Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 18, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 October 1890 — Page 3
7i*
Sketch of
Jta
Now,
,r
f~
A WOMAN'S CLUB HOME
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., CONTAINS THE ORGANIZATION.
Birth, Growth *nd Present
8accc**—Thoroughly JBqnfppcd with Building: Beautifully FaraUUed It Meet* Weekly. -,' One of the most prosperous and useful women's clubs in the United States is located at Grand Bapi&s Mich. Grand RapId* la one of the handsomest cities in the 'went, and contain# host* of handsome women. But the women an not satisfied with being hand&onie: they insist on being cultivated as well. Hence it is that their club l» not a mere social organization, a means for exchanging choice gossip, but a literary club and hence it is, too, that it has grown until there is no room for it to grow any more. In fact It became *o largoseveral years ago that it furnished an "overflow meeting," ana the "Wert Side Iwulie*' Literary club," another similar and prosperous organization, was formed.
again, it has grown until,
like an athlete, it must reduce its proportions to secure its greatest efficiency. The Ladies' Literary club, of Grand Rapid#, is the outgrowth of a class in history formed among tlie women of Grand Rapids by Mrs, L. II. Stone, of Kalamazoo, a woman who has been instrumental in forming several other women's clubs in the west. The history class was disbanded in the winter of 1871-72, but the taste for study had been excited. A meeting of six women was held at the residence of Mrs. 8. L. Fuller, a wealthy woman widely known for her originality and culture as well as for her charity. These six women formed .themselves into a club.
TUB CLUB IS OltG.VNlZRD.
Mrs. Puller drew up a constitution and Issued a call to the women of the city who were interested in the project to join the club. About thirty responded. Tito first regular meeting was held in April, 1873. The membership soon reached 100. Since that time the growth of the club in numbers and in influence has been steady. The present, yiemlwrship is over SOD, and embraces not only many women of wealth, but many without wealth, women in society and thosa not in society. The average attendance at the meetings, which are held every week, is alwut 300, Tho ladies believe that with membership of more than 600 the club cannot work to so good an advantage as with a smaller number. They have decided accordingly to limit it to BOO. No new members will be received therefore until the number falls below 500.
Dee. .'il, 1887, was a red letter day
far
the
club. That day the ladies dedicated a club house, erected under their own direction for their own exclusive use. Up to that time, although they had a library of nearly 1,000 volumes, a large and choice collection of photographs, a piano, a considerable amount of furniture and other paraphernalia for club housekeeping they had occupied raited rooms. Living in rented rooms did not satisfy these progressive women. They decided to buy a lot and build a house of their own. Tho building fund comprised £1,600 in the treasury, an annual Income of $(KX) and a relentless determination, Tho last nientioucd item was the priueipal resource, for it was convertible into several times as much cash a# both the others combined. A lot was purchased on Sheldon street, one of the finest, street# in the city, and duly 80,1887, the corner stone of the new club houao was laid. Five mor.tbH lnt«r the house was dedicated. the cum IlOt'SK.
Tho club houso 1* two stories in height at the front, with a lofty single story in the rear for the main hall or auditorium. It. built of Amherst (O.) blues tone and Grant! Kapid* repressed brick, with terra cotta trimmings, shite roof, stained glass and I'Vuoh plate glass windows. At the front on the tinnt lloor the main entrance opens Into a large reception hull, with a handsome, broad, winding ttsirense leadIgn to the "upper room," the ladies designate what club men would call a banquet hall. Back of the stairs on tho north side is a commodious and convenient toilet room. At the left of the main entrance, on the lirst floor mul fronting the street, Is the club library, a room about twenty-five feet square. The library opens into the auditorium, a room* about fifty feet square, with a wiling twenty-one feet high, i-mhntcing a dome and skylight at tho tenter. At the further or west end of the auditorium Is a large stage, flanked by driving rooms. The llogr of the auditorium is slightly inclined toward the stage. It if. covered with a handsome body 11 rosso in carpet, in which asoft, yellowish brown is h» prevailing tlut, harmonising perfectly with the boauttfvVl decorations of the celling and dome. The library is finished hi oak, and is also elegantly decorated. The colors are darker than those of the auditorium, but are complementary ste them. Aliovc tho mantel in the auditoum is a beautiful plate glass mirror of the full width of the mantel, while in the library the oaken panel above the mantel tears tho word "Books" in hold, carved letters, surrounded by a scroll, on which is the text, "Hound these oufpastimcsand our happiness will grow."
