Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 14, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 September 1890 — Page 3
WOMAN AND HOME
THE BARBAROUS MANNER IN WHICH SHOP GIRLS DRESS.
Woman She I* at Thirty—A Novel W«d* dins' Trip—Amcrlcao Women's F»l»« Teeth— How Women
CM
I'kaw
Slang—Work
for Young Women—Home Manners.
One day the writer stood in one of the large dry goods stores waiting her torn to be served nt one of the counters. The girls behind it were very numerous, but were all busy and hurried, passing and repassing one another in the narrow space to look for required goods. In the eonfusion one jostled the arm of a second, who wan reaching for a box of ribbon*, and knocked it to the floor. "You might have kept out of my way," impatiently exclaimed the
offending
have looked" was
one, and "Yon might
the equally impatient
rejoinder. Then the flrstupeakcrrelented. "it wax my fault, Kitty," she said, "but my feet uciu' me so," and her voice was almost
a
n-nii Then it was Kitty's turn.
"It's all right," she said "I wouldn't have minded a little accident like that only my bend is most uplittlng."
The uniting customer looked #le two girls over. The one whose head itched had on a heavy akirt of shabby black velveteen, whose
waistband permitted it tddrag
upon her hips. A cheap black Jersey was the waist of her dress, and through its thin texture the outlines) of a stout, cruel corset could fee plainly seen. Around her neck, In oljedieuce to the high collar fashion, was apiece of some stiffened black velvet covered with a bead passementerie, the weight of which neckwear must have very sensibly impeded the free flow of blood through the delicate veins. On her head, in addition to her own hair, which was not scanty, was piled a palpable switch of jate, the structure pinned on with two or thrtee heavy ball pins. Poor, misguided child— for the face was pathetically young—was it any wonder that her temples throbbed and |er nerves were strung to the last pitch of rndnrance? Her companion was garbed In a very similar manner, herdress presenting
HO
modifications that made it more
comfortable, though doubtless in her case the maximum misery of poorly made, ill fitting shoes, possibly with high heels and narrow toe*, reduced the mlntamm wretchedness of dragging clothes.
What luster to Mrs. MiI3er*« fame to carry the "gown form" in simple, inexpensive design to girls like these who stand for thousands of their sisters, aadl to ooax from them their defonning«»d Hlllng corsets! To bring this preacher and this flock together for such a result some phllanthro-
Ist ought to see accomplished,—-New York "mcs. _______
Woman as She la a* TMrty.
Balzac ha* said that at thirty a -woman is at her most fascinating«r.d dangerous age—dangerous to the heaTfcs of men.
Perhaps no writer understood so well his own countrywomen as BaSzac, uiul no one has contributed quite so nwmycynical allusions to the sex in general. But Balzacto criticisms would apply to a certain type-df woman, more seen in France, let us hope, than in our own America. Tottlu* blase man of the world the blashing debutante is peculiarly attract!**. But it is the woman of thirty who whirls him in a vortex of emotions. She has lived and experienced, and she is alert tfco every sensibility. She revels In the part of heroine, and in the dlsturbaaoas and «#itaUoua of which she is the cause. She looks upon the dainty creature of iwwsfcy as milk and rosebuds—so simple.
She goes on indefatigaMy playing her part. In perfect knowledge of her charms, unlike the "young thing" by her side, she uses each to advantage. She knows, through her well trained intuition, the particular weakness—the grande passion, HO to speak ~of each victim, And with great finesse she Ijecomca,' for the time, an enthusiast upon the same subject, pursues, with well feigned sincerity, the name "fad whether politic* or athletic#, theosophy or music~-from Beethoven to Strauss-she will always be found a devotee to each.
Flattery in Itssweetesfcanbtlety.safelrc In its keenest flashes, are well at her command. For alas! for her the time is rapidly approaching when she must range among the lookers on: when the chill of antumn will usher in the Indian summer. Fortunate is she if it brings with it the ripe graces and the poetic suggestions which give to that seasou of decay its most mellow charm. True henrted is she if she earns at last the best success this world can (five the possession of a brave and helpful spirit, rich in self knowledge, self control and self help, a touchstone to all who Approach. —New York lcdger.
A Novel Wrdtllng Trlj».
