Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 3, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 9 July 1892 — Page 6

Mpif:

«sV^V8M«SS»

1

£HE WCJHAH OF FASHION*

An£t£a Tffl±&K Costumes Sbs wia Don.

vam mxstnuusa YACHTTNO ooww.

HujieiTj liteottBrt wo feel sorry to se it adopted witZ* swell extravagance in Tcgicnx* wS«ra? it docs not properly belongs i'ar mstacoee, one sees it all over «n tin? xtcaetsz of 2S«w York every other

J5?rt

wu&cs a dark Uoe skirt waist, and, pesfnfnvttdkxlc blue blazer. Even id tibM£sbop»i&ex$rls behind counters are na clad sa thnX Hie yatching girl looks father rrififclfy at licr pretty suit ant^ ftxls. tlmt it hasi lost half of its charm this grt^jileacc of bine. "jk'ut spile ol tlus fact, she is Dot daunted,, hot plans a costume that is qufrr artjjjrmeJI in cut at least, if not in raltaar Tfre sfocrrt, neat skirt is braided in a Uxxt dkiapcnt, in white, and is finished off, below witi* narrow, blue velvet Hand» Hierccnifc is longer than the regu lar blazer, andtislsnttoiiod closely down tfco front,, caceepA -where the collar turns «fcrwra &x«r at the seek, displaying a little «iiuric Uiae stQIk front, and a white collar. .She wears.vMlc cuffs also, and white dmnxifa glomes. Her little blue hat is tjimmed vers and her dotted TO! ia wijr fiilh and fine.

So irraaty ISewr York society belles are fins yachtsmen that it is not surprising llio sport gpamm ia favor with every simair, W&rao a woman can stand— wAmtfh£vtoMn&~cm a yacht and endure „|fio inotvari «rf£beimwel/calnily giving 1ixnm& anter a% the same time {9 the skipped err xrmXrit*g gom? suggestidns,

fjktherfffft it IM» -wonder ma& proud. knlstiht «er out and fromen are tfcact more ana more every ggtwrv JXRK. Ckjacrgc Gonlcl, as every one Jcnowra* is a groat yachtswoman, and enjoys nothing better than a trip with hear htmbozxdL Mm Willie K. VanderIrilt, ttxsv pw* yachting every summtsc. 3W, is.-*w*y amusing to hear some of, flm TTOtea ctm warning in ship lanjpmga* Sfc i» certainly quite as impossiellJo Soiradfacetsad them as if they were meo£ tbe^Mkania.** tonttte awfally pretty blue costume cunwsoat ifact week for the first time. It IKCT.** «tf the rcgnlation blue color, bot otif of tliOBedark purplish shades, •csrtethir^r the color that very blue vvatcrbecMmumw%K» it works itself up into »mgtt It lsa*t made very much like KjiKititSjgggOTro, cither, for it litis frati pafljed aloevns that only come a triSelw)a« tfao^bow, leaving the soft skim tgrrgmknioth, tor the girl that urtU wcaar this dress never keeps her

*w»naaott» OOSTUMKS.

(lbvnn mifaBB«bc goes a sailing. Her &ffi^axW|iat1teo^^acarc^ renovaMem et«| wa&A tint restores thoir ^biteKMm e«*B|*i*e8y, wad so she di»poetBSt fciareenai «ml will under the wm-» rssya with apparent rccklessncss. The waia* «f lwr drees is made in pre*trwsfl fbAte tlaA «re gathered in* to* taM ted®* TmxA ia front—all of tbesBWtt ll^ aastc«MU which is not KA% Iteara collar stands off ieenaidkEtaft^y ia front disclosing more t!h» wlfiEe UerM* than the yachts»ME» rfiiri iR a trifle tieefceecw catches it in a domm* ^ith it glee-

Om^ yadbllng party that started Jorth 0110 many nore eolms "teaaldciii Woo. White, and wr&it* and x«d,aad white nxai yellow mvmodfio ketbc favorite*. One dainty w^tK«xfc«a0la*»fiac W»® ***& team at mm teottom of ibe skirt, and »H amod 3Ma«r, which was Un«d witb ddioBtr wWto fiffttned sUk the Ibow »Mtir .Sk front looked very cvxl

Z»M.M«rl2Hrttreputoar

f^sl?

