Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 26, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 December 1892 — Page 4
Nor)* Sudt)
CONDENSED
Makes an every-day convenience of an old-time luxury. Pure and v/holesome. Prepared with scrupulous care. Highest award at all Pure Food Expositions. Each package makes two large pies. Avoid Imitations—and insist on having the
NONE SUCH brand.
MERRELL & SOUF F. Svrncuse. N. Y.
PILES
"ASA.KESIS given iuataof relief aad Is an tafaillb* Cure fbr ill®#. PrtoefL &» risteormalL. 8e fr»e.~AckiresB"ANAE: Box 2410, New Yock cat*
HOTEL GLENHM,
Fifth ave.t between MCTXT
21st and 22nd street*.
YORK
V1V4
KUItOPKAN I'LAX Central to all points of Interest, principal stores and places of amusement. Desirable single rcim,$1.00.
N. P. BARKY, Proprietor.
Here is a Goorl Tiling for You
A MAN, OR WOMAN,
of intelligence and quick-witted enough to know a "GOOD THING" at sight, but who has Ixtit the Mont Precious Pofwosston on Earth, viz. GOOD HEALTH, WILL NOT require BE("OND TELLING to be induced to become a purciuwer of
Dr. Greg's Electric
Belts aim Appliances.
Do you know why? Bccaufeo It Is plain to be K.^ii that the TRUTH ONCE TOL1) is enough. The HurprlHlnc Promptness with which nil dasKCH of people respond to our an* noinicomoiits, imd tiie rapidly increasing demand for lr. OreKK's Goods wherever introduced, conclusively prove that true modesty Is always recognized and the quality of merit takes care of Itself. Metaphorically our statement Is the Uutton— the Public Press It, and
DR. GREGG'S ELECTRIC SPECIALTIES
"DO THE REST."
The extent of Pressure on the button and the successor Dr. Gregg's Electric Goods in "Mollis the Kent," is more satisfactorily shown In the marvelous growth of our business the pn.st (SO days.
Repeated and Increasing demands for THE GREGG El,l!( TRIO "FOOT WARMER" are coming In froin all parts of the country with profuno acknowledgements that so much comfort for $1.00 (the price) was like buying Gold Dollars for ten acuta
The Delicate Organism of Woman subjects her to many peculiar ailments and unfortunate misery. The extreme sensitiveness of her Nervous System very frequently requires Rrtlflelalst.iinulus. The Gregg Klectrlo Belt lid other Appliances SUPPLY THIS, as ot lilug else can.
The Hugged Constitution of Man, when once Broken, becomes Pitiable In the extreme, from which there is absolutely NO escnpe without assistance. The GREGG Electric Belts and Appliances, In casesof this
UI...I
1have
.. 1irkn tHllIf* 'ritlunf Tr
kind, honestly won their Title of KING of REMEDIES. Rheumatism Is conquered, sufferers from Obesltv are speedily relieved, Dropsy quickly yields,*spinal dlfliculties and Paralysis disappear, and many other diseases of Men and Women are permanently cured, fully described In complete catalogue for tic, or olaborato circular roe. We guarantee to forfeit twice the price of any of Dr. Gregg's Goods found to be not genuine. We make am elegant little ijlM.OO Electric Itelf, which is soiling very rapidly and which wo will toko In exchange for any Higher Power Belt (except, So Belt) Bnd credit on the price of new order. Remember the Electric "Foot Warmers" aro $1 n.palr, worth #10. Address
The Gregg Electric Cure Co.,
flOl Inter Ocean Building, Chicago, 111. Mention this paper.
FAT PEOPLE
You
can got thin.
DR. MILES
NEW
HEART
CURE. rnzu
You
SPEEDY A. LASTING RESULTS. LKTKRKTT8 srscurto CO.( Bo*ton, ItiH,
can
stay
thin.
Dn^K»(ik
HEART niSEASE!
