Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 22, Number 50, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 June 1892 — Page 3
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1
[•i/
CET THE BE8T.
(f you Trant Dr. John Boll's SanmparUla, in find it nnd take no other. It contains Ini4 *dtcntK that are not found In any other .reaporUla. Each Ingredient used
Dr. JOHN BULL'S
Barsaparllla Is chosen for Its beneficent effect [anon tho human system. Combined, they fjxert a harmonizing Influence upon every function of the body, improving digestion, trengthening the liver and kidneys, cleanangthe blood ... —... the nervous faculties, and »4 strength and life, completely rejuvenates evsry part and makes one feei like anew person- No other 8AR8APARILLA
bas so good an effect. Elmer Hodson, AlyaTado, Tex, writes: Mv strength and health bad been failing me for «ev«ral y^re. My blood was in a very impoverished condition very impure. My limbs felt lame, rickety »nd rheumatic, and I could not walk without /tottering. I felt myself growing prematurely I old, ana my face began to look pinched and shriveled. I suffered considerable, was restless at night, very nervous, and growing very melancholy. My eyes were sore and had catarrh. I tried many'tonics, and bltteraand blood purifiers, but failed to get better. I finally asked a physician which 7 18 THE BE8T jfearsaparHla, and he replied Dr. John Bull's.
!iand
I bought six bottles, and before I had ^ed It All I Alt like another man. My strength and [/health improved, ptmpies and sores disappeared from my person, aches and stiff joints left me. and I now consider myself a. well person."
Use fftmitb't* Toulc Syrup, aaafeaad «ure cure for Ch»it» and Fever. Dr. John Buli'M Worip Pegtroy« et-0 taste good and uiek ly
remo,v®
from children or grown
people. rc8t«rlng
RESTORATIVE
f:j
the
m- wo&k and puny to robust bcaltb. *Try tacm* No other worm medicine so safe and sure. Price 25 cents at drug stores, or sent by mail toy John D. Park & Sons Co., 175 and 137 Sycamore Bt., Cincinnati, O., wholesale agents.
Here is a Good Thing for You
A HAS, OR WOMAN,
Earth, viz. GOOD HEALTH, WILL NOT require BECOffD TELLING to bo Induced to become a purchaser of
DR. GREGG'S ELECTRIC Belts and Appliances.
Do you know why? Because it Is plain to be hoc-11 that the TRUTH "NCU TOLD Is enough. The Hurprlslnjjr Promptness with which all classes of people respond toourunnouncornents, and the rapidly Increasing demand for Dr. Gregg's Goods wherever Introduced, conclusively prove that true modesty Is always recognized and the quality of merit takes careof Ksclf. Metaphoricallyourstatemcnt Is tho Button—the Public Press It, and
DR. GREGG'S ELECTRIC SPECIALTIES
"DO THE REST."
Tho extent of Pressure on the button and tho success of Dr. Gregg's Electric Goods In "Doing the Rest," Is more satisfactorily shown lu the marvelous growth of our business the past 10 days.
Repented and Increasing demands for THE tiKKUU KLIU T1UC "FOOT WARMER" are coming In from all parts of the country with profuse acknowledgements that so much comfort for *1.00 (the price) was like buying Gold Dollars Utr ten cents
The Delicate Organism of Woman subjects
her
to many peculiar aliments and unfortunate misery. The oxtrern* sensitiveness of her Nervous System very frequently requires artltlclalstlmulus.
The
OrecR Electric IJelt
nd other Appliances SUl'i'LY THIS, as IV othlng else can.
Tho Hugged Constitution of Man, when once Broken, becomes I'HIable In the extreme, from which there Is absolutely NO «scapn without assistance. Tho GREGG Electric Bells and Appliances, In cascsof this kind, have honestly won their Tltleof KING of REMEDIES.
