Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 22, Number 6, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 August 1891 — Page 6
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AIR AND SUN BATHS.
Wonderful Kffect* of Nature'* Aid* on the Tired Aud Xerron« UooMwIfe.
Every woman has known evil hours in Which she grew unaccountably nervous and oat of sorts, in which she was too restless to remain idle, yet too dull and heavy to absorb herself usefully in any occupation. Now this condition is deadly in its effects upon the appearance.
It makes the handsomest woman for the nonce into an ugly one. It blunts her expression and, seemingly for the moment, even her features, it coarsens her complexion appears to make it grow thicker. Her color loses its delicacy and becomes sallow. Her eyes lose their life.
It is impossible to be an even ordinarily keen observer and not to have noticed this again and again. The more sensitive a woman's nervous organization the more apt is she to fall a prey to just such phases of temporary distemper. Instead of allowing them to run their course a simple remedy should be applied.
It consists of no more nor leas than a total disrobing followed by an air bath. Lock your doors the next time this condition declares itself and try the recipe. A woman well advanced in years, who all her life has enjoyed remarkable health and a total immunity from nervous symptoms, attributed, not long since, much of her excellent physical state and freshness of appearance to this practice resorted to whenever the moments of nervous discomfort alluded to threatened an approach.
Sun baths, taken in the same way, she insisted, bad kept her blood pure and warm and vigorous past middle age. The practice is of .such potent avail that it is a thousand pities more women should not be
to its health giving and beautifying properties. AH air bath of five or ten minutes acts as a total alterative to the oppressed, restless state of the nervous system. It does better thnn a bath which, iJ^one has already been taken in the morning, cannot be always repeated with perfect safety. After the air bath dress again slowly, donning completely fresh linen and some crisp and rather now gown.
The freshness of external attiro is very communicative. It is infallibly soothing. Another suggestion worth careful noting when you are feeling and looking dull eyed and ugly (wars indirectly upon the value of massage. Take your hair down and moisten the scalp thoroughly with some good but harmless hairdressing preparation. Then with the tips of tbo Angers work the moisture well into the scalp and comb the hair out afterward with slow, soft, regular movements.
This is excellent treatment for the hair, as well as being incomparably refreshing to the whole person. If a hairdressing is not at hand at the moment moisten the finger tips with a little cologne cut with water, or even with water alone. If you afterward do up the hair in some way that differs slightly from your customary manner you will find that your nerves have become more quiet.—Herald of Health,
Literary Factory Oirl«.
An aged clergyman, who can hardly be other than the venerable Dr. A. P. Peabody, sends to Tho Atlantic Monthly some reminlscenses of one of the editors of the Lowell Offering—Miss Harriet Farley. The editorial connection of Miss Lucy liarcom with the same magazine—a magazine edited and written by factory girls—will be cecolleeted by many readers. During the several years of Miss Farley's editorship she was the most copious writer for The Offering, aud her articles indicated not •only superior oulture, but literary talent, taste and versatility that won more than approval—hearty admiration—from those best fitted to judge.
Tho Offering had a subscription list of 4,000, which meant fully as much as 90,000 would at the present time.
It was in every respeot on a level with tho best magaelnes of the day. Its profits enabled Miss Farley—the daughter of a poor minister—to carry a brother through Harvard college, and to make generous provision for the comfort of the family at nome.
Tho work attracted no little attention on tho other side of the Atlantic. A volume containing a selection from its articles was published in London in 1849, and at a much later period my friend President Felton, in Paris, while attending part of a course of lectures on English literature, heard one entire lecture on the history and the literary merits of the Lowell Offering.
During the palmy yean of The Offering I used every winter to lecture for the Lowell lyceum. The Lowoll hall, one of the largest of its time, was always crowded, A&d four-fifths of the audience were factory girls.
When the lecturer entered, almost every girl had a book in herhand and was intent, upon it. When he rose the books were laid aside, and paper and pencil taken instead, and there were very few who did not carry home full notes of what they had heart.
