Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 19, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 October 1892 — Page 7

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ToiKirg-o tb« bmels dots not malio then pcffa 5 :*.v bat leaves tbera in worn «oullt!on tliao before. Tiio liver is the ibe seat of trouble* and

THE BEMEBT mwnf act on ft. TniVa 1.1 vex* Pills ac* «lirccily on £ltatorg-&n, causing- a free flow of bile, TrJtiiotit wbtfJi, tao l»w« •«1» are alvajm constipated. JPricc,

S3e.

Sold Everywhere.

Office, 140 to 144 Washington St,, ff. Y.

HOFFMAN'S HARMLESS HEADACHE POWDERS are tticretttUorperslitoatitiuly and experimenting by an expert cfxraJm, tatted ia the noil w* fire c&ie, and rabmitted to th* lilfrh#*t neatest authority. en* donted and pronounced per foot|p harmlM*. T«mo4i now *i teat to ihtU rlrtuM, ud dobs imcd tuOer from HeadachcS iticy will dm JlotZman'a row* der*. A TRIAL WILL CONVINCE.

We will Bend you the marvelous F*ench Preparation CALTH08 free, nnd a legal guarantee that CALTHOS will Restore 70ar Ilealtli, NlmigDt and Tlcor.

Use it and pay if satisfied, Addreas VON MOHLCO., Sole Aatrrleaa Oiehutl, Ohio.

Plfa»» mention thin paprr-

J)R. G. W. LOOMIS,

DE3STTIST.

:2040 north 9th st. Terro Haute, Ind. 1 square from Elcctric Car Line.

JACOB D. EAltLY, LAWYER Room 1, Beach Block, Sixth and Main streets

0. JENKINS, M. D.

w.

"OMce, 1-1 Houth Seventh Street, telephone, 40. residence, 454 north Fifth Htreet,telephone 178. Oltlco hours: 0 a. 111. 2 to 4 p. 111.: 7 to 8 p. m. At residence until until 8 a. m., 12 to 1 p. rn., lo (I p. in.

A RTIFIOIAL TEETH. J-A- I)K, F. 0. BLEDSOE—DJiNTIST. With 80 years practice In dentistry, I can rauiiranteo flint-Class work. Special pains taken In mending old plates, 'l'ecth extract•ed without pain.

MK7% Main street, near Nlnlli.

JpELSENTHAL, A. B.

Justice of the Pcaco tmtl Attorney at Law,

^26 south 8rd street. Terre Haute, Ind.

DE

L. H. BARTHOLOMEW,

DENTIST.

'Removed to 071 Main st. Torre Haute, Ind

H. GAIIRETT, Custom Harness Maker. Track Work and Repairing a Specialty. U3 Houthj7t.li. roar P.J. Kaufman's .Grocery

JSAAC BALL,

FUNERAL DIRECTOR.

Cor. Third and Cherry 8ta., Terre Haute, Ind. Is prepared to execute all orders In his Use with neatuoss and dispute)

JSSok* balm lug HpoolHlty,

^jSq"lSBIT & MoMINN,

UNDERTAKERS,

lOCt NORTH FOURTH STREET, All calls will receive the ino«t careful at1 tuntlon. Open day and night.

TMl. R. W. VANYALZAH,

JLv Successor to

KIHHAimsON

A VAN VALZAli,

JDjEJSTTIST.

i)jt\oo—Woutliwest corner Fifth and V.&h. Street*, over .National Btato BHUR {cnwmc# on Ki fth street.

J.NUUKNT. T. M. 1JAUttE'lT.

£J*UGENT A CO.,

PLtJMBIJNG ami GAS FITTING

A dealer hi

Gas Fixtures, CHobea and Engineer'! Supplies. 00S Ohio Htreet. Terr® Hnuto, IniJ

TTOTEL IUOHMOND JLJL

EUROPEAN.

E. A. FROST, Propr.

Formerly manager Sherwood House, Evansvllle, Intl., late Maugr. Hotel Grace, Chicago. Hnom» ific,|tiOO, 81,80 Per Day.