Rheumatism Is conquered, sufferers from Obesity are speedily relieved, Dropsy quickly yields, spinal dimcultles and Paralysis disappear, and many other diseases of Meu and Women are permanently cured, fully described In complete catalogue for flc, or elaborate circular free. We guarantee to forfeit twice the price of any of Dr. Gregg's Goods found to bo not genuine. We uiako an elegant lit 14) IW IH»V IJVUUIIIW* W tie •h.OO Kleotrlc Belt, which Is soiling very ranldlv and which wo will take In exchange for any Higher Power Belt (except 8o Belt)
AIM IIIKUIN mnv yuAvv^w iV and credit $3 on the price of now order. Re member tho Electric "Foot Warmers" are II a pair, worth fit). Address
II #.I .... A I. MA«I»
The Gregg Electric Cure Co.,
501 Inter Ocean Building, Chicago, 111. Mention this paper.
STARTLING FACTS!
The American people are rtir»l«lly becoming a moo of »wwm wreck.*, and the foHowlii*euww*ta lie best reuievlf'. AlpboiuKiltetnpatnit,of Butler, lva.,nwcars that when his »on wn» speechless fporo •-t, vuu* Unuce, Dr. Miles* Croat Restorative Nervine cured him. Mr*. J.
U. Miller, of Valpnr»
aiso.iaa,, J. I. Tajrlor, of'I^ttaiuMwrt, lwt., each trained 3t) pounds m«u kafcitis U. Mrs, It. A. Gardner, of Mala. 1mlwas cured ofW to 60 conrulslons a (lair, nnd much headache, dimness, bockache, rfiiff n«mms powtmUon. by one bottle. lXinlel yew. ttrvveltlyn, Mtch.. says his da»»#thter was cured if insanity of ten years' standing. Trial bottles and One txok of marvelous cares. FKKK at drumtiMs ThU rensedj- cutitaina no opiates. Dr.MHes' Medical Co.,Elkhart, Ind.
TRIAL. BOTTLE FKEE. For Sale by ACOB BAUR.
PILES
Di\
«AS A KBSES flAvw twUof relief a.xi Is an tnfaiUb* Carvftir Pllwu PrloeftL 3r
,R»S8SSSiSiE£e
W Silfi, New Vorit Ott*
IDJLlDIIESi TRY
DeLuc\s Periodical Pills,
FROM PARIS, FRANCE.
Acts only on the menstrual system positively cures suppression of the mensus from colds, shock, etc. A safe reliable mouthlv nmllolne, warranted to relieve price $2, three forfS. The Amerteau PIH and iledlclne Co., proprietor*, ifpencer, Iowa. Sold and sent by mall upon receipt of price, and by Geo, Rel*s druggist* corner Third aud Mala
upon receipt of price, and by *x«|lst% cort
atrwts, Terre Haute, Ind.
ORATKrt?U~ COMFORTING.
Epps's Cocoa
BREAKFAST,
"By a thototsfh kaowledge of the natural
Ooaoa, Mr. Spp« ha» provided our br««ltfwt table* with a delicately Cavorted beverage which may save u* many heavy doctor*' bills. It is by the judicious uae of *acJ» articles of diet that a constitution may be gr*d» uitlly built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to diseases. Hundreds of sub tie matadlea are floaUns arannd xtm ready to Kttack wherever there 1* wwk point. We may escape many a fatal shaft tar keeplnf ounielvea well forutlwl with pare blood and a properly nourished fraxna."—Clvtl Serrk*
Mad^fslmply with bolllnf water or mtlk. m\4 only to half-pouad Un^^frocwa, labeled thn»: JAM*® WM OO-.
HeaKMiatM* Cbasalats. Lm4m, K»«w
v' H,
'\i 'f ^V-V
SENSE IN EDUCATION.
En
MRS. CHAUNC|Y DEPEW EXPLAINS HER IDEAS OF TEACHING,
Simplicity the Very First Requisite.
Twelve Years the Bight Age to Go to School—Some of the Benefit* of Dancing—No Fairy Tales Allowed.
Three little people whose daily lives are excellent instances of sensible training are the son and two orphan nieces
of
Mrs.
