Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 42, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 11 April 1891 — Page 3

SCIENCE AND PROGRESS.

THINGS SURE TO PLEASE ENTERPRISING MEN AND WOMEN.

Modern Stage KfT«ct)» Tliut Are I'te to OlMiiverlcx of Science, Especially to the VarfotiH Mrniifeatatloiisof Electricity—A

Pretty 8l»c« Trick Explained.

A very pretty stage trick was recently introduced in ,1 play at a Paris theater, where certain roles were exhibited, which, when lifted from the chest in which they were contained, shorn: with a golden or silvery light, and were, apparently self luminous. This beautiful effect, explains Popular Science News, was obtained by placing a powerful electric light underneath the Stage and reflecting it* ravs through the

A r'KKTTV STACK THICK.

Bta^e and into the chest through openings provkkd for 11n purpose. The chest was filled with a light, thin, yellow gauze, which, when lifted out, reflected the light in all directions in a manner analogous to the illuminated fountains and jets of water which were hiicIj a feature of the last Paris exposition.

To obtain a nil very or "moonlight" effect, blue fj nu/,u wan substituted, and a piece of blue glass placed before the electric light. When the scene was finished, the robes were replaced, the "traps" in the stage and the client closed, and the client could then be lifted and removed from the stage, mak inn the illusion complete.

Forked Lightning.

As to the term "forked lightning," the representations of it given by artists, which resemble the so-called thunderbolts placed In the hand of Jupiter, are quite absurd. Popular Science News tells that the flash when photographed exhibits itself ami line which is continually changing its course, and is tlescnlH'd as "intensely crooked" by a very'careful observer. It never proceeds for a time in a straight line, and then, turning at a sharp angle, going on farther in an equally straight line, as is represented in pictures. The forking of it is very marked, and this occurs by side flashes parsing olT from the main track, and eventually losing themselves like the ramifications of tree roots. Occasionally the lightning appears to start from a point from which several (lashes diverge in different direct ions.

To Whiten Iron.

To render iron as white and beautiful as silver The Jewelers' Circular directs to take ammoniaeal salt in powder and mix It with an equal quantity of quicksilver dissolve in cold water ami mix well. When done immerse the red heated metal in this bath and it will become as white as silver. Be careful not to burn the article by overheating.

Home .Undo Scales.

Among the things not generally known is the fact that a capital pair of scales may IN manufactured out of a simple piece of string, thick or thin, as may .come first, to hand This is how it is done:

Drive nvo nails a yard apart into tho edgeof a shelf, say in lie pantry or kitchen. To hoc attach he ends of a piece of string a yard and a half long, lirst tying in tho middle a good .sized knot, long enough to be easily seen. A sheet of millboard cut in two will furnish the scales, each of which you must, .suspend by four subsidiary bits of string fr«tn the principal eord on eit her side of the knot, and each at nine inches distance from it. Tho central portion of the string which I wars the knot will then take a horizontal position, auti will Ik eighteen inches in length. Fasten a square of cardboard or of stout paper behind tIds horizontal portion, and make a mark in it the shape of an arrow, indicating the exact position of tho knot when

THK WKIOtltVO MACHINE.

your scab's are not in use. If you now place any article, sav a chicken, upon one of the scales, the Ivdanco is disturbed, and the ccntral |iort-ion of the ami assuming a more or less oblique direction, the knot will be shift*l from its position in fr^gpt of the indicating arrow.

To bring it ktck to such position you must gradually load tho opposite scale with weights of known denominations, and when the equilibrium is reestablished and the knot conies onee more exactly in front of the arrow, the total of the weights placed in the second scale will indicate that of your chicken. Scales of this kind may be made of any kind of cord, from pack thread to sash line, according to the nature of the articles whose weights arts to Iw .isc-crt-nined. These scales are sensitive and quite exact enough t« satisfy ordinary household requirement*.

Scientific llrcTitle*.

Japanese lacquer ts being tried at the Brooklyn navy yard with a view to the protection of the steel hulls of the new navy from the corrosive action of sea a'«r and the fouling of the bottoms by rnari ne growt lis.

Mr. Bert helot has proved by experiments that there is no foundation for the belief that the earth absorbs and retains more carbonic oxide than other gasea.

