Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 41, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 April 1891 — Page 3

SCIENCE AND PROGRESS.

TOPICS 5URE TO INTEREST PROGRESSIVE MEN AND WOMEN.

Electric Attraction Demonstrated with Commonplace Article*—Simple Scientific Kccreatlon* Snitahle to the Drawing Koora.

Take in dry weather a bit of thin paper, say cigarette paper, and rub it smartly with the hand, or, Htill Ijotter, withabrnah. In a short time it will Ix-comc electrified, and will adhere to your hand, your face or your dress, resisting yotir efforts to displace it, as if it was coat«l with some glutinous substance.

Now electrify in the same way a piece of thick paper, iy postcard, and you wi-i find that (just its happen* with glass, w-al-

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Arris action*.

Iwj, wax, .siiipJr.ir or re.*iii) the card will attract light suo.staticas, such a* crumb* of cork, elder pith. etc. Balance a walking •otiek across iha back of a chair, and you ijuiy ofTcr a wager that without touching it, blowing npuii it or touching the chair you can make it fail. All that you have to do in to dry tin: card well before tin: (ire, rub it on

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coat sleeve and hold it clow

to one end of tlx- walking Ht ick, winch will follow il jti iron follows the magnet, until ith :, it: 1 ii' 'm•.in being destroyed, it falls to t'ne ground.

JiihU.-ad of ii walking ick you may balance on the back of the chair a iishing red or a long pole. The pole will be attracted to the elect rified card just the ftick was, a:.d i:.» greater length will enable the com pau$ et abetter view of the experiment.

af Colli on tlio Strength of Steel. The i'ret 'h government has had conducted for hem a .series of experiments on gun steel /it very low temperature, ways The Railway Review. The specimens, Home of which were hardened and others not liar '.cried, were cool to 75 or lOOdegs. Fahr. b. low zero by immersing them in a bat.l.i of carbonic acid gas arid sulphuric ether. The U.wt bars were prepared in sets of thi i-cM, one to bo used after being cooled to ahoiit KM) degH. below zero, while the other two were tested tit normal temperature AN a result of these 'tests it was found that both the hardened and unhardened bars had their elastic limit' raised about, 11 per cent, when tested cold. The breaking strain of the hardened bars was increased about 0 per cent., and that of the unhardened bars about percent, by cooling. The elongation of the hardened bars was diminished 14 per edit., and the unhardened bars I'J per cent. These changes were only temporary, however, as with the restoration of the bars to the ordinary temperature their original properties returned. Anther series of tests were conducted for wlflch the bars were prepared in nets of three a.s before. Those were tested by means of a drop weight, instead of being subject to tension, as in the pre vious isc. It was found that the cooling of the bars increased their brittleness. As an average each hardened bar required 12..r7 blows to fracture it. at HM) (legs, below zero and 11.4 blows at the normal temjieraiure. The unhardened bars required 5,9 blows* to break them when cold and 1-1.6 blows under ordinary conditions. As in the previous tests, the metal regained its qualities when restored to a normal tempera! nv

Demagnetizing a Watch.

A novel method of demagnetizing a watch is, according to The Electrical Work, due to a Massachusetts genius. The apparatus consists of a compound horseehoo magnet placed erect, with its poles upward and a miitable support placed at Homo distance, perhaps two or three feet, nbovo it. From this support is suspended by a twisted bread a cardboard tray in which is the watch to 1K» demagnetised.

ONK WAY TO PKMAUKKTtZK A WATCH. When in position the .supporting thread is allowed to untwist, and the watch is grad ually removed from the magnetic field.

The authority quoted says that the same iwults could In* obtained by the tune of an elect ro magnet energised from a battery or other source of current as well as by employing jx^rmauent hor*c*hoo magnet*.

Th* World'* Money.

According to the estimates of Director Ixxvh. of the mint. France is the richest country in the world in specie, with a gold currency of $lXW,QtX).(X)0 and $TOO.OOO,OOb in silver. The Uniiod States comes next, with ITftUW,in and fis2.000.0ft of silver. fimu Britain has gold and SSrtl.tXV.tVK) silver Germany. fW.OOO.(XM -,»ld and Vivcr India. «W,tW ,»r: China. #'JW.tV*UXW silver, et*\ Hinvtor Uxvh estimates the tot:il gold c' ctilat i.»ti of the world a? \000 ae h-» t»-ul sisvi cjrcnlation «t WAVSO.G. uf the i-.utcr 1* lt?sr tender. iron Tr,vW Hov'.i'W,

A So« t'*e for Milts.

