Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 22, Number 13, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 September 1891 — Page 6
SWEEPING A ROOM.
A Careful Hoa«k«eper Should Proceed with Skill mid Patience. Every housekeeper knows that there is a certain art in sweeping a room which requires skill and patience. All the difference between a refined, daintily kept parlor and a lounging room, defiant with dust and disorder, lies in the proper doinjj of this simple work. The «r_at mistake which the novice in sweeping makes is to take long heavy strokes. These are manifestly labor thrown away. The object of sweeping is not to wear out the carpet. It Is to brush the du*t out of the carpet. Short, light, even strokes do the work as it should be done. In any carpet it is always best to sweep it once with the grain, and then again across it, going over each two or three yards of the carpet in this way till it is all swept.
Where there is a fireplace it is well to •weep toward it to collect the dust in one pile. Where the carpet is old and worn even it is not quite as necessary to sweep it in both directions, but where it is new and there are perceptible ridges in the weaving, where dnst may be, this caution is always necessary. A Brussels or a nap carpet should always be swept in this way.
There are uinny excellent houses where there is not a proper equipment of brushes, brooms anddustiug sheets for sweeping. Before beginning to sweep a room, all pieces of furniture which are easily movable should be dusted and set in an adjoining room. All small pieces of bric-a-brac and other articles which are liable to catch the dust must be removed. Large pieces of furniture like beds, bureaus and bookcases, should IMS carefully and closely cov ered with dusting sheets.
The window* should bo opened and the blinds dusted, but if the windows are to be washed it should bo done after the •weeping, when the paint is wiped. After the first sweeping of a room it is usually left for ilv« or ten minutes, for the dust to nettle, when the celling and walls may bo dusted down with the loug hair brushes provided for the purpose. The pictures should 1st thoroughly dusted with soft dry cloths. Brushing around the edges of the carpet with a whiskbrush is a regular part of the swooping and should not bo omitted. After going over a room thoroughly and allowing the dust to settle, it is always necesHfiry to brush it over again, and it is best to do this with a damp broom, so as to collect all the dast.
Wiping with a damp cloth wrung out as dry as possible from water in which two tablespoons of ammonia has been put to a gallon will brighten faded colors and make the carpet, look fresh and new. Before putting tin furniture bark into the room, all finger markM and soiled spots on the paint or woodwork should bo wiped oil. if there Is a fireplace the hearth should be washed up and the iron work rubbed olT with a rag dampened slightly with kerosene oil. if there i» brass work it should be carefully polished. The dusting sheets may now bo removed and the furniture put back in place, dusted and fresh.
Such a sweeping as this is a part of the regular housework every week in a house where there are carpets, and every room in the house should bo swept as thoroughly as this. While upon this subject it is well to suggest that housekeepers who aro buying heavy pieces of furniture, not easily moved, should purchase only sueh piece.-* as are lifted tip on legs, leaving a clear space for the broom !o pass under and collect the dust.— New York Tribune.
Hniv to Manage a !lii»lmiil, amount of ndvleo givu to ijomen as
a a a
a
a is a
re a in
I a
a
a a a a
a I a a a
a
Mrs,
Of
I
a
it a
A I a a
my husband, and he a *p|eml
ii
it a
a a
or reproach him,
Not 1.
1
*.
I
a
thought to
did
longer strive for mv love or admiration Of course I am not quite an Idiot, and a manor woman must needs have a phenomenal memory to be an .artistic liar. Now this, fortunately for me, perhaps, my hus baud dvH^t not possess, so when he comes home late with a most interesting account of the supper which he cave to one of the boys who sails for Europe next week I take it that he didn't want to come home and spam! my feelings by this excuse. "When he has forgotten this and the luppcr is mUly given aud bo again stays •way, I have so far gained control of mywjlf that 1 fail to remind him that it is the •ecoud compliment paid to the departing friend, and though it isn't a little bit easy, you may bo sure that I find it a most satisfactory condition of things. So I have laid it down as one of the cardinal rules of domestic bliss, first, that a woman must always l*lSevt implicitly In what her husband tells her second, that if she cannot believe it she muss so school herself as to asMirno that faith, and thus shall she se* cure her own comfort and that of her husband by the s-nbUe flattery thus implied." —Chicago Herald.