A novel method of spending a honeymoon has* recently been added to the list of unique wedding journeys in coaches, on house boats or yacht*. A young Viennese bridegroom procured for the trip anew furniture van with three horses and a driver. The Interior ho fitted up in am«t daintily luxuriant way with every comfort and convenience dear to the feminine heart. Just how the light was supplied Unotoasy to conjecture, for the ordinary furniture van has no windows. Possibly electricity may have diffused its soft radiance from depending globes of roseate hue, or the isolated lovers may have lived only in the soft light of each other's eyes*
The cooking problem would also arise to any one but lovers, but whether the diner united tine culiuary art with that of handling the reins, or whether the young worn* an herself was a eooking school graduate, is not known. Anyway the pair expect to spend a two months'1 honeymoon at a cost of little more than
$10©
per month, rum
bling aboutthe country in theirown private conveyance, with buffet accommodations. Should the fashion become general there couhl 1* no May day weddings, for fancy the Indignation of matron* from whom the romantic hnlhiclnations of nut triage have vanished in the prosaic realities of three J: al* ft day and babies with the eolH delaying their moving while a pair of »«vcr* roam the country in idyllic seclusion, —New York Sun.
Amrrkan Women'* Vm&m "Did tou ever notice how many Amer^ {can yoang women have false teeth nowaday*?" said a well known dentin "Per* hap* vou never have the fair wearers nae every mean* to prevent detection, especially by their gentlemen trten^s. it i* quite mtv to calculate that oat of twenty Aarofcaa young women—I snsstn those movinu in tbe fAsbkmablc society at oar great cities—at least live have entire set while the others will exhibit partial ««S% or it will W demonstrated oa exatcinsiloo thai their natural teeth bee® filled ASK! TTMNIPNLSTED very exlewtvely. If
JTO
doubt my Rswrtion# go law any ballroom of the elite in the .UNMOQ, or alteod any nr* nent society iwfflttoa, *t»d see f©r xw *lf
Yon dOttfatkK» think It «traa«* UwrtUi* teeth, being such prime factor la wo*
sn's beauty, should be so neglected, and It Is strange, considering the prevailing bat pardonable vanity of the fair sex on the subject of personal appearance. But, nevertheless, than is away of accounting for it, and that is upon the basis of the supreme laziness of the average fashionable lady,
1
"La^te hours in the winter season, when the theatres, the opera and ill the tony social amusements are in full blast, are responsible in fact for this laziness, which might, perhaps, rather be styled chronic weariness, and the dread work of completing the transformation of the society young lady into a confirmed idler is done dnring the summer by the habits engendered at the watering places and other heated term resorts of the cremede la creme. The teeth shonld be thoroughly cleaned on arising in the morning and on retiring for the night, bat they are frequently given the 'go-by* altogether or brnsl ed at irregular periods, and thus tartar and decay get a lead which they steadily maintain nntil the precious teeth, though occasionally patched up by a dentist, are ruined beyond repair. "Of course all intelligent ladies are aware of the importance of cleaning their teeth, and are sadly annoyed and frightened when they arc compelled to have false ones put in, but all this does not seem to teach them prudence, and every year it is rt»e old story over again, bnt with a decidedly progressive pendency."—Philadelphia
Inquirer.
How Wbmcn Use Slang.
"I object," says a clever man, "to the cowardly way women have of swearing and using slang. Have you never noticed how they do it? In quotation marks. When a woman is so deeply moved that she wants to swear does she give vent to the round, satisfying single syllable that a man would? Not at all. She says it, to be sure, but she sneaks into the satisfaction of It in something this way: 'If I were a man,' she says, 'I should say so and so.' And saying
4soand
so,' spelled with four
letters, has given her again the temper of an angel without having brought upon her the opprobrium of having actually sworn. "In much the same way does she use a slang expression. The real gentlewoman stands unwilling before the vulgarity of slang. 'She wants its pith and point at times, "but sho doesn't want to adopt it as her own out and out. So when she uses a bitSfit she prefaces it by some such remark as 'This is what a man would call,' or uses it first and then disclaims it by annexing 'as a man would say.' Or, neatest of all, by a dainty inflection of her voice she throws the expression into quotation points. Don't you recall it? "A man says to her, for instance, 'I feel a little "seedy" this morning,' and she asks in return. 'How does a man feel when be feels "seedy Until she reaches that last word sho speaks in her own voice and per son. Just there she makes a little pause, her voice shifts into a key of lady like deprecation, and she says the word, but says It inn way that reminds the man at onco that the word is his and not hers. "Just watch the next woman who uses slang in your presence, and see if you do not catch the quotation point tone at once, and see if you do not feel, when she is done, that, though she has used tho expression out and but, she has not for a moment identified herself with it, or assumed the responsibility of it."—New York Evening Sun.
