Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 22, Number 24, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 December 1891 — Page 6

SEVERAL KINDS OF GIRLS WANTED.

Tonne Women Are In tl»«? Habit of Skipping the I'erlod of Girlhood. Thtfre Ls something that is getting 10 Ikawfully scarce in this world. Shall I teli you what it Ls? It is girl#. That is what is mianim oat of the sentient, breathing living world just now. We have lot« of you ok ladies and lota of society misses, but the sweet, old faabloned girls of erer long ago are vanished with the poke bonnet* and the cinnamon cookie*. Let me enumerate a few of the kind of jcirls that are wanted: In the first place we want home girls—girls who are mothers' righl band girls who can cuddle the little enes next beat to mamma and smooth out the tangle* in the domestic skein when thing* get twisted girls whom father takes comfort in for something better than beauty, and the big brothers are proud of for something that outranks the ability to dance or shine in society.

Next, we want girls of sense—girls who have a standard of their own regardless of conventionalities and are independent enough to live up to it girls who simply won't wear a trailing dress on the street to gather up microbes aud all sorts of defilement girls who won't wear a high hat to the theater or lacerate their feet and endanger their health with high heels and corsets girls who will wear what is pretty and Incoming and snap their fingers at the dictates of fashion when fashion is horrid an hilly.

And we want good girls—girls who are sweet. ri«ht straight out from the heart to the lip* innocent and pure and simple girls, with less knowledge of sin and duplicity and evildoing at twenty than the pert, little schoolgirl at ten has all too often icirls who say their prayers and rem I their Bibles and love God and keep hi-, commandments. (We want these girl* "awful bad!")

And wis want careful girls aud prudent girls who think enough of the generoi father who toils to maintain them in comfort, and «.-f the gentle mother who di-nle* herself much that they may have main pretty things, to count the cost ami draw the line l»etween the esse*tials and the nonessentials girls who strive to save and not to spend girls who are unselfish and eager to he a joy juitl a comfort in the home jrather than an expensive and a useless burden.

We want girls with hearts—girls who artfull of tenderness and sympathy, with tears that flow for other people's ills, and smiles that light, outward their own Iteatiliful thoughts. We have lots of clever girls, and brilliant girl* and witty girls. Give us a consignment of jolly girls, warm hearted and impulsive girls, kind and entertaining to their own folks, and with little desire to shine in the garish world.

With a few such girls scattered around, life would freshen up for all of us, a» the weather does under the spell of summer showers. Speed the flay when this sort of girls (111 the world once more, overrunning the spaces where God puts them as climb Jug roj«es do when they break through the trellis to glimmer and glint, above the common highway, a blessing and a boon to all who paiui them by,—Chicago Herald.

Th«' Home and the Houftehold. Housekeeping it Incoming an art so capable of Ijeingsystetnalized and simplified that it need no ltfnger be a burden. We are beginning to live in a world of finer forces, ami especially in city homes, where hot water Is always ready at the turning of a faucet where rooms heated by steam do not require the extra work of making fires: where go* or electric lighting does away with Inmps and their care—with all Uicm and other conveniences of the day the do me«t!k: r,r.r! reduced to a minimum. Housekeeping In apartments is absolutely a flue art. aud In it a young couple can enjoy all the privacy and charm and sweet sacredness of homt-» life so infinitely preferable to that of hotel or lMardh.ig house and yet take upon themselves none of the burden of ordinary housekeeping Hut while the average country home can not have all the conveniences of the city house or apartment, the devices of labor Having are rapidly accumulating.

The making of jelly, for instance, haIveen one of the unmitigated hardships of the housckftejwr, involving a complicated and mystical process full of fatigue and uncertainty. Mr* St owe, in her encomiums on "facility," that highest gift and grace in the New Kugland judgment, mention*, a* one proof of the posM-ssion of "faculty" on the part of the mNtre,** of the menage, that alv nys I -r jelly turn out a mkccs« rm, c"" ry«Jal like.

