Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 22, Number 17, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 October 1891 — Page 6
WHY GIRLS FAIL.
Some of the Itraxim "Why Many Young Women Ilo Not Succeed In Baslnem. Sometimes the question is asked, "What are the causes of failure among women workers?" Not that there are an alarming Bomber of failures, but while many have •cored brilliant successes, there are others who have fallen far short. The causes are various and are worthy of consideration.
Perhaps one of the most common mistakes* made by young women is their failure to prepare themselves for the work undertaken. We often hear it said, and truly, that there was never a time when so many fields of labor were open to women. It should be added, with equal truth, that never were the requirements so great. There is no longer a demand for shoddy labor. There are in every calling enough who are equipped for their work to entirely crowd out the incompetent workers.
Young women, not realizing the necessity of thorough preparation, strive for and attain some position and feel secure therein, but as their inefficiency becomes apparent they are requested to give place to others from the ranks of the efficient. These raw recruits who find their way into every department and likewise find or are shown their way out, deserve our pity, since they must ever stand back and give place to those who are prepared for their work. In some instances, in fact, in many instances, the lack of preparation is more remote than the matter in hand.
In the business colleges of our land are to lie found many young women pursuing their studies with honest effort. After months of study, not having attained the required standard, they question why they have failed where others have succeeded. The reason is obvious*. They were not prepared for the studies they pursued. Stenography and bookkeeping would avail them little, even if mastered, if they were ignorant of the simplest rules of grammar, spelling and other studies positively necessary to accompany the subjects pursued.
Another cause of failure is that girls too often undertake a work for which they are not adapted, being foolishly influenced by the succ«ss of some friend. A mau may be a first class mechanic, but he would hardly succeed as a lawyer, though he ttptmds years in the study of law. A girl may have a special genius for fashioning liouucts or dresses, and she will doubtless find success in that line. But, if allured by the success of another, she undertakes teaching, office work, or some other labor foreign to her tastes, failure is imminent, though she has taken pains to prepare herself for the work. Wise is the young woman. who, having found her work, has strength of purpose to say, "This one thing 1 do," and having declared thus, to adhere to it.
A very great mistake often made by business girls is that of endeavoring to perform just as much work as they are paltl for and no more. Great is their auxlety lest they do two dollars' worth of work for one dollar. To such, let mo my that the determination to fulfill every obligation fmthfullyjn jydrit and lti_ letter Bhould made. This may bo a difficult matter when one's earnings are required to augment- the family purse, but it will certainly pay in the long run.
If a young woman agrees to perform certain duties for a nominal sum, perhaps far below the actual value, she should know that she cannot afford to render anything less than the best of which she is capable. It may seem to her that her efforts arts not appreciated, but in time they will le rewarded and were doubtless always appreciated. l*ack of intensity of purpose is another cause of failure. In other words, too many enter the ranks of breadwinners, not. with the idea of continuing long therein, but simply to tide over the time between the graduation and the wedding day. They are interested in their work only so far as to the pay they are to receive, their chief interest being in the "coming man."—Frances Mosely Terry in Housekeeper.
Aniplln Rim' (iovn».
There Is not another woman in America who keeps up as constant a correspondence with her modiste as Amelle Rives Chanler. 8ho gets her materials from everywhere— London, Paris Richmond and the family garret—converting skins and crude feathers into trimmings, ami old lace shawls, silk haitKings. linen draperies and historical finery into bodices, scarfs and skirts. These are all expressed to a Now York dressmaker, who has them cleaned and steamed, if necessary, and matched with something else for the picturesque effect always aimed at by the mother of "Barbara."
Mrs, Chanler is very clever with her brush, aud her letters are more than four pages In length and dotted with sketches of sleeves, trains, gores, corsages and bodices with the trimmings done in the deal ml color. Sometimes she dashes off two of these illustrated letters a day, sometimes she gets out of the not ion altogether and wires the dressmaker to "see letter" which changes the whole plan, converting a De Medids role into an Empire gown. Amelia has a mi ml of her own and maintains the right to change it as often as she pleases. She is not hard to please, however, but very, very hart! to understand. Her great hobby is "modifications," always of some remote style.
