Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 22, Number 31, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 23 January 1892 — Page 4
titSSiis/i
GOOD NEWS
FORTHEMIUJONSOFCONSUMERSOF a
Tiitt's Pills.«
It gives I*•• Tutt pleasure to an-A notrnce that he la novr patting np a
TINY I2VEB PHI#
vegetable- Both sizes of these pills are still Issued. The exact sixe of
TUTTTS TIHT LTFEB PILLS Is shown in the border of this
"aLw
OB ATEFUI.—CO MFOBTIWG.
Epps's Cocoa
BREAKFAST*
"By a thorough knowledge of the natural lawH which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well-selected Gosoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy doctors' bills. It Is by the Judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hunaredsof subtle maladies are floating around us ready attack wherever there is a weak point.
properlj Gazette. Made
Here is a Good Thing for You
A HAM, OR WOMAN,
of Intelligence and quick-witted enough know a %OOI) THING" at slgb^, but who has Lost the Mo#t Precious Possession on Barth, viz. GOOD HEALTH, WILL NOT require a SECOND TELLING to be induced to become a purchaser of
DR. GREGG'S .ELECTRIC Belts and Appliances
Do you know why? Because it is plain to bo soon that, the TRUTH
1
»NCE TOLD Is
enough. The Hurprlslna Promptness with which all classes of people respond to our an nounoements, and the rapidly increasing de mand for Dr. Gregg's Goods wherever Intro duccd, conclusively prove that true modesty is always recognized and the quality of merit takes care of Itself. Metaphorically our statement 1h the Button—the Public Press it, and
DR. GREGG'S ELECTRIC SPECIALTIES
"DO THE REST."
The extent of Pressure on the button and tho success of Dr. Gregg's Electric Goods In "Doing the Rest," is more satisfactorily shown In tho marvelous growth of our busl ness tho past
00
days.
Repeated and Increasing demands foi^THE tKGG ELBLTRIO "KOOT WARMER" are coming in from all parts of the country with profuse acknowledgements that so much comfort for $1.00 (1he price) was like buying Gold Dollars for ten cents
The Dallcate Organism ofWoman subjects her to many peculiar ailments and unfortunate misery. The extreme seusltlvehoss of her Nervous System very frequently requires artificial stimulus. Tho Gregg Electric Unit and other Appliances SUPPLY THI8, as nothing else can.
The Hugged Constitution of Man, when once Broken, becomes Pitiable In tho extreme, from which there is absolutely NO escape without assistance. Tho GlvEGG Electric Belts and Appliances, in casesof this kind, have honestly won their Titleof KING of REMEDIES.
Rheumatism is conquered, sufferers from speedily relieved, Dropsy quickly yields," spinal dllllcultles and Paralysis dis-
Obeslty are st
appear, and mauy other diseases of Mou and women are permanently cured, fully described In complete cataloguo for 0c, or elaborate circular free. We guarantee to forfeit twlco •be price of any of Dr. Gregg's Goods found to be not genuine. We make aw elegant little $3.00 Electric Belt, which is selling very rapidly and which wo will take In exchange for any Higher Power Bolt (except *5 Belt) and credit. »il on the price of new order. Remember the Eloctrlc "Foot Warmers" are $1 a pair, worth 110. Address
The Gregg Electric Cure Co.,
501 Inter Ocean llulldtng, Chicago, 111. MonMon this paper.
R. MILES NBW
HEART
CURE.
