Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 47, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 16 May 1891 — Page 7
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LAMP SHADES
jin 1 Jfement 8oxfe«ted for Throwing Jit Iffht Into a Limited SpM«. The ordinary lamp shades of ground or translucent glass are exceedingly wasteful appliances, a large proportion of the rays •of light being absorbed by them and pracI' tically extinguished. ThU equally the
AN IMPROVED LASH' fiHADR.
'case whether the Inxnp is used for general 'illumination of a room or for reading and working, says Popular Science News, which suggests the shade represented in the cut.
This shado is intended for throwing a /bright light into a limited apace—such a* upon a bobk or apiece of work. It Is composed of metal silvered on the inside and bent into such curves that the light rays -diverging from the lamp flame are reflected nearly vertically downward, sell? cording to tho law of conjugate foci. The principle is somewhat similar to that of 1 tho locomotive headlight, which renders the diverging rays parallel and throws them forward upon the track. With a lamp shade constructed on this principle none of the light is wasted, but all Is concentrated upon the point where it is most needed, much to the relief of the eyes and brain. ___•
Protecting ('tiddlers from Furnace tlout.
A method adopted in Westphalia and doscribed in a foreign exchange for protectling the workmen at the puddling and beatling furnaces from the heat radiated from the interior and the casing plates consists of rectangular iron screen, hanging from an overhead rail, which can bo made to cover the working side of the furnace, I or can be pushed aside when not required. iThe lower end is bent over into a gutter, which has a slight fall in the direction of its length, and the upper end is provided on the inside, that nearest the furnace, ,wlth a pipe bored through with small holes about three-quarters of an inch apart, which Is in connection with the service Ufipe supplying water for coaling the sides of the bed. When in use the inside of the |plate is kept constantly wet from the supply
pipe,
the
siniill
i«f the
jets trickling down to
the gutter at the
bottom
rabble,
and running
away to the cooling bosh at the side. A -notch at tho bottom
is
loft for the passage
and a short
Inclined
plate is
provided for the»,ciuder to run over but with these exceptions the whole surface i* screened
by
tho water cooled plate. At the
time of balling up the wnter is shut oft and the screen is run to one nlio, when the furnaoo Is accessible iu the ordinary way.
A New Food Plant.
The choco plant (Sechium edule) is being grown in Santa llarbara county, Cal. This is a valuable fruit producing vine, explains California Fruit Grower, the seeds tf which were procured from Samoa. Both tho tubers of the vino and the squashlike fruits are eaten. The fruit is said to resomblo the chestnut in flavor, and will under favorable conditions weigh son.e three pounds. Tho tubers, which are vomewhat similar in flavor to the yam, ?wjmotiit»es weigh as much as twenty ounda. One of Its peculiarities is the «rout}tigof the seed in tho tilossom end
JhileA.be fruit still hangs upon the vine. |tte.4lnut!» under favorable conditions in about three months. They do uot to be very particular as to soil or loty. Just about what amount of cold will staud has not as yet been defcer«ned.
Writing on Alatals.
^To write inscriptions on metals, says the unufacturem' Gazette, take four ounces [nitric acid apd one ounce of muriatic [id, mix and shake well together, and it Ready for use. Then cover your metal Frfaco to be engraved with beeswax or pip, write your inscription plainly in the but clear to the metal, then apply tho jixed acids with a feather or a stick of pod, carefully filling each letter, let it reLin from five to ten minutes, according appearance desired, then throw on water, |iicb stop* tho etching process, and the ription Is completed.
A itomarliable Discovery*
ae Trade and Mining Review announces (u a remarkable discovery has been made ir Oonalaska, Alaska, namely, coal trans[rtnvd into coke solely by the forces of ire. The locality has been taken up by whip company. So positively Usui is the company of the extent of the fpoetit th.it it has undertaken to supply
I local demand, in addition to furnish[g tiuring future seasons fuel not only for i*6wn steamers but also for those, of the
Ternment service.
A Curious Phenomenon.
London journal describes a curious aomenon observed not long ago at jlkstone. A ship laden with oil was sunk .a collision, and the water was covered lihott. This produced a strange effect the wild fowl, which are plentiful
Wild ducks, teal and other birds easily caught, as they seemed unable 1| on account of their feather* being anted with oil. ..
