Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 32, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 January 1893 — Page 2

WOMAN AM) HOME.

THE BAD PRACTICE OF KEEPfNG CHILDREN UP AT NIGriT.

Ahnnt Onr Bod*-—Give Her a Sliow—I'ay of Teai'bt—k anil Citokb—Tin- Cimrtn of Pleasantness—IJivngcr in the Kitchen.

Woman's Artistic Natiuf*.

It seems to xi)e that each year parents who live in New York are Iecaaiing less careful of the ha-.lth of their children. I refer particularly to..the late hours which children arc allowed to keep nowadays.

Iri the matter of diet, perhaps, the youngsters have better—at any rate more scientific—care bestowed upon them than formerly. They are not allowed to gorge themselves with sweetmeats and pastries its much as they were, and pie is rapidly becoming an unknown substance in the nursery.

The good old rule of "early to bed and early to rise/' etc., is observed mainly in the breach. Instead of going to bed regularly at 6 o'clock, 8 baa now become almost the universal hoar for the little ones to say good night, ami in many families it ismuch later. Worse than all this is the rapidly growing custom of taking children, anywbere from four to ten years of age, to entertainments in the evening.

Go to an evening performance at any theater in the city. You will be surprised to see the number of children in the audience. Quite likely you would not notice them unless your attention was called to their presence. No longer is the matinee the sole performance for them. Almost as many are taken to the playhouses in the evening as in the afternoon. It is not usually convenient for "papa" to go to a matinee and "mamma" wants to go with him. Of course tho child wants to go, too, and the parents nre weak and yield. The introduction of the child element so extensively in the drama and the swarm of infant prodigies who appear at private entertainments and receptions have had a great deal to do with inducing mothers to let their children stay up to unreasonable hours.

In almost every car, in almost every elevated train, late at night you will see, if you take the trouble, a father holding in his arms a boy or girl little more than a baby. The child is too tired to hold its head up and rests it wearily on the father's shoulder. The little face looks worn and haggard. The half open eyes are heavy and dull. Sometimes it is only a wea bit of a baby you will find traveling through tho city at this midnight hour. Then it is all the worse.

And, again, when the car is crowded you may find the father standing up and holding tho tired child in his tired arms all the way to Harlem.

It is a good lesson for him, though. Ho is not ho ready to take his offspring out the next time such a proposition is broached.

Of course the children get just as much sleep in the long run, but not just as good, to say nothing of the bud liabit of late risii) in which the practice initiat es them. .Send them to bed early. It is cruelty to keep them up, aud it is making a lot of pale faced, spirit less and prematurely old young people who when' they grow up will not make nearly as good citizens as they would had they gone to bed early.—New York Horakl.

About Our Iieds.

Having been a great deal away from home, I have been a constant observer of other people's housework, and as I have slept in so many different beds I have particularly noticed them. Some housekeepers who are very nice and tidy about their houses are dreadfully "slack" about their beds. One spends about one-third of the time in bed, and a great deal more time thaft is given ought to be spent in airing and cleaning tho beds. .Making the beds has been i\iy work over since I was eight years old, when my mother first taught me. In tlio&e days we had heavy domestic ticks, and these were filled with oat straw carefully pulled out of the stack or with the inner cornshucka torn into line shreds. A shuck bed would hist a couple of years, but those made with straw were emptied, the ticks washed and refilled with clean straw every spring. Over these were good, large feather beds. These were emptied and the ticks washed about every third spring, the feathers well aired and put back again. Over the feather bed we had a heavy quilt made to fit tho bed aud not hang over. In summer this quilt was put next to tho straw tick and tho feather bed laid aside.

In winter we had blankets and a few light quilts, and in tho summer sheets and a couple of thin quilts and a spread.

Every spring all the quilts and blankets used during the winter were washed and put away till winter came again. In the fall the summer bedding was washed.