Wnmcti aud Evprclw*.
The r?«U for vv-sviso and sport® of all kiads displays*! by oar girt*, and tbe burg** eu r,!*r of vron^ns who aro turning their thought* to physical cuUnrc as a wean# of
Uv.
'Xi
Other
aspect as of excessive nervous tension, so that the better the instructor swings the clubs o» gyrates on the parallel bars the more suggestion is given of a possible nervous prostration waiting not far off. "Indeed it happens not very seldom that tbe woman who becomes a teacher of ph)*siology has herself began by breaking down, so that though she has brought herself back to what she calls health, she never again attains to the look of it. Dr. Johnson parodied the line 'Who rules o'er freemen should himself be free,' by making it read, 'Who drives fat oxen should himself be fat.' "If we stipulated that every woman who teaches people to be well should also be well and look well herself, we should be carrying tbe same demand a step farther. "It must always be held in view, and tbe writer speaks from some experience, that to attain anything like a high muscular training for a young woman is a problem incomparably more difficult than the same thing for men. The slight excess of fatigue for which a healthy boy atones with a few extra hours of sound sleep may sometimes cost years of impaired health to an apparently healthy girl. This makes tbe science of health for women more important, of course, but also morediffcolt."—New York Post.
The Girl at a Boy#' College. The girl who goes to the university of Michigan today, just as when I entered there in 1872, finds her own boarding place in one of the quiet homes of the pleasant little city whose interest centers in the 2,50U students scattered within its borders. She makes the business arrangements for her winter's fuel and its storuge she finds her washerwoman or her laundry she arranges her own hours of exercise, of study and of sleep she chooses her own society, clubs and church. The advice she gets comes from another girl student of sopbomoric dignity who chances to be in the same house, or possibly from a still more advanced young woman whom she met on the journey, or sat near in church on her first Sunday.
Strong is the comradeship among these ambitious girls, who nurse one another in illness, admonish one another in health and rival one unother in study only less eagerly than they all rival the boys. In my time in college the little group of girls, suddenly introduced into the army of young men, felt that the fate of our sex hung upon proviug that "lady Greek" involved the accents, and that women's minds were particularly absorptive of the calculus and metaphysics. And still in those sections where, with growing experience, the anxieties about coeducation have been allayed, a healthy and hearty relationship and honest rivalry between young men and women exists. It is a stimulating atmosphere and develops in good stock a strength and independent balance which tell in after life.—Mra. Alice Freeman Palmer in Forum.
The Care of Sprains.
Severe sprains require elevation of the limb, support to the foot aud a local bath, as hot as can be borne, to be repeated every three hours. After eacli bath the ankle should be wrapped generously in cotton batting, over which should be applied a tight fiannel bandage or a loose rubber bandage.
After the third day, the stage of active hyperiemia (excess of blood) having passed, massage may be used on the parts, and when the swelling has somewhat subsided, a starch bandage may be applied.
The splint should include the entire foot, except the toes, and extend one-half or two-thirds up the leg, and when hardened should be cut open down the front and thus made removable. The hot bath should be repeated several times a day, from ten to twenty minutes at a time, the limb being dried and then well massaged during the intervals.
Precaution should be used in working the foot not to turn it in, otherwise the external lateral ligament fibers which were torn aud stretched—now undergoing repair slowly because of their low vitality or meager Mood supldy—may be return, the tender parts bruised, pain caused-and repair delayed.—Youth's Companion.
When Hatliiug Should Begin. Bat hiug should be begun from the day of birth. Let no foolish old wife's stories
can.' you to omit
it A
apt
to
cry
as
known
hi.
he
young infant is
at hut
cise
this is as good exor
can have at
vided it
is
felhr
a a
tain
is it
is it a a
ha
exist in
a a
ei!