The nov(* pniOfM of jelly making «loo away with all the drudgery hat attended 1$ in the past. The little package of gels tine, of currant. graj»e. crab apple, quirt* hat you will-~i« put im a glass. iug water I* pmiml over it. and ivhold the Jelly. perfect in wior, con^tency «m! flavor (\mned and preserved fruit ni iy i*|mr cbn-icd. if in suflh etifly large quanttSi -, as cheaply as they cats Is* ptvpamt at house, ami this all take* off a great shar« of work of th« autumn. The time is not *,- taut wlsen the no i«orr do it* and pickling than IXi!ies i!- an ssimpler hup, and rap-idiy vnnishins

nd! fidual hou«.-'hold :i canning, pre-ser*.« tiiv* own weaving (H-Mmtng a finer aad d-» of drudgerv are \w A 7 tetter.

T«» rsiui

If I vrew on h« i« for a hushsu»vi should ay the gi innt iy tHtir-ittg My contemplate •n.nt. iMcuttu it rapt .itimMrtt# nrn si!' spoke, and gener ally seek!T" 4 to cr*1 toe smprcs^ton on him that I thought him in wi«iom atus charm not ir.fericr to the angel*. At the jtanic time *honid endeavor indirectly to bring home to him the f.*ic» that tn me be wvul'.l a person wjiH a heavenly tem $cr. bntuming over with aiTr* tio«. I *iw«M take cure l» S*comlngi drw^d. but :~sy "get tip" would look as it I sbonid ewbew s3an« and nvstsljr game*, and I should in my genera! behavior, tn i»y movements 1 nhoui cult irate «r*ce, and with shb objet I *ho-aln take Www in datsemg. My tifc» a»d my llk«i m«M my don Trfltb ~..

T««k a So*'* t*t«r»-

Oo« of she m«w* »««*9»fMl ^rnimmot the prweot day h» Aon* Bwl. bono boy-Oial of Cbari« Beck.of PhilaM£*U. woman, who*# hirth lta*«l*td mwfc dls appointment to b«r t*th» oaaeteani c~'

her sex, resolved that this accident should sot* debar her from being the same help of jicr Duher8 declining years, in all that pertained to business cares, that a son would have been.

She is a graduate of the high school, has taken the full collegiate and pest graduate course at Welles ley, and passed the rigid Harvard Annex examination. Her tastes and instincts are pre-eminently those of the student, but when her father's health began to fail she relinquished all scholastic interests and took up the practical study of the business in the proper place, at the bottom of the ladder, precisely as her brother would have done.

This involved much menial service, extremely distasteful to one of her mental accomplishments, but she accepted all uncomplainingly, refusing all favors offered becanse she was a woman, and so proceeded round by round by deserved and regular promotion, until she is today not only a member of tbe firm, bnt the treasurer, secretary and financial manager o/ tbe concern, which is one of the largest exporting and importing establishments in the United States,—New York Sun.

"Water as a Medicine.

The human body is constantly undergoing tissue change. Worn out particles are ca«t aside and eliminated from the system, while the new are ever being formed, froii) the inception of life to its close. Water has tbe power of increasing these tissue changes, which multiply the waste prod nets, but at the same time they are renewed by its agency, giving rise to increased appetite, which in turn .provides fresh nutriment.

Persons but little accustomed to drink water are liable to have the waste products formed faster than they are removed. Any obstruction to the free working of natural laws at once produces disease, which, if once firmly seated, requires both time and money to cure. People accustomed to rise in tbe morning weak and languid will find the cause in the imperfect secretion of wastes, which many times may be remedied by drinking a full tumbler of water before retiring. This very materially assists In the process during the ni^ht, and leaves the tissues fresh and strong, ready for the active work of the day.

Hot water is one of ourliest remedial agents. A hot bath on going to bed, even In the hot nights of summer, is a better reliever of insomnia than many drugs. Inflated parts will subside under the continued poulticing of real hot water. Very hot water, as we all know, is a prompt checker of bleeding, and besides, if it is clean, as it should be, it aids in sterilizing our wounds. A riotous stomach will nearly always gratefully receive a glass or more of hot water.—-Hall's Journal of Health.