Steam Heat, Centrally Located, two blocks from 1*. O. and Auditorium, opp. the ue* Lester Building. N, \V. Cor State and Vanlluretv—CHICAGO

Established 1881. Incorporated 18S8

QLIFT A WILLIAMS CO.,

Successors to Cllft, Williams S Co. .J. H. Wii^JAsre, President. J. M. Curt, Soo'y and Tre*#.

MAiritrAcrriRKKS or

Sash, Doors, Blinds, etc.

A.ND DRAUtSS lit

UMBER, LA TH, SHINGLE£

GLASS, PAINTS, OILS

AND BUILDERS' HARDWARE. Mulberry street, oor&er 9tb.

\|y

~'r

w-

638WABASK.A\/E.

THE WORK OF THE

ir

In cleaning and coloring Ladies' and Gentlemen1!) Wear, cannot be *tirp«s*ed in auy city in the country. Forty-five y^ars* practical experience in the busin«»s nbould bo sufficient guarantee. Satisfaction given in all branchoa of the busineas.

H. F. REINERS,

686 Main Street

THEY'EE OUT OF SIGHT.

How New York Women Describe Their Dainty Underwear.

What Do Too Dress JTor?Partin Stevens, Mrs. Leslie and Paui®a llae Hall—A. Neat Combination |v Salt of Silk and Wool.

r|Jif

ICOPTB1GHT, 1832.1

Paris is no longer the home of the •daintiest, most luxurious and the most Ierfectly developed worshiper of fashion. She has come to New York and taken up her abode in our midst, whence her edict will go forth to the uttermost parts of the land.

It is for her, rather than for all the doctors of Gotham, to

sc,j

whether we

shall shiver in silks or shudder in flannels, and I have prepared a "symposium" of her views (the politicians would call it "taking1 a straw.") You "may judge for yourself whose fashion you will follow, or whether you will inaugurate your own particular fad. At

1

ij

DR. EMILY THINKS EEFORM IS IN THE AXR.

any rate, don't fail to note the nice discriminations here. Mrs. Leslie believes in feminine independence and individual preferences. "Let me show you an idea of my own carried into execution," said she, tossing aside the marvels of her new Parisian outfit and drawing forth a practical looking combination garment. "This is what I wear in cold weather. It is woven in part silk and part finest wool to tho waist, and after that it is all silk, it is low necked and shortsleeved, because I dress quite decollette in the evening. "Now, here's my favorite silk skirt lined to the knee with flannel and quilted from tho knee down. Anything warm about the waist is nonsense.- Do I approve of the Jenness-Miller garments? Oh, they are horribly stiff: silk is not nice either. "Wash silk garments are by no means the daintiest, most comfortable or most healthful a woman can wear. You will find that the most correct women will wear lawns and cambrics for everything but

sliirt3.

I wear them all tho year,

and when I have to I put on my idea in silk and wool. I don't liko it, but since I don't want to grow old I can't afford to shiver. Now, I am going to tell you that you must be healthfully dressed in winter'before you can be comfortable and pretty."

Dr. Emily has given the subject of underwear her attention from a standpoint quite distant from those occupied by our fair actresses and litterateurs. She has gone into it scientifically rather than artistically, and her conversation with me was flannclly instead of flimsy. My first question was about healthful underwear. "I think it should be of flannei in winter," she said, without hesitation, "and it must be both light and warm and of excellent quality of wool. It should carefully cover tho body with an even waraith from neck to ankles." "But wh.vfc shall a woman do when hor gown must be decollete?" "Well, it's imprudent, at best but if she will bo foolish enough to change her underwear she must take extra precaution against cold." "What garment now on the market do you consider the best?" "Dr. Jaeger's sanitary garment. It is light, warm and complete. There is another good idea in tho union garment worn over black silk tights. That is what I wear, without any skirt at all, yon understand. You can't guess how comfortable it is." "Comfortable, maybe, but certainly neither pretty nor becoming. I judge." "I can't see what particular difference that makes. I think it is more im-

PAtTLINK 11A1X WKABS TIGHTS OFF THE STAGK.

portant to hare well distributed warmth over your body than to have it all around your waist and hips, with firms and shoulders bared becomingly. There certainly ought to be a revolution in dress and winter underwear. How many women dress as warmly as I dot And yet I wear only two garments and neither of these is a skirt.