I
I a I
a
gave my
lie
matter
and decided
that if
that it would l»esi:up!y ruinous to all our happiness that his would
gone and he JJO deeply
humiliated
as
to no
the time.always pro
not a severe screaming. Bath
ing is a necessity to perfect health in the development of infants. The fact that cor-
children, like swine,
[vigor of
a I a
seem
neglect and
to thrive in
dirt is
only a proof of the
their
physical nature, which will
apparent health under such tin
1 whole-ome surroundings. Such children often develop afterward scrofulous sweatings.
It has been repeatedly proved in tene ment districts of large cities that only a I comparatively few of the children, and those the more vigorous, born in squalor and dirt, survive. When a child is restless at nigh" a warm hat h— aluout 00 degs. is the right temperature—with a cup of rock salt dissolved in it is wonderfully soothing. Only a pure soap should le used. A little fine starch is the lest baby powder.
It is hardly safe to use any other powder about a young child.—Hall's Journal of Health.
The Kjrefttght of Children.
When quite young children often show a disposition to hold objects very cloae to their eyes, others have a slight tendency to •quint, thus showing that there is an inequality in tbe eyes. If attended to in time this can be remedied by wearing specially prepared spectacles for a given time, but if neglected spectacles will be of no avail and nothing remains but a surgical operation. Parents cannot be too careful about this matter, as many a child has lost the sight of one eye on account of the ignorance and negligence of the parent#.
When a child first enters school its eyes should be thoroughly tested by means of certain simple tests in the hands of tbe teacher, so that it can be ascertained beyond the possibility of a doubt whether the sight is defective or not and able to bear the necessary strain arising from close application to study. Nothing is of •o much importance to a child «a it* eyetight. little or no progress can be made at school unless the eyes are in a normal condition.—Philadelphia Star.
A PrafiN»r of
miud be wmweats xtpm Professor Oppenheim is a short, good a w«U
writer th*1 looking young
*Afd fee. "can j»ri»
i»: ic habit.* among
adv.-,!.. tn*d.r wiihui a qr.sr It* drawback*, MM i* «t»«i nc. 3 lar, "It bard to avo .| noticing fa our am* ttur e*g*c&ll3- among
of a century, but It has A crest deal of our progjw\.ns# where it should btt
Uurt \mx performers
ivw» tU» teacher* them**:***, bar* a look which is U*«s i^vcrae of #oUd. "'Th'- is *t»ry often a Mrainad, wero
woman,
writer the imnwnae *howm«: larsce white teeth, and she ha* a dear gr*ea eye. She wear* a gown jet black silk over her walking ea&anwt, 1 and oj*on her fair hair rests tbe academic mortar board.
with a fair com
plwdesu very blond hair, a larp? month
At her lectTsres she explains the indictdona which the head, tbe eyes* the now-, the mmlii betray t* .her earef n^Iy trained mind. Subject* are ia vu^l to come upcm the platform, attd she raads from their I head* «»*I isuom from a printed chart
Just what of p*n«em# they are. She In-
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENHSTG MAIL.
forms the persons beforehand that she will not bear harshly on any too disagreeable traits of which they »ay be so unlucky as to be the possessors.
One very good test of her powers in this respect is to have a person whom on® knows intimately well, but whom Professor Oppenheim has never seen before in her life, subjected to her analytical scrutiny.—London Cor. New York World.
Something Worth Rem ©inhering. Here's anew idea which is worth a little reflection:
If in the putting up of decorations you gee to It that lines from the tops of the different objects with which we are to decorate a mantel form angles pointing downward, then the effect produced will be cheerful. If the points of the article point upward, the effect will be opposite. Straight lines as well as curved lines produce the effect of solidity, durability and support.
This is a constructive axiom, accepted from the earliest ages. On this principle wainscotings, doors and mantels are built in straight and curved lines. But it would be manifestly wrong to furnish a mantel with ornaments whose tops or proportions would give a rounding or straight effect, unless you desire such a room to be stiff and prim.—New York World.