The DrcaU of Washing.

So many of my sisters appear to think washing the greatest of earthly trials. I have known delicate women who would carry pails of water to the barn to water tbe horse and feed the pigs or pitch hay, who regarded the washtnb with horror and considered it beneath their dignity to even hang the clothes out on the line to dry. So many people make such hard work of washing. But ironing is much more injurious to the health of the two. Ask your physicians if it is not so. Yet many a woman hires her washing done and does her own ironing on account of poor health. Washing was always the easier for me, there is so much more variety of work and position.

Above all things don't spoil your Sunday by thoughts of washing on Monday. So many otherwise good people do that, while some even go so far as to liegin their washing ou Sunday. Now don't look so indignant. What do you call it but be ginning your washing if you get your tubs, benches, boiler, etc., all ready for use on Sunday and the water pumped, while some even put their clothes soaking? If you must begin the day before, wait and do your washing Tuesday. Don't spoil your one day of rest by such unnecessary preparat ions. It is time to get ready when you fire ready for work.—Cor. New Eng land Homestead.

Tim Klmt of Women "ecdc«l. The strongest man in the world, says Mary Seymour Howell, is the one who is also most tender and has great sentiment. St», if man would know the depth of woman's love and capability, let him not find one who is but nil ivy, but one with brains and independence, able to stand without him, but far happier with him, and he will have discovered a queen who will give him the homage due a kitig aud will bring into his life that abiding sentiment that endures beyond time. Victor Hugo has said: "Woman is the social problem, the human mystery. She seems great weakness—she is great, strength. The man on whom an entire nntion leans must needs himself lean on a woman. The*day in which she is wanting all is wanting."

We are soon going into a new century, which i« calling for strong women as well as men. Self .sustaining women, thinking out the great problem?" of a finer and higher civilization vvomeu who will purify .social life, ennoble the politici! arena aud help solve the vexed questions of the nation--women who will bless home, make wives worthy of she lest men of the conn try and be the mother" ol a nobler race.--Detroit Free I'rc-

,11 »u' Friend.

A man's tv-s friend is a wife of good m5«im and g».-od heart, whom he lovea and who io\, him. In woman there is at once a subtle delicacy of tact aud a plain soundness of judgment which are rarely com hi -..ni to an equal degree in a man. A woman, if she is really your friend, will have a .sensitive regard for your character, honor, repute. She will seldom counsel you to do a sba'-by thine for a woman always desire* to proud of you. At the (wmif* tinit' her constitutional timidity make* her more cautious than your male friends- She, therefore, s*»ldon counsel* ynu to do an imprudent hing. Rely. then, on her wisdom and fait hfulness, and scorn the thoncht of provms unfaithful to the tenderness which, should ooc*»ion demand, would, impel her wiUinjdy to die for yon— as when the brutal Km peror Claudius commandrsl tbe death of her huskv d, the wife, Arria. stabbing herself, handed hips the dagger, with the immortal words, "Pwttt*. ft dees not hurt Bulwer kyUon.

VI"by &»im«

Xm Io

Not 1.1k* Bent*.

(Some women expect their husbands ?«v admire, them mom than other wotntts. Now. when they hare put aside all tbe we doctivw little jooks and way^lhey srdnc*d them into marriage with, and when they UJte no trouble with their drew awd *p {MUtiKC or nurroundieg*, *nd when tbey are ew?n teo la*y to brush their hatw aod give them jgoadbj" fcb* lo take to baw otm with thenu or welcoming oo their arrival borne, tbey expect their lore to h* |«*t as de«r fcw

w*w««

(effort to kt*p it mam, wtw* Owy tterer vttxdy the intern**, wtsJw* er liking* of their tani*. Smm tketr dbdldrra to be be-althy when tl*j take no

care ol ihci& Rood when they take no trouble with them on tbeir way to heaven when they don't show them the way. They expect their servants to work from morning till night at home while they go ont and enjoy themselves day after day, and never to ask for an hour's recreation or want it. These are the women who frighten good men from seeking wives, and are the cause of there being so many miserable homes.—Dublin Times.