STATISTICS sh«w that one in rorn has a weak or JI ttv rt. The first symptoms ore ohorJ brritlh, opiwMtott, fluttering, ftOut nn«l hungry *p*tl».tmlM In »lil«,th«uma(tivritiEi iwo)Un ttnklr-., ilrop.y (nnt denth.l for which »».
MU.1W' NEW HE A 1ST CPBB
isn marvelous reuxuly. "1 have Iwen troubled with heart dispense for year#, niy left pnlse was very *roak, could nt tiroes scarcely feel It, the sniatiest e-vrtteroent wmiUl always weaken mr nerves ami heart nnd fear of Impending dealt! staml nip in the fnce fer hours. OR. MII.W
N KK YIN AND NEW HEART I'UK is tlie only medicine Hint has proved of any benefit and cured rue.—L. M. Drer, Cloverdale, ild. T)r, Mile*' I.lvrr PllUivre a sore remedy for BIIIOIIMCM and Torpid ,1.1 rer. 50 Bowi »3 cent*. Fine book Heart Disease, with wonderful cores Free t» urugjtffts, or address DR. MILES" MEDICAL CO.. Elkhart, Ind.
For Sale by JACXJB BAUR.
II. .A. DUES, TRY
Dr. De-Luc's Periodical Pills,
FROM PARIS, FRANCE.
Acta only on the menstrual sptem and cure# suppression of tlie mensu# A safe reliable month
positively from colds, shock, etc. lv medicine, warranted to relieve prlc* three for $&. The American Ptll and Medicine t\v, proprietors. Spencer, Iowa. Sold and sent oy mall upon rvcelpt of price, and by Geo. Rels-s druoilst, corner Third and Main street*. Terre Ifaute, Ind.
GRATKPHL-COarOBTIltCk
Epps's Cocoa
nRRAICFA$T«
•lty a thotongh knowledge of tb« natural
Caco*, Mr. Kpps has provided oar brmkfaat talt'cii with a delicately flavored beverage which may save many heavy doctors* bit I*. It Is by Uie judicious ustt or such sr-* Udc« of diet that a eonstHation may fmduallv n«»U up until strong eaotuth to wwlat every tendency to dl«««v Hundreds of *nb» tie maladies are floating around ready to attack wherever therein a w*ak point. We may w*p« many a fatal abaft hv keeping ourselves well fortified with pare blood and a properly nourished 8®rrtc*
UMCtiO, Made simply with boiling water or milk. Hold only In half-pound tins, by grexsw*, l»-t-eled thus: JAMKglbM OO|,Hom«opalMc Chemtsta, Ltadoa, Kaf.
WOMAN AND HOME.
ACHIEVEMENTS OF MOTHERS WHOSE SONS BECAME FAMOUS.
TTomen In Political "Work—Sweet Words in the Home—Hints About Garnish ins Ilshes— Girls and Low Cat Gowns.
Information for Housekeepers.
In these remarkable days of the waning Nineteenth century, when mnch that is wise and mnch that is foolish is written and talked on "The Woman Question," it would appear to be eminently proper to pause and reflect upon what woman has done in her sphere before there were any agitations as to her "rights.** "We are the equals of man," says the disputatious woman. "Give us the opportunities and we will distance them in their own occupations."
To this the male tyrant makes rejoinder: "Very true and very pretty, but when women have children would it not be wise for them to see what they can do in the cir cumstances thus imposed upon them? And wonld not this be better perhaps than to step down into the arena with the 'brutal sex' and do battle with them?"
In the achievements of those mothers who have exercised this sweet privilege and have sent sons into the world whose deeds have made them famous is the answer to be found. When Tennyson wrote "The Princess" he exercised the privilege of every true poet and preached a sermon while he told the story. We all know the story, but the sermon is not so familiar.