Aibwtui Deposit.
|Che Industrial Review calls attention to wonderful deposit of asbestos which has found near Hamilton, In Ragitoounty, ,_jh.. and has been uncovered for a dte* I ice of seventy-Jive Feet, aad At the croplift to mid to be eight fek in width. The pastas to of excellent qaality, the fibers, [e as silk, being in some instances as a* eighteen inches in length.
ImnllttM Wwtito BiMdltf. j[ly a new device pieces of metal may be liped with rapidity by being forced under while tendered current. [|1 earns made of /jm about
•oft or plastic by an
or sham art best
apparatus.
STORMY
How Chicken*
Mother Carey and Her Ban^« the Sea.
Mother Carey's chickens are among the smaller species of the petrel family, all of which are distinguished by a peculiar tubelike arrangement of the nostrils. Their feet also are peculiar in being without any back toe, so that they can with only great difficulty rise on the wing from dry land. Mother Carey's chickens have both ashortez bill and a longer leg than their relatives. But all the orocellarias are noted for ranging farther from land than any other of the seabirds. Thus they are often visible from shipboard when no other animal life can be sighted, and thus it was, doubtless, that their appearance suggested safe harbor, and consequent thanks to Mater Cars, to the devout seaman.
Why the petrels are associated with storms is not thus easily explained, seeing that- they are abroad in all weathers, but a feasible supposition was advanced by Pennant. It is that they gather from the water sea animals which are most abundant before or al.ar a storm, when the sea is in a state of iiiiusual commotion, All birds are highly sensitive to atmospheric changes, and all seabirds seem to show extra activity in threatening and "dirty" weather.
There is another interesting thing about Mother Carey's chicken, and that Is, that he is also called petrel, from the Italian Petrello, or "Little Peter." This is because he is supposed to be able, like the apostle, to walk on the water, as in fact he does, with tho aid of his wings.
The Origin of Silhouette Portrait*.
There seems to be a tendency toward silhouetting again as an amusement among amateur artists. Black profile portraits of celebrities who lived in the second half of the last century, when this mode of portraiture was in vogue, are now eagerly collected and high prices paid for them. The name silhouette was derived from Etienne de Silhouette, a French minister of finance in 1759, who introduced several parsimonious fashions during his administration called a la Silhouette, a name which continued to b» applied to the black profile portraits. Silhouettes were executed in various ways. One of the simplest is that of tracing the outlines of a shadow profile thrown on a sheet of paper, as shown in our illustration, and then reducing them to the required size either by the eye or by means of a pnntograph. The camera obscura and camera lucida are also occasionally used for the purpose.
TAKING A SILHOUETTE.
Some profllists displayed considerable talent in cutting silhouettes by hand with a pair of scissors out of pieces of black paper, without tho assistance of an outline. Although silhouettes have no claim to the character of works of nrt, they frequently convey a very good idea of the person represented. The appearance ol silhouettes is greatly improved by adding the principal markings of tho hair and drapery, which, if judiciously done, hns a very good effect. llyron's Marriage. "Chllde Harold" was a tremendous success, as Byron himself indicates in an entry made iu his journal at the time. Other equally successful poems followed, in regard to every one of which the poet was treated by Murray, hla publisher, with the utmost generosity. Never in the whole history of literature have relations between author ana publisher been more cordial. Byron sent for Murray one evening, and, "says he, 'Can you keep a secret?'
4Cor-
talnly—positively—my wife's out of towni* 'Then—I am going to be marriedl' 'The devil! I shall have no poem this winter, then?' 'No.' 'Who is the lady who is to do me this injury?' 'Miss Milbanke do you know her?' 'No, my lord.'" The marriage, as everybody knows, was not exactly made in heaven, and in 1816 Byron left England.
Lul tab leu in Spain, Arabia and Znlnland.
In Spain you will hear little Jose or Isabellita rock«d to the somewhat doubtful sedative beginning:
The moon shines bright. And the snake darts swift and light 1 see five baby bullocks Ami a calf young and white. Then from Spain you may find yourself in Arabia, where a bucolic tone pervades the cradle song mostly used:
Sleep, my baby, sleep, Sleep a slumber hale, Sweetly rest till morning light, My little farmer boy, so bright."