Every morning, as soon ns we got up, the "covers" were turned down and the windows raised. After breakfast and the dishes done, the beds had to be made. The straw or shucks were thoroughly stirred, feather bed turned over, sheets put on, and then the quilts. Each lied bad a wonderful patchwork quilt on the outside, a long bolster to sleep on and a pair* of immense pillows to stand up and look nice. The pillows were laid aside at night

Tho IkmI of today—how different! A set of springs, a thin, hard mattress, sheets cold in wiuter. suffocating in summer, a couple of heavy, clumsy comforts, that ore too heavy to wash, and so must be worn until worn out, all hid by a lovely lace spread and shams.—Housekeeper.

Olrfi Her a Show.

What right have the men of a family to •criticise or refuse to recognize tho rights of other members of the family, even if they do happen to be women? You may not believe it, but the world is fall of just rfuch men. They cannot understand nor have any consideration or sympathy for the fact that the daughter or sister should want to do something for herself in place of living tho routino of life that they plan and mark out for her. They feel a horror at the thought of the sister "unseating" herself— Allowing her intellect to earn the money to pay for her own keeping, instead of her hands to sew on tho buttons and mend the «ocks to pay for tho shelter which they are willing to give her. They think if there is any money to be earned or to be had in the family it should be the individual right of the men that the women are trespassing when they have a desiro to balnnce the scale of their own ability with coin instead of the privilege of mending socks and things*

What man is there thnt would allow another man—be he fat her or brother—to say you must do this and that with your time and life? What intelligent man is

there

who will fee! competent to judge of the uMiity of another man without having Ki\.Vtbe

ability a trial

t,d wh*\ the' *,, should we condemn without a test the cajwbUitu ct mino one who happens to be his«ist«r©r the sister of same one else?

Women are numbered among the thousands who go through lite feeling that a

great injustice is beinfj done to them, simply because, brothers and husbands do not understand that they can have ambitions and yearnings equally commendable, with their own. A woman feels that an injustice is done her not because an interest iu the thing itself is hot given, but because those most interested in her personally have no sympathy or appreciation of what she as an individual most desires to do.—Chicago Inter Ocean.

Pay of Teachers and of Cooks. A year or'twoago there was printed alist of questions concerning domestic service in the United States. They were prepared by Miss Lucy Salmon,the professor of history at Vassar college. Among other interesting facts gleaned from theanswers to these questions are these: By a comparison made between the wages received by teachers in the public schools of, Cambridge and cooks in the neighboring city of Boston it is found that .16 per cent, of the teachers in the former city earn §620 a year. If the very small sum of $&S5 were deducted for board for one year, this would leave a balance of $335 for clothing, travel, books, lectures, charity, pew rent and the inevitable rainy day.

The average wages of the Boston cook are, according to 574 returns, $4.45 weekly, or $231.40. As the cook has no outlay for food, fuel, light or laundry expenses, it is estimated that this added money value would amount to §275 and bring her wages up to go(W.40. The difference in the amount of money left the teacher after paying necessary expenses and that received by the cook, who has no such outgo, would therefore be only €103.

The teacher must dress better, as becomes her position she must attend lectures to keep iu touch with improved methods she is urged to subscribe from, her pittance to journals of education, and has street car fare to pay daily in stormy weather. By comparing two of the tables in the report it is seen that the Boston cook is probably in possession of more money at the end of tho year than the average teacher in Albany, Atlanta, Baltimore, New Orleans, Paterson, Rochester and Syracuse.—New York Post.

Tho Charm of Pleasantness. Every woman has an inherent longing to be attractive, and if she has not she should have, for what would this chaos, doubt and" strife of our daily warfare become were it not that sweet womau interfuses into it her calming, cheering influences? And the natural tribute men pay to woman's attractive qualities is admiration. If a woman is incapable of appreciating the homage of man, and treats man's highest gift as though it were vanity, she makes a serious mistake.

But how can a girl best gain the love and respect of others? This is an all important query, and it is best answered by a concrete illustration drawn from real life. Miss A. is beautiful. Her statesque form and magnificent face are always the same, with a cold, distant aspect which even her Undoubted beauty does not redeem from reproach. Miss B. is neither so talented j.or yet so lovely, but she meets one heart to heart, and her continued pleasantness has a charm which draws around her a devoted circle of appreciative friends. She is her father's confidante, her mother's joy, the recipient of her brother Jack's love trouble and sister Nellie's struggles with French.

