Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 22, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 November 1892 — Page 3
Klfth ave., between
comznsEQ
Makes an every-day ccirrnfence of an old-tirro luxury.' Pt rc aui wSifihjs.xiiC. Prepared with scn: .|ous :iv. JUj-Jk-s' award at ali Pure Food fc.xposlfhHS. fcV.rh package makes two i.fr 'c pfs. Avoi.1 imitations—and insist ru having hs
NONE SliCH »rrr.j.
MERUEJ L''*~T" Y.
«A!TAK1WI8W| relief and to Core for file*. Prkje$L
RESTORATIVE
S"gtves instant is an infaiiib* les. PrioefL Bt
Do you know why? Because It Is plain to be soon that the TRUTH oNCE TOLD Is enough.
h. The Hurprislng Promptness with which all clauses of people respond to our announcements, and tho rapidly increasing demand for Dr. Gregg's Goods wherever Introduced, conclusively prove that true modesty is always recognized and tho quality of merit takes care of Itself. Metaphorically our statement is the Button—the Public Press It, and
DR. GREGG'S ELECTRIC SPECIALTIES
"DO THE BEST."
The extent of Procure on tho button and the success of Dr. Gregg's Electric Goods in "Doing the Rest," is more satisfactorily shown In the marvelous growth of our business the past (10 days. ~,,rT^
Repeated and Increasing demands for THE GEEGG ELIKTRIO "KOOT WARMER" are coming in from all parts of the country with profuse acknowledgements that so much comfort for $1.00 (tho price) was like buying Gold Dollars fof ten cents
Tho Delicate Orgail»iu of Woman subjects her to many peculiar ailments and unfortunate misery. Tho extreme sensitiveness of her Nervous System very frequently requires artificial stimulus. Tho Gregg Elect rl« Unit nd other Appliances
BUI'FLY
THIS, as
othing else can. Tito Kutojud Constitution of Man, When onco liroken, becomes IMtlablo In tho extreme, from which there Is absolutely NO nscuptt without assistance. The GREGG Elcctrlo Holts and Appliances, In cases of this kind, have honestly won their Tltloof KING of REMEDIES.
Rheumatism Is conquered, sufferers from Obesity aro speedily relieved, Dropsy quickly yields, spinal dlflicuitles and Paralysis disappear, and many other diseases of Men and Women aro permanently cured, fully described in complete catalogue for tk, or elaborate circular roe. Wo kii» run tee to forfeit twice the prlco of any of Dr. Gregg's Goods found to be no! genuine. We inak# aw elegant little $.1.00 Kleotrio Ifelt, which Is Helling very raptdly and which wo will take In exchange for any Higher Power Holt (except Jo Belt) and credits on the price of now order. Remtuubor tho Rloctrl**
14Foot
Wurmen*' nro$l
pair, worth $ 10. Address
The Gregg Electric Cure Co.,
flOl Inter Ocean ItulMIng, Chicago, III. Mention this pnper,
YmAFATPEOPLEC\ can get 1 SPEEDY A LASTING I can stay! thin, RESULTS,
htkbktth
thin.
srxeme CO. Bottoa,
Hm.
nR. MILES'NERVINE
There Ik uothlnjt like tho RESTORATIVE NERVINE discovered by the wtohI. specialist, 1R. MILES, to cmo nil nervous diseases, as Moadncho, th« Blues. Norvous Prostration, Sleeplessness, NeuralRln, St. Vltus» Dnnco.Fits and Hvetodn.
AimhtnB
Mr.»y
hke t-'!
from colds, shock, to.
physician#
»*0itin their praett«:\ nnrt wiy the nv»ult* are wonderful. Wo have Innutr-.Hia of testimonials 'Ike "Wo have ttfcver k:uwni
&
Dr. Del
Co.. 8rrt«u\
"Kverv tu Ul of J. U. Wolf, llUlMt iie, Mteh. "Tho best seller yro aver had." Wood worth & Co., Port Wayne, Ind.
