Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 49, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 30 May 1891 — Page 7

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PLATINUM MIRRORS.

Applicattnn

That

KxpEiinit .Some

fi tb« lllutionii of

Mirror.

Iy The mirrors in common tuw* arc «s a rale provided with a reflecting: Knrfacj? consisting of An amalgam of tin and mercury.

ThI» coating is liable to injury by accident, 4i!so by the effect of time and strong sun-

BEES ONLY 1118 OWN RKFI.KCTIOJf.

H«ht. Recently a French firm has produced platinized mirrors which, it is claimed, iiro not only satisfactory in point of brilliancy but are as permanent as the glass itself,

A thin Jllm of metallic platinum is de-' poxited upon the glass by precipitation from a solution of the chloride, by oil of lavender and afterward burned in by heating the glass nearly to redness in a muffle, thus incorporating the reflecting surface into thcs glass itself. *1 peculiarity of this coating of platinum i» its extreme thinness, which readily allows light to be transmitted through it. Thus if the light falls upon the mirror from the front it will be reflected back again the fiftine us in an ordinary mirror, but if the source of the light is lehind the plate of platinized ghbw the rays will be transmitted to the observer standing before it, fw if it was a plate of ordinary glaas. The illustrations from I^n Nature show an amusing application of this principle. The mirror, explains The Popular Science News, is placed in front of a niche containing a grotcsquo head, end which «on be illuminated or darkened at pleas-

&

THE VICTIM OF A 8C1KNT1KIC JOKB.

ure. In Fig^ 1 the light behind the mirroi la extinguished, and the person looking into it sees only his reflection. If now the niche !n the rear of the glass is illumined the reflected image disappears and the victim of the sclent!flc joko sees instead of his own features the less flattering image depicted in Fig. 2.

Under favorable conditions ordinary plate glass without any metallic coating will reflect nearly all the light falling upon it, and by a similar arrangement oynlWrrint^ly illuminating the front and rfnr o£ tiheh a glass Biosfc of the ^ghosts'* Jknd other mysterious illusions of tl« stage fare produced. v, f. I

The Lougott

It Is quite important, when speaking of the longest day in the year, to say what part of the world you are talking about The latitude of a place changed the lebRtb /ot tUeday to a remarkable extent. At Stockholm, Sweden, it is eighteen and one* half hours in lcngth.v At SplUbergWi the longMt day in three anil dtie-luilf months. At £|nlfa, Kcgland, and Bwah«|R. Prussia, the longcjft day luu» alxta+n and onehalf hours. At Hamburg, in Germany, and

DaubKig, in Prussia, the longest day has seventeen hours. At Waruoe, tho longest d&y lasts from May 21 to June S£} without lotismiptlon. At Sfc Pewt&bu«Vv Russia, attd Tobolsk, Siberia tl»e lon|cest day Is nineteen hours and the shortest five hours. At Toruea, Finland, Junc 31 brings a day nearly twenty-two hoars long, and Christmas one k*s than three hours in lengUi, At iv'few Vork. the longest. it is abbtU fifteen hour*, afid at Mont Canada, it about aixteea hours.

How

Fi«u Hooka ArgrMade.

The Industrial World tells how fish hooks are made. There is a little machine which turns out fish hooks six strokes. Stroke No. 1 bites off a morsel of steel wire No. 3 makes the loop where you fasten your line No. S hacks the other end No. 4 flattens and bends back the barb No. 6 makes the point No. 6 bands the wire—and your fish book drops into a little backet ready to ba finished. Then it is either japanned—these are the common black fish hooks—or they are tern pared to the dalicate blue that you sometimes see in cutlery. For this finish they are heated red hot and then cooled In oil.

The Steam £ngl»es of the World. The steam engines of tho world represent approximately, toys The Manufacturera1 Onwite, the working power of 1.000, 3*30,000 of men, or mow than double the working population of tho wrld, the total population at whfeh is Usually estimated at 1,4SW*23,000 Inhabitants. Steam ha* ac* cordingly enabled man to treble hi* worklug {xnrer, tucking it possible for him to I eoonoim.-i* Id* pbyskAl etre: 'hV* *le attending to hi* imeUretual di L.opi^. ak I

A Rot«nic»i Ctuiwltjr.