Ah, girls, the snowiest skin will some day be sallow, the flush of youth will disappear, the bright eye grow dim and the nervy limb be uncertain and feeble, but this inward loveliness, this beauty of the spirit, is born of heaven and knows no death 1 The tender ministries of Miss B. will creep into any true heart sooner than Miss A.'s icy beauty. Such a woma'n in any homo is a glimpse of God's sunshine. Beauty and genius are the gifts of Providence, but good heart all can cultivate.— New York Ledger. •'ii

Dialler in t.ho Kitchen.

"My husband," said a physician's wife not, long ago, "chanced to see one day, standing on a shelf outside our kitchen window, some molds of jelly cooling for tho night's dinner. They were uncovered, as they were out of roach of cats and in full view of the cook's watchful eye. But he questioned me about them and asked if it were our usual custom to leave jelly thus unprotected. I was obliged to reply that, so far as I knew, it was. "Then he said: 'Don't you know that when we medical men want to secure minute organisms for investigation wo expose gelatin to the air or in places where we have confined malignant germs? The gelatin speedily attracts and holds them. I'm afraid your flavored gelatin does the same. Cool tho jelly if you must, but cover it with a piece of sheer close muslin, or, better, if you have it, some pieces of glass taken from some broken window pane.' And we have always done that since then."

It is to bo feared that kitchen processes nre sources of illness more often than is imagined. In many city houses the little kitchen annex, where stands the refrigerator, and where various eatables are kept, is directly against a.drain and a closet.

Yet hero stand daily Uncovered milk, butter, often custards and puddings, and various other absorbents. The average cook is absolutely ignorant of sanitary cause and effect, and the eternal vigilance of the house mother is the family's chief safeguard.— Her Point of View in New York Times.

Woiuan'a Artistic Nature.

Mr. Edmund Gosse, tho English critic, says that "the artistic nature is not strongly developed in woman.'" Yet it is developing in her for all that, Mr. Gosse, and we guess that it will yet be strongly developed. The artistic nature of woman never had a fair show until our time. Now at last it has a fair show. Woman has the opportunity of cultivating it, manifesting it and enjoying the fruits of it. There are great institutions in which she con study all the arts, and in which she is studying them. She can study them unhampered by the presence of man or under the stimulus of rivalry with man. She can present, her productions to the world without obstruction, sure of a fair judgment upOn them. It is a glorious age for woman. All fields are open to her. When she offers us any work of art we welcome it with pride and exult in her triumph.

It has often been said that tho Nineteenth century is woman's century, but it is our opinion that the Twentieth century will be a very merry time for two or three generations of womankind. When Mr. Edmund Gosse, of England, writes, he certainly cannot be thinking of the American woman, the proud soaled, all conquering and incomparable American woman. We have in our country at this time thousands of women earnestly engaged in the study of the «iru, and this fact alone furnishes am pie evidence that the artistic nature of the American v.-omaa is strongly developed.~ New York

Tli« Wumaa with living Heart. The woman with a loving heart is sure to look upon the bright-' side of life, atul by her example induces others to do so. She I sees a good reason, for all the unwelcome events others call bad luck. She believes

'^if^rwm^w

Why Woman Is Behind Man in Music. A German philosopher asserts that physiologically woman is more musically constituted than mau, and that the lack of opportunity and means of developing her power has stifled the germs of genius in many women. The pathetic story of Fanny Mendelssohn bears out the theory, for had her parents, instead of preaching down their daughter's genius, encouraged and fostered it, there might have been a woman composer great enough to refute the chargo of lack of originality in women.

To Care for tho Complexion. The desultory way in which many women caro for their complexions yields poor results. It requires care to keep perfectly clean hands, and women can't expect to erase wrinkles, callousness and black spots by occasionally dabbing their faces with some advertised water under a high sounding name. A little care given every morning with a pure cosmetic will give lasting results, but the treatment must be as regular as combing the hair.—Philadelphia Inquirer.

Miss Betham-Edwards is about the medium height, middle aged and slender in figure. She is fair in complexion, has hazel eyes and a mass of thick, dark hair, gray over tho temples and worn in a twist at the back, the ends dispersed neatly round a small and compact head.