Work for Young Women.
An English lady gave rather an interesting roply to the oft repeated and vexing
Jaughters?""Whatneed
umtton of shall, we do with
JM
The of a remunerative
and suitable employment for well born and well bred girls is constantly increasing, and tho lady suggests that little companies of thoso girls, with two, three or more in each company, train themselves thoroughly in all that pertains to the management of a house, and go out with certificates of competency, and at an advanced rate of wages In consequence of their superior intelligence and capability, to take charge of houses in Sydney or Melbourne where servants are particularly scarce and incompetent, They could call themselves "lady assistants," "house superintendents"or any other distinctive title removed from the objective one of servants. Of course the girls would insist upon doing the entire work of the household, and thus obviate any unpleasant association with servants of tho ordinary ignorant type. The lady also suggests that it would lie wise to adopt a distinctive cap and apron, and take rank with the nursing sisters, and take as well tho same conscientious pride in their duties as do the nurses, —London Letter.
Manners for the Home.
Very few young people realise the immense charm of gentle, courteous home manners. It is not only that it is right nnd the duty of every Christian gentfeWf Uian and gentleman, but it is infinitely lovely aud attractive to see girls and boys showing in their own homes, to their own people and in their every day life the same courtesy and the same consideration that they exercise In society.
There is
A
species of vulgarity
Kxp«rit»eat*
about
•'company manners," just as there is in all veneer ami there are many young people who consider themselves well bred, who would scorn to wear sham jewelry and would think false pretense of any kind bad form, yet who keep their gradousness for the world and spoil tho home atmosphere by their touchiness aud rudeness.
Not that they mean it—they may really love each other dearly and in any great matter would be quick to serve and make sacrifices—but the dally exercise of self control in little matters, the every day unselfishness, the "soft answer that tnrneth away wrath," are not theirs, and almost unconsciously the ha bite of home ill breeding are formed, and many a mother finds too late that through her carelessness and inattention to details the mischief Is done and ahe cannot remedy it,—New York Tribune.
with StM-eh.
The mealy substance known by the name of starch forms the hasis of some very simple and easily performed chemical experiments* Hasp some potatoesi oo a, grater, knead the ptilp thus obtained with water and sqtieese it in »linen cloth the fibrous particles of the cells remain behind, but the jtttee, together with a large proportion of the ctarch, ram through. Lei the liquid remain quiet for some hours it be* comes clear became the heavier starch settles at the bottom. Vmt off the ttouid, wash the starch several times with Crash water, allowing it to settle «wh Unas, and then dry in a moderately warm place, aad march will be the rrauJt.
Heat ia a ftatk the IfajnM poured firom the starch* and after boiling a few moment* it deposdu & flaky mbmsm, which is ve^tftahk# albumen.
If starch is placed In* ladle and getttir hotted, with owt*»t agitation till drkd Ujv bard, horny srannlea are obtained, which swell when bailing water t» poured on litem* Tboe gnumlee are aalk-d
tUl it boils, and you have starch as it Is used for stiffening linen. If starch paste is allowed to stand for a length of time in a warm place it gradually ts converted into lactic add—the same acid tha*. gives to lratterHjilk its well known aonr taste.—Youth's Companion. V^V M'
Pins and Seedl» ~V~
W
Use a wire frame for boiling potatoes, and see how much of vexation it saves and how satisfactory the result.
A teaspoonful of turpentine -boiled with white clothes will aid in the whitening process.
Cincinnati has a Woman's Press club, with a membership of thirty-four, all engaged in active literary work.
