Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 45, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 May 1891 — Page 7
SOMETHING WORTH KNOWING.
^Hon KIIv»t .'ipiKin May Heronic. a Verf Srrvlci-ublc I.arynrokcope. Do you require. Kay. for the examination of a cnnc. of sore, throat, a means of brilliantly illuminating tire interior of the mouth? If bo, here is a methoil of procuring ou the instant a very brilliant light, 'just suited for that purpose.
Holtl a tablespoon behind a candle, the concave side toward the flame, and yon will find that you have an excellent re-
A NOVKL LARYNGOSCOPE.
fleetor, enabling you not only to concentrate the luminous rays, but to direct these with ea.se and precision to the part of the throat you desire to examine.
A silver spoon will al.so enable you to study the vct'y curious properties of curved mirrors. Hold the hollow Bide before your face, and In the concave mirror thus extemporized you will nee your features, upside down. Turn the spoon round, and its opposite, cot'-^ii utiiik a convex mirror, will show your face, this time ri«ht side uppermost, but lengthened to abnormal proportions} narrow at top, but broad at bottom, ariil decidedly more of a caricature than a portrait. Hy turning the spoon horizontally, still with the convex side toward you, your features will be reproduced in aH(|uatfttul swollen form, giving you a notion how you niiwht look if you were hanjied. The surface of a well polished silver dish cover is a still better medium wherein to study he.se distorted reflections, many of which are irresistibly funny.
Magnet /.» ion ste««l flu ten. The Stationary Knu'meer tells that some experiments recently made in the magnetization of steel plates gave some curious ro.snlt.H by showing that poles cduld not be formed at ri^'lit. aiiKles to the plane of the disk? but the poles formed were arrattKud as If the mamietizinn force had acted along a diurnal line across the plate if the plate was square, but if the plate was oblotitf or a rertanj^lo the poles formed were parallel with the longer sides. A number of heso plates. wero placed together and magnetized. So long as they remained together a regular distribution or magnetism existed, but when separated the polariry indicated that, the magnetism was aloni^ the diagonal. These experiments may serve.toexplain the irregular records Of some testing in^l rumcnls that liavo been used extensively.
Tl,i« Cheap 1'in'l l*rilloiu.
Among lhe latent at tempted solutions of the clump fuel problem, says The Commercial Advertiser. N the method of a German inventor, who propo-.es to manufacture gas by dropping a stmiVi of crude petroleum through a blast of cold air from a foree pump The
k:is
A
thus obtained will
boconllneil in a regular cylinder open at One end, where it will be lighted. This produfces an intensely hot flame of several fe,K in length. Hy means of this flame the i/ventor proposes to heat boi'ers, anil ho /maintains that the heating of large blocks, can thus iMs reiluced very considerably.
Sul»!W|ue«»ua Kxploslon.
During tlii tmusual .severity of the past winter iu uort hern Kuropp the Seine and other Frond, rivers were frozen over, and .oil the return of milder weather small ice gorges formed, much to the dismay of the Frenchmen, unaccustomed as they were to Htieh formations, which in this country are of almost annual occurrence. Nitro-glyee-. 'rim* and other powerful explosives were used to break up the ice, with fairly good su.ooe.HH.
The illustration is 'pied from an instau-t-uneous photograph of one of the preliminary e\peninent.s, where a cartridge of
My,
OOHKU FltOM AN INST A XT ANKOCS PHOTOUllAl'lI melinite was explode*! under the surface! of a
sirvam
of water, to judge of the effect
whu-h it would have upon a mass of ice. 5 The pho!«grajU\ was first published in l,«a Nature, ami has mvntly been commented ujH-n
in
i'opuiar Science News as interest-
ing. W: .vs showing the form of tho water column and the tnark'^iiy vertical actions of t!ic exphwion.and also as a fine example of an instantaneous photograph, which must
h.ivo uh'h obtained
irnder pocn
dirticuli comiisions.
Marly
A Natnrsl ax* RrUttng to Retting.
There is a n.'i'uraS law relating to belthi£, mvs The Industrial World, which is not generaUy known. »xit which i* never their** of vaine in practice. The hag or ndlutsjon of st beU i.« a* the square of the mitiiit'r dejcreew which it wtem on the pulley For example, a belt that covers two thirds of the circumference of a pulley requim» four time# line (wwer to make it •lip ha it dtrf* when it covers only one third of the Mine pulley
Quicker TtMtn Llgbtnlns.
