Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 19, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 October 1892 — Page 3

Or.JOHN BULL'S SARSAPARILLA. Is ttiere a single particle of blood poison in your veins? Beware! Like the devouring flame, it Increases in force and leaves only destruction in lt« track. It feeds in a horrible man nor on the flesh, and devastates every organ of the body. Pitiable in the pxtrcmo •would be that man awaiting death from the effects core, flesbv

BAD BLOOD

•were there no salvation for him. But there Ik. Kverv trace of blood poison can be elimlnatcd from hi^ystem if^ will only u^that infallible antidote, Dr. John

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.

J. B. Morac, Clinton, Ind., writes: "I was for many yeats aflfeefced with contagions blood poison. Portions of my flesh seemed to Fairly putrid and mortifying. My hair fell out, and I was an objectof repulsion to every one. My breath smelled horrible, and I had catarrh so fearfully bad that pieces of 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. Bull's Sarsaparilla, and strange as it may seem, that remedy saved my llfeand brought me back to excellent health. I now weigh 136 pounds, am free from pain and sores, and although have deep scars where sores were, I consider myself in perfect health."

Use Tonic Syrnp for Chills and Fever, It never fails. Dr. John Bull's Worm De#troyer. This Mjmedy never falls to eradicate all intestinal parasites, and has saved many pursickly children as well as grown people lives of health and usefulness. Price 25cento at drug stores, or sent by mail by John D. Park fc Son* Co., wholesale agents, Sycamore Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. It tastes good.

Here is a (rood Tiling for You

A MAN, OR WOMAN,

of intelligence anil quick-witted enough to know a "GOOD THING" at sight, but who has I/st the Most Precious Possession on Earth, viz. GOOD HEALTH, WILL NOT require a BRCONI TELLING to be Induced to become a purchaser of

DR. GRliGG'S ELECTRIC Belts and Appliances.

Do you know why? Bocausu It Is plain to be seen that the FHUTH 'NCR TOLD Is enough. The (Surprising Promptness with which all clauses of people respond to our announcements, and the rapidly Increasing demand for Dr. Gregg's Goods wherever Introdueed, conclusively prove that truo modesty is always rccognlzed and h" quality of merit takes rare of Itself. Metaphorically ourstatement, Is'the Hutton—the i'ublle Press It, and

DR. GREGG'S ELECTRIC SPECIALTIES

"DO THE REST."

The extent of Pre-Kiiro on the button and the success of Dr. egg's Electric Goods In "Doing the Kent-," Is more satisfactorily shown In the marvelous growth or our bus! ness the pnHtOt) days.

He pea ted and Increasing demands foi HE GREGG ELIH..TK1U "FOOT W'AItvfEU" are corning in from all parts of the country with profuse 'acknowledgements that so much comfort for *1.00 (the prlco) was like buying Gold Dollars for ten cents

The Iolloiit Organ l»m of Woman subjects her to many peculiar ailments and unfortu nale misery. The extrenv sensitiveness her Nervous System very frequently require artificial st I mill lis. TIirGregg Klcelrlo Kelt lid otItt.'t* Appliances sl'I'l'LV THIS, as othlng else can.

The migged CoiiRtltutli»n of Man, when onee ltrokrn, lieeomes Pitiable In the extreme, from which there Is absolutely escape without assistanec. The GllEGG Electric Hells and Appliances, In easesof this kind, have honestly won their Title of KING of REMEDIES.

Rheumatism Is conquered, sufferers from Obesity are speedily relieved, Dropsy qulckl.N yields, spinal difficulties and IVmlysis dls appear, and many other discuses of Men and Women are permanently cured, fully dcscrlh ed In complete catalogue for Oe, or elaborate circular free. We guarantee to forfeit twice the price of any of Dr. Gregg's Goods found to la? not genuine. AVt* makf II»I elegant little iM.oo Kl«»etrlci Holt, which Is sell Ins very rapidly and which wo will tnke in cxcjiangt for any Higher Power licit (except $d Belt) and credit $.) on the price of new order. Remember the Electric "Foot Warmers" are $1 ajpulr, worth $10. Address

The Electric Cure Co.

(501 Inter Ocean Building, Chicago, 111. Montlon this paper.

