Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 52, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 20 June 1891 — Page 7
il
VvVV 1
8HAD0WS ON THE WALL.
JLa Amusing ReJWatloD for Home Entertainment IHustrateO and Described.
In tbe method of producing shadows on the wall here depleted, the exhibitor, as well as the cardboard figure*, are placed behind the spectators, a position which baa -many advantages.
JTIOURE PROJECTED IK SHADOW OV THE SCREEN.
Place on the table alighted candle, and 1n front of It, at two or three feet distance, attach to the wall a sheet of white paper to form your "screen." Between the light and the screen interpose some opaque body, for example, an atlas or other large book.
Bnt under such conditions bow are we to cast the shadows on the screen Simply by tbe use of a mirror, placed at the side of the table. Tbe reflection of the mirror will appear on the wall as a luminous space, oval or oblong, as the case may be, and If you have placed it at a proper angle with reference to the screen, and move your cardboard shapes about cleverly between the candle and the mirror, you will forthwith see Httlo fantastic figures projected in shadow on the screen. The uninitiated spectator is wholly at a loss to discover how you produce them.
Oow to Make Strong Canting*.
According to The Commercial Bulletin some of tbe Knglish iron founders have adopted a simple practice in making stronger castings. The method Is merely the introduction of thin sheets of wrought iron in tho center of the mold before casting. This idea was first applied to the casting of thin plates for the ovens of cooking stoves, and a sheet of thin iron in the center of a
%-lnch
oven plate renders
It practically unbrcaknblo by fire. Recently tho process lias been applied to the casting of large Iron pipes, a core of sheet iron imparting additional strength and lessen Ing tho liability to fraAtnre. As an evi dence of an additional strength that may bo imparted by this process it is stated that a plate of iron one-fourth of an Inch thick, cast with a perforated sheet of 27 wire gauge wrought iron in the center, possesses six times the strength of a similar cast plate with no core. The inch plate thus made hu» tho strength of a plate one inch thick.
An Ingonloua Automatic Device.
A recent Invention of consldurablb interest la described by Fire anil Water. It is a devico for automatically shutting off the gas when it has boon blown out, instead of being turned off In tho usual way. Tho prlnclplo upon which the Invention Is based is tho expansion and contraction of amolaifto loop made of German stiver and steel, and which is adjusted very close to the gas (lame. One end of the loop is free, while tho other is secured to the fixture. A valve controlling the gas Is attached to tho free end and when tho gas Is burning the viUve is open and t.ho gas freely escapes. If, however, tho gas Is blown out, tho loop will quickly cool and contract, and the valve will shut off the gas. It is said that the devico is exceedingly simple and It respouds quickly to the change in temperature. ______
Tenting the UardneM or Iron. JO Industrial World mentions tnethJfor testing the hardness of iron while 'tho process of manufacture which has su devised by Mr. C. A, Oasperson, of 10 Forsbacka Iron works in Sweden, The inventor, It is said, conducts a current of electricity through a test piece of iron or steel, letting it melt the same, upon which the strength of the current necessl tated in the operation is compared with fhe strength of current required for the fusion of a standard piece of metal of determined degree of hardness, and of tho same diameter as the piece to bo tested. The hardest piece will resist longest, but melt If tho current be maintained snfflclently. By the aid of an ampere meter metals of varying harduess may be tabu• lated, so as to furnish a scale, it is said, of hardness, ________
That I'NuUftt Metal, Sodium.
To preserve sodium it is neewwaryto protect It from the action of the atmos phone, and to keep it in a bottle containing oil of naptha. Sodium is seft, and it is •possible 11 a pair of scissors to cut it like a ball of soft bread that has been kneaded in the hand. It a rater, and when placed in a basin of water floats on the top like a piece of cork, only It is dist bod COMBUStlOS
W$§§.,^
OF SODIUM
and takes the txwater. form of a small brilliant sphere. Great of fervcscence ts alto produced as it floats along, for It reduces the water to a com* mon temperature by Its contact. By degrees tho small metallic ball disappears from view after biasing into flame, an shown in the cut.