Why should the poet have interjected the exquisite bits such as "Home they brought her warrior dead," "As thro' the ]..i etc., into a poem that deals appurtJy with the question of the higher edu cv.tion of women? The reason is obvious Examine the poet's work carefully and it will be seen that each one of the dainty lyrics that has found its place in "The Princess" deals with some phase of the love of a mother for-her child. And so the meaning of the poem is, after all, "Woman is first and foremost a mother, and not all the learning of elassic halls can ever divorce her from this, her natural sphere."
What a formidable array! These sons who admit that to the training and equip mvnt received from their mothers they owe their wonderful success—Washington Greeley, Goethe, Schiller, Cnrlyle, Ruskin and Emerson, John Wesley and Victor Hugo, George Herbert and Cowper, St, Augustan, Cowley and Curran and Napo leon. Each one of these great men has left in evidence the fact that the material influence was the strongest in the forma tion of the individual who afterward stood forth pre-eminent among his con temporal ries.
No idle dreamers they—not men noted merely as well bred and polished, but names that have shaken empires, overturned religious creeds and stimulated in thought the best men of the times in which they flourished. There are cases, to be sure, in which the father assumed the role of mentor, but these great names stand out as conspicuous patterns of paternal training—Hannibal, who was brought to the altar at the age of nine and made to swear the oath of lifelong hatred and who died a suicide Horace, the poet, who wrote what we should now call society verse, and John Stuart Mill, who found the world so hollow at the age of tbirty-flve, after having been under his father's care all his life, that he could get no relief from a settled melancholy except in music, and after awhile even this failed.—St. Louis Post-Dispatch
'Women in Political Work.
It is not a little remarkable that nearly every country that admits the right of a woman to succeed to the crown has had female sovereigns in the highest rank as patriotic statesmen and skillful administrators. The names of Isabella of Castile and Maria Theresa will rise at once to every lip, and it is even more notable that in India, where the general position of women is so degraded, many native states have been governed by able and devoted female sovereigns.
But the most valuable historical evidence of the capacity of women for political affairs is to be found in the names of the English queens. Mary, the wife of William 111, is hardly to be counted, for though in name a queen regnant, her political influence was hardly more than that of a queen consort. But if we take the other four queens regnant, three of them, Elizabeth, Anne and Victoria, occupy the highest position on tho rollcall of sovereigns who have been successful in building up the strength and glory of England, developing her power and resources at home and abroad in frugal domestic administrr.tion, and in subordinating private desires and inclinations to political duties.
The high percentage of first classes and the small percentage of failures among women who have reigned appear to indicate in a pretty decisive manner that women have at any rate no natural incapacity to grasp the import of political affairs.— Mrs. F&wcett in Forum.
Sweet Words in the Home.
There is a tender sweetness about some of our common phrases of affectionate greeting, simple aud unobtrusive as they are, which falls like dew upon the heart. Good night! Tho little one lisps it as, gowned in white, with shining face and bands and prayers said, she toddles off to bed. Sisters and brothers exchange the wish parents and children friends and friends. Familiar use has robbed it of its significance to some of us we repeat it automatically without 'much thought. But consider. We are as voyagers putting off from time to time upon an unexplored sea.
Our barks of life set sail and go onward into the darkness, and we, asleep on our pillows, take no such care as we do when awake and journeying by daylight. Of the perils of the night, whatever they may be, we take no heed. An unsleeping vigilance watches over us, but it is tho vigilance of one stronger and wiser than we, who is the eternal good. Good and God tpring from the same root, are the same in meaning. "Good by" is only "God be with you." "Good night" is really "God night," or "God gnard the nighU"
It would be a churlish household in which these gentle forms of speech were Ignored or did not exist. Alike the happy and the sorrowful day by day may say "Good night-"—Harper's Bacar.
Hint* About OarnisliJnjt Dishes. If our Vgood plain cooks'f could only be Induced to garnish their dishes and serve them up daintily they would be far more appetising. ThiskiTOlvwsJjttle labor after all. and is within the reach of every bous keeper* Parsley especially gives an edible look to even a dish ot cold meat, and a box of It will grow easily In a sunny window all winter and require little or no eare. A few «pdg* around a dish, a IttUe chopped up and sprinkled over fried potatoes or A beefsteak makes all the difference
in the world in their appearance. Taken* some nasturtium roots in the autumn, cut back the ends and the buds, sind in a few weeks they will begin to bloom again, giving you the prettiest decoration possible for your salads.