"Quicker than lightning" is a phrase colloquially used to express the maximum of rapidity. But, according to a contemporary, electricity itself is outstripped by that old fashioned machine, the human body, by which it appears power can, so to speak, be generated in the brain, transmitted through the nerves and developed in the muscles in an infinitesimal fraction of a second- It is stated that a pianist, in playing a presto of Mendelssohn, played 5,595 notes in four minutes and three seconds. The striking of each of these, it has been estimated, involved two movements of the finger, and possibly more. Again, the movements of the wrists, elbows and arms can scarcely be less than one movement for each note As twenty-four notes were played each second, and each involves three movements, we would have seventytwo voluntary movements per second. Again, the place, the force, the time, and the duration of each of these movements was controlled.
All these motor reactions were conditioned upon a knowledge of the position of each finger of each hand before it was moved while moving it, as well as of the auditory effects to force and pitch, all of which involves at least equally rapid sensory transmissions. If we add to this the ivork of the memory in placing the notes in their proper position, as well as the fact that the performer at the same time participates in the emotions the selection describes, and feels the strength and weakness of the performance, we arrive at a truly bewildering network of impulses, coursing along at inconceivably rapid rates. Such estimates show, too, that we are capable of doing many things at once.
An Ancient Race.
Of the builders of ancient mounds and other remarkable earthworks found in this country we have no real knowledge, but popular belief and scientific theory alike attribute those works to a race preceding the American- Indian. Even the Indians themselves appeared to regard them as the work of "some very ancient people. The relics of carved stone, elegantly formed pottery and bronze, silver and copper ornaments found in explored mounds indicate a skill and degree of civilization not found among the Indians by the first white settlers of the country. Tha Inter-Ocean quotes a writer on this subject to the effect that the monuments left by the mound 'builders "indicate that the ancient population was numerous and widely spread, as shown front the number and magnitude of their works, and the extensive range of their occurrence that it wtis essentially homogeneous in customs, habits, religion and government, ns appears from the great, uniformity which the works display, not only in respect to position and form, but in all minor particulars and that the features common to all the remains identify them as appertaining to a single grand sys--tem, owing its origin to a family of men moving in the same general direction, acting under common impulses and influenced by similar causes." Archaeologists find in the mounds evidence of a very different sttite of society from that among the Indians. The Indians were a uomadie race, subsisting by hunting the mound builders were-apparently nn agricultural'people.
Many of the mounds seem to have been erected, as military works these would only have been needed by an agricultural people.
Alcohol mill Tobacco.
Oliver Wendell Holmes remarks in one, of his books: The older I grow "the less use I make of alcoholic stimulants—in fact, I hardly meddle with them at all, except a glass or two of champagne occasionally. I'find that by far the best borne of all drinks containing alcohol. I think, as one grows older, less food, especially less animal food, is required.
What do I say to smoking? 1 cannot grudge an old man his pipe, but 1 think tobacco often does a j^ood deal of harm to the health—to the eyes especially, to the uervous system generally, producing headache, palpitatioti and trembling, I myself gave it -up many years ago. Philosophically speaking, I think self narcotization and self alcoholizat ion are rat Ink ignoble substitutes for uu listurlK'd fcelf consciousness and .unfettered self control.
I'oiuil-attou of tho World io 1890. 1 the proceedings of the Royal Geograph ieal society for .January, 1S91, it is estimated that the population of the world fn 1890 was 1,487,000,0b0, representing an average of 31 to the squnro mile, and an increase of 8 per cent, during the decade. Of the continents Asia has the largest population, aw,000,000, and the lowest percentage of increase, fi per cent. Australasia has the smallest population, 4,7&),000, and the smallest average per square mile, 1.4, but the highest rate of increase during the decade, 30 per cent. Europe is the most thickly settled contiuent, with a population of 380,200,000. which is 101 to the square mile. The population of North America is estimated at 851,230,000, which is an average of 14 to the square mile, and represents an increase of 20 percent (luring lie past decade.
