Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 21, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 November 1892 — Page 3

B£PW

OR. MILES

NEW

HEART

fAKC

THE NEXT MORNINO I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER. Mr doctor nays it act* gently on the stomach, lire* ana kidney*, and isa pleasant laxative. Thl* drink Is made from tmrba, awl is prepared for use as easily as tea. It Is called

LAKE'S MEDICINE

All druggists sell it at 50c. and $1.00 per package. Boy one to-day. Lane's Family Medicine moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy, this fa necessary.

"AlfAKESIS gives instac

tx-iksf

and is an Inta.l'.N'

Cure far Piles. PriceSL. if Dru^ipsu5 or mail. Sarnprfree. AcWrfcW'ANA IL&ZaUox M&, New Yort cat

HOTEL GLENHAM,

Fifth ave., between MTh\AT

21»t and 22nd Htreets,

YORK

vv 1

El'KOPKAN PX.AN Central to all point/ of interest, principal stores and places amuftemeoU Deairtible single room, $1*00.

N. 1\ BARKY, Proprietor.

Here is a Good Thing for You

A HAN, OR WOMAN,

of Intelligence and quick-witted enough to know "(JOOI) THING" at sight, but who ban 1 jQftt the Most Precious Possession on Earth, vlr. CJOOl) HEALTH, WILL NOT require a 8K€0N I) TELLING to be induced become a purchaser of

I)K. GREGG'S ELECTRIC Belts and Appliances.

Do you know \vhy7 Bccauso it is plain to Keen that the TRUTH -NCE TOLD Js tK5 enough. Tho HurprlHlng Promptness with which all classcH of people respond to our announcement*, and the rapidly increasing de maud for Dr. Gregg's Goods wherever Intro filvoly

ducod, conclusively prove that true modestj Is always recognized and the quality of merit takes cant of Itself. Metaphorically our state mcnt Is the Button--the Public Press It, and

DR. GREGG'S ELECTRIC SPECIALTIES

"DO THE REST."

The extent, of Pro-cure on the button and the nucccsh of Dr. G'egg's Electric Goods it "Doing: tho Heat," is more satisfactorllj shown In the marvelous growth of our bus! ness the past tSO days.

Repeated and Increasing demands for THI' OK EGG KI,li( TKIC "FOOT WARMER" arcoming In from all parts of the country with profuse acknowledgements that so much comfort for $1.00 (the price) was like buying Gold Dollars for ten cents

The Dellcat.- Organ loin »f Woman subject*her to many pee-uilar aliments and uufortu nate misery. The extroin- sensitiveness I her Nervous System very frequently requires arll!l'lal stimulus. TlmOrejjjr tOleefrle, Hel lid iiher Appliances St'IVl'l.Y THIS, a o'lilng else can.

The ui^ifed Constitution or Hun, Whor oin'e Broken, becomes Pitiable in the extreme, from which there Is absolutely M» exciipe without assistance. I'llO GUEG El kl of It KM K11 ES.

Klecirlc Hells and Appliances, in casesof Milsilnd, have honestly won their Tltloof KlNU KKMKDIEH.

Rheumatism Is conquered, sufTerors from Obesity arespcedllv relieved, Dropsy qulc-kl yields,'spinal dltilcullles and Paralysis dls Appear, and many other diseases of Men and Women are permanently cured, fully descrlb ed in complete catalogue for tic, or elaborate circular free. We gunrantcc to forfeit twice the price of any of Dr. Gregg's Goods found to be not genuine. Wo make an elegant Itttie iM.oo Ki»ot ric Belt, which Issoiilng very rapidly and which we will take in exchange for anv Higher Power llolt (except $5 Bolt) ami credit S ton the price of now order. Remember the Eleotrlc "Foot Warmers" are *1 a palr, worth $10. Address

The UElectric Cure Co..

!fl()l Inter Ocean Building, Chicago, 111. Mention this jrtiper.

You -vFAT PEOPLE^can get

1

SPEEDY LASTING (can stay]

thin, RESULTS, IKTKBKTTK thin. BrKCirtG 00. Booton, Mm

CURE. raKB BOOK

DrvftfUlii

HEART DISEASE!