In fact you might have a regular little kitchen garden in pots and boxes with very little trouble, and it will be almost sure to interest and delight your cook. There are no end of things that make pretty garnishes for a dish. A few fried onions help out a beefsteak immensely French ohops look particularly nice if laid in orderly fashion around a neat hillock of mashed potatoes a handful of watercress greatly helps the look of a roast of beef croquettes served in a napkin look twice as well as if laid in a dish. A fragrant geranium leaf floating in the water of a finger bowl looks fresh and dainty.—Chicago Journal,
Girls and tow Cut Gowns.
The question of when to wear low cut gowns can have but one answer, "Never in daylight." The rule that obtains for the assumption of men's evening dress—"from dusk to dawn"—is adjustable to both. For every function of society held from midday to a late dinner hour a girl's dress should be worn high, with long sleeves. If on any gala occasion it should be desirable to relax the stringency of this ordinance, it should be only to cut the dress open a |ittle below the throat, and to wear elbow slaves, a pretty girlish fashion, in which her youthful beauty loses naught. There is nowadays to be had such a variety of soft hued, crapy, clinging stuffs, than which nothing can better enhance round contours and fine lines of nature, that a young woman need not sigh for the additional attraction of neck and shoulders revealed to an artificial light) in the afternoon.
A few years ago the experiment was made of hostesses receiving at large afternoon teas in low cut dresses, but the contrast between them and their guests in every variety of outdoor garb, including tailor made gowns, soon brought the fashion to an end. At dinners, evening parties and balls it is so universal a modern custom to equip young girls in decollete gowns that there can only be the question of individual judgment in the matter to combat it. The cut of such dresses is, however, always modest.—Mrs. Burton Harrison in Ladies' Home Journal.
Napoleon's Mother.
Public attention does not seem to have been directed toward Napoleon's mother until her son was proclaimed emperor in 1804. She then received the title of Mme. Mere, and an income of 1,000,000 francs was settled upon her. And that she might have a position of political importance she was made protectrice generale of all the charitable institutions of France. Such an ofilce admirably suited her. She frequently solicited favors of her son for others and was happy whenever her exertions met with success.
On one occasion, upon learning of the arrest of the Due d'Enghien, she even threw herself upon her knees before Napoleon, imploring mercy for tho unfortunate prince.
After this it seems a pity that truthfulness must make us say that even this great woman had one littleness, if we may call it so, of character. She evinced sometimes a resemblance to the brother whose parsimony her sons had resented in tV.eir childhood, by showing a love of economizing, even upon trilling occasions. Tuis proved a source of frequent amusement among the gay circles of Paris. The emperor himself was sometimes a little scandalized at her actions, although this did not hinder him from most highly respecting her character.—Chambers'Journal.
Men Fear tho Sarcastic Girl.
The sarcastic girl may possess talent far above the breezy creature who candidly admits that she would rather read one of
The Duchess'" novels than an essay of Emerson. She may be able to converse in seven different languages. She may be as beautiful as an houri, but tnen will be afraid of that sharp tongue, and the purely feminine creature, who weeps and laughs by turn with Phyllis and Molly Bawn, will win the admiration and preside over tho home of tho greatest catch of the season, while her more brilliant sister, with her dangerous sharpness, will be left to her sarcasms and solitudes.
Sarcasm is not wit, though wit may be sarcastic. One can be bright and say all manner of thiugs without hurting the feelings of others by keen knife edged opinions that are subtle with bitterness and teeming with gftll.