THK WKKKI.t MKKTtJfttS.
A regular meeting of the club Is held every Sat unlay afternoon and lasts tw» hours, except during the heated term, when a vacation is usually taken or the meetings are limited to one hour. As provided by ho constitution of the club, the first .meeting in each month is devoted to consideration of subjects pertaining to art nil literature, to lie brought before the eJub by a committee of three who serve for a jxu'itxi of three months, For the seeoud Saturday of the month a simitar committee furnishes topics on ^duration, and for the third Saturday another committee furnishes subjects in history. The meeting of th« fourth week is In charge of aii "entertainment committer." and whenever this committee furnishes an evening"* entertainment not only do all members of tine 'nb have a standing Invitation, but each number may invite one person to n.«?om(tany her. Th« hours for entertainment arv mm 7 to l'.» p. m. The entertainment getsnrally include# plays, music, readings, rvvitations, etc. Card* aid refmpcthment* are prohibited, When a fifth Saturday cur* in any month It is called "President** day," and on that day the president brings before the club such general topic* a# she sees fit.
The programme committees layout their work sy.^em&tloally a»d canrifully,. aod copl* are printed and tli»tritatled among member* in advance, thus giving member* a chain* to snidy the before their presentation at the elub.--Clvifi9.go Tribune,
Among the various charity swietm of Moscow there i* one for Use endowment of poor ted«. The fimd* of ibe socielr arvj coast sully lncrea««d by the gifts or be« quests of benevolent pemoes, tmt only Uw Interest of the mooey it twed for ibe tim&tp noted pttrpow
About Saving Pennies-
I met a woman on the Stresfc not long ago. It was raining, and there was a blu&fcering wind abroad that made progress a difficult thing Going to the train?" asked I.' "I wish I was," said she, "bnt I expect I •hall lose
it.
I have to go around for my
•ugar." "Why don't you buy yoar sugarthe store you pass on your way to the depot?" queried "Oh, ean get it half *. cent cheaper at So and So's," replied she.
I passed on, musriag. If that woman buys ten pound* of sugar, thought I, she will save five cents, but she will lose her train, get a late supper, and perhaps con tract acute indigestion. She will certainly wear out an extra cent's worth of shoe leather, and she will get wet and lose her temper with the buffeting of the wind. Is It true economy to take such a course? Would it not be better to let the five cents go, and cancel it with the gain in peace of mind and general comfort?
Don't you know that there arc hosts of people who manage in this same wayf They will chase all over the earth to save a penny, and get a poor bargain at last. They are always haunting auctions and •heap stores for special sales. Such people tire me easily. They are very uncompromising in their disapproval of you and of me because we prefer to pay a penny or two more a pound for sugar and save our poor old bones, and they think us extrava gant because we are too wise to seek to buy dollar value for a dime. Ln the long run 1 sometimes think the weasel knows more than the owl, although It may appear less wise on first and pasual inspection.—Exchange.
Be Sure Your Chicken Is Dead. Housekeepers do not always understand that a chicken, after the animal heat leaves the body, is not fit for food in less than twenty-four hours. During this time the muscles are stiffened by the rigor that succeeds directly after the departure of animal heat In all animals, and are tougher than they are at auy time previous. In Virginia and many parts of tho south cooks kill and dress poultry with great rapidity, and plunge the pieces of chicken while they are still warm with animal heat into tho frying kettle. This secures the tender, succulent dishes of fried chicken which are justly the pride of tho old Virginia cook.