Amelle knows what she wants, and things go on smoothly enough when she succeeds in enlightening the New York modiste. To solve she titting problem she has a body, sleeve and f-kirt lining accurately drafted from her measurement with mathematically true seam lines, on which the wonderful gown is built. There is no trying on until the work reaches her Virfinia home. as»tl then back it comes to this city »f every detail is not pet sketch. To herself .Sse modiste files these band painted letu-r* u« case memory proves ttt*' herous. New York World,
\Voapi «ad Yfeetr W#rtt.
A woman who oerupfoa a unique
PCMHJOO
as treasurer and btudoess manager of a large publishing firm In New York says nothing nak«»* her Peel worse than to see girls em i»»y« din different way* spending the leisure f?ea found in business hours In reading a novel or doing fancy work, when tbvf should beacqttititig information or mastering details tm«**ary to promo Uim and Opportunity now are lacking to give mtmm employment, Ifoe point is to so fill the place, to s» perioral the duties, «£m* am ataB be India
pensaoie. it is cot enough to accomplish the duties pointed oat in a machinelike way. There mast be also an interest in the success of the business or firm.
A milliner who is posted is all the new fashions, who knows the new names of new colors and the popular fads, will plan more successful models than if she simply copied Uiow imported for the purpose. It hardly see Las possible that the head woman of a large display room should not know the name of a single French or English artist from whom models are obtained. The successful newspaper woman most know the requirements of the paper for which she writes. One such, being called to an important position on another paper, owed her success to the practical way in which she studied the headlines and character of the page before submitting her matter. Suffice it to say, it did not take the editor half the night to rearrange and make it suitable.
Editors complain of the ignorance of writers in the matter of punctuation and paragraphs, an evil which could be easily remedied with a little study. The efficient saleswoman keeps her patience, even if the customer is a crank. The Brooklyn librarian, who forestalls the demand for certain literature, based on some public event, the death of a celebrated person or the craze for a certain writer, by Issuing a bulletin of all the books to be obtained, is of in valuable service both to the institution and the public. The teacher who came to school the first day of the fall term just begun with a schedule of the day's work carefully written out was undoubtedly the cause of considerable merriment among her sister teachers for such an unheard of proceeding, but all the same the little act showed that her interest was in the right place—in her work.—Brooklyn Eagle.
Two Sides to the Domestic Question "I'm disgusted with them every day of my life," quoth a good woman the other day to a friend who was paying a morning call. They were discussing servants, it may be said. "Only this morning," she said, "I went down to the kitchen to give some directions, and just as I was leaving I said to the waitress, who, I noticed, was making preparations to wash her own clothes: 'Don't wash today, Mary, your cold is too bad to hang out clothes in this rain. I'll see that you have another opportunity later in the week.' She thanked me very civilly and seemed grateful for the attention, aud I came up stairs. "As I was passing the speaking tube on the second floor, it occurred to me I had forgotten an 'important suggestion to the cook, and was about to speak down when mi' own name caught my ear. 'Did you hear Mrs. So-and-so?' Mary was saying, and then she repeated my speech of the moment before, mimicking my voice and throwing into her manner indescribable aud absurd patronage. I was too indignant to speak, really had to turn away and command myself before I could give the necessary order." 'You wasted your strength to get indignant.," was her friend's comment "they all do it. I feel sure that I'm talked over the moment I turn my back on my own servants."
At which a man who was in the room, and who was a brother to one woman and a privileged friend to the other, came forward.
I can't see where the maids are much worse than the mistresses," ho offered. You two housekeepers have been talking over your 'help' for the past half hour, and I haven't caught any compliments."
Both women laughed and admitted the truth of the assertion. Which Incident 8HH,JWM WxS1 TOffiftS exist between two classes mutually dependent upon each other.