This remarkable experiment is very easy to carry out, and sodtam fat now easily procured at any shop where chemicals are sold. The combustion of sodium in water can 1x5 explained In a very simple manner. \Water, as we know, is comj*w*ei of byxlro gen and oxygen. Sodium, by reason of its great affinity for the latter gas, combines with it and forma a wy solnblc oxide The hydrogen is released and thrown off, as we shall perceive by placing a lighted match in the jar, when the «mbu#tlble gasigniusjt
Oxide of sodium has a great affinity for water. It combines with it* and absorb* It In great quantities. It i* a solid, white sabdtaacd. which barns a»d materlw* tbe skin. It i» also alkaline, and livings heck the bine color to Uttuus paper tita! has lieen raMemsd by acids. Sodiam combine# easily also with chlorine If plunged into aJar containing this gaa It ts transformed Into a Kuhsta&ce which is sea salt. W* know that caustic coda, or oxide ofaodlam. Is an alkaline product poaaaaring
rttj
pow
crfnl properties it bams She skin Mad 3* strors onaaic sobetaocpa,
THE DOT ON THE I.
A Point fn tbe Art of Deciphering Character from Handwriting.
Do you put the dot high above the letter I? Do you put it close to the letter? Do you send it flying before? Is it fat, round, Irregular? In each case your peculiarity is the outward and visible sign of some idiosyncrasy, says a master In the artof graphology. "Look at the dots your try to make them different—smaller, larger, rounder, more oblong—you cannot do it. The dot above tbe only changes with your character."
Here are some conclusions which the authority quoted says the ladies may draw from the telltale dot ».
If you often forget to dot your I yon will also forget other things which seem unimportant to you, but which for the comfort of everyday life are as necessary as the dot is to the If you. have often to look in vain for the dot you will also look often in vain for other things, because you have not put them in their proper place. For instance, you put the fifth knitting needle into your book because you were suddenly called away and no better book mark was at hand. You were anxious to finish your sock—where is the fifth needle? The servant girl must have mislaid it while dusting. Servants are such a trouble. In order to
practice
patience and^lf control you
knit on with four needles, "gently pardoning," and presently turn back to your interesting novel. The book opens immediately. and there and then the glittering needle preaches a silent sermon to you.
If the dot flies high above and far away from the letter to which it belongs, your hopes, thoughts, wishes and aspirations are apt to fly about in far off regions, and instead of making practical use of the present day you dream of tho ideals of the future. If this "high flown" dot is of an oblong shape and if, in conjunction with it, the loops of your 1, h, g, f, etc., are loose and lcmg, then^coodby symmetry and calm, for you have very little self control.
If your husband's dots are heavy, shapeless and blotchy you will have a hard time of it where food is concerned. He will not be satisfied with a cold supper, an {esthetic tea or a meal of beef and vegetables. On tho other hand, you have in his favorite dishes a means to pacify the grumbler, and to incline him to listeu to your wishes. Your request for a new gown, for theater tickets, which was peremptorily refused before dinner, Is listened to with much more interest after the man of tho heavy dots has had a good meal. Never ask such a man to grant you a favor when he Is waiting for his dinner. The larger the dots appear the more critically a dish will be attacked and judged.
Oliver Goldsmltli as
a
Married Man.
Pall Mall Budget tells that while rummaging among the parochial archives of Islington Mr. Edward Davey, clerk of the guardians, has found an old book which gives some interesting facts about the famous metropolitan district as it existed at the beginning of the present century. Among other things it contains the census return for Islington in 1801. The parish is described as "a merry village adjacent to London, and a favorite resort for its citizens," and the population is given as 10,121. Now its inhabitants number 858,000. Another entry in the curious volume has raised a startling controversy among local antiquaries. The genial Oliver Goldsmith Is generally supposed to have lived and died a bachelor. lu Islington another tradition exists. It is to the effect that not only had Oliver a little habitation there, where he spent a good deal of his time, but by his neighbors he was regarded as a respectable married citizen. In the recently found book occurs the name of Mary Olivia Goldsmith, and it is stated that this was none other thau the poet's daughter.
tnitect Products.
While insect products are not numerous In comparison with the number of insects, of which there aro nearly 300,000 species known, there aro several of great commercial valuo. Tho silkworm is the most useful of insects, furnishing tho world an annual product of immense value. The yearly valuo of the cochineal produce runs to millions, while many of the gums brought from tho oast are produced by the insects piercing tbe barks of certain trees, and thus causing the exudation. Tho quantity of honey annnally stored up by bees amounts to many millions of pounds, and the wax is almost equally valuable.