A representative of the Scott Stamp and Coin company, of New York, said to The Illustrated American recently that "there nevt«r was any ISM dollar that dies were cat in that year, similar in all rv*peels, mvc the date, to the dies of 1S0&, Is certain. It Is also certain that these dies were destroyed in IS®. But no dollars or half dollars were issued in that year, nor were they imncd at any time by governmental suthorttv

THE CURIOSITY SHOP.

An Old Superstition That Hu Not Entirely Died Out. Seven was considered a holy number, and throughout the Scriptures it is frequently used as such. The seventh son of a seventh son was formerly looked upon as a natural doctor who possessed miraculous powers of healing the sick, and could, in fact, frequently effect a cure by merely touching the sufferer. Even at the present day this piece of superstition has not died out, and occasionally one may still meet with these so called natural doctors, who fully believe in the marvellous powers ascriljed to them. Among the Gaboon tribes there is a superstitioh that on the seventh day after the birth of a child the woman who is nursing the mother is in danger of "being converted into an animal by some evil spirit if the necessary steps are not taken to prevent her metamorphosis. According to a popular superstition seven years of bad luck may be expected by the unfortunate person who chances to break a mirror.

There is a -general belief with most people that they undergo some change every seven years man's life is popularly divided into seven ages, and formerly it was supposed that seven and nine were capable of exerting much subtle influence overmen, the product of these two numbers being particularly powerful in this respect. Thus, sixty-three years was called the grand climacteric, aud that age was considered a very important crisis in a man's life. Women, on the other hand, were supposed to be more susceptible to the influence of six. Probably it was this belief in the supposed influence of uine and seven on men's lives which originally gave rise to the custom of granting leases for multiples of seven or nine years. Long leases are granted for ninety-nine or nine hundred and ninetynine years, instead of a hundred or a thousand years, and there is, we believe, apiece of superstition that otherwise the hundredth or the thousandth year would be under the influence of the evil one.

Corruptiong of .Speech.

Don't

is like dropping the final of the

present participle, a vulgarity of people of culture. Thuckcray aud Anthony Trollope constantly place it, along with

don't

for "chariot,"

yallow

for "tassel,"

A State 'free.

According to one estimate reported upon on Arbor Day, 181K). 7,107 school districts planted 27,007 rees. With a view to arous ing an interest in the subject of arboriculture it was suggested by the state superintendent of public instruction that a vote be taken in the schools throughout the state to determine upon a state tree, to the end that children might be led to consider and discuss the different species most to their liking. The inspectors of electiou iu many cases failed to oltoy the instructions thai were given them, ami the voto was not returned i:i full. In many cases only the majority was given, so that it is not possi* ble from the ret urn «to state the exact num ler of votes cast, for each variety, but the general result is alwut as follows: The sugar maple received 4'i per cent, of the entire vote cast, the oak 25 per cent, and the elm Ift percent. The remaining 16 per cent, were divided among sonut thirty-five dif ferent varieties of rees.

t'ncle Remiin.

Inter-Ocean furnishes this brief bio graphical sketch of Joel Chandler Harris, who was born In Georgia in 1848. He learned the printer's trade and afterward studied aud practiced law, and became an editor of the Atlanta Constitution. He contributed largely to newspapers and magazines and soon became well known as a writer of dialect tales. Among his books may be mentioned "Uncle Remus: His Songs and Sayings," "Nights with Uncle Remus" and "Mingo and Other Sketches." His rendering of negro dialect and sketches of negro character are almost unrivaled.

Soperntltion Held by Queen Victoria.

It is interesting to note that her majesty, the queen, openly avows that she is not "above" believing in certain omens, as is shown by Dr. Krause, who quotes from a passage in the Weiaer Ailgemeine Zcitung: "By command of Queen Victoria, Mr. Martin, director of the Institute for the Blind, has attended to the making of a cradle for the newly born child of Princess Beatrice of Bat ten berg. The cradle is to be made entirely by blind men and women. The queen firmly believes that objects made by blind people bring lock."

The Spaa lull

Buccaneering romances teem with referto the Spanish Haiti, yet how many people nowadays know what or where the Spanish Main was? Main is a contraction for mainland, and was applied to the part of the north coast of South America washed by the Caribbean Tho name is a relic of the time when that part of the oon Unent belonged to Spain, and was used in opposition to the West India islands, which also then belonged to that country

r-

ain't

like it."

for

"am not," or "is not," in the mouths of their highly bred characters. The late Prince Consort used it. I recollect—quoting from memory from his "Life," by Sir T. Martin—that, speaking of the Princess Beatrice as nn infant, the prince wrote, "She

Other corruptions are, or were, 'cm for "them," 17awyul for "Harriet,"

chawyut

for "yellow,"

don't

tosscl

Lunnonfor

for "Rome,"

"London,"

rjoold

Roome

for "gold,"

obLcegc

for

"oblige." The first Duke of Wellington, as I have been told,-always said

obleegc.