And from Arabia you might pass to far off Zululand, and hear: Hash thee, ray baby.
Thy mother's o'er tho mountains gone There she will dig the little garden patch. And water aho'll fetch from the rirer.
The Bayeaax Tapaatry.
The Bayeaax tapestry i« vr«b of canvas or linen clota upon which is embroidered in woolen threads of various colors i\ representation of the invagkm and conquest of England by the Normans. The canvas Is 314 fe«t long by twwsty inches broad and Is preserved in the public library at Bayeaux. Tradition asserts that it is tho work of Matttda, wifeof Villiam the Conqueror, and it is beMe*«d that If sbe did not actually stitch the whole of it, she at least took part in it and directed the execution of it by ber maids.
IK: tww»«f Palkl«r» on
According to Lancaster folklore a good deal depends open the d*y of the week in iMs matter nf saeextng: Steess&ott a Moiwlay, jpuq snaese for dangers ftoeeae oa a T«a«day,yim Wsa a stranger aneeseeaa WedDceday.yMtsaeee* for a letter Saesaa oa a Thawday, fir something bettor £M«seoaaftrfctay. yoall saeesce Cor sorrow SkMKm a Sasardaf* m«r cweebeart tomor-
8acmoaa8aaday,r°ra**ft*y«eek, The defU wtll hare yon the re* of the w*ak! -1 I
&
reiRRE HAT7TE SATURDAY EVEJSINCteMAlD
VIRGINIA.1
PAUL
AUTHOR
Ineiclents In the Early Childhood of This j|& Celebrated French Writer.
Henri-Jacques Bernardin de St. Pierre was born at Havre in the year 1737. He was a beautiful but wayward child, remarkable for his fondness of flowers and animals. One day he saw a carter ill using his horse, and goin£ boldly up to the man
HE SHOOK HIS LITTLE FIST AT HIM.
he shook his little fist at him, calling on him to desist from hurting the poor tfni mal. From his earliest childhood he seens to have been so fond of nature that it closed his eyes to the wonders of art.
When his father took hfm to Rouen and was pointing out to him the beautiful towers of the cathedral, the boy exclaimed, "How high they fly!" Those who heard him laughed, thinking he meant the ton ers but the little fellow's eyes vrerd fixed on some swnllows that had built their nests in them and were swiftly darting through the blue sky above them.
This little boy in time became the celebrated writer of the story of "Paul and Virginia," other tales, essays and several plays. He died Jan. SI, 1814. 1
A Curious Story.
Some time ago I perceived that a solitary hen was frequenting the lawn in front of it, and had apparently withdrawn from the society of her fellow fowls ac the back. Whether she boarded at home, returning to the poultry yard for her meals, or contented herself with foraging in the flower bods and grass of the garden, I do not know, but she certainly had shaken the dust of her former residence from her claws completely at other times. One day I perceived an unusual commotion and agitation in a handsome pine tree, whose branches sweep the lawn, and to my amazement beheld one of our cats engaged with this hen in the liveliest game of hide-and-seek, running in and out under the tree after each other, the cat crouching, wriggling and darting beneath the branches, and tho bird occasionally bopping up on one of them, whither the beast pursued ber. At first I thought it was war, sudden death and murder but presently perceived it was peace, and the pursuit of innocent amusement with the friendliest good un'derstandlng. After this I watched them, and to my infinite amusement saw this game repeated over and over again. Then these curious companions took to walking sedately side by side (almost what you might call arm in arm) round the gravel walk, and finally settled amicably down together on the nice hot glass frame of one of the vegetable pits in the kitchen garden. Herj I have seen them sitting, winking and blinking in the sun, apparently perfectly happy in mind and bo''y, until sudderty the hen would turn sharply round and give a vicious peck at the cat's face or breast (what it had said to shock or offend her I did not hear), upon which the four footed feline creature, hurt no doubt in all its feelings, slid down and made off rather shamefacedly, the biped, the feathered fowl, remaining in undivided possession, though apparently in ruffled dignity, of the comfortable hot glass. vT"
A To«can Lallaby.