Gallnuts, from which a valuable kind of ink is made, are caused by insects, while more than one kind is used in _medicine, fat some parts of Asia and Africa a large share of the people's food is supplied by thc swarms of locusts, so that the insect world really contributes largely both to the comfort and luxury of mankind.
Carton* tie* of Paper.
Paper is now made to serve for steel and iron. When strong fiber is used it can be made into a substance so hard that it can scarcely bescratched. Railroad car wheels are made of it more durable than iron. A building Is said to have been made of it, the rafters, weather boards, roof and flooring being ait made of paper boards, impervious to water. The Breslau fireproof chimney has demonstrated that cooking and heating stovea, bathtubs and pots, when annealed by a process that makes them fireproof, becomes mow lasting than iron and will not burn out. Cracks in floors around the skirtlttg board or other parts of a room may be neatly filled by thoroughly soaking newspapers Into a paste as thick as patty, and forced into the cracks with a paste knifa It will soon harden and can be painted.
Wh**. th« Word PtaekSUng.
Notes and Querks tells that the word pluck affords an iostanc* of the way in which dang wwds In the course of time become adopted Into current English. We now meet with "pluck"' and "plucky" aa the recognised equivalents of "courage" and "csarageoas.** An «nt*y in Sir Waiter Scott's Journal shows that In IS27 the word had not yet lost its character. H* wijn* "wsuitof that article i&tc&gn&ntty tailed pluck." lu origin is obvious. From early times the heart had been pojnUrly regarded as the seat of courage. Kow. when a batcher lays open a caresses he divide* tha pst vessels of thfe heart* cnta through th#windpipe, and then pinek* Mtt together tbe «nit**I heart and feqgp—lights he calls thaa-^ad he terms tbe united mass
wthe
pluck.**
A BOY EMPEROR'S SLEIGH..
A Description of the Sleigh In Which the Youthful Emperor of China Rides.
Only the other day, in a great pnblic procession, the president rode in a common "hired carriage." It was so common, and the horses so ordinary, that even the newspapers remarked the extreme republican plainness. -No greater contrast could be found, perhaps, than the gorgeous new sedan chair sleigh recently built in Germany for the boy emperor of China.
THE CHINESE EMPEROR'S NEW SLEIGH. This imperial sledge is shaped much like the sedan chairs which were more common than carriages even in England in the last century, only instead of being borne on two poles it rests on runners. Sedan chairs are still used at the Chinese imperial court. At the emperor's wedding two years ago, when he was seventeen, the bride was brought in a red sedan chair from her mother's house to the throne room of the the palace, where the emperor saw her for the first time.
The emperor's new sleigh is of wonderful workmanship, richly carved and painted and gilded. At the four corners of the roof are Chinese dragons, as if guarding the golden ball raised in the center which is the symbol of the emperor. In front is another dragon, larger and more terrible to look upon than the four above. The interior of the sleigh is beautifully litted up it contains a toilet case, a watch, a loojdngglass and perfume bottles.—Little Men and Women. "°,d Honesty." f:{M
A capital example of the straits which literal obedience without judgment may bring one into, is given in the Youth's Companion:
Tommy is a very literal boy. He is quite capable of standing on the burning deck, like that other lad who interpreted a command according to the letter of the law, until he should be roasted and toasted to a crisp. "Don't take off your rubbers, tommy," said his mother one morning, as she left him running across tho wet lawn, and that night when she returned from her visit, and looked Into Tommy's room, a strange sight met her gaze. The new Casabiauca was fast asleep in his little bed, and from beneath the clothes were sticking two black feet bedaubed with mud. Tommy had not taken off his rubbersi How was it possible to corrupt so obedient a child by telliug him that he should have used his judgment.
It is well understood in the family that the children are not to eat cake. Tommy, visiting at an aunt's, remembered this on the first morning of his stay. "Will you have apiece of johnny cake?" asked his Aunt Laura. "I can't if you call it that," said he, honestly. 'Tin not allowed to eat cake, but 1 could if you named it corn bread."
A Child's Song.
-FE!R"RE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL
"Where Is tho little lark's nest My father showed to me? And whero aro tho protty lark's eggs?"
Said Master Lorl Lee. At last ho found the lark's nest. Bat eggs wero none to see. "Why are you" looking down there?"
Sang two young larks near by.
MWe've
broken tho shell that held us,
And found a nest on high." And tho happy birds went singing Far up the summer sky. —R. H. Stoddard.
A Qalet Little Game.
