Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 52, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 20 June 1891 — Page 6

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LONDON'S WOMEN REPORTERS.

Some of the English Female* Who Hftft Become Known by Their Pen.

One of the most clever of the article contributors to such papers as the Queen and the Lady's Pictorial is Miss de Grasse Stevens, of New York, whose sister is married to the member for Southampton. He* picture, together with a three column account of her, books and her American ancestry, appears in one of the weekly papers. The correspondents in London of some of the largest of provincial papers are also ladles, and in two instances the wives of members of parliament, while an occasional contributor of the heaviest matter in a weekly review is said to be the young daughter of an English nobleman, who can present the man who seeks her hand with an income of £20,000 a year.

Of the actual women reporters, I have so far only come across about half a dozen. Of these the most conspicuous perhaps is Mrs. Crawford, the heroine of the famous Dilke divorce case. She is a singularly bright and well informed woman, and it is said that she wrote the first interview ever published in The Pali Mall Gazette

She is still a pretty and decidedly young looking woman, and among the successes of her pen are the instructive conversations which she managed to obtain from Canon Farrar, Cardinal Manning, General Booth and many other men who make it their aim in life to alleviate the troubles of the poor. Mrs. Crawford also receives regular assignments for all sorts of odd work, even to reporting cases in police courts, and she does her work so cleverly and unobtrusively that she has made many warm friends among the very newspaper men loudest in their protests against the admission of feminine reporters to their ranks.

Another hard working female reporter is Prances Low, sister of the editor of The St. James' Gazette. She does not get any work on her brother's paper, but manages to eke out a living by contributing gossip to The Star, The Pall Mall Gazette and some of the smaller women's papers. Although her signature would suggest English nationality sho is really of Hungarian birth, as her father is a Hebrew gentleman from Prague of the name of Lowe. His children, long residents in England, Anglicized themselves by clipping the "e" from their name.

Straugo to say, however, one of the most bitter writers against the Russian Jews is Miss Low's brother, of The St. James'. Sho is a young looking woman, with the black eyes and sharp features of a daughter of Israel, and sho may be often seen working out her notes in one of the many aerated bread shops which abound in London.

Tho most prominent, however, of London women reporters is Marie Belloc, a round littlo fat dumpling of awoman, who can bt seen trotting up Fleet street and tho Strand at all hours of tho day. She manages to make a good deal of money, particularly its sho is Mr. Stead's chief assistant on Tho Review of Reviews. She is not more than twenty-five years of age, but she is full of assurance, and has more than once succeeded in obtaining news where men have failed miserably.

In a general way, however, London's woman reporter is either a very loud and overdressed woman or a very shabby and jtjnderdresaed female. Sho waves her card defiantly in the air, and passes a Cerberus before tho guardian animal has time to realize what has happened. Nothing oscaiKVH hor ears or her eyes once sho is inside, and if ever tho now journalism, or, as it is called here, American journalism, becomes rampant in England, it will be the fcnuilo, not the male, reporter in London who will make or mar it.—London Cor.

New York Press.

The Children's Teeth.

It becomes mothers, from tho* moment that their children begin to eat solid food, to seo that they have meat and vegetables and milk, eggs, fruit, bread and porridges of the unbolted grains, and as little pastry, Dno flour bread, and confectionery as possible, in order that they may at one© begin secreting tho material for sound second teeth—which come under any circumstances, to bo sure, but which under hostile circumstances go without long waiting on tho order of their going. It is equally necessary to see that the food agrees with the ehlld for if it is not of a kind easily digested, then the gases of its fermentation will rise and Injure the teeth, and the heated blood occasioned by indigestion will make disease# of the gums, also hurtful to the teeth, and create more sensibility in the nerves to pain and to heat and cold.

Alternations of heat and cold, by the way, are quite as bad for tho teeth as indigestible food, tho delicate enamel being obedient, as every other substance is, to the laws of contraction and expansion, crushing and splitting under tho process, and affording opportunity for tho beginning of decay by lodgment of food, or even by the entrance of the common air. Thus it is hardly a matter of doubt whether ice water and ice cream are not of groat detriment to the teeth* whether good or bad for tho stomach, and if hot tea and coffee, or OTTJU plain hot water, are not equally potent for harm.