I have never seen anywhere so assiduous note taking—no, not even In a college class where the notes might be of avail in an impending examination—as in that assembly of young women laboring for their subsistence, many of whom in after life filled honorable, useful. In some instances conspicuous, positions in society.
Carrying the Baby.
Did any one ever notice with what exquisite ease and grace a mother carries a Utile child? There's no poetry of motion in all the DeAsarte system equal to it. A big, strong man lugs a baby along as if it were a bundle of pig Iron. A slight, trail fitUe woman dings it up on her shoulder and poises it like a nosegay, or, better etlll, veritable part of heneli A woman Is supposed to be mindful of the charms of her sister*, bat the heart of a man aomegives a leap of the cleanest, purest of admiration when one of those sjh^ frail little women trip* alongside irith a baby tadaaoed on her should*** In that comfortaWe way a real womanly woman manage* W
In a Sttle country meeting house the other {lay there was a military funeral. Site drum major of the village band sat in a post of honor, *urronnfcd by his resplendent corpa, aod in his tap held two little white capped mite* of humanity that Wn*t been her* very tout, Up to tba choir loft a hui® woman rafled down upoo them eoeowragtngty with eyee exactly Bk Ihe «p* beneath the little whit* aap*. Directly the dosing hymn was finished aad
isssi
the ixiufHed beat of the drum sounded the signal for the bond to follow the fias draped casket, that little woman, with a swift tide of oolor sweeping over her face, Buttered dotvi* tit* steps, in and out among the horny handed ''bearers." across the church to where the father sat with both infants sound asleep.
Without waking either she tossed the one up on one shoulder just where its sleepy head fell in the hollow of her shoulder against her neck, tucked the other one under her arm, but somehow so comfortably it never wakened. Then she tripped smilingly down the aisle so swiftly and lightly and gracefully that, though she wasn't exactly a pretty woman, ahd had had both babies since she had bought anew bonnet, and the seams in her dress bodice weren't the right shape at all, any painter or poet or man with an ounce of blood in his veins would have envied the fellow in the bearskin, who seemed a little bit ashamed.—Brooklyn Citizen.
Aids to Household Cleanliness.
A tablespoonful of household, or prepared liquid, ammonia to a pailful of water in which flannels are washed will keep them as soft as when new. It is also an excellent cleanser and wbitener of white cotton goods. Borax is a valuable agent in keeping the color of muslins, lawns and prints from fading. A teaspoonful of finely powdered borax put in the last water in which white clothes atv rinsed will whiten them surprisingly. This is especially good to remove the yellow that time gives to white garments that hare been, laid aside for two .or three years. !ors*
It may not" be generally known,".but1 finely powdered borax is one of the best articles for a severe cold in the head. If a little is snuffed up the nose, the congested membrane will give way before this simple treatment and the nostrils be cleared out in a short time.
At housecieaning time, probably more than at any other, the worth of ammonia and borax is thoroughly appreciated as wonderful lighteners of labor. Painted walls and other surfaces can be quickly cleaned by washing with weak ammonia water. Floors scrubbed with it come out white and sweet smelling. It is good for window washing, scrubbing sinks, general dish washing, in fact for anything when the alkali of soap is needed to cut dirt or grease.
Many housekeepers use ammonia water to clean carpets. If ingrains, it is put iu the water in which they are washed, but if brussels, moquettes or still costlier grades, after the carpets have been taken up and thoroughly beaten, the floors scrubbed and the carpets again laid and tacked down, the surfaces are thoroughly gone over with clean, white cloths rung out of warm weak ammonia water to remove any remaining dust and to freshen up the colors. Ammonia in the proportion of a teaspoonful to a teacup of warm water is a cleanser of silverware, silver and gold jewelry—Golden Hod in Springfield Homestead.