Two qaarts of water.with two ounces of glycerine scented with rose,
as
a dressing
in the bath, will impart freshness and delicacy to the skin. Mrs. M. E. Beaseley has an income of 130,000 from a barrel hooping machine, by means of which 1,000 barrels can be hooped in a day.
If you want a draugho to work on, with body and brains, taken glass of white grape juice with a teaspoonful of acid phosphate, and defy the summer to wilt your energies.
The tallest princess in the world is the crown princess of Denmark, who is six feet three inches in height. "These are my household gods," he said to her as he entered his bachelor apartment. "But you lack something," she remarked. "What?" "A household goddess." 4
Succotash. .*"
j-~ lV
Very few housekeepers understand how to cook succotash properly. The Lima beans should be cooked at least an hour, with just enough water to cover them before the corn is added. The corn should be cut carefully, not too close to the cob, and added to the beans, and the mixture cooked ten minutes. Then a large teaspoonful of butter and a scant teaspoonful of flour must be added to every pint of succotash and stirred in carefully so as not to break the beans. The succotash must now be seasoned and cooked ten minutes longer. Some persons odd salt pork to this dish, but It gives it coarse, greasy flavor not Igreeable to a refined taste.—Exchange.
A School for Young Mothers. Dr. Clara Bliss Hinds and Mrs. H. L. Coolidge, of Washington, D. C.f have opened nursery for the instruction of mothers. Women of all nationalities are taught by means of simple lectures how to care for their children, and as an object lesson is always better than theory, a baby is procured for the occasion, washed, dressed, fed and put to sleep in the presence of the audience. Nursery improvements and sanitary reforms are exhibited, and samples of foods are passed around and later cooked and fed to the child that may need nourishment. Thero is sore need for work of this sort in New York city.—New York Letter.
Miss Cornon's Health.
Miss Juliet Corson, the well, known professor of cooking and domestic science at Rutgers female college, Nov York city, is so confirmed an invalid that her lectures are read at her dictation by her secretary, and she illustrates her ideas of cooking while seated in an invalid's chair. She has large and interested classes, and it is a belief of the college girls that Miss Corson could produce a first-class. soup with a wish bone, a quart of water, a watercress, a pinch of salt and a match.—New York: ledger.
James E. Scrlppe, of The Detroit News, has placed the sum of $1,000 at the disposal of the trustees of the Detroit Museum of Art to enable them to offer that sum to defray the cost of two years' study in one of the great art schools of Europe as a prize for tho highest proficiency in the Detroit Art academy. The prize is open to ntudents from,all parts of the country.
tage. Spices are put in baking powder boxes, and a strip of pn per is pasted around them to hold tho covers firmly. All pack ages are carefully labeled to prevent mis takes.
Raisins are stemmed and thrown into large pan, then covered with boiling water. This kills alHnatect eggs in case the may exists After five minutes the watej is cooled so the bands can bear it, the frtii is washed, drained on sieves, and drier quickly either in a fruit drier or a ho oven. It is then pneked in fruit cans whil hot.
Wigs, bangs and switches can be cleane* and made as glossy as new by dippin them in a naphtha bath. This mode renovation is quite good for the hair dea era, as an average of fifty hair fires are rr ported in trade every week. The ladit always declare there was no light or fire the room at the time of the ignition.
To prevent the hair from falling ont turning gray, take a teacupful of due, sage and boil for twenty minutes in quart of water. When it has been strain^ add a piece of borax the slate of a walnu When cool it may be bottled. This was should be well rubbed into the roots of th hair and the head brushed dry.
They have a queer little 10-year-old gii in Philadelphia who is normal in evei thing else, but ever since she was a baby her cradle, when her mother first took fa in charge, she never conld go to sleep unlei the soke of her feet were£ickled, and np this day sho is a victim of the habit.
Miss Helen Newberry, the only danght of ex-Congressman Newberry, of Mici gan, and an heiress, has anassion for o» door sports. She is an accomplished his player, a good swimmer and "a ble little sea dog when it comes to yac£ lug." She is a skillful banjo player*
Borax another ebemte&t that sho: find a common use in every family. $* cleansing the teeth and sweetening fc breath a few grains of the powder in wtr are unexcelled. Italso softens and whits flannels.
A woman factory inspector in Phfttf phia Jto» made 400 inspections duringir servteeof six months. In nine cases it of ten she found that the operatives!! not know where the fire escapes were,
ANew
SSSSJ.