Nervine koIH better than nnything wo erer had." II. F. WyMt A Co.. Concord, X. If. Trial bottle and book of testUaottlaUFreealdnuoJlMs.
DR. MILES* MEDICAL CO., Elkhart.lnd,
TRI.VL BOTTLE FBEE For Sa'c bv .? ACOH BAIFK. X^ZDISS. TIR-IT
lie's
Periodical Pills,
FROM PARIS, FRANCE.
Acts only on tho menstrua! system and positively cure* suppression of the
IHATKI!*PI—COM
overv *»ndenej* to
tK
j"-r»}vor5y
mensus
A safe reliable
month-
lv medicine, warranted to relieve price $2, thtve forfS. Tho American Pill and Medicine Co.. proprietors. Spencer, Iowa. 808a and sent by mail upon receipt of prioe, and by Geo. Uelss, druesist, corner Third and Main streets T*rre Haute, Ind.
PORTING.<p></p>Cocpa
Epps's
kkkakfast.
"By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which sovern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and bv a earefill application of the fine properties of weil-»el«ct?d Caeoa, Mr Kpiw ha« provided our btwkilttt tAbit*'wlUt'• dellcAtfly flavored bev«r*|J« which may save us nnsy heavy doclont* bUI. It is by Judldott# nae of ««c« ws tielef of dU't that a ooiutUtnUoc may fee vially ouiit v.p until strong enouph to resist
dlffoeswse. Hanaredi of
stab-
maladies ane d«»aUns:Rronttd u# to ntUo ^-l.rrevrr therf I# a weak poloL Wf inoy many a fatal «h«ft by kwpln^
ourscSve^i wtU fortll«d
with pune blood
anil«
n«»uri*Uc4 frame."—Clvil Her*l«
Ga*ctU\ Msideii«iplJ with boMttjc watir or milk, j««i»ia «i«lv In hjaif-pountt uts*J§r groeer*. I*, la'led thii-: JAMm itrfin CO.. |{owiopathic Chetnbt*) tumten, K»J«
WOITA^N AJfD HOME.
S"t
when
SSSBgSKfetSB?
BOX 2416,
Now Yactt
Ufc'
HOTEL GLENHAM,
YORK
21ntand22ndstreets, A**-' 7T KUKOl'EAS PI-AN Central to all points of Interest, principal stores and Pja*« amoHemont. X)e#l ruble stogie room, fLOO*
N. P. BAKKV, Proprietor.
Here is a Good Thins for You
A MAN,
OR
WOMAN,
of intelligence and miick-wltted enough to know a "GOOD Til I NO" at sight, but who has Lout the Moat Precious Possession on Earth, viz. GOOD HEALTH, WILL NOT require a HECONI) TKLLINO to be Induced to become a purchaser of
DR. GREGG'S ELECTRIC. Belts and Appliances.
'"iA
cannot"' leave the
?^B!ES"
to
^GO OUT WITH HUSBANDS.
Work
6t
a Tcaclier—Basts ^of Uresslng
"Well—Exercise for Growing Girls—Dress of English Women—Women Who Manage—For the Housekeeper.
How often do mothers with grown oj families look back ppon that period when the children were small and they were obliged to stay afc home to wateb-'over them day and night. What a change the coming of the first little one wrought in the well regulated home.
Prior to its advent the ho^tse was spick and span, its mistress with plenty of leisure oft her bands, ready at any moment to go out for a walk or to a place of amusement with her woman friends or her husband, as the case might be.
With the first little wailing cry the change begins, the house must be hushed
baby sleeps, loud laughing or talking must cease utterly, whispers prevail. Doors and windows are hermetically sealed lest his babyship take a cold, and as for any more outings they consist only in a stroll up and down in the sunshine with the nurse find baby carriage in tow, or, minus the nurse, a Sunday spent at the adoring grandparents, whither they repair in a street car, papa carrying the newly crowned monarch.