Chauncey M. Depew—Chauncey M. Depew, Jr., who is twelve years old Anna Bradford Hegeman, who is in her fifteenth year, and Charlotte Niven Hegeman, who is named after her grandmother, Mrs. Depew's mother, and Is not yet thirteen. "I hardly know," said Mrs. Depew, with a smile, "what to tell you about the chil dren's education, their lives are so perfectly simple. They ail speak French and German fluently. Since their early childhood they have had a French governess and a German maid, and so have acquired both languages easily, almost unconsciously Then, too, when Mr. Depew is not at home, I always converse with them at table in otie language or the other one day in German and the next in French. "I think it insures a more correct form of speech for a mother to share in her children's conversation in some such way. My mother and Mr. Depew always speak to them in English. We consider it very important that their own language shall not be neglected while acquiring foreign ones. In this way they have obtained a command of three languages quite naturally, with no study and with very little effort. "They all three attend school now my two nieces a school for girls and my son a boy's preparatory school., I do not believe in an exclusively home edupation, for 1 do not think that it is possible to make the course of training as thorough as that of a good school, and I also think it well for them to go among other children. But I do not believe in sending children to school very early. Twelve years old is quite soon enough. They need plenty of time to strengthen their bodies before beginning to tax their brains, and then at that age they are better able to understand their lessons and to apply themselves. "I am glad to see that the system of 'marks' is being so almost entirely done away with in schools. I think that it was bad for the children in many ways. "I do not believe very much either in prizes or rewards. It is so much better for them to learn to do the work for its own sake, because it is right for love, and not through fear or emulation. "They are quite musical and all take music lessons. I do not think that it is well, however, unless one has a decided talent, to devote too much time to music. It wonld be much better to give that time to some other talent that one might possess, and of so much more benefit. "They all show decided talent for drawing, which they are cultivating. They also take dancing lessons. Dancing is such good exerciso for all parts of the body and, too, it teaches them to walk and to carry themselves well. Light calisthenics are also excellont and they practice them for a certain time every day. "They keep early and regular hours always. They get up early in the morning, go to bed early at night. "Dinner they have in the middle oi'
f*i
day and a light tea at night. They eat very few sweets—confectionery or anything of that sort. Their desserts consist of some simple pudding or cake. They eat all sorts of plain food—that is, rousts and chops and fillets for meat, and all kinds of vegetables, the greater variety the better. Then, when they come in from their walks, I always have a cup of broth ready for them, hot beef or mutton broth, particularly in the winter. It is good for them and they seem to enjoy it. "Twice a day they take a brisk walk, not too long, for overexerrise is quite as injurious as too little. Children are often allowed to overt ire themselves ami grow cross and fretful witliout being able to un derstand or explain the reason. In sum mcr they are out of doors almost all the time, although they study just a little, even then, for I do not think it well for them to be entirely idle for so long a time. "Aud then I dress them all very simply very elaborate clothing seems out of place for children. I like to have nil that they wear pretty, but plain, so that they can romp and play as children ought, without being hampered and without any thought or fear of rumpled finery." "One accomplishment that I am anxious to have them all acquire is that of reading aloud well, it consider that a very necessary part of a good education, and also that they should learn to enunciate their words clearly ami correctly. "I do not allow them to read fairy stories. I do not think that it is well for them to do so. Instead I give them interesting and instructive books of history to read. There arts such charming little histories for chil dren written nowmlays! They began with historical stories written in words of ooa syllable, and already my son has a really wonderful knowledge of historical events for a boy of his new, but then he has a natural love for the subject. That makes a difference. I suppose. I also encourage them to play various instructive games that amuse and give fchem useful information at the same time—geographical puzKles, authors and other games of that sort. "On Sundays their usual toys and games are put away. They have •Grandma's Old Testament Game' and 'Grandma's New Testament Game,' a»d ou rainy Sundays, when we cannot go to church, we read the services together. "They have a large playroom, but are not confined to it. They never wait to be sent for, but run in aud out of the rooms where we are at all hours of the day, and they always sit with us at the table. Units? made them my companions 1 would
When "ok! Sol" makes all things stak, Drink Hires* Root Beer. Whan dull cm* makes fife a fizzle,
Drink Hires' Root Beer.