That

Bte* KBmtr SOD rylM, Altboagh White It—How ttu tromn |||S

Haw**fa* CM Sailors.

jcwuuuK 1MS.1 :f -,

Tie jju.-liiing g^d Is abroad again. Xbe nanfirUgeooa) xir dies away from the otjr rtiuete aad lictakea itself to awBtey Unas, end sandj beaches she iCflBTOHwd% kite footsteps, clad in «int(iits- ifeai flee aninnur breezes love to nwrt -wisfe, «ad tiot the dancing wiwwjjjftiwidi'wtkmt fear. For the ynrlrting sisife Israrite color is still SAnc, albeit Ac color has been so ruth3es3j eEetzlt w312l It is a pity that blue Sbnxw&lMKtaSdElLte its proper realm— tiu? maa, St Hm&emg* mo naturally and

its

silk fronts on the thinnest and coolest of linen, we can wear our blazers without any feeling of discoo&fort. Another advantage is the economy we can exercise in making them. And what dearer to a xvoman's heart than the thought that she has actually been economical for once in the making of some garment? All one needs is a yard and a half of fine linen, and a couple of yards of white or other colored silk. This makes the two silk fronts, and leaves enough for a full, narrow plaiting down the front, and with a blazer that flies open one can k&ep cool under the most trying circumstances. The blazers with narrow cross straps area little neater, however, as they keep the blazer fronts in place. White serge wi^i deep fancy lines of red for a border makes a very effective suit. Stripes are not so popular at present. White, with pale yellow silk front, pale

yellow

tie, yellow sleeves,

gloves and hat, is wonderfully effective,, if one has a complexion withdut blemish and yellow hair.

Although the tennis girl, as 1 remarked in a former letter, is growing less and less lenient with herself and gowns herself of late in garments so tight that one wonders how she can wield h«r racquet with any ease, once in awhile she relents and dons a looser dress. At a game that I watched the other day there were two girls strikingly opposite in attire.

One wore dull light blue, combined with dull dark blue, and she looked at perfect ease clad in a plain skirt and in a waist that had nothing tight about it save the dark yoke# embroidered in racquets. The loose blouse was buttoned down the side and hung only slightly over the dark belt. She had thrown off her hat in the. excitement of the game, and with her flushed cheeks and flying hair looked the very opposite of the calm and collected young lady who stood beside her, clad in the tightest of bodices. II er skirt was plain, too, and tight, and so was the broad plain sash that went over the bodice embroidered, like her companion's, in crossed racquets and balls. The short blazer didn't reach even to the edge of the sash that fell down to her feet in

THE YACHTING GLRL TAKES IIER EASE.

the back. She had a high stiff collar bandod with a row of dark blue, and her Russian sleeves were adorned after the same manner.

She played without any trace of discomfort, but how she managed I am at a loss to say. J3VA A. SCHUBERT.

A EVER THE SAME.

)§ob Bnrdetto TC!13 £boat tho Blushing Bride, A bride of sixty sweet summers would still be a bride. She declares herself by her disguises. When she would shun tho soft, doveliko "bridey" effects in colors and wears a traveling dress designed by the loftiest flight of womanly genius to declare the wearer an "old married woman," she tnijht as well have embroidered across the Bhoulders thereof in letters of glaring contrast four inches long: "Bride." Because every button on that suit is a mouth shouting in trumpet tones to every glancing eye: "Bride! Bride! Bridel" Tho baggageman looks up as he receives their trunks, which are unlike any other baggage on tho train he grins at the abject man who is waiting for the chocks, and says to his assistant as he turns away: "Third lot this morning, Bill."

The brakeman assumes an expression of supernatural respect and bows low as he touches her elbow with his fingers, by which light and airy gesture —it is a pletisant actiop of tlie brakel man—a female passenger is at oncJ lifted bodily from tho platform and do| posited inside the car* The porter knows her on sight, albeit he never saw her before, and his face shines like the Xaulahka as lie hovers about the pair, brushing invisible dust from dustless things for he knows in his heart that the young man is good for a dollar or toothing, and he if going to play a str&ng game for the dollar.

The conductor, with the anxious frown of responsibility deepening on his face with the hurry of the first collection, feels his face relax into smiles that break through all the clouds of his care' as ho reaches for th6ir tickets, lie ignores—as does everybody else— the young man and bends down to the bride with a fatherly air that is most becoming to him as he gives reassuring and confident answers to her amazing questions about unheard-of connections gt^utteriy impossible junctions a thouod miles beyond the end of his run.—

Home Journal.