R. MILES NEW

HEART

CURE. rtucs BOOK

HEART

nieciici In

nI

PntpltAttotl,

BIIvCiMwGi I'nln In Sllr, Shoulder and Arm.Short Birnth, 0|i|rvwlon, Aslhmn, N»oUrn Ankle*. wen Is. Smothertnsr HnrlU, Drou»T, Wind In Rtotnnfli. etc.. are ciiml by DR. MILES' NEW HEART CURE. Anew discovery br the eminent Indiana SpcelalIM, A. K. Davis, silver creek. Nh..ofier taking four bottles of IIEAHT Ct RE relt better thssn lu luut for twelve yenrs. "For thirty years troubUn) with Henrt lnwases two bottles of DR. MILES' HEART CURE e«mt me.-Levi I*tfnn, lMtehnnnn. Slleh." K. P. Wafwi, WitW Station, Ua li»s taken DR. MILES' HEART CURE for Heart trouble with great n.\*»lts Mrs. I* Unr. Kltchbum. Mich., was ill forlftyewra with Heart lMfeasw.bad to hire house help, lived op liquid fo**ii w*ott Dr. Mllea* Henrt Cure nad all palos left her? constant ttse cured her. Fine lllutmted book FHRB at tntrct»t», or addrfwa Dr.MHos' Medical Co.,Elkh«drt,li.i,

For Sale by JACOB HA UK,

LADIES, TTbir

Dr. DeLuc's Periodical Fills,

FROM PARIS, FRANCE.

Acts onlv on the mensUnml system and positively cures suppression of the metisus from coUta, shock, etc, A safe reliable month--Iv timllcine, \v«rrnntet to reli«ve pr!ee $2, three for 14 The American PiU and Medicine Co., Rent ...... Geo. Kelst, drugjtctsi, streets, Torre Haute, Intl.

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Epps's Cocoa

HKKAKFAST.

'By a lho«oM(th knowledge of the natural

Caeos. Mr Kpl^ has provided »«r tabie« with a d^nc«t«Sy flavored b«?v«r»i»

uh.t'h

may

save

ft# uiary

h^aVT doctor*'

It i«Tby the juds^'^us uw Of such sr» 1 ft Urns a c««'Fv !uik»n may toe jgfad•r up until MfoRg eno'.sjflJ tO'.:)WM t^rtie&e* utdiMw^ Hanwrti ittb* are fta&un* MTOmd waif t»

i.n JU v. iw1'* t-\ tl .' att« SltJtV our pn

V: h« J*A 1** ll« fC SS •--.pf i«!Mv a fata! *b*ft t*sr fcttptng fotUfuv! with rujty hk^aMa r, HirUhwl frame.."—vivll vMih WvUlujt \r*ler at sellfc. ii, U»?, by

1

Ma S

So

bo I

CH li S l#'** I Wf

WOMAN AND HOME.

THE INFLUENCE OF WOMAN'S INI TUITIONAL FUNCTION.

Clioitce" of*1 a 'Knrsc—Women Artists lit Munich—Mrs. Mary Mapca Dodge—GIvo the Sick a Chance—Xlie English Hoinc.

Useful Hints to the Housekeeper.' The long repression to which woman has been subject through her inferior opportunities of culture and outgrowth has resulted in what might be called a great storage of thought and energy in her brain, and has led to the he»ditary descent of that storage in the female line. The consequence of this is the immense superiority of what is |:nown as her intuitional function. A man arrives at conclusions by a more or less tedious process of ratiocination a woman is already there, as if by some electrical course that bore her more swiftly than the light. This habit of her mind her sharper critics do not call a habit of the mind, do not consider an intellectual affair at all, but class as merely an instinctive faculty, as if it were the trait of a lower order of humanity close upon the possibilities of the brute creation.

But in reality it is the result of the long storage of thought and emotion that has never had any output, and that acting on cell and tissue has built up a cerebral character, whose tendency has descended from mother to daughter with constantly increasing strength that is to say, it is the result—as Mrs. Hopkins sayp in her "Spirit of the New Education"—of experience stored in the brain cells. This intuitional faculty, she says, is the product of thoroughly organized thought, of inherited structure so long habituated that its action has become automatic, unconscious and organic, and processes are lost and only results remain. This accumulated energy, the consequence of repression, has given woman a conservation of force which upholds herin all moral crises gives her the finer moral perception, the acuter sensitiveness to wrong, and it makes her sympathy sure, her faith unfailing, her endurance all but eternal, her spirit indomitable.