The (Jrowth of ft Grtmt CityOne of the most singular facts about the growth of iAiudon is its regularity. It has been suited that it may lie roughly token that every month about a thousand houses are added to Ixuidon. In August of last year 7&\577 houses had to be supplied by the water companies with water- in September that number hail increased to 766,797. In August of 1SS9 754,4fU houses had to be supplied, or 11,US IhjIow the number in the same month of 1S90. In September, 1890, the companies had to supply 10,976 houses more than in September of 1SS9. This extension is not confined to any one portion of the capital, but a preference is still being shown for the north and northwest suburbs.
Queer Crabs.
In Bermuda the soldier crab carries heavy shells tip the hills to pnxzle future geologists. Another species climbs the mangrove trees. Ashore crab in the Qape Verde islands may "be seen running along like a piece of paper blown by a strong wind." In Ascension island there are crabs which "climb up to the top of Green mountain, and the larger ones steal the young rabbits from their holes and devour them." The famous robber crab of the Philippines that cracks and eats cocoanuts fa« itself routed out of its hole and feasted on hy the wikl swine.
What a Baltimore confectioner says: I've had rheumatism in my arm.for six month*, and Salvation Oil made an entire cure of it, aft#r visIok less than one bottle. Ws, SCHKLU1AS,
iUho.. Mtl. rr.
Jr.,
Bail's Cough Syrup is a staple article in the market. The demand for It wm never greater than now. The people find It Indispensable, and will not te without it at anv price. Only costs 25 et#.
THE CATS AND THE MONKEY
Uk« Other Fableti It Presents a Moral for Serious Consideration.
Two hungry cats, having stolen some cheese,.could not agree how to divide it. So they called in a monkey to decide the case. "Let me see, says the monkey, with an arch look, "this slice weighs more than the other." With that, he bit off a large piece, in order, as he said, to make them balance.
The other scale was now too heavy. This gave the upright judge a fine pretense to take a second mouthful.
THE LAW MUST HAVE ITS.COUIiSE
"Hold! hold!"-cried the two cats "give each of us his share of the .rest, and we will be content." "If you are content,','says the monkey, "justice is not. .The law my friends, must have its course."
So he nibbled first one piece/ and then the other. The' poor cats, seeing their cheese fn a fair way to be all eaten, most humbly begged the judge to give himself no further trouble. "Not so fast, I beseech you, my friends," says the judge "we owe justice to ourselves as,well as to you. What is left is due to me in right of my office.
So sayitjg, he crammed the whole into his mouth, and very gravely dismissed the court.
Moral:—This fable teaches us that it is better to bear slight wrong rather than tt^ resort to law for trifles.—School and
Two years later, while the fa*|ner:v town on business, he purchased, it* •hog that pleased him and brouglifc it ifo, Tlie hog was driven into the yard, t^herel^a stopped, looked critically around the premises and then, with a grunt of satisfaCpoh, trotted to one corner of tho yard, jvhem,b^ rooted for a few seconds.- Then he tro^ to the duck pond and dived beneath water. When he reappeared and swan ashore he looked disappointed but the farmer and his family were delighted, bocause they had recovered their pet,
An Anecdoto of Km In Push a. Oue morning lately a friend took me. to see a German gentleman who has traveled several times across Africa, just in the same way' as &r. Stanley went on his exploring tours, except that he had only a very few men with him. His name is Dr. Peters, and you bigger ones who are fond of reading books about Africau travel may have seen his name.
At first we talked for a long time of things which I don't think would interest you, but then Dr. Peters wegt on to tell us of how he used to watch Emin Pasha prepare- African birds for museums. Emin did it as an amusement in his leisure time, and he did it wonderfully neatly and carefully. Sometimes the corpses of the little dead birds, with their gay plumage, would be hung all about his tent, and then be would write down all he had found hit about them. I believe the other day, at a meeting of a German ornithological society {the big won! means concerning the natural history of birds), it was stated that Dr. Emin had just sent 800 birds, representing 136 different species, to Gefmany. He had caught and prepared them all in three months' time* whil^ ^oh a tour from the African coast to Tabora, which place you shottld look up on your map. Wouldn't it be delightful to roam about on such an expedition for a few months!
In the Days of Beon Swh.