Onr»inl»m» by tho Million.

In the milt of a codfish, or in water in which vegetables have been infused, the microscopc discovers animalculi eo minute that 100,000 of them ^rould not exceed in bulk a single, mustard seed. And, strange as it may secxn, each of these infinitesimal creatures is supplied with organs as complete In every de-* tail as are those of the whale or the elephant. .V ..

Sewtag Needle*.

Ov&r 70,000 sewing needles are made weekly in the town of Uedditeh, In Worcestershire, r.here the most extensive needle manufactories In the world are situated.

Smta faafea AH

A dispatch from ZansiVar^says Emin Pasha has arrived at ffokoba. Be has recovered from smallpox, which was rumored to have caused hi* death.

fEKRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING

SUMMER SCHOOLS.

Chautauqua. College and Its Group of Special Schools.

The Programme at Plymouth Joseph Cook Will Open the Summer School of Christian Fhilosopby on

Staten Island.

[COPYRIGHT, 1832.}

The American mind abhors idleness, as nature abhors a vacuum, and summer, the period of rest and recreation, fiaa become 'a season of supplemental endeavor in the line of learning. A decade since there were a few spasmodic efforts at the establishment of summer schools of science, history and philosophy. Now these are fixtures, and the American scholar has become part of a vast peripatetic system of summer edu cation.

No part of the country is without its school. In the groves of California, under the bright blue skies of Lake Minnetonka, in Missouri, in Virginia, at Chautauqua, at Plymouth, at Bay View, at Cornell, at

Harvard,

at Lake­

side, at Port Richmond, S. I., aye, wherever the scholar abounds, there you will find the summer school.

Chautauqua easily takes the lead. This year it opens at delightful Lake Chautauqua JulyS, and continues until August 17. Again, Dr. William R. Harper, president of the University of Chicago, will have charge of all the educational work. But Chautauqua college has grown, and about it this year will cluster- a number of special schools, all in charge of the most efficient masters in the country. Chautauqua college will devote itself to English, French and German languages and literature, preparatory and college Latin and Greek, mathematics, physics, cheipistry, geology, mineralogy, botany, history, political economy, social science and psychology. From July 6 to 27 Col. Francis Parker, of the Cook County Normal school, aided by nine or ten specialists, will conduct a school of pedagogy. From July 6 to August 17 Prof. Harper, aided by a number of distinguished theologians, will have charge of a school of sacred literature. Jfrom July 15 to August 19 Dr. H. R. Palmer, of New York, conducts a school of music. Dr. W G. Anderson, of Brooklyn, will be at the head of the school for physical education, while miscellaneous classes covering a great range of subjects will be in charge of men of distinction in respective lines.

But among the advanced thinkers of the day the deepest interest centers about Plymouth, Mass., where the second annual session of the School of Applied Ethics will begin July 0, continuing six weeks. Prof. Q. H. Toy, of Harvard, will be dean and director of the department of history of religions. Prof. H. C. Adams, of the University of Michigan, will direct the department of economics, and Prof. Felix Adler, of New York, will be at the head of the department of ethics. Here is a list of subjects in the "Religious" department which will attract tho scholars of all creeds: "The Prophets," by Prof. Moore, of Andover "Persian Influence on Judaism," by Dr. Jackson, of Coljiuibia "The Ritual Law," by Prof. Jostr now, of the University of Pennsylvania "Jho Wisdom Books," by Prof. Toy, of Harvard? *"The Talmud," by Dr. Hirsch, of Chicago.

In the department of economics there will be the following courses: "Changes in the Theory of Political Economy Since Mills," by ,Prof. H. C. Adams, of the University of Michigan "Theory of Social Progress," by Prof. F. H. Geddings, of Bryn Mawr "Functions of Philanthropy in Social Progress," by Faith Huntington, of New York, and Miss Adams, of Chicago "Functions of Law in Social Progress," by Prof. Taussig, of Harvard "Statistical Presentation of Industrial and Social Questions," by Commissioner of Statistics Carroll D. Wright "Critical Study of the Labor Problems and the Monopoly Problem," by Prof. H. C. Adams.

In the department of ethics the speakers will be Prof. William Wallace, of Oxford Dr. Felix Adler, Prof. John W. Burgess, of Columbia W. L. Shetdon, if St. Louis William M. Slater, of Philadelphia, and Gen. A. B. Nettleton, of Washington.