At a tneeUng lite ilfeymt Botanic node-} iy the secretary brought to the notice of members a portion of a large poplar lately blown down in the garden*, showing a network of toots running almost round the trunk, between the bark aw! wood.atnome distanoc from the ground. The plant bad apparently derired iw eottrishtaenv, notj from the soil, but from the decaying por Hons of until.

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DEER HUNTING IN THE ROCKIES.

In a Few Years There Will Be No More Buckskin for Mtoccualn* and Lets'0*-

The bunting of deer

in

and

in

ready

the Rockies is fast

driving them north into British

America,

a few more years oar Indians will have no more buckskins for leggins and moccasins. Only the skin of the heavy hided deer

can

be used, that of the antelope

and white tailed varieties being too tender for long service, say& The Great Divide, in which we find the following:

The Apaches make# their moccasins and leggins in one piece, in the style of hunting boots, while most of the Indians to the north wear slippers and leggins. Whenever a deer is killed and cut up the bladder 1s carefull) cut away, cleaned and filled with the brain of the animal, and the little bog is moc c*rsfully guarded until a stream is rcached, where the hide may be cured. TUt entirs skin is then put into running water and weighted down with stones. In four or five hours the soaking has swelled it aud loosed the hair at the roots, when it is taken out and stretched on a frame, while the owner, with the aid of a cleansed rib of the animal, scrapes it down until the hair is rubbed off, very much in the same manner as overheated horses arc scraped to remove the foam and avveat. The skin is then pulled and stretched for three or four hours, and at the same time oiled with the brain until it is perfectly dry, soft and pliable, when it is

for use. When a tan color is de­

sirable it is soaked in an infusion of red bark. The sole of the moccasin is always made of the raw hide of beef cattle and sewed to the upper with the sinews of the deer's tendon.

Chumol* Skins.

Chamois skins should never be left in water after using, butshould be wrungout and hungup to dry/spread out carefully so as to leave no wrinkles neither should they be used to wipe off colors, as paint stains form hard spots and help the skin to wear out sooner. Chamois was never intended to wipe the face and hands with, and this should be avoided also, a$ th^skins are liable to become greasy thereby. Never put a chamois skin into warm water—nothing above lukewarm, as it will curl up, become thick, tough and useless. To bring back chamois that has been ruined by grease, paint, or has been used as a towel until it bun all the resemblance of a mrty old rag, the following is recommended: Take a bucket of clean water, making it middling strong with ammonia, soak the skin in it over night, and the next morning rinse it out in pure water, after which use freely of pure white castile soap and water. It is claimed that the process will insure a very good skin again, available- for considerable further service. The whole operation, aside from the soaking, need take no longer tliau a quarter of an hour, and in reality the skin after this treatment is, according to Hide and leather, better than at first, having become thoroughly broken in and free from lint and other impurities.

Custom of Dining at a Lnto Hour.

M. Franklin explainsinoneof hisourious essays on the private life of the forefathers of the preseat generation of Parisians that the custom of dining at a late hour is nothing but a return to the habit of the Seventeenth century, and that the Eighteenth century alone is responsible for all the shifting and changing that has confused and worried the would-be cheerful diner. The only difference between the present day and the Seventeenth century is that what was then called supper is now known by tho grandiloquent name of dinner.

Charles had his break fast at 10 o'clock, and only after having attended mass, and his chroulcl^rs report that he supped "in a very good time." The oldest French cookery book, dating from the Seventeenth century, fixes the breakfasttliour at the same time at which it is now fixed among the upper classes. "Nobody," says this oldorade^'should eat lie fore the hour of 0, unless he be ill or feeble." It then goes on to put dow,n a law tho application of which at the present time would put most people into rather an awkward position.

To eat once a day, says The Menagier in quaint old French, is to lead an angelic life, 'Xo eat twioo is to lie human.

Bat to eat three or four times is "vie de besteJ', ZZ nlffclsu of siftild birAtfliials. 'he keeper of a mtoagerie was once od whether th« baud had any effect on thlitftifttftlM?'

s'^

"To bo sure it does," said he "they^like iit, and therefore it does them good, firyou were to come in and look at them in a morning' when the hand is peratnbulatiug thetowa,.you would see many of them, the more savage beasts in particular, dull and mojplng, and either sitting or lying in their dens. We who travel with wild beastai cannot, Of course* gire them the room they oaght to hare, and being cribbed up in »how boxes they degenerate for want of exercise, do what we will with theas. But ft would he very much worse, I reckon, if i& were uot for the. music. When they hear the hand strike up they rouse themselves, and begin taking what exercise they can, the beasta of prey by walking backward and forward, and the others by repeating the movements natural to them when at liberty. The Irirds will begin to chaffer and plume themselves at the sound, and even the snakes jit times will uncoil and rear up, and convince tho people^ who sometimes seem to doubt the Itrt* that they arellrfaflgawtotM."

l)lbllc*l faefei nd Flgnres* It is told that the Bible contains 3,563,480 letters, 773,746 words, 31,173 verses, 1480c hapters and 86 books. The word and occurs 46,3?? times* the word Lord 1,855 times. The word reverend oocdrs but once, which iu

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Wlmgimtiam.