St

VTtsTtcs show thst one In

rot'H

has a weak

or diseased Heart. Tho tlrst symptoms are short torenth, iiprrMlon, fluttfrlnit, IVilnt and hnncr*»|eJt».|»nln In •Idc.lhtBtmotlirrlnj, •wollrn nnklpa, lr«it»y (ami death.) for which 1»R. MII.KS' XK\V 1IKAKT RR Isa marvelous remedy. "I have been troubled with heart disease for years, my left pulse was very weak, could at times scarcely feel It, tho smallest excitement would always weaken ray nerves nnd heart and a fear of impending death standi me In the face for hours. 1)K. MU.F,.V JiERVIXK nud

K\V IIF..VKT CI HE

Is the onlv medicine that has proved of any benefit and cored wo.-L M. Dyer, Cloverdale, Md. l»r. Mllo' I-lvor rilt» area suro remedy for

BIIIDUUIFM

and Torpid l.tvcr.

30 D»«E«

JMi eent*. fine Ixnik p" Heart Disease, wtth wonderful cures Free oruftgteta, or address DR. MILES* MEDlgAL

CO.,

Elkhart, Ind.

For Sale by JACOB HA It.

LADIES. TBY

Pr. DeLuc's Periodical Pills,

FROM PARIS, FRANCE.

Acts only on the menstrual system and inactively cures suppression of the mensns rwm cold,*, shock, etc. A safe reliable monthly medicine, warranted to relieve: price $2, thr*e for IV The American PHlaud Medicine C\k. proprietors. Spencer, Iowa. and sent by mall upon receipt of price, ana by G«v He5s druggist, corner Thirl *uid Main

OBATKrrir-COMFORtlNO.

BREAKFAST.

"Hy a thoioush knowledge of the natural laws' tie Won Cavoa, Mr Kpp« baa provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored be vera** which may nv« tt« many heavy doctor*' bill*. It is by the Judicious us« of such Articles of diet that a constitution may be grad­

ual

!y aunt up until strong eno^ssh to resist overv tendency to dt*en«6. Hundred* of subtle niatadtes am floating around tw ready to attack whervver ihere Is a wc*tk point. We may escape many a fatal shaft br keeping our*elves well forUfled with mure blood and a

Salette,

roierty

noarlahed frame,"—Clvtl Bervlc*

Made simply with botHnx wnat«r or milk, Sold only In half-Pond Uwl by groowra, i*. beled Hi us: 4AM88 EPFS 4k CO» ilom(eopathie Cbamtsta. London, Mmg,

WOMAN MD HOME.

WOMEN OF FRANCE AND THEIR WORKS AND PROGRESS.,

Systematic Domestic Training—Tho "Woman Ton Can Trust—Josephine's Sanctuary—Overrated Beauty—Fifty Tears

Ago—The Daily Bound. 't' \i In studying the ideas of the few great French authorities oil education for women, one is impressed •with the dominant purpose of the whole French scheme of education as a preparation for practical life. The important feature of these French girls' common school training is preparation for managing her private accounts in a businesslike way, those of4ier household when she marries, and those of her husband's business as well. Men in France go in for high art women for art applied toindustry. The wife of the artist takes upon herself the whole commercial work of the association, drawing buyers to the studio, calling on influential journalists, making out the bills, and thus relieving her partner from the prose of life. Mme. Coquelin invests all the money made by the famous actor, who calls her his chancellor of the exchequer.

The last great step in woman's education in Franco—the opening of girls' colleges by the republic—was made because it had been demonstrated that women 'could use to good advantage higher instruction than she was receiving, and not at all from a generous desire to give her a larger intellectual life. In the course laid out. in these colleges by the state there is |wock required dating the last year on common law as related to the affaire of women. There is also obligatory instruction in idomestic matters, including household bookkeeping, lessons on purchasing, on .useless and useful expenditures and the like. The good results of this system are shown in the Frenchman's reputation of making something out of nothing. A French woman will make a charming toilet out of odds and ends that the American woman gives her maid. She will make a course dinner out of material an American would consider insnffi%ient for lunch but most of all is her superior advantage shown in her important commercial position as a partner in her husband's business or manager of her inn. In the small shops the husband seldom employs a clerk in the large ones the wife is an equal partner, and should the husband die she carries on the business successfully alone.

The fume of the Bon Marche is due to Mme. Boucicault, who helped found, and at her husband's death controlled and enlarged the great business, carrying it on with such nice and considerate system that the "lady of the Bon Marche" is looked upon as a patron saint in many French households. The Duval restaurants, which are found in all quarters of Paris, have been for many years under the management of the widow of Duval, senior, who has increased the number of her establishments. Mine. Jaluzot, wife of M. Jaluzot, the deputy, made tho name for his grand magazine, Le Printemps, through her perfect taste in dress textiles and colors. She was, previous to her marriage, an actress in tho Francais.