Three knives or sticks aro placed on the table. Some one who knows the game is detailed to go out of the room. He must choose a confederate, but not mention who it is. The people in the room are asked to touch one of the knives, which were numbered one, two, three. The confederate notes which one is touched, and on calling In the person who was sent out, gives him tbe cue, touching his forehead if tbe first knife is touched, his cheek or nose if the second or middle one is chosen, and his chin if the third knife is tho one.
The person who gives these signals must do so in a perfectly natural manner. A lady, who had perfect control of her features, sat in the middle of the room and gave oqe signal after another, the others all knowing that she was the confederate, but her movements wero so easy and natural that thev simply could not ttnderstand them. If any one sees, or thinks he sees through the game, insist on his going out: and, ir he has really found It, keep on until the others have all found out, or are willing to "give it up."—Home Queen.
The Mary JMMS
had a little boat. It was called tbe "Mary Jane," And always kept it fastened
To the boathooM by a chain. Sat it somehow got afloat one day And drifted out to sea. And ratv I often wonder where
Tbo^Mary Jane" can be. -St. Nicholas.
Washing Blank eta.
A good housewife vouches for the follow ing as an excellent way to wash blankets Soak tbe blanket* for ten minutes in lake warm water before washing: bare r?**dy some soft soap or good yellow soap thin and be t&s jelly in a iiule /.tar, allowing j»o*T"d to fear M-s irrtne them oat firstwrafesr, »•••,» In this mm! stir them «t then leave them an vs* ate •oak. Alter the waaldng u. ocghly la every part, wrF~ -T? «tUi tmkaa exceptional not require u»U
agood wtad.
®i!
StSll8Sl8f
--w\
sSIM.
A NEW ANTISEPTIC. Stf
Which a French Physician Says is Cheap, Powerful and Not Injorioni to Linen.
Dr. Berlioz, of Grenoble, announces in a paper read before the French Academy of Medicine a new antiseptic called microcidine, which is composed of 75 per cent, of naphtholate of sodium an& 25 per cent, of naphthol and phenyl compo&nds. According to The Lancet, it is a white powder soluble in three parts of water,and the solution, which is cheap, is said to possess considerable antiseptic powers, without being toxic or caustic or injurious to instruments or linen.
The antiseptic properties of microcidine, while inferior to those of corrosive sublimate or naphthol, surpass those of carbolic and boracic acids ten and twenty tames, respectively. Microcidine is eliminated by the kidneys, and is'antipyretic. M- Polaillon, who has experimented with this new agent largely as a dressing to recent and other wounds, utilizing as a dressing, after a preliminary cleansing of the raw surface with a 3 per cent, solution, gauze soaked in the- same and covered with a layer of oil silk and a thick pad of cotton wool, reports excellent results.
Why tlje Baby Cries.
A baby does most of his crying becanse he is hungry. The cry of thirst, while not frequent, is invariably taken for grief, anger or sleepiness, and the mother spends hours patting and rocking the youngster when a tablespoonful of cold water would make him perfectly happy. Aside from the cry caused by hunger, thirst and teething there are almost as many other cries as there are infantile disorders.
For instance, there is the expiratory moan in pneumonia and the husky cry that follows the coughing there is the broken cry in croup, bronchitis and pleurisy the continuous cry of earache the shrill cry, accompanied by a drawing up of the -legs, in stomach ache the screaming and wriggling of the hips in intestinal pain, irritability of the bladder the whining cry of meningitis, when the baby fancies a bright light, and there is the silent cry when the muscles of the face contract, but some mechanical obstruction of the air passages occurs and there is not enough strength to produce sound. The above is Dr. Sumner A. Mason's explanation, as reported in the New York World, of why a baby cries.
Simple and Useful Ixjtlons.
As awash for tender feet, swelled joints and chilblains (when the skin is not broken), one ounce of sal ammoniac to a pint of water is said to be excellent.
A nice lotion to protect the face from the heat of the sun is tincture of benzoin one part to forty parts rose water.
To allay itching in some cutaneous affections a very pleasant application consists of the freshly expressed juice of a lemon diluted with four or five times its bulk of water, to which a few drops of cologne have been added or the same quantity of rose water. This is very cooling.
A popular remedy for a black eye consists of two drachms of niter, one drachm sai ammoniac, one half pint of vinegar and one half pint of water, the whole to be diluted for use with an equal bulk of water.
A Malaria Cure.