TrwU
HEART
RICC1CC In nil forms. Palpitation,
If (wkftOk
Poln In 8ld«, Shoulder and
Arm.Nhort Brenth. Otf^rcuton, Atthmn, Swollen Ankle*. Wtwk and Smothering Spells, I)rop»y, Wind In Stomach, etc.. nro cured by DR. MILE8' NEW HEART CURE. A new discovery by tho eminent Indians Specialist, A. K. Davis, Silver creek. Neb., after biking four bottles of KRAUT CVRE felt better than lie had for twelve years. "For thirty years troubled with Heart DlsenM»: two bottles of DR. MILES' HEART CURE cured tne.-r**l Ixxtnn, Buchanan. Mleh," K, B. Ftutson. Ways Station, (in, has taken DR. MILES* HEART CURE for Heart trouble with great results, Mrs. Le liar. Kltchhurjr. Mleh., was ill for 13 years with Heart Disease, had to hire house help, lived on liquid food: uoed Dr. Miles* Heart Cure and all pains loft hers constant use cured her. Flee illustrated book B'RKR at dntfigrtais, or address
Dr.Miles' Medical Co. Elkhart,Ind. For Sale by A(011 BALTIC
3L^RIESJ
TJ&IT
Dr. I)eLuc's Periodical Pills,
FROM PARIS, FRANCE.
Acts onlv on the menstrual system and positively cure* suppression of the mensxi* from colds, shock, ete. A safe reliable monthly medicine, warranted to relieve price $2, three for JS. The American Pill and Medicine Co., proprietors, Spencer, Iowa. Sold and sent by mall upon receipt of price, aud by Geo. Kelss, druggist, corner Third aud Main streets, Terre Haute, Ind.
VIGGR OF MEN
Easily, Quickly, Permanently Restored. H'esks***, »rvoii.nc», Drblllty. and all the train of evtte fnwu ®artf error*or later MCWW, the re«nlt# of overwortt, sl«koe««, worry, ete. Full strentfth, development* sad tone siren to every oryan and portion of the body. Bias pie, natural method*. Immediate Iwprnretnetrt. seen. Failure tn»M«»ible. 3,W0 references. Book. explanations •admailedrtealedjfre® Addmn
ER«* MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO, M.
RemedyFree. lUTARTftfUCf. Ftwrt
P|| CO
curvttt |v*U» tw»parpei
I I I I a a A vi
to v*i» »*»r? r*n*"dr has a
»mpi« r«n. which h* will malt
to
hi* ni(.
ajidki mars a BO «•1 IWS men MASK nArr MKN who cw« II «tren«ta drenm and body reeo
O. TtT
IT WAS A HIGH-BRED COLT
Fielding Relates the Story of a Cruel Deception. iCii His Friend Bought a Brute with a Pedi
gree So Long That It Included the Celebrated Animal Bidden by Balaam.
[COPYRIGHT,
to
We
rfade simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only In half-pound tins, by grocers, labeled thus: JAMES EPPS A CO-
Homoeopathic Chemists, London, Eng
1S92.
My cousin, Ben Van Gastrick, lives in the country, and pretends to like it. But he doesn't. He is only a hayseed by marriage. The estimable lady to whom, some years ago, he was united for bettei* or for worse (according to whether one views it from his standpoint or hers) owned a fine place in Briarwood, N. J., and as Ben's residence was thirteen by thirteen, up three flights^ in the rear, with the rent
"THERE'S A WORLD BEATEB."
six weeks overdue, the young couple decided to occupy their suburban bohie Briarwood is dull. Like most other pretty places near New York its finest country seats are owned and occupied by the weeping grass widows of Canadian exiles. For a few months succeeding the honeymoon, Ben was sustained by the novelty of getting three square meals a day, and being sure of them in advance but too much peace at last be came monotonous and he was obliged to hunt around for fads to occupy his time. When I visited him last spring, I found him interested in horses. He had bought two or three high-bred cplts, which he intended to rear in luxury.
Ben knows enough about a horse to stay away from a race track and no more This valuable knowledge is, unhappily, far from universal, but its possession does not necessarily make a man an expert. However, it seemed to me that Ben hadn't been cheated very badly in the prospective record breakers that were prancing about his place last spring. But when I went out to see him about a month ago, these formfer favorites were forgotten.
He hurried me out into the stable before allowing me to pay my respects to the family. In one of the stalls I found a new-born, melancholy beast as thin as a towel-rack, which it resembled closely when in repose. "Look at him," sfcid Ben. "Theresa a world beater. Don't you know lie is?" "The marks of a good colt," said he, "are an intelligent eye and an attentive ear. Don't you know they are? Look at that eyel Just run over the list of your friends and acquaintances and see If you can recall an eye like that. And his earsl You can see that he's listening to every word we say."