Nor must the motiief, If It can bo helped, allow the fits* teeth to be drawn. Beal pain that cannot be allayed—(tor there was nemer yet philosopher that could enduro the toothache patiently, says Ixonato—is the only thing that should make her yield on this point and it is right that the fangs of the llrtt milk teeth should be absorbed In their place, and not extracted, after which absorption the little crowns Will iSrop away of themselvta.—Harper's Basar.

The Mother and Hwr Drat*, What a contrast there is in the general appearance of some nKsn and their wires. Some of them look they had mad* a mistake and gobbled up a wonan that ought to have been some other man's wUfcf *nd **rae women—* Rood many womenlook tike victims of some kind of a mistake, It is not uncommon to see women dressed wlth all rospect to the latest deout by Worth or Fells, whllo the husband sateas grateful that he bad tonough money left to boyeven "misfit*." fMa attraet* no particular attention, but Dais's heart will get to aching for the 1* nailld fcacsd aad taaek looking woman vrmm plttsh etoik *«4 tdpua drtssm white tbe bt&band radiant In fresh new solus, fcaa col^r^l gloves* sOk hatasadxtsi rose in is»

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spcnlan

hoar with the f&Maced wom&a

•nd radiant husband. It was in a steam

cat. There were four children with them, ti»e oldest about six years. The wife had on, in addition to the plush cloak, a rusty black hat and gray veil. The children were dressed beautifully. How they loved her! One little fellow came back to kiss her about once in five minutes. It was, "Oh, mamma, isn't that lovely?" and "How long will it be before we are there, mamma?" and "Are you glad we are going?" and "Dear mamma." She gave them some fruit. They would not eat it until mamma had a "bite."

The father was radiant and dignified and grand. He never got a kiss, nor a 'bite," nor a glance from those four children. He paid their fare and looked out of tie window. He had his fine clothes, but the mother was rich in all the love that could fill little hearts.—Teresa Dean in Chicago Herald. 7*.

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Women and Ladles.

There have been some amusing instances of the misapplication of the word lady, which custom decreed to mean social culture instead of its original meaning, "loaf giver."

A girl waiter in a large hotel in an eastern city approached a guest with this query: "Has any other lady taken your order?"

This was equivalent to the politeness of the little girl who surprised the family by announcing: "Mamma, the swill lady is at the back door.".

There is a story of the mistress of a fashionable house who, on being left without any servant, answered the door bell and was confronted by a stout girl, who asked: "Are ye the woman that wanted a lady to work for ye?"

A minister who was very polite changed a portion of Scripture to read, "Ladies and gentlemen created he them and a lecturer who cared more for the sweet phrases of politeness than for the plain statements of the truth, rung this query upon an astonished audience as he discoursed on the characteristics of women: "Who were the last at the cross? Ladles. Who were the first at the sepulcher? Ladles."

But even he was outdone by the exquisite divine who, as he concluded marrying a couple, said gallantly: "I now pronounce you husband and lady."—Detroit Free Press.

-JA Hint for Mothers.

"There is a good deal of talk," said a mother, "about helpful daughters. I have got a helpful son. He is almost tweny-one and quite a society boy, but in a domestic emergency of last week he came to my rescue as perfectly as any practical housekeeper would have done. I had invitations out for a luncheon to some specially formal friends who were temporarily in town, when my strong dependence, a waitress who had been with me years, received word of the dying condition of her mother. She had to go at an hour's warning, and I was In despair. I could only supply her place with an untried maid, and I felt that the fate of my luncheon hung in the balance. 'If you were only a girl, Harry!' I said to my son the morning of the affair. 'I want trained intelligence In the butler's pantry tbday.' 'I'm not a girl, It's true,' he said, 'but I may have some Intelligence, and such as it is you are welcome to it. Only, mother,' he stipulated, 'don't you tell one of thqse ladies who is in the background.' "I promised gladly enough, and the luncheon was the most successful one I ever gavo. Harry superintended all the courses, had plates hot that should be, and vice versa, and attended to all the little details whose accomplishment makes such an affair a success or the reverse. I want to tell you of it, for other mothers with sons and no daughters may be entertaining equal angels unawares."—Her Point of View in New York Times.