Out of this are born the ideals. Mothers transmit them to their sons to their daughters often but the male brain, busy with its outlook, has no time or place, no cell or tissue, "for the slow growth and long building of the ideal it is born of nurture which is finer and stronger than culture, and deeper us it reaches from the recesses of our beginnings. And thus the generic ninle braiu receives but may not create the ideal, for the ideal is born of that conservation of force which is answerable also for the intuitional powers.

By and by some great philosopher, some woman who has come to her kingdom, some man who has not been educated into a contempt for his mother, will examine this subject minutely, and give us a mar-'

The Choice of a Nurse.

Above nil, as you value your children's future rectitude, let truth be paramount in the nursery. No amount of after training can eradicate deceitful habits learned in extreme youth.—-New York Tribune.

Women Artists in Munich.

Munich boasts a society of lady artiste, a body of considerable importance, inasmuch as it has placed under Us care the training of lady artists generally. Once, in days gone by, ladies were admitted to the academy, but this order of things was altered, and for a good many years ladies desirous of studying and perfecting themselves in art felt the want of some efficient art school. Then the "Kunstlerin-Verein" took the matter in hand, and some eights or nine years ago an art school was started under its auspices, where the teaching comprises drawing after living models, Munich now possesses several hundred lady artists* The ladies* art school is being extensively patronized the instruction consists of drawing and modeling from plaster, drawing and modeling from living anodeK both nude and draped, "still life," perspective and art history.

The evening classes for drawing from nude models are also open to women who are not members of the school. The lady artists manage their own affairs but men are, where it is. considered neccssary, employed as teachers, and as a rule only well known artists are engaged. The pay is moderate, as no one is supposed to make money by the The gentlemen and lady artists at ch get. on oa the whole very well together, atid so Ut as exhibitions are ooncer they ha*© Ui© same rights.—London .„ sea,

velous study of the differentiation of the suffering i'rom most violent attack of two brains, male and female, from the one congestion of the brain, which required original maternal cell. And we doubt not that when such a study shall be made it will cause all people to feel that loJty us a' man's brain may bo a woman's is 'loftier, finer and in its action full as what—Harper's Bazar.

A never al-

»'mother8 ^should :,

a

^Lforgether,nurse

tb

Lthat, Kk

and moral health of her child, also must necessarily have great influence over it in both of these particulars, and that while she may be constantly with her children the maid lives with them entirely. Dny and night she is their companion and caretaker and must therefore have more or less to do with tho formation of their charncters. This is not a pleasant thought, but owing to the conditions of our modern civilization it is one that must be faced, and yet how few there are who give this matter serious attentiou and choose a nurse with due regard to qualifications.

For very young children a happy, cheer-1 ful disposition is almost indispensable, as such a disposition has the most beneficial effect both on the character and health of I tho child. An eminent writer on the training of children says that "an live, cheer-

ing of cm wren says tnat an r.:uve, cheer-

ful, good humored nurse by regularaffec ^E

quickly comprehending the language of signs in her little charge will make across child good humored, while a careless, negligent or stupid woman will injure the temper of an angel."

tionate attendance, by endeavoring to.pre-1 ^ok Her convictions have not altered, vent all unnecessary suffering, and by gjie jg

Health and cleanliness are also prime essentials in a nurse, and it is unquestionably true that an old person having charge of a young child is injurious to the latter. Any one who hits any natural defect, too, should not .bp a nurse, or even a very ugly person or one who has an unpleasant expression. The voice is very easily imitated, and in this country particularly, where voices are apt, in spite of the greatest culture, to be nasal and rasping, parents cannot be too careful in choosing a pleasant voiced nurse.