The following is said to have the beneficial effects of quinine without its unpleasant effect upon the head and nerves: Cut a good sized lemon into small pieces, rind and pulp add one pint of water boil down to half a pint, strain and cool. Take a teaspoonful or more, as the stomach will bear it, an hour before meals.
•UK#
GOOD FORM.
A Few ItcnM About the Correct Thing In Invitations, Calls, Kto.
According to tbe best social form, as stated in Tbe Housekeeper, very young ladies do not invite guests, especially gentlemen, in their own names. If tbe mother is not living all invitations should be written in the father's name, although an elderly sister presiding over the house may Issue notes of invitation in her own name.
It is not at all a correct thing to invite a lady to an "at home" until after you have first called on her in a formal manner, and the visit has been returned.
Calls made on reception days where a guest is sta/ing are not binding upon the guest to return, and no separate card 1s left for a guest on a reception day, although each caller leaves a card for the hostess, to serve as an after calL This card Is also necessary to assist the hostess in remembering all who have called.
A young lady enters the room at the right of her chaperon. In escorting each other ladies never offer or take the arm. Tbe host and hostess retain their post of reception during the whole evening After a brief Interchange of salutations the guests pass on to give place to others.
Invitations to "at homes" do not require an answer unless one is requested in this case an immediate reply must be sent. No such words as "regreta," "accepta," etc., should be written on a card a fall reply should be written on a sheet of note paper or on a card made for tbe parpoee.
A half hour to tbe conventional time for the guests to remain at a reception.
The "Too Frank" Individual.
We hear much of people who are "*tdo frank." These desChjyera of the peace of mind of friend and foe alike pride themselves on tbe fact* that they are "nothing if not candid," and "always say jast what they think," Marion Harland assures us, however, in The Housekeeper's Weekly, that this not truthfulness, and that the utterance of unnecessary and unkind critirfmi, however honest, is impertinence amo*.' :rfc*o)rTK When your "frank frien yon your gown does not fit, that you
tin-m
uu. **&&&.
your hair In
socb •ioer, that your ojuju-j.- it isehold Is not whas' -U? sal.-*- a?i tmwarnok' "ys jtt *---.-1: the source of ti..? r*... .jrtfS, fouod. in a luge gereeettr. in a dbh llgter.v .• ger, hcuilOE*, and is O jb bestowlu gr
*1
IS fH
TO GIRLS WHO SING.
A SINGER'S ADVICE TO THOSE ANXIOUS TO STUDY MUSIC
The Task That Lies Before the Tounj Woman with a Taste for an Extensive Musical Education—Kme. Emma Albanl's Lone Coarse of Study.
My first thought, in giving advice to a young girl desirous of becoming a singer, would be to warn her of the very great obstacles to be surmounted to give her an idea of the courage and patience which are necssary to success, and to ask her if she was perfectly sure that she was destined and fitted for this career.
If her voice really warrants cultivation, and if she has the necessary determination, I would then say, "Go ahead, and godspeed I" I succeeded, and why should not she succeed also?
At the same time it often seems to me as if mauy pupils of vocal culture in our days begin, and are permitted to begin, in the wrong way. They often begin too late and more than this, not enough weight is placed upon what 1 consider the absolute necessity of a thorough, all round musical education. I was particularly fortunate in this respect, and I attribute a great deal of my success as a singer to the fact that I was well trained in all the other branches of music.
When I was eight years old I was thoroughly conversant with nearly all the nin-amr.*! pianoforte music, and could play most of the Beethoven and Mozart sonatas. When I left Albany and went to Paris to study I was seventeen years old, and although my whole idea was to study music, strangely enough I had no idea of becoming a singer.
I studied in Paris the pianoforte and organ playing, composition and also the voice. Dear old Duprez, my master, finally told me that I ought to give up all the rest and devote myself solely to singing, and this I determined to do.
At that time Prince Poniatowski, the well known Polish musician'and composer, told me that the French school was not suited for my voice, and insisted that I should study in Italy. It was finally decided that I should go to Lamperti, the celebrated Milanese master. With him I remained nine months. This may at first seem a short time, but it must be remembered how much and how thoroughly I had studied before.
CARK OF THE VOICE.
If a student has tho real genius of song, it will show itself very soon under proper teaching. If she is destined to sing she will sing and although it is very far from my idea to recommend slovenliness or shirking, it is also true that the mero training of the voice can be overdone.