The best success in indoor plant growth comes from a uniform temperature of 50 to 60 degs. at night and from 60 to 75 degs. during the day. A higher temperature is only needed by semi tropical flowers.

The greatest art of a true housekeeper is to conceal her art—to make her home an abiding place of peace, on which the demons of unrest and fickleness never enter.

Teach boys and girls the actual facts of life as soon as they are oli enough to un deration! them, and give them the sense of responsibility witljout saddening them

The myrtle is symbolical of the innocence of the bride, and is jealously worn by every German bride except in the case of women marrying for the second time.

Russian tea is made by simply floating a piece of lemon in place of creaui. This i* very refreshing and enlivens the nerves.

Scallop edge o? an old, br^v frayed skirt, working in buttonhole -. ch with white tianu&i cottoai.

TEJRRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, JANUARY 28^1893.

til silver linings, and likes to point them out to others. A week of rain or fog, an avalanche of unexpected guests, a dishonest servant, an unbecoming bonnet or any other of the thousand minor inflictions of everyday life have no power to disturb the deep- calm of her souL The love light is still in her eyes, whether the days be dark or bright. It is she who conquers the grim old uncle and the dyspeptic aunt. The crossest baby reaches out its anus to her, and is comforted. Old people and strangers always ask the way of her in the crowded street. She has a good word to say for the man or woman who is under the worlds ban of reproach. Gossip pains her, and she never voluntarily listens to it. Her gentle heart helps her to see the reason for every poor sinner's misstep, and condones every fault. She might not serve with acceptance on the judge's bench, but she is a very agreeable person to know.—Harper's Bazar. 'v

Jules Verne's Wife.

The wife of Jules Verne was married at the age of twenty-four her maiden name was Dufrayse. Her father was an army officer of an ancient family of Perigord. Her marriage has proved an exceptionally happy one.

She

is the mother of two daughters,

and of a son, Michel Verne, who is the youngest of her children and is thiity years of age. Her eldest daughter is thirtyeight, and her younger one is thirty-six. All are married, and Mme. Verne is the happy ancestress of six little grandchildren "It has been reported that Jules Verne has been largely aided in the preparation of some of his novels by his intelligent and devoted wife. She herself has hastened to deny the rumor, declaring that she has never taken part in any fashion in the literary labors of her husband. "While fully appreciating" (I quote her own words on tho subject) "the happiness I enjoy in being the life companion of an intellectual man, to whose career success has not beeu lacking, I have shared, therefore, the joys and not the fatigues of his existence as an author."—Lucy Hooper in Ladies' Home Journal.

The Pillow of the Italian Peasant. The Italian peasant girl as soon as she has learned to spin and sew begins to make her wedding trousseau. Thence piece by piece it grows, and she has put into it all her finest stitchery and sweetest thoughts. As soon as she is a bride she makes a bag of fine muslin. This she begins to fill with rose leaves. Each year adds its share. When she dies, perhaps ivy old woman full of years, it is this rose pillow that her head rests on. In this calm acceptance of and preparation for the great events of life, such as marriage and death, there are time and soil for the blossoming of fancy which we, stumbling, hit and miss, through life, do not furnish.—Chicago Times.

Kxtravagant Tablecloths.

The Paris fashionables are becoming most extravant with regard to their tablecloths for dinner, more so than as to what they place upon them in the eatable and drinkable

vrv.y.

The fashion is to embroider the tablecloth with the most splendid and expensivo lace, into which the coat of arms of the' host and hostess are worked the same with the serviettes. Those persons who have not a coat of arms and accept the general fashion for this rich embroidery work adopt the Louis XV pattern, under which majesty they thus elect to he classed.—Boston Globe.

2Tor Ho\ise Roses.

If the flowers in your window box seem blasted, or are of a faded, sickly color, cover the earth around the roots about half an inch deep with pulverized charcoal. The roses that blossom in the next few days will have a fine, lively rose color. Charcoal always gives great vigor to the red or violet colors of flowers. White petunias become varied with red or violet tints violets become covered with irregular spots of a Jjluisli or almost black tint, but yellow floweM are insensible to its influence.— New York' Recorder.