Tho remark, too, of a man who has had charge of an intelligence office in this city for twelve years is apt in this connection. To a captious customer who had interviewed a score of girls, finding none to suit her, and who had impatiently given her dictum that "thero should be a school for raining girls to be servants," he replied, 'and a second to educate women to be mistresses."—Iler Point of View in New York Times.
Mr*. I.lncoln mid Her Tenement House. What Miss Octnviallill has accomplished for the poor tenants of London Mrs. Alice N. Lincoln is bravely trying to attain in the tenement house district of Boston. In 1879 Mrs. Lincolu took possession of nn old barrack on the corner of Merritnac and Chardon streets, variously known as "The Morgue," "Folly Ditch," "Black Hole" and "Little Hell," provoked by the filthy condition of the place, the recurring fevers and the frequent deaths resulting from shameful and inhuman neglect on the part of capital. Mrs. Lincoln tore out the inside of the building, had the drains perfected and the walls strengthened, and rebuilt the house for the convenience, comfort anil welfare, as well as the accomoda tion of the people for whom it was intended.
She painted the walls and floors, bad a closet and sink and a range and stationery tubs placed in each apartment. The rents remained the same as formerly, and many of the tenants who moved in twelve years ago are stilt in the building. The name now is "Good Luck," and the income from the investment being larger than she felt like accepting, Mrs. Lincoln devoted the surplus to a tenants'fund, out of which improvements are annually made in and about the building. Whatever still remains Is applied to the care of the sick and infirm.—Boston Letter.
Pood for Child Two Tears Old. When an infant has cut its eye teeth— which is generally before the twenty-sec-ond month—some of the easily digestible solid foods which do not require much if any mastication, and those which have first been reduced to a palp, may be given it* A thin slice of bread, lightly buttered, will be a grateful addition to the diet, and it is unusually well digested by a healthy child.
New bread is of course forbidden as difficult of digestion. A little well cooked "Irish potato" salted, with milk or a little "Wood gravy" from a roast of beef may be allowed. Mashed potato sometime** causes diarrhoea in children even two and three years old. and should therefore be withheld if that trouble occurs.
Rare roast beef, steak and other kinds of meat are often given early in the second year, a common eastern being to cat the same into long, narrow pieces, from which children are allowed to suck the juice. This practice ought not to be indulged too early, and as a rale after a child is two year* old it will be time eaoueh to allow It.—Boston Herald.
AW*t Wearing Cmpe*
It** rather odd, bat it'* true, that the more some material* cost the cheaper they are, and this especially applies to crape. A good crape may be worn for a long time, dreetwd and ndiwRd, and re* dreewed again, and it always looks as good a* new, while a cheap quality of cape ha*
Frenchwomen thoroughly understand the art of mourning, as they do every other art of dress, and they realize that the Englishwoman who walks with a huge veil over her face and extending far down her back may be a monument of woe, but is really also a blot upon the face of the earth. Instead, the Parisian has Arranged on her street gown a full front of crape, and by full one means covering the entire front, a bodice with sleeves and jacket fronts of crape, and then the tiniest of small bonnets, on which is arranged the heavy crape veil turned back.
There are several reasons why a veil worn off the face is recommended. First, crape, when it is worn over the face, seems to shut out all the sunshine and goodness of life, whereas when it is properly draped it is distingue looking, and, most important of all, it is becoming.—New York Sun.
Women Control the Schools In Kansas.
school superintendents, city school superintendents, principals, teachers, tutors. Teaching is woman's work. She is devoted to the scholars. She thinks and worries for their welfare night and day. She does not loaf about town talking politics. She does not cater to this or that clique she does not toady she does not lie iibe does not beat the boys or love the girls more than is good for them—and they mind her too. After children leave school the men can take them in hand and teach them the meanness they must know to get along. But till then Kansans want women to watch over their boys and girls and teach them love, purity, kindness, gentleness and knowledge.—Kansas City Star.
A Cast Iron Cement.