A considerable amount of plagiarism has been the subject of much complaint. A modified outrage is the instance or the old »t«ry *t t* Uler who, on bei, idressed «n dEsootvred at occapation at the time fixed for loner*!* refdied, "Bitsittees first a&d pkmure afier,M and the "new ve**ioa" is UuttA

HOW TO MAKE A KITE.

Some Kev Ideas Glvea with a View to Pleasing the Boys.

We are indebted to Country Gentleman for some new ideas on kites which we here repeat for the benefit of boy readers:

Find some straight grained, lightweight wood (we use cedar) and make four sticks about inch thick and inch wide two of them 22 inches long, one 17% inches long and the other 13% iJtncbes long, and place them as shown in the cut. pTack firmly where they cross cut »small notches at the ends of the st ks and put in a

GOING TO SEE flM TWO-STILTS.

little loaves. When Mrs Brown bakes large family pies, Luly bakes small pattypan pies, mince and apple and pumpkin. But Loily's, cookies are the best of all— "hearts and rounds" and dogs. and cooky boys and girls. Mrs, Brown whisks over the cookies with white of egg, and Luly powders them with sugar, and on the boys and girls she puts tiny colored candies for eyes and nose and mouth. When all are baked she makes a big package to take to Tim Two-Stilts. Tho "Saturday baking" makes two children happy.—Little Men and Women.

A Little Scolding.

Ruth Ashmore, writing in The Home Journal, says: "It's about the brothers. Your brother and mine get their ideas ot what girls are from their sisters, so I want every one of you to learn not to answer them qnickly or indifferently, but to feel that it is worth your while to be as attractive, as loving and as sweet to 'brother' as possible. I want you never to find it a trouble to chat pleasantly and sensibly with him. I want you to he interested in whatever is of interest to him. I want you to make him feel how good a girl can be and how sweet a good girl is then you are doing for him the best thing in the world —you are making him so appreciative ot the virtuous woman, whose price is above rubies, that he will never want to see ot speak to any other kind. That's what 1 want you to do for your brothers. You see it was a very little scolding after all, but 1 wanted to point a good moraL"

The Mouth of May..

Sotno one drops arose Ou the window ledge. Through the open door Sotne one waveaa vtnje. Tendrils green and fine Fleck the sunny floor, ,ln aBhftdow dance. 1 Who ia this that stands,

CJ

IMJL

wL

0th verse of the Ulth

Psalm. The middle vense is the Slh verse ut tire 118th Psalm. The Slst verse of the Tth chapter of Ezra contains all the letters of the alphabet except the letter 1 The i:ih chapter of !. Ki&gs and the SSUt chapter of Isaiah alike. The longest Terse is the 35th verse of the &b chapter of Esther. The ehotteat retie i* the SSth of the lllth chapter of St. John. There a» no words or names of more than eixayliablca,

fEHRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MATf*

At the threshold's edge* Fair, with flower full hands, Shy, with waking eyes Greet lioir, heart, and Let yoar welcome be. This is lovely May,

J-

Best and^brightest she, A Of spring's children three.

Counting Chickens Before They Hatch.

As a rule it is considered rather a rash undertaking to count chickens before they are hatched, but the good folks in Scotland have entirely overcome this difficulty. It Is as simple as possible. The hen has only to be set on an odd number of eggs and they will not be addled. But there is another dangeir-»nainely, that of the proverbial blind hen—to be averted and this is done by placing the eggs under the mother bird only after sunset, or the chickens will be blind. And while she is at it she may as Well further propitiate the fcnagidans'ttiai are bent on frustrating bx& future plans for the ben coop by repeating a formula of which, for some unacoooo table reason, they stead in great awe. It is, in the proper

TOMca1"-

A' oat tbegeethlr.