Sweat Seventeen.

A lady contributor to Tho National Review tells how she took an English girl, aged seventeen, for a tour on the continent. Shft^appears to have done this, partly at least, to test "the effect of foreign travel on a young and untried mind, fresh from tho stimulating power of a high school education." The result disappointed her. "Sweet seventeen" enjoyed the St. Gothard railway, but, when asked what she thought of the* Alps,'observed that they "didn't look so very high." "Is that your own composition?" sho inquired, when her mother quoted Lord Tennyson's lines on Monte Rosa.

At the Brcrn, Milan, she wanted to know if all the pictures were hand painted. When Catullus' villa was pointed out to her, It turned out thatslie had never hoard of him. At Venice she liked best the sham jewelry shops, and wished to be told "how many doges thero were at once." To her mother sho wrote: "I don't like going to churches, they feel so moldy inside. And the sanitary system of Venice seems very bad thero are no end of smells." In Paris she had to be informed what the Louvre was. Her companion discovered afterward that the young lady stood high in her school, being "first" that term in history, literature and the Shakespeare class.

Women North and South.

A Kentuckian, speaking of the northern fashion of letting a woman hustle for herself in public places, says that this is entirely due to the demeanor of the northern woman herself. When ho is south, ho always resigns his seat in a public vehicle to a woman, and makes it his business to secure her comfort whenever possible, regarding the welfare of every woman as the special care of every man. In the south the women are dependent, confiding and helpless. In the north they know what they want, and they go and get it with a rapidity that startles the average man.

The northern woman buys her own car tickets, checks her baggage, gets aboard, buys a newspaper, looks around for a seat, and waits her turn for one with all the independence and courage of any man that can be produced. She wants no favors and she asks for none. This is so plainly apparent that, as the Kentuckian says, he is half afraid to offer her any favors for fear she may resent his interference and, even when he Is sure that she will not, and when she looks si him longingly, he himtelf Is half provoked at the general swing of the sex in the north and wtuld not offer her a seat anyway.—San Francisco Argonaut.

The Cans* of Homaly *««**.

"The scrawny necks on American women," said a man dressmaker, "are due a» much to the high and tight collars which they h*v* Jbeen wearing during the past six years as to anything else. The fashion was slatted by the princess of Wales, who has a sear on her neck, and it wa* \gertyt-*-tn sphere. Street gowns and .okefat re fitted with tight win-, doth** braids eollaiss a .: these pm tv--* lose'"-that women t_ ,iaoff I t& in a hot worn they not lofreqoently found them aatuxated wtth„

There is so better way of reducing the

flesh than this. A man can. put a worsted or flannel band around his waist, take violent exercise and reduce his girth under the band rapidly and surely. The high collars which women wore had precisely this effect. Now that they have become distinctly unfashionable, I look for an improvement in the necks of New York women."—-New York Letter.

An excelleat covering for burnt surfaces is made by mixing common whiting (used in kitchens for polishing purposes) with sweet oil, olive, cotton seed or other oil, of even water, into a thick paste. With this the burn is carefully covered by means of a feather, taking care not to break the: blister, then the whole part is covered with cotton cloth and kept clean and moist..

Burns of large size are always danger ous, often resulting in death, and should receive the careful attention of a skilled physician.—Hall's Journal of Health. 1

Woman's Physical Proportions.

Celia Logan, speaking of woman's phys proportions, says that the bust should measure ten inches more than the waist. If the waist is laced in smaller than this, the abdomen is pressed down and the bosom up, the result being to cause both to billow out to an unusual size. If the natural shape of a woman is not deteriorated by tight lacing her abdomen, when she stands straight, should protrude very little, if any, beyond the front line of her thighs. The abdomen should never be larger than the bust, which should measure at least five inches more. The hips should measure one-third more than the shoulders. The old Idea that a plummet line dropped from the nose should just graze the abdomen is hardly correct. It should fall free of it.—Bbston Record.