The Mark ctilh attention a nt .i nn cation, for which patent has jtHt t.»ken oat. that isa substitute for fxuio im cvlhnokJ. This new material the inventor pro noes by wUtciRg casein to.i partly ge.la:-, condition by meatss of borax or ao..-..-»nia, aad then mixing it with mineral -.ait dimilvcd in acid or water, which Is-inid is smlj^rejueaUy enponu6d. the res«Uing pr**\u«*t being the new material calu 1 "i-irtUe." The material may ho tuoMvl into any desired form aad colore*! aa rwquiml, cither by the admixture of pigments or by aniline or other dyes.

It is *tat«xl that the average widtb of tb« patb of destruction in tora»doe« about 3,000 feet.

THE CURIOSITY SHOP.

Queer Superstitions Indulged in by the Players of Cards. One of the most common superstitions is that where a cardplayer who is not having good luck gets np and solemnly walks aronnd his "hair three times in order to propitiate fortune, or the player will ci^l for a new pack of cards. The partners in a game of cards who have the grain of the table running between them are also supposed to be helped thereby. This, according to Notes and Queries, is an Irish superstition. We also learn from the same source that if you area card player, and not having a table in yonr room, start to play cards on the bed, then beware, for this is an act sure to bring misfortunes innumerable.

Never throw a pack of cards at any one, as the act will bring all kinds of bad luck to the person struck.

When you have a pack of cards which have seen their best days do not commit the imprudcr.ce of giving them away. It is also bad luck. The proper plan is to burn them, and preferably with pepper and salt.

The belief that a large number of people have, in the efficacy of fortune telling by cards is too well known to dwell upon. These people, when a fortune teller is not convenient, will often pick out their own fort tine by means of divers kinds of solitaire.

Then hero is the old proverb, "Lucky at cards,, unlucky at love." In a g:.me of cards it is considered un­

lucky

to a player to rest your foot on the back" rung of his chair while looking at the ame. liest your foot on one of the side rungs or on the seat of the chair, but the back rung never.

One of the most, curious superstitious I have met with is one which was told me of an old Irishman who could never be persuaded to play cards, unless he wore bis hat. When pressed for a reason he finally gave this one. The devil is always around when card playing is in progress, and not to wear a hat wo Id be a sign of respect to bis majesty, and that would bring bad luck.

Tliomus IJcllerton.

We have only to think of the period covered by Bcttertou's life to see how important is his place in the annals of acting. Horn in KK55, he appeared first on the stage in 1 (Ifio. A fine opportunity for a young actor to come into notice in the year of the Best oration after the dreary regime (dreary th ien supervisioirr~anci was pract ically suppressed. A few old actors preserved in some sort the traditiou of Shakespeare's day, and there was more than one who claimed that he had had instruction in great parts from Shakespeare himself. There wero no actresses then. There was Stephen Ilaminerton, "a,most noted and beautiful woman actor," and later we find in Betterton's company one Edward Kynaston, who is described by Pepys as "the loveliest lady that ever I saw in my life."

The Restoration changed all this, for as early as Jan. 3, 1GG1, Pepys enters in his book, "To the theatre, where was acted 'Beggar's Bush,' it being very well done, rt*l here the first timo that ever isaw women come upon the stage." In the course of his long ireer as an actor—from 1660 to 1710—Better ton was the chosen interpreter of all the heroes of English drama. Besides acting the great parts of Shakespeare, he suffered under Sir William Davenant, and later had the pick of all the Restoration drama. In lfWS Jeremy Collie struck a heavy blow fit authors and actors with his .Short View of the Immorality and Brofaneness of the English Stage," which was tie fleet tally answered by Congreve, Dtyden, indeed, published an acknowledgment, "dignified and stately," of the justness of Collie's attack, so ftir as it referred to him. Bettert.on played at his own benefit in 1700, and tlied in the following year. He was the great actor of his time, and was fortunate in a wife whose talent was hardly inferior to his own. The history of his stage career, corresponding as it exactly does with the history of the Restor.-U.ion drama, is of the highest, possible interest, to the student of the stage.