I admitted that the brute had wonderful ears. Then I asked Ben where he got this remarkable creature. "Johnny Green gave me the tip," he replied. "I call it very square of him. I used to think he had a grudge against me on account of a little practical joke I put up on him. He and two or three other fellows were going fishing, a couple of yoars ago, up in' some queer corner of Maine, three or four hundred miles from a Manhattan cocktail. Knowing that it was a prohibition country, they laid in a big bottle of rum to make milk punchcs with. I got hold of the bottle just before they started poured out all but a little of the stuff, and filled it up with a mixture of vinegar and kerosene oil. They didn't try it till they got away up in the wilderness where they met an old rustic who kept some cows, and who agreed to furnish them with a superior quality of milk if they would let him In on the punches. The boys had just come in from a hard day's tramp and were dying for a drink but they didn't enjoy it so much as they
A SAD CASE or WnOOPHS'O COUGH.
expected. After a few swallows they gave it up and accused the old fellow of feeding his cows on deleterious substances. He repelled the accusation with scorn, drank all the punches himself and swore that it was the best liquor he'd tasted in seven years. "When the boys came back they didn't exactly accuse me of playing this trick on them, but I always thought I was under suspicion. Therefore, when' Johnny came to me a month ago and told me about the celebrated animal which was the dam of this eolt* I winked the other eye. He told me that the owner of the mare was hard up and most sell her right a way. I didn't bite too quick. I investigated and made sure that the story was straight before I purchased.** Here Ben took some memoranda from his pocket, and with their help laid before me the colt's pedigree. This list of famous ancestors included nearly all the trotting horses that have honored the turf during the
iiitiisiiis
past century and extended back till it was lost sight of in the shadows of antiquity. It seemed as if. with a little more research, he might have shown descent from the only two horses that were not left at the post when Noah acted as starter for a new race.
I did not have the pleasure of seeing Ben's remarkable colt again for a week or more. He had grown in that time. His eye had lost none of its intelligence and his attentive ear was even more notable than beforeS "I've sold off all the other colts on the place," said Ben on this occasion. "What was the use of keeping them? They weren't in it with him," and he gazed affectionately on his
Spider-legged
prodigy. "They didn't have the points. Don't you know they didn't? I kept noticing differences between them and a really high-bred colt like this one. Look at those shoulders! THey show the racer. They are sharp to cut the air. Don't you know they are?"
I was obliged to confess in this to stance that there was something1 peculiar about the colt's shoulders. They, were sharp, as Ben said, and his back came down like a toboggan slide, so that anything put upon it would slida off over his head like an avalanche. "I wouldn't stand behind him," said Ben. "He's an animal of spirit, and sometimes he kicks. When he does, whatever happens to be behind him is beyond repair. I should hate to send you back to your family in a basket. I tell you these racers are uncertain in their dispositions."
I hastily put myself beyond the reach of injury and by and by we went into the house where we spent a very pleasant evening discussing the colt. Mrs. Van Gastrick, like a good wife, was interested in everything which pleased her husband and I learned that she frequently visited tho colt, atid gave him medicine for various complaints incident to his tender age.. +,v
Because of this knowledge, I was not surprised, on my next visit, to find Mrs. Van Gastrick in the stable. We were told that she was there by Ben little boy who met us at the station.. "Billy—" which was the name of the four-legged phenomenon— "is very sick,"
BEN PREPARES TO SELL THE COLT.
said the boy. "Mamma's taking care of him." Ben looked worried, and we hastened our steps. We found that Mrs. Van Gastrick had adopted heroic measures.' Billy was standing in four tubs of warm mustard water, and a collar of stockings wet with liniment was around his neck. This decoration did not otrike me as becoming to his peculiar style of beauty. However, Billy seemed to like it, and he wagged his high bred ears with evident content.