Flower of tho plum! Now, baby, let me take yoor flower soft hand, .To reckon with a kiss one little thumb. Flower of the strawberry I
Two kisses on the tiny forefinger\ And for the middle finger shall be three.
A TV8CAX BAST'S BKimMt.
flower of the peachl Tear kisses oa the finger that comes nest, Awl five to ooeac the lastl One more tor each I Flower of the rtsaei *J»e fingers of the little rose white band, The feet bas five pink rosebuds for Its tees. Viewers pink and Irhket Hy
ffracoaid by some magic be yotheunknownffcizyiaadirarj Where boy» nay have their a
What waedd yoar
T& wish"*—be sldewtae «oc tendered sod paosed, aad "I with iMd two brer. One great big oa*. and tvo? Yfeak sothia' aerer'* EEU
t}
Vfcfi trees the tree of dreaans on haads and feet 8» assay kisses, baby, and good eight! —Wide Awake.
A Uttle Stan'* Wfobe*. ,\-
"Kjr&UeBtmcoBoteUtolfc,
»t
And eight or nine gwu
DEATH?
The £ye as a Test for Deciding the Momentous Question,
A peculiar interest is attached to every method proposed for determining whether life in the human body is extinct or not: Science tells that, according to Dr. W. R. Gowers, of England, as soon as the heart ceases to beat and respiration stops the diffused redness of theoptic nerves disk, caused by capillary circulation, disappears in a few minutes and the nerves become white. As the heart's action slowly fails before death the arteries diminish in size, and when it ceases the diminution is suddenly increased, and they "quickly disappear from the disk, appearing to commence at its edge." In the retina they remain longer bat diminished in size. The veins persist longer th?a the arteries, but like them may rapidly become invisible on the disk, "appearing to start from its edge." The blood in them soon breaks up into fragments, giving them a "beaded appearance." The veins in the retina remain visible, while the "beaded appearance increases." In ten to thirty minutes the arteries are no longer visible in the retina. The color of the chorid remains normal for a few minutes and then undergoes various changes, according to the amount of pigment it contains. Soon the retina becomes opaque, when a red spot in the macula 1» tea may be seen, because free from opacification, just as is the case in embolism of the central artery. In the course of about six hours the media become so hazy that further observation is impossible. The reason of the rapid disappearance of the arteries is because their continued contraction after death presses the blood out of them.
Eating Before Sleeping.
The view that brain workers should go supperless to bed is decidedly out of date. A recent writer claims that most medical authorities of the day think it wrong. It is a fruitful source of insomnia and neurasthenia (sleeplessness and nervous prostration). The brain becomes exhausted by its evening work, and demands rest and refreshment of its wasted tissues, not by indigestible salads and "fried abominations," but by some nutritious, easily digested and assimilated articles. A bowl of state bread and milk, of rice, or some other farinaceous food, with milk or hot soup, would be more to the purpose. Any of these would insure a sound night's sleep, from which the man would awaken refreshed.
Embalming and Arsenical Poisoning.
Attention has recently been directed by medical authorities to the hindrances to a proper post mortem examination in cases of suspected poisoning, occasioned by the practice, common with undertakers, of so called "embalming," or injecting into the body, soon after death, a solution of chemicals intended to preserve it. These consist for the most part of arsenic or mercury, and it is plain that the question would be at once raised by the attorney for the defense where, upon the strength of the medical examination after death, homicide by poisoning was alleged, whether the poison was introduced before or after death', by the i&Mmlnal or the undertaker, &- I this question might be very difficult to settle. t» •i
Scientific Wine Drinking
A writer on the scientific drinking of wine says that dry wine is the only healthful wine, from the fact of its containing no sugar and little alcohol. The grape is used when there is only about 23 per cent, of saccharine. After fermentation there remains 10 or 11 per cent, alcohol and no sugar. The grapes for sweet wine are allowed to become very ripe, and used when there is from 80 to 40 per cent., sugar. It is fermented into about 15 per oent. alcohol, and then brandy is added to prevent further fermentation In the bottom. In drinking it the heat of the stomach causes fermentation. Result, headache, gout and possibly an uncontrollable appetite for strong drink.