A Padding That Pleased an Emperor. The German emperor, in one of his trips through the outermost parts of his empire, was somewhere treated to a pudding which so tickled the royal palate that the chef at Potsdam has been obliged to procure the formula and produce from time to time the dainty. From the receipt which follows it will be gathered that this latest Hohenzollern has with his royal birth a truly kingly digestion:

Take a pudding mold and butter it thoroughly on all its sides. First lay in boiled smoked ham cut into the thinnest strips. Next layer of fried potatoes upon tfcis a layer of lean bacon, cut as thin as the ham. Follow with a layer of mushrooms, surmounted with a layer of chopped cooked meat. On this spread a layer of squashed boiled potatoes, and cover the whole with good gravy. Bake in a slow oven.—Exchange.

K«»t for Farmer*' Wives.

At least a third of our women complain that they can't do their housework without great weariness, and many are obliged to hire help who otherwise would not if they would sit down to talk, or sit to do such work as could be as easily done sitting as standing, and then we could keep rested. No one should keep on the feet until trembling and tired, but keep within streugth, and then strength would increase, but if worked to exhaustion, it sooner or later brings on weakness and disease. If sitting does not give complete rest, then lie down each day more or less. If not overworked, the mind is much clearer and the nerves steadier the sharp answer not half so apt to be spoken.—Boot's Gleanings. Kxtract from One of Mrs. Stowe's Letters.

Every woman adores love letters, and here is an extract from one embodying such a high ideal of womanhood that every girl and woman ought to paste it among her scrapbook treasures: "There is no woman like you iu this wide world. Who else has so much talent with so little self conceit so much reputation with so little affectation so much literature with so little nonsense so much enterprise with so little extravagance so much tongue with ho little scold so much sweetness with so little softness so much of so many things and so little of so many other things?" The letter was written many years ago by the Rev. Dr. Stowe, to bis famous wife, Harriet Beecher Stowe.

Kquul to a Water Bar and Cheaper. A sandbag is one of the most useful of household articles. Its virtues are equal, if not superior to, the hot water bag, and the cost is considerably less. The sand should be fine and clean, and should be thoroughly dried out before being "bagged." It is better to cover the flannel bag which holds the sand with a cotton one, as this pruveuts the sand from sifting out. A bag not larger than ten inches square is an a\ ilable size. Mothers whose children are f- ibject to earache will find these bags in\ tluable they hold the heat a long time, nud their composition is such that they are easily adjustable to the affected parts.—Her Point of View in New York Times.

Almost ii Jifiw Carpet.

An ingenious woman has upon her floor a carpet resetted from dirt and destruction to a condition "almost as good as new." The work of restoring was not done by a professional cleaner, but under direction at home. The carpet was tacked to a frame that raised it a good distance from the ground and each breadth was scrubbed with a brush, usiug tepid water and good white soap. Next it was rinsed and dried as well as possible by rubbing with clean cloths. The rest of the drying was left to the wind and sun. The carpet should be shaken and grease spots removed with gasoline or bennine before scrubbing.—New York Post.

A Tribute to IIIs Wife.

The German em|eror loses uo opportunity of winning favor with tbe ladies with his gallant speeches. One of the prettiest of these courtierlike utterances was delivered in answering a toast to his wife in the province where she was born: "The botid that unites me to this province and chains uie to her in a manner different from ail the others of my empire is the jewel that sparkles at my side, her majesty, the empress. Sprung from this soil, the type of the various virtues of a German princess, it is to her I owe it if I am abl« to meet the severe labors of my office with a happy spirit and make head against them."