Papa cannot exactly see why everything should be so completely metamorphosed in his home and his comfort simply because a pink atom sticks its tiny fist into wondering blue eyes up stairs in a lace trimmed beribboned crib, and vvhen he returns to mildly put his wonderment into words and invite his whilom companion, the mite's mother, out for an evening's entertainment ho is quite surprised to have his proposition met by a reproachful glance and still more reproachful, "Oh, Hfirry! and leave the baby?"
He makes these sociable overtures several times with no better success, and after awhile, finding the library very lonesome with no wife pa talk or read to, he goes out where it is» brighter than in the quiet home, whose new occupAnt completely monopolizes his wife's attention, and thus the trouble begins.
It is 110 idle statement, but one many men will corroborate, that they were not the least bit "flisposed to spend their evenings uway from home until the nursery sovereign deposed them and their invitations always met with the same response, "I cannot leave the baby." It is no on^'s fault. The precious infant must be looked after, yet how little the children realize that their love has sometimes to make up for the attentions of a husband who since tho advent of a son or daughter has ceased to show them.—Philadelphia Times.
Tho Wearing Work of Teacher.
Closo observation shows that teaching is ono of tho most wearing occupations for women. Even the hard working clerk, typewriter, journalist or seamstress, with longer hours and more drudgelike employment, keeps her health and strength better through five years of continuous service than does the average school teacher. The girl who begins with erect carriage and rosy cheeks will be seen in the course of a few years to have lost both. Much of this is attributed to the nervous strain necessary for the regular routine of governing often an unruly class and at the same time teaching the required studies. But allowing that teaching is hard work, without entering into tho reasons, certainly nothing should be neglected which adds physical comfort to these positions of honor, filled many times by earnest women who strive by enthusiasm in their work and by a noble example to make teaching a profession.
It would seem to be absurd to declare it is their right to occupy only rooms which can be properly heated and ventilated, and yet it is nob too strong a statement to say that, to the writer's knowledge, one girl last winter owed a severe attack of pneumonia to the low temperature of her room, while others suffered more or less from the same cause. Because there are conditions over which the teachers themselves have little or no control, they should be all the more carefully attended to by those who do.
There is another consideration,however, for which they themselves are responsible, and that is the midday luncheon, which is very apt to be a basket affair, eaten as rapidly as possible in order to go on with school work, or, as one teacher said, "She took a bito while correcting papers which had to lo ready for the afternoon session." The full hour's rest at noon should be enjoyed \^hen possible a breath of fresh air and a rew minutes' walk will make the duties of the afternoon easier.-^-Brooklyn Kagle.
Personality tlio Basis of Dressing Well.
Women do not, «s a rule, attach the slightest significance to their own particular type. Hair, eyes and complexion are forgotten in the scramble for an outfit. A sweet, shy little, blond appearing the other day in ail the glories of a new gown pointedly put the question, "How do you like it I longed to frankly tell the dainty little creature that her prettiuesa had been ravished by a subtle something, I could hardly say what. Certainly from the crown of her golden brown head to the jfeips of her Smart slippers she was a grievous mistake.
Why? Because in selecting the robe she had left out In tlie cold all her best points —points which should have been consulted before a single yard of material had been purchased. This toilet, with its glint and shimmer of gold and scarlet, demanded the figure of a Juno and not the fairylike beauty of the woman who owned it. What she needed was somethiag'light aad floating, a poetic drapery, clinging lines and mi utter absence of fuss and feathers.
The woman suffering from flesh is very apt to insist that her company gown shall be of black satin, which, when she has crowded her ample proportions within this fabric that shines like stove polish, and garnishes it with diamonds, proclaims to the world that she is very rich and very uncomfortable. To be in harmony with her clothes the fleshy woman should affect textures that fall "heavily" and conceal ungraceful curves and lines. Tiny raffles, bows and frills are decidedly oat of place upon the figure that to be graceful must move with rhythmic motion. In truth, fripperies ought never to be allowed a diance to *ieal i. the vulng of a wotftaa who has k.. her wi iry charm of figure.—Philadelphia Inquirer.