A»d here, in «*nclu*fr*n. -unc ». fe$r more useful lt*saacoi mil (v,-e" To hang aa egg 1 .-".An n- *r the rod of a boa^ jM-waserv^-from all hurts.

If ftm. bave a desire t. -v *tc L- i-j-f the broom&ttck on Mar —you »uatt«3ta an *i .-! v*-% -U Tbunday aadstawt wher. .' •-, wit oretaeyou must go into Friday, but come out lrfr

An «kg hung up iu a amu!et?nc»oethe ostric* Bttta resembling them, ia «Jh

-lia

Then cut out a piece of thinnish |p a an inch a ha it an a

A GO O IT E a a small bole at the ends of all the sticks except at the lower cross stick for attachment of strings, which must be on the opposite side from the sticks. Put strings loosely from A to F, from to E, from to D. Make a loop from E to for fastening the tail, which must be made of a long, slender piece of calico or muslin about 1 inch wide and 15 feet long, with ten bobs. Attach your string where the strings cross with a loose knot. If the kite dives, Dut more tail oa. The kite without, the tail ought to weigh two ounces. The string ought to be a fine cord.

Fly the kite with a moderate wind, riot a gale. Lilly's Saturday Baking.

Luly is going out in the snow to see little Tim Two-Stilts, who lives down Xhe lane. Tim is a happy little cripple in summer, when he can walk' about on his two crutches, but he is lonely in winter.

IJhen Tim is alone all day while his mother is away at work. But on Saturdays little Tim Two-Stilts wears a smile all day. He knows Luly Brown will come with her "Saturday baking."

When Mrs. Brown does her Saturday baking, Luly puts on a big check apron and a big paper cap. When her mother bakes large loaves of bread, Luly bakes

FEAR OF DISEASE.

It

Prevents tortality. by Inducing: People to Seek Proper Advice.

J5b one fails to send for a physician in typhus, yet only six persons in a million die of this disease since efforts were made to suppress it, says Dr. R. G. Eccles in Popular Science Monthly. Four hundml and twenty-eight in a million die of wheoping cough because it seldom frightens patients, and neighborly old ladies of both sexes give advice. Three hundred and forty-one in a million die of measles because It so frightens as to induce the friends to send for a doctor. Two hundred and twenty-two in a million die of scarlet fever because medical advice is sought sooner and more implicitly obeyed. One hundred and sixty-eight in a million die of diphtheria because it frightens more than most other diseases and induces people to send for a doctor quickly. Thus we may class diseases as more or less fatal as people are afraid of them and seek proper advice to both prevent and cure. "ilr

Beauty as a Means of Xlealth. Dr. Louise F. Bryson, in an address before one of the New York Working Girls' clubs, summed up in a general way "the great secrets of beauty and therefore of health," as follows: Moderation in eating and drinking short hours of labor and study regularity in exercise, relaxation and rest cleanliness equanimity of temper and equality of temperature. To be as good looking as possible and to be physically well one must in general be happy. And to be happy it is necessary to carry out ideas of personal taste and preference, as many of .them as can be put into definite form without infringing upon the rights of others. Happiness has a distinct (Esthetic and hygienic value. In itself it will secure perfect poise and respiration. To be happy is a duty just as style is a duty, and both are in great measure an affair of intellect and management. The old order put the cart before the horse it said, "Be virtuous and you will be happy"—a rule with many exceptions. But the old order changeth. And the modern gospel postulates happiness and material prosperity as the basis of morality. Other times, otner, manners. The ardent pursuit of good looks sums up the best there is in hygiene and becomes a legitimate and praiseworthy means of health. The world has yet room for two or three truths, of which not the least is the fact that the definite desire for personal beauty—which was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be— constitutes in itself a perfectly proper and meritorious inspiration to effort, especially In a country where the shades oF Puritanism linger as a sad inheritance, ljjd where disinterred Buddhism claims too often the frail neurasthenic for its own.

A Delightful Perfume for the Bath.

For the bath proper there is nothing like soap and water: but to do the dainty part afterward a writer in The World recommends the following:

Have your druggist mix for you 1 oz. tr. orris 1 tr. benzoin, 10 drops oil of neroll and 10 drops oil of lemon. To use this perfume add a tablespoonful of it to about a pint of warm water. It will turn as white as milk and the real perfume will be given off, whereas while in the bottle it has anything but a pleasing odor. Now, after your bath just take a soft cloth and go over yourself with this milk, dry thoroughly and you will smell like a bunch oi violets. The perfume may be altered to suit you, or you may add any handkerchief extract, but don't omit the benzoin, for that is what gives permanence to the perfume and softness and smoothness to-the

8

r:, A New Un for the JSncalyptuS Tree.