Velvet Lining for Medicine. Many people avoid taking medicine when they need it on account of the disagreeable taste. A medical friend informed me tbe other day that such an excuse for refusing treatment was nonsensical. A little extract of licorice destroys the taste of aloes peppermint water disguises the nauseous taste of salts milk is a good abater of the bitter flavor of Peruvian bark, and cloves that of senna. Castor oil cannot be tasted if beaten and thoroughly mixed with the white of an egg.
Another method, he said, of covering the nauseous taste of castor or codliver oil is to put a tablespoonful of strained orange juice in a wineglass, pour the oil into the center of the juice, and then squeeze a few drops of the juice upon the oil and upon, tbe edge of the glass.—New York Telegram.
A Floral Barometer.
A small bouquet of artificial flowers is made of white tissue paper—a bunch of asters, for instance. When finished they are dipped in a solution of the following ingredients: One grain of chloride of cobalt, one-half grain of common salt, onequarter grain of gum arabic, one-eighth grain of calcium chloride and three grains of water. Proportions can be increased according to the quantity desired to be used. The flowers of this floral barometer become light red in color when the weather is damp. In dry weather they assume a violet hue, and in protracted spells of drought they show a beautiful deep blue. In localities were great dryness prevails the solution mentioned above must be mixed with a few drops of glycerin.—New York Recorder.
The Caro "of an Oil Stove.
The preventive for a bad smell in an oil stovo is to use good oil and to keep the stove absolutely and perfectly clean. Every day the flues over the burners must he 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 nccount be filled •. the brim, or the oil oor.es out and causes smell. Once a week it is well to wash ev ry getatablc part with hot I water and sot' This thoroughly takes off any oily sot which may have
HCCUITIU#
lated and which is the chief cause of smell, —St. Paul Pioneer Press.
The Skill of Wouicn In the U. S. Treasury. The most skillful persous to identify the notes and bonds which were defaced and charred in the great Chicago fire were women. There was one mass of charred paper from the Chicago firo amounting to $165,000, consisting of legal tenders, national batik and fractional notes, bonds and coupons. They wero so charred that they would crumble at the touch. This black mass was given to six ladies for identification, and in the course of time they accomplished their task. Other like amounts from that city were in like manner successfully identified.—Washington Cor. Boston Journal.
A Girl's Surprising Feat.
A young girl in France, Mllo. I ieudonnc, accomplished a wonderful mu ical feat, the transposition of Guiraud's Allegro de Concert," which she read at. sight in a contest. Fifty years ago M. Ci sar Franck, who was the first to achieve this difficult task, received great honor for tbe then considered almost superhumau power. Ifc has since been occasionally repeated as a most, irrefutable evidence of the solid education given to the girls of Paris.—Exchange.
An egg cooks just tinder the boiling point, and if custard boils it is liable to curdle. To tell when it. is cooked sufficiently dip a spoon into tbe hot custard, and if a coating remains upon the spoon the custard should be taken from the fire at once but if tbe spoon comes out clean let the custard cook a minute more, then test it again.
If a wick does not move easily in the holder, draw out one or two threads from the side. The wick should be as large a one as the holder will receive. Do not cat it after the first trimming to make it even, but pinch off the burned portion every day with a cloth. The best wicks are wOveu •oft and loose. __________
The fashion of using a canton fiannel cloth under the linen tablecloth is a very desirable one. It prevents noise when dishes are set down, saves much wear on fine linen cloths, making them last longer, and gives body to an old or thin cl6th.
Contrary to the opinion of some physicians, one doctor has found ont that gaslight is not injurious in a sickroom, if placed out of a draft and shaded. "Tallow candles," he says, "emit too strong an odor, and must nofc be used."
If a tablespoonful of kerosene is put into four quarts of tepid water, ami this is used in washing windows and mirrors instead of pure water, there will remain upon the eteansed surface a polish no amount of mere friction can give.
An exquisite chocolate set of cream china has the tall caps with dark brown bandc» wreathed with honeysuckle* the tj. an a it a trailing spiays of ttse*aa» ll-.ncr-
Rir hanl Wagner** widow, the daughter »f a. tnll, Sue looking old lady. Her features a-v lm of t&*t, wftMMd'io a ftminim numl, aad her face is rather Striking than bandisomss,
When ym have *p£lkd anything: oa the •tore or milk has bolted over and a suffocating «noke ari*ea, sprinkle the spot with «a!t and St will disappear immediately.