SarcaSin is not a quality to be cultivated. It is a rank weed that once started grows and grows, choking out the little plants of kindliness, forethought and consideration until it overruns the garden of the mind, dominating and controlling each thought with a disagreeable pungent odor that cannot be eradicated.—Rehoboth Herald.
Prevention of Blindness in Children. The readiest and most efficient way of meeting and overcoming blindness among infants is to put a knowledge of the disease in possession of the mothers and those having the care of newborn children. The public at large must be made aware of the irremediable evils that are likely to follow from the neglect of what has been regarded as a simple and innocent affection. One medium through which this knowledge can be extensively disseminated is the Vffrious charitable organizations, municipal and private, with which our country is so abundantly supplied. Let every society or organization which has to do especially with women have printed Mid widely distributed among its people cards containing something like this:
If the newborn baby's eyes become red and begin to run matter, take it at once to a doctor. This condition is dangerous and may lead to total blindness."
By this means thousands of eyes that would have been lost will be saved. There is no need to appeal to the humanitarian sentiment# of readers a simple statement of the facta is sufficient, we are sure, to arouse their interest and enlist their cooperation in such a work.—Dr. Swan M. Burnett in Century.
Improving tke Hind.
Do all women find a little tlm&each day for reading something good? By good is meant broadening. Tea minutes a day makes hours in a year, and it means a growth c£ the mind that keeps a woman young. Youth means mme than the absenoeof ye&ra. It means living in the present and keeping abreast of the times. Women n«erl to do this. It is a duty owed to themselves and to their families, and she who buries herself in cooking, frills and foJIioseomniitsaBto. Only that which we assimilate as part of the mind is eternal, and it is the only treasure we carry iato that life beyond that awaits us all
All other things are bat the frame the real, the prtodeaa hi that which becomttft partof as, a poem today over which
UfiRRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL
think, & sentence tomorrow which makes luty clearer, a little here and there, and jur minds are growing richer, our lives ire broadening and helping others to reach out for the best.—St. Louis Star-Sayings.
Domestic Measurements.
Soft better the size of an egg weighs one ounce. Four teaspoonfuls are equal to one tablespoonful.
One pint of coffee "A" sugar' weighs twelve ounces. One pint of best brown sugar wejghs thirteen ounces.
One quart of sifted flour (well heaped) weighs one pound. Two teacupfuls (level) of granulated sugar weigh one ponnd.
Two teacupfuls of soft butter (well packed) weigh one pound. .One and one-third pints of powdered sugar weigh one pound.
One pint (heaped) of granulated sugar weighs fourteen ounces. r. Two tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar or flour weigh one ounce.
Two teacupfuls (well heaped) of coffee "A" sugar weigh one pound. Two and one-half teacupfuls (level) of the best brown sugar weigh one pound.
One tablespoonful (well heaped) granu lated coffee "A" or best brown sugar equals one ounce.—Good Housekeeping.
To Prevent Kigbt Cough.
When coughing at night is particularly troublesome the thorough warming of the bed previous to its being occupied will often avert an attack. The taking of warm drink, preferably a glass of hot milk before retiring, or, better, after getting in bed, is equally good. The opportunity to warm abed is not always possible, but it is generally very easy to procure a hot drink of some kind, no matter where one happens to be.
One of the nicest ways to warm abed is by ironing the lower sheet and as much of the upper one as is thrown back when the bed is opened. After this is done quickly draw up the bed clothing and place the boltles of hot water or the old fashioned warm log or bricks in between the ironed sheets. Persons with consumption and heart disease will secure untold comfort and many restful nights if they always go to warmed beds to seek repose.—Providence Journal.
A Bad Habit Among Children.
Children should be warned against the indiscriminate fashion they have of put ting every thing in their mouths while out of doors. Biting at their gloves is a very common trick, and even money is often held between their teeth while making change. People do not realize that their children are constantly carrying things to their mouths unless they begin to notice them particularly in regard to it, and they will then be astonished to see what a prevailing habit it is.