Assuming that tho beginner has reached the point where her public career is about to begin, the timetcoines when some really valuable advice can bo given. Up to that time her master will bo her helper and guide. She must, of course, take tho greatest care of her health, for anything which Is bad for the general health of the body is also bad for the voice, and vice versa.
It is especially necessary that the stomach and digestive organs should be in a thoroughly good condition, and for this reason a singer should avoid all indigestible food. Nuts, cakes aud candies are especially bad for the voice, and a strengthening, simple diet is the best to adopt.
A great deal of exercise and fresh air aro absolutely necessary. For an opera singer, who is probably getting plenty of active exercise on the stage, I consider driving to be the best open air exercise and there is never a day, no matter what the weather may be, that I do not drive for an hour and a half, making a special point of this on singing days.
THE FIRST APPEARANCE.
A 5
With regard to clothing, the chief thing, of course, is not to catch cold. Singers should be careful not to muffle up their throats, for this only makes that precious organ the irore susceptible to exposure. Conversation is to bo avoided on singing days, but otherwise it is an excellent exercise for the voice, and to be recommended within moderate limits.
These simple precautions are not difficult to follow. T»ey do not inconvenience to any great extent, and they repay tenfold.
The first appearance of a beginner will always be a very trying occasion, but to her her art must be sacred, and she must live up to its highest canons. Not only must she show what she has learned, but also what she is herself. The voice itself comes from God, and the acquirement of vocal technique is a mere matter cf routine. It is in the sieging itself, the phrasing and the declamation, that tbe artistshows what is her very own—her artistic personality.
Probably the young can tat rice will be intoxicated by her first applause. It is, indeed, the most grateful of all tributes to the artist but she must not be induced by this to think that she is perfect. Artists should never cease to study and they will find that, however well they sing, it is always possible to improve.
I have been particularly fortunate In tbe degree of success 1 have obtained during my career, but this has not debarred me from constantly studying. Even now, in my oldest operas, I often find that an improvement may be made in the manner of singing some of the passages and phrases.
WAGKER'S MUSIC.
It is a very necessary thing for a singer to take a vacation every year, daring which time all singing is absolutely given up.
Although vacations are undoubtedly necessary, both for the student and for the ftniahgrf singer, still they should not be too long, for in that case ground would be lost which it might be a laborious matter to recover.
Before closing I want most especially to speak of Wagner's music in its relation to the singer, because I wish most positively to deny the theory that it is in itself injurious to the voice. Of coarse most of his beautiful music is very difficult to siog. The intervals are new and unusual, and there are many very long sustained notes and cantabile passages which must be sung carefully. But I maintain that to a property trained linger, and there is the whole point, of my argument, Wagner's music need have no terrors.
If a young and inexperienced artist attempts to sing these parts, it is very likely that the rarult will be injurious. The school days Are only just over. and tbevok» has not yet learned how best to make u»j of its freedom. It is always best to begin with simple tasks In any art or profession bat in the aae of a singer, when a few yeans have brought experience and self reliance, she should be able to sing anything without injury to her voice, always provided that it is properly trained in the first .instance.—Ms-ie. Km ma AHwnila Xpoth's Companion.
Fat a cat take powdered rooln, pound it very fine Mid spread or aift.it over the cut. Wrap a piece of soft lloeu around it and wet ft in odd water quito often. This will prevent inflammation sad soreoeas.
The Purest and Best
Articles known to medical science aroused In preparing Hood's Sarsaparllla. Every in*.. gradient is carefully selected, personally examined, and only the best retained. The medicine Is prepared under tho supervision of thoroughly competent pharmacists, and every step In th« process of manufacture is carefully watched with a view to securing In Hood's barsapariUn ?he best possible result.
Intelligent Readers will notice that
Ms Pills
are not "warranted to cur**' all elamd •r diseases, bnt only such aa result from a disordered liver, fix
Vertigo, Headache, Dyspepsia,: Fevers, Costiveness, Bilious Colic, Flatulence, etc.
For these they are not warranted fallible, bnt are as 11 curly sons It injpos* •ible to make a remedy. Price, 3oeta»
SOUD EYliliYWHERE.
O $ in iD W
.air Agents W&ntedl CmcvxARa Fuss.