Mme. do Levigne, loft a widow with an estate impoverished by her husband's bad management, made large fortunes for her children by her skill and industry. She was a fine lady 1y birth and education, a writer and an ornament of the most splendid court that ever existed. It was she who wrote the dictum to a haughty daughter, "My child, remember that politeness is the small change of Christian charity."

So important is the place which the French woman occupies in commerce that tho chamber of deputies and the senate have agreed to allow her to assist in electing members to the tribunal of commerce. We area practical aud an educated people with women who yield the palm to uone for ambition, energy *and cleverness, but the economic idea is to us not exactly a well deliued one, and the French system of developing it is certainly worth our consideration.—New York Sun.

Systematio Domestic Training. While wo labor over the untrained majority there are hundreds of yonng girls in orphan asylums and other institutions who might be getting thorough grounding in tho fundamentals of domestic work, and make, even in two years, a change in present domestic conditions. If it could bo made the fad, even for one year, for intelligent women to give an hour a week to this work, we should bo astonished at'the result. To ratfee the most independent fjirl without practical knowledge of hoyscwork is cruel, but it becomes worse than cruel for the dependent class. It cannot be that a large per cent, of the girls yearly cared for by charity are to be adopted in comfortable homes or trained for well paying artistic professions.

But who is to give this training? Evidently it can not be asked of the faitshftil workers who are already overburdened with the problem of feeding, clothing and sheltering the orphans. An hour a week is not much for others to give, the work would prove fascinating to many, and there are so many intelligent women, and no much time is wasted. More than this, housework, well done, is a great preventive of both vice and disease. Nino people out4 of ten are sick because they do not exercise enough—brain as well as body all people who are vicious are so because they have not been kept healthfully and happily busy. Housework, taught in the proper way, can be made a fascinating occupation. The time has come for some man or woman to originate the fashion of leaving their millions not at the top, but at the bottom, to be used in an education that will set the formation of character above All e|se.-—Mrs. C. H. Stone in Boston Transcript.

The "Woman You Can Trust. There are in this world all sorts of women—charming. pretty, sensible and delightful ones, too—but of the entire lot do we not pick out for oar rock of dependence the woman we can trust? Is there not a world of reliance in the word of one whom we know neve* violates a promise? Is it not a pleasure to coafide in one whom we know holds oar secret as closely as her own? And is not the assurance of help tram a character sadbuas this a standby in all hours of trouble and difficulty, for we know that her promises once given we have nothing to feat*

The woman that her own sex trusts is one whom tier husband likewise will never have occasion to doubt. The daughter who has proved wwtfiy of the confidence of her patent* will likewise justify her lover®# expe nations when she becomes a wife. Sincerity is a rare Jewel in theae day* of social deceit and subterfuge. Promises «v given for accommodation, never meaning to be kept. The pledge of secrecy is on the halt to worm another's secret from her bosom, then to be retailed

broadcast over the land. The offer of help made in time of prosperity cannot be interpreted as such when .adversity nmkes the need strong. 588^

Life is false and hollow lo a great extent. Therefore when one meets a woman sincere and true she shines forth with the undimmed luster of a pure white diamond among a mass of yellow stohes that may glitter perhaps as attractively, yet which have no value in comparison-with the bit of purity when want compels the necessity of computing it.—New York Commercial Advertiser

I-

Joscphlno's Sanctuary,

At Malmaison, Josephine consecrated one room to the memories of happy days passed there' by Napoleon before. his divorce from her. It was a room then used by him as a study whenever the cares of war and politics permitted* him to seek a temporary rest in her society in that charming retreat, and when she was left there alone to mourn their separation she would allow nobody to occupy the room but herself. In it lay the pen last used there by the emperor, which the ink "had long since corroded on a table lay the map he had last studied over there the line of march tracked out which had long since taught Europe to feel the power of his tactics on the wall, hung a glass case in which some of his hair was arranged in ornamental or symbolic form. It was so long since that hair had grown on his head that the sight of it must have carried back Josephine's memory to the time when she, the widowed Vicomtesse de Beauharnais, determined on marrying Its owner, the young soldier of fortune, with nothing but "his love and his sword and his cloak to offer her."