"HET-DKr! BUT I'LL CtfT A.GREAT OAS&P A youth tn the days of 8e*a Nash Fell heir to a deal of old trash
Said he, **I will wear them. There** no cme to *hare them. Hey-day! but I'll cot» great dashT
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING A TT
A Ptg Tale. 3(084
This story was recently told in (Mwnjp Days: Among a certain litter of sey pigs there was one black runtyto the owner's children took a.^gjeat 0* and taught a number of triclciwi On| to hide ati apple and send the pift in *1 of it. At' this the animal becaafo v^j* pert, until it seemed that an |®PM not be hidden anywhere that tliqpi||te not find it. But the hired man tlim. otherwise so one day he tied a weight an apple and threw it into the duck pon where the watw was about two feet deer The pig went nosing around until hi reached the pond, hesitated a moment, th^ jumped in, dived to the- bpttom and, appeared with the apple in his The very next day, while the chtldrejk in great jglfie over this performan® pig dnappeared, presumably^tole some jealous neighbor. S
A Core for Sleeplessness and Weak Nerrei S* Which Anybody Can Try.
A most.wretched lie-awake of thirty-five years, who thonght himself happy if he could get twenty minutes' sleep in twentyfour hours, says regard to his experience with hot •frater as a cure for sleeplessness:
I took hot water, & pint, comfortably hot, one good hour before each of my three meals, and one the last thing at night, naturally unmixed with anything eke. Th® very first night I slept for three hours on end, turned around and slept again till morning. I have faithfully and regularly continued the hot water, and have never had one bad night since. Pain gradually lessened and went, the shattered nerves became calm and strong, and instead of each night being one long misery spent in wearying for the morning they are all too short for the sweet, refreshing sleep I now enjoy-
How to Bead the Tongue.
The perfectly healthy tongue is clean, motet, lies loosely fn the mouth, is rottnd at the edge and has no prominent papillae, says Dr. JulitMtL Smith in the New York Ledger, and then proceeds to-interpret other aspecte of this small but mighty member: The toague may Be furifcd from local causes, or from sympathy with the stomach, intestines or liver. The dry tongue occurs most frequently in fever, and indicates, a nervous prostration or depression.
A
:with
Nichoi—
white tongue is diagnostic
simply of the feverish condition, with perhaps a sour stomach.' Whfen it is moist and yellowish brown it shows disordered digestion. Dry and brown indicate a low state of the system, possibly typhoid. When the tongue is dry, red-and smooth,look out fbr inflammation, gastric or intestinal. When the papillss on- the end of the tongue are raised and very redjve call it a' strawberry tongue, and that means scarlet fever. Sharp pointed red tongue will hint of brain irritation or'inflammation, and a yellow coating indicates liver derangement.
False Teeth Lengthen life,
A dentist is quoted as follows:" The perfection to which t?he manufacture 'of false teeth has been carried has practically abolished old age—that is, old age in the sense that I used to: know it. You see none of the helpless, itfumbling pld .men and women that you formerly did. This is not because people do not attain the age their parents and grandparents reached, but because the dentist has prevented some of thembst unpleasant consequences of advancing years. lien of seventy no longer either look or feel old, because they are not deprived of nourishing food at the time they need it most. Estimates have been made showing that tjie average length of life has been increased from four to six years by the general use of false teeth.
The,Beauty Sleep.
your beauty intact
?.-7„Want
of proper rest
wte mucih as anxiety. i%the social world i^ in bed one day a
Tall feeling of fa-, ^teye in the "beauty fe# sleep every night :eep fresh and un-
It's seven hours
.,/Bman and nine for the old saying but ,en complain that they six hours' sleep, as their ir duties are so heavy. Wornate hours better than girls, take it a rule to have a nap
fe|,«f Handshaking,
li'Hands? No one apjgjjftSQt mean much, if jot Suffered from the sp of, let ijs fondly
When our .rig with 1«rvor? the man who, your hand as if .jr ten minutes and ffr" has not suffered l0 will nothold on at all
Allows you to do the shaking process him? Whv is unacquainted" with the man with the clammy hand? Why must we shake hands With him?
Xefc
we
it we dislike it we dislike it very much, even he sees we dislike it, that it is positively' distasteful to us yet, meet him tomorrow, and out comes his hand once more to ingulf your own.