Mars. Maxy p8p tfcc^

Mar? Mapes iwecsw AjNs ago ot BKih! v{ rs widow wish two bdurty tooysdrpa»d»a»f bad bsvxt readh?g Motleys bisiws.js, was carried iato the land e£ dlfees and windmill* until stse felt that she knew HoUaitd. tw«»riy well as Amer!". Thf outness of a story came into her id, bat

ue was determined that they should be of

do

faint tracings. She seized upon every book bearing upon the customs of the Dutch and the appearance of their country which she could find and devoured it. This was productive of a flesh and blood tale— "Hans Brinker, or the Silver Skates"— which made her famous, it being not only translated into Dutch, but other languages.

This would have been a remarkable triumph for a bright, hardworking, conscientious young widow without previous training or natural talent. But as a girl she had received the most thorough education from private tutors, and wis a musician, a linguist and thoroughly grounded in English literature. From girlhood she had teen in the habit of meeting at her father's and her husband's houses authors, lawyers, artists—men and women of culture and information. She had already written a number of

charming

sketches,

having, in fact, tried her wings enough to know that she could fly. Before Mrs. Dodge was appointed editor of St. Nicholas she served an apprenticeship with Mrs. S to we as an associate on the force of Heart and Home. Today the vivacious, retiring lady of middle life goes to her office in The Century building, and in the supervision of the intricate machinery of the great juvenile periodical she labors as many hours and more intensely than some of her subordinates.—New York Commercial Advertiser, ps® mm

Give the Siok a Chance.

Many a life has been shortened and many a family circle broken into because of affectionate solicitude or fraternal interest on the part of the other members of the household. A sickroom is no place for chat or gossip or the presence of other than those absolutely necessary to attend upon the invalid. Of course it seems very hard to shut out the loved ones from the sufferer, who frequently likes their presence as a relief from monotony and pain. With a mistaken idea of occupying the mind of the sick person they come in, fill up the room, exhaust all the better elements of the atmosphere, tax the attention by gossip about irrelevant things and ask questions out of curiosity or sympathy. They want to do something to make the invalid comfortable, and filled with this laudable purpose they succeed in increasing the suffering and perhaps indirectly causing the death of the one for whom they would sacrifice almost everything could they but be made to understand the true situation.

Almost all observing persons can recall instances where indiscriminate and injudicious visiting in the sickroom has been productive of the most seriou.' consequences. A lady just recovering from a nervous attack was pronounced so much better that the entire family gathered in the room to congratulate her on her convalesceucc. Something occurred to cause considerable merriment then some one told story, and the whole company indulged in laughter, jc'--3 and little flashes urs later the patient was

all of the skill and care of the medical at* tendnnts to subdue.—New York Ledger.

Tho Engli. Ii Heine.

Mina. Alathilue Blind has beeu culled "the English Heine." Daughter of Carl Blind, the well known socialist and scientist, she was for many years the beloved pupil and adopted child of Mazzini he

'he,sr^Tatri

3M

in her a strong love of liberty. As a young girl she lived in what was then the most interesting political circle in Europe. Among those who visited at her father's house were Garibaldi, Thomas Carlyle, John Stuart Mill and Professor Huxley. Mathilde Blind was little more than a child when she published her first book of verse since that time she has written constantly, but her greatest success was made by her translation of the "Journal of Marie Bashkirtseff." She is an intimate friend of the mother of the strange Russian artist.

Miss Blind's study is lined with portraits of the unhappy Marie, and she possesses many letters and other interesting relics which at one time or other belonged to her subject. Speaking French and Italian as well as German, she spends much of the

he ccntinent and has lately been

fciasearchof material for a new

stjj| un an}ent

Liberal, and is never

afraid of stating openly her convictions. Among her intimate friends she counts Mrs. Mona Caird and Mrs. W. K. Clifford.

She has a keen, sensitive face, and her mass of wavy hair is drawn off her forehead and done up in a single knot on the nape of her head. She dresses with good taste, and was one of the first to adopt a hygienic and aesthetic form of costume long before picturesqueness came into fashion.—Exchange.

Homemade Things.