A Pall Fill a I^ong Felt Want. A Sdhenec. idy woman has invented a household utc:isil that will fill a want that must have been in existence for a long time, even if it hasn't been felt. The invention is so simple that the wonder is that nobody has ever thought of it before. It is simply a pail for cleaning purposes which is divided into two compartments, one of which is designed to hold suds water,while the other is filled with clean water for rinsing. There is also a partition for holding soap in one of the compartments.—

IJURKE ATTTE SATURDAY EVENING /MAIL. 9tm

&

"Cure for

Barns.

Put Ihe part instantly in cold water, or cover it with moistened baking powder and then with a wet cloth. When the skin is destroyed the point to be attained is to exclude the air. Do this by covering the burn with sweet oil, vaseline, linseed oil, cream, carron oil, lard, or with flour spread thickly on a linen cloth or on a cotton batting.

4

Women and Tobacco.

I have heard men remark complacently that they were glad their wives did not dislike tobacco, as they did enjoy a pipe by their own fireside. Their wives would not deny this statement, but afterward would tell me that they "invariably left the room for a breath of pure air." There are two sides to all questions, and I am very sure if many men fully comprehended the worn en's side of the tobacco question, the dis gust and contempt so many of them feel for a "tobacco worm" they would at least cease to putrify the air of their homes and the floors of the buildings they frequent. But were men to ask these selfsame women If tobacco is offensive to them, the reply would very probably be, "Oh, not particularly!"—Mrs. Irene G. Adams.

Covers for J&arrings.

Surprising it is that shells or little coverings for diamond earrings are not more worn in this country. The safest place to carry the precious gems Is In the ears, but during the day, particularly in the morning, theno little shells, either In black or subdued colors, look well. They conceal the brilliancy of the diamonds, that should really be shown only when a lady is in full dros or very elegantly attired. One could shopping, etc., and thc.-o modest shell arrings would attract no attention wbtii. ver.—Jeweler's Weekly.

Al­

bany Express. Who "Carrlo Careless" Is. Mrs. Augusta Prescott, who is known to the newspaper readers as "Carrie Careless," is & widow of a prominent scientist! and professor of natural history at an educational institution in Albany. She has a department in Harper's Young People and also edits the woman's department in the New York World.—Current literature.

Agnes Repplier is one of the few quiet ,and careful essayists among women. She is a native of Philadelphia and lives a quiet, studious life among her books, sending frequent and serious articles to the Philadelphia and New York journals and to The Atlantic Monthly, and delivering occasional leotures during the season.

Matilda Aston, a young lady of seventeen, completely blind, has matriculated at Melbourne university. Anna Chamberlain, also blind, has been trained as a masseuse, and is meeting with considerable success, as many people prefer her sensitive touch, and are not at all opposed to a masseuse who cannot see.

Among the women's clubs in New Jersey are some that have named themselves "The Sparrows," because they live on the crumbs that fail from the big clubs' tables. In other words, they have the second reading of the papers from two or three large clubs in the state.

Civil engineering is the only profession in which women have not as yet figured conspicuously, but it is known that for some years the sisters of J. Edgar Thompson, the railroad magnate, hare worked with their brother in the father's office at dvil engineering.

MIm

Paddock, the daughter of Maggie

Mitchell, looks very much like her mother, but is so different from her that she has hardly crossed the threshold of a dressing room or seen the glare of the footlights except faintly and from far away.

Joel Chandler Harris' wife is the anther's best assistant. She looks over his manuscripts before they go out, often advises upon them, and keeps a scrap book filled with press notice* of her husband's published writings. _____

The Baroness ton VcuHel, better known to Americans as Blanche WUlnrd Howard, is reported to be singularly happy In her married life. Her fcnshsmd is very prood of her litenuxgifts, «*d encourages her titerarygifts, workIn her work.

When roolr -sits used inc. dngitba great in re* to boil an itbef—n rather -iessant .*•»

OF

tv -TOT oft, ,asses is

tnodhi *. thfepr-

Mrs. Amelia E. Barr, the popular no«ltst, be Q* mother of fifteen children. It ii K«ily dilate years that she has discovered bear aMMiy to write stories.

A GARDEN PARTY COSTUME,

A Picturesque Toilet Designed Especially for Fetes and Garden Parties.