Heat In vessel half adnua of starch, with an ounce aad a half of water, stirrtnt
ordered a set of brass with gold in an exceedingly The registers will be placed in the ow^s
Purltf clothes that have been kepti the air by laying pieces of wrapped in paper, in the folds. open mtt first.
Stoves aad ranges should be from soot la aH compartments. A hot air passage wDB prevent any oven
Ii(118®p
TEACH HER TO COOK
SUGGESTIONS ABOUT TRAINING^THE &i YOUNG DAUGHTER.
Utilize the Desire to "Matte Bread" That Nearly Every Girl Has by Instructing Her In the Art of Plain Cooking—Many
Things That Girls Will Readily Learn.
Every child, especially every girl, has an instinctive desire to make and meddle wherever any culinary processes are going on, and every mother and every kitchen maid are accustomed to give the little one a bit of dough when mixing bread or cake, and of letting her bake her own little confection in a saucer. It is a wise mother who takes advantage of this natural inclination in a girl to make htsr a cook betimes, and to turn the taste and tendency to account in the family.
To be a good cook, to be a good nurse, to be a good needle woman are the three things absolutely essential to the happi ness, and to the continuance in happiness, of the great majority of all women, whatever more it may be given them to be and if the things leading to such desired proficiency are taught in season there will be so much more time left for the ather things that invite after the foundation of the positively necessary is laid.
The business can be begun by letting a child of 0 or 10, for example, make a bowl of gruel, overseeing its preparation so carefully that there can be no mistake made, 'Sndnthat the consumer of the gruel can praise it so sincerely that her ambition will be fired for all the future, so far as gruel Is concerned, to make it perfectly. She will put a quart of water in the saucepan over a good fire, and then wet a tablespoonful of oatmeal in a little cold water, and stir it smooth as the smoothest paste, and When the water boils she will pour the paste into the saucepan, stirring it all the time, when half done adding a saltspoonful of salt, boiling a half hour, and straining through a fine wire ..strainer, when, if it has not scorched, the invalid will have a fastidious Appetite who is not pleased with it.
SOUPS F1BST, THEN BREAD.
Indeed, many well people find it an agreeable and satisfying dish and we have known of a housekeeper, in distress for soup, serving this oatmeal gruel, well salt' ed, and with some celery tops thrown into the tureen as it came to the table, for the sake of appearance^ and experiencing the delight of one who has made anew discovery at the relish with which her guests disposed of her white soup.
When our little cook is sufficiently accomplished in this simplest gruel, to which learning in later years panada and the more complicated sorts can be added, her attention can be turned to bread, that one most necessary thing in the support of drllixed life and her initial step in the process can be the concoction of some cream of tartar biscuit, in which she wlll.be shown how to rub apiece of butter the size of an egg into a quart of flour till there are no lumps, adding then a teaspoonful of salt fend two heaping teaspoonfuls of cream of tartar, stirred in well, then wetting it with a pint of cold water in which a heaping teaspoonful! of soda has been dissolved.
When well mixed pour it out on the board into enough flour to let it be molded smooth, rolled to a surface a half inch thick and the biscuits cut out with a tumbler, if there Is no biscuit cutter, and baked in a well greased pan. When her biscuits have
Admired* a» to. bo, she can pVoceed to bread. Here the question of yeast complicates matters at the outset but as yeast is now so easily obtained at the baker's, and in the compressed form, we will assume that she has it on hand, and if she has to learn to prepare it that exciting business can come afterward.
If now she scalds a half pint of milk and adds it to a gill of water in which a quarter of a yeast cake-has been dissolved, together with a teaspoonful of salt and another of butter, and stirs all that into a quart of flour, turns it out and kneads it
Tea and ground coffee are- packed in tin cans of the kind used for maple sirup. A funnel will be required to fill them, but except for that the small hole is an advan-j^jjj £er ijfctle arms are tired, and another
stronger person most finish the half hour's kneading for her, and then puts It into a pan, and cuts a transverse slit in the top of the mass, and leaves it to rise over night, she will have completed the first chapter of her work.