Give a young child an umbrella, a stick, a pencil to hold, and the chances are it will be in the mouth within five minutes, and when one considers how many dangerous diseases can be and are introduced into the system solely through the mouth it is easy to understand why one cannot be too careful.—New York Tribune.
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.
The Boastful Pug.
The boastful pap pot on boxing gloves, And in aloud tone said he: Tm champion of all the little dogs.
Will any one spar with me?" And the Maltese cat from a safe place said, "To spar with you I'll agree.'' "Come down on the ground., then," said tho pug.
Said the cat, "Yon come up in the treel" H3t. Nicholas. Blow, blow, blow! That disagreeable catarrh can be cured by taking Hood's Sarsapariila, the constitutional remedy.
When Jackie Saw the Sea.
It is interesting to note the early age at which the young idea, in some infants, begins to shoot regardless of any especial teaching. When Jack waseighteen months old his mother took him from the city, where the boundary of his small world had been that part of Central park lying between the tennis grounds and the upper lake, to a farmhouse in the mountains at Liberty. On the stage ride from the station he hailed each passing tree as a "yittle piece of a park." At the farmhouse one of his chief delights consisted in watching a flock of waddling, solemn geese. Two months later Baby Jack went to the seashore to finish his summer outing, and at the sight of the cat boats, which dotted the water with their white sails, he clapped his. dimpled brown hands, crying out, "Oh mamma, bee 'e pitty doose boats."—New York Recorder.
That house is no true home where the steam and fumes of the kitchen penetrate to the living rooms, or where the mistress sits down to her family table with her face clouded under the petty trials and vexations of her housework.
An honest Swede tells bis story in plaih but unmistakable language for the benefit of the public. One of my children took a severe cold and got the croup. I gave her a teaspoonfol of Chamberlain's Ooagh Remedy, and in five minutes Inter I gave her one more. By this time she bad to cough up the gathering in her throat, then she w«nt to aleepaadslept good for fifteen minute*. Then she got up and vomited then she went back to bed and slept good for the remainder of the night. She got the croup the second night and gave the same remedy with the mme good result*. I write this becanae thought there might be some one in same need and not know the true merits of thi« wonderful medicine. CHARLES A. THOXTSSKKX, Dea Motnea, Iowa. SO cent bottles for sale bv all druggists. Dec.
A Tablecloth Worth Having. The American woman who is the proud possessor of a silk petticoat covered with embroidered autographs will hide her diminished head when she reads about Mrs. Eduard Sacher's tablecloth. Mrs. Sacher is the wife of a well known Vienna restaurateur, and her tablecloth is covered with the signatures of distinguished guests who have dined in the Sacher rooms.
Archdukes, princes of foreign houses, men and women of the Austrian nobility, artists, writers and musicians are represented. The autographs were originally written in pencil and afterward embroidered by Mrs. Sacher. It is said that no one has ever refused to sign his name.—Chicago Tribune.
Mouth Breathing and Deafness. From the condition of a "mouth breather" it is but a short step to one of two results— more often both, deafness and that peculiarly stupid, sleepy, inane, foolish expression of countenance so characteristic of the "mouth breather."
To parents who have the welfare of their children at heart such a warning as this should be of sacred importance. As soon as the child gives evidence of a tendency to breathe constantly through its mouth just so soon should intelligent medical investigation be made of its nostrils, preferably by a proper specialist.—Dr. A. M, Fanning in Popular Science Monthly.
The Woman Who Sulks.
"Anything," said a worldly matron to a group of friends, "under the sun but a woman who sulks. A good, honest fit of anger, with a burst of heart sunshine to clear away the storm clouds, is generally effective. A man JIS a rule likes the fair one all the better for outspoken sentiments that are free from taunting meanness, butj what he cannot tolerate is the consciousness that the little passage at arms is going to be followed by a finishing off process which ends in sulky resentment. This sort of thing is sso rasping."—Philadelphia Inquirer.
For Nervous Prostration Use Horsford's Aoid Phosphate. Dr W.