Such radical common sense quite took my breath away. Apropos, hare you noticed that a woman invariably aitribtites any such failure to some cause impalpable?

Mrs. Stevens is described as dressing with a perfect taste and an adaptability to the most ultra fashion and th« most bitter east wind. It is the tendency to wear lighter, thinner and more compact underwear each winter, and Mrs. Stevens, with other leaders of fashion, i*. it is needless to say, wearing light, thin and compact undergarmeats. Yet so beautifully woven wad so fine ia texture are they that the wearers ire quite as warm as they could ba in

fuzzy, camphor permeated woolen things which careful dames used to unpack at the first cool breath of winter.

Mrs. Stevens dresses with a light, smooth, yielding warmth, produced by three, or at most, four undergarments.

First, the union suit which, by the way, is wonderfully popular, and with more reasons for it than many crazes can boast. Then come the silk tights, -of quality so fine and clinging that the entire form is fitted without a disturbing fold. Of course the petticoats are of silk—one short, the other long.

Mrs. Stevens does not wear wash silk chemises. These are not considered quite the thing now. Her substitute is the odd, fanciful Bolen waist, or the practical silk jersey worn especially by driving women for the warmth in its long sleeves. She wears much lawn and many lace trimmed cambrics. With tights and the union garment to furnish warmth. Fancy may have her way with the further costuming of the fashionable person.

Pauline llall wers tights all tne time. Of? the starp she calls them "equestriennes," which is only another name for one garment 1 hatve already twicei

This consensus of opinions is bringing us to practical issues, isn't it? And I really believe it will benefit the public to know how feasible it is to clothe one's self comfortably, beautifully and becomingly.

But to return tp Pauline. V» .T'fi

I had meant to auk her what she thought of silk chemises—I'm interested in finding women differ so radically about it—but I forgot to, because Miss Hall began telling me of "Puritania's" struggle with a censorious press. But the play is succeeding so

riQIITg AND

ITNldff SUITS, PETTICOAT.'

TERRE HAUTE SlTTJRDAT EVENING MAIL,

J'l

She doesn't dress so very differently from Dr. Emily—that is on general principles of underwear but she dons her garments with a view to a certain taut trimness of fit which keeps smooth the pretty lines of embonpoint.

When "I questioned her she said she didn't \cnow whether she dressed like anybody else or not. "I wear the equestrienne—a silk thing, more like tights that any other comparison I can think of. It is low necked, short sleeved, and it comes to. my knees. Then with my silk skirt on I'm ready for winter, and I can be warm, 'too, if I wear a heavy fur coat," added "Puritania'ft" star. 'From linen to silk is my only concession to winter. People in my profession must be recklesa That's the only way to be careful^' Do I ever wear flannel? No, mercy no. The touch of it is horrid."

VEBSUS THIS

well that the actress ought to keep warm with the praise she receives—of coursc aided by her equestriennes.

Delia Fox, whom I saw in her jaunty yachting costume behind the scenes of tho Broadway theater, gave me views from an actress' standpoint, She spoke with a laughing vigor, aiyl she defied hygienic principles of seasonable underclothing.' "Do I think women should wear flannel garments in winter? Well, that might do for some women, but I can't bother that way, don't you see? vlt wouldn't be safo to wear—what do you call those dreadful things,

4Jen-

ness Miller,' isn't it?—all day, and then expose myself during the evening, when must change my costume so often. There is nothing like silk, I think. It's sweller than anything else you buy, a.nd cooler and lighter. Those dainty little 'Marguerites' in white or tinted silks I just dote on, and 1 wear them all the year round." When I asked if she were not afraid of catching cold, and harming her voice with carelessness. she laughingly retorted: "I don't believe in the neck handkerchief idea. By and by you get up to your ears in wraps, and then where are you? No, my undergarments are all silk and all low necked. Then when I put on an evening dress I bathe my neck in some kind of spirits, and am perfectly safe. If a woman is dressed becomingly she's sure to feel comfortable, and if she's both pretty and comfortable she can't help being healthful." Then the stage manager spoke to Delia, and she hurried away, nodding brightly, and saying "Did I tell yon everything you wanted to know?" $

ThoaghtleMneM. ||§g fi|

Farmer Simpson was an exceedingly mild-naturcd man, and would find excuses for the shortcomings of his neighbors, for the faults of his horses and, in fact, for every unpleasant thing that came in his way. He purchased a cow, and had great difficulty in keeping her in the pasture, "She's kind of a rovin* critter, but she means well," he said, after a walk of several miles $n pursuit of her.