"There is a charm about homemade things that does not belong to purchased stuff, no matter how beautiful or expensive it may be," said A. C. Cruikshank at the Southern yesterday. "You can buy no bread like that your wife bakes, granting that she is a home queen and not a society butterfly. You can find no pies like those you used to sneak out of your mother's cupboard. You sleep better under quilts that have been put together at home out of the scraps of clothing worn by those dear to you. There is a charm about a homemade rug that makes you want to lie down and roll on it like you used to on the rag carpet of your grandmother. "Did you ever notice the affection of a little girl for a homemade doll? Well, sir, you may give her the handsomest wax dolls that money will buy, but when you go to her crib at night you will find that she has left them to shift for themselves and is sleeping with the old scarecrow of a homemade rag doll cuddled up to her bosom. You will also notice that the young lady who has grown up at home, who owes the chief portion of her education to her mother instead of to a boarding school, is more sweet and lovable than those who have been sent to Paris to be polished. She has more soul, and when she nestles down into a man's heart she does so to stay."—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.

How to Kill Cockroaches.

Cockroaches are very general feeders. All sorts of household refuse, almost all kinds of food and many other substances, such as blacking, paint, india ink, the bindings of books and other articles containing paste, are eaten by them. In warm houses they breed uninterruptedly throughout the year, and it is impossible to estimate the number of annual generations.

Very few remedies are at all satisfactory. The best is perhaps a fresh pyrethrum

SHI

ias

powdt-r ground in thin counarnia «rcWTi plants and sold is the freshest and {miffed at night under i.-l iota all dark corners rr .-.j. In f.- it will be tl the atinoe"»gidy saturated thea be tishtly

ti. C... tj- 'ir ti» r:

of an to ..." oti: Ol wS 1st! with it. rooms

asar8

J*

closed, and in the morning the roaches should be swept up from the floor and burned. Many persons are prejudiced against the use of pyrethrum powders for the reason that they do not kill the insectt at once. Their action is comparatively slow, but it is none the less sure. Two or at most three thorough applications at intervals of three days should almost entirely rid any building of these insects.— Professor Riley.

Marie BashkirtsefTs Tomb. Poor Marie BaslikirtsefiPs last resting place in the cemetery at Passy is attracting few pilgrims from among the multitudinous visitors to Paris. The tomb, howevei^a massive structure in white stone, towering far above the tombs by which it is surmounted—presents many remarkable features. Its inscription consists of the titles of twenty-four of the

young

1

artiste's picto­

rial and sculptural works, and a verse of original poetry laments her untimely death and speaks of her youth, beauty and genius. If you stroll along tho footpath leading past the right hand side of the tomb youf attention will be arrested by a glass doot opening into the interior of the monument, whose first aspect in no way calls to mind any of the usual mournful associations connected wiiJh death.

A pleasant, spacious, well lighted, artistically furnished apartment meets the gaze. Carpets, stairs, footstools, cushions, art pottery and draperies—evidently ones used by Marie Bashkirtseff herself—are tastefully arranged there. Her own bust, surrounded by palms and memorial wreaths, is placed at the farther end of the chamber, and her portrait in stained glass fills two of the six window PfJies.—Woman.

Woman's Advancement.

During the past decade woman's progress has been wonderful. While man haa retrogaded woman has advanced. Though called the "weaker vessel,"she is constantly exhibiting a strength of character and an ability to endure suffering, both physical aud mental, which man is a strangei to. One of the most encouraging evidences of advancement is found in the fact that

she

is casting off the mask of conventionality which has hedged her divinity, and enlightened individual judgment is taking its place. The coming woman will be none the less sweet, loving creature, the happy mother, the light of earth, because she possesses the privileges which are her birthright.

She will still be "enthroned in the empire of the affections," and the "supremacy of her sex in the production of a bettei breed of human beings" will be recognized. She will bo the owuer of her person and property, and her individuality will, make its impress for good on the ages. Her chief ambition will be to secure a noble fatherhood for her children that they may be well born, and so to live that all who know her will call her blessed.—Boston Times.

1 11

1

a Proud Indian Princess.

n'i

It is told of the beautiful Princess Ahmadee of India that when she was first brought to England she refused to allow heraelf to be presented to Queen Victoria, saying, to the horror of her attendants, that the caste of her race forbade her to look'upon her inferiors. It was only by persistent entreaties that the proud little beauty could be induced to obey the queen's summons to Windsor, and even when she did deign to confront her majesty nothing could induce her to offer the slightest token of respect for the sovereign of the people who had deposed tho hereditary rulers of India.