In the accompanying cut is illustrated a fete costume recently imported. The three-quarter jacket is in apple green cloth, lined with gold gimp around the armholes and down the side seams of the pointed fronts. The back is close fitting and longer than the fronts which are semi loose and have the ribs of the cloth running slantwhile these are horizontal at the back.

AS IMPORTED COSTUME.

The collar and sleeves puckered on the shoulders are in plain Bengaline silk. The round

Bkirt

in pink Indian cashmere Is

bound with gold braid, from under which projects a hem in silk of a deeper tint. Stars embroidered in silk and gold thread encircle the skirt and ornament the left side. The hat, which is from Virot's, Is in Manilla straw, faced with green velvet in keeping with the crossbands on the low crown. There is a trail of tinted leaves on the bent brim and panache of light green feathers at the back. The parasol is in pink crepe, veiled with bouillonnes and flounces in moussellne do sole. Narrow ribbons hide the ribs of the frame.

Gloves and Shoes for Men.

Golden tan kid gloves are worn by gentlemen in the street, when making calls, and at church. At morning weddings the groom, ushers, best man aud guests wear very light tan colored gloves. At after noon weddings and in the evenly also, the men of the bridal party wear the palest pearl colored gloves, with very narrow stitching of black or self color. Men's gloves are of glace kid, and are fastened by two buttons.

Patent leather and fine calfskin shoes worn by men of fjishlon have the round French toe instead of those with sharply pointed toes lately In vogue. Walking shoes are h.h about the aukle, and are laced or buttoned, as the wearer prefers Low shoes, laced^u the nsU*i. *'"i irely of patent leather, aud indeed ail very dressy shoes, whether high or low, are of the glossy pHfcent leather throughout. Black socks of lisle thread or line Balbriggans are still preferred for wearing, either with high or low shoes. Tan colored, mode and gray socks, quite plain or with narrow lines of color, are also worn. Pocket handkerchiefs of fine linen, with narrow hems hemstitched, are for best use, and those with a narrow border of color are for general wear.—Harper's Bazar

The Newest Gloved.

The newest gloves for day and evening wear are In the fashionable color—cornflower blue. These are loud, and no lady with a modest taste in dress would care to wear them. Doeskin gloves in mild shades of tan and brown, with leather bindings and brass buttons, look smart with tailor made gowns. They will stand a good deal of hard wear. The prettiest evening gloves are in soft, nameless shades of pink, mauve, gray, drab and yellow. Short gloves are very little worn.

Honsetnaid's Cap.

There Is anew cap for housemaids. It is of English origin and resembles somewhat in shape a plate, as it lies close on the head

A SEW CAP FOB flOCSEMAIPS.1

In front. A little peaked crown appears at the back and is finished off with muslin strings.

It is more dressy than the coronet cap and more becoming to the majority of maids than is the Normandy cap.,

Truest Styles of Bfitbom.

With reganl to ribbons, very wide, soft shot «nk find favor for hats, and four inch width for trimmings. Tinsel embroidery appears on the soBd colorsaad spots of several sixes but the charming little pompadotir jprlgs on sstin grounds are the leading" ideas, while the favorite fiowar* are the cowslip, the polyanthus, cornflower sad the bttttm:up, and fruits aw preparing for the laier season. Brocades on gold gauze ribbons cure mnch worn, .awi shot silks, whkh «ft«n display brocaded forgetmenotoand penftdeea^ shot spots of laxge aim. sometimes elliptical. The fsvorlte cotnbroattona are brown and bine, jfmrtti eokved and sky htne, pink sad

rial

knr.yeHow and green,'black ind gold.

ATTRACTIVE FURNITURE.

Novelties in Mirrors, Dressing Tables, Hedsteada, Etc.

Novelties In dressing tables have an ingenious arrangement of mirrors. The main glass is flanked by two hinged wings which fold after the manner of the Psyche glasses so much in use. The best of them are made in Pollard oak with beveled French plate mirrors.

Some of the prettiest English dressing tables are made of curly walnut, a drab wood with little curls in the grain resembling the grain of bird's eye maple. A large dressing table of white maple mounted with brass costs $60 upward. This white maple is a beautiful wood for bedroom sets.