One morning he was milking the oow, when she began to kick violently, upset the stool, sent the pail flying1, and all the milk was spilled.

The farmer got up, and, contemplating the ruin, said gravely to a witness of the disaster: "Well, now, that's the worst fault this cow has."

Then after "&bment*s meditation, feeling that perhaps he had been unnecessarily severe, he added: "That is, & you can call it a fault maybe it's only thoughtlessness."

THE HEALTH WOMAN.

THE BLOND ASKED ABOUT HER. AND THE BRUNETTE TOLD HER/fr1?

If

Then They Talked About Other Things. Thu Blond Explained All About Good Society and* Won the Undying1 Gratitude of the IJrunett

It was in a very positive tone that the brunette said" to the blond, "I saw a health woman yesterday."

And the blond asked in a surprised way, "What is a health woman?" With an air of knowing a great deal the brunette informed her. "A health woman is a woman who goes without stays because they are unhealthy, who wears divided things and not silk petticoats, who disapproves of bangs, who eats all sorts of nasty messes made of gritty things, and who doesn't believe that her thoughts can be lofty unless her heels are low." "Oh, bother," said the blond, "that is what the London street boy calls 'Tommy rot.' That isn't a nice slang phrase, but it applies to just such idiots. They like to talk about our grandmothers being healthy, and yet, according to all accounts, our grandmothers went with their necks bare and in satin slippers when our streets were not half as good as they are now. And that is not sayinK much. The general woman, my dear, is very sensibly dressed she doesn't approve of the hourlass waist, for she knows that stamps her either as an idiot or a lady whose reputation is undoubted. She wears a properly made corset, which shapes itself 'to her figure and is a thousand times more sensible and more comfortable than the hideous combination of muslin and bones that the health people try to foist on her. "She knows if she laces that her nose will get red, and she is not going

£0

be such

a goose as to bring this calamity on herself. As for the combination undergarments they are so diabolically awftfl to get into that they would ruin the temper of an angel. They are positively unbeautiful, very apt to cut you on the shoulders and certainly to be avoided. Skirts area sensible length today, and no woman who is a smart dresser wears anything- but a medium heel on the street, and she doesn't permit herself to make ungraceful movements by wearing tight fitting sleeves.

Of course her petticoat hangs from her hips—that's what the Lord made them broad for. He never intended her to wear suspenders if he had he wduld have made her the shape of a man. A woman I know, who never has a cold, who escaped the grip, and who is certainly healthy and wise, told me exactly how she dressed in winter. She keeps her rooms at summer heat her underwear consists of a silk vest, a pair of lawn drawers, long silk stockings, a very light weight flannel skirt, a silk skirt and then her stays. She never wears a very heavy gown, but when she goes out into the cold air she puts on a fur coat that is like that famous one of Balzac's Seraphia— warm to the soul.' You know, really, we women don't want our dresses reformed they are quite sensible enough. What we want to do is to make our belongings suit our surroundings, and not sit in a hot room with a thick frock on and then put on a thin coat to go out into the cold air. You see, we want to exercise the small amount of common sense that we have, and convince the world at large that we are not lacking in gray matter." "It is so nice," said the brunette, "to know you, because you always explain things. But 1 will tell you something funny I saw the other day. The very first thing that the new rich wants is a crest, and I have been watching those on the freshest carriages. On a brougham that is a little too smart, which goes up the avenue every afternoon, is a ship in full sail, while above it is a cock crowing and the motto underneath in French is, 'All or nothing.1" "T^t *s funiiyi"