It is generally thought that when any cast iron object is broken that is the end of it and it is useless to try to mend it. A clever amateur workman tells us, however, that a cement may be made which will hold the parts together perfectly. It is made in the following manner: Take two ounces of sal ammoniac, one ounce sublimed sulphur and one pound cast iron filings mix in a mortar and keep the powder perfectly dry. When it is to le used mix it with twenty times its weight of clean iron filings, grind the whole in a mortar, wet with water until it becomes a paste and apply to the parts to be mended. After a while it will become as strong and hard as any part of the metal.—New York Tribune.
IIow to JKeep Cutlery Shiuiug. Great trouble is sometimes caused in the household by knives and other steel cutlery becoming rusty. This may easily be prevented by a little care. Steel cutlery should bo plunged in a pan of whiting after washing and removed just before it is used. When it is wiped it will be perfectly bright, and if kept in this way it cannot get rusty. In case the cujtlery should already be rusty it should be rubbed with a flannel dipped in sweet oil, then covered with slacked lime and allowed to rest for twenty-four hours. It should then be wiped clean and finished off with some powdered whiting and a pieco of chamois leather, when it will become as brigl.as new.—Chicago News.
Ho v.- to Grow Plump.
Any womai not predisposed to extreme thinness and iu comparative good health can, by care to her diet and her temper, reach the state of plumpness she yearns
Bake llread in a Slow Oven. It is wrong to put the dough for bread in a hot oven. The oven should only be slightly warm, and then heated gradually. This plan has been been tested by a London baker, who asserts that the intense heat, suddenly striking the surface of the dough, kills the yeast influence which should make the bread rise. He tried an experiment by having the dough put In the oven of a gas stove, slightly warmed and gradually increased the heat till it reached the degree at which bread bakee. The result was simply wonderful. Bread baked in this fashion rises to amazing size, and the loaf is of a spongy lightness.— Yankee Blade.
A Brooklyn Woman'* Library. Mrs. Abbey E. Pope, the Brooklyn biblomaniac, has the finest library of any woman in the country. The books are her own, not by heredity, but by purchase aud personal right. Among other rarities she has a number of first editions of the English poets, novelists and British essayists of priceless value, and the famous Charles VI missal. At the Grolier exhibition the club levied upon Mrs. Pope for loans of rare and extinct copies of famous books bound in mosaic and carved leathers. Aside from collecting books she is an omnivorous reader and knows her library.—New York Letter.
To make volatile soap for removing paint, grease spots, etc., take four tablespoonfuls of spirits of hartshorn, four tablespoonfnls of alcohol, and a tablespoonful of salt. Shake the whole well together in a bottle and apply with a sponge or brush.
It is customary, as every one knows, to serve beef and mutton quite rare. Lamb and veal should be thoroughly done, bat they should not, for this reason, be dry. The juices should follow the knife when the meats are cat on the table.,
The silk vest is really an institution and has come to stay. It is unquestionably the most comfortable of all summer garments, and for cold weather wear, with a light weight wool gossamer, there is nothing better.
Mrs. Senator Edmunds in her Burlington home uses a very curious card receiver. It being nothing more nor less than an immense Indian mortar and pestle taken from the Colombian river.
When the PrinceW of Wales gives a garden party it is her custom to request the gue»ts to bring their children. The result is that a pretty scene i* made still more picturesque.
If soot has failen oat from the chimney in any rooms. salt thickly sprinkled over the soot will allow df lis being easily gathered into the dn&tpan* tearing no traces.
To remove rust from knives* cover the Uades itfth sweet oil for a day or two and tben no with a lump of fresn
1/JERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAI I
tbe unplet&Mnt fashion of growing rusty in a very short time and looking like mitigated woe and suggesting nothing so much as grief that will not survive a rainy day.
Tuut worry over
every trifle, will always remain thin. The young woman desiring to get fat must take life calmly hurry about nothing and as far as possible rest a great deal. If her nervousness is extreme, then she must apply to her physician, who will give her a sedative and a proper diet. She may eat freely of green salads, put upon them as much oil as she likes, but give up the vinegar.—Hall's Journal of Health.