The newest library tables are massive affairs of oak and mahogany. They are curved in the kidney form popularly attributed to Chippendale, but in reality a Sheraton shape. There is a succession of drawers on either side of the table, and it is supported on short spindle legs beneath the drawers.

The old fashioned four-poster bedsteads offer such allurements to the decorator that they are largely sought. Sets of carved mahogany posts are so scarce that they are being reproduced. Some of the new sets of unstained mahogany have tall, fourposted bedsteads. Single antique posts in carved mahogany are successfully utilized for hall trees, being supplied with brass or mahogany pegs.

Hall trees are mnch used in bedrooms for receiving the clothing laid off at bedtime, according to The Decorator and Furnisher, from which the foregoing notes are gleaned.

A CHINA CORN Eli.

Tlii? corner will be of,especial interest to the Indies, for where is the woman who does not delight in this dainty waref In fact, it may ic s.vid of the average,woman:

Chinn'H the passion of hor soul. A cup, a plate, a dish, a bowl Can kindle wishes in her breast, Inflamo with joy or break her rest. Along mirror is sometimes highly effective in brightening a dark corner of a par lor. i/3t it be draped in some artistic manner with soft yellow or pale blue silk, caught up here and there with delicately tinted fans of different Bhapcs. A tall palm, or a littlo table on which is a bowl of flowers, so placet! as to be reflected in the mirror, would give a pleasing effect

One of tho little bamboo tea tables so popular just now, wRh its white cloth and tiny cups and saucers, makes a charming corner, giving an air of hospitality which nothing else In the room can give. They are both pretty aud inexpensive, and come in several sizes.

A Handsome Sweet Disli.

Peel some nice oranges, removing as much of tho white pith as you can, and divide them into their natural quarters. Wipe quite dry in a clean cloth, then with a needle and thread make a longish loop through the white part in the middle of each quarter. Slip these loops five or six at a time on to skewers, so that the orange quarters bang free without touching one another. Now boil some sugar and water (one pound of sugar to a good tumbler of water) to a sirup, skimming it carefully. When a drop of this, lifted out on the point of a knife and dropped into cold water, will snap off short between one's fingers, lift iu both hands one of the skew ers aud dip the orange in and out of the sirap, then put aside the skewer, supporting both ends so that the fruit hangs clear, and let it set. Repeat this process very quickly till the fruit is all done. When the quarters are cold the sirup should be like a coating of thin ice. Now oil a plain mold, and arrange the orange all round it inrows, each quarter overlapping the next one, each alternate row goipg the opposite way to the previous one, fixing the fruit with a little more sirup. Set the mold on ice or in a oool place till hard then slips knife round the mold to loosen the orange, turn it on a dish and fill up the center with whipped cream.

White Sauce.

Aw all sauces are made on the same lines, this one will serve to show the method: For three or four people take a spoonful of floor and one or two ounces (accord ing to bow rich you want the sauce to be) of butter stir steadily over the firs till the hotter is perfectly amalgamated with the floor then add half a pint of boiling water a little salt* stirring all the time. Let ft cook for a few ml a tea, then run it through a fine sieve into the sauce boat. whfdbshooJdbsrtrebee®preifooslyw8«ned. If the yolk of an egg, beaten tip with a UttJe lemon juice and strained, be added to this sauce when taken off the Are it besome* French melted butter—in other sonk. "mmettblanche*„

Plato lstmon Pie.

Three eggs, on* cup of sugar, onsof cold sratcr, two taespconful* of flour, the Juice the rind of one lemon.

ant

that it ti Krt in wiiirli tati litiUne' to ptoa' toilet a Uiey rai not gvl cxUmhdi t« which and all wliilo adwr tainitu inirpiu nurt-ly E«:,NO

1

Tasteful Corner Arrangements.

"Corner decoration" may be somewhat of a fad just now, but it is certainly a commendable one. In the corners of a room one may give dainty touches and exercise an artistic perception which shall render it homelike, cheery and inviting. Nothing is so ugly and stiff looking as a bare corner.