£xerct*c for (trnwinc Girt*. Growing girls of twelve va sixteen or® apt to be very awkward both la their movements a»!, ires, icti- "ithey ootgrow these .JLtsg,agjL fcar« tiajg# and deportment without aay especial effort on the part of j" "r rnctors, bet it is a dangerous exi _: imeat to trust to
time as the only cure for these evils. Besides, it is not only grace that is of chief importance, but the much
more
vital ques
tion of health. How is it possible for a body to grow and develop without the necessary amount of pnre air to feed the lungs, and how can & cramped up, flat chest and narrow shoulders give the requisite supply?
In arranging therefore for a child's Curriculum do not forget the body while providing for the mind, and besides the daily walks" see that the children have some form of regular exercise particularly adapted to expand the chest and improve the| carriage. There are so many excellent methods, now that one can hardly go astray, but perhaps a combination of the Delsartean movements with simple dumbbell exercise would be the best. The former certainly-gives grace and suppleness, and there is no better medium than the latter for developing muscle and. inflating the chest.
There is no need to give much time to these exercises, and in no case should gymnasium work take the place of long walks in the open air. Fifteen or twenty minutes' regular and daily practice ia all that is necessary, and it will be found in every case to be of incalculable advantage. A breathing exercise should always accompany the manual performance.—New York Tribune.
The Dress of English Women.
Class distinctions are more decidedly drawn in England than elsewhere in Europe, but the women all dress so near alike that there is no way to tell to what class a woman belongs except by that uncertain standard of smartness or shabbiness of attire. When her grace the duchess has finished with her gown it is sold to a dealer and reappears soon again upon the back of some one lower in the social scale. There is one exception to the rnle that all women in England dress alike.
There are two classes which an observant person soon learns to distinguish without chance of failure. These are the west end Dbop girls and the barmaids in the hotels, restaurants and railway stations. I don't know that it is true, but I suspect that personal appearance has a good deal to do with securing such positions, for ft is very rare to see one of these young women who is not well to look upon. And they are the best dressed women ii^ London. They do not have the most expensive clothes, but they seem to hold together better and the tout ensemble is more harmonious. And what is more their boots and gloves are trim and in order but, alas, the inevitable hatl Even the shop girls and barmaids have not escaped that.
The shoulders of English women are, I think, naturally broad, certainly broader on tho average than the shoulders of American women. The habit of tight lacing accentuates this and makes them seem still broader. This peculiarity is more exaggerated in the shop girls and barmaids than in the other classes, for those comely young women lace tijl their waists are literally wawplike.—Godey's.
Women Who "Manage."
The world of the managing person is divided into those who allow themselves to be maruiged and those who object. Generally the managiug person is a women. Women are the born managers of this world. The woman who has this "executive ability" soon masters the affairs of her own particular household, and then she looks abroad for fresh worlds to conquer. She devotes herself to the business with energy. To those of her neighbors and friends who will allow themselves to be managed she is untiringly attentive She studies each case with ardor and persistency, arranging circumstances publicly and privately, and giving advice by wholesale and retail.
The woman with a talent for management is quite a boon to those weak creatures who cannot settle their own affairs, and who are willing to take counsel and help from any outside parties willing to give it. It saves them troublesome and fatiguing thought. They are content to do the proper thing without controversy, and aro thankful for the instruction.
But the people who object to be managed area constant thorn in the side of the busy manager. She marvels that a mysterious and shortsighted providence should have so blinded them to their own interests Their obstinacy and opposition to'their own best good are maddening and unaccountable. There is something wrong. The world should have been divided only into the managers and the managed. Providence has mado some mistake.—Boston Times.
"n- Frsulcin Craln's Story.