One of Miss Alcott's Stories. There went into Miss Akott's sitting room one day a young woman in all the glory of a new and modish costume, of which she was uncommonly proud. Whereupon Miss Alcott, a dress reformer of stern principles and long habit, read this frivolous young woman an impressive lecture on the sinfulness of theconsetand the high heeled shoe, as in her cherished costume exemplified. "It's all very well, my child," said she, with the queer little twist of the mouth and "shake of the mane" which belonged to her especially earnest moments. "It's all very well now, when in the iicious pride of your youth you've notbftg to do but prance about and amuse yoursalf. But wben the dnties and the tests of wifehood and maternity come upon you, where will you be, with your health sacrificed to your vanity? Let me emphasize my moral, ma'am, after the manner of the saintly Miss Edjgeworth, by a simple tale drawn from the riches of my personal observation: "There were once two young girls whom
wewill
The schools in Kansas have about been ]jne from her infancy dressed as becomes a given over to the women. They are county rational female, with unconfined waist and feet shaped as heaven has ordained.
Caroline and Sophrouia. C&ro-
Sophronia kept her waist down to eighteen inches—at what cost to her in'ards, my love, we will not inquire—and tilted herself aloft on French heels like those I see before me. Mark the result."
Here the speaker's voice deepened omi nously, and she shook a warning finger aloft. "Both these girls married, and in due time were blessed with offspring. Caroline, the sensible, the hygienic, all but died from the ordeal, and is an invalid to this hour. Sophronia, the fashionable, the frivolous, is the mother of seven daugh ters, and continues to dance all night in an 18-inch corseti" "But good gracious, Miss Louisa!" gasped her startled interlocutor, "it seems to me that tale turns out its moral wrong end to!" "My dear," said she, her gray eyes all a-twinkle, "I realized that fact too late to change my unfortunately selected illustration. 'But,' says I to myself, 'let us be truthful, Louisa, though the heavens fall!' "—Boston Transcript.
Mrs. Carlyle as a Writer.
I do not kuow whether I am siugular in not indorsing very heartily the enthusiastic admiration of his wife's genius bestowed upon her after the death by Carlyle. In ray personal intercourse with her she seemed to me a bright, clever, intelligent woman but as to any comparison between her mental powers and those of the two great geniuses of our day, George Sand and George Eliot, it was really absurdly inad inissible. She either had caught from Carlyle, or was naturally endowed with, a fine general contempt for the intellects of her acquaintance, and in her lettors, I think displays an effort at brilliancy and point quite destructive of its effect.
A very small instance of this with reference tq myself will illustrate this tendency "Mrs. Butler paid me a visit," said she, "with a riding whip, I suppose to keep her hand in." I was dressed in my habit, aud just going out on horseback, and necessarily carried my riding whip, which I am not aware of ever practicing (keeping my hand in in the use of) with any creature but my lior.se. The desire to write something smart, such as this observation of hers exhibits, seems to mc unpleasant and unsuccessfully aud frequently apparent in Mrs. Carlyle's letters. I wish clever people had a higher and juster respect for simple stupidity.—Frances Anne Kemble.
What It Does.
Ilm)a''s Snrsnparl 1 la. 1. Purities the blood. 2. Creates an appetite. 8. Strengthens the neryes. I. Makes the weak strong. 5. overcomes that tired feeling. 6. Cures scrofula, salt rheum, etc. 7. Invigorates the kidneys and liver. 8. Relieves headache, indigestion, pepsin.
INYALIDS AND CONVALESCENTS.
Restored to Health and Strength.
You Invalids and convalescents who have Malaria remalu weak, tired, nervous and exhausted, there is a marvelous restorative, an unfailing strengtiiener of brain, nerve, blood and body—Dr. Greene's Nervura—which will give you more utrcriffth of nerve, \itaUty of blood and vigor ixxly than anything else under the sun. This wonderful giver of renewed health and strength is purely vegetable, perfectly harmless, and may l»e taken by the most delicate invalid with absolute certainty of quick and speedy benefit. Dr. Greene, its discoverer, Is the well-known physician, and guarantees the healthful, strengthening and InvigoratlngcRecisof this marvelous remedy.