Many pretty corner furnishings are being constantly devised. Unusually attractive among these are the following, suggested and Illustrated by. Good Housekeeping:

Since it is no longer the custom to keep one's china in a closet, a corner is just the place for a cabinet, where the various pieces may be displayed. Its shelves should be lined with heavy Indian red paper, a color which sets off china to the best advantage, and pretty silken curtains, hung on a slender brass rod, would add to the effect.

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After all, the best way to know thA real merit of Hood's Sarsaparilia, is tov try it yourself. Be sure to get Hood's.

Cure Many Iise»»c*.

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or at! Uif products of (heir twtabllshnicnt Bono lobe pl.ic.ul nbovr tho Sliandon Bella Toilet tSoap Its growth in tias tran plit-unmrnai. and 1 based ii|»m

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WEAK

Wlfcrl KXHAl'HTIO.V, WAKTIXU WKAKKK88, IS-

TOM'XTltlY I.OSSK8«llli KAII1.Y JM'XAY In VOt'MJ nml MIHIltK AUKUt Inck or vim, vicor. nml utiTtigili.wlth »c*ual organ* Unimln-it nud w-al^ne^Jsi^m^irTWIn am^aneMii«:oM BJte.

WHEN W In ninny (hoti«

UIP PIV nilDC t\'o fptVk from knowle.WtB HE SA7 WIIItt of PKItMANKNT ItKKU/fS nd emeu 11'mted nml cured In twelve ycar»,

An iitrnee of our fiiitli In Prof. Harris'

^C&GsOLUBLE MEDICATED PASTILLEB. TO7a I offer clglil dnyi.trtnl AIIMOM'TKI.Y PltKK, a 1Klftt(n

young or old, ouffcrlnj from Oil*

prevalent trouble uliotild *cnd theiraddrom »o tiecan fttrnlnh qmwilon* to be nntwerod, tbwt we may kuowtho trneeoiulliioa of i-iicb cnue and prepare ineflielne to eHoct a prompt cure.

I.ocuteit 111 New York (afier li venrn nl St. U»l«), we offer nil nelmneo to be cured by tho celebrated l'a»tllle Treatment. THE HARRIS REMlEDY CO., WlfB. Choml^S, 99 TeFwvwrA W STREET. NEW YORK, rSTAQ'O lft7fl.JNCORFP 1830-CAPITAL flggiOOO.

ni

Thte Tmd® Mark la on

Tie

Waterpot Coat

In the world. 3. Tovip.

fend for IllnrtraUd 0nt»lo|ro«. )tf

SURE CURE FOR CATARRH

FOE OYER FIFTY YEARS this old SoverelgnRemedy has stood the test, and stands to-day the best known remedy for Catarrh, Cold in the Head and Headache. Persist in its use, and it will effect a cure, no matter of how long standing the case may be.

For sale by druggists.

Uitcd aucmwfully 15 yearn. Vr. JOB. Ilium' Hotr und Poultry Ilnnc-dy nrre*f» aiserine, nrcveHt* di«eni«'. iiu-roHM*# tin* Jlnch find hiwlens maturity. Price ?1M, Si f/k* per ace. Ask for fcKtf monlitis. H?nl2-t' ntMtiunp for "Homology" to Jon. linn-', H,, Indiumipoiix, I tid.

Snt.K AOF.NT,

GULICK & CO.,

N. W. cor. 4th and Wnbnali Ave, Terre Haute, nd.

Jii/

7h

8 WABA§ HI, AVE.

TRUSSES

Will r*4aln the most difficult foroaof HHftMA or KBDtarewStb eotafoitxxl toitAy fairnr&rflcal CUUE crfallcuraM«caw«*.

tody, or

in*

LEWIS

S3

lmper~

in em-jr fe*r*bUs pattcra. wHh pad* «o*. frrr.wiiy coa*tn»sfad,towt «U

Tha

Gftmxt

and Skillfnl Mechanical Trenimeut or

HERNIA 0»fflUPTURE A SPECIALTY,

tuUftf *4

"'W#

ritt

pro :y cbatNr ^MaJtura—

LOCKWOOD

JCAS ufi-AeruKi?jt of

Palest IMsaM Defonolty Appliances SevuRtli

tind

Main seta,

HcKEEN BLOCK, No.

14.