Women who have missed in early life the privileges and opportunities now obtainable in all phases of culture will been couraged by the story of Fraulein Crain, of Germany, proprietor of "one of the schools for girls in Berlin. The daughterof ail invalid mother, Fraulein Crain devoted her early life to the double duties of nurse and housekeeper, and at thirty-six found herself not only without a family, but without a home, without means and without sufficient education to pass the series of ex aminations demanded by her country from one who aspires to be at the head of a school.
She took her final examination at forty, and began with less than a score of pupils the school which nowhaa SOO students, and Includes a normal department, a kinder garten and a separate school for boys. Boginning in small rented rooms, the school] occupies a handsome building of its owa1 on one of the most desirable corners in Berlin, and includes a beautiful country home for day pupils. Fraulein Crain is now assisted by a staff of forty teachers, inclnding some university professors of national distinction.—New York Sun.
It Taken Courage to Retrench. Is the furniture getting shabby? Are our expenses this year so great that we can offer only th«i cheapest and simplest re freshments to our friends? Is it wisest toi reduce the establishment to a storm footing, to answer one's doorbell one's self and lay down—not a carriage, indeed, for such an equipage we boast not of—but a French nurse, or a German governess, or & high priced cook, supplying their departments in other ways?. How much more courage does this reefing imply than sailing still closer in disaster's face with all our old extravagances? Yet the courage is really on reduction's side.
To wear the last year's hat and a"henSpeckle" gown—a good gown, but one that everybody knows you by, you have been seen in it so often—takes much more courage, if you please, than to run in debt for new ones. While the olid ones nre perfectly good, yet so recogttixabkv litis taking.of reef is simply braver to J". T.ietmt in new fluisT.—PMhidel,.
€oinfori» for it#,
Certainly the the hot*M »boaJd ife
v-Jit
able a. brd
as
••r"
any oak. !.• very trfu :,fe
is cot the ease even in iUAurioas hwust-*, a saringless cot being thought good
S
8
for the girl's room, though in a city home, the room of the maid of all work is a small hall bedroom on the top floor. This may still be neat, even fine in its appointments, with dainty spreads, convenient toilet articles and whole looking glass. There should be a bureau of some description, with a drawer reserved for her towels and bed linen, so that she need not call on the mistress for these things common enough in the rest of the chambers, but luxuries here.
A very good way to appreciate a girl's weariness by those who seem, never to dream she can get tired is to try some day to take her place. After getting thoroughly tired out with still half the work undone," a mistress begins to understand what day after day of domestic toil means. When on Tuesday an ambitious girl is hurrying to complete a large ironing in one day, it is hardly fair to call on her repeatedly to do something else, as often happens when there is only one servant.—St. Louis GlobeDemocrat.
Children and Their Teeth.
All diseases which profoundly affect the nutrition influence the development of the teeth, and since the growth of the teeth is mainly limited to the age of childhood their condition is especially influenced by children's diseases.
Faulty nutrition or severe wasting illnesses show themselves nowhere more prominently than in the development of the bones and teeth, and, on the other hand, good teeth in children play a very important part in producing a healthful and robust manhood or womanhood. Decaying and loosened teeth directly favor imperfect mastication and consequent indigestion.
Indigestion favors poor nutrition. Sit causes the secretions of the mouth to become acid iu reaction—a perversion of the normal reaction1 of the saliva, which attacks the teeth and favors their rapid decay.—Youth's Companion.
'Cleaning Diamonds and Silver. -T
Diamonds can be cleaned at home to look as. well as when done by a jeweler if only a little trouble is taken. They should be thoroughly cleaned in alcohol and then dried in boxwood sawdust. Pino sawdust is too oily for this purpose. Silver filigree may be brightened by washing it in ammonia ami water,' using a fine brush and castile soap and drying in the same manner as diamonds. In case it is very much darkened and the stains refuse to disappear with ordinary treatment hyposulphite of' soda may succeed. Hyposulphite of soda should be purchased of a trustworthy druggist and used only according to his advice.—Philadelphia Press.
The Rights of Women.
Women being the inotliers and nurses of human races have always been in servitude to men, owing to their love of children.