Jean Ingelow's .London Home. Jean Ingelow's Loudon home is a veritable bower, hidden from the street by trees and shrubs, and surrounded by a half acre of ground, every inch of which is made to produce soma useful or beautiful form of plant life. This garden receives the poet's constant personal care in ummer, and in winter all the moveable plants are brought into a conservatory, where in a world of blossoms Miss Ihgelow receives her callers ond serves them with the great English beverage in pink eggshell cups.

A CALIFOKNiA CCIilO.

Chemical Properties of a Spring IT

1

That Makes the Hair Grow.

The Strange Discovery of a "Bald-Headed Old Sinn Whose Scalp Was Made to Produce a Generous ,*' Growth.

The spring is about thirteen miles southeast of San Diego, at the head of a little valley branching' from the Sweetwater. Standing on the little mound out of which the waters gush you can see Mount San Mignel to \he east, to the southward Sweetwater lake, and off in the west a range of low hills which just shuts off the view of the Pacific ocean. And if you follow the road a' little farther north you will find yourself among the olive and lemon groves of the Sweetwater and Spring valleys. The tiny valley is part of the old Spanish "Jainaoha" grant, and had passed through many and romantic episodes before it n?ade known the powers of its little spring. Underlying its soil and but a few inches below the surface there is an immense cement deposit, highly impregnated with iron, arsenic, sulphur and magnesia, and it is supposed that the waters get their chemical qualities by percolating througli^thls cement bed and dissolving its ingredients.

The first person to discover the virtue of these waters, says the Chicago Inter Oeean, was an old man named Jepseii, who in 1885 lived on an adjoining claim and carried water for domestic purposes from this spring. He was then seventy-three years old, his head was perfectly bald on the crown, and what hair he had was thin and scattering. In a few weeks a thick grojvth of hair started up all over his head, and his son, who is'now a merchant on Iv street in San Diego, says that he had to cut his father's hair many times during their residence on the ranch. At the time they regarded this growth of hair as an unaccountable phenomenon, and did not think of attributing it to the waters of the spring until they learned of its effect^ upon other people.

At about the same time Charles Fitzallen, another bald man, nearly sixty years old, was living on the ranch a,nd regularly using the spring water. In about two months' time he found a new growth of hair covering his head, which he says is as soft and luxuriant as it was in his youthful days.

Dr. P. C. Remondino, Dr. Thomas L. Magee and Dr. T. A. Davis, all prominent San Diego physicians and members of the board of health of that city, have, investigated the spring' and its cures and have reported as follows to your correspondent: "The water is alkaline, ferruginous, sulphurrettcd, and arsenical, and from the evidence brought before us we must acknowledge that it has made hair grow on scalps where it had been entirely lost. Of this we have had several examples on persons whom we have known for a number of years and wlio, until the use of said waters, had given up all hope of ever again having a full head of hair."

Most of the people in San Diego who known anything about this spring will simply iaugh and say, "Nonsense!" if you ask them about its hair-raising properties. Their scepticism, however, is based solely on broad, general principles, and no case was found in which it was due to personal knowledge. But a San Francisco gieaiist who analyzed the water made this report: "If there Is anything in that water to make hair grow a liberal application of apollinaris to a bald head ought to raise a redwood forest."

Ponderous German Humor. The slowness of the German savant to comprehend the quips and turns of American humor are traditional, but according to Kev. Dr. Griffis a company of them was actually put to the test by an American consul stationed in a German city. The consul, to prove the truth of the tradition, read to them Mark Twain's declaration that "it is not possible to raise watermelons in the vicinity of a theological seminary." The Germans, pressed to explain the meaning of that, were only able to reply that they could not see why the watermelons would not grow "if the seeds were healthy, the soil rich, and the seminary buildings did not shade the melon patch." There is the same ponderosity about German humor that characterizes their philosophy and- literature. What the scalpel cannot be applied to is likely to escape them.

Pimples on the

Face cured. Sulphur Bitters will cure the worst case of skin disease fiom a common pimple on the face to that awful disease scrofula, it is the best medicine to use in all cases of such stubborn and deep-seated disease. Do not delay: use Sulphur Bitters and drive the humor from your blood.

p^gloRKPQlH^

VETOH!