said

probably means

the blond. "It

th°

person who p&ys

for it is cock of the WAlk, and that the young woman who rides signifies by the ship her desire to go in the swim." "Then," said the brunette, "there is still another on? it shows three steps with a cross laid upon them, and then in French is, 'Audacitj', audacity and again audacity.' I can't understand, though, what the cross has to do with it." "Oh, that is easy enough to understand," said the blond. "It means that the audacity, in the shape of the bank book, will try to ascend the steps that lead to the Patriarch's ball, but that there is across in the way in the form of one or two gentlewomen, who believe that good society is not that which is governed by money." "Well," asked the brunette, "what is good society?" "Good society," answered the blond, "is where you and I are, but to go a little further, it is that society where one earns one's title of gentlewoman not only by birth, but by good manners." "Yes," said the brunette, "and it is that society where to understand Greek is of small importance, and to thoroughly comprehend courtesy in all its laws is a necessity." "It is that-society," added the blond, "where men are respectful, where off color stories are not told, and where women, once discovered to be untruthful,^deceitful and ill-bred, are ostracized." "True," answered the brunette, "it is that society which, while it recognizes the value of the conventionalities, is yet sufficiently strong to be occasionally guided by the dictates of the heart, and it does not of necessity follow a leader, as sheep da" "Then," thought out the blond, "good society is that which can give a dinner or have its daughter introduced without writing notices to the newspaper, which believes that the family in its happiness is of more importance than the world at large should know the gowns in your closet or the money in your bank. To sum it all up, good society has for its cornerstone consideration, and good society cannot exist without this, for it means the care as to other people's feelings and a general kindliness all around." j5 "You do know snch a lot," admiringly spoke the brunette. "Yes," L(l the blond, "I do."

And after this frank confession of her intelligence Hhe went and drank fonr cups of strong tea and ate two pieces of plum cake, claiming that both the ten and the cake fed her brain.—New York Sun.

Hereford's Acid Phosphate. Beware »f imitatioi»

farTorpid Liter am Dr. Xtitt' Pitt*.

Chamberlain* Kje and Sktu Ointment A certain enr«» for Chronic isme E)es, Tetter. Salt Rheum, Scald Ufad. Old Chronic Sores. Fever Sorfs Eczema, Itch, Prairie Scratches, Sore Nippies and Piles. It is cooling and soot hing. Hundreds of cases have been cured by it after all oiher treatment had failed- It is put up to 25 and 50 cent boxes. For sale by druggists.

Necessary Training.

With nvithers lies the remedy in the training o1 their daughters, whether the are the children of millionaires or of the humblest clerk in a dingy office, to know how to manage their own homes from the culinary department up to perhaps the more congenial but no more important part of entertaining right royally and performing the part of hostess with the grace that practice alone brings.

How can a man expect a girl whom he marries right out of school to know how to go into the kitchen, if necessity demands it, and with her own hands prepare a meal! The young wife has never been trained in domestic arts, though she may be accomplished to the last degree. It is essentially material and unromantic, we know, but a man appreciates much more a woman who can grill a steak until it is just right, make puffy biscuit that melt in his mouth and pour out a cup of coffee of her own mak ing as clear as amber than one who can trill French chansons or quote poetry by the yard, yet who does not know even how to prepare apiece of toast. The cooking schools are Philadelphia .gp$ -iisi

Women as Instrumentalists. In small things as well as in great the steady progress of our sex is observable. Attention has lately been called to the decline of the old fashioned prejudice that limited the feminine study of instrumental music to one or two instruments. Even the violin was once frowned upon as "unbecoming," and the pianoforte, the lineal descendant of the old harpsichord, was held to be the only "ladylike" musical instrument. Nowadays this limitation has almost entirely disappeared, and girls are permitted to take up the study of any in strument that pleases them. I am afraid I have still enough of the "Old Adam" left in me to hope that none of them will de vote themselves to the trombone o? the ophicleide.

I say this at the risk of being voted con ventional and old fashioned, but somehow or other I cannot quite reconcile myself to puffed out feminine cheeks and red femi nine faces, even when produced in the combined causes of art and emancipation! —Lady's Pictorial.