Such a sanctuary indeed was this chamber at Malmaison to the ex-empress that she would not allow any hand but her own to dust or move the objects in it which had been consecrated, as she deemed, by the touch of the husband who had sacrificed her to his ambition, and in so doing had lost his guiding star, the guardian angel of his life.—Buffalo News.

Overrated Beauty.

By the way, some of the papers went a few steps too far with their admiration of the almost miraculous beauty of Queen Louise of Denmark's three daughters. "Loveliest of all the lovely," to begin with. "Time has recoiled from touching them with his marriage'fingers," and soon, with plenty more of the same sort. Well, flattery of this strength is afar remove from an honest compliment, and even the touched up photographic portraits of the Princess of Wales, the empress of Russia and the Duchess of Cumberland will scarcely support that theory of miraculous loveliness.

Our own Alexandria, as all the world knows, has a beautiful face which owes its chief charm to a sweet expression the czarina's large, lustrous eyes constitute her one perfection, «tnd both these illustrious sisters find the rest of their wondrous youth and attractiveness in the mighty art of dress, in the pursuit of which they must spend any amount of time and attention.

It is their getup which is so marvelous, and in the elevated position it attracts world wido attention. As for the Duchess of Cumberland, always the least pretty of the three, illness and unhappiness have changed her into a very plain woman, with an almost miserable expression, differing greatly from the bright look she wore as a girl.—London Society.

Fifty Years Ago.

Half a century ago, if we may credit a contemporary authority of undoubted weight, the costume of English women was, in the matter of convenienbe, not so much on an equality with as in advance of that of English men of the same period. It was, he did not hesitate to affirm, in as favorable state as the most vehement advocates for what is called nature and simplicity could desire. It was one in which they could dress quickly, walk nimbly, eat plentifully, stoop easily, loll gracefully, and in short perform all the duties of life without let or hindrance. The head was left to its natural size, the skin to its native purity, the waist to its proper region, and tho heels to their real level.

The costume then in vogue was in fact, as he said, calculated to bring out all the natural beauties of the person, and to give each of them fair play. Since that remote and unfortunate era, however, feminine attire has been exposed to a series of reversion to earlier and less advanced types. All the novelties wliioh have been introduced into it in the years which have intervened have been revivals of obsolete fashions, beginning with the hoops and high heeled shoes of the reign of Queen Anne, and ending for the nonce with the tight bodices and inflated sleeves of the reign of Queen Elizabeth.—London World.

The Daily Bound.

Our lives are necessarily made up of constant repetitions, and just as the ever recurring seasons usher in the same yearly changes of winter and summer and spring and autumn, we are obliged, in household matters, to consider every year the same questions. What to wear, what to eat, how to educate our children, to manage the household and our money affairs, and to obtain the best possible result for the expenditure of our time and thoughts— these are the important considerations that must be pondered upon over and over again by most wives and mothers. Sometimes these petty, monotonous cares become very hard to bear, the brain seems to grow dull and the energies lag.

Many a clever woman has felt intellectually starved through the daily treadmill of her life, and has almost longed at times to lay the burden down forever. If these despondent ones, however, could only have a full realization of the greatness of their calling, they could not help feeling a glory in the service on which so much depends. A well known writer has said that the happiest families in/the society about us are those in which the mistress comes near* est to the grand description of the houseworker in the Old Testament—whose psioe is above rubies.—New York Tribune.

A Short Honeymoon.

II husbands woe wise they would take a quiet and very short honeymoon, and let the longer journey come a few weeks later And they would marry earlier, instead of waiting until they have fought their fight and can afford a "good establishment." They take a young wife and iset her down In the "spick and span" house, with nothing to do and nothing to look forward to until children arrive, and then very often the baby is such a welcome relief Scs the day's monotony that it ou$ts the farther from the first place and becomes a tyrant in the home. Some of the happiest couples I kuow are those who married in the flush of the! early youth on very modest incomes, and have fought the battle of life together *iej by step, learned the lessons of life together, and together suffend sorrow and enjoyed bleaali^a.