Slip, At a piano
It Wa» Only
It was at an afternoon tea. sat a woman who was notoriously good at Chopin, but reveled also in Grieg and Tscbalkowsky and other of the weirdly fascinating northern composers. Everybody listened, a thing which seldom happens. v.vo
1
In an alcove stood twdWotiieti. One belonged to an old New York family. She was'quietly adored by the nouveau riche. But she was a woman of such unassuming character that assertion was impossible to her. Bred in the aristocratic set, and habituated to her environment, she took things for granted that other women were disagreeably conscious ot The woman beside her was by some oheerf ul affinity her close friend, but she had a humbler station in the world. She was a teacher, the head of a department in a grammar school. A woman of grace and refinement, distinguished in carriage, she was as much at home as any woman in the room.
The woman at the piano finished playing something by Heller amid the fluffy patter of gloved hands. |ii
Charming!" exclaimed the teacher.
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How delightful she isl" &dded the other woman in the alcove. "Does she teach?" asked the first speaker. "Oh, no," enme the reply, "she's a lady."
The teacher's face scarcely changed, but her friend, from whom the remark slipped in the most involuntary way, had scarcely pronounced the last word when she flushed to her temples. Sire clutched her companion's arm in the most painful embarrass' meat. "Forgive met" she stammered, "I do not misunderstand you," smiled the teacher, with a gentleness that crowned her with the highest title.
But it had been said!—New York Recorder --is A Happy
Some one the other day thought of this about a calecdar. A daughter was to go away, to be gone along time, on the other side of the earth. So the mother, thinking to bring her good cheer, bought a calendar.
Now the ordinary calendar differs little from its fellow, except happily now and then in the way of quoted phrase, or blithesome child, or maybe jlecoratlve fruit and flower. More than that, no ordinary calendar seems an individual's very OWJL As how could it, with its counterpart on anybody's deskand its mates ail manufactured by the doxenf
But the calendar this mother made could be duplicated by no one, for this is what she did. Below the date on each leaf thaw was a blank space. She therefore took the calendar apart, sending Its 886 leaves to aa many different Mends and relatives, asking each to write some sort of ailutation on this blank space below the date. When these were returned they were bound together again, and the calendar was given to the daughter, who knew knothing of what had bean dona. She was made to promise, however, to tear off no leaf until tit* day had dawned *ben the leaf was due.
What a source of delight such a calendar would be to an exile from home can easily be imagined. Every day a different greeting from a differentfriend. Everyday a new surprise, and never to know till the morrow what friend was to send a word of good cheer.—Harper's Baxar.
Common feat* Prwiu
"We hear a gn&t deal about common •ease shoes and rational droning," said a matron as she crowded the la»« parcel into her temveHBg bag aad shut the clasp, breathing, as she did so, a little atgh of satisfaction, "bat a good deal of what Is called rational Is bat another some lady's fed* aad foodea Toreduoetbe subject to Its simplest terms, audi dreesing has aaythtiMt but the elements of costfort whkch its sponsors claim for Ik 1 know for I hare tried it In fact, I think 1 have tried everything that promised ease aod vestfalneaa, and mothiag ple*u«a mo as well aa adrew* of my own arranging. **t use nun's serge, aad malm the aktrt test to clear the groand. The waist is a Norfolk blouse and is belted in. The are IOOMcxtoagh to be comfarta£&v
•nd the collar turned back from a rather high linen collar which is worn with it. If I do not core for a collar I wear a mull fr»rr hfftf inside the waist. Underneath 1 wear a silk vest, a bnttoned waist of coutille, a short skirt of flannel und fuE trousers of heavy linen, made somewhat jm Turkish fashion, but fastening just belpw the knees. "With long wrtsted gloves of heavy leather and a moderately wide brimmed with long veil of tissue, which can be wrapped around the throat, I am equipped fOr storm or shine, and con climb* walk, row or travel in ebmfort and the certainty that my clothes will neither fall iu pieces, show the wear and tear of my journey or make me in any way conspicuous."—New York Ledger.
How Men Taflc to Women.