Wanted It Matched.
Artistic Man Dressmaker—I have just received a letter from Miss Creme de la Crerue, ordering a new costume and inclosing this lock of hair which must be matched in the goods.
Forewoman—I that .Miss Creme de la Creme's hair? "Oh, no, it is her j»xxlJe's."—Detroit Free Pres3-
The Depth of Lure.
ICC CREA8
UFA*
He—Did you read that article on ice cream? Five hundred persons, I believe, died from eating it last year.
She—So I read, George. But I'd willingly face death at your side, dear.—Truth.
One Way Out of It.
A short man with red whiskers and shambling gate wandered into the audito rium last evening and asked for a typewriters' studio. He lives in Indiana, not a million miles from Chicago, and has been there attending the races. Luck had walked on the same side of the street with him, and he wanted to stay another week. But his wife expected him home today, so he was in search of a typewriter to send home a letter to serve as an apology for his nonappearance. "Chicago, this date, '91," he muttered to the typewritist. "I have that." "My dear wife." "Yes." "Very important business will require my presence in Sheboygan for a few days" "Let's see," interrupted the artist, "how do you spell that Sheboygan?" "Spell it yourself. It's your own typewriter." "I can't." "Can't spell Cheboygan?" he asked with disgust. "No." "Then I'll goto St. Joe."—Chicago Her aid.
What He Wanted.
A rusty appearing fellow drifted into a
broker's ofiice not long since, and approaching the manager said that he wished to make an investment, and that he waut ed to buy something good. "How does silver strike you?" queried the broker. "Too gol darn high," Raid the farmer. "Well," said the broker, "if you want something cheap buy lead." "I don't think lead's ony good," replied the farmer "Have ye some good tin?" he continued. "No, tiu was busted -nme months ago. Why don't yon try Consolidated gas?" I continued the broker. "Consolidated gas!" exclaimed the stranger. "I've hern tell on pails made of papers (1 spoze they use old ones they kin buy cheap), but I'll be dinged if they air now makin on 'em of gtis." "What do you waut in here, anyhow?" roared the broker. "I came in to buy some milkpails," re plied the stranger "a feller down here says as how this was a bucket shop."—Buffalo
Enquirer.
.Ilia Sign Manual.
Mr. S the theatrical manager, though in other respects a thorough business man, could neither read nor write, but kept a private secretary, who had strict injttuc tions not to letray the secret. Nevertheless, this deficiency did not remain con cealed from the memlers of his troop, and the manager consequently often found himself in a serious fix. One day ho was dining at a hotel, when a gold watch was raffled for. Kach of the guests staked two thalers, wrote his name on a scrap of paper and threw it into a hat.
Our manager was dreadfully perplexed when his turn came to sign his name. However, in order not to expose himself, he pretended to write, rolled up the blank piecc of paper and threw it into the hat, along with the rest. As chance would have it, this very paper was drawn. Genera! astonishment when it was found to be blank. But the low comedian, who was present, mked to have it shown to him, and when he had examined it carefully he gravely exclaimed: "That is our manager's handwriting. 1 should know it among a thousand,"—Thuringer Zeitung.
Let Krotherljr Love Continue. Two Detroiters nro not speaking to each other now. Several qights ago they bad some words over a quiet game limited to fifty cents, and one called the other a prevaricator. Friends interfered and the insulted man insisted upon an apology. "If be says he is sorry he said it it will be all right," he explained.
Then the friends went after the offender. "Blank says It will be all right if you say you are sorry for what jrou called him," they said. "What did I call him?" "Yon said he was a prevaricator." "Is that all?" and he began to get hot. "Well, I'm very sorry I called him that. I ought to have called him a liar and had it out with him on the spot."
That was a week or more ago and there la so sign yet of sprouts on the olive branch.—Detroit Free Press.