When you fed a little diy, When you're cross ^and am'X knowwby. When with thirst the children oy» There's a sweet relief to try—
Driok Him' Root Beer.
A 2$ ant Package makes five gallons.
__—:^ij£RKE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.
pot get to khow thetfi or to understand their characters, and that knowledge is so necessary, for it teaches one how best to guide and govern them. I believe in encouraging them to develop their individu alities, and to cultivate a certain independence of character. "I do not think that 1 started out with any particular theories of education if 1 had they must necessarily have been much modified, for each child needs a special sort of training, adapted to its own particular nature and capacities. My boy I. myself, taught entirely until he was eight years old. "One thing that I particularly insist on with all the children is that they should be polite to all the servants. It seems' a little thing, but is one that really has much influence! over a child's character and manners. Courtesy.and consideration for others, no matter what their station in life is, are lessons that cannot be too early learned."—Fergus Falls Journal.
KEEPING UP WITH THE CHILDREN.
An Earnest Mother Who Bnllded Better Than She Knew. She was a woman of middle age, thin and plain, with no claim to beauty except the eager dark eyes shining starlike from a wistful, care lined face. Twenty years Igo she had slipped her trustful hand into that of another, and counting the world well lost for the sake of her lova and faith, had entered upon a life of such toil, privation and heroic endurance as only women in frontier settlements, amid primitive conditions, know. yj
if-
"I have tried my best," she said simply, "to keep up with the children. Father and I resolved, when our first boy was a baby, that stint and scrape and contrive as we might we'd educate all that heaven sent us. And we have done what we could. 1 wasn't willing that my children should get ahead of me I've tried to study their lessons with them, and to enter into their feelings. I don't want them to outstrip me in the race"."
This mother had been one of those to whom early rising and late retiring had been always essential, in ordjer that the routine of the housework should not suffer. In that part of the country whefe she lived, hired help for domestio purposes was almost unheard of women did their own work, a neighbor's daughter sometimes lending a helping hand in an exigency, and the men of the family doing their share at need. In her determined effort to keep step with her children in their intellectual development, she had in another direction builded better than she knew for the children, boys and girls alike, had early been pressed into her service, and had, as she explained, "taken hold" of whatever was to be done.
The boys could niake beds and set tables as well as draw water and split wood. The girls were facile housekeepers, with a practical knowledge of cooking and laundry work—in American society as essential in the outfit for life to the richest as to the poorest. Though the living in the household wad plain, it was abundant, and the ideal set before the family was something nobler than a mere strife for wealth. Everything was open and above board. Books were read and prized in common, and so much was going on to interest everyl«)dy that there was no temptation to devour poisonous tidbits in secret. So it came to pass that the keeping up with the children brought great good in its wake.
At last a day dawned when the mother felt as if the first stone bad been set in a wall of separation. Two ofj her brood hod found their wings? A daughter was going to college. A son was entering upon a business career. The little wistful woman yearned to keep pace with thom both, yearned perhaps to ordain the pathway of both, as she always had done. But it was inevitable that there should be some parting of tho roads. Brave as she was, she kept down a heartache under her chdery show of courage. "Have comfort, dear," said an older friend, who had been through a similar experience. "The children will never outgrow you you hod a twenty years' start of them. And you have so disciplined your mind and trained your heart and elevated your own thoughts above the daily rut, the fret and the stir, thtft you dwell in a serene atmosphere, favorable to expansion of every faculty. They may acquire facts, but they will fly like honey laden bees back to the hive. The mother who has kept pace with her children from babyhood to adplescence will never lose them."—Harper's Bazar.