1,000 Brewster's Safety Relo Holders
S
lven
away to Introduce them. Kwr orm owner tony* (Tom I to 6. Unea never under hones' feet. Seml 23 centa in stamp* to p*v portage and packing for Nickel Plated Sample that iwlla for65 eta. Brewster Hffc.Ue., Holly, Mlck.
XIJLIDISSJ TEY
Dr. DeLue's Periodical Pills,
FROM PARIS, FRANCE.
Acts only on the menstrual system and positively cures suppression of the meusus from colds, shock, etc. A safo reliable monthly medicine, warranted to relieve price $2, three forlfi. The American Pill and Medicine Co., proprietors, Spencer, Iowa. Sold aud sent hy mall upon receipt of price, and by Geo. Relss, druggist, corner Third and Main streets, Terro Haute, Iiul.
$3000
A. TEAR
and Pull particular!
I onilertuke to brieQp
teachnnjr fmlrly Intelligent ptraon ofelthw itx, who c»i road and writ*, and who, ,after liutructlon, will work IndnitHooily, how to «*rn Three Thousand Dalian
a
tiar In thalrown localltlea, wh«rc»er thoyllra.l wltlahoftarnUh the situation or employment,at which yon can mm thiri amount. No nioutr for me tmleaa succeufht at above. Eatlljr and qulokhr learned. I detlre but one worker from each dletrlct orconntjr. I hare already taught and provided with employment a forge number, who are making over 98000
a
rear each. lt'»SfKV»
articular!
FKuE.
Addrf
FREE.
Addreea
at oaetk
E. C, ALLEBT, Box 4SO, AuKuat», Mu.ln«s
8mig little fort nnfiharc been made at work for tin, by Anna Tage, A in tin, Texan, and .Ino. Bonn, Toledo, Ohio.
work for tin, by Anna iSee cm, OthrraRtetlolngaawoll. Why |iiiit .rim? Some cam over $800.00 a outh. y«n can ilo the work and llva |«t hump,
wherever yon are. Even bt-
lnner» are ra»ily earning from 8
to
110 a day. AII ago, We (how you how anil atart you. Can work In aiwre
time
or all the time, lllg money Air work--r, I'nlllirc unknown among them. NEW and wonderful. Particulara free.
II.If ullcttife Co.,Itox 880X*ortlt»m!,Mutua
ABSOLUTELY
No Change of Cars
FROM^-'
ST. LOUIS, TERRE HAUTE' INDIANAPOLIS, CINCINNATI,
DAYTON, SPRINGFIELD,
.New York, Boston
J^ISTJD THE ZELA.ST VIA THE POPULAR
EBB
Lake Shore and
New York Central
5
ROUTES.
THE—,,,
Shortest & Quickest Line
BETWEEN
EASTrWEST
All trains arrive and Depart from Sixth Street Depot.
Berths in Sleeping Cars
SKOTJHEn THROUGH TO
NEW YORK & BOSTON
E.E. SOUTH, Gen. Agt.,
710 WABASH AVENUE
ACKSONVilif
94 Miles the Sborteat and the Quickest.
CINCINNATI to NEW ORLEANS afiJKiTSKr
Direct connection* #i Orlefto* and Sbreveport forTexa*,
Mexico
llfl Miles the Shortest, 8
nnd Call fornla.
hour*
from CINCINNATI
tbe Quicken
to
JACKSONVILLE, Pla.
Time 27 hour*. HoJid train* and through M*pen without change for any cla*» of pae(wsnpn«, Tbe Hbort Line between Cincinnati ""Lexington, Ky„ time, hour*
Knoxvllle, Teno., time, 12 honrn AahviUe, S. 0, time, li hour* Cbatuwoaya, Tenrt.. tltn«, it botant Atlanta, I4infc 15 botti* BJrmtnaham, Ala- time 18 boor*. Thr**4 Hxpnm Train* Daily. Pullman ttowfr-r.-qeepfngCais.
Tralw. ieave Ontral Unlwn
Over ooe million
ItepoU
Cincin
nati cro«*i»g the Pamott* High Bridge of Ketitaefey and rounding tbe inue of lookout Mountain.
acres
of land In Alabama,
the future great of tbe South, *utject to»re-einpUo». Un#urpa»i«d elJmato. For ran*, mar^et^.»dire*# NKiL C. Kskb, Tra*. Pa**. A«u, No. »t W. Fourth gurnet* Cincinnati,0.
KDWARt^(•
j», at. A
C. C. HA BVKV, Vice President.
craaxXATi a