The Letter and Spirit of Good Breading. An excellent old gentleman, once upon a time, discussed the virtues and faults of his son with the young woman who was to be his daughter-in-law. "Dan's mother died when hervras a baby," he said "he has no near female relatives. He has spent nearly all his life in school and at college, so tha£ he has never had that training which comes from association with well bred women. He is a good boy—as good as gold. Thare is nothing that he would not do for you. He will give you all that h£ has, he will be as true as steel, he will honor you and love you with all bis heart although he may forget to tell you so. He would die for you, but he will probably not pick up your pocket handkerchief for you."
The young woman listened respectfully to a father's pardonable praise of his son, then she said, "But I do not want him to die for me, and I shall want hhn to pick up my pocket handkerchief.'' She preferred, says a correspondent of The InterOeean, who relates this little iaeWeat, tbe letter to the spirit.
There are among many superMally polite people trsiaeodous respeet for eertain requirements whieh they believe are an Index to soci~l position and todkatioh of honorable origin, says the same writer. Tbey would consider tiwmsdvee hopelessly disgraced were they to put tjM fcrrffte to aa improper use to confuse tbe various spoons, forks aad glasses about their plate at dinner, but other matters which affect their relations with their fellow being are passed over as of no oonsequeaee.
Ose off tbe most common offenses among tbe superficially well bred is tbe slight aad disconrt o»y *~bich they show to dependents, or tbcw* •j'ku tbey consider ftdr social inferi *»oor relation in his shabby
eoa,"r'W5S^i'
-5 y*»»ts receives seant cour
tesy. j3Uv, if siwl dressmaker, met
by
*•''x» (.«mnHlsge, copfroat-
4
i»r fc* paused by aad -i .-isrsjsUw illbreedrich who, not v.. I mowing wdfl came, be»ilace cam ha 'swags 'r cftinstfaiin lf§ %«ta-aaivigE-
stag
®§,4l
s-m
SHOPPING JUST ONCE.
BUSINESS MAN ACCOMPANIES HIS WIFE FOR £NE DAY.
afct IS
She Proves to Him Conclusively That Buying Thlnjr# for tbe Family Is Not the Easy Task 8I«n Are Inclined to Begard ^tit-It Was an Ordinary One Too.
certain New York woman has a husband who made, himself conspicuous recently by a remark. He was reading aloud in the newspaper tbe suggestion of some masculine happy thought that it would be a good thing if women would try to finish their shopping to occupy the oars an hour earlier than the tired male workers needed them, in which case the latter could bury their noses in their newspapers without any conscience pricks from the sight of standing women about them. And so reading this husband remarked emphatically: "That's a sensible notion. Women can just as well manage their shopping hours to be through and home by 5 o'clock."
His wife differing with equal emphasis, an argument followed which ended, as many arguments do. in the husband's assertion that he could do it, and he was no shopper either. Whereupon his wife invited him to accompany her on one day's ordinary round, and in a rash moment he accepted the invitation. A day that week was selected, and the husband duly remained up town after breakfast. "We must start early," he said. "That is one of the points I made." "Asearly as I can ever start," replied his wife, and the head of the family watched an hour slip away while his wife-got the children off to school, talked with the cook about the day's meals, received an early "visitor on an errand, saw the grocer's and butcher's men, wrote a note ordering coal, put on her jacket and bonnet, and finally left the house with him at five minutes before 10.
AN EARLY START.
At the gate his wife was met and detained five minutes by a poor woman who belonged in her charity visiting district, Whose call necessitated a return to the house for an order as treasurer of a relief committee. Their residence is in West One Hundred and Twenty-seventh street, audit toolt ten minutes to reach the station, five minutes more to catch a train, which they left at Eighteenth street and Sixth avenue at exactly seventeen minutes to 11 o'clock. "Now take a transfer card,'1'said the husband, "and get everything in one store. That's the way you women waste time and strength running about to compare prices and save a cent here and theras"
His wife said nothing. It was ner habit to use a transfer card. The large shop first entered was crowded. It was not easy to get to the counter desired, but once there a clerk was ready. Some white pique was bought, and then some colored pique was asked for. Only two pieces were in stock neither would answer this errand must be done elsewhere. The purchase was recorded on the transfer and the hosiery counter was sought. "Stockings for Ned, Flossie and little Frank." said the wife "two grades school and best." The hosiery counter is always besieged, and a considerable wait ensued before she could be served. Only one part of the order could be filled. Certain sizes were out.