It certainly does grate upon the ear to hear

for "doesn't," and yet we find

it used in the "Pickwick Papers," in the song which Mr. Wardle sings on Christmas eve at the Manor Farm, Dingley Dell: And love that's too strong, why. It ilon't last long As many luvvo found to their pain.

In East Angl ia, we say "you don't ought" and "ho didn't, ought," which, though true, is slightly ungrainmatieal —Notes and Queries.

The French Acudeiuy.

The French academy is one of five academies, aud the highest, constituting the Institute of France. It was fouuded in 1633 by the Cardinal Richelieu, and reorganized in 1810. It is composed of 40 members, elected for life, after personal application aud the submission of their nomination to the head of the state. It meets twice weekly, and is "the highest authority on everyt hing appertaining to the niceties of the French language, to grammar, rhetoric and poetry, and the publication of the French classics." A chair in tho academy is the highest ambition of most literary Frenchmen. The other academies of the Institute of France are: Tho Academy of Inscriptions and Belles-Lett res, with 40 members Academy of Sciences, with 50 members Academy of Fine Arts, with 40 members (as follows: painting, 14 sculpture, S architecture, 8 engraving, 4 musical composition, f»). and Academy of Moral and Political Science, with 40 members. All mem Iters are elected for life.

fEKRE HAtJTE SATURDAY EVENING A TU

YOUNG FOLKS' COLUMN.

INSTRUCTION AND ENTERTA1NMEMT FOR GIRL AND BOY READERS.

gome Facts About tbe Inhabitants of Arabia—The Settled Tribes of Arabs. The Bedouins or Wandering Tribes.

Their Good and Bad Qualities.

Few nations have changed so little as the Arabs. As their fathers were, so they are. Xet even in the desert the children are

AN ARAB GIRL.

taught, generally by the mother, to read and write. The Arab is of medium height, muscular make, and brown complexion he is by nature quick, sharp witted and fond of poetry, while earnestness and pride look out of his keen and glowing eyes. The best of them are noted for courage, temperance and hospitality, although these good qualities are often marred by a spirit of sanguinary revenge. Most of the Arabs lead settled lives, but many of them are wanderers, living in tents with their horses and camels, and holding very loose notions as to the rights of property.

These Bedouins, as wandering Arabs are called, despise the settled tribes, scorning as they do to be tied down to the soil, even where such bondage would make them wealthy. The Arab is generally kind toward his wife and children, although some of them, it may be, love their beautiful horses almost more than their little ones. An Arab girl of the better class is, as a rule, gentle and thoughtful in appearance, but with her full share of the prejudices and peculiarities of her people.

Our Birthday.

I've a secret to telLyou, Dolly Let me whisper it in your ear Tomorrow will be our birthday—

Your birthday and mine, my dear! As soon as the "sun peeps over Tho hill where the blackberries grow, I'll be eight years old, my Dolly,

And you'll be one you know.

DOLLY AND

Don't you remember, Dolly— I'm perfectly sure you doWhen I woke last birthday morning

Tho first thing I saw was you? You sat on the edge of a workbox. Waiting, you lovely child. And when you saw I was looking

You stretched out your arms and smiled.

And you're just as lovely as ever, Though your curls are very thin, And your poor logs wobble sadly.

And your left eye's fallen in And if tomorrow morning Another doll comes here We'll bo kind to her, but she shall not

Supplant yon, Dolly dear. —Little Men and Women.

A Memory Contest.

The game here described sharpens the wits nnd induces habits of observation. Tho Home Queen tells how to play it. Let a table be prepared in an adjoining room, or in a hall, with a number of small articles placed upon it—hooks*.pocket knives, cards, ornaments, knitting needles, pens and pencils—all the paraphernalia that goes to make up the living room. Let the players pass into the room, one by one, slowly and taking a good look at the table and its contents then let them pass Into the other room, and, in five minutes, write down the names of all the things that they can remember. The person who has charge calls "Time!" and then each one tells how many things he has remembered. After that each one reads the list, and amusement and amazement are the result. One person will remember something that no one else noticed, while almost every one will have been struck with some one thing, and include that in his £r her list.