4
"What's the matter with poor little Billy?" asked Bent in a voice full of pathos. "He's got the whooping cough," replied Mrs. Van Gastrick, and I thought her on the verge of tears. "You know, Mr. Fielding," she continued, turning to me, "that our little daughter has had it for more than a week. I have tried, of course, to keep her in the house,.but yesterday she ran away, and I found her playing in the stable. This forenoon Billy broke out with it, and he coughs in a perfectly dreadful way."
Probably Billy, being an unsually intelligent animal, understood this conversation and felt called upon to supj^ort Mrs. Van Gastrick's assertion. He coughed loud and long.
That's it, and no mistake," said Ben. Ohnk—e-e-e, e-e-e, ohnk—e-e-e, ohnk—e-e-c-e-c!" said Billy. "What do you think of it?" asked Ben, turning to me. I had sat down on a bale of hay and was* endeavoring to control my feelings. I could not immediately command my voice. "By Jove, he's affected to tears," said Ben. "I say, Howdy, it's dreadful, isn't it? Do you think it will kill him?"
I'll tell you what I think, Ben," said "He didn't catch that from any member of your family. He inherited it. In that pedigree you've omitted the most important individual. I allude to the illustrious beast which balked with Balaam."
You don't mean—" Yes, old man, the suspicion which has been growing on me for some weeks is confirmed by that cry of distress. Those ears, those heels, that voicel Ben, old boy, your high-bred colt is a mule."
And just then Billy brayed again. It was a sound to remove all doubt from the most prejudiced hearer. Ben turned white and then red. A second later he was sprinting for the house at ten second gait. I found him overhauling his double-barreled shotgun.
I'm going over to have a little talk with Johnny Green," said he, and his smile had a distinct wire edge on it.
I want to persuade him to purchase this colt and bring him up as a member of his family. I hope," he continued, sticking a couple of cartridges into the gun, "that he will take a proper view of the situation."
It was Mrs. Green who met us at the door. "Johnny saw you coming,** said she, "and he stepped out the back way. We expect him home again in about six months.** HOWARD FTKLDEXG.
S«r» to Be & Bore, W
Hostess—May I introduce yon to Miss Gander? Wag—Well, if her5name isn't Ann*:— Harper's Basa^ ..
SATURDAY EVENING MAIi
Whi fiUKSES AKt CHEAP.
Quconstand Farmers Pay for Having Them Killed.
No one can buy a horse in this city, says the Washington Star, which is fit for any purpose, for less than one hundred dollars. A broken-down car horse is worth nearly this amount. A horse for a grocer's cart in New York, Chicago, or San Francisco will cost from one hundred and fifty to two hundred dollars. In Queensland, Australia, however, the horse market is away down. A sound, well broken animal can be bought for five dollars. Farmers in the interior cannot afford to send horsed to Brisbane for sale, because ordinary stock will not bring more than one dollar and seventy-five cents a head. They shoot them instead 1 And, what is Still more startling, they pay at the rate of sixty-two cents a head for having them shot!
All of these statements are strictly correct. The colony of Queensland is now seriously discussing the advisability of passing a law imposing a" tax on all* stallions and authorizing the appointment of inspectors to see that all unlicensed animals are killed. All over Queensland they are going to keep down horses as we keep down ,the superabundance of dogs in, the city of Washington.
Horse-breeding in Australia was for many years a remunerative business. A great demand was created by the taking up and occupying of new country, from the opening up of the new gold fields and for the prosecution of the sugar industry.
Everyone who had land began breeding horses. Now the demand has ceased, the sugar industry is declining, the mining is stationary and the owners of what was formerly new country are sellers instead of buyers. The consequence is that the whole country is overrun with' unsalable horses. They cannot be eaten like sheep and cattle,' and a boiling-down factory for tho manufacture of glue and other products failed after consuming fifty thousand animals.