There is something repulsive to the northern housewife in serving up a fowl that was perhaps a few moments before strutting about, the pride of the yard. An equally good and tender dish of chicken may be attained by keeping the fowl till the muscles relax, and it is in prime condition for food. In fact only by the rapid process of frying can a chicken be cooked done before the muscles stiffen. This the southern cook knows, and she never attempts to friensseo or roast a fowl that has not been hun at least twenty-four hours.-—New Yorfc Tribunp.
Danger Signal* In tho Bedroom," To those fair enthusiasts who are prone to the purchase of trifle,** I would say: Avoid too many chairs in a room. Avoid rockers that wet in the way and raise the temper and lumps ou your shins. Avoid small tables which are so "cute"—those aTTairs that take up so mucl\ room and hold a couple of books or a vase that is in constant danger of upsetting. A friend of iniriu with a wife who insisted^ipon wicker rockers with- dainty head rests, and small tables with blue china, and who frequently had to get tip nights for the paregoric, went i»ut one morning after a eight's groping for tho match box and brought home a pot of phosphorescent paint, which ho dabbed on all corners, points and edges of those darling little rockersand sweet tables, dec orating the match Imjx, the bed posts, tho gas bracket and door knobs, determined upon avoiding tho shoals and wreckages Of the midnight cruise. And now at night the room looks like the ghost scene from "The Flying Dutchman." The phosphoresence gnthers light all day and lets it loose MlI night. But there's no more black and bluo spots, and the toe romps fearless of the vicious chair leg.—Exchange.
An Intercfttlng Witness.
"Is there a man in all this audience," demanded tho female lecturer on woman's rights fiercely, "that has ever done any thing to lighten the burden resting on his wife's shoulders? What do you know of woman's work? Is there a mau here," she continued, folding her arms and looking over her audience with superb scorn, "that has ever got up in the morning, leaving his tired, worn out wife to enjoy her slumlers, gone quietly down stairs, made the fire, cooked his own breakfast, sewed the missing buttons on the children's clothes, darned the family stockings, scoured the pots and kettles, cleaned and filled the lamps, swept the kitchen, and done all thi i, if necessary, day after day, uncomplainingly? If there is such a man in this audience let him rise up. I should like to see him!"
Away back in the rear of the hail a mild looking man in spectacles, in obedience to the summons, timidly arose. He was the husband of the eloquent speaker. It was the first time he had ever hud a chance to assert himself.—New York Telegram.
Styles of American Beauty. The close observer cannot but perceive that there are changes baking place in our established standards of beauty. For instance, the southern type of lovely woman was formerly a creature of languorous movement, dusky hair, passionate, dark eye today she is frequently a classic blonde, devoid of high color, like a Cherokee row, perfect in outline and energetic in movement, as are the traditional northerners. Those American women, however, who axe the most admired abroad area conjunction of these two leading
types—
golden hair united to brown or fcawel eyes, soft, smooth skin,with faint olive shading, little color, features sharply defined
and
the figure healthily rounded. Boston Globe. Starring liable*.
ANew Haven medical examiner makes the somewhat startling -statement that, oa an average, be has tea case* a year «f Iwbies starved to death. lie had one last week of a child dying suddenly, and in visrtigatiou showed that It had bee» fed on some patent food, bnthad starved to death. It the ignorance of the parents which at the bottom of the trouble, he suys and. strangely *K««h, this particular kind of ignorance prevails more amottg the well Uvdo than the poorer claases,—Exebange.
Bay Only tSMfc Be**- Fta»e».
If jtw* propose to give jtmr child a mo*$3*1 education get the best no yea can aiSetd, It is a atfetake to ..ak aa old! piano stood *«ottgbto practice oa. ft way lie a* far as' tlie mecfe «al part of pkyteg Is c««iie*r**,d¥ bat a!„ u# time tlie «ari*h*jBngitiS4. «a*e per«t«i«« «f net sot by Us»* through the bono of tt* ta—ess and toscrrect Lewbi*** Jmraal.
CLOTHING OF WOMAN.
EYpLUTION OF THE MODERN FROM THE SAVAGE GARMENT.