Vibrato ami Tremolo.

0|eragoers

89

are constantly using the

words vibrato and tremolo, and yet few perhaps could tell wherein these two vocal habits exactly differ. The matter is complicated by the fact that the words do not mean the same thing in instrumental and vocal music. Violinists and violoncellists frequently produce a fine effect by a sort of rapid nervous shaking of the left hand without raising the finger from the string. This is tmlled vibrato, while tremolo is the succession of sounds by rapidly moving the I hw up and down on the same note. In vocal music, on the other hand, this apparent, rapiil iteration of the same note (really due, to an alternate weakeuing and strengthening of the tone) iscalled vibrato, while the tremolo in vocal music resembles he instrumental vibrato. In vocal music loth these habits are objectionable, except in very rare cases.

The Mountain Ash.

The mountain ash or rowan tree is renowned among Celts as well as Teutons for its potency against witches and evil spirit#. For this reason It is also called witchen or wiggen tree, the latter name being a corruption of the former and it is still in request for its prophylactic virtues in the highlands of Scotland, in Ireland, and in Wales, where it is often hunff up over doorw and in stables and TOW houses to neutralise the wicked spells of witches and warlocks. The mountain ash appears to have been venerated by the Druids, for a stump of the tree, probably a relic of one planted by them, has frequently been found in their old burying places and stone circles.

llalm of GUead.

The balm of Gilead, which is alluded to in the Old Testament as being extremely precious, am. which is spoken of by St-rabo, Pliny and er ancient writers as being a cure for airiasi every disease* is a liquid rvsinous sui^i-ance of high fragrance and enjoys a ver/ high reputation in the east. It is gene rally believed to be taken from a spccies of tv. imodend row, a small tree growing in Arabia and Abyssinia and known as balsam of Oiieadcnse. The finest Iwlsain, caik obobalsaai or b^mof Mecca, is obtained by incisions, is at first turbid and while, but finally becomes a golden yellow color and oft he consistency of hooey. Inferior kinds are obtained by boiling the fruit and the wood.

A Cold W#te Defined.

A cold wave, as de&ned by Professor Russell, of the wither bureau. Is it fall of tempera* ure in twenty-four hours of SB desgs. over an area of 50,000 square miles, tbe temperatare in some part of this turea descending to 38 &e«&. Between 1890 sad 1980 80 lea* tban 991 cold waves were recorded in tiro United States.

YOUNG FOLKS' COLUMN.

INSTRUCTIVE AND ENTERTAINING READING FOR BOYS AND GIRLS.

A Short Chapter About JewLoais Ernent Meissonler. the Eminent French Painter, Whose PJr ares Are the Admiration of the Whole Civilised World.

Meissonier, the eminfent French painter, who died in Paris on Jan. 31, was born in 1815, the yo igest son of a druggist and grocer at Lyons. The boy seemed to ha~e inherited his mother's talent for drawing, and when his father removed to Paris, to set up a shop, he sent his son to school, and afterward permitted him to study art, first with Potier and then with Leon Cogniet.

MEISSOXIER IN HIS STUDIO.

He began by illustrating books. By studying tbe small pictures of the Dutch school in the Louvre he struck upon the vein of minutest execution which he ever afterward persevered in. His early pictures were regarded as curiosities, and the patience bestowed upon each object, as well as the minuteness of the work, were thought prodigious. .J&pwever, the first picture he exhibited SCifthe salon in 1834 was sold for a small sum. Though some of his most brilliant achievements were in Louis Philippe's reign he only became famous in 1855, when the late Prince.Consort admired "La Rixe" at the Universal exhibition, which Napoleon at once bought for about $5,000 and presented to his guest. Thenceforward, whatever he painted commanded high prices. In 1859 he" accompanied the emperor on his Italian campaign, and did a painting of Napoleon III at Solferino, and afterward, under the inspiration of Thiers' "History," began his series illustrating the "Napoleonic Cycle." To this period belong "1805," "1807" and "1814," the last of the three being the finest of all, In 1884» the jubilee year of his cr.reer, there weresome one hundred and fifty works of his in Paris, representing, however, sea reel a fourth part of those he had then completed and sold.