Woman Artists of Brooklyn. Brooklyn's girl artists form a charming portion of the art community, and have become known in this especial branch far in advance of the women lawyers, doctors or writers of the city. They have almost all begun their art studies in Brooklyn, gone abroad, studied and exhibited in foreign galleries, only to return home to choose studio dwelling places In their native city. They have made little nooks of artistic light and brightness amid dreary office buildings as well as in their homes, and they we all personally abody of charming young women, intelligent* broad minded, unaffected ami womanly in the highest degree. In the study of art they seem to have forgotten the frivolities and insignificant nothings that make up the lives of so many women, and the work they have done places them as artiste on a plane which has won the respect of*their brother artists as well as in some instances the encomiums of the foremost critics of the day.
The aspiration of every artist, whether man or woman, is to own a studio—cm apartment where individual taste may run riot and where unfiniahed sketches or studies may be left free from the devastating dust brush of the housemaid. The women artists of Brooklyn have all attained their wishes in this«respect, and scattered throughout the city, although more particularly confined to the down town district, there area number of studios all reflecting the artist temperament, and plainly showing that they are used as real*workrooms and not as boudoirs, where a plaque or a teacup painted mice in awhile dignifies the apartment with the title of "stadia'*—New York Herald.
The Ag«i of Famoai Women. Josephine was thirty-three when she married Napoleon, and judging from the letters written by the abaeaat husbend during the early years of their' union she Inspired the redoubtable soldier with most intense love azd jealousy. It Is claimed by maoy writers that she was the ooly woman Napoleon ever really loved. Cleopatra was nearer forty than thirty when Mack Antony fell beneath her spell, and the most beautiful woman the world has ever known, Helen of Troy, was long past thirty when the Trojan heroes fought their famoos battles far her sake.-'New Yqrk Son. _______
Fofeseor Huxley1* daughter, who is now the wifecrf a civil eogtneer. Is among the many interesting people who form the Englith cchony in the City of Medco.
Pii
GIRLS OF MEDICINE.
WAYS OF THE FEMININE CREATURE TERMED "THE HEN MEDIC."
fSl- i§
A foang Person of Bather Queer Idoas, 3 Perhaps, Imt a Womanly Woman for All That—Her Testes for Science by No
Means Drive Oat Her Gentler Qualities.
Ten to one the reader doesn't even know what a Hen Medic is. Well, she isn't a woman doctor just yet, but she's going to be.
It is difficult to describe her so that one can tell who she is at the first glance, for she looks wonderfully like any ether bright, earnest%irl but a few truths about her mij^not come amiss.
To begip, she may or may not wear her hair short As the Irishman said, "Some does—mor^ don't." But if it is short, it is safe tor say^that it is prettily curled close to her shapely little head, and it is apt to be brushed Jb$qk from her smooth, white forehead,
In thCmatter of dress she is reasonable and conservative. Something neat mad stylish always, but running to neither extreme^ Overdoing is one extreme, tight lacing is the other, she will tell you with a wise look.
She Has discarded corsets, to be sure, but that never would be known from the fit of her gown. Her hats are neat and inclined a little to jauntiness, and she affects jackets with pockets on the sides. To tell the truth, she rather likes to stand upon the street cars to let the people see that she hasn't a "back," and one notices that the hand that holds the strap is well gloved. She's a companionable creature withal, and will tell you about the most interesting operations she has witnessed, all in the same breath with a description of a "s et gown" she's having made, and an acc ant of the play which she saw tho other night.
SHE IS NOT AFRAID.
Dissecting isn't the pleasantest task in the world, and she is frank enough to own that she doesn't just like it. The "r bject" is grewsome at best and it ma} be that she feels «at the first sight that ihe would like to scream and run away but she doesn't.
:i
She may have to be carried out once or twice—her brother, the Booster Medic, has had that experience at times himself— but she is up and at it again in no time at all and soon her soft taper fingers are slashing through the tissues.