An Imprtivlsptl Clot lies l'r«-»*. This was the scheme of a woman who one summer found herself at her wits'end to dispose of her children's clothing when the one small closet of her country quarters was filled. A bedstead with a high headboard stood across tbe corner of the room, and on the hack of this headboard the perplexed mother had rows of hooks screwed, fitting to the top on a wire cord, a curtain of caiico to protect the clothes from dust, and that improvised closet, sin said, "was my salvation," which is a suggestion worth remembering against future restricted quarters.—Exchange.

What France wants, according to M. Jules Simon, is state restriction upor. female iaior, a- in England. Tbe excessive number of hours worked by many women is, be says, most injurious to the well being of the family, that unit of every well ordered iwiety.

For wadding ironing holders nothing is better than paper. When traveling ia cold Treat her place one or two newspapers between your shoulder and the window, and yon will be saved tbe stiff neck or lame back which so often follows tbe long car ride,

Few mothers ever put shoes on tbeir baby's feet until they are old enough to walk, and it is well. No mother should do It. as the stiftness of the shoe# is apt to injure the free and natural development of the muscle*.

Twelve per cent- of the working class of Great Britain and Ireland are woi»en~~ii» percentage of working women being larger than hi found tn any other country lit tbe .world.

Alice Freeman Palmer give* as tbe practical result* of coWege education toa girl, "caum nerves, pwd health, good friends and modest Ofrinkm of herself."

The Set. Ftorcnc* Koiiock, of Illinois, has not here one* absent from her poipit

of cixteea jww*.

TERRS HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING KATl*

Tabie Board for Two at 85 a Week. During the past eight years I have made so many experiments as to tbe cost at which choice fare can be furnished to two or more persons per week that with me the question is no longer an open one. While in charge of the school of domestic economy of the Iowa Agricultural college I tried the experiment several times at different seasons. While in charge of a similar school at Purdue university, Indiana, I did tbe same thing, and I repeated my experiments in the school of cookery at Chautauqua.

I have also experimented in the same direction in Boston, in Kansas City and in other places, and in all my experiments the results have shown that two persons can live on the best the markets afford at at from $3 to $3.50 a week. But to do it every article must be of the best quality, and must be prepared in the best manner possible. It requires a very limited amount of food to satisfy one's appetite if the food materials be judiciously selected and skillfully prepared. Aud if half the time spent in concocting messes were devoted to the proper preparation of the staple articles of I diet, the larger item of expense would be avoided.

At the average table the food that is wasted on account of being badly cooked costs more tban the food that is eaten, and my ^experiments have not been made to ascertaiu the smallest possible sum upon which two persons can eke out existence, but to establish the fact that the prime factor in obtaining cheap food is a knowledge of the culinary art.

The secret of cheap living consists in selecting the best food materials and preparing them properly. I can select a bill of fare for any given month that will satisfy tbe most fastidious at a cost of not more than five dollars a week for two persons, and at which qrdinary mortals will not grumble for three dollars a week for two persons.—Emma B. Ewing iu Housekeepers' Weekly.

Inexpensive Molding.

There is no excuse at present for the use of a gaudy, ugly wall paper. Excellent, tasteful designs can be found at a low price. Few rooms require more than ten rolls of paper, many much less, and there is often only the difference of five or ten cents on a roll iu the price of a pretty or a cheap, ugly pattern. A beautiful paper for ordinary use cau be purchased at tweuty-fivo cents a roll, and If properly cared for will last many years. It is the fancy of the hour to use a wide border or frieze, varying from eighteen inches to twenty-two in width, and usually wide enough to cover the space from the top of the doors ami windows to the ceiling. This frieze is usually separated from the main body of the paper by a narrow picture molding.

This molding costs about eight or teu cents ti foot, put up. The paperhangcr cau do it, and it is much better to let him, as the carpenter, though he may do it as well, may not be so careful not to injure the new paper in the process. An amateur could probably learn easily to put up this molding. It is put up with brads, but care must lie taken not to nick or scratch it in putting it up, as it is already finished in gilt or natural wjod stain. When purchased already finished the picture molding costs much less than when the carpenter makes it aud finishes it on the wall, as is sometimes done. A picture molding properly put up will last as long is the house.— Springfield Homestead.