Use It invalid or convalescent, and watch the rtrcngth return I» your limb», the jmver and vigor to pour nerve*, the warm, rich mlor to j/our Cheek, and fetl the gimp of henllh throt) agoin in your vein*.
HOW SHAIX GET STROXIi 7
"J teat weak I could mi raite mptcif in bed, mad doctora raid could be so better. Hearing ot Dr. Greene'* Xervnm, I commenced taking it, and In a week I began to feel belter. I am now able to w»ik and ride out, biTtng gained *1 poonds In weight, that I omnitUTthfti fir. Greene'* »rrnn» oar***
N!.
mjf lift.
MRS. E. M. BAJK, Oxlortl, y. H."
ir-fxr- Dr. Greene, the mcocmfal fcss special tot in corin# all form* of nervows and chronic di#eaae«, W. llth Street, Xe» Tart, etui be eonmlted ft**, per*onaUy, or fey letter. Call or write htaiaboot yoar esse* or m^ati for symptom blank to fill oat, asd a letter folly expUinlog year MM, glTtn# idvtce, etc., will be retarnedAw.
A Great Explosion!
In these days of gunpowder, dynamite, giant powder, and the like, tremendous explosions, are no rarity, but the greatest explosion ot modern times is, without doubt, that of the "old-school" idea that Consumption is incurable. Thousands of lives have been sacrificed to this mistaken notion. Modern research has established the fact that Consumption is a scrofulous disease of the lungs, and that there is one remedy which will positive ly eradicate it from the system—Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. Of course, there were in the olden times many who would have pronounced modern explosives instruments of witchcraft, but there are. fortunately, few to day who do not acknowledge that the "Golden Medical Discovery" is the one sovereign remedy for all scrofulous diseases and Consumption is one of them.
A Wonder Worker.
Mr. Frank Huffman, a young man of Burlington, Ohio, states that he had been under the care of two prominent physicians, and used their treatment until he was not able to get around. They pronounced his case to be Con sumption and incurable. He was persuaded to try Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds and at that time was not able to walk across the street without resting. He found, before he had used half of a dollar bottle, that he was much better he continued to use it and is to-day enjoying good health. If you have any Throat, Lung or Chest Trouble try it. We guarantee satisfaction. Trial bottle 10 cents at all drug stores. 5
A Husband's Mistake.
Husbands too often permit wives, and parents their children, to suffer from headache, dizziness, neuralgia, sleeplessness, fits and nervousness when by the use of Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine such serious results could be prevented. Druggists everywhere say it gives universal satisfaction, and has an Immense sale. Wood worth Co., of Fort Wayne, Ind. Snow «fe Co., of Syracuse, N. Y. J. C. Wolf, of Hillsdale, Mich., and hundreds of others say "It Is the greatest seller they ever knew." It, contains no opiates. Trial bottles and a tine book on Nervous Diseases, free at all druggists. 5
Green Mountain Salve,
Is unequalled as a cure for nil rheumatic pnlns, weakness In the side, back orany other place, and Is unexcelled for cuts, bruises, corns, etc. It is the uncompromising enemy of pain In whatever form, or wherever manifested,and has never been known to fall In a contest with this dreadful foeof human happiness. If you would live a peaceful and painless life, rythts great remedy and you will never regret It.
DOCTOR
(ACKER'S!
ENGLISH
REMEDY
will stop a Cough in one night, checka Cold in a day* and CURE: :Consumption if taken in time.! •IF THE LITTLE ONES HAVE
WHOOPING COUGH OR CROUP Use it Promptly. S A 85 cent* bottle mc,7 .save their* .lives. Ask* L--C your druar-1 igist for ft.
N
dys-
Chiunberlain* Hestorative PHI*. These pills are peculiarly adapted to all bilious affections, and as a safe, pleasant and reliable purgative and alterative have no superior. For bilious levers and all other fevers incident to this climate they are unsurpassed. Ask your druggist for them. I
It Tastos Good,
I Br. Acker's English Pills!