In his studio Meissonier talked incessantly, passing to and fro among his sketches. He retained the extraordinary strength ol his eyesight till the very last. It was his marvelous vision winch enabled him tc produce, without the help c,f glasses, effects of lifelike realism in the faces of the size of a thumbnail which occur in most of his pictures. His conscientiousness knew no limits. When he painted his masterpiece, entitled "181representing Napoleon returning from Moscow at the head of his staff, hd actually had a road made down an incline, waited for the snow to come, and then requisitioned a battery of artillery to make the ruts he set himself to copy.

Ilum-um-um.

Said little brown Bee to big brown Bee: "Oh! hurry here and sec, and see Tho loveliest, rose—the loveliest rose That in tho garden grows, grows, grows. Hum-um-i. i-hum-um-um," Said little brown Bee to big brown Bee.

Said little brown Bee to big brown Bee: "Much ho*"y must be here, and we Should beg a portion while wo may, For soon oro bees will come this way. llum-um-nm—hum-um-um," Said little brown Bee to big brown Bee.

Said big brown Bee to little brown Bee: "The rose is not for me, for me. Though si: "5 is lovelier by far Than many other flowers are. Hum-um-um—hum-um-um," Said big brown Beo to little brown Bee. Said big brown Bee to little brown Bee: **No honey cup has she, has she. But many cups, all brimming over. Has yondc little purple clover. And that's the flower for me, for me. Hum-um-uji—hum-nm-um," Said big brown Bee to little brown Bee. —St. Nicholas.

The Cat'* Toilet.

As a rule, animals are clean by nature. Brushes and combs most animals carry with them. Cats, large and small, make the most careful toilets of any class of animal, with the exception of some of the opossums. The lions and tigers wash themselves in exactly the same manner at Ihe cat, wetting the dark, India rubbei like ball of the fore foot and the inner t*e, and passing '.t over the face and behind the ears. The foot is thus at the sa time a face spouge and brush, and tne rough tongue combs the rest of the body-

Why?

Whycaa't boys get to be great men Thoat tricing timo to grow? And what's the good of button shoes Apd skirts, I'd like to know? YVTiy can't I have some rcg'lar pants With lots of pockets In?

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jFERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVEJSTING MAIL

RCSR TO BE A BOT.

And wbaffe tbe a* of horses when They're only sad© of tin? And why do folks"most always say, "Look oft?* "Be careful, dawr*— It*# not much fan to be a boy Wltea people are so queer! -Little Men and Women.

Sunshine Is tbe great purifier and vivifier, and no lighting of fires will make tb* air in north room like that In a south.

PHYSIOLOGY AND HYGIENE.

A Remedy for Heart Failnre Which Physicians Are Using. Among the list of stimulants for the heart, a writer in The Medical News pro nounces the powerful and poisonous drug strychnine as one of the best, if not the best. He says:

A study of its physiological action undoubtedly shows that it has objectionable features, but fortunately they can, to a certain extent, be mitigated by the conjoint use of other remedies. When a medicinal dose is administered hypodermically the heart at once responds by an increase in the strength of its movements, the arterioles contract and the blood pressure rises. Lately strychnine has been strongly recommended by sowe eminent observers as a reliable agent when other members of the group of cardiac tonics are contra-indicated, and to tho writer, who used it a great deal while resident physician in the Pennsylvania hospital, it has proved very satisfactory. The stimulation is not confined to the circulatory system, but is general, and in many respects very much resembles the effects of heat. Its characteristic effect upon the spinal cord no.doubt tones up, so to speak, through the sympathetic nerves, the digestive function, which, with the diffused stimulation of the circulatory system, must certainiy result in a supply of better blood to the nerve centers, and consequently to promotion of the vital functions.

Items for Travelers.

Without any prejudice against any other disinfectant for home use, I certainly prefer permau? ate of potash as a convenient article to carry on a journey, says a traveler. Being dry, there is no chance of spilling in transit, and as water to mix with it can be had anywhere for the asking, it takes less space than any other disinfectaut*that I know of. It is not poison, and having no smell its presence is not easily detected should it seem advisable to use it in any part of the premises outside one's own 'drooni. Landlords are often ix-ate if any odorous disinfectant is used, seeming to think that a slight is put on their domestic arrangements, and that the other visitors, if they notice disinfecting smell, will imagine that there was something wrong to make it necessary. Camphor is another disinfectant that is easy to carry, and a *^w lumps packed in one's box or laid in a bed have many times prevented the ingress of unpleasaut visitors, all too common in warm climates.