Georgu Uoiilii'o lun«»llo Wife. S^tMrs. George J. Gould, who was a Miss Edith Kingdun, is a famous young housekeeper. She cares nothing for society, but devotes all her time to her husband, her children and her home. She does all her owu marketing, knows how to select a good joint, and, better still, knows how to cook it. Mrs. Gould is the wife of the prospectively richest man in America. She has millions at her command, yet she does not squander a penny. Her husband gives her a fixed income for household exnense and a liberal allowance each year for clothing.

She keeps a little book in which is set down the sums of money she receives and spends, and once each month she balances it, pays all bills, and begins a new account. She purchases every ec." of clothing worn by her children, and often makes a special artlclo of wear for them herself. Mr*. Gould is a firm lieliever that all wives should have a fixed aJ Iowa nee from their husbands for household'and clothing ex penses. It may be much or little, just as the husband can afford.—Ladies' Home Journal.

Prevent Ion I* Hotter

Than eure, and tho:-e who are wubjeet to rheumatism can prevent attack* liy keeping the blood pure and fr«* from theneld which causes the disease. For this purpose Mood** farsnpnrllla Is used by thousands with sireut success. It Is the best blood purifier.

Constipation Is en used by loss of th'peristaltic action of tbe bowels. Hood's I'tH's restore this action and Invigorate the liver.

A l-w of ii» Victim*.

Helow arc few of tbo dj«cH"-e-« Hint will succumb nt once to Chamberlain's Immediate Relief. Cholera morbus, Dysentery. Colic, I'iarrhoea. Sate throat, eatarrb, diphtbersa. fevnr and rheumatism, cough*. fO?d«. bean.. neuralgia, sprains. enl?. limine*. enumerate them all would rcquin* much space. There will bn something interesting on tbi« subject in rext week's issue. '1

Mltw' Ncrro and l.lwr Pit!-. Act on *. ewprinciple— regulatingtlic!! ver Monmch and bowel* nvfth

the

jYotiCanStopaCouglij at any lime with

DOCTOR

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ENGLISH I

REMEDY

I IT WILL CURE A COLD I IN TWELVE HOURS

A 26 cent Bottle m*ysavo 7"®° UlOO in Eoctor*» Wll»-may «a.ve iyoor life. Ask your iDroggi**: •tor it. IT TABTE8 GOOD.

:Bt, Acker's English Pills! 5 curb mMoimKWW.

fur** I'" I •w. a. books* oa.

The Ol*po«al of Houm Slops. Any drain into which kitchen slops an poured is & pestiferous nuisance. It is practically impossible to make one in which the very things aaost desirable to lie pot rid of will not be deposited all along the way, in time closing it up. 1 once moved into a house having a Iour kitchen drain made of plank, the acme of perfection in the estimation of the man who constructed it- It had evidently become obstructed, although still in operation. The first thing I did was to have it dug up its whole length. It was almost full of the deposits from the slops, a most loathsome, stinking mass, about the color o* blue clay and the consistency of new cheese. It had to be cut out with shovels from end to end.

A barrel of slop poured into a draiu at a time will generally be less harmful than a pailful, because the larger quantity will run further before it begins to precipitate the impurities, and will, as a rule, precipitate less in the whole course. Diseas? germs come floating back upon the air o.' the half filled drain to its head to poisoc whoever has occasion to come near.

I have in my washroom a drain for wash water, but it is short., and the overflow o! the cistern runs into it, or we would not use it at all. The water is curried on to a piece of sloping grassland, where it is innocuous, but so promotive of rapid growth that the grass is cut several times during each season for soiling purposes. Hut tbe greater part of our house slop is saved in pails and carried out on the laud, which is a much better way than pouring on a manure heap to be reliandled. Once on the land all there is of value is appropriated aud all that is noisome is neutralized.