I was watching, not long since, a man fatllrinff to a bright woman on the train, and hfa manner of comporting himself set me to thinking of the peculiar ways men have of addressing themselves to women. Some talk to a woman very much as they might talk to the wonderful automaton around at the museum when it plays a game of chess. "Why, bless my soul, it really seems to be thinking! Whist apparent intelligence! What evident faculty of mental independence! It almost appears to possess the power of coherent thought!" Others sit in the presence of a woman as though she was a dish of ice cream. "How sweet." "How refreshing." "How altogether nice!"
Many behave in her company as though she was a loaded gun, and liable to do mischief, while a very few act as though she was above the wiles of flattery, and not to be bought for the price of a new bonnet. Hasten the day, good Lord, when she shall be regarded as something wiser and nobler than an automaton, less perishable than a confection, more comforting and peace producing than a firearm, a veritable comrade for man at his best, not so much prized for the vain and evanescent charm of her beauty as for the steadfastness and the incorruptible purity of he^r soul.— Chicago Herald.
•:''^V.:\:--'i'Mrs. Ayer's Jewels. lill
Mrs. Ayer, who is now the owner and occupant of the former home of the Duke of Mouchy in Paris, has in her possession two necklaces of fabulous value. One is made of six strings of perfect pearls, evenly matched, each one of about the' size of a fat pea. The other is composed o{ two strings of pearls, each about as large as a gool sized English gooseberry. Mrs. Ayer owns beside a pair of solitaire pearl earrings, for which she paid $40,000.
Mrs. Ayer was a Quaker girl of simple manners, living in Lowell, Miss., when she became the wife of the late Dr. Ayer. He had a womanlike fondness for collecting jewels, and never lost an opportunity to secure gems that struck his .fancy gmd were to be bought. He left to his widow some of the finest specimens of jewels of their kind in the world.—New York Sun.
Typical Suffragist.
The secretary of a state W^ffian Suffrage association says in a private letter: "I have been 'driven' the last few weafcs with the most-heterogeneous mass™ of things—suffrage work, alunmsB work, library work (I am librarian of .oreligious society), house cleaning, presefving. I have already put up over seventy quarts of berries. We grow them ourselves, hence the quantity. We have three smaJLehlldren, each with a sweet tooth herfc^ also the quantity!" We commend lOb instance to those benighted individuals who still think that tho advocates of equalimffrage are not useful members of society"ftr in philanthropic lines, and that they never know how to cook.—Woman's Journal.
Well Connected Women in the Treasury. The daughters of Chief Justice Taney were employed in the treasury until friends of their father raised a fand for their support. Governor Foircbild, of Wisconsin, married his wife from the treasury. A sister of General Robert Ould was- along time in the treasury. The poetess, "Florence Percy," held a place in the quartermaster general's office until she was married. Some of tlie more prominent women writers of Washington were opce treasury clerks. The daughter of Pittigrew Kinpr, the noted governor of Sbuth Carolina, w. long a clerk in the postoffice department. The list could be made a very long one.— Washington Letter. |g ,»?
I Mane, de Steel's HAr. Mme. de Stael, the religions skeptic, scholar, wit and queen of the salons frequented by such men as Tallyrand, Schiller, Mirabeau, Voltaire, Rousseau, De Lafayette, Napoleon and Louis XVI, openly confessed that, although she might not wash her face once in a week, her front hair bad to Lo looked after every day, and she wore a head dress of beaded crape with a frill of little spiral curls running across her forehead from ear to ear thrt kept4n curl, but caught fluff, feathors and any dust that was flying.—St. Louis GlobeDemocrat. gl!
Every mother should accept the fixed fact that a sound and healthy child cries but rarbly, unless it meets with an aoddent, is hungry, thirsty or pleading for the gratification of some other desire also that babies that are frequently peevish, fretful or cxying must have «ome trouble about them which ought to be carefully and quickly looked to.