Care should be taken that only

familiar

objects should lx used, and not less than twenty-five articles should be shown. N» one, to my knowledge, has ever remember ed mot% than twenty or twenty-two, while the majority remember even less.

California Bear Story.

"I never fooled a bear but onoe in my life," said an old California hunter. "I was hunting quail with a light shotgun one day when I suddenly met a very large bear. I was willing to puss without speaking, but bruin was mad about something and bristled ap for a fight. So I let him have both barrels and then cot for a tree.. The shot dazed him for a minute, and then he gave chase, and pretty soon came clawing up after me. There was a long, projecting limb on one side, and when I saw him oomin t? I got out to the extreme aid, although it bent like a reed under my weight. Out. came the bear after me, slowly and carefully, and with every step the branch bent lower. When the bear got within two yards of me I was within ten feet of the ground. Then I dropped down, ami as the bear shot up twenty feet in the air I made for home as fast as I*«mM ran."

Her Little gketUuMi Shawl. 1 kaaw

a little maiden.

And winter, spring, and fall.

A little Shetland ah* wU

She «ay» if all the birds staid north— The Masfbto, wee thta^l That some would soon wear tiny shawls

Tadted gaderaeath their wines! -St. Nicholas

PHYSIOLOGY AND HYGIENE.

Fiie Ether and Opium Treatment for Small|iox Described by Frcnch Doctors. Dr. Mosse, of the Montpelier Society of Mcdicine and Surgery, relates his experience in treating smallpox with ether aud opium in combination, the result beiugso excellent that he strongly recommends the treatment. Other French practitioners have arrived at some important conclusions in regard to this matter, among which are the following, as stated in the Paris edition of The Herald:

The medication by ether and opium is capable of having a favorable influence on smallpox and of attenuating or checking the eruption. Its favorable action appears to manifest itself specially on the purulent transformation of tho vesticles, which it either checks or prevents.

Second—This medication, like all others, is usually powerless in cases of hemorrhagic small pox.

Third—The association of ether and opium is the fundamental condition of this medication. These two substances can be given in quite high doses from the start without any danger (ten to fifteen centigrammes of extract of opium eight, ten or twelve grammes of ether, or eight, ten or twelve tablespoonfuls of sirup of ether evtry twenty-four hours). It is necessary to administer them in sufficiently large doses in order to obtain the therapeutical result sought for. The urine should be analyzed in order to watch the condition of the kidneys.

What to Do When One Faints. A phj'sician is credited with the following plain directions: When one faints he should be placed in a recumbent position, with his head low if he is pale and bloodless, but high if red in the face, and every •tight fitting garment should be loosened. Then he should be fanned in the open air ,t by a window, cold water should be sprinkled over him, and his temples bathed \vith vinegar,, ether or cologne, while ammonia, burnt feathers or singed hair are held beneath his nose, aud his nostrils are tickled to make him sneeze. If the faint be a deep one, an enema of vinegar may be administered, the feet and hands bathed in warm water, the soles of the feet chafed, and mustard applied over the heart. Upon coming out of the faint the patient should still preserve for a time the reclining or recumbent position, and should drink .a little cold water, some brandy nnd water in the proportion of ateaspoonful of brandy in a tablespoonful of water, or a little aromatic spirits of ammonia, ten drops in a tablespoonful of water.

The Cause of Homely Necks. "The scrawny necks on American \von en," said a man dressmaker, "are duo as much to the high and tight collars which they, have beeu wearing during the past six years as to anything else. The fashion was started by the Princess of Wales, who has a scar on her neck, and it was eagerly taken up here. Street gowns and jackets were fitted with tight velvet, cloth, or braided collars, and these pressed tho neck so closely that when women took them off after having been in a hot room they not infrequently found them saturated with perspiration. There is no better way of reducing the ilesh than this. A man can p,',t a worsted or flannel band around his w«iist, take violent exercise and reduce his g'fth under the band rapidly and surely. The high collars which women wore had prtfcisely this effect. Now that they have »-pome distinctly unfashionable I look for an improvement in the necks of New York ivomeii."—New York World.