At first glance one might well be surprised at the little semblance of an Indian princess in the attire, if not the features, of this charming scion of eastern royalty. Delhi, however, long since yielded to the forms of western civilization, and is today a thoroughly Europeanized city as a result of British rule.—Chicago Tribune.

Fits—All Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. No Fit* after the first day's use. Marvelous cures, Treatise and ?2.00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline, 931, Arch St., Pbila., Pa.

Advice from a Trained Nurse. "It is well known that the skin is a great absorbent, and nutrition even can be conveyed through its agency," says a trained nurse. "A physician once ordered a beef tea bath for a baby I was nursing, who was apparently dying of some exhausting bowel trov.thls, and with admirable effect, And" I myself have found that rubbing delicate persons with warm olive oil is an excellent tonic. If I had charge of a puny, sickly baby I should feel inclined to give it oil baths instead of water baths, and try tiie effect. The oil is quite as cleansing, and it stands to reason that such tiny beings, particularly if they are badly nourished, «hould not have the natural oil of the body continually washed away."

Preservation of Kings.

"Don't wear your rings under gloves unless you remember to have them thoroughly examined twice a year," is the advice given by a jeweler. The constant friction wears out the tiny gold points that hold the stones in place, and unless strict attention is paid to them they become loose in a very short time.

Small purses of suede leather are made on purpose for rings or any soft pouch of skin of chamois maybe used to place the rings in when desiring to carry them around with one. They should never be put into the ordinary pocketbook, as the rubbing against coins is also bad for them. —Philadelphia Press.

Catarrh in the bead is aco ti Ititl if at disease, and it requires a constitutional remedy like Hood's Sarsaparilla, to effect a cure. f'

il&i Mending Table XJnen.

A housewife whose table linen always does her good service mends it with flax embroidery cotton of a number to correspond with the quality of the cloth. Under the ragged edges of the tear she bastes & piece of stiff paper, and makes a network of fine stitches back and forth over its edges, carrying the stitches about an inch beyond the edges of the cut. Thin places and breaks in linen maybe run with the flax or embroidery floss, and towels should be mended in the same way.—Daughters of America.

A reported outbreak of cholera at Hfilinetta, N. J., created much excitement that vicinity. Investigation showed that the disease was not cholera but a violent dysentery, which is almost ass severe and dangerous as cholera. Mr. *Va!ter Wiliard, a prominent merchant. of Jamesbcrg, two milwfroffl Heltnetts.. MW Chamberlain's Colic, Cboton, nd Diarrhoea Remedy has given great

faction Sn tho most severe cawsof lery. It is wruinly one of tbe owi, things ever made.*T For sale by «rog

gists.

Lydi.v PiN'Kiiaai:—"

My son,

I

A mistaken Way of Talking. Stammering children are often subjected to humiliation, or even cruelly treated. One great cause of defective articulation is tho foolish manner in which children are talked to by ignorant uurses and fond mothers. When I hear a»mother say to her child, "Say t'ank oo to de p'etty lady— that's a 'ittle pet," and so on, it makes my blood boil.—St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

A busy woman is Mrs. Emma Drew, of South Norridgewock, Me. She runs a small farm, keeps a horse and cow, raises butter for market, cares for her five children, does her own housework and also teaches a school of seventeen children five days iu the week. *jV

In London there are ninety-four model kitchens, managed by fifty trained teachers and attended in one year by 19,000 scholars. Each class includes twenty or thirty girls, who work together six or eight at a time. ________

Squares and circles of white silk edged with a frill of oriental lace make pretty mats for small polished tables. Tho silk centers should be lined, and an interlining of white crinoline gives a desirable stiffening.

Old newspapers make the best'of ho'usecleaning materials. They are excellent for cleaning windows, "just the thing" for scouring woodwork r.m! unequaled for cleaning brass and silverware.

All kinds o? cooked fish can be served with salads. Lettuce is the best green salad to serve, but all cooked and cold vegetables go well with fish.

It is said that Mrs. Adair, of Philadelphia, whose first husband left her an immense fortune, spends $120,000 a year in entertaining.

New Orleans has two woman literary clubs—the Geographers and tho Quarante —which meet weekly at the houaes of members.