Covering First Made of Bark—Beginning of the Petticoat, the Corset, the Stockings and Other Apparel—Ribbona Tin*
Used by Barbarians. 4^4^ **To trace the development from their primitive origin of women's garments as they are worn today is very easy," said Professor Mason at the National museum. "You can see the original of the petticoat even now among savage peoples all over the world in the shape of the universal waist cincture, with pendent drapery of bark or what not. "The most beautiful illustration of this Is to be found at present among the Indians of the northwest coast. The female among those tribes ties a cord around her waist and
hangB
therefrom innumerable strings
of shells, beads, pine nuts and all sorts of things that are pretty and make a jingle. So Sacred are these ornamental girdles considered that when the girls join the white schools and are obliged to adopt civilized clothing it is very usual for them to wear tho garments under their skirts behind, doubled up. Many authorities aver that this is actually the source from which the notion of tlie bustle was derived. "The cinctur© I have described reaches only from the waist to the middle of the thigh. As to the upper part of the body tho Indian maiden of the northwest wears nothing for a covering, except in cold weather, when she puts on the tanned skin of some beast, simply tying it over the windward shoulder and under the other arm with strings. Thus you have an admirable example of the most primitive female costume. The next step in the development of the upper garment is made by cutting holes through the, skin to accommodate the arms, and in this shape jou find the primitive and earliest form of
AMONG THE POLYNESIANS.
"Take a big jump over to the islands of the Pacific and yorj find the savages making clothing for themselves out of mulberry bark, which they beat with mallets and wash until all the soft part of its substance has -been taken out of it, leaving the textile portion, which serves in that shape for a soft and strong cloth. A piece of any size can be made by hammering'the edges of many pieces together until they unite so perfectly that it is difficult to find where they join.
ORIGIN OF CORSETS.
"Corsets have always been worn in ona* shape or another by people who were at all civilized, the necessity for some support for the bust being obviously the occasion for them, and not fashion, to begin with. Women of ancieut Greece and Home wore a cloth bandage wrapped about tho body, more or less tightly, beneath the bosom for the purpose. In the time of Queen Elizabeth the corset, as you are doubtless aware, was a far more formidable thing than it is now, in stiffness and size almost like a piece of armor. Nowadays women wear corsets because they make their figures shapely, and that reason is sufficient to constitute a certainty that they will go 011 doing so for an Indefinite time.
"As
for stockings, you know yourself
they are of the most modern invention, as may Iks judged from the fact that Queen Elizabeth was censured for her extravagance in procuring a few pairs of silk stockings for iter'own use. To discover the origin of the stocking you have only to consider the fact that the people in early times, finding the simple sandal not very comfortable, wore it as a sole for asoft foot covering separate from it, which was the first attempt at luxury in footwear.
You can see that it was only necessary to stitch the sandal to the soft shoe io order to make what was to all intents and purposes the shoe of the present day. But the men of those early times found it con venient to wear for hunting purposes leggings to protect their limbs from the thorns and burrs. Hence have been developed what we know as breeches or trousers. Recently there has reached the museum a pair of ancient leggings of the sort described attached by sewing to the soft undersoles. Here you have what is doubtless the original form of stocking.