No summer school of philosophy'Tias ever attempted to covcrso wide a range of topics or has ever succeeded bringing together so .great a faculty. g|lf§jj$'?^.

On July 13 the great summer scliool of the American Institute of Christian Philosophy will begin at Prohibition park, Staten Island. The gathering will be opened with a lecture by Joseph Cook on "Fast and Loose Theories of Involution," and closed by President C. D. Wanfield, who will present the topic:

The Philosophy of Education." Among other speakers will be Prof. Hyslop, of Columbia W. F. Round, Hon. Walter B. Hill, of Georgia} Prof. E. II. Sneath, of Yale President W. L. Brown, of the Alabama Polytechnic institute Dr. G. R. W. Scott, of Andover, Alexander, of New- Ydrib

Then at the head of Lake Michigan, in one of the prettiest of western towns. Bay View, there will open on July 13 perhaps the largest summer school in the country, barring Chautauqua. Last year there were twenty-five thousand in attendance. This year many more are looked for. This school will be iij charge of Prof. Richard T. Ely. At Martha's Vineyard the summer school is for teachers only, but it claims the distinction of being "the oldest, the largest and the broadest summer school for teachers in the United States." Glen's IMls* K. Y., has a similar school which begins July 19. Harvard's summer course opened July l, and that of Cornell, a new departure there, at about the saaxte time.

The American Institute of Instruction, more of a convention than a summerschool, has a brief session atNarragansett pier, beginning July &.

On July IS, and continuing to July 30, the summer school of higher pedagogy and of psychology will be held atQark university, Worcester.

On JulyST the Falmouth summer Institute and culturing camp opens at Falmouth, and no doubt the presence mm

there of Dr. C. H. Parkhurst will at-' tract many of his admirers. Joseph Jefferson is to beamong the lecturers.

But. I find that I have enumerated only the most important of these summer schools: There are the Virginia summer school of methods at Bedford, the Lakeside gathering near Madison, Wis., the state Chatauqua assemblies, the Lauvier summer school at Exeter, N. H., and then a host of minor educational assemblies of only local or state interest, but all showing the tendency of the times. The year is evidently too short for the scholar. He is befit on making the school year as nearly equivalent to the calendar year as is possible, and he has-succeeded in his purpose this year.

BACKED BY UNCLE SAM A Congressman Whose Four Deuce* Were Supported by the Serjeant-at-Arms. "The luckiest man in a poker game," remarked a Washington man in a* reminiscent mood, as he drew three cards, "was a certain congressman from Illinois. He was backed in a jackpot by the United States. We were having a nice little game of two dollars limit. There is often a smart pile of money in a two-dollar limit. Around the hotel table were four of us, and this was the only congressman who had sand enough and money enough to sit out the game. There was a night session and an exciting time in the house of representatives, and the others had dropped out one bygone on the score of public dtfty. "Well, it was getting on towards two o'clock in the morning, and we had a lovely pot and everybody stayed in. The pot was opened on four deuces and the man stood ^pat. That was this same congressman. There was nothing less than a good pair out, and everybody seemed to have improved his hand in the draw. The betting was lively. Just then a servant rushed in and said there was a call of the house and the sorgeant-at-arms was at the door. 'I'd play this hand out if the whole United States was at the door,' said the statesman. 'Keep him out a minute, Jim.'.1 'Cock the door!' fT"'/ "But the big foot of the"sergeant-at-arms was thrust in the crack of the inner door as Jim was going out to bar the outer one. 'I am sony, gentleman, but'—" 'I'm not," interrupted the member. 'I'll go as soon as I rake in this jack pot. In them eantime let .me have fifty.' "The sergeant-at~arms produced his order book, and the fifty soon went to swell the pile. 'I'll draw on you for a hundred, pretty soon,' came from the plucky Illinoisan. One of us laid down his hand at this, and another began to look nervous. There were several I. O. U.'s in the pile already, and I was down to my last dollar and had to call. I had a king full, and—well, the Illinois congressman and his four deuces and the sergeant-at-arms and the United States treasury and that jackpot, with about eight hundred dollars in it, all went off together."—St. Louis Post-Dis-patch.

5 •ft* fit*'

A SHREWD BARGAIN.