CUKE CONSTIPATION. SmnlJ, plcn»nitt» a favorite with tlic ladle*. W. II. IIOOKElt & CO., W?« Broadway, N. Y.
••••••a
P^torKoeni^
^HveTORIG
In ttfi Worw# Fora. I BENTON, Laf. Co., W1H., DOC. '{A
Rev, J. C*. Bergen vounbos for (bo following: JarueB lloonay, who was anffcrfng fr«,.u Vltuo Danco in its worst form for about Oue aud r. fourth yoar«, was tivatad by Bovoral physician*) without effect two ittloB of Pastor Iv Oui Norvo Tonic oared hhu.
Too-t.sAi.vT, Ohio, Oct. 25,18.)J.
I used 1'antor Koonlg'B Xorvo Tonlj for a lady 20 yoarti old every two or three weeks she had a et'rloud attack of fitlliiiy Blckncatj, accompanied with licfuiiiciHi »ad was uriren to dhj v.-a» sjnt mi.'o to ii.i iiiBiuio aeylti Tii'-doc-tors could not relievo her I bo^im with ono bottle 'your njudfelno. alio tiud taken threequarter* it, and sh wrote to uto a tow dnyt ai o. "The medicine holps mo much I think another bottle will euro mo."
HKV. ARMANI.) IIAMELIN.
REE
—A VttlUH.'jle I took
MI
Nervorum
Il*eH.*e* «ont free to any addreM, and poor pationta can al*o obtain this medicine free of clurte.
Thin remedy h»« been prepared by the Bevorond Pagtor Koentg. of Fort Wavne. Ind„ since 1878, and la now prepared underbill clirectton by tbe
KOENIC MED. CO.. Chicago, III. 8old by Drnggtxtfi at 81 per Bottle. for 85. I^rgo Sice- SV75. fl Bottle* for «6.
We send tbe marr«lotm French Remedy CALTH08 free, and a legal guarantee tbat CAI.TJIOB will STOP Dl*efaar«M A- Kabutma, CURE UperoMtMrliea. VsHmeak u4 BESTOHE LeatVlgsn
Uteitand pay if satisfied. AMnm, VON MOHL CO.. Sate AmHcaa XgrnU, tlwhMll, Ohio.
TRUSSES
Will retain the most difficult ioTTUM of IIEKNI A of Rapture witfa ownfort and Mfety, thereby oomplHlag»radicalCCRK ofafl carabte *«*. fmper
YIOM
to motwtare, may be
OMMSin
hrtblw^nd fit*
tine perfectly toferm of body, are^wor& tthont inooovenieDee try tbe ycrangwrt child, most deikato lady, or Uh laboring man. aToidln* nil M»nr, iwMtr.padM iijIeaMUrtiitwh tot t* Coel. leanly, and abreya rrliafefe.
Made In CT{-ry destrabta pattern, with pad* anatomkailF pomrtructedL. to suit all amtm.
Tbe Correct and Skinful Mechanical Treatment at HERNIA OMRUPTURE SPECULTT, in iff* etrrrvft adsr^tlotj of rqlfabta tCTww *we»ci« itmiWml hmirmtotmtarlt» wltb meoMHwy cltavtrm uid aUwattwsa LEWIS LOCKWOOD
WA?k'(?*r*CTCRER Or
Palest Limbs and Deformity Appliances
Seventh and Main Street*, MCKKKN BiXX'K. BOOM So. It gjk 0k t* A A TBA 1 to txMfr U* zM IIII 111111"tot Nrf Mrf wW
0 UU
mtmrr **hm
IMMM*.1*****bm*m*mmtramim*
Itifirt mmOrn —«/. 1
H. GAIIRET, Custom Harness Maker. Track Work and Repairing a Specialty. 83 south 7th. rear P. J. Kaufman's'Grocery.
A
RTIFICIAL TEETH. DR. F. G. BLEDSOE—DENTIST1. With 80 years practice in dentistry, I can guarantee first-class work. Special pains taken iu mending old plates. Teeth extracted without paln.
8S7J£ Main street, near Ninth.