As the pails are filled they may be set by the door, where it becomes the duty of the men to attend to them. A low bench made of two scantlings, on which to turn the emptied pails, is better than a plank, as the air is admitted to the inverted pails with excellent effect. If the men understand that when there are as many as two pails standing at the door it is their business to empty them, the slop nuisance is more satisfactorily aud economically disposed of in that than in any other way.—San Francisco Examiner.

•file devotion of the Prince of Naples to nis beautiful mother, Queen Marghvrita, is said to be his .strongest, attachment. Her Influence over him is greater than that of any of his t.utots or friends, and has doubtless done much to fit him for his position

For Sleeplessness

lr«o Murtiford'ft Acid Phogphnte. I)r. C. R. Dake, Belleville, III., says: "1 have found it, and it alo)n\ to be capable of producing a sweet and natural sleep in cases of insomnia from overwork of the brain, which so often occurs in active professional and business men."

CHEATING HORSE BLANKETS

Nearly every pattern of

5/a

Horse

Blanket is imitated in color and style. In most cases the imitation looks just as good as the genuine, but it hasnt tl^ioarp threads, and so lacks strength,and while it sells for only a little less than the genuine it isn't worth one-halfasmuch. The fact that Horse Blankets are copied is strong evidence that they are THE STANDARD, and every buyer should sec that the trade mr rk is sewed on the inside of the Blanket,

Five SVHio Bo^s Ei Ctrl £xfv,\j .st 3 osk-'"1

HORSE SUNRERS

ARG Ti"-!S rF-ONGVST. "i 'j A •. price to c* -n.' cdy. If •, oti can't get them irotn v.r dc-'.k-r, 'write us. Adi for the 5 A IW.'. Vou it 'Immc. WM. AY RES ti- CO ^, i-hiladclphia.

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n»* rtsscoverv. r»r. Miles' PSJlKSpeedily cure biliousness, bad taste, tftrpid 11 ver, piie*.constipation. Unequaled for men, women and children. Smallest, mildest, surest! SO do***, Sfl rt«. Samples Free at nil druggists*

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BE A MAN

APOLLO WA8 A PERFECT MAN.

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May ttnk wtm pmlfAtmat, trrrr MJM n» 1w RtOM M4VIOOEOCi I* tit rtmctl.

TOUNQ MEN OR OLD,

ccs«rts« froa WIMTOVt OKturn. t-* WIIMUMtoH, r*rrr. itm»u4 Xrr«l*»a«at, «r _. ratcovAL wuHtn. «m mUrrf ranct nun *m ou vox3.9 rxTAssrr «r imtojia KCJt, trM**M iMWtt We ct*)m tT of pnclKj bf oar mrtbol* osltwrn •uonoTotr or tvccw ta ttmtr N. Ittfill IMmmw, VmUmm u4

Ji TntlSMBltll (msMftuMMUlTtnttMlM.

CUR HEW T~"Z. ^r5aViSS,Ti,"KA^I

kmkMttru lMl(NiMU»«rit)«i. MEDICAL CO. BUFFALO. *-T,

MEN Ii" HAPPY S ttooM HEALTH TID-BITS re**in»cp tM*n *nd MhUUlC BUM COM*: BB

XK5T«to

TOLL^SOAP

NO OTHER

LkavebaDklicatkandLastinoOoob For wile by bU Drag nrnl Fancy Goods Dcnloni or It unshlo to procure this wondcrftal toap Mrnd S5c tn stiunpa iu»d mxlvo a cakc by return mAli. JAS. S. KIRK & CO., Chicago.

SPKCf AT^—Shnndon RollsWatt* (ttip popalu Socloty Wntt*) sent FREK to nnvono scudrag Qt three wrappers of Shandon Bolls Soap.

H. GAREEX

Custom Hnntess Mnkrr.

Truck Work and Rcpnlrliiit Specialty, sa south 7 th. rear P.J. Kaufman's Groivry.

A RTIFICIAL TEETH.