It is sometimes said that trrtvelers who go south ill return better, but that those who go well are apt to get worse. The reason is, of course, that invalids take care of themselves, but persons in good health take no care, and think in that dry, sunny climate they may run any risk with impunity.

Good Things That Lemoiirt Will Do. Many jieople know well the value of lemon juice in the cough season. Many, again, know nothing of the power wrapped up in the little yellow fruit, for the good lemon juice has done is wonderful—tus wonderful as it is simpleaud harmless. It is useful, in bronchial attacks and asthma, and also for chilblain •*. In the latter c:i"» soak the hands or feet in very hot stilt, an water, and rub them with the inside of a baked lemon for two or three nights running. The h^at and smarting will at once be allayed, aud a cure speedily effected.

Tho Pineapplo as a Digestive Agent. £b is stated that there is an element in the common pineapple similar to pepsin, and of such remarkable strength that the juice of a single pineapple will digest ten pounds of beef. It is further stated that the juice of the fruit is a very active solvent of the membrane found in diphtheria.

One Thing and Another.

Many women go up stairs with the body bent forward r.nd the chest contracted—H practice very injurious to the heart and lungs.

Artificial complexions are said to be on the- increase. Very likely since where they are once adopted the wearer soon has no other to speak of.

A simple means of chauging the air of a sick room is to open a wiudow at the to_ and opening the door, move it back and forward rapi-ly, so as 11 insure a current of fresh air from the window.

Keep a thermometer in the sitting room. One's feelings are not a correct guide to the temperature, which should not fall low 68 degs. fn such a room, while 70 degto 72 degs. is considered safe temperature.

Oneof the best things to cleanse the scpip thoroughly is to dissolve one-half teaspoonful of borax in a quart of water and apply it, rubbing it in well. Rinse thoroughly in clear water.

SOCIAL ETIQUETTE.

Th« Voloo of Polite Society and of Pleasant Dally Life. "We all know how agreeable it is in a strange place to encounter a person with a soft voice and a gracious manner of handling it. Whether well or ill advised, we are drawn to this person, and feel liko placing confidence there for we often imagine that we can tell something of the speaker's moral condition from the voice one rough to brutality, one soft to hypocritical silklnass, here with a snarly petulant cry in it, here with a clear natur 1 ring that bids and compels trust. Altnos. always, too, does this voice betray something of the social status and savoir faire for one of tho indisputable signs of good breeding is the management of the voice in speaking—A harsh guttural croak, noisy explosions, n-^al intonations, rough and strident sounis, and indistinct enunciation most frequently donating, if not positive vulgarity in birth and surroundings, at any rate great inattention to the finer points of personal care in relation to manners."

Harper's Bexar describes this voice of pleasant daily life, of polite social life, PS the voice that never tires you, that always pleases you, sweet and soothing as the whisper of the brook, the murmur of tb6 southwest wiad, neither too high, nor too low in its register, allowed exit from the throat unhindered by 'cheeks or lips teeth, never affecting you with a consciousness of tbe speaker's weariness or wetness, but always seeming the expression of a full vitality, and deceiving you if it is not also tbe expression of a sound nature

There is no young voice that' cannot, according to the authority quoted, be iw proved by ad-ice and training at the bands of one capable of giving both: this is eminently true daring the first doxen years of life bat it is true, also, until close upon tbe thirtieth year. Jh the matter of singing voices, baritones have made (or themselves tenor voices by slow determination and practice sopranos have ciosed a lower and opened a hijber register and if such miraculous work as that has been done with tbe delicate and difficult singing voir surely all that can be required of the spea* inn voice is possible every day, and all that is required is much less (ban anything of this sort.

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Railroad Time Tables,

Train rlced thus (P) denote Parlor Car* attached. Trains marked thus (S) denott

run daHy^Sundaysaccepted.

-VJLISrD.A-Iil.A. LIHBT. H. & I. DIVISION.

X.EAVK FOlt THE WKST.

No. No. No. No. No. No.

Western Express19 (S&V). Mail Train Fast Line (P&V)...

No. No. No. No. No. No.