Now, in a semi-wild state, they overrun the entire interior of the colony. The best of them bring at auction not more than thirteen dollars or fourteen dollars a dozen. Property holders in New South Wales have relieved themselves of the burden on their grazing lands by shooting them. On the Barwon river, within two years, between sixty thousand and seventy thousand head were destroyed, at a cost to their nominal owners of twenty-five shillings six pence a head. Queensland has now the same trouble to fight. A law entitled "The Marsupials Destruction, Act" is now in force, directed against the kangaroos, to check the increase of these noxious animals. But a kangaroo's skin is worth three dollars and seventyfive cents in the open market at Brisbane.
How much more need is there, then, for a destruction act when horses are larger, animals, eat more, are more numerous than kangaroos and are nearly "worthless! This is the question
Atvhich
ia agitating the property holders of Queensland at the present time, as is learned from the recent bulletins of the department of agriculture of that colony Will it pay Australians to ship these horses to the United States? The passage to San Francisco will take twenty days. The Pacific ocean at certain times is almost smooth. One of the Australian steamships will probably carry from seven hundred to one thousand horses at a trip. The import duty on horses and mules at present is thirty dollars a head. It resolves itself into a question of water carriage.
A MISPLACED POULTICE.
The Funny Kenult of an Enforced Silence.
There is a time to keep silence, but it evidently was not the right time in the case of a boy mentioned, who lives in an Ontario town, says the Keboboth Sunday Herald. He got a sliver in his foot and, in spite of his protestations, his mother decidcd to place a poultice over his wound. The boy vigorously resisted. "I won't have no poultice," he declared, stoutly. "Yes, you will, Eddie," declared both mother and grandmother, firmly, and, the majority being two to one, at bedtime the poultice was ready.
If the poultice was ready the boy was not, and be proved so refractory that a switch was brought into requisition. It was arranged that the grandmother should apply the poultice, while the mother was to stand with the uplifted switch at the bedside. The boy was told that if he "opened his mouth" be would receive that which would keep him quiet. As the hot poultice touched the boy's foot he opened his mouth. "You—" he began.
1
"Keep still!" said his mother, shaking her stick, while the grandmother busily applied the poultice.
Once more the little fellow opened his month.
«IJ It
But the uplifted switch awed him into silence. I
£&•*.
,f
In a minute' more the poultice was firmly in place and the little boy was tucked in bed. "There, now," said his mother, **the old sliver will be drawn out and Eddie's foot will be all welL"
As the mother and grandmother moved triumphantly away a shrill, small voice came from under the bedclothes: '•You've got it on the wrong footl**
4
Educational Statoa of Chill.
Chili is a great country for newspapers there are more than forty of them in Valparaiso and Santiago, and there are others in all the bead towns of departments. Chili has many literary men, including a regiment of poets, and also many scientific men and a multitude of statesmen and generals. The schools are free and the educational system provides for provincial lyceuzns, normal schools, an agricultural school, schools for the arts and trades, military and naval academies and a national university, all supported by the government. In some years there have been six ten hundred students at the Santiago univcrsitv.
*_ '•'t, S i'n
4
i-r
rt-
Street Oil for Young Children.
The value of sweet oil used in rubbing is not generally appreciated. When a little child has taken cold and seems restless from the cffccts, nothing is more soothing than sweet oil rubbed into the skin, before a warm fire, with gentle pressure of the hand. The o\l should be rubbed on the soles of the feet, down the back and neck and around the hips, and the little one should be carefully shielded from any draft while this is done. Such a rubbing will take the place of the daily bath at a tiirwhen the child is suffering from cold, ana it is not advisable to expose it any more than is necessary. .If the little one has a croupy cough and shows signs of hoarseness, a thick flannel saturated with sweet oil and sprinkled with camphor, and heated as hot as the child can bear it, should be laid over the chest, high enough to extend around the throat. It should be covered with another flannel or a layer of cotton batting to retain the heat. The heated flannel should be changed for another as soon as it cools. By this method the cold of a little child may often be broken up and the most serious disease averted.