Ms Housekeeping Schools. Housekeeping schools seem to flourish more generally on the other side of the sea than with us. The Swedish schools may be called the pioneers, one of thesesupporting a restaurant for about

For Torpid Liver ase Or. Miles' Pills.

r:: doctor

ENGLISH i,»

(REMEDY!

•will stop a Cough in one night, check a. Cold in a day* and CtJBEjj Consumption if taken in time, •IF THE LITTLE ONES HAVE

WHOOPING COUGH OR CROUP Use it Promptly.:

YOUNG, OLD and MIDDLE AGED MEN CURED.*

ATHLETES, BICYCLI8T8, HORSEMEN,

R. R. WEN,

A protection to CenoratiireOrKans. For sale toy druggists.

TAKE NO OTHER.

three

3

100

people. In

France this branch of study is to a degree controlled by the state, and the aim is to teach girls a self supporting occupation. London lias ninety-four model kitchens, attended by nearly

20,000

pupils, who pre­

pare food for sale. Germany has the greatest number of these schools, with practical courses, including washing, ironing, cooking, the cleaning of rooms, etc.

Catarrh in the Head'

Is undoubtedly a disease of the blood, and as such only a reliable blood purifier can effect a perfect cure. Hood's Sarsaparllla is tho best blood-purlfler, and it has cured many very severe cases of catarrh. It gives an appetite and builds up the whole system.

Hood's Pills act especially upon the liver rouslnc it- from torpidity to Its natural duties, cure constipation and asslBt digestion.

Miles' Nerve and Liver Pills. Act on a new] stomach

Catarrh Care.

A clergvman, after years of suffering from that loathsome disease Catarrh, and vainly trying every Jtnown remedy, at last found a prescription which completely cured and saved him from death. Any sufferer from this dreadful disease sending a self-addressed stamped envelope toProf. J. A. Lawrence, 88 Warren street, New York, receive th$ 'recif6 free of charge.

pfsfp

MtwMWWifti* 7

are the strongest and best

Chase's

Plush Lap Robes

are the standard. The plush will not shed. All robes have the name Chase either woven in the binding or sewed on the corner

FIRST-CLASS DEALERS WILL SELL NO OTHERS.

L. C. CHASE & CO., Boston, Mass.

HUMPHREYS* VETERINARY SPECIFICS

For Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Hogs^ AND POULTRY. ffOOPage Book en Treatment of Animals and Chart scut Free. curbs 5 Fevers,Congestions,

i.K.—Diseases

Mwithin

liver A

anew principle—regulatl ng the 11 and bowels throtiph the nerves.

new discovery. Dr. Miles' Pills speedily cure biliousness, bad taste, torpid liver, piles, constipation. Unequaled for men, women and children. Smallest, mildest, surest! 50 doses, 25 cts. Samples Free at all druggists.

F0RTHF, CUBE DF

'VITALLY WEAR).: DUtlnef. of iltiijrl «ovcr4 EXCK88K8 In middle Ufa,ol

A 25 cent* bottle may save their lives. Ask your drug-a gist for ft. it Tastes &001.S

I Dr. Acker's English Pills-

CURB CONSTIPATION. Small, nlcacant, fuTorUe with the W. H. HOOKEIt & CO., 4# Wert Broadway, V.

T.

iHlllfHIIIIHtHMItaMMII •tMMHIMIIItMll

Inflammation

A.A.i Spinal Meningitis, Milk Fevor. 11.B.—Strains, Lameness, Klieumatlsafe C.C.—Distemper, Nasal Discharges. D.D.—Hots or Grubs, Worms. E.E.—Conalis, Heave*, Pneumonia* F.F.«-Colic or Gripes, Bellyacho. G.G.—Miscarriage, Hemorrhages. H.H.—Urinary and Kidney Diseases*

.I.—Eruptive Diseases, Manare. ol* Digestion, Paralysis* Single Bottle (over SO doses), .6# Stable Case, with Speclflos, Manual,

Veterinary Ouro Oil and Hedlc&tor, 87.00^ Jar Veterinary Cure OIK, 1.0# Sold by Druggists or Sent Prepaid anywhers and in any quantity on Heoolpt of Price.