Maocaroni should be used much moue than it is. It is a very good substitute for potatoes when that vegetable is scarce aad high. Many physicians object seriously to the use of old potatoes after they have begun to sprout, and on their own tables us«* maccaronf instted. The simple wojv preparing tfcia dish everybody knows.
Mra. Martinot, the inventor, baa taken out thirty-five patents, and five of thesr have been patented In seven countries. Among them an a steam washing maa gas stove, an tee cream nmmet and a clothes dryer. The investor makes models land Is very dexterous all her own with toola
Cleopatra wore her cow's tall red hair banged round her face and ears. Eve is pictured with loose tresses playing about her browa and temples. Salome^ the Garmeedt* of biblical clays, wore a bang to did Magdalen, the beautiful Queen Bess and the Beaux and beauties that Van Dyke painted.
If tbe teapot becomes discolored inside pat into it a teaspoonful of soda and fill two-thirds fail of water kt this boil unt. tbe exain will wash off. Any ware treated tn thb ttianner every two weeks will nevtr get discolored, but keepasckon oa when
Miss JaaafeJRotbHgill* the novelist, wrote bet first and most famous novel, "Tbe Flret Violin," in 1&4 Since tint time she has written six or eight other romances that have given her a high rank among the femfnloe novelists of Great Britain.
TERRS TT AUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL
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SUMMER STYLES.
Skirts, Bodices and Sleeve*—Newest Fancies In Fashionable Millinery.
The summer fashions ajs now quite decided. The gkirts of dresses are made very fiat and close on the hips, a little fullness at the back, whioh gradually widens out, so as to make the skirt about 8}£ yards wide around the foot. The bodices are much trimmed with gathers, plaitings or folds. Sleeves are full at the top, but not very high on the shoulders. Below the elbow is a deep cuff of guipure lace. Short mantles are still worn on chilly evenings and for driving.
THE TRIANON BONNET.
Large hats are mostly reserved for garden party and country wear, and a smaller kind is now in vogue not much larger than a sailor hat, but the brim is fluted and bent about the face. Flowers and ribbons are used to ornament this and also wreaths of half-spread wings. A new style veil worn with these hats is an imitation of old fashioned lace veils, with flat flowers aud sprigs at intervals.
In our cut we give a charming bonnet in rose colored straw, veiled with a lace flounce, quaintly arranged to describe drooping plaitings at the back, which tapers in front to about an inch. Ruehings, torsades and upright loops of white satin ribbon adorn the top and., outline the cockscomb „lace frilling. _____
1
Midsummer Dress.
New dresses of white English serge for the country, for mountains arid seashore alike, are very simply made, and are kept white throughout. Their trimming is white silk braid a third of an inch wide, tubular or basket woven, put on in frogs, in disks or bombes, as the French say, or else wider white Hercules braid is used in parallel rows of graduated widths.
A good plan is to make white wool dresses with a coat bodice with jacket fronts that open ou removable vests of crepe de chine, or of the deeper crinkled Japanese crape, of which there should be three *or four— one white, another yellow and a third pink or green, as best suits the wearer's complexion.
To #iva further variety to the summer wardrobe, the white serge skirt is worn*in the morning with a shirt waist of gray blue or of pink wash silk striped with white, or of white twilled silk striped with blue or green. A pretty detail of these shirts is a narrow plaited frill of the silk set around the white collar and cuffs. The cravat bow is of the same silk with a deep hem ou the ends neatly hemstitched, and is made of two pieces set under the fronts of the collar instead of passing entirely around the neck in warm and olumsy fashion.
The belted waist is again the favorite for summer dresses, especially with Parisiennes, who have rung all the changes possibleon coats and begin to tire of them. The Recamier corsage made by Paris dress* makers has a seamless back and bias draped front, and is quite long waisted, with a fanciful sash wound twice about the waist and falling in long ends.