There is no use of any one suffering with the cholera when Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhcea Remedy can be procured. It will give relief in a few minutes and cure in a short time. I have tried it and know.—VV. U. Clinton, Heimetta, N. J. Tbe epidemic at Helmettfi was at first believed to be cholera, but subsequent "investigation proved it to be a violent fortn of dysentery, almost as dangerous as cholera. This remedy was used there with great sucoess. For sale by druggists. Oct

fleart Dleewe cured. Dr. Mllea' Hew Core.

^V£ToH$

Perfectly Well I

Ftllmobe, Dubuque Co.. Ia., Sept., 1889. Miss E. Finnigaa writes: "My mother and sister used Pastor Koenig'fi Norve Tonic for neuralgia. They are both perfectly well now and never tired praising the Tonic.

Tippecanoe Crrr, Ohio, Oct. 21,1890. Since taking tho first aposaJal ot Pastor Koexiig'a Nerve Tonic, the latter part of last Trlny, I have not had any gyrsytoms of fits, and, flruily believe that I am curel. Icaanevr -tank you enough for yoar kindness to me. It la a wonderful medicine. M18S LID

IA GltASl.

CAPAC^flrh., Oct. S, 1830.

My wife at times became atich nervotis spells that she could not bo kept in bed, and all

v»|

lkw

I (iLiIM this mod This remedy ha* 1* Pastor Koenljt.of F« La now prepared node

t%

was just thinking how our little cvoup

of three generations so strongly demonstrates and illustrates my theory of the transmission of health from mother to child, aud what can be more striking than the fact that my vigorous health is reproduced in your darling children."

The uormnl life, well-being, and happiness of mankind depeud upon the physical health and perfection of Woman. Thousands of women in all parts of the civilized world cherish grateful re*merabrance of the Vegetable Compound, and daily bless its discoverer.

LYDIA E.PEM&HAM'S

Is the only POSITIVE Cure and Legitimate Remedy O IN POUND for the peculiar weaknesses and ailments of women.

lor tne pecunar weajenesses ann ailments oi women. It cures the worst forms of Female Complaints, that Bearing-down Feeling, Weak Back, Falling and Displacement of the Womb, Inflammation, Ovarian Troubles, ami all Organic .Diseases of the Uterus or Womb, and is invaluable to the Change of lJfo. Dissolves and expels Tumors from the Uterus at an early stage, ami checks any tendenev to Cancerous Ilutnor. Subdues Faintness, Excitability, Nervous Prostration, Exhaustion. Cancerous Ilutnor. ^uuuuvs uAnausuuu, and strengthens and tones the Stomach. Cures Headache. General Debility, Indigestion, etc., and invigorates the whole system. For the cure of Kidney Conipluiuts' of either sex, the Compound h»a no rival.

All Druggists sell it as a Htnmlard article, or sent by mail, in form of Pills or Lozenges, on receipt of $1.00. LYDIA E. PINKHAM MED. CO., LYNN, MASS.

An illustrated book, entitled Guide to Health and Etiquette," by Lydla E. Plnkham, Is of great value to ladies. We will present a copy to anyone addressing us with two 2-cent stamps,

ITTLE

PILLS.

Il­

eal treatment proved without offset. Sinco ehe aBed pastor Kocniffs Nerve Tonic she haft had no sp«lla and is healthier than ever, therefore I cot-aider myseit under obligation express my gratitude to yoo.<p></p>FRFf™

CHB1SX. 6C—OE NEjIAN.

arrauttiae to you*

can also obtain

medicine free of charge. bM wropawd 'ort Warne, Ind, since JfRtt aao rbla direction or tbe

KOEN1C MED. CO., Chicago, 111. gold by Druggists st 61 pmrBottie. 6te8S XargO Size. 81.78. 6 Bottle* for 99.

BEA MAN

APOLLO WAS A PERFECT MAN.

if KlftCT W FOR* !~MATetflfSS II *A« 1 .. ^2% Boiaxtaw U* axrclenu

1

lot

MaUvsit sec !&*i

/¥i/ pscr boT**t btrtb fll'Sr-L. Ja *T«rr

KA* cm t» SntOHO

jiM

i8$Sfr:

sadvXaOftOtTSiasHmjttets.