HUMPHREYS' MEDICINE CO., Ooraer William and John Sis., Now York.

WILL 0. ROOD'S MAQIO SCALE tho boat most perfect 8lmplost Liuilos' Tailoring System In uso. Oicr 120,0008»ki

LADIES!

Cuts all garments worn byLadlosand Children (Including undergarments and nloovos) to Ht the form per* fectly notrylngonorrctlttlng. Ennlly learned.

niVC ON TRIAL. S«ml UK hl« nilTrrlNrmrot UA I 5 S3 itml ht will wntl rou tli« 11A0IC 8CAI.K and INSTRUCTION ItOOK, and I Mutt «ttl*niil jrno na return It 30 ilitjn itnd we il! repycrj cent of rmr

A0KNT8 WAMTKD. Ilf^ron". (riven. Circular* trv. MAQIC SCAt.E CO., OHICACO, IIX'S*

PACKAGE

PROEHARRIS1

PASTILLES

WEAK MEN

$u$

o^vV

Made by to eloio application la iour« tncntnj trslnor fief 8Kxr»r. nfo.oi* vl*httt ooiuraotrit In *onUu

WAV IICU A"K VICTIMS TO 2KriV0IJ8 DklllUT* ncflfv JflClV EXHAUSTION, WXSTIlUt jfKAKMfCftS, Iff* YOLUSTAn* LOSSES wllh KAttliY llKtUY ta V0UK0 «nd Hlt»

LB AGKUi Iftek of vim, vigor, nnd ilrcngth,*ftlJrexQAlorfftfi» lmt*frcd and wcakonod prematurely Id Approaching old ttfe

WHEN SAY CURE

Said by all tml Druggltu.

POSITIVE

A BOON TO MEN

Soffarloif frorathe fotllaiiofyooii. Apftaltivooar* for Y*rte»cel« jtraiaffod rcinal, Lett Manhood, Iiopot«ney ud Kootamal Eatfaalees wilbeat the aid of dnsca. Oar Sufp«eaary 1* «il«r«ed by phytic! as, at?* *»t!y W«Mc«4 D. 1 pMMl*. MM Pee. KOtr JL The beat, caifwrt, elcaMat, ebeapcat and wflAUMrtmaU* moody on UMS»(T«t. Afford* abaelK4K*Uef eaxlly tpalMt IsteatnlMM to the tMitC|M«nu eultt la hot weather, prevent* »»dd*a Jar or atrala. Price, $3.00 by nail, or by otpreaa C. O. D.. wlli prfrlteca •f«x•alMtlea. Cltcnlara and (nforatatlMi Im. 8*od fit tftrt Mini fwiwyitfitiflffliifl Trtioianlfl-ffiTn ft mini

VD

PA 20 Buhl Block,

troM

Of P^KMANKNT I

In man thonmnd euoj trontod and cured in cant twolvovear* A« evidence of our faith In Prof. Harrirf SOLUBLE MEDICATED PASTILLES

TPIAI offer eight day* trial AHSOMJTKLY fKS^. men, young or old, aafTerlng from tbl» prevalent trouble thould tend their odd rem go we can ftirnUll question* to be aniwtrcd, that we may know tho true conditio® of caeh emo and prepare medlelne to effect a prompt carat iiocitcd In New York (lifter 12 ysar* at St. Loulu), wa offer nil a chance to be cured ny the celebrated Paatllla Treatment. THE HARRI8 REMEDY CO., Mfe. Chemists. fi9 BEEKMAN STREET. NEW YORK.

CSTAgQ 1876. INCOPPD I6»0 CAPITAL DS5.00&

remedies ..

jnre tho health or interfere with one's business or pleasure. It builds np and improves the general itealth,clears thenkln and bcantlflostho com plosion. No wrinkles or llabblncHe follow this treatment. Endorsed by physicians and leading society ladles. PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL CONFIDENTIAL. llarmleM. Ho Starring. Send 6 cent* In «tansp» fur pnrtlcalm to

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