Taking Advantage of t»a Illiterate Man's ,1 l!?noranco. _{. During the recent high water, when tho flooding of the bottom lands along the Missouri was the topic of conversation with every one, a party of gentlemen were seated around a comfortable fire in an Independence office telling stories of flood and fish. One, a noted jurist, told this, which he claims is "Gospel fact:"

It was during the 'flood of 1881, when so much of the bottom lands were "out of sight," and a lean and lank ICansan, the sole proprietor of an eighty-acre plat, stood on a pound surveying the great lake covering his real estate possessions, and, disgusted, swore to sell, trade or give away every rod of that "dod-blasted bottom."

The opportunity soon c^.mo. Passing along the highway, this Kansan met another leading a calf. It was not much of a calf, but still the Kansan, who must have been a Yankee, smelt a trade. To the Owner of the calf he advanced and the following dialogue took place: "Stranger, wanter trade?" "Wall, I might what yer got?" -,'V "Well, I'll give yer at clean deed to forty acres of Kaw bottom land fer that er calf."

The papers were drawn up and the calf was delivered, and soon after the TTn.nftn.Ti told the story to a friend, with this remark: "When I l'arncd that the 'tother fellow warn't able to read, I worked the whole eighty off ofc him, by gollyl"—Kansas City Times. r- VHSWS i—

A ureat Rider.

A German friend of Buffalo Bill one day out west said to a cowboy: "Herbert, have you any circus-riders in this state?" "Oh, yes," was the reply, "we've got lots of them. Who is your greatest rider in Germany?" "Oh, Hans Wagner. He is the greatest rider you ever saw in yonr life.** "Ah," said the cowboy, "111 'bet he ain't much to what we've got in America. Now there's Billy Brown. I've seen him ran along and jump off a horse's back and on again five or six times." "Oh, that's nothing, raid the German gentleman. "Hans Wagner does that every day for practice." "But I've seen Billy jump on ahorse going °t full speed, and stand with one a "Yes, bttf. Hans Wagner did that when he was a young-man the first time he tried.*' "Good* bat P*e myself seen Billy Brown ran into a ring and run twice around with the horse, and then jump and land right on the horse's breath." "Well, but Hans Wagner has But look here, my lsgfl, that's a lie. I dant believe that," said the German, as Jus retired ^^mnqaifihed.---Candock.

Great Swallow.

Naturalists say that a single swallow will devour 0,000 files la a day. _)

ATfi

/AC^T LIGHTED BY ELECTRICITY, #3 Uow Complete an Electrical Equipment

Can Be Pnt In Small Space,

The vessel herewith illustrated is said to be the smallest steam yacht lighted by electricity from its own plant, and shows how complete an equipment can be placed within the most limited space. The Marine Journal, from which these cuts are reproduced, says

The vessel is 35 feet over all and 7 feet beam. The hull is planked with white cedar, copper riveted and lined inside with cherry and white pine finished in oil.

THE STEAM YACHT CTGNET.

Shipman oil burning boiler supplies steam at

160

pounds pressure to the two engines and donkey pump, all of which, together with the dynamo, are located in the cabin amidships. The main engine, which is a "fore and aft" compound engine having cylinders by 6& inches and stroke of 5 inches, operates jits feed water and vacuum pumps by worm, gear having a reduction of 4 to 1, and runs at 850 to 400 revolutions per minute. A high speed single engine is bolted to the cylinder head of the main engine, as shown in Fig, 2. This has cylinder 2% by S inches and makes 500 revolutions per minute. Belted directly to tho pulley of this high speed engine and located on a bracket attached- to the front of the cabin is a kilowatt Edison generator, capable of supplying ten 16 C. P. incandescent lamps, also a search light so arranged that when desired it can be thrown into circuit. By means of this light it is said that the bottom of the lake can be readily seen in forty feet of water. The well known fascination which the electric light has for the finny tribe has been taken advantage of by fishing parties who have enjoyed an excursion on this little craft, and a large catch has testified to the efficacy of the method employed.

MACHINERY ON STEAM YACHT CYGNET. The cabin is 6 feet S inches high and 6 feet square, with a passageway on either Bide.

The yacht has been fitted throughout with great care in every detail and makes a fine appearance as well as a very comfortable cruising craft. A speed of nine to ten miles per hour is readily at' tained, and the, natty littlo craft attracts at on he re it

•'When your heart is bad, and your head is bad, and you are bad clean through, what is needed?" asked Sunday-school teacher of her class, know—Ayer'a Sarsaparilla," answered a little girl, whose sick mother had recently been restored to health by that inedioine, 1^' An English Mixture for tho Complexion.