GUAEVKS,
Bknmkta Orgaas «an
Northlield, Minn,
aays: "l have used it in casesof nor vous prostration, and also in combination with other remedies in indigestion, it has proved as satisfactory as could be expected.
Heart Disease cured. Sr. Miles' New Core.
T-A-IKZEJ
Phenyo Caffein!
FOR HEADACHE or NEURALGIA.
It tones up the Nerves, and thus has a curative actioh in Headache, Neuralgia or Rheumatism. Money refunded if it does not cure.
Go to druggists for PlienyoCaffein. It is guaranteed to cure Headache and Neuralgia.
Those who have trvkeu PhenyoCaffein for Headache
or
Neuralgia
are unwilling to be without it. Take Phenyo- Caffein for Head ache "It does the work."
Why suffer with Headache or Neuralgia, wheif Phenyo-Caffein is to be had at your druggists'?
ROSS GORDON,
LAFAYETTE, IND.
WHOLESALE AGENT FOK INDIANA
PLEASANT
THENEXTMORNING|
FEEL BRIGHT AND
NEW AND MY COMPLEXION 18 BETTER. Mr doctor says.lt acts gently on the stomach, liver and kidneys, and Is a pleasant laxative. This drink is made from herbs, and Is prepared for use as easily as tea. It Is called
LAHE'S MEDICINE
All druggists sell It at GOc. and $1.00 per package. Bay one to-day. Lane's Family Medicine move* the bowels each da v. In order to be healthy, thlf sneoessary.
FOR MEN ONLY
YOUNG MEN OLD MEW
SET tN TtU TOILS OF THE gtXPENTS OF DISEASE. They Bake horeia effort! to free tfe«»Ml*es, but not knowing he*» to jnceeciJoilv
SHAKE OFFTHE HORRID SNAKES
OUR NEW BOOK Mfll frf. po»t-p*l4, r»)!«itcd
Um«.e«plnSti*
tb» pfaUoMpby of nil tiles ud Afflictions ot the Orc*o» of Itsn, and
HOME TREATMENT, lqr methods exclusively onr own, tfcs worst eases of lost or Fslllaf MsnHoj*. Gvrtrkl Mt Kerroni DeMlttr, Weskaats of Bo4y •ad Mind, BSoets of Error* ®r Etc*****, fltnnud or
•M mOtt So«»«. T«rrtwrk«
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PASTILLES
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WEAK MEN
({VITALLY WEAK*. SWewkyU ex** .«,:!««»»to iNulsen »r iMr: wrtra BWttl rtftiaor grMi SCXCJtt. ROSKS la aid««lifter ttetoiai MR« is roots,
WRIY URN ,IK TICTIKSTO *r*vor* BWITTTTW nUR ffltR EXHiMTior, wjumwi wmsxws. uTOU.JTARY losses »il* EXKLT DM.it fa. Totsu *mt m»MS JtSHH ef *1*. orfUM kmtrca4nit(M4 pmtttrrttrja mpftmuhhit ti4 u*.
WHE1 IK SAY CURE.te.iX&'.-SKS
to mtxif Uxys««s4 ttiiwwJ hi putftraJveyctnt.
MMAOM «M lirnv*
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i.«wi«l IsX«wir«f*rmr**iSi,La«lL*» OR *c*«(uwt« to ner*! PmtttH Tnuxta—i. THE HARRIS REMEDY OO., Mfg. Chemist*, as «nnitr ITSHHI1 wttw vmir
SI
Lydia £. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
Acts in perfect harmony with the laws that govern the female system* under all circumstances. Its success in quickly and permanently curing all forms of
Female Complaints, Is unparalleled in the histoijr of" medicine. Is almost infallible. Use it with confidence in cases of
LeneoniicM, Betrine-down FetUnf, Weak B«ek, FfcNUl sad DtipUcemeatofth« Womb, ln(Umm»Uon, OrarUn Troubles,. snd all Organic l)iira*M of the Uterui or Womb. It It' invaluable to the Chauge of Lift.