The lungs and breathing tubes of a little baby are peculiarly delicate, and any child during infancy is very liable to "contract serious diseases of the lungs from very slight cause. The little one is also cured by very simple remedies, and this layer of hot oil acts as powerfully as a mustard plaster on a grown up person. A child that has been suffering seriously with a cold one day, after careful treatment of this sort will often wake up the day after with hardly a suspicion of illness. There is no better laxative than sweet oil for a young child.—New York Tribune.
HorBford'a Acid Phosphate For Night Sweat* of consumption, gives speedy benefit.
Intellectual Women.
It is often said that study disgusts women with domestic labors. This is an error. If anything diverts us from our daily duties it is not study, but frivolity. Minds that are incapable of fixing themselves on a serious subject are not the better fitted on that account to keep the household expenses within bounds or to govern their children. Women whoso intellectual nurture consists of plays and novels are not likely to air their apartments better than those who read history and philosophy. Frequently the scholarly woman knows how to handle a broom better than the one who knows nothing of science or literature. Whenever an interesting volume prevents one from performing a household duty, the far It does not lie in the legitimate desire for mental cultivation, but in the love of enjoyment, which has its root in selfishness, however elevated be its object.
Moreover, while the diligent hands are busied with humble tasks the mind does not cease to roam. Is it not better that it should move in a lofty sphere, in the domain of lettera and science, than be occupied with such wretched subjects as scandal and gossip? Those who have the highest claim on us should be glad to have us do a little independent thinking. We are drawn closer to those who ordinarily occupy our thoughts if we can remove ourselves from them at certain moments. It is one of the privileges especially reserved for women that whatever they do for themselves confers a benefit on others.—Sadie E. Martin in Irrigation Age.
Brass Kettles Cleansed.
A brass kettle can be cleansed, if discolored by cooking in it, by scouring it well with soap and ashes first, then put in half a pint of vinegar and a handful of salt and let them boil on the stove a short time then wash and rinse it out in hot water.— New York Journal.
18 Pounds of Blood
Is about the quantity nature allows to an adult person. It Is of the utmost importance that the blood should be kept as pure as possible. By Its remarkable cures of scrofula, salt rheum, etc., Hood's Barsaparilla has
§er.
roven its claim to be the best blood purl
For a general family cathartic we confidently recommend Hood's Pills. They should be In every home medicine chest.
Good Looks.
Gc$d
looks are more than skin deep,
depending upon a healthy condition ol all the vital organs. If the liver be in active, you have a Bilious Look, if youi stomach be disordered you have a dyspeptic Look and if your Kidneys be affected you have a Pinched look. Secure good health and you will have good looks. Electric bitters is the great alterative and Tonic acts direotly on these vital organs. Cures Pimples, Blotches, Boils and
Rives
a good complexion.
Sold at any Drugstore, 50c. per bottle. 4
Lane's Family Medicine Moves the Bowels
tiach day. Most people need to use it.
For Torpid Liver ase Dr. Miles' Pills.
Cure for Headache.
Headaebe can be most surely and effectually cured bj' removing the cause of it. This result 'can be best obtained by the use of Cbamberlan's Restorative Celarine Coated Pills. Forsale by drugists.t 3
Or.JOHN BULL'S SARSAPARILLA. Is there a single particle of blood poison In your veins? Beware! Like the devouring tlame, it Increases in force and leaves only destitution In Its track. It- feeds in a horrible manner on the flesh, and devastates every organ of the body. Pitiable In the extreme would be that man awaiting death from the 6fi*6CtiS nnn.AAnfn/1 111. cers, flesh
BAD BLOOD
were there no salvation for him. But there is. Every trace of blood poison can be eliminated from his system if fie will only"*® that infallible antidote, Dr. John Bull's Sarsaparllla. It contains Just such ingredients as nature has provided for cleansing the bloodvof every impurity, for restoring strength to the digestive processes, for assisting in the correct assimilation of nutrition and building up new tissue. Try it when other remedies have failed and your blood will be
MADE PURE.