Concerning Length of Days. Dr. Humphreys, of England, having carefully collected information concerning 900 persons over eighty years of age (including seventy-four centenarians), finds that vigorous mental labor appears, other things being equal, to predispose to length of days, a capacity for prolonged mental strain arguing great brain power. Happily old age is not often accompanied with dementia, although frequently some evidence of childishness appears. He notes also that there is only one instance of death of a centenarian from cancer. It seems that the liability diminishes from about forty-five to fifty-five onward, and that after seventy there is but little to fear in this direction.

A Lurking Place for Typhoid Hacilll. The Medical Journal advises the careful examination and washing of celery before it is used. Many cultivators force the growth of the vegetable with night soil, which is full of typhoid fever bacilli. The plaut's construction is such as to make it peculiarly apt to hold portions of this soil.

The Excellence of IU\v Oyitters. An eminent French physician claims that raw oysters are the most nourishing food in existence. Tftey are excellent for all cases of impaired digestion, exert a strengthening influence upon the nervous organs, and the liquor they contain is a valuable tonic.

SOCIAL ETIQUETTE.

The Proper Thing in Oreeting—Coldness and Hauteur Quite Oat of Date.

Cordiality in greeting is now the proper thing. To quote a New York exchange: "Lassitude, languor and indifference have gone to the wall and in their place are graciousness, gush and welcome. With both arms outstretched your hostess greets you, beaming with all the effulgence that nature will permit. She is glad to see you. glad all over, aud she shows it as openly and undisguisedly as if she bad not been taught for the past few years to conceal her affections, likes and dislikes, under a cold society hauteur. The woman who understands her business greets yon as if she has not another friend in the world, and has no wish to make any beyond your own sweet self."

A Wise Way of Teaching Manners.

Yonr wise mother does not expect perfection in a day, and so, according to Harper's Bazar, she does not begin with exhaustive attention to the minutiae of etiquette, knowing that way lies the danger of making her boys prigs and her girls self conscious society misses before they are in their teens. She lays down as the laws of her household the broad principles of respect for elders, reverence for women, kindliness for all and she permeates the home atmosphere with her finest conceptions of tbe deference and sympathy doe from soul to aouL Her children very early delight to place a chair for grand mother and to save fathers teps. They learn to be proud of that restraint which enables them to keep self in tbe background, and to defer to brotLer and sister. It never enters their beads that servants are k» worthy of respect than other people. They are unabashed in tbe presence of wealth and poweras they are tender toward suffering and poverty. When she teaches them from time to time her code of manners—and she

TSi

younjr mother,

so strict,

VL

run daily,

ays accepted

-V.A.IETID^XiI.A. x/msriE. T. H. & I. DIVISION.

I.EAVK FOK THE WKST.

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

9 Western Express1:1(S&V). 5 Mad I Train 1 Fast Line (P«ftV). ..... 21 7 Fast Mall l.'t Effingham Ace .......

No. 52 South Bend Mall No. 54 South Bend Express ARRIVE FROM THE NORTH. No. 51 Terrc Haute Express No. 58 South Bend Mail

0

"OH, IF MOTHER WERE CKI.Y ALIVE!"

All through life she Ins known a mofho -Y, \vntch!Yi3 c-::v.

ami trains f-tronjrth hot slowly. S!:t-

worldsto do I'vcrythinir lor her precious babv. but cainio-:

and dues not sympathize with her. as mother .-

That baby has unfolded in the youne mother's heart, new emotions She has a living responsibility, ami requires strength to enable her to perform a loving duty. At such a time, too mueh cure cannot be taken, ami the Vegetable Compound is indispensable.

LYDIA E. POM IK HAM'S

Is tin-only K*ONitiv€ Cure aud I.(ffitimatc Slrnictlv O MPOIJN for i!it peculiar weaknesses and ailment* of women. It mres the worst, forms of Female "oin)il:uiits, (lint liouriatr down IVelin::. We: r.aefc, Falling and Displacement of the Womb, Inthunniaiion, Ovarian TroiibW, a iI Organic I Houses of tlie t'terus or Womb, and is invaluable to the Cliuujre of Life. 1N solves anil expels Tumors from the Uterus at nn early stage, and elieeks any tende ("aiu-erons Humor. Subdues Faintness, Kxeitubilitv, Nervous Prostration', K\!a aud streiiurtliens and lines tbe Stomach. 'ures Headache.(ieuernl I vliillty, Iniili' etc.. and Invigorates'the whole systei :. For theeurc of Kidney Comjilaiuts of t!:j' haw no rival.