A rug for the library, "which I am so glad you can help me to select,?'was her next errand. They took the elevator for the rug department and took seats for inspection of the stock. Rug after rug was spread before them until, as the husband confessed, "the choice became maddening." He liked every one better than the preceding, and finally gave it up.
THEY GET HOME LATB. A
Then
hiB
wife priced, examined, consid
ered the colorings of the room for whioh it was intended, and at last made a judicious selection, not, however, until a good half hour
had
been spent in the work.
One or two more purchases were made in the shop as expediciously as possible, and a numier were tried for but were not obtainable! There was a considerable wait at the transfer desk for parcels and bills not arrived there, and when they were once more in the street the husband was astonished to find that it lacked only a quarter to 1 o'clock. To get a luncheon place, be served and discuss the meal consumed another hour and then the work, was continued.
An exchange was to be effected at Ohe shop which needed considerable circumlocution, and at another the wife wanted to look"up a parcel bought the previous week which had failed to reach her. In this case the dry goods red tape became very trying, and the husband, like one of Ouida's heroes, swore a little "under his mustache." The colored pique proved a difficult necessity to procure, the 'desired stocking sizes were cot all found ac one place, other purchases needed trips to more than one shop, and it was 5:20 before they left their last shipping place and boarded a Third avenue elevated train at Ninth street.
Both were tired out, the husband especially so. "And," said the wife, "this is an easy day of shopping I have bought no bonnet or gown the choosing of either implies more time and effort. Yet you see how weary It is and how inexorable the hours consumed. And I am an expert compared to many women 1 know* and today I have not looked at a single thing outside of my list, which one has to do to shop judiciously. "The truth is tbe weariest person on a car at night is the woman who has been doing a day's shopping. It is physical and mental labor of tbe most fatiguing sort, yet it is as important a branch of the family affairs as any other part. And if men will only let us alone and let us choose our owif time it is all we ask, and, they may keep their seats forever."
The husband replied never a word.—Her Point of View in New York Times. 9
A member of tbe British parliament, in bis address to his constituents, wished he bad a window in bis bosom that all could aee his heart. He was considerably surprised to find that he had'been reported as saying "widow" instead of window.
Mrs. E. D. E. N. Soutbwortb's full name is Km ma Dorothy Eliza Neuette Southworth, and she explains it by saying that ber parents were so poor that they could give her nothing else, so they bestowed upon her all those valuable names.'.
"Wbo did you say, is to b* the next President?" "Obi I don't know and don't care. Pm not looking for Praridenis—I'm looking for a bottle of Salva tlon Oil. It kills pain every time." Cta.
Price 25 cta.
2a
One of oar moat e*timable dtiseos may be thankful for tbe introduction of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup, for Ita timely am ban saved bis Ufa. For incipient ronsumpiion It is a certain remedy.
S£»
cheer, I help-1 strengthen, I aid, 1 chidden the heart of man and maid, 1 bctconsti pal ton's captive free, A ud all are better for taking me. Thus spoko one of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. (Th-y are pills that speak for themselves.) Very small, very ^icototake, produce no nausea or griping, yet are most etiectual in all cases of constipation, bilious or sick headache, or deranged liver. Only 25 cents a vial, at druggists. A perfect vest-pocket medicine.
IP YOU HAVE
MMUAOR PILES,
SICK HEADACHE, IU5fl» AGUE, COSTIVE BOWELS, SOUR STOMACH »n4 BEI.CHIKGitr yonr food doe® not wn aimllate and you have no appetite,
trill euro these tronblos. Try thomt «ou IIHVCnothing to lose,bnt will r»ia Vigorous body. I'rlce, 23c. per box*
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
$3000
II.Hninl.t«fc
«wmemm
'i-
TLSI01M
28T Agents Wanted 1 CiRcntiARS Fan.