An excellent English authority says that the flour des pois, the creme do la creme, the quite too-too people, do uot indulge in this practice as much as the upper and lower middle classes, for there every one shakes hands with every one on entering and leaving a room, on meeting in the street and on saying "good morning," "good night" or "goodby." ,It is not for a moment meant to say that the grasp of a hand is aUvays a bore not at all. The gentle pressure and the unmistakable grasp of love, that is handshaking but th.e vapid how do's of some of the young ladies and gentlemen of today, as,
raised elbow, limp wrist and scarcely pressing fingers, they give you a sort of horizontal shake in a bored way, is absurd.
One of the most unpleasant persons to shake hands with is the nervous man, who cannot make up liis mind whether to shake hands with yoa or not who does not hold out his hand when you effer yours but the moment you haVe withdrawn, and pocketed your hand, stuffs his out, to be again perhaps withdrawn again too soon for you to catch and shake it. This specimewmay be considered and classed with his twin bore, the person who does not know which side of the pavement he proposes passing you upon, and who does a sort of imbecile, dodging, cavalier senl before you in an agony of indecision. There is only one thing to be done with him, walk straight at him, and you are safe.
Grant Allan, the English novelist and essayist, is a thin and intellectual looking man of forty-flve. His eyes are light blue and his hair gray. He was born in Canada hot passed the greater part of his life in England
Standing, with reluctant feet,
Where womanhood and childhood meet. 'Tis a supreme moment! 'Tis a critical period! No maiden should attempt passing this boundary-line without the aid and assurance of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Its helpfulness in tld ing over tbe perils incident to young *omannood, is universally acknowledged! Xo mother can put within the bands of her daughter anything that will prove more valuable ia meeting all her requirements! Dr. PUrce's Favorite Prescription is made expressly for all diseases peculiar to women, and Is the only medicine of its kind, sold through druggist*, and guaranteed to give satisfaction In every case, or money refunded.
"Praise be to him, whose wondrous skill Has conquered every human ill— And now alone, as victor, stands The 'Goldeu' compound "of his hands.1' So spake a man, with tribute crowned, Of Dr. Pierce, the "world-renowned," Whose "Medical Discovery" Had vanquished pain and sot him lr«e.
One can but speak in praise of a remedy so effectual and unfailing as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. Aoting promptly and thoroughly, it produces permanent cures. Consumption, in its early stages, scrofula, liver and kidney disorders, and all blood diseases, are within the field of its unbounded success. 1m Grippe Again.
During tbe epidemic of La Grippe last season Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, proved to be the best remedy. Reports from tbe many who used it confirm this statement. They were not only quickly relieved, but the disease left no bad after results. We ask you to give this remedy a trial and we guarantee that you will ?be satisfied with results, or the purchase jprice will be refunded. It has no equal iu La Grippe, or any Throat, Chest or Lung Trouble. Trial bottle free at any
Drug Store. Large ibottles, 50c. and 1.00.
I have been bothered with catarrh for about twentv years I had lost sense of smell entirely, and I had almost lost my hearing. My eyes were getting so dim I had to get some one to thread my needle. Now I have my hearing as well as I ever had, and I can see to thread as fine a needle as ever I di.d, my sense of smell is partly restored, Sod it seems to b§ improving all the time/ I thinJt there is nothing like Ely's Cream Balm for Catarrh. Mrs. E. E. Grimes, Rendrill, Perry Co., 0. 44 2
The JSe.yret of Success.
All druggists believe that tho secret of success is perseverance. Therefore they persist ill keeping the finest line of perfumeries toilet articles, cosmetics, drugs and ohemicals on the market. They especially invite all persons who have palpitation, short breath, weak or hungry spells, pain in side or shoulder, oppression, night mare, dry cough, smothering, dropsy or heart disease to try Dr. Miles' unequaled New Heart Cure, before it is too late. It has the largest sale of any simular remedy. Fine book of testimonials free. Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine is unsurpassed for sleeplessness, headache, fits, etc., and it contains no opiates. 5
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
The Pest Sa 1ve In tho world for Outs, Bruises, Sores,-Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Te1 ter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all skin erupt ions,
or no pay perfect satisf per box. For s^le by all druggists.
Miles' Nerv® and Liver Pills. Act on anew principle—regulatingtheliver stomach and bowels rouph the nerves. A new discovery. Dr. Miles' Pills speedily cure biliousness,-bad taste, torpid liver, piles, constipation. Unequaled for men, women aud children. Smallest, mildest, surest! 00 doses, 25 Ots. Samples Free at all druggists.