NATURAL HISTORY OF RIBBONS. "Nothing is more closely identified with women's dress today than ribbons. What, then, is the origin of ribbons? You can discover it very simply by looking at the long fringe of strips into which the primitive savage cuts the deer hide or other skins that forms his garment or his tobacco pouch or whatever else of bis ornamental possessions you please. Why does the savage go to the trouble of cutting the beast's hide into such stripe? It Is because the eye is pleased with waving curves. "When savage fashions merged into civiliiced fashions this idea was retained, and so at present we find weavers and makers of staffs manufacturing their fabrics into what we call ribbons. They arc adopted {*?cuiiarly by women In this age, when the masculine sex eschews ornament in civilised life almost wholly. "The hat, In its origin, is a thing purely ornamental Except in arctic climes, where as much as possible of the body must be covered to keep out the oold, savages have sever thought of protecting ties hmL Withnsit a matt** parely of cultivation—the necessity for ahead covering growing out of the habit of employing it. The beginning of the hat
RE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING- MAIL
5
"It is believed that the largest piece
ot
this mulberry cloth in the world is at present in the National museum it is six feet long by twenty feet wide. Among the rich islanders it ,is the custom for a woman to wrap as much as thirty or forty yards of the stuff around the Body, below the breasts, which are left exposed. The simple lengthening of the primitive waist garment makes the petticoat as we find it today, "As for tho jacket, its most primitive form was that of a skin tied over the shoulders. Next the skin became blanket, and soon 9 hole for the head was cut through the middle of the blanket, as in the Mexican cloak called the 'poncho.' You will find the Arabs even now employing the same device, with the addition of holes for tho arms. By tho time you have got this far the jacket is pretty nearly complete, All it needs to become entire are sleeves and cutting to the figure,
wm
what you
find it among ravage peoples today—a raft of feathers, a bunch of porettplse quiils or what oat.*«~W&Rhin$$on Star.
Bnby Jweket*.
Colored ribboo* are not tk best for a
h*bf*
botmet. ti 1 t»o4 show
A WILD GOOSE PATROL.
Herders Defeating Wheat .Fields ftoxn Flock* of Geese and Ducks. "It may sound funny to people in the mst to be told that to protect the grain crops in some of the California counties from mld ducks and geese the farmers employ a large force of what are knOTr^as herders to patrol the fields and shoot, club and destroy and frighten away by various means the enormous flocks of these ravenous fowl that sweep down on the young and growing grain and devour it, bnt such is the fact," said James E. Palen, a large grower of wheat in the Sacramento valley. "The ravaging swarms of ducks and geese begin their work of destruction early in the fall, as soon as the wheat begins to sprout. The fowl invade the eauktry a|ong the rivers, but they do not tarry there an iiour after the rains have made the wheat plains habitable for them. "I have seen a tract of seventy-five acres in Colusa county absolutely covered with wild geese, so densely packed as to resemblo pictures I have seen of seabird rookeries on some ocean rock. When they first come they wax fat on the wheat stubble, and are juicy and sweet flavored for the table, but when the young winter wheat appears they work on the green sprouts. This has the effect of making their flesh Tank, and no one in any of the wild goose ridden districts will eat of these fowls then. They are shipped by the thousand, all the same, to San Francisco and other markets all winter long, where the people seem to think the green wheat fed birds aro a delicacy. But if the markets could take ten times as many as they do tho number would be small compared with tho thousands and thou-1 sands of the destructive fowls that are killed and left lying on tho ground. "Tolo county, where I live, especially in its northern part, I once thought could beat all creation as a feeding place for wild geese, for I have seen these flocks so thick in the air, going to and from their favorite pasture, that only few-and-far-between glimpses of the sky could be obtained for an hour at a time. But when I went into Colusa county I made up my mind that I had never seen wild geese enough before to speak of. There is a large expanse of barren plain in that county which1 affords an unrivaled place of rendezvous for both geese and ducks, and I have seen those barrens when I thought that all tho wild geese that went forth to ail parts of the land, near and remote, must surely have their startipug place on tho Colusa county barrens. They may bo seen rising up from liio plains in swarms like the locusts of Egypt, and going forth in all directions to prey on the farjaors. They remain all winter long, and the wheat the fanners cut in tho harvest they have had to fight the geese and ducks "for months to retain. "There are many largo wheat ranches in these two counties, such as the Glenn ranch, the Bogg and others. Prom twelve to twenty-fivo herders are employed by each of the big ranches to ift^o wheat fields and wage continfor£?
a£a"jst
up
toadv&ntr**" nwd «se*ai *»wyp tyla«l window*, .-»d
iWTtoasoe*
thax
is tbe jumper for 11.- n. Hir, Baby takes bite off r~weH: ur ttm&r «f lift eoUnrwadutrslih ... -.KMt&faiti*wimAcd. If the gtm dowtt tbe wrong co3irhimr,crt*
m&m
AgpJrfe*'* of aefcr.A: tafwiMeiswil rMmiatee mad norSrf ttftdl the Stiff to
geese and ducks.