Nothing in the world can replace the £eelings engendered of long assoristtav

and the love of one's youth remains strong In the end, uneer any circumstances. In earlier life, too, habits are less formed, aud all one's senses are keener. Why will men so often offer women only the refuse of their lives? Generally, I suppose, because they are ambitious to begin where their fathers left off.—London Latlv. -*v '«i-ipk

One Way of Sharing Knowledge. "I must run right down stairs while everything is fresh in my u\ind to tell it all to Ellen," said a housekeeper the other day, hurriedly leaving a house guest. Later she explained that she was taking a course of cooking lectures and sharing them promptly every time with her cook. "I talk them over with her, and she tries the dish the new way at once. I don't believe housekeepers realize it, but they get constantly many valuable hints and much domestic knowledge that is of no use till it is applied in the kitchen, where it rarely goes. It is perhaps a selfish policy of mine, but still the right one, I think, that iny cook shall receive all such enlightenment as comes my way. It adds of course to hep intelligent service, aud it adds, too, to her willingness to undertake innovations. Arbitrary, unexplained ordersare distasteful to anybody. I can appreciate that to the kitchen intellect they partake of tyranny. I have a library of cookbooks which Ellen understands are for her—not my—benefit, and a housekeeping magazine which I take goes regularly down to her with paragraphs marked, or I call her attention to them. "It has always seemed to me that we mistresses sit, in our knowledge, asking overmuch from the ignorance of our servers. I am trying in a small way to raise the standard of one kitchen."—Her Point of View in New York Times.

Delicious Maryland Biscuit." Aunt Hannah's pride was her old fashioned beaten or kneaded biscuit, and this is her recipe:. One quart of the bo^t flour, half a teaspoonful of salt, four ounces of lard chopped fine and rubbed thoroughly into the flour. Mix with cold water just as stiff as possible so 3tiff that you feel almost hopr iess of ever doing anything with it. Put it on a board and knead until it is perfectly pliable and makes a popping sound undcr-your hands from the air bubbles breaking in it, and until you can pull it down in long thin strips. These tests are infallible, but you have to knead hard and long before the dough will answer to them. When it does you can make the biscuit.

Break off pieces about the size of an egg, mold them into round balls, and roll three-quarters of an inch thick with a rolling pin stick through and through five or six times with a fork. The oven must be well heated, but not too hot, or they will be undeidone in the middle and all of their excellence ruined. They will cook in twenty minutes if the oven is properly heated. A quart of floiir makes twentyfour biscuits of ordinary size.—Ladies' Home Journal.

Crystallized Fruit.

Peel and divide into sections four Tangarine oranircs. Also select two or three dozen firm Malaga grapes. Put two cupfuls of wliito sugar and one-third as mucn water on the lire in a saucepau. Boil to the "thread"—that is, until the candy will form threads when dropped from the spoon. Put the candy in a warm place where it will not boil, and then drop in two or three pieces of the fruit. Carefully lift out with a fork and put it on a greased plate. Be careful not to stir the candy, as that would make it go to sugar. Put in more fruit, and lift out carefully in the same way.

If the candy should begin to sugar, add water and boil until it reaches the same point again. Continue the dipping until ail the pieces of fruit are covered with a perfectly transparent and dry coat of candy. Nothing could be prettier than a small cut glass dish heaped up with these frujts.—Good Housekeeping.

ts—All Fits stopped free by Dr. Klibe's Great Nerve Restorer. No Fits after the first day's URe. Marvelous cures, Treatise and $2.00 trial bottle free lo Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.

A Clothes Tree.

A no?el ides in a clothes tree wasi worked out the other day by an ingenions young woman. A diad tree from the woods had the branches Sawed away so as to leave projections of from four to twelve inches. These were roinded off, peeled, smoothed and polished, tie entire trunk being handsomely finislpd. Into the projecting branches werd screwed brass hooks, and the whole was jet into a standard made of a very heavy mestnut plank. This was polished and mrnished and mounted on castors, which tere set at the extreme corners of the base! With a push of the foot it could be roljd anywhere.—Now York Ledger.

Cleanig Hard Wood,

Cherry and maogany furniture can be cleaned in the Slowing Way to look almost like new: Issolve a small lump of common waa'iinssoda in some very hot water. Wash onla small portion of the wood at a time win a bit of flannel dipped in the soda water, bd dry it immediately with another pi^ctlf flannel, rubbing uutil it is highly polled.—New York Journal.

How to

Shirts.

Don't dip collars 1 in boiled starch, across lumps when on the articles on tl fingers, and as soon on the right side it —New York Jourm

cuffs or shirt fronts will be sure to come ning. Rubthestarch [wrong side with the it begins to appear uificiently starched.