Physicians Couldn't Cnre Him. SEDAM8VTLLK, Hamilton Co., 0., June, 1B89. One bottle of Pastor Koenig"a Nerve Tonic cored me entirely, after physicians had tried unsuccessfully for eight months to relieve mo of nervous debility. W. HUENNEFELD.

Lowell, Ohio, July 8,1890.

I bad epileptic fits for about four yews, two every week, when Rev. J. Kampnaeyer recommended Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonic since using ft have bad none. It ia the best epileptic medicine I have ever used, aud I have used

ADAM CRAMER.

New Cohtdon, Ind., Nov. 18,1©0-

it affords mo exeat pleasure to certify that my son, who for five and a half years *a* affectea failing sickness, vr&g cured by usiug Pa«tor Kotnics Nerve Tonic. For two years past he baa »o6 had a sjcgle attack. Therefore, tuy

rnrIT &<«««»*»»T»»

KLL

*N?

obtaiB

tbe

HOEIilC MEO. CO., Chicago, lit. pftM try Drtiggigta a£ St iver Bottle. 6ftir8S £fgEgossse.*vrA eBottfcwfiw*®.

ja ytt ,,

"-'s'

"I have been using Salvation Oil for a lame back, and think it if th« be-t reme-i dy l.aive ever used. G. E. Durling, 15 Oritral avenue, I"nn. Mass,"

I A Hap:»y Family. At Central park, in New York city, may be seen a happf family, the like of which, possibly^ cannot be met Anywhere else in the world. It consists of a number of frisky young hares and the slowest and mast ancient looking of tortoises. The tort oises, however, are net as old as they appear. When grown to their full size they will

weigh hundreds of pounds apiece and lie quite able to carry men upon their backs. The tortoises are part of a number brought from the Galapagos islands several year* ago to the Natural History museum at Washington.

Although rather clumsy pets, the creatures are entirely harmless. The little saucy hares that share quarters with them at Central park pl:iy(aroi?ud, about and all over them, as if they were so many great bowlders, which indeed they somewhat resemble.—St. Nicholas.

A Lively Storm.

First Boy—Woo! This is a awful storm, isn't it? Just hear the wind! Second Boy—Pop read in the papej that this was only the tail end of a big storm that's movin across the country.

First Boy—Well, mebby it is, but it's switcliin its tail pretty hard, isn't it?—Good News.

The 1 iws of health are taught in our schools but not iu a way to be of much practical benetit and are never illustrated by living'examples, which in many eases could easily be done. If some scholar who had just contracted a cold was brought before the school, so that all could hear tho dry loud cough, and know its significance see the thin white coating on the tongue and .later, as the cold developes, see the profuse watery expectoration and thin watery discharge from the nose, not one of them would ever forget what the first symptoms of a cold were. The scholar should then be given '"Chamberlain's Cough Remedy freely, that all might see that even a sevore cold could be cured in one or two days, or at least greatly mitigated when properly treat ed as soon as the first symptoms appear. For sale by all druggists. Jan.

I had a severeattack of entari aud be came so deaf I could not hear common conversation. I suffered terribly from roaring in my head. I procured a bottle of Ely's Cream Balm, and in three weeks could hear as wel.l ns I ever could, and now enn say to all who are afllicted with the worst of diseases, catarrh, take Ely's Cream Balm and be cured. It is worth $1,000 to any man, woman or child suffering from catarrh.— A. E. Newman, Ir&yling, Mich. 3'2-2.

For Torpid Liver *eo Dr. Miles' Pills.

Miles' Nerve and Livor Pllla. Act on anew principle—regulating the liver stomach and bowels through Ihit nerves, A new discovery. Dr. Miles' Pillsspeedily cure biliousness, bnd taste, torpid liver, piles, constipation. Un on ftled for men, womon and children. Smallest, mildest, surest! r»0 dimeo, 25 cts. Samples Free at all druggists.

Children of Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Sollar Altoona, Fa.