FOR TORPID LIVER.
A. torpid. deranges tho whole »yss« tern, and produccH
Siclf Headache, Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Rheumatism, Sallow Skin and Piles.
There is mo betteir remedy for these common diseases than Tsitt's I.lver Fills, as a trlial will prove. Price, 25c.
Sold
Everywhere.
ITTILE
P8ULS.
URE
Blck Heaflachs and roliova all tbo troubles incfdent to a bilious statoof tho system, suoh OS Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness Distress after eating. Pain In tho Side, to. Whila their mosft tomarknblo success has boon shown in conog
SICK
Tfrpflnj-hft, ret Carter's Little Liver PlUfl ar9 equally vaiuahlo in Constipation, curlng ftod proventing tbis annoying complaint, while they also correct stl disorders ofthestornach^tiranlato the Jivor and regulate tho bowels. Even if they only
"HEAD
Acli Ihoy would bo almost priceless to those who Buffer from this distressing complaint but forttt* rat#lT their goodnoradoos notend horo^ind thoea •whooncetry them will find these little pills,'valuable in so many ways that they will not bo_willing to do without them. But after alielckhe#4
ACH
'is the bane of so many lives that here to where wo make our great boast. Ourpillscuroltwhilo
"^Carter'skittle Liver Pills or® very small end very easy to take. One or two pills make* doso. Th7y^s strictly vegetable ati
do not
gripe or
pnrga, bat by tfcotr gentle action plcaao&il who cso them. In vialsat2S ccnts five for W. SojI by druggists everywhere, or sent by laaO.
CARTER MEDIOJNE CO., New York.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE
MA®
THE GEHTLI THE GERTLEIIWirS F8IEND.
Oar Perfection SyriRef frw with #vcry bottle Does
notabUxt.
S«nt to any address for Sl-OO. 3KAlTIOR
JIAJfrre
N
N
CO.. OJhlo. Kor »aI«| at
fill LICK A CO.. DrttsaMs. TEBRE HAUTE. IND.
OTICE OF ASSIGNMENT.
Notice 1s hereby given, that on tbe 1st day of April,
mi,
Sigmund fcoeb made an as«ign-
tneni of all bis property for the benefit ofall his creditors In conformity with the laws regulating voluntary assignments, and the
A. B. Felsentbal, Attorney.
JOTICE TO NOX-IUWIDENT.
State of Indiana, County of Vigo. In the Vigo Superior Court of Vigo County, June term,
JSO.SW6.
Lulu Turner vs. John B.
Divorce.
1
Be it inewn, tbatnn tbe 18th day of April, 1881, It was omened by the court tbatthe clerk notify by publication said John B, Turner as non-residednt defendant of the pendency of this actten against him.
Said defendant Is therefore hereby nottfled of snid «^on a«^i«rtTblm, ^ttbe««»e will stand for trial Jnne Wb.JUBi, tbe same
beinc Jane term of said court in tbe year MIL* JOHN C. WARREN, Clerk.
THE NEW WEBSTER
J98T PUBLISHED—ENTIRELY HEW.
WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL, DICTIONARY"
A
GRAND INVESTMENT
Ibr the Family, tho School, or the Library, Revision has been in progress for OT«r 10 Year*. Nora than 100 editorial laborers employed. $800,000 expended before first copy was printed.
Critical examination invited. Get the Best. Bold by all Booksellers. Illustrated pamphletfree.
G. A O. MERRIAM & CO., Publishers, Springfield, Mass., U. S. A. Caution I —There have recently been issued several cheap reprints of tho 1847 edition of Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, an edition long since superannuated. These books are given various names,—"Webster's Unabridged,"
?«The
Great "Webster's Dictionary," "Webster's Big Dictionary," Webster's Encyclopedic DloUonary," etc., etc.
Many announcements concerning them are very misleading, as the body of eacn, from A to 2, is 44 years old, and printed frem cheap plates Bade by photographing the old pages.
Chichester'* Encllnti Diamond Bru4
ENNYROYAL PILLS
Original and Only Genuine. •afc, alwavt reliable, laoics atk
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$3000:
letter,
by retam
MalL 10.000 TrsUinoDUl'.. A'ttu Aspar. Ohloheater Chemical Co.,Muiilnn Mao
are*
ocal Dmnetiu. Phllada., Pa.