Parisian doctors are using creosote, or oil of smoke, made from the eucalyptus wood for the cure of consumption. The creosote cure, as it is called, is practiced by inhaling air saturated with this substance. Its effect is said to clear the lungs, killing the germs of disease and allowing nature to perfect a cure.

The Number of Cards to -An authority on manners and social customs thus aolves the sometimes perplexing question of how many cards to leave: "Upon a married lady whose husband is living, by a married lady whose husband is liviug, one'Of the lady's cards and two of her husband's.

4

"Upon a married lady with a daughter In society, two of the lady's and three of the husband's."

A gentleman iu making fiall sends In or leaves a card tor each of the ladies of the family. If he is calling upon a young lady who is a guest in a household to which he to a st ranger, he must ask to see her hostess at the same time and also send her his card I sczt:

Wedding Anniversaries,

Following Is one way in which the list of wedding anniversaries is enumerated: The wooden wedding la celebrated on the fifth anniversary of the marriage, the tin wedding on the tenth, the dryslal wedding on the fifteenth, the linen wedding on the twentieth, and the silver wedding on the twenty-fifth. The next is the golden weddiOg on the fiftieth anniversary the diamond wedding is on the sixtieth^ Ss X? TXX 'ii

H3ntt"

A Tetter sent'by one friend or acquaintance to another, through the handf of a friend or acquaintance of either or both, should always be unsealed.

Sit- ir linen given to a bride is marked tht iTJTTiateof bermaiden name. lithe ^mate of ~l:a otbets ,-r- of ji i»Ifa»ard.

h'TcySfcr't espevrv r^sjji»eCts a i.'crp

i-' rtemjer.

rtt the dish with the

iim mem

bab-

White Squaw Very Brave.

The early annals of the west abound in anecdotes of fortitude under suffering and heroism in circumstances of peril among the wives and mothers of the early pioneers. Many were tb instances iu which, when their cabins were attacked by the savages, these brave women displayed wonderful courage and presence of miud. In. December, 1791, a small party of Indians attacked the dwelling house of Mr. John Merrill in Nelson county, Ky.

Mr. Merrill was alarmed by the barking of bi3 dog, and opened the door to see what was the matter, when he received the fire of seven or eight Indians, by which his leg and arm were broken.

The Indians at once attempted to enter the house, but Mrs. Merrill and herdaughter shut the door against them. Then they hewed away apiece of the door, and one of them wedged himself part way through" the opening. The heroic mother dealt him a fatal blow with an ax, and hauled him through the passage into the house.

The other snvng^fes, unaware of the fate of their companion, and supposing that they had now nearly succeeded in their object, rushed forward. One by one they pushed themselves through the door, and were despatched and drawn inside by Mrs, Merrill, till five dead Iudiaus were in the house. Then the others outside discovered what was going ou.

They retired for a few minutes, but soon returned aud renewed their efforts to force an entrance. Despairing of succeeding at the door they attempted to descend the chimney. Mr. Merrill heard them, and anticipating their design, ordered his small son to cut open a feather bed and throw the feathers on the fire.

Two of the Indians were already descending the wide mouthed chimney. The smoke and heat from the burning feathers greeted them most unpleasantly. Choking, coughing and well nigh suffocated, they came tumbling down into the room I

Mr. Merrill seized a billet of wood and despatched the half smothered redskins, and Mrs. Merrill in the meantime was defending the door against the efforts of a single savage. Finally he, being wounded, retired, and the family were not disturbed again that night.

A prisoner who escaped from the Indians soon afterward stated that the wounded savage was the only one of his party of eight braves that escaped. When he returned and was asked, "What news?" he answered: "Bad news for Indian me lose son, me lose broder. White squaw very brave she fight bettor than 'Long Knives'"—the name given to the white men by the Indians because of their long swords.— Youth's Companion.

A Man Who Has Worked Hard.