Chiffon gowns are ideal dresses for summer dances and dinner parties. Young ladies wear the entire dress of white, pink, yellow or blue chiffon, with low corsage, puffed sleeves and gathered skirt over satin linings. Young matrons wear ehiffon or silk muslin gowns of pale gray
rS
Or
black
striped throughout with very narrow satin ribbons—mauve ribbons on gray and pink on black.—Harper's Bazar.
Pleasing Toilets.
In the illustration here presented are shown two stylish toilets worthy of description. In one the jacket and plain skirt of the dress is in white and heliotrope checked silk. The jacket bodice is enhanced with a Louis Philippe large necktie in white lace. The stylish little capote is in gold tissue with mercury's wings.
8CKXKR TOLLETS.
In the second figure is Illustrated a gown with around bodice finished with a circular hip belt. The skirt
is
and
is
in dove gray cloth
embroidered with lover's knots, outlined with steel bead*. Thehat^ in drawn lace, trimmed with ui upstcadlngbow of lace, in front of whkb rise two horizontal loops finished off with earlike ends in lemos colored velvet.
Foisted toes aad high heels are salient features of tbe shoes for house wear.
VeU» wtthvwy tiny qgfr aretSMd.
SEASONABLE NEEDLEWORK.
Delicately Colored Designs on Linen. Plenic Tablecloths ana Fioor Cushions.
Summer fancies in needlework are shown in some charming self colored desigus. For instance, a tablecloth will have the pretty border delicately tinged with terrfr cotta thrown up with a few deeper shades asideboard slip will bear a fine pattern wrought in shades of water blue silks.
Finger bowl doilies are shown in dainty colorings and artistic designs. A large water lily embroidered in white and gold, a pansy or arose of a stzb adapted for use, beautifully embroidered and then cut out, makes quite as pretty an ornament for the table as the most fastidious could desire.
For picnic or out-of-door table covers checked grass toweling in squares of different colors may be finished with a border in cross stitch done in red marking cotton. This A? worked over canvas basted on the toweling, while a fringo of the same may be knotted on the edges. A monogram or design of fruit or flowers will be appropriate to fill in the corners. If the toweling is not as wide as desired by joining two breadths, then feather stitching the seam and striping the cover with lines of feather stitch, it may gain iu width and ornamental qualities as well.
Very new and taking in toilet cushion covers are the pretty white linen ones, the four corners of which fold over the cushion and may be pinned down in the center with a fancy pin. In each of the corners is a tiny spray of flowers worked in colored silks or linen floss.
Denim in dark blue or brown couohed with a geometrical pattern in white cord and fastened at one end with white lacings makes an out-of-door or floor cushion that is as serviceable as it is good looking.
Kitchen Conveniences.
Two handy homemade contrivances for the kitchen are illustrated iu The Farm JournaL Steps made like those in the cut here reproduced are convenient for reaching the upper shelves of the pantry. 9
HOMEMADE STEPS AND RACE.
A handy rack for drying the dish towels and other small articles during rainy weather can be made by nailing a block to the wall beside or over the stove. The rode being fastened on a hinge can be opened at any angle or folded back against the .wall out of the way.
Stewed Steak.*
An economical family dish which warms up well, being even better the second, day, is stewed steak. Remove all fat from two or three pounds of beefsteak and cut into pieces of convenient size for serving. Put into a stewpan with a quart of lukewarm water, two carrots cut in pieces, half a dozen peppercorns and allspice, half a teaspoonful of salt and a pinch of curry powder. Let it boil up and skim well. Then cover the stewpan and stew two hours. Takeout the steak. Bub into a dessert spoouful of flour as much butter as it will take up, stir this thickening into the gravy and letit come to the boil. Add a teaspoonful of mushroom or tomato catchup and stir. Return the steak to the stewpan and let it simmer in this gravy for ten or fifteen minutes. ,"i"•'The Care of an Oil 8tov«.--
The preventive for a bad smell in an oil stove is to use good oil and to keep tho stove absolutely and perfectly clean. Every day the flues over the burners must be thoroughly cleansed. Several thicknesses of old soft cotton cloth tied around a stick answer for this purpose better than any brush. The oil reservoir must on no account be filled to the brim, or the oil OOBCS out and causes a smell. Once A week it is well to wnsh every getatable part with hot water syd soda. This thoroughly takes off any oily soot which may have accumulated and which is the chief cause of smell.