No flowery rhetoij can teli the merit of Hood'a Sarsapallla as well as the cures accotnplisheqby this excellent medicine.

Mrs. J. Ellen Fqpte W. C. T. V. workers is a woman of large person. She speaks vi and decision, and set self possessed.

well known to all to many others, rather imposing wonderful fluency to be absolutely

White muslin in edge the neck of wido the sombemess of tb crepe du chine or fu added to dull silk or

dai and sheer folds gowns to relieve efess. Soft vests of berthe ruffles are hlrietta costumes.

Miss Mary Wilkii thousand words—no day. Sometimes, whe ination is especially much within an hour.

is said to write a re, no less—every -he spirit of imiyjshe does this

1 Ti

Do not enter Into clandestine correspondence with any yon man. The very fact that he urges yoa aach a bit of deceit should warn you a, inst hinu

For Sore Throat.—karate a flannel bandage with Chamb4ain's Pain Balm and bind it on the tb any ordinary case For sale by arnggls

It will care

ie night's time. No r.

"ill*1

The King's Drum.

This spirited picture, by Mr. G. W. Joy, represents an incident of 1798, when the drummer boy, having been ordered to beat his drum for the enemy, destroyed the parchment, saying sturdily, "Tho king's drum shall uever be beaten by rebels." The engraving is very line, it would be very suitable, if tastefully walls of a boy's own room.—Hurleratheforframed, Bazar. "How delicious is tho winning

Of a kiss, at love's beginning,"—

sings the poet, and his sentinieut is true with one possible exception. If either party has the catarrh, even love's kiss lo^es its sweetness. Dr. Sage's Catarrh RemejJy is a sure cure for this ropulsivo and distressing affliction. By its mild, soothing, antiseptio, cleansing and healing properties, it cures the worst cases §500 reward offered for an incurable case.

England's Rulers.

First William the Norman, then William his son, Henry, Stephen and Henry, then Richard and

John,

Next Henry the Third, Edwards one, two and three, And again after Rich&jd three Henries we see, Two Edwards, third Richard, if rightly I guess, Two Henries, sixth Edward, Queen Mary,

Queen Bess

Then Jamlo the Scotsman, then Charles, whom they slew, Bnt received after Cromwell another Charles too. Then James the Second ascended the throne, And good William and Mary together came on. Till, Anne, Georges four and fourth William, all piast, God sent England Victoria may she long be the last! —Selected.

The small niceties of woman's garb are the best index to the character of the woman who expends her thought upon their selection.

If girls would only study men more and themselves less they would come nearer (o reducing flirting to au exact science.

An old country drink used for hoarseness and roughness of the throat is blackberry juice diluted with boiling water.

Sponge your shiny black silk in a pint of tepid water in which a thimbleful of ltorax has beeu diluted.

Horsford'a Acid Phosphate Relieves Mental and Physical .Exhaustion.

Heart Disease cured. Dr. Miles' Hew Core.

h&VeTO

A HATtTRAXi RE2CEED7 TOR

Epileptic Fits, Falling Sickness, Hysterics, St. Titos Dance, Nervousness, Hypochondria, melancholia* Inebrlty, Sleeplessness, Dizziness, Brain and Spinal Weakness.

This medicine has direct action upon the nerve centers, allaying all irritabilities, and increasing the flow and power of nerve fluid. It is perfectly harmless and leaves no unpleasant effects. -A Valuable Book on Ifemtu

FREE

Disease* sent free to aayad&ett, and poor pstiesti can obtain tM» laed&toe freo of chary©#

KOENiC MED. CO., Chicago, lit Sold brDra»slittt as

Si per Bottle.

^^kJNKHAM'S PROVERBIAL PHILOSOPHY

Dnj""-!et3 sel! It as a standard article, or sent by mail, in form of Pills or Lozenges, on receipt of $x.OO .1 illustrated book, entitled Guide to Health and Etiquette, bv Lydia E. Pinkham, is of great value to ladies. We will ...!tW s.aMk /.ant atamfM. present a co

py to anyone addressing us with LYDIA E. PINftHAM MED. CO.,

6fcr8S

X*Xge Size, 8L75. 6 BoiUe* tor *9.

FOR MEN ONLY!

orLOSTorTAZLOrCr MAgHOOP.