Sir Henry Partes, the premier of New South Wales, commeliced to earn his own living when a child nine years of age, and he has been a hard worker from then till now. He never went lb school for more than three months in his life, and from the age of nine he has been entirely dependent on his own efforts. He arrived in Australia a young man without friends, without money, and with no letter of introduction to any one, and lived in the country for nearly two years without seeing a human face that he had seen before coming out. Now he has been premier of New South Wales about ten years. He does not believe there is a man in all Australia who has worked harder than he has at manual and other labor. He is close upon seventy-five years of age.—London TitBits.

A Peculiarity of the Capital

Washington is the only city of a quartet of a million inhabitants in the Union that has no factory girls. The lack of manufacturing and commercial enterprises reduces the working women to a minimum. A few are employed in retail stores, photographic galleries and private offices, but the majority who earn their living are in politics. Another novelty is the total absence of tenement house life. Even the poorest little colored mammy has a house of her own, where she reigns queen of the castle and high priestess of her daughter's picaninnies.—Washington Let­

One ^y one our dear ones die.

.r, O, to keep them with us.stlil I Loving hearts send up the cry. Wife and mother, O how dear, ss

Fading like a mist away. Father.Ietug keep them here, Tearfullly to God we pray. Many a wife and mother, who seems doomed to die because she suffers from diseases peculiar to women, which saps her life away like a vanapfre, and baffles the skill of the family physician, can be saved by employing the proper remedy. This reaaedy is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Precription, the greatest boon ever confered by man on weak, suffering, despairing women. It Is a specific for all phases of female weakness, no matter what their name.

I atti an old man and have been a constant suflerer with catarrh for the last ten years. "I am entirely cured by the use of Ely's Cream Balm. It is strange that so simple a remedy will cure such a stubborn disease.—Henry Billings, V. 8. Pension Att'y, Washington, D. C.

For eight years I have suffered from catarrh, which affected .my eyes and hearing have employed many physicf. ai relief am now on my ians without second bottle of Ely's Cream Balm, and feel confident of a complete cure.—Mary C. Thompson, Cerro Gordo, 111 48 2 Zm .*$#•/

The New Discovery.*''"

You have heard your friends and neighbors talking about it. You may yourself be one of the many who know from personal experience just hOw good »thing it 1t. If you have ever tried it, you are one of Its staunch friends, because the w^derful thing about It is, that when once given a trial, Ir. King's New discovery ever after holds a place in the house. If you have never used it and should be afflicted with a cough, oold or any Throat, Lung or Chest trouble* secure a bottle at once ond give it a fair trial* It is guaranteed every time, or money refunded. Trial bottles 10 ct£, free at 3. & C. Baur* drugstore. 6

H«arl dlmeAM* i* i»y fat the most frequent can- A sudden death, which ia ^rseoutof four I* muttwpeet**!.- The mpt/nax are fiemliy understood. Th'-". ,aresj a hahit of lying on the rlfch tilde, short breath*' pain or in side, h*cU or shoulder, irregalar pulse, a*thma, and hungry speilo, wind to stow 'i. swelling oi or dropsy, oppression dry ecragh and crfag. Dr. Miles' Hlastrafcw! book ou Heart Disease* free st all druggists who ««U and guarantee Dr. Mile*' um-qnaled «i« Heart Curts, and his Restorative XrrvW, which com nerroamtm, headache, steepiewroe**, rtfceAa at drJnkinf, etc. It contains no

WSKBmm

Stand Your Ground.

AVhen you make up your mind to takft Hood's Sarsaparilln, do not be induced to buy some other preparation instead. Clerks may claim that "ours is as good as Hood's" and all that, but thepecullarnierltof Hoods' Sarsaparilla cannot be equalled. Therefore have nothing to do with substitutes and Insist upon having Hood's Sarsaparilla, the best blood purifier and building up medicine.

A Noted Divine Says:

•«I havo been using Ton's Liver Pilla tor DTSpeimiB, Weak Stomech and Oostiveness, with which I have lone been afflictcd.

ARE A SPECIAL BLESSING.

I never had anythingtodomosomn«h ctKtd, 1 reccommena them to ail Ttho best medicine in

Bov. F. it. OSCiOOP, Kcff York. SOLD EVERYWHERE.

Office, 39 & 41 Park Place, H. Y,

$3000:

ILSlOiiM

J8T Agtnta Ws:nedl

CIKCTULSS

Fnrs.

torn Brewster's Holders ftlvon away

UUIWIUJM.