0
A Corner Cupboard.
Corner space may be utilized in an attractive manner as follows: A row of triangular shelves is fitted in from the floor up to a convenient height, the top being ornamented with a scroll of very pretty design. The Inside of the cupboard is painted a deep yellow. A glass door closes on one-l}alf the shelves it is decorated with a border of oxeye daisies painted in oil, while dainty china is nicely displayed against the bright background. The lower part's, used as a receptacle for books aad magazines, has a curtain of yellow India silk, powdered'wlth single daisies.
Aa Economical Padding^-
For a nice economical pudding, cream together three small tahlespoonfuls of butter, one-half cupful of sugar, then' beat in one egg and one cupful of sweet milk. Dissolve half a teaspoonful of soda in a little warm water and add to the milk. Sift twofcupfuls of flour and add to it one teaspoonful of cream of tartar. Mix all together and flavor aa you like. Steam for half an heur and serve with cream and sfigar.
Lemon Cake.
Cream,together two cupfuls of sngar with two-thirds of a cupful of butter, add the beaten yolks of three eggs, then the beaten whites, two-thirds of a capful of milk, three and one-half cupfuls of flour, and at'the last the juice of one lemon. A little more than half a teaspoonful of soda should be sifted with the flour before that is mixed In, or It may be beaten in just before stirring In the lemon juice.
Cklckm Costard.
Mince finely the white meat of a chicken place in tbe bottom of a spall pie dish and season with pepper and salt moisten with alittlestock. Let the pie dish be half fall of meat. Make a eastaid of quarter of a pint of milk, two eggs well beaten, yolk* and whites whipped separately beat tip with the custard two ounces of grated cheese. Pourtbe custard over the meat and bake in tbe oven.
Raspberry lee.
Make a sirup with three quarts of and four poundsof sugar, add the JnJce two lemons and one quart of strawberry reapberry juice, then freest.
Hereford's Acid Phosphate. Believe* the Feeling of Isnltad* so
common
in mid^naiaier, and im
parts vitality.
Tbe Best Salve In the worid for Cat*, Braises, TTTi »I
mimm
ttlasoJUHw 8*^rr i¥iO- Ortrs-rt^i
pttons, and postUveljr cores Piles, waited. It is guaranteed to ftva
A Few of
its Victims.
Below area few of tho diseases tli"..' will succumb at once to Cbamberlail' Immediute Relief. Cholera morhn Dysentery. Colic, Diarrhoea, Sore thrown catarrh, diphtheria, fever and agu| rheumatism, coughs, colds, headaclr neuralgia, sprains, cuts, bruises, etc. enumerate them all would require inuoh space. There will besomothi interesting on this subject in no. week's issue.
it
wro OMapjsnsuE*.
XieaVcs IteUeate
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Odor After Crint,
Ifurmblc to procure SUANtiov Bst,L8 SOAP send 25cIn stamps ami rewire enko by rotnm mall.
AS. S. KIRK & CO., Chicago.
UPKCIAJT*. SlintvJon Balls Watt* ttlio popular Society Walt*) sent Fit KB to anywn© sending us three wrappers of Bbnmlon Bella soap.