Exuberant Gratftode.
Earline has knitted a pair of stockings for her friend Wilhelm, who has joined the Imperial guards, and presents them to him en his birthday, with the usual oongratu buions. "Karline," says the happy man, sobbing under deep emotion, "you are too kind— the nice white stockings—Hi—I'ii wear them «s long a» 1 live!"— Ulustrirtc Chronik.
1
sr
A Son Slfa.
"Well, mias, how soon is your wodding to et»»e offf"
wMy
wsddingf 1 have not tbe slightest Intention of getting married." "Ahl h«t when yo mg ladies like yoor teit heg^o bayiag HX* sheet* of note paper to a single packet of envelope*, titers is al ways something In tbe wind!"—-B«lletr?# ttsche Zeitaii*
Three Girl Highwaymen. Fall River, Mass.. was treated to a peculiar accurrence in the shape of a highway robbery, one nig-lit last week. Agnes Ureenwood aud Agnes Sexton, two spright misses, of 18 and 19, were "held up" in one of the principal thoroughfares, by three girl desperadoes, of like youthfulness. The former were scurrying homeward from the market at a late hour, wi en accosted by the strangers who demanded the purse which the Greenwood girl carried. Naturally she objected. Then tbe three girls "held her up*' in the most improved western style. One of them held the girl's arm while another of them put snuff in her nose. When the victim sneezed she looseneu her hold upon the pocketbook and the third young robber improved the opportunity to snatch it from her hand. Then thev ran around the corner and disappeared.
A V*Iuable Trunk.
Old .lane Hankinson. of South Stanington. Conn., died the other day. Once a society leader in the historic old town. She grew eccentric in her declining veaVs, even shutting herself out from the rest of the world. So when she died nobody seemed particular about her belongings, most of which were, of little value. One old trunk, however, yielded up a fortune. There was a lot of worthless old paper next to the lid and some wearing apparel. but at the bottom of the trunk was found a package that was tied up with much care. lie pulled off the covering and uttered an exclamation of astonishment. The package was a bundle of bank notes of large denominations, amounting to over ?T,00 The deceased left no heirs, so the find reverts to- the corporation of South Stauingtou.
Not Safe Plnco.
Mrs. De Hood--"Wouldn't it be a good idea to put your money in the big family Bible
Deacon l)e Good (contemptuously "V-e-s, and some day the. minister will drop in and cab! age every cent of it."
Eariilur Grub.
Jinks—Whats Winkers doing for a living now? Blinks—Oh, anything his rich wifiv tells him.
WKI.I. SHAKEN—'Gertrude refused Tom four times before she married him," said a girl to her friend at the seaside. "Ah. 1 sec. It was a case of well shaken before taken."
Astonished Hill Olerlc—Isn't thero some mistake about this order from lJunker's Corners for 800 pounds of bacon and two bags of chicory?
Traveling Salesman—No: that's all right. A fellow went out there a week or so ago and started a flrst-cluss sum mor resort hotel.
After all, the best way to know the real merit nf Hood's Sarsnparilla, is t-o try it yourself. Be sure to got Hood's.
I
WHS
troubled with catarrh for seven
years previous to .commencing the u,*?e of Ely's Cream Balm. It has done for mo what other so-called cures have failed to do—-enred ipe. The eflfeet ol the Balm seemed magical. Clarence L. Hull', Biddeford. Me.
After trying many remedies for catarrh during past twelve years, Iried Kly'.s Cream Balm with complete success. It is over one year since I stopped using it and have hud no return catarrh. I rrvommend it* to all my friends.-Milton T. Palm, lfendlug, l'n. 1
Its Warnings Are Plain—BEWARE! No hour p'iMscs that Home one does no! drop dead of Heart Failure. The Urst •symptoms of is at a is as a 1 full to hCCll fhon if yon rnlw nr llV tifr,
A noi vons, weak, weary feellnjr, «l«Wli: •swimming of )i-ad, »!range, faint --lins*. trembling, sinking -eiiBtit.lott, eoid, -is of feet mid k'gN, ilntteiiiit palpitation of beau, f-'Cliitf: of apprehension, inisicly, tirowsltii -s uaytiti s, hloepleKsiie.v* ni?hly.