L-Suiers live in cabins scattered Ito ranches, and tramp about the fields from daylight until dark, and long after night, too, if tho moon is shining, for both geese and ducks foed on the wheat fields at night if it is moonlight. Ducks are more troublesome than geese at night, and it was discovered accidentally a few years ago that a light in a field would frighten them away. Lanterns were placed in large numbers among the wheat, and for along time the fowl were so shy of tho bright lights that the farmers were benefited. At last, however, the ducks became used to the lanterns, and grew so bold as to feed by their light.. "The small farmers in the wheat district, being unable to individually employ herders, have combined in a sort of mutual herding association, and pay for patrol protection out of a common fund, many of the fanners doing herding duty themselves."—New York Sun.
A Brave Little Yankee.
During the revolution a party of Connecticut troops were captured on Long Island, one of whom was a fifer boy much undersized, though full of fire and very strong for his inches. His commanding officer being summoned to the presence of the British general, the boy followed. "Who are you?" said tho general. The boy replied, "I am one of Kii.0' Hancock's men." "Can you fight,?" asked the general. "Yes, sir I can," said the boy.
The general called tip one of his own fifers and said, "Dare you fight him?*1 "Yes, sir," answered the little Yankee. The general then told the fifer to strip and give battle, which he did forthwith. The figl^t ended in victory for the small soil of Connecticut. Indeed, the little Briton was so badly damaged that it was deemed best to interfere, lest the Yankee boy should demolish him entirely.
The English officer rewarded the little fellow's valor and resolution by giving him his liberty, and he lost no time in weiring his way to the land of steady habits, where his exploit was duly chronicled in the local newspaper.—Youth's Companion.
„f? Who Are tfee Cretin#? They area class of the unfortunates, imab£e to walk, usually deaf and dumb, and practically blind. This degeneration of body and mind is occasioned by poverty, imjumre air, filth, intermarri-: Of relatives and intemperance. Thougu ftm&d in other portions of the earth* Oetinsare veryntmierotasin central and aotttfcerB Earojpe. In sever*! of the SwiaBCMtomtlMsy are said to form from 4t©6 per ceefc. of the population. Bheidsh Prnssiaaod
perovinoes of Anstria the number is still greater in Syria many villages of foe* at five thoosamd inhabitant# not ttavfrft single man capabte of bearing an: la WtzrianbeKg aad Bfev&rfo, Savoy, Scnttsfck the Alpine rcgi of i\ see and the moaatatn&ss dtaMtfrt the disease ifl very prevakmt lock la Christian at Worts.
The king of medicines—Hood's Sarsaparilla. It conquers scrofula, salt rbeum and all other blood diseases.
Kapepsy.
This is what you ought to have, in fact, you must have it, to fully enjoy life. Thousands are searching for it daily, and mourning because they fiud It not. Thousands upon thousands of dollars are spent annually by our people in the people in the hope that they may attain this boon. And yet it may be had by all. We guarantee that Electric Bitters, iT used according to directions and the use persisted iu, will bring you Good Digestion and oust tbedemon Dyspepsia and Install instead Eupepsy. We recommend Electric Bitt«rs for Dyspepsia and aU diseases of Liver, Stomach and Kidneys. Sold at 50c. and §1 per bottle by J. A C. Baur, druggists. 4
A Strange Case.
Had Mrs. H. A. Gardner, of Vistula, Iud., lived two thousand years ago she would have been thought to be possessed by evil spirits. She was subject to nervous prostration, headaches, difcfciuess, backache, palpitation, and forty to fifty spasms a day. Though having been treated by eight physicians for years without success, she was permanently cured by one bottle of Dr. Miles* Restorative Nervine. A trial bottle of this new and wonderful medicine, and a finely Illustrated treatise free ?t J. & C. liaur's drugstore, who recommends and guarantees it.