Western Express (S&V). Mail Train Fast Line (P&V) Mail and Accommodation Fast Mall

No. 6 Nash & C. Ex* (8 & B) 5.10 a in No. *i T. H. & East Ex 11.50 a No. 4 Ch & Ind Ex"1 (S) .... ... 10.10

LEAVE FOR 80UT1I.

No. 3 Ch & Ev Ex«(8) ........ 6.C0 a No. 1 Ev & Ind Mall 3.15 No. 5 Ch & N Ex°(S&B) ..... .10.00 pre

33- & I.

ARRIVE FROM SOUTHir

No. 50 Worth Mixed 10.30 am No. 32 Mail & Ex 4.06 pm LEAVE FOR SOUTH. No. 33 Mail & Ex aiOam No. 40 Worth'n Mixed 4.0»pm

C. & IE. I.

ARRIVE FROM NORTH.

No. No. No. No.

3 Ch & Nash Kx^S) ....... 5.45 a in 4 7 A 1 0 1 5 a 1 Ch & Ev* fie ... 3.10 pm 5C & N Ex(S 0.50

LEAVE FOB NOHTn.

No. No. No. No.

6 N & O E M&By. ... 5.20 am 2 & Ch Ex 12.10 48 Watseka Aec ..... 330pm 4 Nash & Ex*(8). ...... .10.20 pm

T. H. Sc 3P-

ARKJVE KUOM NORTH WEST.

No. 4 Pass Fx ........... Il.»am No. 2 Pass Mail A Ex .... /.19 pm LEAVE FOR NORTHWEST. No. 1 Pans Mail A Ex 7.15am No 3 Pass

Ex W»pm

X. & ST. L.-BIO- 4.

GOING KAffT.

No. 10Bo»ton ANY Ex?. 1.10am No. 2 Cleveland Acc 8.02 am No. 18 South west* rn Limited*. 1.10 pm No. 8 Mall train* 3.48

GOING WEST.

No. 7 St. Louis Ex* l.lfft No. 17 Limited" H2pni No. 3 Accommodation .... 7-h No. it Mall Train* 10-09 am

Used #ucc*M«fully 15 year*. Dr. Jkws. Haas* Hog and Poultry Remedy airest* di*«M»e, prevent* incrTf""® jhefleabjmd hsalens maturity. Prtef- $1.25, SOc jter jmcfeagtf. Auk for testimonium. 8end2^*nt*tanip for "Homology" to Jos. Huas V. lmllanar polls, Ind.

SOIA AOBJfT,

JACOB BAUK, Druggist, E. cor. "th and Wabaab Ave, Terre Haute* 1d9L

MONEV!

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Lyvia Ptxkham My son, was just thmkirur how our little urotip of three generations so strongly demonstrates and Illustrates mv theory of the transmission of health from mother to child, ami what can be more striking than the fact that my vigorous health is reproduced in your darling children."

The normal life, well-being, and hnppiness of mankind depend upon the physical health and perfection of Woman. Thousands of women in all parts of the civilized world eh.-fish grateful remembrance of the Vegetable Compound, and daily bles* its dieoverer.

LYD1A E. PINKHAM'S ^ejabi-E

Is the only Po»itir« ('nrr uml l/ocitimntc ISMiictly O IVi PP N for tlio peculiar wi-aknosdes ami siilments of women. it ciircs the worst forms of Fcnuilo Oowjihiiiits. that Kcarlnr-tiowii I-Veliiicr, Wt-iik Hack, Kulliug and Displacement of the Wotnh, lntl::mnintio», Ovarian Troubles, ami all Organic Diseases of the Uterus or Womb, ami is iimihinblo to tlu Chnnjri' of l.ifo. Dissolves and expels Tumors from tho t'terus at an early stage, and checks any tendency to Cancerous Hinnor. Subdues F:\intness, K.xcilahility, Xervons Prostration, Kxtiaustid!), and strengthens aud tones the Stomach. Cures Headache, General Debility, Imlluestiou, etc., and invigorates the whole system. Eor the cure of Kidney Complaints of either sex, tli! (lompuitnil has) no rival.

All Druggists sell it as a «tauih:ril i»rtic!«v, or gent by mail, in form of Pills or Lozenges, on receipt of $l.O». LYDIA E. P1NKHAM MED. CO., LYNN. MASS.