Send 10c In stamps for smmple bottlo Sftanrfwi Bfllx Perfwnt.
lOw 100tn*»lyeMdnigeiti. THIN BO «QNA] tbr cartas DtainEU,HMD»cb»,IrJ •OoftiTeittt.MaJtrtai,XJrorComputet, Fmrl I*ad Asm, lndlceiMB, Bmkwhi*, *nd all 1
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(1ft j*wr t» biinjf wxilf hy John K. v.oriT ii in. l(raI*r,
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Horn finxos, all In «U.V port of Amrrlctt, you run caiMmun* #l liome, givi\g *11 your tlinr.or »p*«s tmuuimtt only to the work. All »o«v tirt-nt j.»y 81'HK for
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(VITALLY WEAK). Made »o br ton elo#e application
to
buaWiwor study. «cr#ro nmntal urslnor grief! SKXI.'AIU KXCKSSBSIa middle lUo,«r vleloiw Jmbli* commoted in youth. WeitfUEU AKK VICTIMS TO NKKVOtS itKRILITYor WEAK mtn EXHAUSTION, WAHUXU IVKAKNK88. INTOI.l'STtllY l.tV.WKH will-. KAULY BM'AY la YOUNU ami Mill" *)J,R AUKDi lack or vim. vlnnr, and »ti-fngth,with *«xu*l «rgi»n». Unpaired and weakened iin maiurelv In approaching old am. #HEN WE SiVCURES-ffiitKi'SiSSfi In nmtit ircM-cdnm! cured tn pA»t twelve years*
L- 'Ji'AsrvMcnfmof «nr fnlili In Piflf, Hftrrlt M* XC ©SOLUBLE MEDIOATEDPASTILLES. TBUI woto eight day* trial ABSOI.t'TKl.Y PRICK, alwl.iii men. yoMtiu or old, auf|erlnB from VliU proralont trouble ihould "til1'«'•
iliclrrid'trcM «o can furnlith
quoulon* to bo awrtferod. tlirtt m«V know tbo tr«« tondltloo of oaeli en«o aud prcpnre mi'dUltie to effool prompt U«ttt«d In New York taUtr IS oara aiSt. T-ouliO, wo Offer 1 aelinneo lo bo it red by iliexjJ^rated r#»tlll»troatmBaU
HARRIS RSMBOY
CO.,<p></p>SB-
MFA. CHEMISE,
rrTrmrAW STREET. HEW YORK.
THE 89 UTsmrmrA li
STABD 1376 TNCORFD 8-^0. CAPITAL This Trad* Mark Is on st
Watemmf Goat
In the world,
©R ATS2IT13 li—C OMFORTIN O.
Epps's Cocp|
BRKAKFA8T.
"By a thowugh knowledflte of the aat laws which govern the operation* of di. tion and nutrition, and by a caretu) appi tion of the fine properties of well-itefcc Coaoa, Mr-Epps tafl* provided our breakfi tables with a delicately flavored b«ver which may i»ve us many heavy dopto hills. It is by the JudloiouB use or such a: tides of diet that a constitution may be grac ually built up until strong enough to reals every tendency to disease. Hundreds of NU tie maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there Is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame."—Civil Service Oasette.
Made simply with boiling water or milk* Bold only in half-pound (inn, by grocers, labeled thus: JAMKS
KPVS St
CO..
Homosonathic Chetnlntt, London, Kag,
Used successfully 15 years. Dr. Jos. Haas' Hog and Poultry Remedy arrests disease, prevents disease, increases the flesh and hastens maturity. Price f2JX, 91.25,60c per pack' age. Ask for testimonials. Bend 2-centstamp for "Hogology" lo Jos. Haas, V. 8„ Indian** polls, lnd.
SOLK AOEWT,
GULICK & CO.,
K. W. eor, 4th and Wabasif A ve, Terre Haute, lnd,
Will
648WABASHI,/WE. •.
rtUia ttie
na^ afflenltforgtirof HKitXIA or
m'S'
Tim Crmct «i4f»ai/ril Me^uinfea] Tmtateot at HERNIA OMQWraHE A SPECIALTY. Kir"-:
A"-
issaxsmasetsti
LBWI8 LOCKWOOD KAKorAorousov Patent Limbs and DefonnKy Appliances
Seventh and Main streets, MeKEEN BLOCK, BOOJ