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nltiUust-rstabtishal, and best /mown Jfurserics
In
the country.. Address w. & T. SMITH, Genova Nursery, EntJthllnlini) In 1S4II. tirmtvn' N. Y.
SELLERS1 LIVER PILLS
Ow 100 gross told by om di hare no tqaul fbr enri
wszl
HOoatir mftni Aj •Unti
ss&^sm
.DIWIumi, W Complaint, P«T«r loo, B*ck*ehe, and *11 trouble*. They Never
nplaint, F«v«r^a Mho, and *11 'hey Never id eonntry flortW ntUbwryfc, ft.
Sold by all drugiriiU and eonntry fiort Seller, A Ca., rttubnrth, li.
"PfOTEL GLENHAM,
FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, Bet. 21st aud'22d st*., near IVladUon Hquart. EUROPEAN PLAN.
N. a BAERY, Proprietor.
Now and perfect plumblug, according te the latest scieiitlflo prlnclplos.
DRUNKENNESS
Or the Liquor H»bi*. PuiltMj Cur *d by Admlnlntcrlni, Dr. Haloes' Golden Spec.fir. It can be given In a cun of coffee or tea without the Knowledge oflhepermm taking It Is absolutely harm lens, aim will eflect a permanent and speedy cure, whether the patient l« a moderate drinker or an nleohollo wreck. Thousands of drunk«rds have been made temperate men who have taken Golden Hpocifle ln their coflfce without their knowledge and to day believe the^ult drlnklnjr oftlielrown free will. IT FAl The jiyatem once Impregnated with tho 8peIflc, It becomes an utter Impossibility for the lloUor appetite to exist. For naU by
AS. E. SOME8, DrugglMt,
Cor. 6th and Ohio ttta., Xerre Haute, 2nd.
mfap«« l#L tho wot'ld. Our fccIIUTp. are unrqualfd, and to Introdurs our
•1 nipcriorfoodtwawUlMndrnKK to ova rlRfoir in cacti locniity, atabor*. Only tho»« who writ* totuat ooeaoan matt* tore of tk* chine*. All you h«»« to do la
E
timilM.
ntaro li to (how our rood, to thote who c»ll—your mrfchbor* •nd thoi* arouna yon. Tn« b#gtnnlnK of thU »dvmlwm«nt Mow* tlto •mull end of th« t*l«-
Mop*. Tb« following e«t fjr*a Ui* appwr«nc« ofll rtducad to
3
'J*.
•boat th» flftWh p*rt of It* tmlk. It li er«nd. donbl* t»l»Koo*,uUr|(«u M*y to c*rry. W# will alio «how you how»ou Mnm*k«mm 0S toSlO• day »tl«*»t,
fromthaitait,wflb.
UtnpMjMe*. B.tUrwritaU I AddnM* B. HALLSTT 4 CO«(B«t IIO, TottUHP, llAliri.
To euro 3lllouBnc»#, Sick Itcndacho, Constipation, Malaria, Liver (.'omolalnU, tako tho eafo and certain remedy,
SMITH'S
BILE BEANS
Ifee the MMAIX Mice (40 little Bean* to tho bottle).
TlIBV ABB THE MOHT CONVKKtBWT. •ulMblo lor al I AuM.
Price of either mixe,
H!iv.
I S S I N
per Bottle.
7
pPAWKLRBrzS£or(
1% IW11 Malted for rl», J.F.tMlTH AC8^**«»of"»H.KBB.iX«, ST. 10018 MO.
3 EXPRESS TOU1S DAILY
r*o«
KVAMtVILU, VMOCfWC#» TERRK HAUTC «nd OAHVILLC TO
CHICAGO
wm'iirTi 0ISECT OONHECTTOIf itnada toaHpelatt EAST, WEST^ NORTHWEST
Per rate*, time tablM and Inioma&m ie d«M» addmw enmt Tklwt Agvet. WILLIAM HILL, Oe«. P«M.
mpti T%t, AgS
CHICAHO, ILL.