An Illustrated book.entitled "Guide to Health and Etlquotts." by Lvriia£. Pinkhamilsofgrcat I value to ladies. We will present a copy to anyone addressing us with two 2-cent stamps.

S

THE POSITIVE CURE.

IELY BROTHERS. 68 Warren SU New York. Price 60 cts.1

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R»,r-r

WtiRmrtifh®5a

JJQTEL GLENHAM,

1.42 a 10.21 am 2.15 8.10 pin 0.04 4.OS

Fast Malil Elllugbam Acc LEAVE FOR THE EAST. Cincinnati Express "(8) New York Express (S&V). Mail and Accommodation Atlantic Express (P&V). Fast Line

No. No. No. No. No. No.

1.20 am 10.15 am 2.00 3.05 0.45 9.00 rn

ARRIVE FROM THE WEST.

No. No. No. No. No. No.

Cincinnati Express (S) New York Express (S&V). Atlantic Express (P&V). Fast Line 2 14 Effingham Ac

1.12 am 1.42 a rn 12.42 2.15 pin 6.00 pin 9.30 a

T. H. & L. DIVISION.

liKAVK FOR THE NORTH.

No. 52 South Bend Mall 6.00 am No. 54 South Bend Express 4.00 ARRIVE FROM THE NORTH. No. 51 Terre Haute Express 12.00 No. 58 South Bend Mall 7.80

IE. & T. H.

ARRIVE FROM SOUTH.

FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, Bet. 21st, and*2Sd sts., near Madison Square, EUROPEAN PLAN.

N. B. BARRY, Proprietor.

New and perfect plumbing, according to the latest scientific nrlnciples.

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g. 1t* fB*. f«... -r*- 9 f**-&. ftt* 'W*dMfc i^ 1 fHfc,

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1.20 a 1.61 am 7.16 a in 12.47 2.30 6.05 in

ARRIVE FROM THE EAST.

A STAMPEDE.

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Corralling a drovo o! hones give# you plenty of work for hour*. You don't have timo to think what the weather is. You lot everything slid* tfll the work is over. But tho cowboy is never ua-

ruvfded with a Fish Brand Pommel Slickar." .Fith one of these saddle efeats on,you cant wot if you try. Your entire wddle wll bclm the coat, and it will be dry, too. Did you ever try the Pommel Slicker? Just try one, they cost very little. Then no more colds, fevers, rheumatism, and other results to exposure of weather. Every garment stamped with Fish Brand Trade Mark. Don't accept any inferior co« when you can have the Fish Brand Slicker delivered without extra cost. Particulars ana illustrated catalogue fr«e. A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass.

HEADACHE

FOR ALL-

US5 HOFFMAN'S

HARM L"D1 HEADACHE tOWDERS. rv area Specific. Coiifn^ilnf no opto". te nrf»U«. Tli»r «r» n.tkt I'rl**,** fU. J.r if drBffUU *r l»7 Will I. -nnyw THB 7 DRt/Q CO. loral Bridge,Ont

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fiftfit&tii BuCiilpi U«Y-i tne

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Epps's Cocoa

HKKAKKASf,

"By a thorough kuowlmltf tbe natural

wwu propertK„. Co«oa, Mr Epp* haa provideii onr breakfaat tabiea with a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy doctor*' bills. It la by the Judlciou* u*e of such article* of diet that a constitution may be gradually built np until strong enough to re*i«t every tendency to disease. Honar*^S«of xubtie maladies are floating around ua ready to attack wherever there ft a weak point. We

Made simply with boiling wat«r or milk. Bold only In half-pound Uns, by^f]wer«, labeled th us: .JAM ES KPpfi CO-

HomowiNitliic Chemixts, jUonrtoa, Kng.

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T"* V?TT\T"P'C Teaches the StuA N I N KCHOOL

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in railroad service. Send for

cpp» T"*/"*"ft A TITf\rcircular*. VAI^E A S 5 S

MALYD0R

GfSTLEMIH'S FRIES0.

Otlir VtfTif 'i -iv st# iff' if Xt0im ttM.ittain I orrtM** tret to 4'!»}•_*. ftmrit ut any ntUim* for WAl.t n'"* BAJtrrtf CO.. tMMfiOHI». at OUUCK & CO.. Droflfiists. TERBE HAUTE. IND.

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Botb mxm,*11 »***. I» p»nie cavMMmt*

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