ILS10JLM
.-ST.Agents Wonted! Ciucvlars E'ncn.
1 oo.i HieWJtcrN Urln Holders f^lvon awny to in(rt«l«ifi thttn. Every liorte owm-r Imits fni:i I to 0. l.tnwi tiBVM under hmsps' fit t. m-ihi cvirta In stamix fav mni pitcklnn fnrKickeJ I'laiod snmpu-thntsflln for65 cis. liroTTAter .11 Tk. to.. Holly. Mich.
A. "V A It I nnitrrliKf
to
briefly
tenoh any fairly
tntrlllpvnt prrton
•ei,
who can
rcnil mid
tltiiatiuii
»d. I
write,and
induatrioiialy,who,ofeither
afler
iiiitructloii,nlll
work
liow
to enrn Three
Tear
In
their own
lncalllle«,wher»ver
oremploytnenl,atwhichthey11*0.1
No money for m«u»leaaau«eaanilaa above.Ka*llytha-toamount.fVimlnhquicklyDollara*«l»andwillearnThouianriranyou learn
the
de«lro but one worker from each district or county.
hare already taught and provided with employment
number, whs are making
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a lam
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and ,SOT,Il.
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each.
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/ddreM
at onea,
JS. V, A Xlox 4SV, Aufustn, Maine. Kntif?'little f«^rlunr»h«vfl)rrn work f«»r 11% b\- A turn rngrc* Austin,
Jim, ilunn, Totfun, Ohio, W
i»»t y«*u? Siiwim^ih ovrr^ftWI.DO A Ymt rtiudo tl»o work aim! IIyq »t fi»tu«, hpr»v¥t*ryou nrr. l-.vcn bf»KifitH*r» «in% cnminix ftrotn #5 vllhi WnnhowyoM ho*r nmt you, t'nu xvork In mmit or nil tliMltiw. Hl|c inonoy f«*i ^C'* f-n. I'nllurr unhtiown nmonff NKW nin] Pnrll
wmir thrni*
MHO I'orlluiKl,S
ABSOLUTELY
No Change of Ca#
&
l'roM
ST. LOUIS, TEBRE .HAUTET IHDIANAP0L1 CINCINNATI,..
DaYTON, 1 SPRINGFIE
TO—
New York, Boston^
JL.JSTJD ar-HiE EAST VIA THE POPULAR
Lake Shore an NewYork Centra
ROUTES.
THE"—
Shortest & Quickest Line
BETWEEN
EAST rW EST
All trains arrive and Depart from^ Si^th Street Depot.
Berths in Sleeping Cars
HKCTJKKI) THKOrOH TO
NEW YORK & BOSTON
E. E. SOUTH, Gen. Agt,
MILLS
WEM
PreventsaMrlrt*»«». core*•»*»*»
orrhiwtand (Jlwt
in
1 to4
days. A*k I
710 WABASH AVENUE.
94 Mllee the Shortest
imSHEBIEIEE
CINCINNATI to NbW ORLEANS
Entire Train, I^y Sleeping CSarn through..Yilhr^ftn« ?uid Direct connections at New (nwM_ ana Hhrevepr rt for Texa^ 110 Mile# the Shortest, 3 hours the QulcKesl
from CINCINNATI to JACKSONVILLE, Flft. Time 27 hours. Solid trains and through Sleepers without change for my
Atlanta,
Giu,
clauw of
time.
pa*-
wagem The Short Line between Cincinnati
Aiibvuie, a. Cyv,'. Chattanooga, Tenn., time,
11
hom*,
15
houm
Birmingham, Ala-,tlme 16hour*. Three
Kxprtm
Turner.
Traltn Dally. Pullman
Boodoir Sleeping Oant rtn^nTrain* leave Central Unioni Depoi, wiwan nati crotwlng tbe amou* Hign Brid«eof Kentucky and rounding the baae of Laokont
MOvero'nemillion
Cincinnati, O.
acrm of land in Alabama,
th* futore crat Bute of the Ject to prompt ion. "kwi
KI)WAIiDrtf G.
p. & j. A
C. O. HARVEV. Vice President. ciiiciJcifAn o.