AFTER BREAD, SWEETMEATS. In the morning, when the dough may have doubled in height, she will take it out, and knead it again till the little arms id assistance is called in
can do no more, an then she will shape it into a loaf, put it Into a buttered pan, prick it with the earring fork, and bake it in a hot oven three quarters of an hour, when it will not be her $iult or the fault of her overseer if she has not produced a good loaf of bread and is not entitled to be called lady, or loaf giver.
Gingerbreads and cakes and dainties will come into a later year of our little cooking school, as in this year only the essentials are dealt with, although to hungry school children cookies and snaps and jumbles sometimes seem more essential than bread and meat, and they quite agree with that wit Who thought he could dispense with the necessaries of life if he could only have the luxuries.
But all this accomplished week by week it is time for the young cook to learn how to roast the meat, wiping and not washing the beef and mutton how to boil it—in hot water if the meat is fresh, in cold if it is salt or corned how to broil a steak, by searing each side quickly as possible in order to retain the juices bow to make and season a stew leaving the dressing of a fowl to a much more advanced period of kitchen lore, together with the composition of ent rees and all such elaborate affairs. It will be time, too, with this roast or stew, to learn about the preparation of the simpler vegetables: how to cook potatoes. for instances, by plunging them into balling water, and when done pouring off the water, sprinkling them with salt, and leaving them one hot, evaporating, bursting moment over the fire.
And when with this oar little maid has learned how to make plain custard padding, by beating fire eggs with two tablespoonfuls of sugar into a qaartof milk, adding half a teaspoonful of flavoring extract, peach or lemon, and a generous pinch of salt, grating nutmeg over the top, and baking lhre«Hqtuut«ra of an hour, •he eaa truthfully style herself a good plain cook and she has learned her art, moreover, in away as good as play.—Harper's Bazar.
JS cfeod Wtl the Utile one* to bed happy, 'jfevet. whip children just before- they retire to rest, the ftetber% caress, the mother's kfe» he the last link between the day** path of pain or ptwsttxm and theuighVa
Sfeod the children to bed happy. Si
there hi sorrow, punishment or df^raee let them meet it la the daytime and hare hoars of play ha which to recover happiness, which is childhood's right. Let the weary feet and the busy breiu tort in ted happy.—Herald of Health.
ifeaxhe First Step.||||
Perhaps you are run dowiff "can't eat, can't sleep, can't think, can't do any thing to yon satisfaction, and you won der what ails you. Tou should heed the warning, you are taking the first step into Nervous Prostration. You need a Nerve Tonic and in Electric Bitters you will find the exact remedy for restoring your nervous syBtem to its normal healthy condition. Surprising results follow the use of this great Nerve Tonic and Alterative. Your appetite returns, good digestion is restored, and the Liver and Kidneys resume healthy action Try a bottle. Price 50c. at J. fe C. Baur's drug store. 6
1
An Important Matter.
Druggists everywhere report that the sales of the Restorative Nervine, a nerve food aad medicine—are astonishing exceeding any thing they ever had, while It gives univeiwil satisfaction in headache, nervousness, sleeplessness, sexual debility, backache, peor memory, fits, dizziness, etc, Taylor Bros., ef Bryan, G. Ambery A Murphy, of BattJb Creek, Mich.. C. B. Wood worth & Co., of Fort Wayne. Ind., and hundreds of others state that they never handled any medicine whicfe sold so rapidly, or gave such satisfaction Trial bottles of this great medicine and book oh nervous diseases, free at J. d:
(X
Baur's,
who guarantees and recommends it. (8)
A Hp 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 treatment pursued by special physicians who treat indigestion, stomach aad liver trounles only, was obtained and prepared.
The
treatment of other physicians
celebrated for curing catarih was procured and so ou till these incomparable cures now include disease of the lungs, kidneys, female weakness, rheumatism, and nervous debll ity.
This new method of -'one remedey forgone disease" must appeal to the common sense of all suflterers, many of whom have experienced the ill effects, and thoroughly realize the absurdity of the claims of patent medicines which are guaranteed to cure every ill 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 Toronto, Canada, sole proprietors.
Mother, Wife, Daughter.