DisaolTts and exptlt Tumora from the Utern* at an early' stage, and checkaany tendency to Cancerout Humor. f.ubduet Falntneu, Exrltabllltr. Kerrout Proitratlon, SXhauntlon, Kidney Complalnta, ami tonca the Stomach,
All Drucelita tell It, qr tent by mall, In farm of rlU« or Losenget, on receipt qf 81.OO. jilwr Hllla, 8flc. IA'DIA. K. PINKHAM MED. CO., I.YNN, MAM.
CURE
Sick Headache and relieve all tbo troubles inofdent to a billons citato ot tho system, auoh aa Dlwlness, Nausea, Drowslneso, Dlstrow nfice satins, Pain in tho SI do, Ac. While thuir rco .5 remarkable auccess lias been showo lu curing
SICK
Headache, jut Carter's LltUa Liver Pills arS" equally vnluabloln Constipation, curing aud pro* Tenting tliis annoying complaint, vrhilo tboj- air,® corroct all disorders of tho stojnticli 41 tl nmlato tho liver and regulate the bovrcla. Even if they only
"HEAD
Acfcathoy would bo aim ostpricolessto thom. win*Buffer from this distressing complaint but fortuuately their gooduosa does notond horc, ona who onoe try thorn will find theaolittloptltovnlu* fiblo In so many ways that they will
IH
bo vil-
ling to do without them. But aftor haa&.
ACHE
I 1b the bone of BO many livoa that here l8v" re vro make our groat boast. Our pillscuroltv. ao Others do not.
Carter's Littlo Liver Pills aro very nmall itnfl very easy to take. Ono or two pills makoa doao. They aro striotly vegetable and do not gripo oe purge, but by their gentio action please all wbu me them. In vials at 26 cents livofor $1. Sola,' by druggists everywhere, or scut by malL
CARTER MEDICINE CO., New York.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICF
S!
MEN
SiS!
HAPPY
I: S:
MEN who use HEALTH T1D-B1T8 regain 1 strength dream and dribbling losses cease and body recuperates: goo' mall, ft. Sample box, 10 cts ire ft 177 Sycamore Street, 1
ABSOLUTELY
No Change of Cars
-FROM-
ST. LOUIS, TERRH HAUTE: INDIANAPOLIS, CINCINNATI,
DAYTON,
SPRINGFIELD,
New York, Boston
THIEJ EAST
VIA THE POPULAR
S a
J310 Hr, NewYork Central ROTXO::IIS.
THK
Shortest & Quickest Line
BETWEEN
EAST JTWEST.
All trains arrive and Depart from Shctb Street Depot.
Berths in Sleeping Cars
SKCURKD THKOTJOH TO'
NEW YORK & BOSTON
E.E. SOUTH, Gen. Agt,
710 WABA8H AVENUE
BfiL DIEFFENBACH'S PROTAGON CAPSULES,
Sore Cure for Weak Men, as proved by reportsof leading physicians. State a#e In ordering. Price, #1. SaUlogae Free. A O A A sate and speedy HA Is cure for of««£ II W Stricture sod au nnnatural discharges. Price #3.
Care* nil Blood t, #er»f'
AREEK SPECIFIC
Wand Skin Hls«o*««. I
u1 tram ftere* andWyphtlltlc Affection* with cotmemiry. Price, S3. Order from
THE PERU DRUG & CHEMICAL CO. A
WiMOuia SUM, MV.WAVZM3, yOf
Act on a r.ew prtndplo— regulate the liter, stomach
Dm
bowels through IM
nerve*. Da.
MILKS' PILLS,
tpeedUv air* bliloosnMS,, torpid lirer and
COD*U(M.
tton. Smallest, mildew* viurMtl &pdoses,25et4i Sanplea free at dnwgista. fr. wh* «•-. Httart,
A4&
""-1 ,-safe