1,003 Brewster** Safety Rein Holder* given away to Introduce Utem. Kwry hone owner bare from I to O. Ltne* norer under horses' feet. Send 25 cents In stamps to pay postage aud Mcking for Nickel PIftlea Sample that sell* forw cu. Brtrrster Xffc. 6o.,Ui)U|,liek.
LADIBSj TIRTT
Dr. De Luc's Periodical* Pills,
FROM PARIS, FRANCE.
Aets only on tbe menstrual system and
fiosltlvely
cures suppression of the monsua
roni colas, shock, etc. A safe reliable monthly medicine, warranted to relieve price 13, three for 15. The American Pill and Medloino Co., proprietors, Spencer, iowa. Sold and sent by mail upon receipt of price, and by Geo. Relss, druggist, corner Third and Main streets, Terre Haute, Ind.
A YEAH I I »n4«rtak* to briefly
teach any folrly tuMUIgmt pwwrn of either in, who con
read
aad write, aad who,
.after Instruction, will worit iDdastttonsly, 'how to earn Three Theaaaad
Mian
Yearln thelrown loc«Utle*,wherev*rtbegrllTaJt wttlaho
a
Auniih
the situation orem)loynient,at which yoneaa earn that amaiiat. No money for me unlee* lucceuftil ai abova. Sadly aad quickhr learned. I deelre bnt one worker from eeoh dUferiot oroounty. I have already taught and provided with enplaymeata tarn number, wha are meklr.r orer MOW
a
and 80I.II. Pull particular*
year each. It'* HSW
FSSIX.
Addraaa at
o»w^
JB. C, AtLEW, llox iSe^Amsils, Malae,
work Air na, by
Utile
fortnneiharebeenmadeat
ABBA
Pa«o. Auatln,
8miff
Tr*«», and no. Bonn, Toledo, Ohio.
•k
mm jno. Bonn, iwmi vmu.
Ret cut.
Otheraandohif aiwelL
Why
iu? Hoaiseam OTerSMe.M a mniitli. Vnti ran do the work aad ll*e at lioim. xvlicrereryoa an. R*enbe
Inn.TK hit Mially earning from ft to Ula On.v. All ajres. Weahow you how and tnrt you.
Oka woih la apere time
or alt rim time.
Big money
for work
er*. Failure
unknown among
then.
MOV nuil wrnidarfWL Parttoulara fre«.
HBO Portland,Main*
,ABSOLUTELY
No Change of Cars
-FROM-
ST. LOUIS, TERRE HAUTE INDIAHAFOLIS, CINCINNATI.
DaYTON, SPRINGFIELD,
-TO-
New York, Boston
.A-lSriD TECS IEJ-A.ST VIA THE POPULAR
Big4,
Lake Shore and New York Central
IROTTtraS-
-THE-
Shortest & Quickest Line
"1
1'
5
BETWEEN *,
EAST WEST
All trains arrive Sixth Street Depot.
and Depart from
Berths in Sleeping Cars
SBCtJHED THROUGH TO
NEW YORK & BOSTON
E. E. SOUTH. Gen.
Agt,
710 WABA8H AVENUE.
94 Miles tbe Shortest and tbe Quickest.
CINCINNATI to NEW ORLEANS
1 1 »iio«tlonV *1 New OriMOf aad Shreveptrt 'or Texs^ M«I» sod O^IforoJ^ 110Milestbe Shortest, 3 boars the Quickest front CINCINNATI to JACKSONVILLE, Fl*.
Time 27 boars. Solid trains sod through Sleepers without change for cU« of pas* senzers. Tbe Short Line between Cincinnati "Lexington, Ky., time, bonis
Knoxvllle. Tensu, time, hours AshTille,N. a, time,,17 hours Chattanooga, Tenth, time, 11 honrs Atlanta, «*., time, 15 boon: Birmingham, Ala-time 16 hours.
Express Trnl
Three Express Tmlns Boudoir Sleeping Car*.
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seres of Isnd to Aisbsns,
the futursN great State of the South* refci ject
pre-Wnptlon- UosurpsMedrcJljn"*? 5 5
Trsv/Tfi*!. Agu, No. W W. Fourth street Cincinnati, a guWARDS, O. F« T. A a HABVEY. Vice President.
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