All Di-iiegisis s:ll it as a «»rmjcl is\0 or rent bv nmll. form .'i!' ?,oac:iges, on rccei .t of r£l.QO. LVD1A E. PINKHAM" MED. CO.. LYNN. MASS.

An illustrated book, cr,titled ''Guide Health and itiquette," by lyriin E. Pinkham, is or great I value ladies, Y/e will present a copy to anyone addressing us with two 2-cent stamps.

O S I I E

Railroad Time Tables.

Train rked thus (P) denote Parlor Car* attached. Trains marked thus (8) denote

bus (fl) Sundi

1.42 am 10.21 a ni 2.15 pm 3.10 0.04 4.05

I.EAVK FOK THK KAST.

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

12 Cincinnati Express (S) (5 New York Express (S&V). 4 Mall and Accommodation •. 20 Atlantic Express (P&V). 8 Fast Line* 2

1.20 am 1.51 am 7.15 a 12.47 2.30 5.05

ARHIVE KKOM TIIK KAST.

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

t) Western Express (S&V). 5 Mail Train I Fast Line (P&V) 2 1 8 Mail and Accommodation 7 Fast Mall

ARRIVE FROM TUB WEST. Cincinnati Express (S) Express (s«feV).

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

12

0.00 a 4.00

12.IX) ni 7.30

3E3- & T. ZHI. ARRIVE FROM SOUTH.

No. (i Nash & e. F.x* (8 B)... No. 2 T. H. fc East Ex No. 4 Cb & Ind Ex^tS)

5.10 a ill 1 l.oO am 10.t)

J.KAVE FOR .SOUTH.

No. Jt Ch Ev Ex«(H) No. 1 Ev & Ind Mall No. 5 (Jh A N Ex*(S&B) ....

0.00 a in U5 10.00 tn

33- & I.

ARRIVK FROM SOUTH.

So. 50 Worth Mixed .... N 3 2 a & E I.KAVK FOR SOUTH. N a E No. 40 Worth'n Mixed

8.10 am 4.05

C. & 33. I. AKIUVE FROM NOHTH.

No. 3 Oh & Nash Ex«(S ... ... 5.45 a in No. 17 Act* 10.15 am No. I Oh A Ev Kx ....... '{.10 pm No. 5 O N Ex (SAB) ».50

I.KAVK FOR JCOKTJ1.

No. Ji N A Exi»AB) .... V20am No.

-2

A Oh Ex 12.10

No. *8 WaUseka Aec 8.30 pm No. I Nash A Ex*(8) ....... 10.20 rn

T. SC. &Z IP-

akrivf. FROM SOUTHWEST.

No. 4 Pan# Fx 11.30 a in No. Paw Mall A Ex 7.10 J.BAVEFOU NORTH WKST. No. I Pas* Mail A Ex ... 7.15 am No UPasaEx JS.lopm

X. & 8T. L.-BIG- 4. GOIRGKAST. No. 10Bo»ton AN Y'EX*. 1.10am No. 2 Cleveland Acc. ...... 8.02 am No. 18 Southwestern Limited41. 1.10 pm No. 8 Mall train* 3.48

OOISO WEST.

No. 7 St. Loul* Ex« No. 17 Limited* .......... 1.10 pm No. 3 Accommodation ...... 7Jwpm No. 9 Mall Train" .10.00 am

Used nuccexftfull 15 yearn. Dr. Jo*. Haa*4 Hog and Poultry Remedy Arrest* dJ*©a*e, prevent disease. Increase* the fl«*h and ba»tetw nul urlty. Price t2-50,11.25, ftc p«r package. A»k for testimonial*, tie nd 2-cent staJiip for "Hojrology" to Jon. Haa*, V. 8., Indianapoll*. Ind.

mix Miner,

JACOB BAUB, Druggist,

S. E. eor. 7th and Wabaah Ave, TerreHaatOtind.

MONEY!

tfttrrrm

W« mm M«*.

t.. .vteo in rtxyllw. A»y

r»«i «•*•*«•*. K»tT«»»•«*».

tfnk.

To*

•til

*a

perwMfccMl •psraxta.

n^attftwa'lW* »«!*wi'^sit. na fismMi

css^istvtvik

i*

S?io nr.v, would tiiedo hvavs tllii

J!V i-

lull, I i-ll.