Tho following for preserving tho com ple^ion and soothing the skin after exposure to sun and wind has at least a pleasant and harmless sound: Take a wine glassful of best orangeflower water. Add the least pinch of carbonate of soda and two teaspoonfuls of glycerin. Melt piece of camphor the size of a pea in three tea spoonfuls of eau de cologne and add to the orangeflower water. Agitate the whole for five minutes. Apply to tho face every night. If any soap be found necessary, use old castile and rub the face gently with apiece of chamois leather after washing

Chamberlains Eye and Skin Ointment. A certain cure for Chronic Sore Eyes, Tetter, Salt Bbeum, Scsld Head, Old Chronic Sores, Fever Sore", Eczema. Itch, Prairie Scratches, Sore Nipples and Piles. It is cooling and soothing. Hundreds of eases have been cured by it after all oiher treatment had failed. It is

Ey

ut up tn 25 and 50 cent boxes. For sale ruggists. V' 't 1 I have been a,great sufferer from dry catarrh for many years, and I tried mani remedies, but none did mo so mucl benefit as Ely^s Cream Balm. It com pletely cured mo. M. J. Lally, 30 Wood ward Ave., Boston Highlands, Mass.

I think Ely's Cream Balm is the best remedy for catarrh I ever saw. I never took anything that relieved me so quickly, and I have not felt so well lor along time. I used to be troubled with severe headaches two or three times a week.—J. A. Alcorn, Ag't U. P. K. R. C9., Eaton, Colo., .3 2.

Refreshing Retreats.

Saril finer days are fast approaching and now is the time that excursionists, pleas-ure-seekers and sportsmen thould figure out a route for their summer vacation. In doing so, the delightfully cool summer and fishing resorts located along the Wisconsin Central Lines come ,vividly to view, among which are Fox Lake, 111., Lake Villa, 111, Mukwonago, Waukesha, Cedar Lake, Jfeenah, Waupaca, Fifleld, Butternut and Ashland, wis. Wisconsin has within the last five years become the center of attraction for more pleasure seekers, hunters and fishermen than any other state in the union, and each visit increases the desire to again see the fragrance that is apart of the invigorating atmosphere, wander through the colonnades of stately pines and hook the speckled beauties with a hand made fly.

For pamphlets containing valuable information, etc., apply to D. W. Janowitz, T. P. A.. Indianapolis, Ind., or Jas. C. Pond, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Chicago, 111.

HUMPHREYS' VETERINARY SPECIFICS

Fff Howes, Cattle, &eep, DcgBj Hogi, AMD POtTLTRY. 809 Pa«e Btikn Trr*.tmcnt vfitiatli aae Chart Heat Free, enn

5

FmnXnieMimublnlaMwulw A.A.iSpiaa! Meanurfti*, Milk Fever. B.B.—Wtraiai*, Lamramw, Ubemmmtlmm* C.t.-Ill»ie*K',» Kami iHediarvee* D.D.»B«u mv (J rah#, Wvrmn,

K.—C«Mfth«, Hcavta, Paeaanmla. F.F.—er Orfpem Bellyache. (M*.—3f}ftearrtace, Ue*Berrh*#e». lt.ll.~ClriBa.rir aa¥ Kltot r' !.!.—SraptlTe Ma

•r (tripe*. Bellyache. XfeiM«rrfca*e«. Kldae Diaeaac*. j»»em Mange*

J.K^OiwMe* af Ditwtln, Faratjral**

m"&£S8£?oS'52&2EF-'•L«

Jar Veterlmmrr Cmre Oii, Held br Drngeiirts or awtau?

HUMPHREYS' MEOlCm CO, CtanMT William and Jofea Sta, Vvw York.

LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S

-!-& XlU

b~

?A|

*,5^ *».

A O N W O AN AT IF

Or, as tho tvorld expresses it, a well-pre-served woman." One who, understanding the rules of health, has followed them, and preserved her youthful appearance. Mrs. Pinkham has many correspondents who* through her advice aiul care, can look with satisfaction in their mirrors.