She does her work conscientiously and well She fishes daintily around for the end of a nerve or a tendon, and, although she handles it a .bit gingerly, to be sure, she hangs on to it tightly all the same, and she gets the bearings of that particular nerve so that she remembers ever afterward.
She studies hard and understanding^, and her examination papess are neat compendiums of medical knowledge. While she learns just how thick to mix a mustard plaster, she doesn't forget how many eggs to put in a cake, and her knowledge of the manner of stitching up a wound doesn't, interfere with her learning the very latest stitch in embroidery.
MAKES AN EXCELLENT WIFE. She does not have a minute's time to practice, yet you will find that she knows all the ne^r airs, and she can tell you just how the trouble started in Chili. If there is a rubber at whist and the table is one shotjf, she* can take a hand and play it witii ciTuli mingled luck and-skill that you would much prefer to be her partner than her opponent.
As a matter of fact, one secretly leans toward a life partnership with this little Hen Medic, but is half afraid of her because she knows so much. But despite her knowledge she has a heart as tender and true as that of the most innocent little maiden, and if that is won her band goes with it. And once she's won, it is forever and aye, through thick and thin, and her "Materia Medica" and her "Essentials of Anatomy" will go up on the highest shelf of her closet, and her practice will be confined to you and the children of the poor of the neighborhood.
The-girl knows how "the boys" regard her and she laughs at it and it doesn't hurt her a bit. Now, it may be that the women who first got this nickname were not of the same make. They may have worn smooth hair and spectacles and talked through their noses and gone about in draggled gowns. But if that wa3 the case that sort of people axe back numbers now, and the girl the men toast is the Hen Medic of today.—Chicago Tribune.
The presence of dandruff indicates a diseased scalp, and if not cured, blanching of the hair and baldness will result. Hall's Hair Renewer will cure it.
Washing and Dreulng a Baby. Is small Rouses, while the family it naall, the best rooms are very properly ased as nurseries. The nursing is good, for it is directly under the mother's eye. Here some of the common cares and duties that make a good nurse are practically taught. The simple precautions thus learned are not always attended to when the nurse acts independently of the mother. Old custom lingers long in nursery matters—longest perhaps in the first traditional handling of infants, where the experience of the nurse has to be trusted to.
The most "experienced nurse" has to be distrusted. Experience Is often plaoed as an excuse for carelessness, or as a cause for the nurse's convenience coming before the, welfare of the child. To some nurses it Is too much trouble to nse a thermometer for the infant's bath they can tell ii It Is the right heat if ntot, it has been said, the infant will cry and loci red if the water be too hot blue if too cold. They are slow, also, to consult the thermometer on the wall they like the room to be warm, and prefer a bright light from gas or lamps, when the night light Is all that should be allowed.
The temperature
at
washing an
ll&
the water used for
infant
"should be nearly that of
the surface of the body—06 degs. or 88 degs. F. As the child grows older the heat of the water should be gradually lessened, while the limbs should be allowed free exercise in a large tub. Some children do not bear cold water well good sense, discrimination and observation should be our guides
io)
this as In all other matters.—
Mrs. W. E. Gladstone in Ladies' Home Journal. *f'-
The ehpress of Japan Is noted for bar skillful manipulation erf the koto,a Japanese musical instrument that somewhat resembles the ritfaer of German origin.
CtuuabcrUia* Eye and Skin Ointment. A certain core for Chronic Sore Eyas* Tetter, Salt Rheum, Scald H«*d, Old Chronic Sores, Fever Sore*. Eczema, Itch, Prsine Scratches, Sore Sipples and Piles. It is cooling and soothing. Hundreds of (mh have been cored by it after all oiher treatment had failed. It Is put up tn 25 and 50 cent boxes. Foreale by druggist*.