Both Had Eczema

In Its Worst Form

After 'Physicians Failed, Hood's Sarsaparilla Perfectly Cured. Great mental agony is endured by

5rom

arents

who see their children suffering diseases caused by impure blood, ana for Which there seems no cure. This is turned to joy when Hood's Sarsaparilla is resorted to, for it expels the foul humors from the blood, and restores the diseased skin to fresh, healthy brightness. Read the following from grateful parents:

To C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: ""We think Hood's Sarsaparilla is the most valuable medicine on tho market for blood and skin diseases. Our two children suffered terribly with the

Worst Form of Eczema

for two years. We had three physicians in that time, but neither of them succeeded in curing them or even in giving them a little relief. At last we tried Hood's Sarsaparilla and in a month both children were perfectly cared. We recommend

Hood's Sarsaparilla

as a standard family medicine, and would not be without it." Mb. and Mas. M. M. Solleb, 1412 2nd Avenue. Altoona, Fa.

HOOD'8 PJLL8 cure liver flit, constipation, bUSooineti, Jaundice, tick, headache, lndlgeitlon.

MEN Sl§i HAPPY SEE:

KBK who use HEALTH TID-BIT8 regain iwM( strength dream and dribbling Iootm c«»»e mind

RemedyFree. IKTAIITaiUlf. Final ire in 10da.y*.NeTer returns: no ponte no mItd no •appositor)'. A victim tried in r*in mrr remedy has discovered a

PILES

oimpie cam, which he will mail free to bin fellow *offerera. aUt«m J.B.KKKrcH.Boi 82w».X*ir v.rt lHr,.N.r.

jBOF. DIEPFENBACH'8 PROTAGCN CAPSULES,

Sere Core for Weak Men.« proved by reports of leading pnraldan*. State sge in ordering. Price. 81. Catalojrue Free.

A A Assfe and cpeedy JEr «iis tor Gleet, 19 W W SKricttrretrnd all onnaturaldtodianM*. Pries 8®. ffcREEK SP£€1

FiCB»S*d

OlMtuet,

Bloat Sore* snfi# illllle ASectloaij flfith OTitiBerfwry. Price. ȣ. Older imm

THE PERU DRU6 & CHEMICAL CO.

189 Wucotaaa Stmt, Jtl&WATOHZ,

The Keystone Watch Case Co. of Philadelphia,

the largest watch case'manufacturing concern in the world, is now putting upon the Jas. Boss Filled and other cases made by it, a bow (ring) which cannot be twisted or( pulled off the watch.

It is a sure protection against the pickpocket and the many accidents that befall watches fitted with the old-style bow, which is simply held in by friction and can be twisted off with the fingers. It is called the

and CAN ONLY BE HAt) with cases bearing their trade mark—

Sold only through watch dealers, without extra charge. Ask any jeweler for pamphlet, or send to the manufacturers.

Railroad Time Tables.

Train rked thus (P) denote Parlor Cam attached. Trains marked thus (S) denote sleeping Cars attached daily. Trains marked thus (B) denote Bufl'et Cars attached. Trains marked thus p) run daily. All other trains run daily, Sundays accepted.

LIIsTB.

T. H. & I. DIVISION.

LKAVR FOR THE VKST.

No. 11 Western Expresse' (SAV)... 1. 83a No. 5MailTre*n .10.46 am No. 1 Fast. Line (PtV) '2.15 No. 21 2.85 pm No. 7 Fast 2Ma.il 9.04 No. 13 Effingham Ace 4.05

LKAVK KO.K THK KAST.

Cincinnati Express (S) New York Express (Sife V) Mail and Accommodation Atlantic Express1:1(P&V). Fast Line

No. 12 No. 6 No. 4 No. 20 No. 8 No. 2

No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) •. No. ti New York Express (fA-V). No. 20 Atlantic Express ,l\t V) No. 8 Fast Line* No. 2 No. 14 Effingham Ac

1.20 a 2.20 am 7.15 am 12.47 a 2.110 5.05 no

AKKIVK KKOM THK KAST.

No 11 Western Express (S&V). No. 5 Mail Train* No. 1 Fast, Line (P&V) No. 21 No. 8 Mail aud Accommodation No. 7 Fast all

1.20 a 10.40 a in 2.00 2.30 0.45 9.00 ni

ARRIVE FKOM THE WEST.