N ,r!eet of ihr^e symptoms '.vlM r«-Mtll In It it N ii fiy !•-.
If you hs« he :?•«.•:)I ne! veand heart remedy Dr. »reen' v':"n iisi- fin-! .symptoms appear, ft wii! proven? nil '^uwr o' heart faillir.-. It i" niviy ve.i.-mWe ami harmle**. and its n»e «ai« he /.V- t,ul!t JlHf I I t't! '':1 !h S' l/tty Uif hn-'t rmvtf. l..-rU5rt!!*«,i sell for Si.!:!!,
WELL. AT mtKA KFAST— J'ltOSTKATK! AT SOOX. "I trim troubled with oeart dl#e»*e. Some morning* I would be *arprf»ed when I woke and found mywlf njfve./w amulicn dr*i&h a»f/ mom/nt. I bought a bottle Of l»r. Grwne'# .Vertnra. and mo*l that it ha* rapidly brought roe to ivtUh find atrenpfh. I have now tskco four lxttles and dill myself cored, and mnt certainly my that it in th* wmth rfvl rrMftp/"*• tfir Arrr^. Brain aiuJt hmrl- that fea# ever discovered. .{, 4. 235 Main fit., Brockton, 1? 'he ftccoeswfoi O. I *j»e« iaJUt In curing all forms of nervnn* r.«d chronic S» W. ilth Ktreet, Kc* York, con fa con*«it*d /w, perwonaHy. or t»y lotler. tall write bim #l»ot your ca**, or*pnd for*replAi« Wank to fill' oat. and tetUr f«Hy explaining: your dl*er, giving -iklvice, ft/*., «»H »e rttnrrtrd/W*,!
Glossy Sheen
And vigorous growth, so much admired in hair, can be secured by the use of Ayer's Hair Vigor. There is nothing better than this preparation for keeping tho scalp clean, cool, and healthy. It restores to faded and gray hair the original color and beauty, prevents baldness, and imparts to the hair a silky texture and a lasting aud delicate fragrance. The most elegant and economical dressing In the market, no toilet is complete without Ayer's Hair Vigor.
My wife believes that the money spent for Ayer's Hair Vigor was the best Investment she ever made. It imparts a soft
And Silky Texture
to the hair, and gives much satisfaction."J. A. Adams, St. Augustine, Texas. "After using a number of other preparations without any satisfactory result. 1 find that Aver's Hair Vigor Is causing my hair to grow.""—A. J. Osment, General Merchant, Indian Head, N. W. T. "Ayer's Hair Vigor is the only preparation I could ever find to remove dandruff, euro Itching humors, and prevent loss ol hair. I confidently recommend it."—J. C. Butler, Spencer. Mass.
Result From Using
••Ayer's Hair Vigor will prtvtnt premature loss of hair and when so lost will stimulate anew growth. I have used the preparation for those purposes and know whereof I affirm."—A. Lacombe, Opelousas, La.
Ayer's Hair Vigor
PRErARKn
BY
Dr. J. C. AYER & CO., Lowell, Mass.
Sold by DruggisU and Perfumers.
Prof. I. HUBERT'S
•I Prof. I.
MALVINA
CREAM
For Hcimtlftincthe Complexion. Tan, Sunburn, Pimnlon,
live.
but re-mot*-*=
Removes *11 Frocklos, Tan,'Sunburn, Pimplon, Lire* Molos, and other imperfections. Xotnr flUU 1HUC* llliputimJiiixia. /i nil bleminhoa, and permanently r*»torin« theoom. p&Klon to it* orurinnl froshnww. For mle at your Diftf* fist, or Hont postpaid on receipt ot price—5C*
Pro*. I« HUBERT, TOLEDO* OHIO.
DRSELLERSV %C0UGHT
SYRUP.