Can SalnHwomcu lie Truthful? "How can girl be truthful aud become a clever saleswoman?" This is the actual remark of a girl employed in one of our large stores, aud an hour spent in her special department revealed that fluent fibbing was an essential element- in her line of business ajt least. The first customer was an elderly lady with a penchant for gay colors altogether unsuited to her years. A black bonnet being produced she sniffed audibly and remarked: "That! Oh, my, you don't suppose I want to look like my own grandmother?" "Certainly pot, madam. That was an order for a customer. I have not looked for yours yet." Ah, the ready little fibber. "Is moire ribbon fashionable?" goes on the aged customer. "Yes, indeed, quite the newest thing." The hat is sold and buyer No. 2 cqmes in. "I want a bonnet trimmed with satin ribbon—no moire mind that is altogether too much behind the times." "Quitw right, madam. We do uot use moire at all on our newest hats." "Do you think this is becoming?" with an sixious glt/nce in the mirror opposite tha reflects the most outrageously inharmonious getup imaginable. "Yes, indeed it is just your color, and those tips are awfully stylish don't you think so?" appealing to the writer, who is put to utter confusion by this sudden question, and, like the man of the stsry, has no lie feady. "I am sure you will like it if it doesn't suit bring it right back, for it is one of outbest selling styles, and we will have no trouble to get rid of it."
That settles it if others are anxious for it it must be desirable, aud away she goes with a bandbox perfectly satisfied, whereat the salesgirl gives a sigh of relief:" "We have tried for weeks to sell that fright, and now, thank heaven, it is gono!" lu the next twenty minutes she told,juBt as many fibs as there .were minutes, yet Bhe is one of the best and most honest little creatures in the world, and would revolt in holy horror from a lie on any other subject, but considers in business everything fair and square, and fibs glibly in tho interest of her employer. It's only a bit of character, after all, and to be met with every day.—Philadelphia Times.
Are you troubled with corns or bunIons? If so, let us give you a little advice. Pare them down as closely as possible without drawing blood then soak them in warm water to soften tbem and apply Chamberlain's Pain Balm twice dally, rubbing them vigorously for a few minutes at each application. Acorn plaster should be worn for a few days to protect them from the sbtie. As a general liniment for sprains, bruises, lame back or rheumatism, Pain Balm is all that can be desired. 50 cent bottles for sale by druggists. Jnne.
J9Vr Torpid Liver «se Dr. Miles' Pills.
CoUghingJLeads to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once.
Green Mountain Salve.
Is unequalled as a cure for all rheumatic pains, weakness In the side, back or any 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 foe of human bnpplne#*. If you would live a peaceful and painless life, try this great remedy and you will never regret it.
Miles' Nerve and Liver Pills. Act on anew principle—regulating the llvw stomach and bowels
VETOH!
A VAXUBAX. SEEKSDT FOB
Epileptic fits, Falling Sickness, Hysterics, St. Titos Dance, Nervousness, gpypochondrfa, Melancholia* In* ebrity, Sleeplessness, Dizziness, Brain and Spinal Weakness.
This medicine has direct action upon tie nerve centers, allaying ail Irritabilities, and increasing the flow and power of nerve fluid. It is perfectly harmless and leaves no unpleasant effects r«hwM» Boo* ma Mirattl
HO*
n.--
S,'a/ '4 4
THE DRESS IS FINISHED, SO AM l.»
A gorgeous costume flashed beneath the brilliant lights of a ball-room
queen of society is radiant to-night." The nervous hands of a weak woman have toiled day aud night, the weary frame and aching head have known no rest —for "the dress must be finished in time." ____________
To that queen of society and her dressmaker we would say a word. One, through hot-house culture, luxury, aud excitement, and the other, through the toil of necessity, may some day find their ailments a common cause. The Vegetable Compound will enable both to meet the demands of society. LYDIA E. PINKHAIVf'S vegetable Is the only Positive Cure and Lc^tlmatv Remedy
for the peculiar weaknesses and ailments of women. It cures the worst forms of Female Complaints, that Bearing-down Feeling, Weak Back, Falling and Displacement of the Womb, Inflammation, Ovarian Troubles, and nil Organic Diseases of the Uterus or Womb, and is invaluable to the Change of Life. Dissolves and expels Tumors from the Uterus at an early stage, and checks any tendency to Cancerous Humor. Subdues Faintness, Kxcitabilitv, Nervous Prostration, Exhaustion, and strengthens and tones the Stomach. Cures Headache, General Debility, Indigestlou, etc., and invigorates the whole system. For the cure of Kidney Complaints of cither sex, the Compound tin* no rivnl.