Mothers prefer to suffer and die, if need be, rather than let harm come to their offspring.
This is a divine condition all through higher animal life—the admiration of the" world.
The natural place for woman is in the home, made happy by just industrial 'conditions and love.
It is right that women should have perfect freedom in the choice of occupations.— Dr. Henry S. Chaso in Chicago Woman's News.
Modjeska's Emotions.
To some one who questioned Modjeska the still beautiful actress answered: "Modjeska economical of her emotions—why, I am not oven economical with my money. I am the veriest spendthrift that ever lived on smiles and tears and dollars. It is that I have still retained the power to feel everything, whether glad or sad, most intensely, to laugh and cry within the same moment almost that keeps me young. Youth is not careful for anything, but wastes itself on every einotion, sure of the fullness of it3 fount of feeling."
Fits—All Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. No Fits 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., Phila., Pa.
Gentlemanly Women.
Woo\«tl have been Billingsgate fishwomen, and plowed with a cow as a yokefellow, and there was no talk about their "usurping the place of men." They were so like the Billingsgate man and the donkey that the world was not stirred to save them from being unsexed. If the "modern maiden," with an inheritance of refinement and education, and with possibilities far beyond those which the gentle maiden of a hundred years ago, trained to stand straight by being strapped to "backboards," and to converse sweetly by practicing "prime" and "prism," and to make rose conserves and fine lace, could by the wildest stretch of imagination conceiver— if, I say, this young woman is going to become a swaggering fop, or a bluff boor, she is throwing away her birthright for a mess of garbage.
Girls, I beg of you mothers, I implore you, to keep sacred every gentle grace of womanhood. It is your right. Do not let a false social standard or a discouraged heart wrest it from you. If you have leisure, and live in a city, beware how yo» sink below the manners of a gentleman while you array yourself in the garb of one. The country girl is quite as much in danger. She may be "loud" in her, fashions and in her conduct, and I know of no place where there is a more painful exhibition of unwomatilinesson the part of young girls than on village streets. A girl who from babyhood is nurtured, in the spirit of a noble graciousness, though she live in the humblest cottage, will be a lady always.—Mrs. Lyman Abbott in Ladies' Home JournaL
No flowery rhetoric can toll the merit of Hood's Sarsaparilla as well as the cures accomplished by this excellent medicine.
Xavender In Place of Camphor. Lavender, loosely strewn in drawers and presses, is an excellent preventive of moths. For fans, feathers and other small belongings that need, protection the aromatic flowers ace especially useful, since they lend a fragrance as well as keep off the destroyer. Many women find the lingering odor of camphor or mothaline so sickening that they prefer to run the risk of moths rather than use either. Such will welcome the sew value of lavendet —New York Times.
In Germany babies arts carried about on pillow for the first three months, with the Idea of keeping the back straight, and this is not at all a bad plan.
For Sow Throat.—Saturate flannel bandage with Chamberlain's Pain Balm and bind It on the throat. It will.cure any ordinary case in one night's time.
For sale by druggists. Nov.
The Girl at College, .vf
Dress in a woman's college is a matter dt much slighter moment tl an it is popularly supposed to be. The last thins a girl who is in earnest about her education cares for is her gowns, if only they are comfortable and suitable. One girl known to the writer weut through an entire college course of four years with four new gowns, and she was well dressed all the time. The expenses of fitting up one's quarters are not so much for a woman as for a mau, supposing it to !»_ done at all in the latter'* case. The "knowing how," which is characteristic of a. woman's fingers, is better t!haD.-i great many dollars iu a man's purse.
The damtieast study parlors the writer has ever seen --vero two furnished with the most obvifous articles of need by the college, and ikv.orated at an additional expense of twenty-six dollars for the two by the girls who had taken them for the year. There is 110 point of expense in which the woman student has not the advantage of the man student. No matter how little he can live on, she can live on less. When he economizes in dead earnest he goes into a cooking club and eatx abominable food because it is cheap. She rigs up a kerosene stove in her owu room and does her own cooking, and lives well on a dollar less week than he does.—Exchange.