«h*va. »ory

homo owner Imvs in-ifi I to 0. l.lnw never unJei hoi

MM'

Hvt. .-una ii criH#

In etamja toimy rosiest1 Mickine for Nickel Klnievt sample that sell* forttS cis. llrawster Mf(j. Co., Uollj, illftu

LADIES^ TEY

Dr. DeLuc's Periodical Pills,

FROM PARIS, FRANCE.

Acts only on the menstrual system and positively cures suppression of the jnensus trom colds, shock, etc. A snfe reliable monthly medicine, warranted to relieve prico 82, three for£5. Tho American Pill and Medicine Co., proprietors, Spencer, Iowa. Sold aud rlce, aud by sent by mall upon receipt of price, aud by Geo. Relss, druggist, corner Third and Main streets, Torre Haute, Ind.

YEAH I nmlertuke to briefly touch any (hlrly Intelllp'iit fienon of either eox, who can r«sd ami write, mid who, after lixtnictlon, will work Inituatrlonely, how to enrn Three Thiu»*nd ltolUrn a

TenrSn their own loealltlea,wherever they llve.lntll«hofkirnlat the altuntlon orcmploymeut,nt whli-h you can ««rn thM amonnt. No money for me unteM turcraifut aa abovn. Kmtly anil quickly learn "d. dpalro but ono worker from ench dUtrlct or county. I hare already taught and provided with emiiloyment a largo number, who oro maklnr over$3000 a j-eareach.

13. C, ALILJEJF,

II'INEW

and SOI^IIK Full rartlcularaB'Ml fcE. Adlrm» at one#,

Box

MO, AUKUKUI,

Maine.

Sni'tfr Utile 0)rtine»l:a»ebecnro*deiit work for u», by Anna r«Be, Anatln, Te*a*, and J116. Wonn, Toledo, Ohio. See cut. Othera are doing ni well. Why,Inot you? Some earn ow 500.00 month, l'on enn do ihe work and live [at Iwine, Wherever ycu src. Kvan beSlOttilnv.AllRReti.

lmx-m nrc entity enmlnir from to Weahow you how and *!m-i yo» fait work In #nrmtlme or itll tin* (line. Ulg Inoney tor worker*. PnllUro unknown among ihem. XKW nnd wo,iderftil. rnrilMilm*fr«v

H.lI«»llott.t "«».,il«x WHOl*wi'tliiti«t,Mntiio

ABSOLUTELY

No Change of Cars

-FROM-

ST. LOUIS, TERB.E HAUTE IHDIAKAPOLIS, CINCINNATI,

HO,

DaYTON, .SPRINGFIELD,

New York, Boston

JLISTZD THMAST VIA THE POPULAR

Lake Shore and NewYork Central

Big 4,

ROUTES.

THE

Shortest & Quickest Line

BETWEEN

EAST! WEST

All trains arrive Sixth Street Depot.

and Depart from

Berths in Sleeping Cars

SBCVHEn THROUGH TO

NEW YORK & BOSTON

EE.SOUTH,Gen. AgC!«% 710 WABA8H AVENUE

94 Miles the Shortest and the Quickest. CINCINNATI to NEW ORLEANS Entire Train, Baggage Can Day Coacbcsaad Sleeping Car* through without Change Direct oonneeUon» at 2t&w Orleans and Bbrcvcpcrt tor Tex a*. Mexico and CidSfornla.

MJle* the Shorleni, 3 hoara the Qutoke*t from CINCINNATI to JACKSONVILLE, Pla,

T'me 27 hour*. Solid train* and through wUhoiu cbang:« for fltny el»w of ptuh The Hborl Line l«iween€inciniiatl ixjJnalon, Kr.. «me,2thoara noxv !ii«. Twin., tlmrf 12 hour* A«*mil*j, %'. Cy ti/oe, 17 boon ---"a* xenn.. time, 11 hour» A r«Urnin« 'O, Ala. ros 0 i.tt# Dally. Pulluian

Cftm ntiral Onion Depot OucSici».ion* Hlffi Brtflec of .g Oi« bane of Looboat

iim T-.. '"wvi "ntw nail «n**in« me I* K6DtorK,y auii roun Mountain.

Over oMsiflUn aetw of l«nd In AWb*m», tbe fuioro great Mlate of the «oatb, «utject to pro-etnption- UnaorpMSfd climat#

"sst 5 c,^-a"wr?o'ssi-

Sl a. O. P, T. A

a a HARVEY, vice Pre*ik-nU ctnatofAti o»

mm