All Druggists sell it as a standard article, or sent by mail, in form of rills or Lozenges, on receipt of frl.OO. LYDIA E. PINKHAM MED. CO.. LYNN. MASS. An Illustrated book, entitled "Guide to Health and Etiquette," by Lydla E. Pinkham, Is of great value to ladles, We will present a copy to anyone addressing us with two £-cent stamps*
.V
tf""
rtrrtrt. A
new discovery. Dr. Miles Flllsspeedlly cure biliousness, bad taste, torpid liver,plies,constipation. Unequaled for men, women and children. Smallest, mildest, surest! OO doses, 25 eta. Samples Free at all druggists.
n^lttffOEK
(Hit medictoe free of chars*.
KOEMIG MED. CO.. Chicago, III. 6ArWk »«la» *1.78. 6U*a—*xB9.
COMPOUND
ITTLC
PILLS.
CURE
Blck Heartache and relieve all tbo troubles Inofr dent to a bilious state of tbe system, auoh as Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating. Pain in tbe Side, &0. While their most remariable success has been shown la curing
SICK
Headlache, yet Carter's Littlo Liver Pilli equally valuable in Constipation, curing and pie* venting this annoying complaint, while thovals9 correct all disorders or tho a tomach^tlmulftto th® liver and regulate the bowels. Evon if they only
HEAD
Butter from this distressing complaint but fortu« sately their goodneasdoes notendhero,and tho#® who onco try them will find these little pills valu* able In so many ways that they will not bo wilitnp to do without them. But after all sick head
ACH
flsthe bane of so many lives that horo Is where we mate onr great boast. Our plllscurolt while othors do not.
Carter's Little Liver Pills aro very small ana very easy to tako. One or two pills make a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action please all who use them. In vials at 35 cen is five for $L Sdlfl by druggists everywhere^ or sent by mail.
CARTER MEDIOINE CO., New York:
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE iSn MEN SiSS HAPPY »IK
MEN who use HEALTH TID-BITS regain »emu4 strength 5 re a man ddri biin cease^mlnd
ABSOLUTELY
No Change of Cars
FROM
ST. LOUIS. TERRE HAUTE INDIANAPOLIS. CINCINNATI.
DAYTON, SPRINGFIELD,
TO
New York, Boston
J^JSTID THE BAST VIA THE POPULAR
Big4
Lake Shore and New York Central
R/OTTTIES-
-THK-
Shortest & Quickest Line
BETWEEN
EASTrWEST
All trains arrive and Depart from Sixth Street Depot.
Berths in Sleeping Cars
8ECUKKD THBOL'CH TO
NEW Y0RK & BOSTON
E.E. SOUTH. Gen. Agt,
710 WABASH AVENUE
[BSL Df EFFENBACH'8
PROTAGON CAPSULES, Sure Cure tor Weak Men, a* proved by rcporUi ofleadlna physician*. State age in ordering,, Price. 81. Catat««iM Free,
A safe and roeedjr core for Gleet* StrSetareand all
tmnataral discharges. Price SS. OREEK SPECIFICS, Wand «k»* 3M*e**««, Sero^
•Son lore* yjh I UUeA flftretloaa, witboattsercarr Order from
THE PERU DRU6 CHEMICAL CO.
l& Wl»o»c«ta Strwt, KILWAPmOt,
mmvmm
Act on anew principle— regulate Qie lirer, atomacb aoa bowel* through tA* iMrea. Da. HLwoe Taut jpMriUfy ew* biliooamwe. torpid tiTer tad conattpa-
ai
iSfi!