Price 60 eta.

JJOTEL GLENHAM,

FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, Bet. 21st. and'22d ste., near Madison Square. EUROPEAN PLAN.

N. B. BARRY, Proprietor.

New and perfect plumbing, according te the latest scientific principles.

SELLERS' LIVER PILLS

lOnr 100 ttross sold by «m«_druggist.. Tho/ Ihivaoo oqual for enrlnB Dlndnest, He^djsohe, fContlroneu.Matari*,LiTtrComplaint, F«vcr gue. Indigestion, Backache, and all

VOSuraWM. JBKIErW, lilTfl VT \T fond Ague, Indigestion, Backache, and all JUitr and Stomach tronblM. Thoy Never /Fail. Sold by alt dru(orf«ta and country more I keepers. Bolters Co., Prop's, PtUsbarfh, Pa.

PACKAGE

PROFH ARRIS1

PASTILLES

1.20 a 10.15 a in 2.00 3.05 K.45 in tkOO

FOR THE CURE OF

1.12 am 1.42 am 12.42 2.15 5.00 0.30 am

New York AtlantlcExpress^P&V). Fast Line •*.

20 8 2 14 Effingham Ae.

T. H. & I* DIVISION.

LEAVE FOR THE NORTH.

WEAK MEN

(VITALLY WEAK). Made so by tw eio.c applieallon to bunlncKSor study: severe mclitnl strain or grief 8EXIAL KXt'K98B8lnwlddlollfo,orTlclo«sbnlili«eonlnieuii In youth, lurill' UEU ARK VICTIMS TO NKHVOI8 IlKIIIUTYor

WcAlv Mtll

KXIIAIHTIOX, WANTIMl MKAKNKfiS IN-

VOIiUXTAIIV M1SRKH nllh KAItl.Y IIKCA In YOUMI and 111lDLKAdkUt lack of vim, vigor, and strength,with sexual organs Impaired and weakened premature!/ In approaching old nge. WHEN WE SAY CURE r0pt'lTMAHKNTl'«KH«I.I5 In many thoimnnd ciwen Iroatcd and cured In past twelve years ••T* A* evldenco of our faith in Prof. Harri*

MP X2C CsOLtTBLE MEDICATED PASTILLES* 1-1.. a tmni «»*».•

IV Vlf DV

fm a WO oder eight dnys trial AIIBOIiUTKLY FRKK. HIAI.au men, young or old, sintering from this prevalent trouble should send their address so wo can furnish questions to be answered, that we may know tho true condition of each case and prensro medicine to efleet a prompt oure. l.ocated In New York (after 12 rears at 8t. I-pul.), wa offer all a chance to be cured by the celebrated Pastille Treatment. THE HARRI8 REMEDY CO., Mfg. Ohemlstsv vvvinifAff flTREST. KEW YORK.

ESTAB'D iaTA. INCORPP 1890. CAPITAL 055,000.

This Trade Mark la on

The Best Waterproof Coat

In the world.

p«nd for lllustratart Catalogue. Jfrss.

1H.30 a 1.05

F0n ALL-

yEADACHE

U~" HOFFMAN'S

HAR."'.. HCA0ACHE wvDcns. -y nro Specific. t'anlslflnf opl""t l»r®" r.'ir",Ur*. Tlier ir» a vll'. l'rlM!t)£ eta. hj iSragglats or by

I.

9 "VWcftr .«:«i»iiww tub 0RU0 co 55 Mali St., Buffalo. N.Y., and' ~-''onai BridgeOnfc

OKATKFUI^-CO HMIBTWO.

Epps's Ctcoa

"By a tboitfti^b hnowb-dm- the nataral law* which govern the of dice** tlon and nutrition, and a •*refill application of the fine proper!le* well-selected Wiuu VI *UC MM Cocoa, Mr Epp# ban provided our breakfast table* with a delicately flavored beverage which may save an many heavy doctor*' bill*. It is by the Judicious use of such article* of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of *ubtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there fit a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortiflftd with pnre blood and a groperly nourished frame."—Civil Service

Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only In half-pound tine, by grocera, labeled thus: JAMES KPP8 CO-

Homoeopathic Chemists. London, Kpg.

VALE Nil N E'SSS

Oar IVrfi-mU»o

then starts them In railroad service. Send for

SCHOOL OF

TELEGRAPHYf«jWs£

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with tK»Ule.

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