UK. F. Ii. HI,ED§OK-ltENTlST. With 30years practice In dcutlstrv, 1 oau guarautec tlrst-clsss work. .Special pains taken In mending old plates. Teeth ext rooted without pain. 8S7)jMaln street, near Ninth.

JpELSENTHAL, A. B.

Jnstlcc of the Peace mitl Attorney at I.a\v, 26 south Srtl street. Terre Hante, lnd.

DE

L. H. BAHTHUI.OMEAV,

DENTIST.

Removed to (171 Main st, Terre Haute, lnd.

J^Pv. G. AY. LOOMIS,

DEHTIST.

2t)t() north IHli st. 'I'orre llaute, 1 ml, 1 square from Elect rlc Car LI tie.

C. DANAL'DSON,

ATTOBWEY -A.T LAW 228'ij WABASH AVKNUK.

DK

O. M, BROWN,

DENTIST

Office ."11 J4 Ohio Street, Terre Haute.

"fMi WrO. JENKINS^ JL-/ Office, l'J south 7 st. Hour,s 1 :.'50 t») Residence, cor. ftt.h and Mnton.

Office telephone. No. IOf Hnur's DrttR Store. Resident, telephone No, 17(1.

I)

11. GILLETTE., I). D. S.

IDEIsTTTST.

N. W. ("or. Main and Seventh, opposite thoTerre Haute House.

JSAAC BALL,

FUNERAL DIRECTOR.

Cnr. Thlrit and Cherry St -., Terre Haute,* lnd. i.h prepared exi-cnto sii orders In his line with nejtlncHK nnddlxpatcl

KutbaltttliiKr Speclulty,

1SJJ1T A McMINN,

i:

UNDERTAKERS,

108 NORTH FOURTH STREET, All calls will receive the most careful attention. Open day and nlnlii-. TPTRTWTTAN VALZAli,

Successor to

KlOllAHDSON «V. VAN VA L/A H, r)E3sra?isT. Offloe—Southwest corner Fifth and Main BtreclA, over .National Statu tinnn ^entrano# on Ktft.li street.

J.NUU EN'i. M..I. ItltuPiii

JS^CTGENT CO.,

PLUMBING Hiid GAH FITTING A dealer In G»b Fixtures, Globes and Engineer'*

Supplies.

50S Ohio Street. T®rre Haute, lnd

KKtablUhed J«6J. Incorporated JSH8,

QLIET A-. WJLL1AM8 CO.,

Succewwirx to Cllfl, Williams A* Co, J. 11. Wn,t,jAMH, rrcsldent. .1. M. CMM, Hoc'y and Trea*

MAM'rAOTVKBItH OT

iash. Doors, Blinds, etc.

AXlt DKAi.&m IN

LUMBER, LA Til, XlliNaiJIS (j LAhi), I' A A 7 •*, (J /v'!

A.'-n I'.I'JLDKIX' HARDWAU)'., Mtjltierrx- «trM«i. ^orn'-r »th.

648 WABASH,AVS.

tr#ed «ucc«Mfullj".li yeaiT. I»r, Jos. Haan' Hog and I'oattrj* ttctnwlj* arreot* dlMWue, pti'Vitote dlKMe. the flcoh and ha*leu'* mat Hrliy. Prlcc fi,W, titc per pack* at-c. Anfe fort«»ltriiot»l«l«. Hend 2*c«TJtRU»mp for Il/u«t, V. H., Irtdlanft* fKtl In, Itni. •vit.y. ASiKirr,

GULICK & CO., ?». 'A', car. ith and Waba*h Ave, T«rrre Haute, I fid.

For all kinds of School Supplies,

iH/lV J7UUno« I VUUllUj lliniJj

TABLETS, PENS, ERASERS, SLATES OF ALL SIZES, LETTER PAPER, INKS,

NOTE PAPER, ENVELOPES,

AUto all ot tbe L*Umt Hewtpnven, &afa« tlDM, HUrr Papers, «tc^ go to the

POSTOFFICE NEWS STAND So. North Bert-nib Mtnwt,

TWO D00K8 NORTH OF MAIN.