Every one knows how much cooler water may be made by putting it into a stone bottle, hanging it to a string and twirling it around, wetting the bottle from time to time with a spray from the watering pot.
f'hnririing people, these exceptional i, Here's a medicine—Dr. Pierce's ?n»d»»n AJedieal Discovery for instance, and it's oured hundreds, thousands that re known, thousands that're unknown, and that yours is an exceptional case! Do you think that that bit. of human nature which you call "1" is different from the other parcels of human nature? "But you don't know my case." Good frieuri, in ninety-nine out of a hundred cases, the causes are the game—impure blood—and that's why "Golden Medical Discovery'' cur^s nine ty-nine out of every hundred. You may be the exception.* And you may not. But would 3'ou rather be the exception, or would you rather be well? If you're the exception it costs you nothing, you get your money back—but suppose it cures you?
Let the "Golden Medical Discovery" take the risk.
Make a baby waist and to it sew a skirt twice as long as usual, finish with au inch hem on the bottom, and into this run a tape when the baby is dressed put on the creeper and turp the extra length up under the skirts and tie the tape around the waist. When baby is through creeping slip it off, and baby is fresh and clean. 1
To clean marble mix a little whiting with a stroug solution of washing soda and a little dissolved soap. Lay the mixture on the marble with a brush and let it remain for half au hour, then wash it otf, using a scrubbing brush and flannel, wirth a little alcohol to polish up the marble.
When doing' housework, if your hands become chapped or red, mix cornmeal and vinegar into a stiff paste and apply two or three times a day after washing in hot water then dry without wiping and rub with glycerin. At night use cold cream and wear gloves.
Miss Sarah Pollard owns a half section of land in Polk county, Minn., which she works without any help except in harvest season. She is a young woman of many accomplishments and left a comfortable home in the east to become a western farmer. .C'-^
Mrs. George W. Buell, of Meriden, Conn., has made abed quilt which contains 1,116 pieces of silk.
For Dyspepsia.
Use Horsford's Acid Phosphate.
Dr. Lobenzo Waite, Pittsfield, Mass., eays: "From its use for a period of about eight weeks, to the exclusion of all other remedies, I attribute the restoration to health of a patient who was emaciatqd to the last degree, in consequence of nervous prostration and dys pepsia. This patient's stomach was in «ueh an irritable condition that becould not bear either liquid or solid food. An accomplished physician of many years experience, whom I called in consultation, pronounced bis case an incurable one. At this stage I decided to use Horsford's Acid Phosphate, which resulted as above mentioned."
Heart Disease cured. Dr. Miles' New Core.
•fcfcVETo
Sleeplessness Cnr«9. IV I am glad to testify that I used Pastor Koctrig's Kerve Tonic with the best
buccohs
for
jUvjyleesnes'H, and bdUevo that It la really t,roat relief for 6u£I?rtag humanity. E. Flt.VNK, Pantor.
St. Sevwrtn.-Koylofton i'. 'O., Pa.
Locax,
Ohio, Oct. 18, IRK),
scxl Pastor Koonig's Totiio iti tlit CR.IC of a 13-y^r eld boy for ft CO.BC of St. Vfttt! Dance of two years' otandirig Bis omTitUm was mok'i lamentable, as bin limbs wash- eonalantly in motion, and at table his h&udtf fcuu V. not bold knife, fork or spoon The effect this medicine was ac oaee noticeable to
all,
was
I
the boy himself remarked, "I know It hcipe me," and before the second bottle was fiead tip, he Insisted that there was no nece**lt7 of taking more as be
op tiro 1 _cyrod CA11L HJELFENBEKGEfi. Valuable Book mi WerrrctM sent free to
cncT-&£i£ iKLL
mr
ftddress,
patients can also obtain
medicine froe of charge.
now prepared under hi* direcUon by Ue
KOENIC MED. CO., Chicago, III. Soicl by Druggists at 81 per Bottle. 6fbr9& Sorgo Size, 81.75. 6BotUe«ror»9.