JpELSENTHAL, A. B. Justice of the Peace and Attorney at Law, 26 south 3rd street. Torre Haute, Ind.
T)R. L. H. BARTHOLOMEW,
DENTIST.
Removed to 671 Main st, Terre Haute, Ind.
J)R. G. W. LOOMIS, DENTIST. 2040 north 9th st. Terre Haute, Ind. 1 square from Electric Car Line. Jp C. DANALDSON,
ATTORNEY .A.T 22S}£ WABASH AVENUE.
J)R. 0. M. BROWN, DENTIST Ofllce 511}$ Ohio Street, Terre Haute.
W. O. JENKINS,
-1—^ Office, 12 south 7 st. Hours 1 :S0 to 3:30 Residence, cor. 5th and Linton. Ofllce telephone, No. to, Knur's Drug Store.
Resident telephone No. 178.
J)R. GILLETTE., D. D. S. DENTIST. N. W. Cor. Main and Seventh, opposite the Terre Haute House.
JSAAC BALL, FUNERAL DIRECTOR. Cor. Third aud Cherry Sts., Terre Haute, ind. Is prepared to execute all orders li» his line with neatness aud dispute)
Kinbalmtug Specialty.
jSfiSBIT fc McMINN,
UNDERTAKERS,
lftS NORTH FOURTH STRKKT, All calls will receive the most careful attention. Open day and night.
DE
LI Y\. VAN VALZAJH, Kuccetuior to
RICH A KDMON it VAN VALZAH, CTJi Office—ttout.hwest corner Fifth and Main Streets,over National Mtato mna (entranc* on Fifth street.
"P)~OTEL GLEN HAM,
FIFTH AVKNUK, NKW YOliK, llet. JSltit aud,'22d nts., near Mndlson HQUHTO EUROPEAN PLAN
N. JB. BAKRY, Proprietor
New and perfect plumhiutt, according te the lateatHcleuttflc principle*.
J. NUOKN'i. M.J. BKOPH1 ^UGKNT te CU„
PLOMBiNU and GAS FITTING A dealer In Gas Fixtures, Globes and Engineer'*
Supplies.
50ft Ohio Street. Torre Ilnnt*. Ind
Established 1861. Incorporated 1B8H
QLIFT A' WILLIAMS CO..
Successor* to CI I ft, Wimamn Co J. H. WII-MAMH, President. J. M. I'M p-i Hec'y and Trca*.
MANtTFAOTPnKKH OF
Sash, Doors, Blinds, etc. Am
OKALBKH IN
LUMBER, LATH, SmNULHM
GLASS, PAINTS, OJLs
AND BUILDKIW HARDWAKK. Mulberry street, "orner 9th.
Matfca,
'Is-
643WABA§HI,AVE.
Uned micoewifully 1 r, years. Dr.tMox.fHaa*' IIOK and Poultry Kernedy arrenta dlaeaae, prevents dlwaae, increawx the flesh find haan» mat url ty. Price 92M, $1.25. Mc per package. A*k fortCHtlmonlnlK. Bend2-eentMamp for "Hogology" to Jon. Haas, V. H., IndlauapoliK, Ind.
HOT.K AOK.TT,
GULICK CO., N. W. cor. -1th and Wabnah A v« Terre Haute, ind.
AfiEHCHfer
A pampblet of Information gad ab •tract of tbe law», (bowing Mow to Obtain Patent*, Caveats. Trade
VATOIKL TNK)
81 Brcmdwmr. Hew «rk.
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Dr. DeLac'g Periodical Pills.
FROM PARIS. FRANCE.
Act# only on the mcnalrttal »y*tem and positively core* *ttppre*mlon of tbe tne»«o* from cold*, ahock, etc. A aafe reliable rnon thir medicine, warranted to relieve prlco 12, three forts. The American Pill and Medicine Oo-. proprietor*, Hpencer, low*. Hold and aent by mall upon receipt of Geo. ftofjw, dntgjcftt, oorn street*. Tern Haute, Ind.
price, and by
comer Third and Mala