YQUN9 MEN OR OLD, nf«ia| (rw KMOM M*

bilitt"

keod.

say ifiiona

—.

tt* V6SX.S

XTtALSTt at

SU8 HEW BOOK KSfiifW!

lery. It is cerUUnly one of tbe best t* twit stsrotsxt nMmdi

STMHQ

atSY,tk» Srti* ant Zvmr of Vtitom*. We claim by years of practta* by ©or method* a anltorm '•KCXOPOLT or SUCCESS" in treating ail W«*k»«i**asi5

JdiicttesaeflCtfi. TWrttnM* Iroto 50 States and 1- 'tori

fret, WW. -i. p-**

Oct. ERIE EOICAL CO. BUFFALO, N.Y.

CURE

Siok Heartache and relievo all tbo troubles inof* Cent to a bilious stato of tho systom. such 08 DizzlnesB, Nausea, Drowsiness. Distress after, eating, Pain in tho Bide, &o. Whilo their most remarkable success has boen Bhown in vv. -.ag

SICK

Hoaflacho, yet Carter's Littlo Livor Pills at* equally valuable In Constipation, curing and pre* vonting this annoying complaint, while thovalso correct all disorders or tho stomach stimulate tho Xivcr and reguiivto tho bowels. Eronif they only curod

Acliethey would be almostprlcclcss to those wnl 6ufror from this distressing complaint but fortn* mtoly their goodnoss docs notend hore.and thoss who once try them will find these little pills vala* able In so many ways that they will not bo wit. ling to do without thom. But after ail tick head

ACHE

'le tho bane of so many lives that heroin \rfcer« tromake our great boast. Our pills cure it whlltt others do not.

Carter's Little Liver Pills aro very small and votf oosy to t&ko. Ono or two pills xoako a aoso. I'hoy are strictly

vegetables

and do not (jripo or

purge, but by their gentle r.cUon ploasoall who nsethem. In vials at 25 conts live for $1. Soul by druggists everywhoro, cr sunt by ma'L

CARTER N3EDS01NE CO., New York.

SHALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE

4381

i*) MEN Si™ HAPPY & IK MEN who use HEALTH T1D-BITW refrain* strength dream and dribbling tosses cense: L. and body recuperates: good "health results, mall, |1. Sample box. lOcts, Ohio Chemical IT6 A 177 sycamopi Street. Cincinnati, O.

ABSOLUTELY

No Change of Cars

FROM

ST. LOUIS, TERRE HAUTE INDIANAPOLIS, CINCINNATI,

DAYTON, SFE.INGFIELD,

_TO_„

New York, Boston

J&.2STJD THE BAST VIA THE POPULAR

TV Lake Shore and Dig Hr

New York Central

5

EbOTXTES. -THE-

Shortest & Quickest Line

BETWEEN

EAST WEST

All traina arrive Sixth Street Depot.

tho

and Depart from

Berths in Sleeping Cars

SBCTTBKDIHKOUOH TO

i,j

NEW Y0RK_& BOSTON, E.E. SOUTH, Gen. Agt,

|R0F. DIEFFENBACH'S PROTAGON CAPSULES, Sure Core for "Weak Men, as proredbr reports of leadinicphT* \slcians. State age in orderly. iPrice.*H- Catalytic Free,

1

., 710 WABASH AVENUE

A g% A safe end speedy Kg la cure tor Oleet, IX Ntrlcture and all annaturaldlscbarses. Price®®. iP.EEK SPECIFIC niTiS •and Aktn Hcrpf-

afaac »orem ant»rphliuir Aff«*ctlon»,»rlthostmereanr. Vnee,*«. Carder Xr»»sn

THE PERU DRUS CHEMICAL CO,

mfSStreet, XUWATCSE, WIS

I

W

mmwi.

Act oa mw print. tegtilt*- "be ama t«'-' ntrea. iJ«. Mar tpeedily cure bS:.'torpid liv sxd cok tlon.

icb •he

30, .1«« n.

Sr. eet,

estedil 5o doses, 5U3 ots. Sjunplee free at flraas/isw, Br. Iti €«-, Elkfiart, lat

iaiip

W