OR
MEN ONLY
YOUNG MEliVOLD MEN (IT II THE THIS 9F TRf SUPCITt BISIASC, Th*r h*nAe «SorU to h— theat*W*f.
SHAKE OFFTHE HOfIWD«SAK£I
OUR NEW BOOK
fer »llnrited Ub* pfcil»»op!sjr at is Afiictien Ontu
Xm,aadtowtyUnof
HOME TREATMENT, by SMtkMU «J
•n, irorst ewWMir iMt or Ttfllu
Ocami *£d
We Send Free
by mail to any woman a beautifully illustrated book, containing over 90 pages of most important information about all forms of female complaints. No woman should live without a copy of
Guide to Health and Etiquette,"
by Lydia E. Pinkham. Thousands of women havelseen benefited by Mrs. Pinkham's advice after all other medical treatment had failed.
Send 2 two-cent stamps to cover postage and packing, when you write for the book. Address
LYDIA B. PINKHAM MED. CO., Lynn, Mas*
CARTERS
ITTLE
PILLS.
CURE
Sick Bendaohe and relieve aU tbo troubles
fool*
dent to a bilious state of the system, suoh as Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating. Pain In tho Side, &e. While their moat remarkable success has boen shown in curing
SICK
Headache, yst Garter's Littlo liver Pltln atv equally valuable In Constipation, curing and pre* venting this annoying complaint, whilo they also correctalldiBordoraoftheetomacli .stimulate
the
liver and rogulate the bowels. Even if they only
HEAD
Aehsthey would be almoatprloeloas to those WHOcutter from this distressing complaint but fortunately their goodness does notond here,and those who onoo try them -will find these littlo pills valuable In so many ways that they wlU not bo willing to do without them. But after allalcli ha&O.
ACHE
flB the bane of so many lives that here Is where we make our great boast. Our pills ouro it while others do not.
Carter's tittle Livor Pills aro very small.and very ouy to take. Ono or two pills makoa doso. '.They are striotly vegetable and do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action please all who use them. In vials at 25 cents live for $1. B019 by druggists everywhere* or sent by maiL
CARTER MEDfCINB CO., New York.
^ALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE
.£?! MPN "SS HAPPY!!! !&
ABSOLUTELY
NoChange of Cars
-FROM-
ST. LOUIS, TERRE HAUTE INDIANAPOLIS. CINCINNATI,
DaYTON, SPRINGFIELD,
-TO
New York, Boston
JL35T33 THE EAST VIA THE POPULAR
Lake Shore and NewYork Central
EkOTTTIESTHE
Shortest & Quickest Line
BET
W
KEN
EAST^WEST
All trains arrive and Depart from Sixth Street Depot.
Berths in Sleeping Cars
SECURED THROVOH TO
NEW YORK & BOSTON
E. E. SOUTH, Gen.Agt,
710 WABA8H AVENUS
PBQLDIEFFENBACH'SasMen,CAPSULES,"WeakforCurePROTAGQNfiorc1
proved by report/sot
leading
pby
1 C«a In nHarlntf
stci&m- State
6#e
in ordering.
Catalogue Free. A safe and speedy cure for Oseet, Utrtetare and ail
nnnatnraldischarge*. Price*#.
KREEKSPECIFICS','?^
Irand ftkin Jl *, geror-
nhniA «orcs andWypfcimio Affection*, with co, 92. 001 mertmry. Price, Order from
THE PERU DRUG i, CHEMICAL CO. & Wlfcaada Street, JOIWAUKSZ, WJ»
mmmm Act on anew principle— legnlate the liver, stomach •ad bowels thrwtqh the Mrtet. De.
Muss* Frits.
tpeedUu cure bUioasnese* torpid liver and constipation. Smallest, mildest, sorest! Spdoses,25cts. Ssxnpleo free at droplets. Sr. fija Set. CttEUJurt, taL
mmm