JT.B. Morse,' Clinton, Ind., writes: "I was for many years affected with contagious blood poison. Portions of my flesh seemed to be fairly putrid and mortifying. My hair fell out, and I was an object of repulsion to every one. My breath smelled horrible, and I had catarrh so fearfully bad that piecesof frontal bones rotted and came out my nostrils. I lost the sense of taste and smell. I became a veritable bag of bones, and weighed only eighty-nine pounds. I could hardly sleep from pain, and was so weak I could hardly walk. The doctors said I could not live many months. A friend persuaded me to try Dr. Ball's Saxmparilla, and strange as it may seem, that remedy saved my life and brought me back to excellent health. I now weigh IX pounds, am free from pain and sores, and although have deep scars when? sores were, I consider myself in perfect health."
Use Smith's Tonie Syrnp for Chills and Fever. It never fails. Br. JTohti Ball's Worm Destroyer. This Epmedr never fails to eradicate all in* testinZl parasites, and has saved many
pun
r,
sickly children as well as grown people lives of health and asefulnei^ P«ce25cents
J!
jo
4
It contains a volume of valuable Information. It has saved lives, and may save yours. Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Oo«» Lynn, Mass«
CARTERS
ITTLE
PILLS.
**ffSp
CURE
616k Heartache and relievo all the troubles fnol* dent to a bilious state of tho syBtom, such as Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress aftes eating, Pain in the Side, Sto. While theirmost ^remarkable success has been shown in curing
SICK
headache, yet darter's Litdo Liver Pillfl ant equally v&luablo in Constipation, curing and pre* venting this annoying complaint, while they also correct all dlsordora or tho etomach^timulato tha liver and regulate tho bowels. Even if they only
HEAD
Aebathey would bealmostprioelosato those who suffer from this distressing complaint but forta* nntoly their goodness does notend hero,and those who once try them will find theso little pills valuable in RO many ways that thoy will not bo wililing to do without them. But after allsick heat)
ACHE
fls the bane of so many lives that hero fa where we make our great boast. Our pills euro it while Others do not.
Carter's Little Liver Pills aro very small and very easy to take. One or two pilla make a doso. Thoy are striotly vegetable and do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action plooeeall who use them. In vials at 25 cents -fire for $L SoUl by druggists everywhere, or sent by mall.
CARTER MEDICINE CO., New York
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE
stages. UMfttonm. Tou will see the excellent effect after taking the first done. Boidbrde*kn«rerr*i** Mrg«BoUlM,60oeau«BdtUX.
1
.r«r
I HATE TO ASK MY DOCTOR."
False modesty and procrastination aro responsible for much female suffering. We can excuse tho instinctive delicacy that suggests concealment to the young, but there is no excise for those who reject the assistance of a woman.
LYDIA E.PINKHAM'S expound
is an entire and permanent euro for tho worst forms of female disease, and instantly relieves all weaknesses and ailments peculiar to the sex. It is sold by all Druggists as a standard article, or sent by mail, in form of Pills or Lozenges, on receipt of $1.00.
For the cure of Kidney Complaints, either sex, the Compound has no rival. Mrs. Pinkham freely answers letters of inquiry. Enclose stamp for reply. 'Send two 2-cent stamps for Mrs. Plnkham's'V beautiful 88-page illustrated book, entitled "GUIDE TO HEALTH AND.ETIQUETTE."
It Cores Influenza.
ABSOLUTELY
FROM-
ST. LOUIS, TERRE HAUTE INDIANAPOLIS, CINCINNATI,
DAYTON, SPRINGFIELD,
TO
New York, Boston
-A-IsTDD THE BA8T VIA THE POPULAR
Big4
Lake Shore and 9 New York Central ROUTES.
THE
Shortest & Quickest Line
BETWEEN
EAST_WEST
All trains arrive and Depart fro to Sixth Street Depot.
Berths in Sleeping Cars
sttcxTsxD tmuavon to
NEW Y0RK& BOSTON
6
EE.SOUTH,Gen.Agt,"
710 WABASH AVENUE