Those dull tired looks and unp volumes. "Dr. Female Betned
An important discovery. They act on the liver, stomach and bowels through the nerves. A new principle. They speedily torpid lives, piles cure biliousness, bad las.., and constipation. Rplendld for men, women and children. Smallest, mildest, surest. 30 doses for 25 cents. Baur's..
Samples free at J. & C.
fluoklen's Arnica Salve.
The Best Salve in the world for Outs, Bruiaeq, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetc hllblal cures Piles,
Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rh ter, Chapped Hands, CI all skia eruptions, and or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. 25c. per box. For «"de by J. & c. Baur, H. E. Cor. uventh and Wabash Avenue.
To Cure Kidney Troubles
Use
uDr.
Kilmer's Swamp-Root Kidney
Liver and Bladder Cure" It relieves quickly and cures the most chronic and complicated cases. Price 50c, and fl.00 Pamphlet Free. Binghampton, N. Y. Sold, recommended and guaranteed by J. fc C. Baur.
LADIES
Who Value a Refined Complexion MUST U8E
POZZOWI'S
MEDICATED
COMPLEXION POWDER.
It tmpnt-t« brltllnnt trflntpartntr t® •kin. nit ptmplro. IVMklM dlMolnriiltana, antl muko the »kta d«lle»U' If (mift nad bcaetlflnt. It o«»t»tna a© liar, whit* lead or ««r»cnle. Iw three
ptttk or leak, whil* and brnrcitc. FOR SALK
ST
111 trsggifix aad
FUKJ
MOORE'S
Thsy act
in the
Blood.<p></p>Pilules
IRXiFX.IErY'
leasant timer
feelings speak ale Betnedy" builds up quickly a run-down constitution And brings back
Price?1.00. Pamphlet ld,recom
youthful beauty Free. Binghampton, N. Y. Sold,recom
mended and guaranteed by J. A C. Baur
To Cure a Bad Cough
Use
Dr. Kilmer's Cough Cure (Con sumption Oil). It relieves qulokl tickling in the throat. Hacking, Catarrh dropping, Decline, Night-sweat and pre vents death from consumption. Price 25o. Pamphlet Free. Binghampton, N II. Sold, recommended and guaranteed by J. & C. Baur.
Miles' Nerve and Liver Pills.
mWBMMM rssMUiv
6M4S Dealers Kverywlwe
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.-
/SWAMP ROOTUKMU
BLADDEECURE. Bead Symptoms aad Conditions This SpeeUke will Believe and Cure. If Vnit threatened with, or already have II IUU Blight's disease, orUrinary trouble. If VM.. have sediment in urine like brick dust IIJUU frequent calls ot mention, with datmss or preme in the parts, Baths bloats
If TOU
If Ton 5SJs^STi?ssiS°
-J
if y^tt have poor Appetite. Bad
slightly laxattrtt
Absolutely Sure
For Malaria, Ohllls* A Impure Blood Th«y expel disease germs, aad Parity the System Druggists,4 Dr. CC. Moore, 78 Cortland
St.
&c
N.Y
They Positively Cure.
FOR MEN ONLY!
WilUil-iiffM LOST or FAXLX2TQ XAKHOOD] VIGORS
STRENGTH
Qe&end and HBKVOUS
W a a
ML tanas of Body aad Hind, Effect*
toHtUnVUt, CSDSTXLOPKD 0R6AK3* PARTS OF SOOT, tkahtdi uhUbv
KOSS
TRXATH1XT—BEO»SM la a lit,
SmlMiltr from tOSUlMMd F*r«lga CMatrti*. ffril* t)*n. 0atcH|4l«* B*ok, *»u*U«a **l pre*f» »»5M
IMM)
fee*,
BR'E MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO, N V.
The Unknown Dead
Let It uot bo said of your friends. Call on the new firm
IDEIISrTSriZN-Q-
West of Court House, Roedel block.
Tablets, Markers, Breast Plates, Corner Posts, Etc,, Etc.
GRANITE AND MARBLE.
Cottage & Spire Monuments.
Stone Special ty.
NEW PRICES TO SUIT THE TIM^ES.
TT^j^^'^Turcaln'nSirTorTITjnsaTt^rour ftIJJCiii JL O Home-Grown Nursery Stock. WANTED
MOST LIBERAL TERMS.