UC Mimed ht« Opportunity! BOAT MIMT I1C Yonri, Header. Tt.o majority negloct their opportunities nntl from tlmt eituia live In poverty nnd dip in obscnrlty I Ilnrrowlng deipnlr li tho lot of ninny, it* llie? lookbgck»i lost, forovsr lost, opportunity, I.lltolspaM*. Inn! Keach out. Be up nnd doing, Iinprovoyour opporto. nlty,and«ocnrepro»perlly, promlnenco.petce. ltK-nctala. by a philosopher, tiint "the OoJda** of fortune offer* golden opportunity to each prr«on at some period of Href thechance.r and ilia ponra oat licr rlchos fnl! to do embrace ..... to and die depart*, netttr to ratnm." How »h»U yon nnd. tbo

GOLDEN

opportonlt/F loveitlgato every clianco that

appear* worthy, and of fair promise tlmt la what all successful men do. II ore la an opportunity, inch a* I* not often, within the roach nt laboring people. Improve!, It will (five, at lead, a grand sMrt in life. The ooi-im* opportunity for many is here. Money to be made rapidly and honorablyby any Industrious person of either sex. Ail a(t«s. Von can do the work and livo at home, wherever yon are. Even be* glnuer* are easily earning from to 810 per day. Yop con doaswoli lfyott will work, not loo bard, bot Imlustrlonslyjand you can Increase yotir Income ns you (?o nn. Yon can give tpare time only, orall

your

i:

Compound

goes to the root of all femaie complaints* renews the waning vitality, and invigorates the entire system. Intelligent women of middle age know well its wonderful powers.

All Druggists sell it as a standard article, or sent by mail, in form of Pills or Lozenges, on Receipt of $1.00.

Mrs. Pinkham freely answers letters ol inquiry. Enclose stamp for reply.

'Send two 2-cent stamps for Mrs. Plnkham'sV beautiful 88-page Illustrated book, entitled GUIDE TO HEALTH AND ETIQUETTE." It contains a volume of valuable information.

It has saved lives, and may save yours.

Lydia .E. Pinkham Med. Co., Lynn. Mass»

It Onrea Coughs, Golds, Soro Throat, Group,Whooping Oough. Bronchitis and Asthma. ccnaia oar« AM. Consumption In first «uge«, nml a »nro relief 1 advanoed stages, trrantonoe. Yon will aoo tho osoollont offeot after taking tho first doao. Sold bj d«*iwn «?erywh«rt» uuga Bctilos, to oe&u and 6140. 16 Cures lufluonza.

JCAN AGENCY/OT

A pamphlet of Information andab*/ \stractof tho laws, showing How to/' .Obtain Patents, Caveats,Trodo/ .Marks, Copyrights, tmt fret

^Addnw NIUNN A CO., .301 Broadway, New York.

time to the work. Easy-

to learn. Capital not roqnlred. We start yon. AH l» com* paratlrely new and really wonderful, we Instruct »ri4 »bow yoo how. ft-ee. Failure unknown among oor workers. So room to explain here. Write and learn ail flrce, retnm uinli. UnwJse to delay. Address at once. II. ttilett fc Co., Box 8HO, Portluhd,

MIIIM,

9

WHERE DOLLAK8 ARE MADE

Thfilineof the»UBEN A CRESCENT ROUTB throngh KENTUCKY, TENNE88EK, ALABAMA, MISSISSIPPI, and LOUISIANA QgFKRS GRgATRft OFPOTtTU.V fTTKS TO

OJlLi JL JL 1 Mj JL \j O

MANUFACTURERS & GENERAL BUSINESS ENTERPRISE

tbfts any other part of the U. 8., VMt Ixxliesol

Coal Iron, Timber & Farm Lands

Also THOUHA'L8 of ACUW of LONG LEAP YELLOW PIKE for «ale cheap Thin road run* through tbe thriving' town* I of Lexington, Danville, and Somerset, Ky. Rock trood,Manimart. and Cbatanooga, Tenn Ft. Payne, Atiallo. Birmlnetiatn. and Ttuoaloom. Ala.: Meridian, Bstuesbnig, Jackson and VleksburK, MiM. Nctr Orleart*, Delhi, Monroe, and Bhrrveport, La. Home of tbe new town* will donate money and land to locate manofactaring enterprises.

Tbe R. li. Co. wlU make low rates for Pasaengeni and Freight, And aOord ln\e#tora every opportunity to examine the different local!tie*. If nece«#ary, will send a representative with the party.

Foil particulars, and any required Informstlon, trill be Mnt t»y mall on application to D. G»*EDWARD8» O. P. A T. AKU,* fS- q,£c. Route, CINCINNATI, O,

Adl