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•t^you umy n* tmtHi, lmt e*n V*'.u 'kly how 1mnn 1WW11 fJi to i*«luy nt Uic Mart,
FIND M»
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Hoih ft!l W, In nny jmu of s. out ctmmt*ncM' u\ lutm*, ft(vii yrur ilimvr fx* nt-UHMiM only to dk» AH I* Ht'W. i.vmf i«»y SI III-. Tor •«i»*-k«,r. W* Mnrf you, iVruhhtnjf vMiitip* KAHM.Y, f?I'JClftMI.Y Irniiictl nill,Al.-S ntKK. AiMfMninnr©, m.A U.• v.UMi,
G~KAT VI -i »M FOKTI M.i,
Epjs's Cocoa
I: \KKA -T.
"By ii thoimu'h krowlcdito ol the nali.rul lawn which tnvi-rn the op-rations of di« eHMi)n aud uutr'tiun, mid by a careful application of the tine properties of well-He Ice led Co«oa, Mr. K)lias provided our break fast table? with ciicately flavored beerak'o which mny save
UH
many heavy doctors'
billK. It is by the judicious
UHO
or such ar
ticles of diet that a constitution may be jjrndttallybulltupunt.il strong enough to resist, every tendency to disease. lIundrcdH of subtle maladies are, floating around us ready to .ittuek wherever there IH a weak point. Wo may escape many a fatal fdiafl by keeping ourKclves well fortified with pure blood find a properly nourished frame."—Civil Hervlce Gaaet le.
Made simply with boiling water or milk. Bold only In half-pound ttnr, by erocer^, labeled thus: 4 A MBS.
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UtMiKPOimllile Cb«rnlwt«. I.midoo, I'in/f.
¥V
REFER ENGE^V^ANK rfft WERCAKTt^'^£NG|^-
UmhI 8ueefrKHfully 16 yearn. Ur. "Jo-." I,.uik' HOI and Poultry Remedy nrroNls -/LUSI'IISC, ereven'H dlKense, IncreiwK the (liv.h mid hiiHfVns irmlurltv. J'rtce SifiO, -Vu- pi-r pnc.k- «•. A.-k for tent Itnonlitlw. Hend SJ-cent «lnmp ftr "Hox^doity" to Jim. V. Indiana^ poliss Jnd.
KOJ.K AfifiNT,
GIJ LICK & CO.. N. VV". eor. IIh and Wttbash Ave, 1'erre Hmilp, Jnd,
TRUSSES
Will nrtaiHUiftroont difficult fornw of 11 Ii It NIA or |tui»t«ire with comfort Mid cafety, tbonihy Jtiff «1 ra4lic.nl CVia: of ftllcurabic rra««. IinpervioiiHtfJ iiiolnlore, niay beuwd In Imtlilntf.niiil fltlintf perfect I.y of l)«! vs nrc won. without inconvonk'tic''. i.iy tho yoiiipwf^t rlrll'l, itirmt itflicaUi larly, or the liilmrinff jnfiu, »void lit it all wotir, Hwenty.pRddvd nrt|leaMntUiic,~, \ri.is l.l«lit. Cool, f'lennly, and alweyw reliutde.
Mad" in ev. ry iliwra'J'i t«tK-rn. with jal8 nuatomlctdly c««t.truel')d, to «ult all earns*.
TO/ .5. '9
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ari'lHkillfid MrvJiBnlral Tjvatfn«it ot
HERNIA Off DUPTURE A SPECIALTY,
cre-Miur in iU: rnrnft of .1 Mjitfil.lo tni-- fBn'lt Ii ."(till rnpr wl lia'lnu jnr in cro -T w». i»!i twrnry ch: iw* n„.| ti* LEWIS LOCKWOOD
MAKIRFACTCITKM OL'
Patent Limbs and Deformity Appliances
Keventh and Main Htreeu, M» KEEN Hi/K.'K. l«JOAI No. II.
SfiENCf^
A pMtipblet of InfoTTOotloo *nd a! •tract of tbe l»w«, *iiowing How to Obt«ln PsienU, TrwJe
Marks. Copjrrlghts, 301 nrondway, fftw Tark.
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