
