1.10 am 2.10 a in 12.12 in 2.15 pm 5.00 in 9.80 a

T. H. A L. DI VISION. I.KAVK FOK THE KOI'.TH.

No. 52 Sout r.otid Mnll H.20 a No. 54 South Hcml Express ..... !.() No. 50 H(. Joseph Special 1.00

ARIUVE I' ltOJl THK IS OUT 11.

No. 51 Terre Haute Kxnmts ll.45a No. 58 South Bend Mail 7.80 No. .5 Southern lix 9.45 pm

IE. & T. IE3:.

ARRIVE FROM SOUTH.

No. 6 Nash & C. Kx* (S & 13). 5.00 a No. 2 T. H. it East Ex 11.50 am No. 4 Ch & Ind Ex* (S) 10.80 pm No. 00 .. 9.00 in

LICAVE FOIl SOTJTir.

No. 3 Oil it Ev Ex*(S) Otf a'iti No. lEv&JndMall 8.15 pm No. 5 Ch & N Ex*(S»tB) No. 7

10.00 10.42. a

33. & nr.

AltniVK FROM SOUTH.

No. 150 Worth Mixed lo.uo a n* No. 82 Mail A Ex 4.25 pin I.BAVK FOK SOUTH. No. 38 Mail A ES '.50 a in No. 40 Worth'n Mfxed '. 4.25 No. 18 New Plttsbnrg accomodation. 0:45 a in

C. & 33. I.

AKRIVB FROM NORTH.

No. 8 Oh & Fash 5.45 am No. 49 Til Aw? 10.25 am No. 1 Ch & Ev Kx .8.10 in No. SCAN Ex*(8A-f!) 9.50

IjKAVE t'OH NOKTH.

No. N A Kx^HAB) 5.10 am No. 2 HA Ch Ex 12.10 No. 50 Watseka Aoc 8.20 ra No. 4 Nash & Ex'(8) .10.45 pm

r-x\

EC. & IP.

ARRIVK FROM NORTHWEST.

No. 4 Pass Ex 11.20 am No. 2 Pass Mall A Ex 7.10 LKAVK FOR KORTH WKST. No. 1 Pass Mail A Ex 7,10 a ra No. 8 Pass Ex .3.20

C. C. C. &c X.-BIGh 4.

GOINQ KAST

No. 12 No. 0 No. 2 No. 18 No. 8

Boston ANY Ex* 1.22 a New York and Boston «8 2.29 a Cleveland Acc 7.25 am Southwestern Limited* .12.50 pm Mail train* 8.48 pm

GOING WEST.

No. 5 No. 7 No. 17 No. 3 No. 9

St. Louis Express«« 12.17 a St Louis Ex*

1.41

a

Limited* 1.68 pm Accommodation 7.58 pm Mail Train* 10.06am

•qPilSTOPPED FREE

Uk AfarvtUut menu. \tmr,e Persons Restored

B® D'.KLINE'B GREAT NerveRestoreb

'RRA//n»AIJF

4 Nbrvb Diseases. Onlysurt

cure far Nervt Afftctwni. Ftit, EpUtfty, tie. INPALLIBLB if taken directed. No Fit* after

eiprc

afflicted to Dk.KUNE4iiArch St..Phll*MpK*.P». gaSDreMtott.

BMW ARB OF IMITATING F&tUDS.

CURE FOR CATARRH

FOR OVER FIFTY YEARS this old SovereignRemedy has stood the test, and stands to-day the best known remedy for Catarrh, Cold in the Head and Headache. Persist in its use, and it will effect a cure, nd matter of hor* long standing the case may be.

For sale by druggists.

mammtmmmassa You need not be «tck if yon will uke Moore's Pilules-

Theynrc-aniHrvoi'.ufi medicine They kill the microbes, 'ftoey care chili*, ferers, *ick beadactie, rheuHwtUm, liver au! blwxl tUaorderx. laalari*.

Better than quinine

Foraewtetakatwo? reftofTBiwHinimiti a box. stk'.j S: 2!?r*m ttm. Moore, ,» O iiaUMre.. 0-r*.