•adjimtvouaiimiiirr,

*so#Bodya»4m«*,E«sets

JafScTD»arZzMaMS is 014 crToaf, IB90PMhlnwi Sil*Un»M .aWKTKMha 0MUVI* rA*TS «OK9T mt TE*iT«orr imm taaHMasrflMpCMMrtib Wriute.

wulHii

»m*, trfimmUm mmS prmtt m*S\t4 (ii«li)ftw. IMS MUHOALOO., BUFFALO V.

Coming events I cast their shadows before.

The feeling1 of utter listless-

O

ness, lack of energy, desire to be alone, or the don't care" feeling, are all shadows of coming- events. No woman should permit those symptoms to gam

ground, for, being forewarned, she should be forearmed. Lydia £. Pinkhains Vegetable Compound will disperse all those shadows. It goes to the very root of all female complaints, renews the waning vitality, and invigorates the entire system. Surely such letters as this will support our claims:

DEAR MAI?AM. I in a Compound saved my life it is the best medicine •for kidney and female troubles I ever saw. I induced 'my friends to use it, and it has never failed.—Mrs. H. E. FOSKETT, West Rutland, Vt.

two a-cent stamps. Lynn, Mass.

ITTLE

PILLS

CURE

Blck Headache and relieve all tbo troubles Inof* dent to a bilious state of tho system, suoh «a Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating. Pain in the Sido, &o. While tholr mosfi remarkable buocoss has been shown in curing

SICK

Heaflaehe, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills are equally valuable in Constipation, curing aud pro* venting thlsannoylngcomplalnt,while thevalsa' correct all disorders of thostomach,stimulato the livor and regulate the bowels. Even if they only cured

Acbathey would be almostpricoless to those wlidt oufrer from this distressing complaint butfortunately their goodnoss doos uotend hore.and those who onoe try thorn will find theso 1 lttlo pills vaht* able In so many ways that they will not bo willing to do without them. But after ollsick hood

ACHE

(is the bane of so many livos that hero in wliott we make our great boast. Our pills cure it while' othors do not.

Carter's Little Liver Pills aro very small and" very easy to take. Ono or two pills inakoa doso. They are strictly vegetable and do not gripo or' purge, but by their gentle action ploaso all who' use them. In vialsat25 cents flvo for $1. Solq by druggists everywhere, or sont by mail.

CARTER MEDICINE CO., New York.

SMALL PILL. SMALL D9SE. SMALL PRICE

•SEMEN"*-

in A

as A DDV

hl880-

MADE Tl A"" In 1880.

MEN who use HEALTH TID-BITS regain* MA W b- jtaMA awt tffc nJt% •(KK11 ft IV I /1AAAA 9 uuu uuuy rwuwiiw»j gww ,*v mail.Al. Sample b5*. 10cts. Ohio Chemical Cou

177 Sycamore Btraet. Cincinnati, O. Try It.

ABSOLUTELY

No Change of Cars

—FUOM—

ST. LOUIS, TERBE HAUTE INDIANAPOLIS, CINCINNATI,

DaYTON, SPRINGFIELD,

New York, Boston

JL2STJD THE BAST VIA THE POPULAR

Big 4

Lake Shore and New York Central

ROUTES.

THE

Shortest & Quickest Line

BETWKKN

EAST WEST

All trains arrive and Depart from Sixth Street Depot.

Berths in Sleeping Cars

1

SBCITKKI) THROUGH TO

NEW YORK & BOSTON

E. E. SOUTH, Gen. Agt,

710 WABASH AVENUE

SSL DIEFFENBACH'8 PROTAGON CAPSULES,

Sore Cure for Weak Men, as proved by reportsof leading physlclans. Btateage In ordering. Price. 81. Catalogue Free.

A safe and speedy cure for Gleet, Mtrfeinreand all

nnnatoral dUcharjtes. PriceS2. Cures all Blood i, Scrof-I

fiREEKSPEClFICfi

"and Skin 1)1

atoua ftores andftyphUltic AfertloM, without rnereury. Price, M- Order from

THE PERU DRUGS. CHEMICAL CO, u.™

Solo

ltt VJjcCTMia StfMt, KILWAUKEg. VTJA

Act on a sew principle— regulate the liver, stomach and bowels through lA* ntroet.

Db. Mirza*

Ptu»

tpetdUv cure biliousness, torpid liver and constipation. Smallest, mildest Mueetl 90do*ss,25et», Samples free at druggist*, •r.

Hto MuL «*, Bkhart, Ia4