Unequalled facilities. One of the largest, oidetl-cstablishcxt, and beat known Nurseries In the country. Address W. & T. SMITH, Geneva Nursery,
Established In 1840. Geneva' N. Y.
Dr. JORDON,
The well known Throat and Lung Physician, of Indianapolis, Ind., No. 11% west Washington street, Has patients visit him from all parts of the United States for treatment of Catarrh, Throat and Lung Diseases. Dr. Jordon's Lung Renovator, the great Lang Blood,Liver and Kidney Remedyls sold by all flm-closs druggists throughout the United
States. Eng
land, Germany and Canada. Wholesaled by Cook, Bell & Lowery, Terre Haute, Ind. 82890
JJOTEL GLENHAM, FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Bet. 21st and 22d sts., near Madlton Bquare,-
EUROPEAN PLAN. N. B. BARRY, Proprietor.
New and perfect plumbing, aeoordlng
the latest scientific principles.
tar
DRUNKENNESS
Or the Lienor Hablr. Positively Cartd
sy
Adaiinlsterlna Dr. Hataes' Golden Speelflo.
It can be given In a cup of coffee or tea without the knowledge of the person taking It Is absolutely harmless, and will effect a permanent and speedy cure, whether the pa* lientls a moderate drinker or an alcoholle wrecK. Thousands of drunkards have been made temperate men who have taken Golden Specific lu their cofl'ee without their know* ledge and to-day believe they quit drinking of their own free will. IT NEVER FAILS.
ist, for sale by E. SOMES, Druggist, sts., Terre Haute, Ind.
AS*
dor. 6th andOhiostau
BBtqaalMl, tsd to iQtroducxmt •apwtor toeds wanUlMndrsss tooss MtMOK In (Mb locality, sasbore. Only tbo*t who wriU tonsst
OOMOOI
nRIPwIIVlMIIM f#r 41
akade*
sttng*
tag. Aching Pains in sidt or hips,
HYoo
BWct°I*
have BLOOD hare Stone fn Kidney. Gnvref Bladder, Stoppage of ursoc or Drffihttng,
Tasto.
FooJ-
II108 hwttar wySlBantHwt. Bitflfle HP quickly rcm-dovn coosttttiyoo. DUilUd IXmt neglect early symptoms,
Evsmr Sen Xm Biear TO TVS grot.
Oemtfew
SDM Large 59c, extra large $V
ask* rar« of
tbo ohaaoo. All
700
tart to do Is
ratamt* io thow oar good* to tbo** who
0*11—roar
nrichbor*
tod tboM aroond jron. Th« b»-
Sowt
nnlnf of tbl« odrtrtlitmral fti* imtll end of th* Ml*,
•oopo. Tbo foDowisf eat th* uppmnoe* or It rodaetd to
•boat tho Aflloth part of It* balk, tttia
«eop«,uUrv*a* l« to e*rrj. Wt will •an m»]u from S3 to SIO a at l«ut, from th« »t*rt, MI
1* (rand, donbl* ilc* Uto* will alto uiow jrou bow rem 1 l«Mt, from tbo (tart,with*
MMrloaeo. B*ttor witto at one*. W« par all oapr*** oborfM. LddrtM, B. HALLBTT 00., Bos SSoTrosiXAXD,
MAWS.
To curc Biliousness, Sick Headacho, Constipation, Malaria, Liver Cooiolnlnts, take tho safe and ccrtaln remedy, A
SMITH'0
BILE BEANS
Use the HJH AXX SI so (40 littln Bcunn to the bottle).
THKR ARE TUB MOST CONVBXIEHT. Stxltabla tor
All ASM.
Price of either wise, 25c. per Bottle.
w, (ooptxer* or
J.MMlTH&CO.Mavraor-aiMSBBAXS/ST.igOII MO.
ROUTS
3 EXPRESS TRAINS DAILY
reow
KVANSVILLC, VINCENKftO, TEftftS HAUTC »nd 0AKVILLK
CHICAGO
WHOfCE BISECT COITOTCnOK it made to ail points EAST, WEgTaad NORTHWE3T
Ferrates, timetables and informalSoa In
detail*
address jfoer eesisst Ticket Agent
WtLUAM KILL, Ceo. f»a*s. a*3 Tkt. hgfi CHtCAOO,
ILL.
